Saturday, July 31, 2010

In The Rearview Mirror

Nine years ago today I loaded up the Pontiac with my plants, my computer, and Sam. At 6:30 p.m., in a driving rainstorm, we left Albuquerque following the Bekins moving van on our way to Miami and my new job. We drove until midnight, getting to Pecos, Texas, where we spent the night. The next morning we got on I-10 and cruised across the Lone Star state, catching Houston at rush hour, New Orleans in the dark (I took the detour through the city so I could say I'd been there), and finally stopped for the night somewhere on the Mississippi/Alabama border. Finally, forty-eight hours to the minute after leaving Albuquerque, we arrived in Miami... in a rainstorm.

Nine years later, I still have the Pontiac and the plants. Sam is gone, and the computer -- a Gateway PC -- has been replaced three-fold. I don't have the same job I did when I came to Miami, and I'm living in my third residence. I have made a lot of new friends, renewed some old ones, and maintained contact with the people I left behind in Albuquerque who still mean as much to me now as they did then.

Nine years is the longest I've lived in one city since I graduated from high school. My current job is the longest I've worked in one place at basically the same job; it will be eight years in October. For someone who is staring down the barrel of his 58th birthday in six weeks, that probably makes me sound like a flake; I know people who are my age who have worked at the same place since they graduated from college and I'm being invited to their retirement party hosted by their grandchildren. But I wouldn't trade my life experiences for anything. Yeah, there are some things I could have done better, and I have a few regrets, including my failed relationship with AJP. But even there, we had fifteen good years and wonderful memories -- and a lot of growing up for both of us -- that can't be discarded because we're apart. Although I'm not doing exactly what I planned to do with all those years of studying theatre, I am very proud of the work I do, and I feel like I'm making a genuine contribution to the education of the 340,000 students of Miami-Dade County Public Schools. I owe a lot of that to the experience I gained working in Albuquerque and Michigan. As for the theatre, moving to Miami gave me the inspiration to write the play that gave me my first New York production in 2008. So all in all, life is in balance.

In a way, it's hard to believe it's been nearly a decade that I've been back in Miami. In a lot of ways I still feel like a newcomer. I still have a strong connection with New Mexico, including being the defender of New Mexico Spanglish among a lot of other different accents and dialects. I still miss the glory of the mountains and the spectacular New Mexico sunsets, and I still have yet to find a place in South Florida that does huevos rancheros the right way. But I'm glad to be here and able to look back at all the amazing blessings that have come my way.
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Greetings From Ohio

I made it safely to Perrysburg. My vacation has begun.

Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry
Hero of the Battle of Lake Erie
"We have met the enemy and they are ours."

Wikipedia doesn't list them, but Perrysburg is also the hometown of two well-known bloggers: NTodd of Dohiyi Mir and some other guy.
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Travel Day

I'm off in the early morning light to catch a flight to Detroit, then on to Perrysburg for a much-needed vacation, time with my parents, and then our annual pilgrimage to Stratford, Ontario, and the Stratford Shakespeare Festival. From there we're going on to the Shaw Festival at Niagara-on-the-Lake for our first visit there.

Blogging will be on a vacation-type schedule with a later start in the morning and more posting during the day than trying to cram it all in between the time I get up and the time I get to the office. Also, my postings and reviews on the plays we see at Stratford and Shaw will be on Bobby Cramer in keeping with the literary intent of that blog and to add a few more ticks to the traffic counter over there.

Meanwhile, I'll see you next when I get settled in at my usual spot in my old home town.
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My Life On A Plate


When I moved to Minneapolis to start grad school in September 1975, I decided to replace my 1973 Ford F-100 pickup with something else. I wasn't crazy about driving it in Minnesota's famous winters; being a rear-wheel drive vehicle, it didn't handle snow all that well unless it was fully loaded, and the four bags of cement in the back didn't help. Also, it had developed a shimmy in the front end from time to time that was so bad it once jerked the wheel out of my hands. The Ford dealer diagnosed it as warped rotors on the disc brakes and tried to fix them -- under warranty -- but to no avail. So a couple of weeks after arriving in Minneapolis, I stopped by Ridgedale Ford and saw a used two-door 1975 Ford Granada on their lot. It was red with a three-speed manual transmission and no A/C, but with the trade-in the price was right and it handled pretty well on ice and snow. Yes, I did look at a Mustang, but a Mustang II (which was based on the Pinto) was out of my price range.

In those days in Minnesota the license plates stayed with the car, so for the first time I had a different state's plates on my car.

There's a little history with me and Minneapolis in that my father was born and raised there. My grandfather died when I was seven, so my memories of him are fleeting, but our family went to Minneapolis in December 1964 to celebrate my grandmother's eightieth birthday. I met uncles and relatives for the first time and I have vivid memories of the house on Fremont Avenue South close to Lake Harriet. My grandmother died in 1967 and the house was sold, but one of the first things I did in my new car was to drive by the house. I knocked on the door, introduced myself, and was treated to a tour by the nice people who owned it. Even with a new family living there, I could still recall the memories of my childhood visits, right down to the special scent of the attic and the backyard where my grandfather had kept his bird-feeders. It was a nice way to make a connection with my new town.

Photo by David Nicholson.
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Asked and Answered

Question: Why is Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY) an embarrassment and a drag on the midterms for the Democrats, but Sen. John Ensign (R-NV), who is under criminal investigation by the FBI, is not an embarrassment and a drag on the midterms for the GOP?

Answer: IOKIYAR.

Thanks for playing.

HT to Steve Benen.
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Separated at Birth?

Basil Marceaux:



Archie Bunker:


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Short Takes

Economic growth in the second quarter was weaker than expected.

Nevertheless, the president went to Detroit to tout the success of the auto companies after their bailout.

How bad was the recession? The worst since the 1930's.

Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY) may only get a reprimand from Congress, just like Newt Gingrich.

Charlie Crist has a slight lead in the Senate race in Florida.

Same-sex couples are getting married in Argentina.

Tropical Update: Wouldn't you know that something would pop up when I'm going on vacation?

The Tigers finally win one, and it was against the Red Sox.
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Friday, July 30, 2010

You Vote Yes If You Believe Yes

Via TPM
The House was debating a bill last night that would provide up to $7.4 billion in health care aid to rescue and recovery workers who have faced health problems since their work in the wake of the September 11 attacks. The bill ultimately failed to get the needed two-thirds majority, 255-159, and Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-NY) was not happy about it. Not one bit.


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Question of the Day

"If you don't stop fighting..." The summer vacation time is upon us... for those of us lucky enough to get the time off or have a job that gives us the opportunity to take off. Some take road trips (hence the reminder of kids in the back seat of the Country Squire), some go to exotic places like Paris or the Grand Canyon, some just stay home and recharge. So...
What's your idea of a great summer vacation?
It used to be the month our family spent on the shores of Grand Traverse Bay in northwest lower Michigan, swimming, sailing, and long twilight nights doing things kids do. Now it's the week or ten days I spend with my folks going to Stratford, Ontario, to see some plays and just be with family.
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Ask A Silly Question...

