Sunday, May 31, 2009

Terrorism in Wichita

Abortion provider Dr. George Tiller was shot and killed while attending church this morning in Wichita, Kansas. A suspect has been arrested. From the Wichita Eagle:
WICHITA - A suspect in this morning's fatal shooting of George Tiller is in custody and on his way back to Wichita, deputy chief Tom Stolz of the Wichita Police Department said today at a news conference.

The 51-year-old male suspect was arrested about three hours after the shooting without incident near Gardner on Interstate 35.

Tiller, 67, was shot just after 10 a.m. in the lobby of Reformation Lutheran Church at 7601 E. 13th, where he was a member of the congregation.

Tiller was serving as an usher at the church, one of six ushers listed in the church bulletin. He was handing out bulletins to people going into the sanctuary minutes before being shot.

A church member who did not want to be identified said the gunman threatened another person at the church after the shooting.
I am pretty sure the far-right anti-choice crowd is cautiously condemning this act of terrorism -- which is what it is -- while trying to mitigate it by saying that Dr. Tiller himself was guilty of thousands of murders of the "unborn." They can say "Yes, we condemn this, but..." all they want, they can make all the excuses that they want, and they can pray to whatever god they choose to in thanks for vindication of their beliefs, but Dr. Tiller was practicing medicine within the laws of the State of Kansas and even if he wasn't, the act this morning was nothing less than what we accuse the Taliban and Al-Qaeda of doing and for what we allegedly went to war for.

Now I am sure the far-right will, on cue, play the victim and claim that the act of this terrorist will be used to tar their entire movement. They will say that they can't be responsible for the individual acts of every person that follows their path. They will say that it is a terrible tragedy but Dr. Tiller brought this on himself and that God has rendered His judgment.

Bullshit.

If they don't condemn this unequivocally and without a "Yes, but," and if they don't do everything they can to disavow and work to remove these lone wolves, they are as guilty of terrorism as the man who pulled the trigger. They would expect no less from us should there happen to be an act of terrorism from the left. To paraphrase President Jed Barlet, until they do, they can get their fat asses out of the public discourse.

I hold Dr. Tiller and his family in the Light.
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Sunday Reading

Good Relations -- Leonard Pitts on Sonia Sotomayor.
A few words about identity politics.

That's the knock on Sonia Sotomayor, who was nominated to the Supreme Court last week by President Obama. If confirmed, Sotomayor, who is Puerto Rican, will be the first Hispanic to sit on the nation's highest tribunal.

That has traumatized some titans of the right. George Will, for instance, complains that ''she embraces identity politics, including the idea of categorical representation: A person is what his or her race, ethnicity, gender or sexual preference is, and members of a particular category can be represented, understood, empathized with only by persons of the same identity.'' Some go further, alleging that Sotomayor's ethnicity carried greater weight with Obama than her qualifications.

That argument would be a lot more persuasive if the right (Will, to his credit, was the exception that proved the rule) had raised it when John McCain chose Sarah Palin as his running mate on the basis of her chromosomal makeup. Sotomayor, at least, has the aforementioned qualifications. Palin, not so much.

Point being, so-called ''identity politics'' are practiced at both ends of the political spectrum. And I'm not at all convinced that's a bad thing -- particularly where the high court is concerned.

[...]

Contrary to what they'd have us believe, legal judgment is not simply a matter of quoting precedent and applying logic.

It is also a matter of interpretation, and interpretation is shaped by who you are and what you've known.

If precedent and logic alone were definitive, the court could not have decided, for instance, to endorse segregation in 1896 in clear violation of the 14th Amendment. But because of who they were and what they had known, that panel of white men somehow interpreted the amendment as allowing Jim Crow -- a tragic travesty that stood for 58 years.

Would the court have been well-served in 1896 had someone likely to be affected by the ruling been there to offer a counterbalancing interpretation? If the court is debating an issue of importance to women, is not the quality of its deliberation improved if someone in the room is in possession of a uterus?

Yes, emphatically, to both.

Ensuring the presence of diverse people in the deliberation chamber betrays no American principles. Rather, it affirms a core American promise: Liberty and justice.

For all.
From another perspective, what is the trashing of Judge Sotomayor telling the Hispanic community about how the conservatives and the GOP really feel about them? Matthew Yglesias fires back:
As anyone who knows me can attest, I don’t have what you’d call a strong “Hispanic” identity. Three of my four grandparents are Jews from Eastern Europe. My paternal grandfather, José Yglesias, was a Cuban-American born in Florida. But that puts the family’s actual Hispanic ancestry pretty far back in the past. He grew up in a Spanish-dominant immigrant community, but spoke English fluently. My dad grew up in an English-speaking household and knows some Spanish. I took a semester of Spanish at NYU one summer. And Cuban-American political identity in the United States is heavily oriented around a highly ideological far-right approach to Latin America policy that neither I nor anyone else in my family shares. The Yglesiases emigrated from Cuba before the Revolution, José was initially a Castro supporter, and though he gave that up he and my dad and I all share what you might call anti-anti-Castro views.

But for all that, I have to say that I am really truly deeply and personally pissed off my [sic] the tenor of a lot of the commentary on Sonia Sotomayor. The idea that any time a person with a Spanish last name is tapped for a job, his or her entire lifetime of accomplishments is going to be wiped out in a riptide of bitching and moaning about “identity politics” is not a fun concept for me to contemplated. Qualifications like time at Princeton, Yale Law, and on the Circuit Court that work well for guys with Italian names suddenly don’t work if you have a Spanish name. Heaven forbid someone were to decide that there ought to be at least one Hispanic columnist at a major American newspaper.

Somehow, when George W. Bush affects a Texas accent, that’s not identity politics. When John Edwards gets a VP nomination, that’s not identity politics. But Sonia Sotomayor! Oh my heavens!
A Different Kind of Identity Politics -- President Obama's picture is everywhere.
Perhaps not since John F. Kennedy, whose dusty portraits can still be seen in kitchens and barbershops and alongside the antique beer cans at bars like Manuel’s Tavern in Atlanta, has a presidency so fanned the flames of painterly ardor among hobbyist and professional artists.

Mr. Obama’s campaign was well known for inspiring art, including Shepard Fairey’s ubiquitous “Hope” poster, a version of which is now in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington. Months after the election, with the glow of the administration’s first 100 days dimming, it might have been expected that enthusiasm for Obama art would be dimming, too.

Yet the still-ample offerings of original paintings of the president and the first family on eBay and at places like the annual Affordable Art Fair in New York — along with a crop of presidential-art-obsessed Internet sites including obamaartreport.com, artofobama.com and, inevitably, badpaintingsofbarackobama.com — are indications that it might just be a growth industry.

The phenomenon has been a boon to the near-anonymous painting factories crowded together in the suburbs of Shenzhen, China, famous for cranking out copies of masterpieces, along with landscapes and semitasteful nudes. Another one, seemingly based in Germany, offers stately Obamas amid air-brushy likenesses of Tupac Shakur, Bruce Lee and Al Pacino (in his “Scarface” role), advertised as “real hand-embellished” paintings on canvas.
Can black velvet renderings be far behind?

Frank Rich -- The GOP blame game.
The harrowing truth remains unchanged from what it was before Cheney emerged from his bunker to set Washington atwitter. The Bush administration did not make us safer either before or after 9/11. Obama is not making us less safe. If there’s another terrorist attack, it will be because the mess the Bush administration ignored in Pakistan and Afghanistan spun beyond anyone’s control well before Americans could throw the bums out.
Doonesbury -- God and money.

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Short Takes

GM bankruptcy is tomorrow.

Iranian plane bomb defused.

Venezuela buys missiles.

Lifting the embargo could be good and bad for Florida business.

