Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Pretending Not to Notice

Eric Boehlert noticed a strange -- if not unsurprising -- double standard among the Villagers this past weekend.
If you don't think there's a media double standard that favors Republicans over Democrats, then let's play a game of what-if.

What if, in 2006, at Yearly Kos, the first annual convention of liberal bloggers and their readers, organizers shelled out $100,000 for former Vice President Al Gore to address attendees? And what if the same organizers booked as an opening-night speaker a fringe, radical-left conspiracy theorist who'd spent the previous year pushing the thoroughly debunked claim that some Bush White administration insiders played a role in, and even planned, the 9-11 attacks. What if the speaker (also proudly anti-Semitic) received a standing ovation from the liberal Yearly Kos crowd?

Given that backdrop, and given the fact that the 9-11 Truther nut had for weeks bragged about his chance to share the stage with Gore, do you think the press would have demanded that Gore justify his association with a hateful conference that embraced a 9-11 Truther? Do you think pundits would have universally mocked and ridiculed Gore's judgment while condemning the Yearly Kos convention as being a hothouse of left-wing hate? Do you think Gore's appearance would have become a thing?

I sure do.

Gore and liberal bloggers would have been crucified by the press and the D.C. chattering class if the scenario I described ever unfolded in real life. (FYI, it goes without saying that organizers for Yearly Kos, now known as Netroots Nation, would never dream of mainstreaming an anti-Semitic 9-11 Truther via a prime-time speaking gig.)

But this past weekend in Nashville, at the first National Tea Party Convention, the Beltway press did just the opposite with regard to Sarah Palin's keynote address, which did follow a prime-time speech by "birther" nut Joseph Farah, who over the years has carved out a uniquely hateful and demented corner of the right-wing blogosphere. Because, yes, at the Tea Party convention, Farah, a proud Muslim-hater and gay-hater, did receive a standing ovation from the conservative crowd after he unfurled his thoroughly debunked birther garbage. (i.e. Obama "doesn't have a birth certificate.") And Farah did brag in the weeks leading up to the event about his chance to share the stage with Palin, to associate with Palin. ("Sold out! Palin-Farah ticket rocks tea-party convention," read the headline at Farah's discredited right-wing site, WorldNetDaily.com.)

Worst of all, though, the press played dumb about the whole thing.
It isn't so much that the press "played dumb" as it is that the press demonstrated either laziness or cowardice in covering the Tea Party. I happen to think it's the latter. Simply put, the media is afraid to criticize the people -- both the attendees and the promoters -- of the Nashville convention because they think there would be a backlash against them. Mocking Sarah Palin for her collection of schoolyard rants and taunts would have brought torrents of accusations of sexism and misogyny from people who regularly use racist and homophobic slurs in their everyday speech. Glenn Beck would have gone on some crying jag about how the "liberal media" is conspiring to paint the "real Americans" as marginalized lunatics that represent a minority of a minority of views, and the major networks would have gotten death threats from people who carry signs demanding that the president read the Constitution.

In Mr. Boehlert's scenario, the press and the pundits would have gotten a free ride to trash such a convention because they know that the left never hits back. The right may be wrong but you will never get them to admit it; there's something comforting, I suppose, in being so secure in your beliefs even when they turn out to be utterly without merit or fact. And they're also very good at "working the refs" -- intimidating the press. That's probably because they know that if they don't, they wouldn't get past the smell test.

But it's always been easy to sow doubt among the lefties -- or at least get them to say, "you know, you might have a point" even when they are on solid ground. It's not that they lack conviction; they're just not as doctrinaire as the right wing, and they're not as likely to go off like a Roman candle when you call them out on it. That's why someone like Rep. Alan Grayson (D-FL) got so much attention last fall when he did a mild counterpoint version of right-wing talking points about healthcare ("The Republican health care plan is this: 'Don't get sick, and if you do get sick, die quickly'") on the floor of the House. He caused a sensation -- and got a huge reaction from the media -- for doing what any number of Republicans had been doing day in and day out without getting much more than a "Worst Person in the World" rating from Keith Olbermann. OMG, the media said; a Democrat is being sharp-tongued!