Via the Minnesota Independent:


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Think Of the Children

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) wants to amend the Constitution to take away citizenship of people born in this country based on the child's parents' legal status.
“I may introduce a constitutional amendment that changes the rules if you have a child here,” Graham said during an interview with Fox News’ Greta Van Susteren. “Birthright citizenship I think is a mistake, that we should change our Constitution and say if you come here illegally and you have a child, that child’s automatically not a citizen.”
That raises a few questions. First, if the child is not a citizen of the United States, what country is he or she a citizen of? What if one parent is a legal resident or citizen of the United States and the other isn't? What if the child needs immediate medical attention? What if the child is the result of rape or incest?

The Republicans are supposed to be the ones who were all about thinking of the children; that they would do everything they possibly could to prevent abortions and bring that precious life into the world. Changing the law would lead to more abortions: if an undocumented immigrant becomes pregnant -- it's not always planned, y'know -- and sees that there's no chance the child will be granted citizenship, rather than carry the child to term, the next stop is an abortion clinic, or worse. And if the child is born, how many of them will be abandoned on doorsteps or dumped in trash cans?

Lindsey Graham is supposed to be one of the "reasonable" Republicans nowadays.
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See You In Court

Shirley Sherrod is planning to sue Andrew Breitbart.
Sherrod was forced to resign last week as director of rural development in Georgia after Andrew Breitbart posted the edited video online. In the full video, Sherrod, who is black, spoke to a local NAACP group about racial reconciliation and overcoming her initial reluctance to help a white farmer.

Speaking Thursday at the National Association of Black Journalists convention, Sherrod said she would definitely sue over the video that took her remarks out of context.
I predict that the next chain e-mail you get from your crazy right-wing relative will be an appeal to donate to the Andrew Breibart Legal Defense Fund.
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Quote of the Day

Via TPM, Diane Serafin, the leading of the protest against the building of a new mosque in Temecula, CA.:
They hate Jews, they hate Chrisitans, they hate women, they hate dogs. [The idea of the new mosque] scares the daylights out of me. I want you to stress this -- I'm not prejudiced. I worked retail for nine years and I didn't even know my manager was gay until someone told me. And when I found out, I didn't care.
National Brotherhood Week is just around the corner.
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Friday Blogaround

Is it really the last week of July coming up? Here's how it's looking to the LC.
- A Blog Around The Clock: Go check out Bora's new site.
- archy: go trilobite.
- Bark Bark Woof Woof: Mrs. Schlafly regrets.
- Dohiyi Mir: last week it was the kid, this week it's the dog.
- Echidne Of The Snakes: doing your research.
- Florida Progressive Coalition Blog reports on some dirty campaigning in Florida.
- Left Is Right: this week's good bits.
- Pen-Elayne on the Web: just try to get these cows out of your head.
- Rook's Rant: Rook is back and on a rant.
- rubber hose: noz shares pictures of a cool place.
- Scrutiny Hooligans: about Elizabeth Warren.
- Stupid Enough Unexplanation: NOM, NOM.
- The Yellow Something Something: Lindsey Graham is a craven xenophobic panderer.
Next week we'll be reporting from the True North. Stay tuned.
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Short Takes

With the death toll at 63, this has been the deadliest month for the U.S. in the war in Afghanistan.

The wildfire north of Los Angeles is still blazing.

The Pentagon
is looking into who leaked the 92,000 pages to WikiLeaks.

The GOP would filibuster a ham sandwich.

Arlington National Cemetery's
record-keeping mistakes are a nightmare.

The House laid out the charges against Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY), and they're serious.

Tropical Update: There's a little disturbance out there worth keeping an eye on.

The Tigers drop another one to the Rays.
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Friday Catblogging

The first rule of being a housemate -- even if it's just for a little while -- is to make nice with the pets.


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Thursday, July 29, 2010

Food For Thought


Photo by Balla Tamas.
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Question of the Day

I heard a promo this morning for the radio program The Takeaway that prompted this one.
What movie was better than the book it was based on?
I'd have to say The Godfather. I saw the film and then plowed through the novel, and the film is much, much better than the turgid prose of Mario Puzo.

There are those who say the films of The Lord of the Rings are better than the original Tolkein trilogy, but I don't think so.

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O'Reilly on DADT

Here's an eyebrow-raiser from Bill O'Reilly:
"President Obama has the power to stop this 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' business. Just sign an executive order. I don't know why it's taking so long--it's not fair. We should stop this nonsense," said O'Reilly.
This was the other night on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

As much as I appreciate the sentiment, President Obama can't just eliminate DADT with the stroke of a pen on an executive order. It's a law, and as much as some Republicans like the idea of sweeping presidential power -- as long as it's one of theirs in office -- the president can't overturn a law by executive order. He can stop enforcement of it, but the next Republican president can reinstate it just as easily. We've seen that happen with the on-again/off-again ban on giving federal money to international groups that perform abortions or provide abortion information. What is needed is a full legislative repeal signed into law.

I suppose I could get all cynical and say that the only reason that Mr. O'Reilly is making this suggestion is so that he can tweak the president for not living up to his promise to repeal the ban on openly gay people serving in the military; "C'mon, Mr. President, where's your support for gay rights now?" But I really think that he just doesn't understand the concept of executive orders vs. the law.
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Math Class

Sen. John Thune (R-SD) demonstrates Republican math skills:
Appearing on Fox News, Thune and host Greta Van Susteren discussed the bill's call for the creation of a Joint Committee on Deficit Reduction, tasked with reducing the deficit 10 percent year over year.

"It would be required to find 10% in savings -- 10% of the deficit in savings every budget cycle," Thune said.

"So in 10 years we wouldn't have a deficit?" van Sustern asked.

"Theoretically, yes," Thune replied. "10% Is a floor. Obviously -- you can go beyond that."
It actually doesn't work like that, and anyone who took math in Grade 8 will tell you that.
Let's say the government starts with a $1 trillion budget deficit. If Thune's committee reduces it by 10%, it would be a $900 billion deficit a year later. The next year, it cuts another 10%. Would that bring it down to $800 billion? No, it'd be $810 billion ($900 billion - 10% = $810 billion). A year later it would be $729 billion, followed by $656 billion, and so on.
It would take 43 years to get to 1%, and theoretically you can never get to zero.

But it sounds good on TV, so what the hell.
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Chelsea Clinton's Wedding

This will be my only post on the wedding this weekend of the daughter of the former president and the current Secretary of State, so here goes:

Best wishes to the happy couple.

That is all.
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Short Takes

The FBI wants more access to internet data.

Rain is slowing the search for the dead in the Pakistan air crash.

The healthcare law is gaining popularity.

Bet on it -- Congress is reconsidering the ban in internet gambling.

Where did it go? Most of the oil from the Gulf is unaccounted for.

Speaking of spills, more than 800,000 gallons of oil flowed into the Kalamazoo River in Michigan on Monday.