In search of picinic baskets, perhaps? -- bear still on the loose in Florida.

Susan Boyle places second.

Tigers win 6-3 in Baltimore.
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Saturday, May 30, 2009

Saturday Night Video

All in favor...


HT to Misty at Shakesville.
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Cooler Heads

After hearing Newt Gingrich carry on like his home was in a tree about Judge Sonia Sotomayor (not to mention convicted felon G. Gordon Liddy speculate about her lady bits), it's a relief to hear some conservative commentators telling the rest of the wild bunch to dial it back. Kathleen Parker in the Washington Post:
When Republicans appoint justices (seven of the nine currently serving), they're merely brilliant men who happen to be Italian American or African American -- without any political or identity considerations whatsoever.

Then again, perhaps Sotomayor is an experienced jurist who happens to be a woman (check) and a Latina (check), who also happens to have the qualities Obama prefers, plus a spiffy résumé: Princeton University Pyne Prize winner, Yale Law Journal editor, 17 years on the federal bench. Some call that a trifecta. Yet, you'd think from the onslaught that she runs a chain of abortion clinics.

Although her judicial record has raised some legitimate concerns, Sotomayor isn't so easily characterized as the radical liberal that some on the right have suggested. She has ruled favorably toward abortion protesters and unfavorably toward minority plaintiffs.

Nevertheless, most criticism has been aimed at perceived racist-sexist remarks from a 2001 diversity speech in which Sotomayor suggested that she, as a Latina, could be more qualified than a white guy. Pause: Don't most women think they're more qualified than most men when it comes to making wise decisions? Kidding, kidding.

What she said: "I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life." Sotomayor may be misguided, but she isn't necessarily a sexist-racist. I say this as a mother of white males (perfect in every way) and author of "Save the Males." Notwithstanding the preceding, I see her point.

Could a white man get away with saying something comparable about a Latina? Of course not. After Latinas have run the world for 2,000 years, they won't be able to say it ever again either.
And Peggy Noonan, who still lights incense sticks at her little backyard shrine to St. Ronald, tells the right wing to act like grown-ups.
Some, and they are idiots, look at Judge Sotomayor and say: attack, attack, kill. A conservative activist told the New York Times, "We need to brand her." Another told me a fight is needed to excite the base.

Excite the base? How about excite a moderate, or interest an independent? How about gain the attention of people who aren't already on your side?

[...]

Barring extraordinary revelations, Judge Sotomayor is going to be confirmed. She's going to win. She does not appear to be as liberal or left-wing as others who could have been picked. She seems reminiscent of the justice she will replace, David Souter. She will likely come across in hearings as smart, spirited, a middle-aged woman who's lived a life of grit, determination and American-dream proving.

Republicans can be liberated by the fact that they're outnumbered and likely about to lose. They can step back, breathe in, and use the Sotomayor confirmation hearings to perform a public service: Find out what the future justice thinks and why she thinks it, explain what they think and why they think it, look at the two different philosophies, if that's what they are. Don't make it sparring, make it thinking.

Don't grill and grandstand, summon and inform. Show the respect that expresses equality and the equality that is an expression of respect. Ask and listen, get the logic, explain where you think it wrong. Fill the airwaves with thoughtful exchanges.
Based on the Republicans' performance since the inauguration of President Obama, I think there's a better chance that Rush Limbaugh will don a tutu, then flap his arms and fly to the moon. And right now, he and people who talk like him are the ones running the show.

It's beginning to dawn on even the more reliable right-wingers that some of their brethren have gone into Cloud-Cuckooland and that if they don't dial it back they will be relegated to the same place as the urine-soaked homeless guy who stands on the corner of the street and screams about the implants in his head. And this is only five months into the first term of the Obama administration.
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Comments

Yesterday the bugs got into the comment system; some would disappear only to show up again, and the counter was whacked. JS-Kit says it's been fixed, so comment away.
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Short Takes

Cool it -- Secretary of Defense Gates warns North Korea not to keep testing nukes.

Make it "timely" -- Obama wants Judge Sotomayor confirmed without delay.

High hopes -- GM wants to pay back loans from the federal government in five years.

Bill and George hang out in Toronto.

Good luck collecting it -- Court awards man $1B in his lawsuit against Fidel Castro.

Tigers lose again in Baltimore; still lead the division.

Saturday Morning Chuckle -- Don't mess with this pedestrian.


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Friday, May 29, 2009

Question of the Day

Pixar releases their latest film called Up today. So in honor of that...
What's your favorite animated film?
I divide myself between the two types of animation: the films made with hand-drawn cels like the Disney classics that took years to make, and the new CGI ones that take almost as long and require as much skill with a mouse (no pun intended) as the hand-drawn need with a pencil and paint brush.

Mine would be Fantasia in the first group and Ratatouille in the second.

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Glass Reflections

Just something to meditate on after a long week....

Last weekend when I was in Ohio we visited the Toledo Museum of Art's Glass Pavilion. In the foyer is this amazing piece of sculpture by Dale Chihuly:


Click pic to embiggen... and enjoy.
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Would You Buy a Used Conspiracy Theory...?

In case you're not keeping track, the latest evil plot that Barack Obama is cooking up is buried in the Chrysler bankruptcy: by shutting down over 700 dealerships, he's exacting revenge against car dealers who gave money to the GOP in the 2008 election. OMG; has the man no shame?

Yeah, that would work except, as Nate Silver at FiveThirtyEight points out, there's little flaw in the logic:
Nobody has bothered to look up data for the control group: the list of dealerships which aren't being closed. It turns out that all car dealers are, in fact, overwhelmingly more likely to donate to Republicans than to Democrats -- not just those who are having their doors closed.

[...]

It shouldn't be any surprise, by the way, that car dealers tend to vote -- and donate -- Republican. They are usually male, they are usually older (you don't own an auto dealership in your 20s), and they have obvious reasons to be pro-business, pro-tax cut, anti-green energy and anti-labor. Car dealerships need quite a bit of space and will tend to be located in suburban or rural areas. I can't think of too many other occupations that are more natural fits for the Republican Party. Unfortunately, while we are still a nation of drivers, we are not a nation of dealers.
Maybe they should move along to the next hush-hush conspiracy: a vast majority of Democrats voted for Barack Obama in last year's election. What's up with that?
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Oh, Christ

Red State blogger Erick Erickson thinks Rush Limbaugh, whom he perceives is under attack from fellow right-wingers, is comparable to Jesus Christ.
Peter, under pressure and fear, denied Christ not just once, but three times. Peter, though, feared death. The strain on Peter was great. The rest of us, though, typically fear the opinions of others.

There are those who like it when we feel guilty for associating with someone. More troubling, in the conservative movement and in the greater right-of-center coalition, there are many, many fellow traveller who would rather spend their time throwing their own under the bus than fighting the left...

The incidents of late with Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Dick Cheney, and others is why I raise this. Putting it bluntly, were these guys on the left, their fellow leftists would at best be cheering them on and at worst silently nodding along. There wouldn't be any on that side rushing to the nearest microphone to condemn them...

As an aside, perhaps an even greater bother are the high minded types on our side who condemn any level of aggressive activism because it is icky, mean, or beneath us. There is a war going on. We fight. Suck it up.
I'm pretty sure that even a casual follower of Christianity would find it pretty creepy to hear their Lord and Savior compared to a flaming gasbag in a glass booth. Not to mention the fact that it's tough finding a crown of thorns that will fit over that inflated head of his.
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Epic Flail

Another day, another series of attacks on Judge Sonia Sotomayor:
  • John Derbyshire doesn't buy her "compelling life story" --
    The woman grew up in the capital of the world, went to two Ivy League schools, and was blessed by Providence with the precisely correct right race-gender two-fer for the moment.

