Archive for the ‘politics’ Category

This election.

Monday, October 20th, 2008

Were votin for the ni-!

All I have to say is . All I’ve ever seen in my adult life is the bitter divisions in our country, exploited on both sides but by far more explicitly by the right. I didn’t think we’d heal THIS quickly. I didn’t think that the Limbaughs and Hannitys would fade so quickly to the margins, but they have. They are a non-issue now. I’m really proud of this country. I hope that feeling will continue throughout the next four years.

Of course, for every one of these, it feels like there’s another of these. But I do feel that those attitudes are far more marginalized now than they were from ‘94 to ‘04.

Debate #3 Summary

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

Edit: And a follow-up commentary:

I blame boomers.

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

Rachel Maddow speaks for me.

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

I was thinking this all day yesterday: Who leads the Republican party right now?

Copy/paste crisis explanation

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

This is a verbatim copy of a long, fantastic post on the SomethingAwful forums explaining the steps that led us through the era of subprime mortgages and the selling of mortgage backed securities to the current crisis. Forums user razzledazzle says:

It’s ridiculous to blame the crisis on the Community Reinvestment Act or ACORN or whatever. The central thesis seems to be that the government forced lenders to give loans to risky customers, when in fact lenders chose to give loans to risky customers because there was a vast amount of profit to be made. (Reasonable people can differ on whether the CRA is good policy in principle and in practice, but that’s really besides the point here.)

It works like this:

(more…)

The day the market crashed.

Monday, September 29th, 2008

So here’s the situation at 2:30 PM on a Monday:

  • The Republicans have voted against the bailout bill en masse, causing it to fail 205-228. As of right now, there is no bailout bill in place, and the only solution House Republicans have in return is “lower taxes”. Earlier in the weekend, Minority Leader Boehner was promising the House Republicans would vote for the bailout and ensure the markets stayed steady.
  • The Dow is down 550 points and sinking.
  • We are fucked.

The Republicans voted against this not because it’s a bad bill (it’s not great but a truly great bill would not pass with Republicans anyways - as I said, their proposal is to erase the fucking capital gains tax which failing institutions wouldn’t be paying anyways), but so they could sit back and say “HEY GUYS WE VOTED AGAINST IT” in case it didn’t work. Or so they could have something to run against and try to win seats in November. House leadership on both sides wanted it to pass - Republicans who voted against it wanted it to pass. They just wanted to seem like the white knights fighting against this Bush/Democrat bill.

Basically, Republicans played petty election politics and are causing our economy to tank. This is why I’m not a fucking Republican. They have the audacity to put election politics above the good of the nation. A paraphrase of what McCain despicably and inaccurately says about Obama in regards to Iraq, they’d rather lose an economy than win an election.

Oh and  this just in - Republicans are trying to blame the bill’s failure on Nancy Pelosi. Fuck these motherfuckers. I don’t know what else to say. This is amazing in its utter lack of foresight and seriousness.

HEIL FRAU PALIN!

Thursday, September 4th, 2008
The Big Lie

The Big Lie lives on

Oh Sarah, poor lying and power-hungry Sarah. Debate it all you want, but here’s the truth: McCain is sunk. I’ll bet anything on it that picking her just sealed the deal - Nov 4th, Obama will be selected the next President of the United States, and it’ll be by a wide margin.

Modern political media totally sucks part 34

Monday, June 30th, 2008

On Sunday retired general Wesley Clark, promoting Barack Obama on CBS’ “Face the Nation” said some pretty provocative things in regards to John McCain’s service:

CLARK: Well, I don’t think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification to be president.

Ouch. Pretty harsh, eh? This sounds like a scandal in the making.

At least it does when twisted out of their original context:

SCHIEFFER: I have to say, Barack Obama has not had any of those experiences either, nor has he ridden in a fighter plane and gotten shot down. I mean –

CLARK: Well, I don’t think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification to be president.

SCHIEFFER: Really?

So basically Wes Clark has to defend Obama from Schieffer who is apparently supportive of the idea that riding in a fighter plane and being shot down is a qualification to be president, and is shocked when Clark says it isn’t. But if you were to read hack gossip websites Drudge Report or Politico.com or any of the hundreds of prominent blogs that copy from them verbatim, watch NBC or ABC, or god forbid listen to talk radio, you’d think Clark came out and took a huge shit on a pile of yellow ribbons.

This is what I mean when I talk about the media being awful. They do the bare minimum required to create new content, relying on gossip and out-of-context quotes to manufacture news and controversy. It’s completely irrelevant to the task at hand but it’s easier to be a reporter on a political version of Entertainment Tonight than to do the work of Woodward and Bernstein.

And as a side note, I can guarantee this is only controversy because it’s about McCain. I’m not saying the media was never easy on Obama; please, give me that much. The media has a vested interest in ratings above all, and the best way to get ratings is to create a close race. If McCain was up, it would be the reverse against him. Of course I do think on the whole the media is friendlier to the Republican marketing of we’re-the-tough-guys-and-they’re-the-pussies and typically do anything to reinforce those stereotypes, but that’s a tangent into which I won’t currently devolve.