In one respect it's probably a good thing that TP'ers got as much attention as they did; otherwise the rest of us would not have heard about Mr. Farah's nutsery or been reminded of what a thoroughly loathsome and unreconstructed racist Tom Tancredo is. But the press also has an obligation to at least point out the errors, inconsistencies, hypocrisies, and just plain craziness when they see it and holding the perpetrators accountable. Pretending not to notice because you're afraid of the reaction is a disservice to journalism in a free society and to the people who both practice it and who count on it.
Fetch more...

Short Takes

The health crisis in Haiti is getting worse.

Pakistan offers to help fight the Taliban in Afghanistan.

China has a big problem with water pollution.

Now it's Honda's turn for a big recall.

More snow for the East Coast.

Some Los Angeles suburbs in the foothills brace for mudslides.

South Florida will have a brief cold snap this week with temperatures heading down to the 30's.

Broward County schools may lay off teachers and cut back classes because of their budget crunch.
Fetch more...

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Question of the Day

I shamelessly pinched this from aproustian at Shakesville:
If you could live the life of a fictional character, which would it be?
I think my life already is the life of a fictional character; why else would I be a playwright?
Fetch more...

She Meant To Do That

The reaction to Sarah Palin's palmistry has been, for the most part, mirthful. The left is giggle-snorting over it and enjoying watching the right try to defend it or fulminate against the left's "outrage," which only tells you that the righties either don't know the difference between being laughed at and outrage, or they are so embarrassed that such a silly thing happened that they're just flustered and are trying out all sorts of reasons why Ms. Palin would do such a thing. So far the one explanation that makes me chortle the most is the one offered by Gretchen Carlson over at (where else) Fox News:
I think she did it on purpose. I think she did it on purpose, yeah. Because it’s an exact opposite of reading off the teleprompter with a script written for you with every word in a sentence and here’s she’s just taking crib notes on her hand. It makes her look like she can just talk off the cuff and she just jotted down a few couple notes before she went out to give a big long speech.
Yeah, that's the ticket.

PS: You knew this kind of hilarity would ensue.
Fetch more...

Local Talent

Marc Kevin Hall, a fellow Miamian and the keeper of Hidden City, made a contribution to NPR's Morning Edition today. I heard it driving in to work.

I've been a fan of Hidden City since I started blogging. I have always felt I was in the presence of greatness, and this only confirms that.

Way to go, MKH.
Fetch more...

Explain Yourself

The Obama administration would like Anthem Blue Cross of California to explain why they're hiking their insurance rates by 39%.
"Additionally, you should make public information on the percent of your individual market premiums that is used for medical care versus the percent that is used for administrative costs," [Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Kathleen] Sebelius wrote, noting that the profits of Anthem Blue Cross's parent company, WellPoint Incorporated, have soared.

The company earned $2.7 billion in just the last quarter of 2009. Quarterly sales went from $15.1 billion to $19 billion -- a 26% rise.
In a reply, Anthem Blue Cross is making the pitch that it's not their fault:
Unfortunately, in the weak economy many people who do not have health conditions are foregoing buying insurance. This leaves fewer people, often with significantly greater medical needs, in the insured pool. We regret the impact this has on our members.
They also say that they want healthcare reform "done right," which is a GOP talking point. That's not really a surprise; what are the odds that Wellpoint has contributed to the anti-healthcare reform campaign?
Fetch more...

Pre-Existing Conditions

The House GOP leadership is balking at coming to a healthcare summit being hosted by President Obama.
Leading House Republicans raised the prospect Monday night that they might refuse to participate in President Obama's proposed health care summit if the White House chooses not to scrap the existing reform bills and start over.

In a letter to White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (Ohio) and Minority Whip Eric Cantor (Va.) expressed frustration at reports that Obama intends to put the Democratic bills on the table for discussion at the Feb. 25 summit.

"If the starting point for this meeting is the job-killing bills the American people have already soundly rejected, Republicans would rightly be reluctant to participate," Boehner and Cantor wrote.

Obama proposed the half-day summit on national television Sunday, but in their letter, the two GOP leaders offer their suspicion that the president is not serious about opening a bipartisan negotiation on health care.

" 'Bipartisanship' is not writing proposals of your own behind closed doors, then unveiling them and demanding Republican support," Boehner and Cantor wrote. "Bipartisan ends require bipartisan means."
I suppose it would be pointless to point out to Reps. Boehner and Cantor that "bipartisanship" also doesn't mean saying that you're willing to be bipartisan if that means the only way you'll participate is if the White House meets your demands. That's not how it works, either.