    This is a story of privilege, dammit, not adversity.
    Yeah, the projects in the South Bronx are really the Hamptons. Who knew?
  • Former Rep. Tom Tancredo notes that she belongs to La Raza, which he calls the "Latin KKK." (It's closer to the NAACP, but they all look alike to him.)
  • The New York Times says that she has a "sharp tongue" which could "raise issues" on the court. If so, she would be in good company with Justice Antonin Scalia, who is not known for verbal restraint.
  • Karl Rove said that Judge Sotomayor would not be the first Hispanic justice on the court; he says that honor fell to Benjamin Cardozo, whom Mr. Rove claims to have been "Sephardic." Actually, Mr. Cardozo's ancestors came from England and Holland, and even if there's a link to Portugal, it's not a Hispanic country. Hispanic refers to people who came from Spanish-speaking countries, and in Portugal they speak -- wait for it -- Portuguese. (If you think they're all alike, tell that to someone from Lisbon. Or Madrid.)
  • Charles Krauthammer and David Brooks square off over "empathy." Dr. K suggests that the Senate Judiciary Committee beat the crap out of her during her confirmation hearing, then, duly chastened and on notice, send her off to the Court. Mr. Brooks, in his normal equivocation, cautions that there's good empathy and bad empathy, and he hopes for the best.
So far none of these off-the-wall pronouncements and accusations appear to be having any effect on the populace. Rasmussen polling, which tilts to the right, reports that 87% of respondents say that she will be confirmed and 45% say she should be. And while watching all the histrionics and spluttering is amusing in the same way that watching a dog chase his tail or a cat go after a laser beam, I'm still sticking with my prediction that she will be confirmed with at least 80 votes, even if Sen. Pat Roberts (R-KS) has already made up his mind even before the confirmation hearings.

HT to Media Matters.
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Short Takes

Trouble in Pakistan -- The Taliban is talking about attacking major cities; several bombings have occurred.

Car Deal -- GM worked out a deal with their bondholders, but it may not stave off bankruptcy.

Cybersoldiers -- The Pentagon plans to wage war against cyber attacks.

Unsettling -- Obama takes tough stance with Israel over settlements.

Latin America wants Cuba back in the OAS; so far the US isn't budging much and Cuba says they're not interested.

Happy Ending -- Miami works out a deal with the producers of Burn Notice; it stays in the Grove.

Rushing the season -- The first tropical depression forms in the Atlantic; heading out to sea.

Tigers lose opener to the Orioles 5-1 in Baltimore.
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Friday Blogaround

Where did May go? Wow, what a month. Let's see what the LC had to say this week.
- A Blog Around The Clock: tick tick tick!
- All Facts and Opinions: "Glad to be Gay"
- archy: A two-fer about mammoths.
- Bark Bark Woof Woof: Hollywood ending.
- Bloggg on Joe Sestak.
- Dohiyi Mir: Gaza news.
- Echidne Of The Snakes: hunting Sonia.
- Florida Progressive Coalition Blog: interesting idea about who should replace Alex Sink as Florida's CFO.
- ...I Am A Tree: "Post-Apocalyptic Hippie Fest"
- Iddybud Journal: Camillus Memorial Day Parade
- Left Is Right: why Obama can't fix our country.
- Musing's musings: California, here I come .... not.
- Pen-Elayne on the Web: jerky business cards
- Rook's Rant: she is what she eats (you're welcome, Rook)
- rubber hose: ignorant-or-misleading?
- Scrutiny Hooligans: strange bedfellows
- Speedkill: new ideas
- Steve Bates, The Yellow Doggerel Democrat: Oh, Ben...
- Stupid Enough Unexplanation: child's play
- The Invisible Library: there's still gay marriage in California.
- WTF Is It Now?? grade school civics.
Have a great Memorial Day [traditional] tomorrow.
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Friday Catblogging

Catching up with Snowball's buddy in Ohio...


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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Quote of the Day

From Rook:
Okay, look. The conservatives don't have a problem with empathy. They have a problem with where that empathy is employed. If it's employed towards minorities, BAD. If it's employed towards old white guys, GOOD.

Got that?
Thanks for clearing that up.
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Alito the Activist

According to Karl Rove, "empathy" is a code word for judicial activism.
Mr. Obama said he wanted to replace Justice David Souter with someone who had "empathy" and who'd temper the court's decisions with a concern for the downtrodden, the powerless and the voiceless.

"Empathy" is the latest code word for liberal activism, for treating the Constitution as malleable clay to be kneaded and molded in whatever form justices want. It represents an expansive view of the judiciary in which courts create policy that couldn't pass the legislative branch or, if it did, would generate voter backlash.
This must be a new code word enacted since 1991 because President George H. W. Bush thought it was a fine quality to have in a Supreme Court Justice back then. And apparently Samuel Alito didn't get the memo either, because he certainly spoke eloquently about that quality when he was being confirmed in 2006.
"[W]hen a case comes before me involving, let's say, someone who is an immigrant -- and we get an awful lot of immigration cases and naturalization cases -- I can't help but think of my own ancestors, because it wasn't that long ago when they were in that position.

"And so it's my job to apply the law. It's not my job to change the law or to bend the law to achieve any result. But when I look at those cases, I have to say to myself, and I do say to myself, 'You know, this could be your grandfather, this could be your grandmother. They were not citizens at one time, and they were people who came to this country.' ...

"When I get a case about discrimination, I have to think about people in my own family who suffered discrimination because of their ethnic background or because of religion or because of gender. And I do take that into account."
I guess he got through Mr. Rove's vetting process because he doesn't actually use the word "empathy," and he does talk about avoiding "bending the law," but what the learned counsel is describing is exactly what President Obama and Judge Sotomayor were talking about when they used the term "empathy."

It's also a little more than ironic that were it not for judicial activism on the Supreme Court in 2000, Karl Rove wouldn't have spent seven years working out of the White House instead of the state capital in Austin, trying to keep Gov. George W. Bush occupied while he ran the state of Texas for him.

HT to Steve.
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Making a Federal Case Out of It

Two unlikely allies -- Theodore Olson and David Boies, who last faced off over Bush v. Gore in 2000 -- are working together to take California's Prop 8 to federal court.
“Ted and I, as everybody knows, have been on different sides in court on a couple of issues,” said Mr. Boies, who represented Al Gore in Bush v. Gore, the contested 2000 vote count in Florida in which Mr. Olson prevailed for George W. Bush. “But this is not something that is a partisan issue. This is something that is a civil rights issue.”

The duo’s complaint, filed last week in Federal District Court in San Francisco on behalf of two gay couples and formally announced Wednesday at a news conference in Los Angeles, argues against Proposition 8 on the basis of federal constitutional guarantees of equal protection and due process.

In the end, the two lawyers suggested, the case might take them, again, to the United States Supreme Court. While neither man claimed any special connection to the gay community — they are working “partially pro-bono,” Mr. Olson said — both said they had been touched by the stories of the same-sex couples unable to marry in California.

“If you look into the eyes and hearts of people who are gay and talk to them about this issue, that reinforces in the most powerful way possible the fact that these individuals deserve to be treated equally,” Mr. Olson said at the news conference.

“I couldn’t have said it better,” said Mr. Boies, patting Mr. Olson on the back.
While I appreciate the sentiment and I am grateful to have such high-powered voices raised in support of marriage equality, I can't help but wonder a couple of things. It's not as if this is the first time someone has suggested going through the federal courts to challenge the host of federal rules and laws -- including the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) -- that have been enacted over the years. But a lot of the gay-rights groups have learned something from watching what happens when laws governing such things as civil rights or abortion rights have been dealt with through the federal courts rather than at the local or legislative level. It hands the opponents of such rights the cudgel of "outside agitators" or "activist judges" which makes for screaming headlines and talk-radio resentment against the all-powerful federal government riding roughshod over states' rights, and in some cases it would tear up years of grassroots efforts by people who have been working to craft local acceptance or overturn state laws.