One of the freed Cuban political prisoners arrived in Miami yesterday.

The funds to fight AIDS are going, going...

Not Yogi and Boo Boo -- Bears were on the rampage in Yellowstone Park, killing one person.

Road kill -- The slump continues for the Tigers, losing again to the Rays. If you're keeping count, that's nine road losses.
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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Arizona Immigration Law Blocked

Via the New York Times:
PHOENIX — A federal judge on Wednesday, weighing in on a clash between the federal government and a state over immigration policy, blocked the most controversial parts of Arizona’s immigration enforcement law from going into effect.

In a ruling on a law that has rocked politics coast to coast and thrown a spotlight on a border state’s fierce debate over immigration, Judge Susan Bolton of Federal District Court here said that some aspects of the law can go into effect as scheduled on Thursday.

But Judge Bolton took aim at the parts of the law that have generated the most controversy, issuing a preliminary injunction against sections that called for police officers to check a person’s immigration status while enforcing other laws and that required immigrants to carry their papers at all times.

Judge Bolton put those sections on hold while she continued to hear the larger issues in the challenges to the law.
Chris Matthews on Hardball thinks it's a disaster for the Obama administration because it lands the immigration issue right in their lap. Chris Matthews makes a lot of money to talk on TV, and I don't, but I don't see how enforcing the Constitution is a bad thing for anyone. Oh, wait; we're talking about going up against the Republicans, who only give a rat's ass about the Constitution when it's in their favor or that of one of their special interest groups (see NRA). Be that as it may, the complaint against the Obama administration is that they don't enforce the laws already on the books. Aside from the fact that the Obama administration has increased the deportation of immigration law violators over the Bush administration, every attempt by the Obama administration to fix the immigration laws has been blocked by the Republicans. Why? Because they know that it would hand another victory to the Democrats, so they know they can't have that. They would rather demagogue immigration and all the issues -- employer sanctions, separated families, the Neo-Nazis patrolling the border -- that come with it and get face time on cable TV than actually do something. What a surprise.

The case will be in court for years, and I'm guessing that by the time the Supreme Court gets around to ruling on it, the plain fact that Constitution places the enforcement of immigration laws solely in the hands of the federal government should win the day. (Given the makeup of the court, I wouldn't bet money on it, though.) The fact that the law is flawed and states feel compelled to take the issue and make a political football out of it is irrelevant. Based on that logic, states would have had reason to start printing their own money after Wall Street screwed up the economy in 2008. But currency policy -- unless you're a wingnut investing in gold via Glenn Beck -- isn't an emotional issue. In a country where, unless you're a member of the First Nations, we are all immigrants, there's where emotion -- not to mention crass politics -- trumps the law.
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Quote of the Day

Jay Bookman in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Here we are in the smoldering ruins of an economy recently wrecked by Wall Street greed, in a country where for 30 years almost all income growth has been concentrated among the richest 1 percent of Americans. Rising populist anger, massive long-term unemployment and record home foreclosures serve as counterpoints to soaring corporate profits, while the Supreme Court rules that corporations are people and can spend limitless amounts of money trying to elect candidates willing to serve their interests.

Meanwhile, the Republican Party defends massive tax breaks for the wealthy while blocking aid to the unemployed, fights bitterly against regulations designed to prevent a repeat of the Wall Street meltdown, blocks legislation that would at least require corporate and special interests to identify themselves when they invest in elections and does all that while proclaiming itself to be the party of the little people.

Do I have that right?
Yes.

HT to Steve Benen.
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Mrs. Schlafly Regrets

Phyllis Schlafly has always embodied the soul of hard-core conservatism; leading the fight against the ERA in the 1970's and speaking out against women's liberation, which she thinks is designed to shatter marriages and keep women from doing their wifely duties such as staying home and raising the children. Ironically, she must have spent a great deal of time outside of the home (did anyone ever ask Mr. Schlafly what he thought about that?). Recently she was out and about, lecturing America on the latest plot of the leftists and the welfare queens -- embodied in the Obama administration -- to ruin America for white conservative patriarchy: they're going to have more babies.
One of the things Obama's been doing is deliberately trying to increase the percentage of our population that is dependent on government...For example, do you know what was the second biggest demographic group that voted for Obama? Obviously the blacks were the biggest demographic, yall know what was the second biggest? Unmarried women. 70% of unmarried women voted for Obama. And this is because when you kick your husband out, you've got to have Big Brother Government to be your provider. And they know that. They've admitted it. And they have all kinds of bills to continue to subsidize illegitimacy, which is now nationwide, running at 41%. 1.7 million babies were born in our country illegitimately last year. The Obama administration wants to continue to subsidize this group because they know they are Democratic votes. Republicans never could have given the amount of money they are going to get. And as Ronald Reagan said, if you subsidize something you are going to get more of it, and if you tax it you're going to get less of it.
Well, I suppose it's a saving grace on Mrs. Schlafly's part that she referred to "the blacks" instead of "the coloreds." Small steps. As Robin Marty notes, these are the same people who fought birth control and access to abortion. I guess Mrs. Schlafly thinks they're having the wrong babies.

On a larger scale, it is not at all surprising to hear this kind of sentiment from Mrs. Schlafly. She represents an age and a mindset that believes that people -- especially certain races and classes -- should know their place. The idea of equal rights for all is fine as long as it's all the right kind of people. And as a product of a generation and a culture that venerated the social graces and a strict class structure, it is inconceivable to her that anyone would want it any other way.

I know people like Mrs. Schlafly. I grew up in such a culture, where the Social Register and country club membership was a sign of "good breeding," so to speak. They are, according to Stephen Birmingham, The Right People. They attended the right church, they sent their children to the right schools, they spent their leisure time in the right places: all of them with overt covenants that limited membership and attendance to the right people. If you called them out for using the term "colored" or "Negro" they would be genuinely shocked; not because they are using a racist terms but because someone found their behavior to be ill-mannered. To this day these Upper Crustaceans are convinced that "the blacks" are not ready for acceptance in the upper class, that there is something in their blood that keeps them from acquiring the necessary skills and taste for being a part of the world where white men and women can sit at the same table as a black couple for the Labor Day Tea Dance at the country club. Regardless whether or not you grew up in the suburbs of Cincinnati or St. Louis, the only black people who lived in the white part of town were the live-in maids, and the only time a white man showed up in the black section was when the cops were called.

The Right People would never give any credence, however, to the more radical elements of the conservative movement today. The Tea Partiers may be largely white, but they are staunchly middle-class and tacky; they would only be in contact with them if they wanted a plumber on weekends. Fundamentalists, too, are not of their liking; boisterous religious expression doesn't fit in well with the Episcopalians. Likewise they dismiss the "birthers" as cranks. It doesn't matter where Barack Obama was born; he could be from St. Louis or Richmond Heights and he would still not be acceptable to them as the President of the United States. He would, however, be a credit to his race as the president's valet.