I have no doubt whatsoever that the White House knew all along that this would be the response from the GOP. In fact, I'll bet they were counting on it; they called the Republicans' bluff and Mr. Boehner and Mr. Cantor folded. (They also went back and reviewed the video of the House Republican retreat when Mr. Obama played them like a Stradivarius. They don't want that to happen again.) Now they're going to go ahead and convene the summit, put it on TV, leave a row of empty chairs for the Republicans, and leave the floor to the president to explain that his bill already incorporates a bunch of Republican ideas and still they refused to participate.

Okay, fine; be that way. It will give the White House yet another opportunity to lay out the entire bill and let the public see what's in it, and it will also let them say that they gave the Republicans a chance to work with them and listen to them, but they set all these pre-existing conditions that are meant to accomplish only one thing: kill the bill entirely.
Fetch more...

No, We Do Not

Oliver Willis replies to some right-wingers who are putting up a billboard with a picture of George W. Bush that says "Miss Me Yet?".
Fetch more...

Short Takes

Recalling all Prius -- Toyota is recalling about 400,000 of the hybrids to fix faulty brakes.

More snow is headed for the East Coast; they're still digging out from the last one.

R.I.P. Rep. John Murtha (D-PA); He was the first Vietnam veteran elected to Congress and a critic of the Iraq war.

North Korea says it will stick to its nuclear disarmament pledge.

Meanwhile, Iran says it will start enriching uranium.

First an earthquake; now the spring rains will make life miserable in Haiti.

The Dow closed below 10,000 for the first time in months.

The space shuttle Endeavour is in orbit.

Campaigning in circles: Rep. Kendrick Meek (D-FL), running for the Senate, has bought space on a NASCAR racer.
Fetch more...

Monday, February 08, 2010

A Simple Solution

If the Democrats are going to really fight back, then there's a very easy way to do it: make the Republicans vote in Congress on some very straightforward pieces of legislation that will tell the country exactly where they stand. For example, Paul Begala, a former adviser to President Clinton, says let's have a vote on the budget proposals put forth by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) that calls for balancing the budget in 50 years and privatizing Social Security and Medicare.
"Why don't we put Mr. Ryan's budget up to a vote?" he said. "Make them vote on it."

Democrats, he argued, should stop calling Republicans the "party of no."

"They have ideas, and lots of them. And their ideas ruin the country," Begala said.
Excellent. I'm all for it. As Digby says, let them put their mouth where their money is. Any hesitation, blowback, hedging, or filibustering will only confirm that they're full of it.

The same is true with healthcare. There's going to be a bill submitted to Congress to remove the anti-trust exemption for insurance companies. It's not a complicated measure, and the results would be obvious: if you vote against this bill, we'll know who's side you're on. What could be more simple?
Fetch more...

Sentimental Journey

There was quite a bit of attention paid to former Alaska governor Sarah Palin's appearance at the national Tea Party convention in Nashville this past weekend. She gave a speech that according to NPR "electrified" the crowd of 600 and she got off some good zingers, snark, and evangelism, something that sounds more like she was preaching at a carnival tent show than a political convention.

According to those who watched the speech, it was a mish-mash of all the usual right-wing complaints about President Obama:
She blasted him for rising deficits, “apologizing for America” in speeches in other countries, and for allowing the so-called Christmas bomber to board a plane headed for the United States, saying he was weak on the war on terrorism.

“To win that war, we need a commander in chief, not a professor of law,” she declared.
Do I have to explain that the deficits were raised before Mr. Obama came into office and would be a lot worse now if he hadn't gotten the stimulus package; that making up to countries for the roughshod way that the Bush/Cheney cowboys ran over the rest of the world isn't "apologizing," it's called "diplomacy"; and that as inconvenient as it may be, the United States Constitution, with all its protections against the heavy hand of the government against the people, is still the law of the land? Ms. Palin may not like it, but it's been settled law for over 100 years that the Bill of Rights apply to all people in the United States, including foreigners arrested on our soil for crimes committed on our soil, not just American citizens. It helps that the commander in chief was a professor of law; that's one of the basic things that separates this country from previous experiences with tyranny. By the way, when the Bush/Cheney administration gave terror suspects their Miranda rights, tried them in a civilian court, locked them up in American prisons, and announced plans to close Gitmo, she and the rest of the teabaggers didn't say a word. (It's also more than a little ironic that Ms. Palin mocked the president for using a teleprompter when she scribbled cues on her hand for the Q&A portion of the pageant like a high school kid trying to crib on a test.)