Such a suit also runs the risk of being lost. Popular opinion may be shifting towards acceptance of marriage equality, and several states such as Maine and Vermont have passed laws to make same-sex marriage legal, but in front of a still-conservative Supreme Court, the outcome could be different. Mr. Olson, however, seems to think that the Court could be persuaded.
Mr. Olson seemed confident that the makeup of the Supreme Court was right because of the presence of Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, pointing to two cases in which gay rights groups prevailed — a sodomy case in Texas and a constitutional ban on local antidiscrimination laws in Colorado — in which Justice Kennedy wrote the majority opinion. “We studied this very, very carefully,” he said, adding that it was difficult to tell clients, “‘Why don’t you go back and wait another five years?’”
That may be, but two things come to mind. First, the example of Roe v. Wade shows that just because the Supreme Court ruled in 1973 that a woman's right to choose was in the Constitution, the ruling obviously did not end the debate or the lawsuits. Neither, for that matter, did Brown v. Board of Education end school segregation in 1954. An argument could be made that the Supreme Court in both cases actually set back the causes they were supposed to help by fueling resentment against the federal government and its sledgehammer approach. The same thing could happen with marriage equality. Second, and this is showing a bit of tin-foil-hat paranoia, it occurs to me that the motive behind this suit could be to force the issue into the docket of the Supreme Court with the hope that it will lose, thereby setting back gay rights. I hasten to add that I am not accusing either Mr. Olson or Mr. Boies of conspiring to destroy the case for marriage equality by feigning to help it, but I can't help but wonder where they were when Prop 8 was on the ballot a year ago.

The lesson of Roe v. Wade is that sometimes it's better to work to win your case on a person-to-person, state-by-state level rather than get a sweeping pronouncement on a federal level. If there are federal laws that need to be repealed such as the Defense of Marriage Act or enacted such as the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA), then let us work to do so through the legislative process. If the states can provide for marriage equality, then let's work at that level rather than a cookie-cutter/one-size-fits-all approach, and not provide the anti-gay forces with the ammunition to battle against judicial rulings (and with irony working on all cylinders, go to court) and claim that "the people" had no say in the matter. It may take a little longer and be harder to achieve than hoping for a 5-4 ruling from the Supremes, but no one can say that the fight isn't worth it.
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Flailings -- In a Pig's Foot

The right wing noise machine is going into overdrive trying to come up with something with which to tar Judge Sonia Sotomayor before the Senate confirms her to the Supreme Court. If the last couple of days are any guide, you really have to marvel at the lengths and depths they will go to to come up with something -- anything -- to attack her with. It's almost inspired.

First there's the usual taking-out-of-context of words from a speech she gave in 2001 that Newt Gingrich says are so bigoted that she should withdraw her name; except when you read the speech you realize it's nothing of the sort (to the point that conservative columnist Rod Dreher says he was wrong about her). Then Karl Rove claims that her educational background is inconsequential; "I know lots of stupid people who went to Ivy League schools." Okay, who wants to hit that one out of the park? Rush Limbaugh calls her a "reverse racist," whatever the hell that means

From there we go into the land of the truly desperate. Mark Krikorian at the National Review, demands that we shouldn't be forced to pronounce her name correctly but conform to "English" pronunciation to assert her "assimilation." Not only is it blatantly bigoted (not to mention channeling the Borg), I wonder if Mr. Krikorian knows -- or cares -- that Spanish surnames have been in North America a lot longer than America has been a country, that someone from Puerto Rico doesn't have to "assimilate" because they've been citizens of the United States for nearly a century, and anyone named "Krikorian" has no right to tell someone else that they should make their name easier to pronounce unless they want to sound like a complete ignoramus.

But wait, it gets better. There's actually someone who thinks that because Judge Sotomayor likes Puerto Rican cuisine, that might be a sign that she's an "activist" judge. I kid you not.
According to Hill reporter Alexander Bolton, "This has prompted some Republicans to muse privately about whether Sotomayor is suggesting that distinctive Puerto Rican cuisine such as patitas de cerdo con garbanzo -- pigs' tongue and ears -- would somehow, in some small way influence her verdicts from the bench."
Curt Levey, the executive director of the Committee for Justice, a conservative-leaning advocacy group, said he wasn't certain whether Sotomayor had claimed her palate would color her view of legal facts but he said that President Obama's Supreme Court nominee clearly touts her subjective approach to the law.
Slightly gobsmacked, I called Bolton earlier today and asked him whether this was for real--whether any conservatives were genuinely raising this issue. He confirmed, saying, "a source I spoke to said people were discussing that her [speech] had brought attention...she intimates that what she eats somehow helps her decide cases better."

Bolton said the source was drawing, "a deductive link," between Sotomayor's thoughts on Puerto Rican food and her other statements. And I guess the chain goes something like this: 1). Sotomayor implied that her Latina identity informs her jurisprudence, 2). She also implied that Puerto Rican cuisine is a crucial part of her Latina identity, 3). Ergo, her gastronomical proclivities will be a non-negligible factor for her when she's considering cases before the Supreme Court.

Got it? Good. This is the conservative opposition to Sotomayor.
(Ed. Note: TPM notes the correct translation of the menu -- pig's feet, not ears -- here.)

If this is the best that the wingnuts have got going for them, then apparently we've found the summer replacement for America's Funniest Videos. Get out the popcorn.
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Short Takes

Baghdad bombings kill US solider.

South Korea and US troops are on alert as North Korea gets more belligerent.

Burris vs. tapes -- Illinois senator says they prove he wasn't trying to buy his appointment.

According to TPM, Rep. Joe Sestak (D-PA) will challenge Sen. Arlen Specter in the Democratic primary in Pennsylvania.

Not Amused -- Queen Elizabeth is left out of D-Day ceremonies.

$66.5 billion
budget signed by Gov. Crist.

Father Jean-Juste, Haitian spiritual leader dies in Miami.

Don't Smile -- Virginia wants a "neutral expression" on your driver's license.

Tigers beat KC 8-3 and head for Camden Yards.
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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

He's Got Your Empathy Right Here

President George H.W. Bush at the announcement of the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court in July 1991:
He is a delightful and warm, intelligent person who has great empathy and a wonderful sense of humor.
I guess empathy ain't what it used to be.

HT to TPMDC.
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Question of the Day

This one occurred to me this last weekend as the family sat around and reminisced about summertime activities.
When was the last time you went to a drive-in movie?
I think it was in 1979 in Benzonia, Michigan. I went with some friends to see Blazing Saddles (again) at the Cherry Bowl Drive-In.
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Quote of the Day

Former Gov. Mike Huckabee on the Supreme Court nomination:
The appointment of Maria Sotomayor for the Supreme Court is the clearest indication yet that President Obama's campaign promises to be a centrist and think in a bipartisan way were mere rhetoric. [Emphasis added.]
Her name is Sonia. That's what happens when the closest you've come to dealing with Latinas is listening to your original cast album of West Side Story.

To be fair, the error has been corrected.
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Hollywood Ending

As I noted last night, I can't say that I'm surprised with the outcome of the California State Supreme Court ruling yesterday that upheld Prop 8's ban on same-sex marriage. I am not a lawyer and so I can't dissect the ruling in those terms, but what I gather is that same-sex couples are entitled to all the rights and responsibilities that straight couples are except the term "marriage." That sounds suspiciously like "separate but equal," and apparently there are still some rights that same-sex couples are not privy to which the state legislature must still address.

