Jan 272010
 

One chamber of Congress seems to be making progress.  One isn’t.

congress The political will is there on one side of the Hill for comprehensive healthcare reform. Greg Sargent talks to Dem House whip James Clyburn:

"I feel certain that the House Democrats will pass health care reform if the fixes that we feel need to be made to the Senate bill are guaranteed," Clyburn said. Asked directly if the House votes would be there if this happened, Clyburn said: "Yes, sir."

Clyburn’s comments suggest that if Dem leaders figure out a way of demonstrating to House Democrats that the reconciliation fix is iron-clad, they could support the Senate bill in large enough numbers to pass.

Clyburn cautioned, however, that House Dems would have to be convinced of the veracity of the fix, citing the "natural distrust between the two bodies." He added that House Dems would want to see the fix address their opposition to the "Cadillac" tax, to state-based exchanges, and to various sweetheart deals for Senators.

Clyburn called on the President to use his clout and prestige to urge Congressional Dems to follow this course of action during tomorrow’s speech.

Meanwhile, the Senate Dems reportedly didn’t talk about reform at their weekly luncheon today… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Alternet>

Senate Democrats didn’t even talk about it?  The Nevada Leg Hound, Harry Reid, needs to pull his head out of his nether parts and get cracking!  Perhaps he should change his name to Ulysses so we can call him Useless for short!!

Of course the DINOs are whining:

Dino Two Democratic senators, Evan Bayh of Indiana and Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, have declared that they won’t support a plan to have the House pass the Senate health care bill whole, then pass fixes to the bill through the reconciliation process.

A third, Ben Nelson of Nebraska, suggested lawmakers give up on the comprehensive health care bill entirely and pass reforms one by one.

"We need to focus on things where we have a consensus," Bayh said."Just ramming through a bill on a purely party-line vote on a strictly partisan basis will not do much to generate the kind of progress around here on other issues that we need."

Bayh also said he doesn’t understand why the Senate dropped the version of the bill passed by the Finance Committee with one Republican vote. "Maybe we should take another look at that," he said. "If Sen. Snowe was willing to vote for it, perhaps there were other Republicans who were willing to."

Under reconciliation, legislation could pass with 50 votes (plus Vice President Biden as a tie-breaker), with no chance of a filibuster. So Democratic leadership could afford to lose a few votes and still be able to pass changes to the Senate bill… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <TPM>

Bayh has to be intentionally obtuse here.  Let me clarify.  He’s lying his head off.  Before any Republican votes for passage of any of the versions of health care reform that have been on the table, I will be arrested for poop-bombing SCOTUS, while flying over DC under my own power.  And Nelson has some nerve complaining about reconciliation.  He had no problem with the use of reconciliation in 2001 when he voted for Potomac Pinocchio’s $1.3 trillion tax cuts for the rich!

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Jan 272010
 

Yesterday I caught up on comments, but did virtually no visiting, because I had occupational and physical therapy.  One of the exercises was walking around a square path of corridors for six minutes while the therapist followed me holding a blood oxygen monitor hooked to me.  On each circuit, I passed a skeleton, whom I named George, and had an ongoing conversation with him as I passed.  The therapist was laughing like hell, especially when I said, “George, considering your physical condition, I sure hope you’re a Republican.”  I learned some good stuff, though.  This will take up one day a week, and I’ll be done in March.  Today will ve no better, because it’s my volunteer day at the therapy group.

Today’s Jig Zone puzzle took me 4:18.  To do it, Click Here. How did you do?

Here’s your cartoon:

Happy Hump Day!

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It’s Time to Dump Reid!!

 Posted by at 3:18 am  Politics
Jan 262010
 

The Nevada Leg Hound, Harry Read has been too busy spinelessly humping GOP and Blue Dog legs to be an effective Majority Leader in the Senate:

Reid-LegHound Research 2000 for Daily Kos. 9/18-20. Likely voters. MoE 4% (8/31-9/2 results)

Harry Reid (D) 41 (40)

Danny Tarkanian (R) 52 (45)

Reid (D) 42 (41)

Sue Lowden (R) 51 (44)

Yeah, incumbents usually don’t come back from numbers like that in the best of times. In this political environment? Brutal. Reid’s favorability rating of 34 percent, compared to 55 percent unfavorable, doesn’t give him much room for improvement. Among independents, that number is 26-61. Definitely brutal.

This isn’t the first poll showing Reid in trouble, there are plenty of those floating around. So we decided to look for a Democrat that could hold the seat for us.

Oscar Goodman (D) 44

Tarkanian (R) 41

 

Goodman (D) 44

Tarkanian (R) 40

 

Shelley Berkley (D) 40

Tarkanian (R) 46

 

Berkley (D) 40

Lowden (R) 45

 

Ross Miller (D) 36

Tarkanian (R) 44

 

Miller (D) 37

Lowden (R) 43

Miller is the Nevada Secretary of State. With name ID of only 38 percent, he’s unknown, but has potential upside. Berkley is a congresswoman, and tainted with DC. That association is toxic.