Some perspective: Watergate vs today

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

I’m going to straight quote a Cato Institute blog for this one:

Reading Tim Lee on FISA, I had a historical revelation. We could have avoided the long national nightmare of Watergate if only the burglars had carried letters from President Nixon stating that John Dean had determined that they had a legal right to trespass.

This is why I’ll always be saying the Bush administration has been the worst since Nixon, if not worse. At least Nixon was held accountable by the public. Back then, wiretapping used to scare people. Now even the Democrats support warrantless wiretapping. Barack Obama yesterday:

My view on FISA has always been that the issue of the phone companies per se is not one that overrides the security interests of the American people

Despite in November ‘07 when he was saying this:

One of his most passionate passages was not in the prepared text. He promised to close down Guantanamo “because we’re not a nation that locks people up without charging them. We will restore habeas corpus. We are not a nation that undermines our civil liberties. We are not a nation that wiretaps without warrants.

His justification for denying public financing passes muster with me. This, however, seems to be a lot more spine-bending in terms of spin. Obama won’t even be present to vote on the FISA bill. Progressive leadership at its finest!

McCain and public financing (and the media).

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

With all the uproar over Obama’s decision, has anyone noticed that John McCain is in a bit of a dust-up of his own on the very same issue of public finance? Granted, we haven’t heard word one about it since February, but again, this is because the media is just so goshdarn friendly to Obama I guess. TPM Muckraker had a few good articles on it though from back in February:

First, McCain opted in to the public finance system for the primaries last year. It meant that his struggling campaign would get $5.8 million in public matching funds in March. Now that he’s effectively the Republican nominee, he wants out, because the system entails a spending limit of $54 million through the end of August. He’s almost spent that much already, according to the Post.

It is a serious issue. As the Post reports, “Knowingly violating the spending limit is a criminal offense that could put McCain at risk of stiff fines and up to five years in prison.”

McCain opted in to the public finance system for the primaries back when he was dead broke before New Hampshire in order to qualify for a loan (and also for free access to ballots, which cost Howard Dean approximately $3 million back in 2004). After New Hampshire when he was flush with money and it became apparent he would be the nominee, he has said that his opting in didn’t count and he wants to opt out because he didn’t want to be restricted by the spending limits. Here’s your campaign finance reformer, ladies and gents. Here’s the guy who’s so outraged by Obama opting out of public funding for the general.

Oh, and by the way, the law he’s breaking was created by the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002. As a side note, McCain is now running not only against that bill, but also against immigration legislation passed in 2006 and 2007 based on the failed-then-reworded McCain-Kennedy bill from 2005. The man is campaigning against two bills that he himself wrote and his opponent is the “flip-flopper”?

The DNC is filing a lawsuit this week in regards to McCain’s FEC problems because the FEC board does not have enough members to vote on whether McCain broke the law or not. Aside from Countdown with Keith Olbermann, does anyone honestly expect the news to cover it? I mean, with the news being such a liberal organization like Limbaugh and Hannity are always telling us, shouldn’t this be getting constant coverage while Obama’s finance problems go under the radar?

I’m still waiting for someone to show me evidence of a liberal media on any sort of wide-scale. I’m wholly convinced that the media has been rooting for conservatives since Reagan at the very least, but you can go back throughout history til at least the beginning of the Cold War with all of the communism scares to see similar actions. It feels like we’re still in McCarthyism mode, where reporters are afraid to look even the tiniest bit anti-war or pro-socialism lest they be outed as a dreaded LIBERAL. The questions are always “is he too weak?”, “is he too left?”, “are his acquaintances a little too extreme?” and never whether McCain gets too angry or if he’s too quick to go to war or if he’s going to further the privatization of government duties that has gotten us where we are today.

Left-wing media my fucking ass.

EDIT: Perfect timing via FirstRead:

With so much attention on Obama’s reversal on public financing, liberal bloggers like Arianna Huffington and Josh Marshall have wondered why McCain’s own apparent flip flop on the subject hasn’t received as much scrutiny.

Well, the Democratic National Committee is trying to change that by filing a lawsuit in US District Court in DC to force the Federal Election Commission to investigate McCain’s decision to opt in the public matching funds system for the primaries, secure a loan based on those public funds, and then withdraw from the system after becoming the GOP front-runner. McCain, though, never actually received those public funds before opting out.

“The chairman of the FEC,” the lawsuit states, “has already advised Sen. McCain that he is not free to withdraw unilaterally from his agreement with the FEC and to ignore the legal requirements of the Matching Payments Act, without the FEC’s approval. Yet Sen. McCain cannot obtain such approval, because he already violated a key condition for dispensing with the Agreement by which he entered the matching funds program: he has pledged matching funds as collateral for a loan to his campaign.”

Let’s see if this gets covered this time for any amount of time. I’ll be watching…

EDIT 2: Quoting Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen (Via Sargent):

Obama might have a similar bottom line, core principles for which, in some sense, he is willing to die. If so, we don’t know what they are. Nothing so far in his life approaches McCain’s decision to refuse repatriation as a POW so as to deny his jailors a propaganda coup. In fact, there is scant evidence the Illinois senator takes positions that challenge his base or otherwise threaten him politically. That’s why his reversal on campaign financing and his transparently false justification of it matter more than similar acts by McCain.

There you have it, in black and white. You see, McCain’s actions are justified because he was a prisoner of war.

Wow.