Andrew Sullivan calls the ruling "perfect."
It would have been dreadful if voters were retroactively told their valid vote was somehow null and void - it would have felt like a bait and switch and provoked a horrible backlash.
While I can't say I'm 100% behind him on the emotional level, as a practical matter of law he's right; to overturn the referendum on the thin reeds that the opponents made in their case before the court would have made a mockery of both the court and the process, and all it would have done is dragged it through another series of purgatory-inducing suits and trials. The opponents of marriage equality won that round, and the way -- at least in California -- is to beat them at their own game. Proponents should put up a referendum of their own and make their case for repeal. And this time they should proceed as if they have everything on the line, not like they did last year and take it for granted that the voters were with them on it.

In a separate ruling the court let stand the 18,000-plus same-sex marriages that were performed between the time the court ruled that straight-only marriage was unconstitutional and the time that Prop 8 was approved. That was a no-brainer; ex-post facto laws are a violation of both the state and federal constitutions. But, as Dan Savage pointed out, it's going to be interesting to see how the anti-gay forces take that.
The anti-gay bigots said before the decision that they wanted Prop 8 upheld and they weren't concerned about the 18K gay couples who wed while same-sex marriage was briefly legal in CA. That exposes their fundamental dishonesty. If they believe, as they claimed during the campaign, that married same-sex couples are a threat to the family, a threat to children, an invitation to hurricanes and earthquakes and wildfires, and that the existence of married gay couples somehow requires homosexuality to be taught in schools, how can they be indifferent to 18K married gay couples rattling around the state? Won't all those bad things still happen?

Either they don't believe any of that crap—and many don't—or they intend to go after the 18K couples whose marriages were declared legal.
What I find interesting is that while a lot of drama and demonstrations have been playing out in California and there have been a lot of wars of words between opposing sides out there, marriage equality has been quietly taking place in places like Vermont and Maine where the state legislatures have already changed the laws, and New York is working on it. New Hampshire was on the verge of passing it until it hit a speed bump regarding dispensations for religious groups, and hopefully it will be worked out. California may be the trendsetter in a lot of things such as fashion and hipness and they may have all the flash and celebrity of Hollywood, but when it comes to same-sex marriage, they are becoming practically irrelevant, and the example they have set is a case study in how not to achieve it.
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Identity Politics

The right wing talking points against Sonia Sotomayor seem to boil down to three main tags: she's a radical liberal, she's not that bright, and she was picked solely because she's a Latina. Joan Walsh at Salon does a nice job of debunking all three of them, including the fact that if she wasn't so smart, how did she end up as graduating summa cum laude at Princeton and editor of the Yale Law Journal? (Yale's reputation may have suffered thanks to George W. Bush, but it's still a major law school.) I don't think that it's a good idea for the Republicans to be questioning Ms. Sotomayor's bona fides especially when they still have Harriet Miers on YouTube. No slight meant to Ms. Miers, but if they really thought -- for three weeks -- that she was the yardstick by which Supreme Court nominees should be measured, Ms. Sotomayor more than meets it without even taking off her coat. Being called an "intellectual lightweight" by the acolytes of Mr. Bush calls into question their grasp of irony.

The biggest issue that the right wing is wrestling with is the race/gender issue. Apparently they are concerned that because Ms. Sotomayor is female and Hispanic, that might have an "undue" influence on her decisions. Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK) summed it up:
Of primary concern to me is whether or not Judge Sotomayor follows the proper role of judges and refrains from legislating from the bench. Some of her recent comments on this matter have given me cause for great concern. In the months ahead, it will be important for those of us in the U.S. Senate to weigh her qualifications and character as well as her ability to rule fairly without undue influence from her own personal race, gender, or political preferences.
This also seems to be a concern of George F. Will:
And like conventional liberals, she embraces identity politics, including the idea of categorical representation: A person is what his or her race, ethnicity, gender, or sexual preference is, and members of a particular category can be represented -- understood, empathized with -- only by persons of the same identity.
Oddly enough, I don't remember either Mr. Inhofe or Mr. Will raising such a concern about Chief Justice John Roberts or Justice Samuel Alito and their white Catholic upbringing, or Justice Clarence Thomas and his hardscrabble upbringing in Georgia and affirmative action acceptance at Yale. The only "identity politics" that are acceptable are those that they can identify with and hence everyone on the Supreme Court should be a prissy white guy or an African-American who agrees with their political points of view. Every person sees the world through the lens of "what his or her race, ethnicity, gender, or sexual preference is." What other way is there? Anyone who says they don't is either a liar or a fool and has no business being in a position of power in our lives or our government.

The problem Mr. Inhofe and Mr. Will have with Ms. Sotomayor's identity is that it doesn't match theirs, and therefore must be suspect. That's the one aspect of identity politics they seem to be unable to identify.
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Short Takes

Sabres are rattling in the Korean peninsula.

We will own 70% of GM under new deal.

Meanwhile, Chrysler is about to get their act together and hit the road.

Into the VAT -- Some suggest the value-added tax would be the solution to our money woes.

Sen. Roland Burris (D-IL) was caught on tape offering to write Gov. Rod Blagojevich a check.

Mike Tyson's daughter dies after accident.

Veterans Day parade may be history in Homestead over a Confederate flag flap.

School scandal
-- A teacher at a Hialeah private religious school is under arrest for having an affair with a 15-year-old. (His mom was okay with it....)

Enough already -- It's rained more in South Florida over the last week than it has in the last six months. The forecast calls for more of the same.

The serial cat killer is still out there in South Dade County -- three more bodies found; reward upped.

Tigers lose 6-1 to KC.
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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Safe at Home

The flight from Chicago landed 20 minutes late due to diverting around storms in Florida, then we sat in the waiting area for another 45 minutes while they found us a gate. People with connections were in freak mode.

Anyway, here I am, back home in Miami. I saw the CNN monitors in O'Hare with the news about the California Prop 8 ruling. It is not a surprise but it is still a disappointment, even with the silver lining of the ruling that the 18,000 same-sex marriages performed there during the time between the ruling last May and the November referendum are still valid. That should make some interesting case law in the future. There is already a move afoot to get a referendum on the ballot in 2010 to repeal Prop 8.

All have more on this in the morning. As it is, I'm tired and I am craving a peanut butter sandwich before I go to bed.
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Travel Day

The route is TOL to ORD to MIA to BED.

It was a nice long weekend with lots of the usual family dynamics and celebration of Mom's birthday and catching up with siblings and friends and lots of good food and other stuff, including a walk along the Maumee River that brought back a lot of memories of times exploring along the banks when I was a kid. I even got to watch a Tigers game on TV -- something you have to pay for in Miami.

See you on when I get home. By then I will have formulated a response to the California State Supreme Court ruling on Prop 8.
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Obama to Nominate Sonia Sotomayor to SCOTUS

This is from MSNBC:
President Barack Obama tapped federal appeals judge Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court on Tuesday, officials said, making her the first Hispanic in history picked to wear the robes of a justice.

If confirmed by the Senate, Sotomayor, 54, would succeed retiring Justice David Souter. Two officials described Obama's decision on condition of anonymity because no formal announcement had been made.

Administration officials say Sotomayor would bring more judicial experience to the Supreme Court than any justice confirmed in the past 70 years.

A formal announcement is scheduled for 10:15 a.m. ET in the East Room of the White House.

Obama had said publicly he wanted a justice who combined intellect and empathy — the ability to understand the troubles of everyday Americans.

Democrats hold a large majority in the Senate, and barring the unexpected, Sotomayor's confirmation should be assured.