Then there’s Oscar Goodman, the mayor of Las Vegas who recently left the Democratic Party to run for governor as an independent. The flamboyant politician certainly carries none of the stench of DC’s failed political culture on him, making him the most electable Democrat in the state. And he’s not even a Democrat anymore…

Inserted from <Daily Kos>

Since it seems clear that this jellyfish cannot even hold onto his own Senate seat, Nevada Democrats need to run a candidate with a better chance at winning the seat, and leave the Majority Leadership to be filled by a Democrat with sufficient spine to stand up to the GOP.

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Traitor Joe Must GO!

 Posted by at 3:17 am  Politics
Jan 262010
 

He’s at it again!

Warning!  Do Not Watch the Embedded Video Without Barf Bags Handy!

lieberman-traitorjoes During the 2008 presidential campaign, Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) supported Republican John McCain and attacked then-candidate Obama while speaking at the Republican National Committee. Though he currently caucuses with Democrats in the Senate, Lieberman has repeatedly stated that he views running for re-election in 2012 as an option.

In an interview on Connecticut’s Face The State program this weekend, Lieberman once again said that it was “possible” he could run for re-election as a Republican. Noting that “it would be harder, to be honest, to get the nomination in the Democratic party,” Lieberman said that while he is “most likely” to remain an independent, he could see himself as a Republican:

HOST: Could you see yourself being a Republican or is that…

LIEBERMAN: It’s possible.

HOST:…far-fetched.

LIEBERMAN: Yeah, yeah. No, it’s possible. A good old-fashioned New England moderate Republican.

Watch it:

 

Lieberman has also suggested that he would “support some Republican candidates for Congress or Senate in the elections in 2010.” In a separate part of the interview, Lieberman suggested that he was open to endorsing Republican Linda McMahon in a Senate race against Democratic Attorney General Richard Blumenthal if she wins her primary with former Rep. Rob Simmons (R-CT).

It’s not clear, however, how helpful Lieberman’s support would be for any candidate in the Senate race. A recent Public Policy Polling (PPP) survey found that Lieberman had “a 25 percent approval rating with 67 percent of his constituents giving him bad marks.” To demonstrate how disliked Lieberman is by CT Democrats, PPP notes that “Barack Obama’s approval rating with Connecticut Republicans is higher than Lieberman’s with the state’s Democrats.”…

Inserted from <Think Progress>

Democrats no longer have the luxury to keep this vile turncoat at the head of Homeland Security.  Traitor Joe Must GO!

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Jan 262010
 

In tomorrow’s State of the Union address, Obama plans to address the Bush/GOP deficit.

gopdeficit Looking to signal at least one step toward reining in huge federal budget deficits, President Barack Obama will propose a three-year freeze in non-security discretionary spending, senior administration officials said Monday.

His budget proposal, to be unveiled in part with Wednesday’s State of the Union speech and in detail next week, will urge Congress to keep overall spending at $447 billion a year for agencies other than those charged with national security and mandatory-spending programs such as Social Security and Medicare.

The freeze would take effect with the 2011 fiscal year starting Oct. 1, and wouldn’t affect the $787 billion economic stimulus plan already being implemented, the officials said.

It also wouldn’t affect a $154 billion jobs plan pending before Congress and backed by Obama, the officials said. One aide said that plan would be exempt because it would take effect this year, before the freeze.

Administration officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to not upstage the president, said that the three-year freeze would save $250 billion over a decade — if it’s approved by an election-year Congress.

After three years, the total spent would be the lowest as a percentage of the total economy in 50 years. Spending on those agencies has increased by an average of 5 percent a year since 1993, the officials said… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <McClatchy DC>

My knee-jerk reaction to this was to think he’s loony as a Tea bugger!  Reduce spending during a recession is a GOP solution.  Consider Hoover.  After listening to a couple progressives, I decided to reserve judgment.  The details will show.  Our government is awash in corporate welfare.  It would be possible for Obama to increase programs for Main Street and still achieve the savings by cutting the GOP’s No Millionaire Left Behind spending.  So I’m going to wait and see how it develops before ASSuming the worst.

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Eikenberry Cables Revealed

 Posted by at 3:15 am  Politics
Jan 262010
 

Before Obama decided to give the Bush/GOP generals, McChrystal and Petraeus, what they wanted, we knew that the US Ambassador to Afghanistan had grave concerns.  Now we know what they were.

eichenberry The United States ambassador in Kabul warned his superiors here in November that President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan “is not an adequate strategic partner” and “continues to shun responsibility for any sovereign burden,” according to a classified cable that offers a much bleaker accounting of the risks of sending additional American troops to Afghanistan than was previously known.

The broad outlines of two cables from the ambassador, Karl W. Eikenberry, became public within days after he sent them, and they were portrayed as having been the source of significant discussion in the White House, heightening tensions between diplomats and senior military officers, who supported an increase of 30,000 American troops.