What strikes me about this whole tea party thing is that it reminds me of the political agitation of my youth -- the antiwar demonstrations and marches on Washington and the protests against the "establishment". Those of us that were involved in it forty years ago probably had has much passion and fervor for it as the folks who gathered in Nashville to hear Sarah Palin channel George Wallace this past weekend. There were just as many crude assaults on the senses and sensibilities back then as there were today and the same kind of tasteless attacks on the president at the time as there were today (except I don't think there were as many dog-whistles to racist and nativist attitudes among the hippies). It was a movement, not a political party, and in 1969 there was no single leader of the antiwar movement, either. He had been assassinated in June 1968.

The problem with movements is that they don't elect presidents... except for the other side when they're perceived to be aligned with one political party as the Democrats were with the antiwar movement. Franklin Roosevelt faced a populist rebellion during the Depression at the hands of Huey Long and Father Coughlin, and he was re-elected four times. Richard Nixon's election in 1968 was cemented by the street riots at the Democratic convention in Chicago, as was his re-election in 1972 by the shrewd politicization and demonization of the antiwar movement -- and by transference, of the Democrats -- by his White House and his take-no-prisoners vice president, Spiro Agnew. (Sound familiar?) Had it not been for Watergate, Ronald Reagan would have been the GOP nominee in 1976, and Jimmy Carter was about as far away from the counter-culture movement as you could get in the Democratic Party. But the damage was done, and it took twenty years for the Democrats to get their footing again, and that was at the hands of Bill Clinton, a centrist Southerner and master politician. To this day, the Democrats are still skittish about being linked to the dirty effing hippies.

So the tea party conventioneers might well take a lesson from history. They can enjoy their time in the limelight and generate all the soundbites and bumper stickers, but for now, their political might is mainly seen as how much they can get on TV and who can come up with the most outrageous statement in order to get the attention. (If the tea-partiers can learn from history -- which is highly unlikely -- they'll figure out where this is going and nominate Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) for president in 2016.) It's all very nostalgic for those of us who remember the days of the war moratoriums and trying to levitate the Pentagon, and it all seems very romantic, thanks to the love-peace-and-tie-dyed culture. But it really didn't do anything much for the direction of the country except give us Republicans in the White House... and some really great rock music.
Fetch more...

Short Takes

President Obama is inviting the GOP to a healthcare summit.

There was a deadly explosion at a Connecticut power plant under construction.

Washington, D.C. is basically shut down today by the snowstorm.

Haiti kidnapping: "Divisions emerged within the group of 10 Americans jailed in Haiti on child abduction charges, with eight of them signing a note over the weekend saying that they had been misled by Laura Silsby, the leader of the group."

Toyota will announce their plans for the Prius recall this week.

The Obama administration is pushing back against its critics on how they handle terrorists.

Costa Rica has elected its first woman president.
Fetch more...

Sunday, February 07, 2010

The Saints Went Marching In

Congratulations to the New Orleans Saints. It's been a long time coming.
Fetch more...

More of Why I Live in Florida

My brother in suburban Baltimore sent me this yesterday.


If that looks familiar, it's because he sent me this picture...


back in December. My back hurts just looking at it.
Fetch more...

Sunday Reading

On Trial -- Jane Mayer of The New Yorker profiles Attorney General Eric Holder and the trials of getting Khalid Sheikh Mohammed tried.
On January 11th, a few weeks before his plans for a trial at Foley Square fell apart, Holder flew to Boston, to preside over the installation of a new U.S. Attorney. That evening, he returned to Washington in the Justice Department’s Gulfstream jet. Holder, who had jokingly lamented that such perks wouldn’t last forever—“I’m missing it already!”—sat down, put on headphones, and blasted one of his favorite songs, Jimi Hendrix’s “Purple Haze.” Holder, who is fifty-nine, seemed determined not to let the tensions of Washington politics poison his mood. He was equally determined not to capitulate on the idea of holding a 9/11 trial. “I don’t apologize for what I’ve done,” he told me at one point. “History will show that the decisions we’ve made are the right ones.” Holder said that he regarded trying Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in a courtroom as “the defining event of my time as Attorney General.” But, he added, “between now and then I suspect we’re in for some interesting times.”