If approved, she would join Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg as the second woman on the current court.
I'm sure the wingnuts have a full barrage lined up and ready to fire -- Joe Scarborough was citing her "far-out" rulings this morning -- but that's what they've been gearing up for since before Souter announced his retirement: they were going to be against anyone President Obama nominated just as an autonomic response. And there have been the threats of a filibuster by some Republicans, who have conveniently forgotten that just a few years ago, when Samuel Alito was nominated and the Democrats muttered about blocking his appointment, they termed filibustering a judicial nominee as unconstitutional. But that now that there's a Democrat in the White House, it's perfectly acceptable. Rail on, supercilious twits.

I'm guessing, based on her confirmation to the federal bench in 1998, that she'll be confirmed by more than 80 votes in the Senate.

Bio of Judge Sotomayor here.

HT to TPM.
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The Next Right Wing Meme

According to Forbes, Barack Obama is the new Jimmy Carter; weak and wishy-washy in the face of the threats from North Korea's nuclear sabre-rattling.

But wait; wasn't Barack Obama the next Hitler or Chairman Mao, the hard-core socialist dictator who dispatched his opponents without mercy? At least that's what they were telling us back in the days of the teabagging demonstrations or as David Brooks seems to suggest.

I really wish they would make up their minds; it's hard to keep track.
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When You're Desperate

The latest argument against same-sex marriage comes from Sam Shulman at The Weekly Standard. He's given up on invoking biblical mythology and bigotry and tries to approach it from some sort of social-construct angle in which he believes that gays don't conform to the norm of marriage because they're not programmed to accept marriage as the ball-and-chain type of set-up that straight couples have.
The entity known as “gay marriage” only aspires to replicate a very limited, very modern, and very culture-bound version of marriage. Gay advocates have chosen wisely in this. They are replicating what we might call the “romantic marriage,” a kind of marriage that is chosen, determined, and defined by the couple that enters into it. Romantic marriage is now dominant in the West and is becoming slightly more frequent in other parts of the world. But it is a luxury and even here has only existed (except among a few elites) for a couple of centuries–and in only a few countries. The fact is that marriage is part of a much larger institution, which defines the particular shape and character of marriage: the kinship system.
The kinship system is based on the idea that a straight couple will develop a bond with their in-laws and become a part of a larger family: the groom will go hunting with his father-in-law and the new bride will go shopping with her mother-in-law and the family will grow, whereas gay couples are shunned by the extended family and can never produce the grandchildren that are the glue that bonds the family together. Apparently Mr. Schulman has missed out on centuries of mother-in-law jokes (even Shakespeare had them) or he is reinforcing the stereotype that gay family members are still isolated from their family and that their partners are not welcome in the family at all. I don't know where he does his research, but if it's purely anecdotal, he's several generations behind.

His next argument, however, proves that he is truly and desperately grasping at straws when he says that the purpose of straight marriage is to protect women. Really.
The first is the most important: It is that marriage is concerned above all with female sexuality. The very existence of kinship depends on the protection of females from rape, degradation, and concubinage. This is why marriage between men and women has been necessary in virtually every society ever known. Marriage, whatever its particular manifestation in a particular culture or epoch, is essentially about who may and who may not have sexual access to a woman when she becomes an adult, and is also about how her adulthood--and sexual accessibility--is defined.
Wow. Just wow. Like reproductive choice, this conservative argument comes down to what matters most: controlling the woman and her uterus, and domestic violence and spousal abuse happens only when women don't remember their place. Apparently that's the most important lesson Mr. Schulman has taken away from his three failed marriages.

In the end he believes that same-sex marriage is just a fad, like pet rocks.
When, in spite of current enthusiasm, gay marriage turns out to disappoint or bore the couples now so eager for its creation, its failure will be utterly irrelevant for gay people. The happiness of gay relationships up to now has had nothing to do with being married or unmarried; nor will they in the future. I suspect that the gay marriage movement will be remembered as a faintly humorous, even embarrassing stage in the liberation saga of the gay minority. The archetypal gay wedding portrait--a pair of middle-aged women or paunchy men looking uncomfortable in rented outfits worn at the wrong time of day--is destined to be hung in the same gallery of dated images of social progress alongside snapshots of flappers defiantly puffing cigarettes and Kodachromes of African Americans wearing dashikis. The freedom of gays to live openly as they please will easily survive the death of gay marriage.
Yes, everybody knows that us queers are just flighty and trendy and when we get bored with it like we did with smoked-glass interior design and South Beach, we'll move on to something else, like brunching. To quote Woody Allen, I love being reduced to a cultural stereotype.

I realize that Mr. Schulman wants his readers to take him seriously, but it's so obvious that he's got nothing other than misogyny and stereotypes of both women and gays. As Pam points out, the arguments he uses are the same that were used to oppose women's suffrage a century ago and civil rights fifty years after that. Those uppity women and blacks didn't know their place, and look what happened.

There may be cogent and intellectually honest arguments out there against marriage equality -- although I have yet to hear one -- but this claptrap sure isn't one of them.

HT to Sadly, No!
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Short Takes

Now What? Dealing with North Korea is a global problem.

Short List -- Obama is down to four for the Supreme Court.

New NASA Chief nominee, Charles Bolden, is a former astronaut.

Colin Powell is more popular than Dick Cheney and Rush Limbaugh. What a shock.

Today is the day of the California State Supreme Court ruling on Prop 8.

Cuba welcomes migration talks.

Tigers wallop KC
13-1 in KC; they lead the division by four games and are in third place overall in the league.
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Monday, May 25, 2009

Band of Brothers

Scenes and the main theme from the HBO series Band of Brothers, and a reminder of what today is really about.


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Memorial Day

I'm back in Perrysburg, the town where I grew up. It's a small town in Ohio, a suburb of Toledo, and when I was a kid in the 1950's and '60's, it fit all of the images that small towns in the Midwest have: tree-shaded streets, neat homes, lots of churches, and a main street -- Louisiana Avenue -- with little shops like the drug store with the fountain, the dime store, the barber shop, the hardware store, the bakery with the smell of bread baking and the sweet scent of icing, and the bank with the solid stone exterior. They're all still there, just under different names now, and my parents, who still live there, still call the drug store by its old name, even though it's changed owners and become a jewelry shop. In the winter the Christmas decorations line the street, and each Memorial Day there is a parade that starts at the Schaller Memorial, the veterans hall, and proceeds up Louisiana Avenue, taking a turn when it reaches the Oliver Hazard Perry Memorial ("We have met the enemy and they are ours...") and marches down West Front Street past the old Victorian homes that overlook the Maumee River.

When I was a kid the parade was made up of the veterans groups like the American Legion and the VFW, and platoons of soldiers and veterans, including, through the 1970's, the last remaining veterans of World War I. They wore their uniforms and their medals, and those that couldn't march sat in the back seat of convertibles, waving slowly to the crowds that lined the sidewalks. They were followed by the marching band from the high school, the color guard, the Cub Scouts, the Boy Scouts, the Girl Scouts, the drum and bugle corps, floats from church groups, all of the city fire equipment, antique cars, and the service groups like the Shriners, the Elks, and the Kiwanis Club. After the last float came all the kids on their bicycles decorated with streamers, bunting, flags, and all the patriotic paperwork we could muster. My friends and I would try to outdo each other, and it had less to do with patriotism than it did with seeing how many rolls of red, white, and blue crepe paper we could thread in between the spokes of our wheels.

I was about ten or so on one Memorial Day when I spent a lot of time getting my Schwinn Racer ready for the big parade. It was a perfect day; the sky was a sparkling spring blue and all the floats, cars, and fire trucks were gleaming in the sun as the parade organized on Indiana Avenue in front of the Memorial Hall. The high school band in their yellow and black uniforms marched in precision as the major led off with a Sousa tune, and as the parade slowly made its way down the avenue we could see the crowds along the sidewalks waiting and waving. As we waited our turn we wheeled our bikes in circles, just like the Shriners in their little go-karts, and finally we got the signal that it was time for the kids to roll. There was an organized rush to lead off, and then we were slowly pedaling down the street, waving to everybody outside the library, the Chevy dealership, even the people lined up on the roof of the pizza parlor. I looked for my dad shooting movies with the 8mm camera, but didn't see him. Oh, well, it didn't matter; we were supposed to meet at the home of friends who were hosting a post-parade picnic in their backyard. Their house was at the end of the parade route, so that was the perfect place to pull out of the parade and have the first of many Faygo Redpops that summer.