Fortunately, there is a sizable number of people of that ilk and generation who, unlike the ossified Mrs. Schlafly, have emerged from the shadow of the past to embrace and encourage the change; I count my parents and a number of their friends and children -- all who grew up with the culture -- among them. To change, to grow, to progress is a true sign of class.

HT to digby.
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Colbert: Racial Pro Firing

How to get fired without doing anything wrong:

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Racial Pro Firing
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes2010 ElectionFox News

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Speaking of "Unfair"

BP CEO Tony Hayward is philosophical about losing his job:
"Life isn't fair," he said, but he conceded that wasn't the point. "BP cannot move on in the U.S. with me as its leader."
I think the million dollars a year pension he'll get will take some of the sting out of that.
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Lord Help Us

Jeffrey Lord, he of no-rope-no-lynching fame, tried again to make his case that Shirley Sherrod was lying about her relative that was beaten to death on the courthouse steps in 1945.
Three people are not a “mob.” A mob is defined as a “large crowd.” So there was no “mob action” because there was no mob. Second, the Supreme Court specifically said the Sheriff and his deputy and a local policeman acted “under color of law.” Which means they had legal authority.
That reminds me of Captain Renault's line in Casablanca: "I am making out the report now. We haven't quite decided yet whether he committed suicide or died trying to escape."
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Expert Witness

Florida Attorney General -- and candidate for governor -- Bill McCollum justified hiring Dr. George Rekers -- he of "rentboy.com" fame -- as an expert witness against same-sex adoption.
"You don't find very many experts out there, people willing to testify, especially on academic campuses that are, actually, very discriminating today against people with views that differ from theirs, especially on issues like the gay issue," McCollum said.

"He was the best expert that was available and willing to testify."
He's right; Dr. Rekers was certainly doing his best to keep on top of "the gay issue."
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Short Takes

A passenger jet has crashed in Pakistan.

The oil slick from the BP spill is vanishing quickly, but that doesn't mean it's gone.

There's another oil well spill happening in the Gulf.

Republicans filibustered the campaign disclosure bill.

Would you pay $41,000 for an electric car? GM hopes you will for the Chevy Volt.

Eighteen states -- including Florida -- are finalists in the Race to the Top education grants.

The Tigers lost again in Tampa Bay.
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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Tuesday Night YouTubery

Because I couldn't make it to the show when my colleague Vikram got tickets...


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Question of the Day

Keeping with the food theme...
What's your favorite fast-food joint?
It used to be Blake's Lotaburger when I lived in New Mexico. The best burgers -- get the green chile cheesburger -- and fries in the world. Now it's Pollo Tropical here in South Florida.
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Rocky Mountain High

I loved the years I lived in Colorado. I still have a lot of friends and family there, too, and I have a lot of good memories of good times. The politics of the state has always been a mix of progressive liberalism, hard-core right-wing Jesus-freaky conservatism, Old West libertarianism, and a touch of wackiness that might come from the combination of altitude and open space. After all, this is the state that gave us Gary Hart, an unashamed liberal; Ben Nighthorse Campbell, a Democrat-turned-Republican Native American U.S. senator; and Amendment 2, and the the anti-anti-gay discrimination law that was so odious that the Supreme Court under William Rehnquist threw it out. So that mix might explain the political circus going on out there now.
Former Congressman Tom Tancredo is in the race for Colorado governor, he said this morning.

“I will officially announce at noon that I will seek the nomination of the constitution party,” Tancredo told The Denver Post.

The Littleton Republican must file some papers with the Colorado Secretary of State and register as a member of the American Constitution Party, but then “he’s ready to go,” raising money, disclosing his platform and launching a website that is already put together.

Tancredo gave Republican candidates Scott McInnis and Dan Maes an ultimatum last week: Promise to get out of the race after the primary if polls showed the winner lagging behind Democrat John Hickenlooper or else he would get in as a third-party candidate.

Both Maes and McInnis refused.

Tancredo’s entry into the race is likely to split the GOP vote in the general election, giving Hickenlooper a win, said Dick Wadhams, head of the state’s Republican Party.
Mr. Wadhams and Mr. Tancredo got into a shouting match on talk radio, too, just to give the race a little spice. Mr. Tancredo, as you'll recall, has a long history of making racially-tinged remarks about immigrants, the president, and just about anybody in general that doesn't fit in with his idea of the Aryan Master Race average white Coloradan. There is a strong conservative element in Colorado, including some vestiges of the Old West that doesn't cotton to strangers, but even they might find Mr. Tancredo to be a little too much.

And then there's Ken Buck, the Weld County DA who's running for the Senate and in a primary race with Jane Norton. Last week he got a little weird -- not to mention a tad misogynistic -- when he told an audience that voters should back him because he was the candidate who wasn't wearing high heels. Now he's been caught on tape referring to birthers as "dumbasses."
On an audio tape obtained by The Denver Post, Buck was caught muttering "will you tell those dumba---s at the Tea Party to stop asking questions about birth certificates while I'm on the camera?" outside a June 11 event in Crowley.

Buck then started laughing as he walked into the event with the Democratic tracker.

"What am I supposed to do?" he asked, rhetorically.
Well, for one thing, you might want to reconsider calling yourself the Tea Party candidate before they come after you, rhetorically or otherwise.
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Sounds Like Fun

Talk about good times and good timing:
Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele has a party fundraising event coming up in August that is scheduled to feature a very special guest: Conservative media activist Andrew Breitbart, according to a copy of the invitation exclusively obtained by TPM.

The fundraising event, billed as an "Election Countdown," will take place from August 12-14 in Beverly Hills, California, and will also feature other politicians such as California Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, and Nevada Republican gubernatorial nominee Brian Sandoval. Steele and Breitbart are scheduled to co-headline a welcome reception on the first evening, August 12.
Afterward, there'll be a marshmallow roast out by the burning cross on the lawn.
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Goodbye, Middle Class

Via Balloon Juice, there are some rather sobering statistics that the Haves are beating the daylights out of the Have-Somes.
Well, the globalism and “free trade” that our politicians and business leaders insisted would be so good for us have had some rather nasty side effects. It turns out that they didn’t tell us that the “global economy” would mean that middle class American workers would eventually have to directly compete for jobs with people on the other side of the world where there is no minimum wage and very few regulations. The big global corporations have greatly benefited by exploiting third world labor pools over the last several decades, but middle class American workers have increasingly found things to be very tough.