Holder, despite the controversy he has inspired, has not actually pushed for radical change. Indeed, critics in left-leaning legal circles have complained that he has kept too many of George W. Bush’s counterterrorism policies in place. For example, Holder’s Justice Department has continued blocking lawsuits by people who were subjected to extraordinary rendition—the practice of sending suspected terrorists captured abroad to countries known for administering torture—on the ground that such litigation would expose state secrets. Even some former members of the Bush Administration see more continuity than change. Bradford Berenson, who served as a White House lawyer when the Bush Administration was forging its controversial legal approach to terrorism, told me that “from the perspective of a hawkish Bush national-security person the glass is eighty-five per cent full in terms of continuity.”

Holder told me that he was frustrated by much of the criticism over the handling of Abdulmutallab. “What we did is totally consistent with what has happened in every similar case” since 9/11, he said. “There’s a desire to ignore the facts to try to score political points. It’s a little shocking.” Without exception, he noted, every previous terrorist suspect apprehended inside the country had been handled as a civilian criminal. Even so, critics such as Krauthammer were denouncing Holder for failing to send Abdulmutallab directly to Guantánamo. As a senior national-security official in the White House put it, “It’s a fantasy! Under what alternative legal system can Special Operations Forces fly into Detroit, and take someone away without court oversight?”
More below the fold.

The Tea Party Racket -- Joan Walsh at Salon reviews Sarah Palin's appearance at the Tea Party convention.
Eric Hoffer didn't live to see Tea Party Nation, but I always think of his most famous quote when I'm forced to deal with it: ""Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket."

I'm not sure the Tea Party cause is a great one, but it's an influential one, and it degenerated into a racket lickety split, in less than a year. This weekend's gathering in Nashville splintered both the Tennessee and the national Tea Party movement, as local go-getter Judson Phillips set up the once-anticipated "convention" as his own for-profit business. We'll have a first-hand report from the racket that paid Sarah Palin more than $100,000 to speak Saturday night. But I can't help weighing in.

Wow. This was the Palin we saw at the 2008 Republican convention, the snarling pitbull in shimmery lipstick. I know journalists aren't supposed to use words like mean and dumb, but I can't help it. Palin is one of the meanest people on the public stage today. She wallows in it. She loves it! Also? Possibly one of the dumbest. But mean works, and so does dumb. And so do lies, and there were many mean, dumb lies in her speech.

How rich that she read her talk in a sing-song voice as she ripped Barack Obama for using a Teleprompter. Once she left the speech for the Q&A, she really went off-message, as well as nearly off-English. (Even though it looked like, at one point, she was reading answers off of her hand.) "They're not knowin what are we gonna do if we don't have Tea Party support" was one of my favorite head-scratchers, a great echo of "when Putin rears his head."

But it was also in her brief Q&A that she made one comment she might regret, if anyone in the Republican Party ever held her accountable. She told the crowd her husband Todd -- according to recently released emails, the non-elected former governor of Alaska -- is "much too independent" to be a Republican, because he's even "more conservative" than she is. What a great way to revisit the controversy over Todd's membership in the secessionist Alaska Independent Party! Remember how Palin dogged poor McCain campaign manager Steve Schmidt, trying to get him to denounce Salon's reporting on the Palins and AIP? She tried to get Schmidt to lie and say her husband checked the AIP box on voter forms mistakenly, and he refused. Now she's bragging her husband isn't a Republican because he's so "independent."
Frank Rich on the outing of Don't Ask Don't Tell.
Polls consistently show that independents, however fiscally conservative, are closer to Democrats than Republicans on social issues. (In May’s Gallup survey, 67 percent of independents favored repealing “don’t ask.”) This is why Scott Brown, enjoying what may be a short-lived honeymoon in his own party, calls himself a “Scott Brown Republican.” A Scott Brown Republican isn’t a Boehner or Hatch Republican. In his interview with Barbara Walters last weekend, he distanced himself from Sarah Palin, said he was undecided on “don’t ask” and declared same-sex marriage a “settled” issue in his state, Massachusetts, where it is legal.