But the full cables, obtained by The New York Times, show for the first time just how strongly the current ambassador felt about the leadership of the Afghan government, the state of its military and the chances that a troop buildup would actually hurt the war effort by making the Karzai government too dependent on the United States.

The cables — one four pages, the other three — also represent a detailed rebuttal to the counterinsurgency strategy offered by Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the top American and NATO commander in Afghanistan, who had argued that a rapid infusion of fresh troops was essential to avoid failure in the country.

They show that Mr. Eikenberry, a retired Army lieutenant general who once was the top American commander in Afghanistan, repeatedly cautioned that deploying sizable American reinforcements would result in “astronomical costs” — tens of billions of dollars — and would only deepen the dependence of the Afghan government on the United States.

Sending additional forces will delay the day when Afghans will take over, and make it difficult, if not impossible, to bring our people home on a reasonable timetable,” he wrote Nov. 6. “An increased U.S. and foreign role in security and governance will increase Afghan dependence, at least in the short-term.”

Without offering details, Mr. Eikenberry has said in public hearings since then that his concerns have been dealt with, and that he supported the White House’s troop increase plan.

But it is not clear what might have changed about his assessment of President Karzai as a reliable partner, and the strong language of the cables may increase tensions between the ambassador and the Karzai government, especially as world leaders meet in London on Thursday to discuss a much-debated Afghan plan to reintegrate Taliban fighters. It also coincides with a strong effort by the administration to mend ties with Mr. Karzai.

An American official provided a copy of the cables to The Times after a reporter requested them. The official said it was important for the historical record that Mr. Eikenberry’s detailed assessments be made public, given that they were among the most important documents produced during the debate that led to the troop buildup.

On Nov. 6, Mr. Eikenberry wrote: “President Karzai is not an adequate strategic partner. The proposed counterinsurgency strategy assumes an Afghan political leadership that is both able to take responsibility and to exert sovereignty in the furtherance of our goal — a secure, peaceful, minimally self-sufficient Afghanistan hardened against transnational terrorist groups.

“Yet Karzai continues to shun responsibility for any sovereign burden, whether defense, governance or development. He and much of his circle do not want the U.S. to leave and are only too happy to see us invest further,” Mr. Eikenberry wrote. “They assume we covet their territory for a never-ending ‘war on terror’ and for military bases to use against surrounding powers.”

He continued, “Beyond Karzai himself, there is no political ruling class that provides an overarching national identity that transcends local affiliations and provides reliable partnership.”

In a second cable, dated Nov. 9, he expressed new concerns: “In a PBS interview on November 7, Karzai sounded bizarrely cautionary notes about his willingness to address governance and corruption. This tracks with his record of inaction or grudging compliance in this area.”

On Monday, Mr. Eikenberry declined through an embassy spokeswoman, Caitlin M. Hayden, to comment on the cables and his views on Mr. Karzai. She said by e-mail, “We stand by what we provided during the review process, which got us to the clear strategy we’re now implementing, that the ambassador unequivocally supports.”

In his memos, Mr. Eikenberry raised other concerns. He said he had serious doubts about the ability of the Afghan police and military forces to take over security duties in the country by 2013. “The Army’s high attrition and low recruitment rates for Pashtuns in the south are crippling,” he wrote. “Simply keeping the force at current levels requires tens of thousands of new recruits every year to replace attrition losses and battlefield casualties.”

The ambassador, who left the military last April to become Mr. Obama’s emissary, also complained about an inadequate civilian counterpart organization to the NATO military command in Afghanistan. Nearly three months later, he is still expressing concerns about too few civilian experts in Afghanistan.

He also noted worries that the success of Mr. Obama’s Afghanistan policy hinged on Pakistani forces’ eliminating militants’ havens in the mountainous region near the Afghan border.

Pakistan will remain the single greatest source of Afghan instability so long as the border sanctuaries remain,” he wrote. “Until this sanctuary problem is fully addressed, the gains from sending additional forces may be fleeting.”

“As we contemplate greatly expanding our presence in Afghanistan, the better answer to our difficulties could well be to further ratchet up our engagement in Pakistan,” he wrote without elaboration.

On Nov. 9, he repeatedly warned against rushing into a large deployment of more American forces without further study… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <NY Times>

Like a traditional general, Eikenberry made his points and, now that the administration chose the opposite path, has shut up  to follow his orders.  The unfortunate thing is that Eikenberry was right.

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Jan 262010
 

Yesterday I was robbed.  They promised me a Cat Scan, but they lied!  I traveled a half hour, each way.  I filled out a ton of forms.  I waited an hour past my scheduled appointment.  I was passed through a huge machine.  But I didn’t even get to meet the cat, let alone discuss feline matters or play!! 🙁

I replied to the build up of comments, but got no visiting done.  Today should be no better, as I have appointments for both occupational and physical therapy this afternoon.  They call it COPD Boot Camp.

On today’s Jig Zone puzzle, I have an unfair advantage.  It took me 3:53.  To do it, Click Here.  How did you do?

Here’s your cartoon:

What’s up this week?

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