Here are the statistics to prove it:

• 83 percent of all U.S. stocks are in the hands of 1 percent of the people.
• 61 percent of Americans “always or usually” live paycheck to paycheck, which was up from 49 percent in 2008 and 43 percent in 2007.
• 66 percent of the income growth between 2001 and 2007 went to the top 1% of all Americans.
• 36 percent of Americans say that they don’t contribute anything to retirement savings.
• A staggering 43 percent of Americans have less than $10,000 saved up for retirement.
• 24 percent of American workers say that they have postponed their planned retirement age in the past year.
How are you doing?
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Just An Umpire

I have said it before and I'll say it again: when you elect a president, you're also looking at electing the next forty years of judicial rulings from the Supreme Court. Jeffrey Toobin at The New Yorker looks at the legacy of the Court under Chief Justice John Roberts.
“Judges are like umpires,” Roberts said at the time [of his confirmation]. “Umpires don’t make the rules. They apply them. The role of an umpire and a judge is critical. They make sure everybody plays by the rules. But it is a limited role. Nobody ever went to a ballgame to see the umpire.” His jurisprudence as Chief Justice, Roberts said, would be characterized by “modesty and humility.” After four years on the Court, however, Roberts’s record is not that of a humble moderate but, rather, that of a doctrinaire conservative. The kind of humility that Roberts favors reflects a view that the Court should almost always defer to the existing power relationships in society. In every major case since he became the nation’s seventeenth Chief Justice, Roberts has sided with the prosecution over the defendant, the state over the condemned, the executive branch over the legislative, and the corporate defendant over the individual plaintiff. Even more than Scalia, who has embodied judicial conservatism during a generation of service on the Supreme Court, Roberts has served the interests, and reflected the values, of the contemporary Republican Party.
Yeah, just an umpire.
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Short Takes

Today's number: $2.6 billion -- The Pentagon cannot account for how it spent that much of the oil proceeds money from Iraq.

Exiled to Siberia -- BP's CEO Tony Hayward is out on October 1 and is sent to the Russian front.

Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY) faces some really serious ethics charges.

What a team -- Jeb Bush attended a Rand Paul fund-raiser.

Congress commemorated the 20th anniversary of ADA by having Rep. Jim Langevin (D-RI), a quadriplegic, preside over the House.

"Remember the Revolution without me"
-- Neither Raul or Fidel spoke at the rally on Revolution Day in Cuba.

The Tigers lose in a no-hitter in Tampa.
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Monday, July 26, 2010

Pure Vile

Jeffrey Lord, some alleged human being who writes at The American Spectator, claims that Shirley Sherrod lied when she told the story that a relative of hers, Bobby Hall, was beaten to death while in the custody in Georgia. According to Mr. Lord's definition of what a true lynching is, the murderers didn't use a rope. No rope, no hanging, no lynching.

I can understand the right wing being put out because their completely fabricated story turned to shit right in their hands..I can even understand why they're trying so hard to rescue what's left of their dignity without actually admitting any culpability in promoting Andrew Breibart's lies. But this weaselly mealy-mouthed dismissal of a brutal murder is so far beneath contempt that it's hard to imagine anyone with any morals or sense of decency defending it.

But don't worry; they'll manage.
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Question of the Day

Dinner is served...
When you're home, where do you eat most of your meals: dining room, kitchen, TV tray, or some other place?
I have a nice little dining area where I have dinner by myself. Lunch at home is usually soup and a sandwich on a makeshift TV tray, and breakfast is toast and coffee at the computer.
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The Kool Kidz Table

Oliver Willis has the 411 on the latest lefty clique gossip: Tucker Carlson, the poor man's George F. Will, tried to join Jornolist, the secret liberal e-mail gang that hung out in the Village and dished all the righties to filth. When they wouldn't let him sit at the Kool Kidz table, he went all grumble-bunny and posted mean stuff about them on his blog. And then there was the time all the liberals got invited to the White House to sit down with President Obama and how that proved that they were all in cahoots. No conservatives would ever do something like that. So there.
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So Go Already

Rep. Zach Wamp (R-TN), running for governor in Tennessee, joins the secessionist brigade.
"I hope that the American people will go to the ballot box in 2010 and 2012 so that states are not forced to consider separation from this government," said Wamp during an interview with Hotline OnCall.

He lauded Gov. Rick Perry (R-TX), who first floated the idea of secession in April '09, for leading the push-back against health care reform, adding that he hopes the American people "will send people to Washington that will, in 2010 and 2012, strictly adhere" to the constitution's defined role for the federal government.
I'm not necessarily in favor of secession, but I certainly would consider the idea of the rest of the states voting miscreants and freeloaders out. Let Mr. Wamp figure out how to handle currency, defense, foreign relations, immigration, and all of the other things that the federal government provides for them -- TVA, anyone? -- and see how he likes it.

HT to Zandar and boatboy.
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Seems Like Old Times

To those of us who are over fifty and who paid attention to the news nearly forty years ago, we know what the term "Pentagon Papers" means. It was a massive leak of secret documents about the Vietnam War in June 1971 that revealed how America was led into the war and how it was being executed, including how disconnected from reality were the rosy scenarios of winning the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese people and the strength of the Vietcong. The story was also about the Nixon administration's furious effort to try to contain the damage of the leaks by taking the newspapers -- The New York Times and the Washington Post -- to court to try to stop them from printing the articles. The government lost at the Supreme Court; prior restraint by legal means was ruled to be unconstitutional, and besides, the revelations did not tell us much that we did not already know: the war in Vietnam was poorly thought out, badly executed, we trusted an unworthy and weak ally in a South Vietnamese government riddled with corruption and criminals, and the lesson of the war was that interfering in a civil war in a small country at the cost of over 50,000 American lives and countless numbers of civilian losses in Vietnam was a horrific waste that left wounds that still linger today.

And that is why reading The War Logs, a series of stories about the war in Afghanistan based on thousands of pages of leaked documents by WikiLeaks, has such an eerily familiar ring to them. We have heard all of this before: the strength and the depth of infiltration of the enemy into neighboring countries, the weakness and corruption of the government we're supposed to be helping, the neighboring countries that harbor the insurgents, the poor planning and assumptions behind our effort, the terrible loss of civilian life, and the brutal fact that this war, like the one that ended thirty-five years ago, is unwinnable at the hands of a foreign army that has been sent in to ostensibly avenge an attack but is essentially trying to build a nation in its own image.
Americans fighting the war in Afghanistan have long harbored strong suspicions that Pakistan’s military spy service has guided the Afghan insurgency with a hidden hand, even as Pakistan receives more than $1 billion a year from Washington for its help combating the militants, according to a trove of secret military field reports made public Sunday.

The documents, made available by an organization called WikiLeaks, suggest that Pakistan, an ostensible ally of the United States, allows representatives of its spy service to meet directly with the Taliban in secret strategy sessions to organize networks of militant groups that fight against American soldiers in Afghanistan, and even hatch plots to assassinate Afghan leaders.

Taken together, the reports indicate that American soldiers on the ground are inundated with accounts of a network of Pakistani assets and collaborators that runs from the Pakistani tribal belt along the Afghan border, through southern Afghanistan, and all the way to the capital, Kabul.

Much of the information — raw intelligence and threat assessments gathered from the field in Afghanistan— cannot be verified and likely comes from sources aligned with Afghan intelligence, which considers Pakistan an enemy, and paid informants. Some describe plots for attacks that do not appear to have taken place.

But many of the reports rely on sources that the military rated as reliable.