It’s in this political context that we can see that there may have been some method to Obama’s troublesome tardiness on gay issues after all. But as we learned about this White House and the Democratic Congress in the health care debacle, they are perfectly capable of dropping the ball at any moment. Let’s hope they don’t this time. Should they actually press forward on “don’t ask” in an election year with Mullen and Gates on board — and with even McCain’s buddy, Joe Lieberman, calling for action “as soon as possible” — they could further the goal and raise the political price for those who stand in the way. Recalcitrant Congressional Republicans will have to explain why their perennial knee-jerk deference to “whatever the commanders want” extends to Gen. David Petraeus and Gen. Stanley McChrystal on troop surges but not to Mullen, who outranks them, on civil rights.

The more bigotry pushed out of the closet for all voters to see, the more likely it is that Americans will be moved to grant overdue full citizenship to gay Americans. It won’t happen overnight, any more than full civil rights for African-Americans immediately followed Truman’s desegregation of the armed forces. But there can be no doubt that Mike Mullen’s powerful act of conscience last week, just as we marked the 50th anniversary of the Greensboro, N.C., lunch counter sit-in, pushed history forward. The revealing silence that followed from so many of the usual suspects was pretty golden too.
Doonesbury -- At twits end.

Fetch more...

Short Takes

They're digging out in D.C. and waiting for the next storm.

President Obama delivers a pep talk to the Democrats.

Toyota will announce a fix next week for the Prius's faulty anti-lock brakes.

One small step -- The House may vote next week to lift the anti-trust exemption for insurance companies.

Change of heart -- Gov. Sanford demands stimulus money from Washington... after spending most of last year saying he didn't want it.

If you're wondering what all the fuss is about, it's Superbowl Sunday.
Fetch more...

Saturday, February 06, 2010

Saturday Night at the Movies

American Graffiti (1973)


Fetch more...

Downtown Miami Car Show

If you're in Miami and have some free time today, come on down to Flagler Street and SE 3rd Avenue between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. for the 9th Annual Downtown Miami
Classic Car Show (MAP). All collector cars are welcome: original, restored, modified, hot rods, motorcycles, and all years for Corvettes and Mustangs. It's free to register and free to the public. We're expecting pretty good weather, too -- compared to the Eastern Seaboard -- and even if there's a shower or two this morning, we'll be there. I'll be handling registration, so stop by and say hi.
Fetch more...

Title Fight

Jon Stewart on the difference between reality and blogging.

The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
The Blogs Must Be Crazy
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political HumorHealth Care Crisis

Fetch more...

Short Takes

It's really snowing hard in Washington, D.C. and Baltimore today.

North Korea has released the American missionary.

Unemployment dipped below 10% in January.

Sen. Richard Shelby (R-AL) blocks every Obama nominee over pork.

Bill Clinton
popped in at a benefit concert for Haiti in Miami.

The president honored the seven CIA employees killed in Afghanistan.

Gearing up for the winding down of the space shuttle missions.
Fetch more...

Friday, February 05, 2010

Quote of the Day

Former Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) on why Barack Obama was elected president:
[W]e do not have a civics, literacy test before people can vote in this country.
We used to have them but they were outlawed because they were used to keep African-Americans from voting.
Fetch more...

Duty, Honor, and Country

One of the standard arguments against repealing the policy of Don't Ask Don't Tell in the American military is that the armed forces are not the place for "social engineering" and that forcing straight soldiers to live in close quarters with openly gay soldiers would be disruptive and therefore destructive to unit cohesion. I'll start right off by acknowledging that I did not serve in the military, so I'm not speaking from first-hand experience. But I know enough people, both gay and straight, who have served, and to a person they say the argument doesn't hold water. And it doesn't take a degree in sociology or cultural anthropology to know that the military, like a lot of institutions that force people of different backgrounds and experiences together, actually depends a great deal upon the success of social engineering.

With an all-volunteer service today, it perhaps isn't as obvious as it was during the time of the draft, but when the new recruits show up at boot camp and are processed into the barracks, the social engineering begins: a kid from the Bronx ends up sharing a bunk space with a kid from El Paso; a boy who went to prep school in New England is showering with a guy from the projects in Chicago. There are enough differences in the racial, ethnic, and economic backgrounds that being gay -- something I doubt would get announced at roll call -- is just one more part of the mix. The drill sergeant's duty during boot camp is to take these kids from all of these different backgrounds and dismantle these differences -- to basically strip away the recruit's unique identity as a person -- and mold these men and women into a unit that thinks and works as one. The fact that one or more of them is gay doesn't make it any harder -- or easier -- to form a unit than the fact that one or more of them is black, Hispanic, Jewish, or a Yankees fan.