But for some reason I stayed with the parade, on down West Front, and then up West Boundary and past the gates of Fort Meigs Cemetery. The floats and the fire trucks were gone, but what was left of the parade -- the color guard and the veterans -- went through the gates and along the path. There was no music now, just a solemn drumbeat keeping a steady muffled tapping. The color guard turned at a small stone memorial, and then past it to a gravesite where a family was gathered; a mother in a black dress, a father in a grey suit, and a teenage son and daughter, looking somber and out of place. The grave was still fresh, the dirt mounded over, the headstone a simple marker with a flag. A minister spoke some words, and then the color guard snapped to attention. A volley of rifle fire, then Taps, and then a tall young soldier in dress blues handed a folded flag to the mother, who murmured her thanks and tried to smile.

I suddenly realized that I felt out of place there with my gaudily-patriotic bike and my red-white-and-blue striped shirt. No one noticed me, though, and when the people started to slowly move away from the gravesite and back to the entrance, I followed along until I was able to ride slowly back to our friends' house, park my bike with all the others, and find my parents, who probably hadn't even noticed that I was not there with all the other kids running around and playing on the lawn.

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Short Takes

Boom - Reports say North Korea has tested a nuclear device.

Infighting - Republicans squabble over who gets to sit at the Kool Kidz table.

Feds Probe Murtha
- Pennsylvania congressman under investigation for ties with contractor.

From the top - Adm. Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, says Gitmo needs to be closed.

Atlantis lands in California due to rain in Florida.

Out of court, into the winner's circle - Helio Castroneves wins at Indy after being acquitted of tax evasion.

Tigers drop another to the Rockies.
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Sunday, May 24, 2009

Sunday Reading

No More Waiting - Frank Rich makes a powerful case for moving forward on marriage equality.
It would be easy to blame the Beltway logjam in gay civil rights progress on the cultural warriors of the religious right and its political host, the Republican Party. But it would be inaccurate. The right has lost much of its clout in the capital and, as President Obama’s thoughtful performance at Notre Dame dramatized last weekend, its shrill anti-abortion-rights extremism now plays badly even in supposedly friendly confines.

Anyone with half a brain in the incredibly shrinking G.O.P. knows that gay bashing will further dim the party’s already remote chance of recruiting young voters to replenish its aging ranks, much as the right’s immigrant bashing drove away Hispanics. This is why Republican politicians now say they oppose only gay marriage, not gay people, even when it’s blatant that they’re dissembling. Naked homophobia — those campy, fear-mongering National Organization for Marriage ads, for instance — is increasingly unwelcome in a party fighting for survival. The wingnuts don’t even have Dick Cheney on their side on this issue.

Most Congressional Republicans will still vote against gay civil rights. Some may take the politically risky path of demonizing same-sex marriage during the coming debate over the new Supreme Court nominee. Old prejudices and defense mechanisms die hard, after all: there are still many gay men in the party’s hierarchy hiding in fear from what remains of the old religious-right base. In “Outrage,” a new documentary addressing precisely this point, Kirk Fordham, who had been chief of staff to Mark Foley, the former Republican congressman, says, “If they tried to fire gay staff like they do booting people out of the military, the legislative process would screech to a halt.” A closet divided against itself cannot stand.
But when Congressional Republicans try to block gay civil rights — last week one cadre introduced a bill to void the recognition of same-sex marriage in the District of Columbia — they just don’t have the votes to get their way. The Democrats do have the votes to advance the gay civil rights legislation Obama has promised to sign. And they have a serious responsibility to do so. Let’s not forget that “don’t ask” and DOMA both happened on Bill Clinton’s watch and with his approval. Indeed, in the 2008 campaign, Obama’s promise to repeal DOMA outright was a position meant to outflank Hillary Clinton, who favored only a partial revision.

So what’s stopping the Democrats from rectifying that legacy now? As Wolfson said to me last week, they lack “a towering national figure to make the moral case” for full gay civil rights. There’s no one of that stature in Congress now that Ted Kennedy has been sidelined by illness, and the president shows no signs so far of following the example of L.B.J., who championed black civil rights even though he knew it would cost his own party the South. When Obama invoked same-sex marriage in an innocuous joke at the White House correspondents’ dinner two weeks ago — he and his political partner, David Axelrod, went to Iowa to “make it official” — it seemed all the odder that he hasn’t engaged the issue substantively.

“This is a civil rights moment,” Wolfson said, “and Obama has not yet risen to it.” Worse, Obama’s opposition to same-sex marriage is now giving cover to every hard-core opponent of gay rights, from the Miss USA contestant Carrie Prejean to the former Washington mayor Marion Barry, each of whom can claim with nominal justification to share the president’s views.

In reality, they don’t. Obama has long been, as he says, a fierce advocate for gay equality. The Windy City Times has reported that he initially endorsed legalizing same-sex marriage when running for the Illinois State Senate in 1996. The most common rationale for his current passivity is that his plate is too full. But the president has so far shown an impressive inclination both to multitask and to argue passionately for bedrock American principles when he wants to. Relegating fundamental constitutional rights to the bottom of the pile until some to-be-determined future seems like a shell game.

As Wolfson reminds us in his book “Why Marriage Matters,” Dr. King addressed such dawdling in 1963. “For years now I have heard the word ‘Wait,’ ” King wrote. “It rings in the ear of every Negro with piercing familiarity. This ‘Wait’ has almost always meant ‘Never.’ ”

The gay civil rights movement has fewer obstacles in its path than did Dr. King’s Herculean mission to overthrow the singular legacy of slavery. That makes it all the more shameful that it has fewer courageous allies in Washington than King did. If “American Idol” can sing out for change on Fox in prime time, it ill becomes Obama, of all presidents, to remain mute in the White House.
Doonesbury - No memorial.

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Short Takes

Student Life -- Miami Central is coming back thanks to students' efforts.

Former South Korean president commits suicide.

Who He'd Like -- The president details his ideal Supreme Court nominee.

Guardian Angels on patrol in Toledo.

Tigers' streak ends at seven -- the boys lose to the Rockies 4-3.
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Saturday, May 23, 2009

Class Act

Earlier this week, RNC Chairman Michael Steele said that from now on, the Republicans would challenge President Obama and the Democrats directly.
The honeymoon is over. We are going to challenge those policies that we believe are wrong, and we are going to do so without apology and without a second thought.

But there is a very important distinction I want to make here.

We are going to take this president on with class. We are going to take this president on with dignity. This will be a very sharp and marked contrast to the shabby and classless way that the Democrats and the far left spoke of President Bush.
This, then, must be an example of what he was talking about when he said "class" and "dignity."
She’s the 69-year-old speaker of the House of Representatives, second in the line of succession and the most powerful woman in U.S. history.

But when you see Nancy Pelosi, the Republican National Committee wants you to think “Pussy Galore.”

At least that’s the takeaway from a video released by the committee this week – a video that puts Pelosi side-by-side with the aforementioned villainess from the 1964 James Bond film “Goldfinger.”