While current and former American officials interviewed could not corroborate individual reports, they said that the portrait of the spy agency’s collaboration with the Afghan insurgency was broadly consistent with other classified intelligence.
The publication of these papers has already brought a reaction from the White House, condemning the leaks as damaging to the war effort and, at the same, dismissing them as inconsequential. That's not quite the way the Nixon White House reacted in 1971 -- they went after the leaker, Daniel Ellsberg, by trying to bug his psychiatrist's office -- but still using the condemnation as a distraction from what the leaks reveal: the war is not going as well as they would like us to believe.

This is the news story that will now dominate the airwaves and the blogosphere for the rest of the week, perhaps longer. Although it is unflattering to the military, to the Obama administration, and it will cause a great deal of tumult in places where liberals championed the release of the Pentagon Papers only now to have the shoe on the other foot and a Democrat is in the White House, the inescapable conclusion is that once again we are neck-deep in a place where history has long taught us the exit is far more costly than the entrance.
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Quote of the Day

Matthew Yglesias on wingnuts duping wingnuts.
At some point conservatives need to ask themselves about the larger meaning of this kind of conduct—and Andrew Breitbart’s—for their movement. Beyond the ethics of lying and smear one’s opponents, I would think conservatives would worry about the fact that a large portion of conservative media is dedicated to lying to conservatives. They regard their audience as marks to be misled and exploited, not as customers to be served with useful information.
HT to DougJ.
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Short Takes

The search widens for the missing sailor in Afghanistan.

Will he or won't he? There are conflicting stories about whether or not Tony Hayward at BP will be replaced.

Monitoring marsh grasses for clues to spillage damage.

Miami's Metromover trains are running again, nearly a week after a collision shut most of it down.

Photography is not a crime.

Nightowls or early risers: I am not the only person who blogs early in the morning.

The Tigers split the doubleheader with the Blue Jays.
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Sunday, July 25, 2010

Sunday Night Music


I just got this album -- again. It reminds me of playing Hearts with Steve, John, and Doug on summer nights in 1970.
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Sunday Reading

The Scourge of Anonymity -- Glenn Greenwald looks at the perils of trusting anonymous sources on the Internet.
CNN's Kyra Phillips and John Roberts spent a good five minutes yesterday expressing serious concern over what they called "the dark side" of the Internet: the plague of "anonymous bloggers" who are "a bunch of cowards" for not putting their names on what they say, and who use this anonymity to spread "conspiracy," "lunacy," "extremism" and false accusations (video below). The segment included excerpts from an interview with Andrew Keene, author of Cult of the Amateur: How Today's Internet is Killing our Culture, who explained that the Real Media must serve as "gatekeepers" to safeguard the public against the dangers of anonymity on the Internet. Roberts demanded that bloggers should "have the courage at the very least to put your name on it," while Phillips announced: "something is going to have to be done legally. . . . these people have to be held accountable, they're a bunch of cowards."

These CNN journalists have a very good point, of course: it was, after all, Internet bloggers -- using the scourge of anonymity -- who convinced the nation of a slew of harmful conspiracy theories: Saddam had WMD, an alliance with Al Qaeda, and responsibility for the anthrax mailings. Anonymity is also what allowed bloggers to smear Richard Jewell, Wen Ho Lee, and Steven Hatfill with totally false accusations that destroyed their lives and reputation, and it's what enabled bloggers to lie to the nation about Jessica Lynch's heroic firefight, countless U.S. airstrikes, and a whole litany of ongoing lies about our current wars. And remember when anonymous bloggers spewed all sorts of nasty, unaccountable bile about Sonia Sotomayor's intellect and temperament? Just as Roberts lamented, blogs -- as a result of anonymity -- are the "Wild West of the Internet . . . . like a giant world-wide bathroom wall where you can write anything about anyone."
His point, of course, is that all of those anonymously-sourced stories appeared in the mainstream media; i.e. newspapers and broadcast news outlets.

More below the fold.

Tightly Wrapped Package -- The Miami Herald tries to lift the curtain around Rick Scott, the multi-millionaire Republican running for governor in Florida.
''The only thing we know about him is what he's wanted us to know, so I'm eager to see what he's like for real,'' said Joni Weist, a Sarasota Republican club leader who said she left unsatisfied after hearing him speak.

''I had to keep asking him follow-up questions regarding his plan to attract businesses to Florida,'' said Radio Mambi host Ninoska Pérez Castellón, who spoke with Scott in Miami. ''He's very much like what he projects on television, but in this particular election, I think people need more than an image and a promise because of the economic situation. He gives very standard answers, and voters are going to want more from him and all of the candidates.''

Scott on offshore oil drilling: ''We have to continue to look at it.''

On his business background: ''I know what it's like to balance a budget.''

On social issues: ''Family values are very important to me. I'm a Christian. I am pro-life and pro-family.''

The few questions he fields from voters at some events offer the only unscripted moments of his campaign.

At a Clearwater diner, Scott agreed with high school teacher Sean O'Flannery in supporting a bill vetoed by Gov. Charlie Crist that would have overhauled teacher tenure. Asked for his education plan, Scott told the teacher he would release one soon but cautioned what would work in Clearwater won't work elsewhere.

''And also a school's color,'' Scott said. ''If you're 70 percent African-American, you are going to deal with different issues.''

The teacher agreed, but the McCollum campaign seized on the remarks, calling them ''concerning.''

Robert Phillips, a former corporate executive, asked Scott about the $1.7 billion fine for Medicare fraud paid by his former company, Columbia/HCA. Scott gave his stock response in which he takes responsibility and says he wished he had more auditors.

''All he's told us is trust him,'' said Phillips, who remains undecided about the race. ''That's not enough.''
Leonard Pitts, Jr. on the Sherrod story.
[I]sn't it telling how often conservatives will discover their burning concern over race just when it becomes useful to them? We saw this last year. In a nation where one state may soon require Latinos to show their papers, conservatives hyperventilated over the ''racism'' of Sonia Sotomayor extolling the virtues of a ''wise Latina.''

Now, against the backdrop of an Agriculture Department that long ago admitted to decades of discrimination against black farmers, Breitbart weeps over the ''racism'' of Shirley Sherrod refusing to assist a white farmer -- right up until she did.

It is probably useless to say Breitbart should be ashamed. There is little evidence he possesses the ability. But Sherrod is pondering a defamation suit, and a judgment in her favor might help him fix that defect.

May she win big. And may the outrage machine choke on the bill.
Gone Flat -- Alex Jung at Salon interviews Paul Solotaroff on the decline of the muscle culture in America.
Where have all the muscle men gone? Just a few short decades ago, men like Arnold Schwarzenegger, Hulk Hogan and Sylvester Stallone, with their glistening bodybuilder physiques, were not only movie stars but the embodiment of the 1980s American zeitgeist — pumped up, ripped and always ready to take off their shirt and start flexing. Nowadays, hyper-muscular physiques are more readily associated with a hard-partying subset of gay men and the cast of "Jersey Shore" than with conventional notions of sexiness (the Village Voice went so far as to conflate the two by putting the "Jersey Shore" stars on the cover of its queer issue). It's a change that telegraphs the ways in which our ideas about masculinity — and sex — have changed since the early '70s.