Continued below the fold.

The next argument is that soldiers need to trust each other in order to place their lives in hands of others, and that straight soldiers couldn't trust a fellow soldier if there was some question about his or her sexual orientation. That logic fails on several levels. First, speaking as an openly gay man, I don't understand why being candid about it as opposed to concealing would be a cause for distrust among other people. Being honest about it, whether or not it makes others uncomfortable for their own reasons, should form a foundation of trust. Second, just because I am an openly gay man doesn't mean I go around announcing it. I don't wear a sign -- and trust me, with my fashion sense, I don't even fit the stereotype of being a natty dresser -- nor do I bring it up in conversations with my colleagues or associates, even though I work in a place that is, by law, non-discriminatory. It's not that I'm ashamed of it; it's just not relevant to my job, and neither should it be when you're a soldier. Besides, one of the first things you learn as a gay person is that it is something you keep to yourself. Our society has taught us well that conformity with social norms, whether you're eight or eighteen, is paramount, and those social norms are that boys are supposed to like girls and when you feel an attraction towards boys, you don't announce it unless you're looking for trouble. We learn at a very early age, long before sexuality rears its throbbing head, that it is far better to be cautious with your feelings. Trust, therefore, is a major component in social interaction. Not telling someone you are gay until you are fully comfortable with them is the norm, and learning to sublimate your feelings in a group is a part of the deal. (By the way, there's a difference between sublimating your feelings and repressing them. In the first case, you're comfortable with who you are, you accept it, and therefore you don't feel the need to hold it up to others for validation. In the second case, you battle the demons that society, religion, or family force you to create in your own mind that deny your own whole self. That leads to all sorts of trouble.) The true sign of maturity in any person is that they are able to acknowledge their own identity and realize that what they are by the grace of genetics, nature, and social interaction is just a part of who they are.

No one has any delusion that the repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell will make life in the military any easier for gay or lesbian soldiers any more than President Truman's order in 1948 desegregating the troops magically wiped away racial discrimination in the ranks. Human nature is what it is and no law or order can legislate tolerance. There will still be gay-bashing in the service. There will still be soldiers who are uncomfortable being around someone whom they see as a threat, but as is often the case, the soldier -- and the institution -- that feels threatened is the one who is the victim of intolerance. Yielding to fears and prejudice goes against the basic creed that has defined the code of military service since time out of mind: duty, honor, and country. Don't Ask Don't Tell goes against all three.

Fetch more...

An Honor To Be Nominated

The South Florida Sun Sentinel has opened nominations for the Best of Blogs (BOB) awards.
We are hunting for the best blogs in all of South Florida, so if you write or read a blog you think is worthy then let us know! Simply click on the categories listed below that you feel best represents the blog, and then fill out the form on the following page. The winner will receive a $100 gift card and ads on SunSentinel.com to drive traffic to their blog.
Lo and behold, somehow this humble blog has been nominated in the Politics category. How'd that happen?

Rules for nominating are on the site. Voting starts on February 15. If you feel like voting for BBWW, I wouldn't object.
Fetch more...

Short Takes

Missionary position? Ten Baptists are under arrest in Haiti and stand accused of kidnapping.

Things are looking up in Afghanistan.

Are there going to be two vacancies on the Supreme Court this year? ABC News thinks so.

Another big snowstorm is headed for the Eastern seaboard this weekend.

Toyota's Prius's brake problems get the attention of the NHTSA.

It's Senator Scott Brown (R-MA) now.

The Dow dipped below 10,000 for a moment yesterday.
Fetch more...