The RNC video, which begins with the speaker’s head in the iconic spy-series gun sight, implies that Pelosi has used her feminine wiles to dodge the truth about whether or not she was briefed by the CIA on the use of waterboarding in 2002. While the P-word is never mentioned directly, in one section the speaker appears in a split screen alongside the Bond nemesis – and the video’s tagline is “Democrats Galore.”
Cute. But I thought they said they were going to be direct. So why didn't they just come out and say "Nancy Pelosi is a c*nt" and leave it at that?

Oh... it wouldn't be classy.

(To be fair, Mr. Steele said the GOP would take on the president with class and dignity. Anybody else, however, must be fair game.)
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Made It

Arrived safely and on time. But what's interesting is that if the economy is in such bad shape, you couldn't tell it from the airlines. My flight from Miami to Chicago was oversold and packed to the gills, and the commuter flight from Chicago to Toledo was almost full.

Dad picked me up and took me to lunch at Loma Linda's, which you'll remember is, in my opinion, the original and best Mexican restaurant ever. (I don't know why they insist on putting an apostrophe in the name to make it a possessive, which translates to "Beautiful Land's." Whatever; the food is the best.)

Well, as long as we're getting nostalgic, here's something silly from the 1940's.


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Travel Day

On my way to the airport for a flight to Chicago, then Toledo.

See you when I get there.
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Short Takes

U.S. signals willingness to reopen talks with Cuba.

Unappealing -- Big tobacco loses in court again.

The State Department will grant same-sex partner benefits.

Prop 8 Redux: The California State Supreme Court will issue their ruling on the suit to overturn the ballot measure on Tuesday. (Just a hunch, but I have a bad feeling about this. But I've been wrong before.)

Salute -- Obama is welcomed as commencement speaker at the Naval Academy.

Obama signs credit card bill.

Today's Irony: Liberty University bans College Democrats club.

Doing the numbers: 9.6% unemployment in Florida; $192 million is Florida's Powerball jackpot; GM borrows another $4 billion a week before going bankrupt.

Tigers beat Colorado Rockies 4-3 in Detroit.

Travel Day Flashback: Back in the 1970's, Eastern Airlines used to have a direct flight from Toledo to Miami...


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Friday, May 22, 2009

Question of the Day

ABC plans to bring back V, the mid-1980's sci-fi series about "Visitors" from another world who looked human but were really reptiles in drag who planned to enslave the world. It was a thinly-veiled metaphor for the Holocaust. This time it will probably be about terrorism or something appropriate for the time (Dick Cheney munching a live rat, perhaps?).

There's also plans afoot to do a series based on the 1989 Ron Howard comedy Parenthood. If that sounds familiar, it's because NBC tried to make a series based on the film in 1990. It lasted twelve episodes. But TV relies on short-term memory, so here we go again, this time with Craig T. Nelson.

This isn't the first time that a series has been revived; I remember an attempt to bring back Perry Mason in the early 1970's with Monte Markham as the sleuthing lawyer, and The Odd Couple has been tried again, too. Both, by the way, bombed, but hope -- for ratings, if not art -- springs eternal. But some things are best left to memory and reruns on TV Land.

That leads to:
What TV series would you like to see revived? And which of your favorites would you not like to see brought back?
By "revived," I mean a new version of the original series, not a spin-off, like Star Trek - The Next Generation, etc.

I would like to see Hill Street Blues again, and updated... although I think NBC's Southland is coming pretty close. I would not like to see them try to bring back M*A*S*H or Barney Miller. They were one of a kind, especially the gang at the old 1-2.
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Blogging Forecast

This weekend marks the traditional start of summer with the Memorial Day holiday: the end of school in some places, the Indy 500, and the usual attempts by commerce to get you to spend money with car and home furnishing "door buster" sales. Let's just not lose sight of the reason for the holiday in the first place -- and I plan to post on it on the day. Meanwhile, in parts of the country where it's finally beginning to warm up and lawns and gardens are taking hold, there will be a lot of relaxation... or travel to get to places to relax. I plan to do both, which is my way of letting you know that blogging will be on a holiday schedule -- light and variable through Tuesday before returning to somewhat normal -- whatever that is -- by Wednesday of next week.
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What We See

There are a lot of reactions to the two speeches yesterday. President Obama's speech at the National Archives laid out his vision of our national security, and former Vice President Dick Cheney tried to justify the record of the Bush administration and take down the president in the process.

The reactions to the speeches are predictable depending on who you listen to; the right wing thought Mr. Cheney was just wonderful and President Obama hopelessly naive and "flowery," while the left thought Mr. Cheney was his usual dictatorial self, with the expected wrinkles, especially from those who were both surprised and more than a little curious as to what President Obama meant when he put forth the idea of "preventive detention" for terror suspects. Hilzoy sums it up.
Preventive detention????????

No. Wrong answer.

If we don't have enough evidence to charge someone with a crime, we don't have enough evidence to hold them. Period.

The power to detain people without filing criminal charges against them is a dictatorial power. It is inherently arbitrary. What is it that they are supposed to have done? If it is not a crime, why on earth not make it one? If it is a crime, and we have evidence that this person committed it, but that evidence was extracted under torture, then perhaps we need to remind ourselves of the fact that torture is unreliable. If we just don't have enough evidence, that's a problem, but it's also a problem with detaining them in the first place.
And then there are those who would strike a middle ground between the snarling and smug arrogance of the past administration and the toxic mess they left for the president who, because of the mistrust now ingrained in the fabric of our consciousness about what our government is capable of doing, has to make the dubious case that we should trust him with the open-termed power he holds as the Commander in Chief.

Frankly, I don't like the idea of "preventive detention" any more than Hilzoy does, and I don't buy it just because I hope that President Obama will be a more able steward of the rule of law than his predecessor. This isn't a liberal or a conservative issue; it's the basic foundation of our system of justice: you are innocent until you're proven guilty, not until we can find enough evidence to make the case. There shouldn't be exceptions to this, and it shouldn't be based on the question of whether or not a suspect is a prisoner of war, an "enemy combatant," a person of interest, or just a bunch of anti-Semitic crack addicts in the Bronx. The United States Constitution wasn't written in the abstract; it was -- and still is -- a clear and practical foundation of both laws and ideas. The men who wrote it knew all too well what the unlimited reach of a monarch could do, and they knew all too well what it was like to live in reactionary times; the American Revolution was still a vivid and recent memory at the time it was crafted. Put in perspective, the times were just as perilous for the nation then as they were on September 12, 2001. Yet the Founding Fathers did not waver from the idea that justice had to be based on the evidence and that defendants were owed a fair trial based on what the prosecution could prove.

In court the guilt or innocence of a defendant comes down to what we see now, not what we think we might see at some future point. The same can be said about trusting our leaders to live up to the realities of the Constitution and the rule of law.
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Friday Blogaround

This will be a three-day weekend, so you have plenty of time to catch up with the LC.
- A Blog Around The Clock: special!
- All Facts and Opinions: the Prop 8 series continues.
- archy: where's Bobby Jindal's birth certificate?
- Bark Bark Woof Woof: no shame.
- Bloggg: this one will make you think.
- Dohiyi Mir: NTodd writes letters.
- Echidne Of The Snakes on Cheney.
- Florida Progressive Coalition Blog: friendly fire.
- Iddybud Journal: "Looking for your Face."
- Left Is Right: bits and pieces for the week.
- Left Turn Only: what's the lesson here?
- Pen-Elayne on the Web: the Obamanator.
- Rook's Rant: goodbye, MN GOP.
- rubber hose: from Gitmo to NIMBY.
- Scrutiny Hooligans: poverty and food.
- Speedkill: random thought.
- Steve Bates, The Yellow Doggerel Democrat: Steve on Rachel on Obama.
- Stupid Enough Unexplanation on human nature.
- The Invisible Library: time travel.
- WTF Is It Now?? Hitler reacts to Star Trek.
But don't forget to remember our heroes on Memorial Day.
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