Muscle culture and the politics of masculinity are two things that are awfully familiar to Paul Solotaroff, contributing editor at Men’s Journal and Rolling Stone. His new memoir, "The Body Shop," recounts his own tortured relationship with steroids and weightlifting — an obsession that simultaneously built up his body and broke it down. Coming of age in the '70s, he was saddled with a slight frame and father issues, but when he began injecting steroids as a freshman in college, he went from anxious beanpole to muscle-bound hulk in a few short months. This change led to a career as a stripper, coke-fueled orgies and a lifetime of health problems.
Doonesbury -- Clip and save.

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Short Takes

More U.S. deaths in Afghanistan.

President Obama pays a surprise visit -- via video -- to the Netroots Nation meeting.

The heat is still on in the Midwest and East.

Ford did really well last quarter.

Still not dead -- There was another Castro sighting.

The Tigers lost to Toronto 3-2, and lost a couple of key players to injuries.
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Saturday, July 24, 2010

My Life On A Plate


Once again Ohio continued to ask the question about seat belts in 1974. This plate marked a first -- the plate was reflectorized -- and a last; it was the last time Ohio issued new plates every year, joining the growing trend of renewing with stickers in 1975.

I had the TRUCK version on my F-100. I graduated from college in May 1974 and drove back to Ohio, dumped my belongings in my parents' attic, and drove to Newport, Rhode Island to pick up my brother who was graduating from boarding school. We packed up his stuff, drove back to Ohio, dumped his stuff in the attic, and then I was off to Lander, Wyoming, to embark on my graduation present: a wilderness course with the National Outdoor Leadership School. I spent six weeks in the Uintah Mountains of Utah learning all about how to survive in the wild, climb mountains, and discovering a lot about myself. The experience also became the germ of The Hunter, the play that was my Masters thesis at the University of Minnesota in 1977.

When I returned home in mid-July, I was starving for news. This, after all, was the summer of the climax of Watergate, and for someone who was hooked on the minutiae of the scandal and who could name the members of the Senate Watergate panel as easily as the starting line-up of the Detroit Tigers, quitting cold turkey and going six weeks without a newspaper, magazine, or the hourly news on CBS Radio was excruciating. Fortunately my timing was perfect: I arrived home just in time for the House Judiciary Committee to release their evidence against President Nixon. The impeachment hearings were in full swing, and on the night of August 8 the nation gathered, much like they had five years before to watch Apollo 11, to witness another moment of history as President Nixon announced he was resigning.

So now that I was a college graduate with a degree in theatre, it was time to get a job. But what did all those years of studying acting, directing, playwriting, and scene design prepare me for? House painting, of course. I got a job working with the man who had painted our house over the years, and I made a pretty decent income until winter set in and the jobs dried up. I then got a part-time job working at the local public TV station as an office assistant. Neither jobs were what you would call careers, and grad school beckoned... at least it meant putting off finding a real job for a couple of years. In June 1975 I was accepted at the University of Minnesota, and in September -- after another summer of house painting -- I collected my stuff out of the attic and headed off to the Land of 10,000 Lakes.

Photo by David Nicholson.

The rest of the series is here.
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Their Agenda

House Minority Leader John Boehner went dry when he was asked what the GOP would do if they won back the House in November, but Michele Bachmann was not so reticent.
I think that all we should do is issue subpoenas and have one hearing after another. And expose all the nonsense that is going on.
She's talking about investigating the Obama administration... and that's all. Period.

As digby said, the lesson is that for the GOP there is no downside to crazy.
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Maddow 1, O'Reilly 0

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


The money quote:
Because when you got all 'kicked your network's butt' and 'madam' on me, you really weren't trying to tout your network's ratings. You were trying to take the attention off me saying that your network, Fox News, continually crusades on flagrantly bogus stories designed to make white Americans fear black Americans -- which Fox News most certainly does for a political purpose, even if it upends the lives of individuals like Shirley Sherrod, even as it frays the fabric of the nation, and even as it makes the American dream more of a dream and less of a promise.

"You can insult us all you want about television ratings, Mr. O'Reilly, and you'll be right that yours are bigger -- for now and maybe forever. You are the undisputed champion. But even if no one watches us at all except for my mom and my girlfriend and people who forgot to turn off the TV after Keith, you are still wrong on what really matters, and that would be the facts, your highness.
Flawless.

HT to Steve Benen.
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Magical History Tour


HT to CaitieCat.
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Short Takes

North Korea rattles their nukes.

Five U.S. soldiers were killed in Afghanistan.

Tropical Storm Bonnie passed through South Florida with little fuss on Friday.

The Deepwater Horizon's alarm system was disabled, according to a technician on board.

241 teachers in Washington, D.C., get their pink slips.

The Democrats gave up on the climate change bill.

What are the effects of a weather system on the oil slick?

Tropical Update: My Bonnie lies over the ocean.... as a tropical depression.

The Tigers got rained out; they'll make it up with a double-header tomorrow.
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Friday, July 23, 2010

God Hates Jedi

I am a firm believer in the philosophy of fighting batshittery with good-natured humor. And I am glad to see that not only am I not alone, but I have an entire movement behind me: Nerdom.
They've faced down humans time and time again, but Fred Phelps and his minions from the Westboro Baptist Church were not ready for the cosplay action that awaited them today at Comic-Con. After all, who can win against a counter protest that includes robots, magical anime girls, Trekkies, Jedi and...kittens?

Unbeknownst to the dastardly fanatics of the Westboro Baptist Church, the good folks of San Diego's Comic-Con were prepared for their arrival with their own special brand of superhuman counter protesting chanting "WHAT DO WE WANT" "GAY SEX" "WHEN DO WE WANT IT" "NOW!" while brandishing ironic (and some sincere) signs. Simply stated: The eclectic assembly of nerdom's finest stood and delivered.


There are a lot more pictures here at Comics Alliance.
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Daniel Schorr -- 1916-2010

Journalism has lost yet another giant.
Daniel Schorr, a longtime senior news analyst for NPR and a veteran Washington journalist who broke major stories at home and abroad during the Cold War and Watergate, has died. He was 93.

Schorr, who once described himself as a "living history book," passed away Friday morning at a Washington hospital. He was able to bring to contemporary news commentary a deep sense of how governmental institutions and players operate, as well as the perspective gained from decades of watching history upfront.

"He could compare presidents from Eisenhower on through, and that gave him historical context for things," said Donald A. Ritchie, Senate historian and author of a book about the Washington press corps. "He had lived it, he had worked it and he had absorbed it. That added a layer to his broadcasting that was hard for somebody his junior to match."
- 30 -

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The Party of Fiscal Responsibility

Via Think Progress, RNC Chairman Michael Steele has been doing some creative accounting.
In a memo to RNC budget committee members, RNC Treasurer Randy Pullen on Tuesday accused Chairman Michael S. Steele and his chief of staff, Michael Leavitt, of trying to conceal the information from him by ordering staff not to communicate with the treasurer – a charge RNC officials deny.