Friday Blogaround

I don't know if the groundhog saw its shadow, but the LC looked back over the week of winter anyway.
- A Blog Around The Clock: Podpeople!
- archy: space bumps.
- Bark Bark Woof Woof: DADT on the Hill.
- Bloggg: Hecticity.
- Dohiyi Mir: My own Himalayan miscalculation.
- Echidne Of The Snakes: on honor killings.
- Florida Progressive Coalition Blog: high-speed rail comes to Florida.
- Left Is Right: bits and pieces.
- Pen-Elayne on the Web: graphing the five-second rule.
- Rook's Rant: whisper.
- rubber hose dogs it through.
- Scrutiny Hooligans: Turning pro.
- Stupid Enough Unexplanation: flaws.
- The Yellow Something Something: more on presidential "direct action."
- WTF Is It Now?? Whatever it is, they're against it.
There's a really big event this weekend in South Florida... the 9th annual Downtown Classic Car Show on Flagler Street in Miami.
Fetch more...

Friday Catblogging Classic

Snowball finds out that the Mustang will be in a car show this weekend.


Fetch more...

Thursday, February 04, 2010

Thursday Night Ton Lehrer


Fetch more...

Question of the Day

Snow job...
Are you planning on watching any of the Winter Olympics?
If something's on that's interesting I might watch, but it's not really appointment TV for me, especially with all the filler crap that NBC throws in about the athletes and their life story that borders on the tear-jerking level of a bad Lifetime Movie of the Week. If I was somewhere where I could get the feed from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), which tends to be much more minimalist, I'd watch, even though the games are in Vancouver, B.C. and they'll probably go a little overboard on their coverage out of patriotic fervor.
Fetch more...

Powell Backs Repeal of DADT

General Colin Powell is on board with repealing DADT.
Gen. Colin L. Powell, who as the nation's top military officer in the 1990s opposed allowing gays and lesbians to serve openly in the military, switched gears today and threw his support behind efforts to end the "don't ask, don't tell" law he helped shepherd in.

"In the almost 17 years since the 'don't ask, don't tell' legislation was passed, attitudes and circumstances have changed," General Powell said in a statement issued by his office. He added: "I fully support the new approach presented to the Senate Armed Services Committee this week by Secretary of Defense Gates and Admiral Mullen."
At the Senate hearing on Tuesday, Sen. John McCain got testy when he found out that the military was now open to repealing the law, reminding Admiral Mullen that Congress makes the law, not the Pentagon. That's a bit of a switch from Mr. McCain's earlier stance a few years ago when he said he and the Senate would listen to the generals, including Gen. Powell, on the matter of DADT.
Fetch more...

They Never Learn

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) is now the point person for the GOP and the undie bomber. It really is kind of silly, though, to see her go on TV and get schooled by Andrea Mitchell of MSNBC.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


I don't object to Sen. Collins having a point of view and toeing the party line. I do object to rank ignorance or deception, especially when there is overwhelming evidence to the contrary of said talking points. Glenn Greenwald adds,
But this right-wing demagoguery (coming from both Republicans and some Democrats) has nothing to do with those debates. For one thing, the accused Christmas Day bomber was captured and is being held inside the U.S. (right-wing fear-mongerers have long argued that we should not bring GITMO detainees to the U.S. because, once inside the U.S., they would then enjoy full Constitutional protections). But more important, the standard rhetorical formulation being used -- "extending rights to foreign Terrorists which the Constitution reserves for U.S. citizens" -- suggests that Constitutional rights are for American citizens only. That is blatantly false, and anyone making that claim -- as Susan Collins and so many others have -- is either extremely ignorant or extremely dishonest.
Actually, it's not an either/or situation; it can be both. You lay the facts out there in front of them and try gently not to humiliate them on national TV with the fact that they're just plan wrong, and yet they don't give up. In the case of Sen. Collins, it's just embarrassing.

It also makes me wonder that if Sen. Collins is representative of the current crop of Republican "moderates," we've certainly moved the needle to the right. (And she was one that the Democrats thought they could win over on healthcare. Wow.)
Fetch more...

Short Takes

Toyota's problems were first noticed in 2007. Now it's the brakes on the Prius.

Transportation Secretary LaHood backtracks on his "Stop driving your Toyota now!" call.

They think they killed the Pakistani Taliban leader.

Lead on: President Obama talked to the Senate Democrats and gave them their marching orders.

The president will meet with the Dalai Lama; China is not happy.

Those folks at AIG might get the bonuses, but they really don't get it.

Schwarzenegger: Florida is known for "old people." (Has he ever been to Arizona?)

Have you heard? There's a big football game here in South Florida this weekend.

Tigers Update: $80 million for Justin Verlander.
Fetch more...
 

Blogger Template Designed and Implemented by CLWill