Mr. Pullen told the members that he had discovered $3.3 million in debt from April and $3.8 million from May, which he said had led him to file erroneous reports with the FEC. He amended the FEC filings Tuesday.

Campaign-finance analysts said that simply misreporting fundraising numbers to the FEC can lead to millions of dollars in fines and that criminal charges can be levied if the actions are suspected to be intentional.
These are the same people who want to run our economy again.
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The Bush Legacy Project

Paul Krugman looks at the attempts by Republicans to rehabilitate George W. Bush.
But they have a problem: how can they embrace President Bush’s policies, given his record? After all, Mr. Bush’s two signature initiatives were tax cuts and the invasion of Iraq; both, in the eyes of the public, were abject failures. Tax cuts never yielded the promised prosperity, but along with other policies — especially the unfunded war in Iraq — they converted a budget surplus into a persistent deficit. Meanwhile, the W.M.D. we invaded Iraq to eliminate turned out not to exist, and by 2008 a majority of the public believed not just that the invasion was a mistake but that the Bush administration deliberately misled the nation into war. What’s a Republican to do?

You know the answer. There’s now a concerted effort under way to rehabilitate Mr. Bush’s image on at least three fronts: the economy, the deficit and the war.
But it's more than just rehab. Republicans have this maddeningly smug sense of entitlement, as if it was Destiny that George W. Bush was president in spite of all the roadblocks put in his way, including a disputed election in 2000. Had the Supreme Court ruled the other way, the vote count continued in Florida and Al Gore became president, we would still be hearing from the GOP, Glenn Beck, and every right-wing blogger that Al Gore stole the election, that Bill Clinton had bribed his pals in Florida and on the Supreme Court, and that the gridlock imposed by the minority Republicans in the Senate from 2001 onward was justified in by their sincere objection to the illegitimate president's policies. As it is, they just put all of that off for eight years.

It didn't really matter what George W. Bush did in office; he could have been the biggest doofus to occupy the White House since Warren G. Harding and the GOP noise machine would have made him out to be another Washington or Jefferson. After all, they had a lot of practice with Ronald Reagan (who, it turns out, wouldn't stand a chance with today's Tea Party thanks to all of his tax hikes and willingness to work with the likes of Tip O'Neill). To Republicans, obsequious duty to a president of their party, regardless of what he does, is Rule 1. Ironically, for all their years of combating Communism, it's a dead ringer for Soviet-style legacy building.
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Quote of the Day

Josh Marshall on blaming President Obama for the Sherrod mess:
Still, you just have to back up from that and realize that as disappointing as Tom Vilsack’s first crack at this was, the idea that he or Obama is the bad guy in this story is not only preposterous but verging on obscene. It’s like the NYPD as the bad guy in the Son of Sam saga because they didn’t catch David Berkowitz fast enough. Or perhaps that the real moral of the story is that the woman with the stalker should have been more focused on personal data security. Not for some time has something so captured the essential corruption of a big chunk of what passes as ‘right wing media’ (not all, by any means, but a sizable chunk along the Breitbart/Fox/Hannity continuum) and the corruption of the mainstream media itself as this episode.

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Poor Baby

The victim of the Shirley Sherrod story speaks out:
An unrepentant Andrew Breitbart told POLITICO on Thursday that the Obama administration and its allies have manufactured a controversy over the video he posted of Shirley Sherrod’s speech to the NAACP as part of an orchestrated effort to take him down.

“I am public enemy No. 1 or 2 to the Democratic Party, the progressive movement and the Obama administration based upon the successes my journalism has had,” Breitbart said in a telephone interview late Thursday morning as he headed to the airport for what he said was a long-planned, three-day vacation.
Oh, set it to music, you worthless excuse for a "journalist." I hope Shirley Sherrod sues your ass off and you end up selling classified ads for the weekly shopper's guide in Bayonne.

The good news about this story is that this, at long last, might be the Joseph Welch "have you no sense of decency" moment in the whole right-wing cacophony of smears and attacks on the Obama administration and liberals in general. To be sure, it won't stop the attacks, but perhaps now people and the press won't be so quick to fall for them. That means that best thing that could come out of this whole kerfuffle is that while the attacks will become more and more outrageous -- if that's possible (and of course it is) -- they won't be a source of concern; they'll be a laughingstock, and the people that push the latest "shocking" scandal will be taken as seriously as the guy who stands on the street corner, soaked in his own urine, shouting at the passersby about the CIA putting transmitters in the fillings in his teeth.
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Friday Blogaround

The oil well is capped, Andrew Breibart is a sleaze-ball, Newt Gingrich is a religious bigot. What else do we have?
- A Blog Around The Clock: a change of venue for Coturnix. Update your link.
- archy: wow, Ben Stein is quite the snob.
- Bark Bark Woof Woof: Sarah Palin emulates one of The Rivals.
- Bloggg is not happy with the Sherrod business and the White House handling thereof.
- Dohiyi Mir: the kid.
- Echidne Of The Snakes: utterly hilarious.
- Florida Progressive Coalition Blog: in case you missed the list of Florida Netroots 2010 winners.
- Left Is Right: bits.
- Pen-Elayne on the Web: orienteering.
- Rook's Rant: jealousy.
- rubber hose: the war against the unemployed.
- Scrutiny Hooligans: affordable housing.
- Stupid Enough Unexplanation: religious bigotry.
- The Invisible Library: and the Buddha has Robin's back.
- The Yellow Something Something: death is not cheap.
How's your summer going so far?
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Short Takes

Finally: President Obama signs the jobless benefits bill.

Making the case: Both sides present their arguments in the lawsuits against the Arizona immigration bill.

The House Ethics panel has a date with Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY).

What a heel: Ken Buck, a Republican running in the primary for the Senate in Colorado against Jane Norton, tells voters to choose him because he doesn't wear high heels.

President Obama called Shirley Sherrod and made nice.

Tropical Update: It's Tropical Storm Bonnie now, and it looks like we might get a bit of rain here.

The First Family will be here in Florida just in time to get a taste of Bonnie.

R.I.P. Ralph Houck, Tigers manager from 1974-1978.

The Tigers are back on a winning track; they beat the Blue Jays 5-2.
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Friday Catblogging Classic

It's been dry recently...


But not for long.
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Thursday, July 22, 2010

Food For Thought



Photo by Balla Tamas.
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Question of the Day

Off to pick up a few things at the grocery store?
What kind of grocery shopper are you? Do you graze up and down the aisles (trying to avoid the people who are blocking it with their cart in the middle as they stare blankly at a can of Dinty Moore beef stew), or are you a hunter-gatherer with a list and the layout of the store memorized, strategically planning each move to get in, get your stuff, and the longest time you spend is waiting in line behind the person laboriously writing a check?
Definitely hunter-gatherer here. I can be in an out of Publix and get everything I need in under a half an hour.
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