Aug 042010
 

Yesterday, I spent most of the day at a meeting and had no tome left for replying to comments or returning visits.  Today is my volunteer day co-facilitating a therapy group for former prisoners, so it won’t much better, if at all.  I shall reply to every comment and return every visit possible.  Potting a big dent, at least, in that backlog id my project for tomorrow.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 3:55.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Fantasy Football:

Because it was clear that we will not get enough players, and CBS will not let us publish the league to get players from the general pool, I moved the league to Fox Sports, because they will let us go public.  I have sent an email initiation to everyone who was in and two have responded, so far.  If you would like to play, sign into Fox Fantasy Football with any MSN ID.  The League ID is 1023560.  The Password is nogop

Short Takes:

From TPM: Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) has added his voice to those who are speaking out against the construction of a Muslim community center in downtown New York, close to Ground Zero, an issue that has become a major cause on the right.

Once again I call to strip this Republican of his Committee Chair.

From Think Progress: Police in south-central Pennsylvania have arrested prison guard Raymond Franklin Peake for the murder of Todd Getgen on July 21 at a Pennsylvania Game Commission shooting range. What’s most disturbing about this incident is why Peake is involved. Peake told police that he found Getgen already dead and “stole his rifle so it could be used by an extremist group bent on overthrowing the U.S. government.”

This is Republican patriotism at its finest.

From MSNBC: A Teabagger Dovorce

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

Grounds? Failure to commit Teabuggery

Cartoon: from Cagle.com

4keefe

Happy Hump Day!

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Aug 032010
 

constitution

We have been covering the US Constitution line by line.  When Republicans wave their paper props and parrot their vile machinations, we will be prepared to expose the lies.  We have finished the main body of the Constitution.  Now we continue with the Amendments.  You can find the last article on the main body of the Constitution here. It has links to all the others.  The text comes from The US Constitution.  Previous articles in the Amendment series:

Article I
Articles II and III
Article IV
Article V
Article VI
Article VII
Article VIII
Articles IX and X
Articles XI and XII
Article XIII
Article XIV
Article XV
Article XVI
Article XVII
Article XVIII
Article IX
Article XX

 

Article [XXI]

1:  The eighteenth article of amendment to the Constitution of the United States is hereby repealed.

2:  The transportation or importation into any State, Territory, or possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating liquors, in violation of the laws thereof, is hereby prohibited.

3:  This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by conventions in the several States, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the States by the Congress.

The Twenty first Amendment repeals the Eighteenth, prohibition.  It was ratified in 1933. 

Clause 2 provides authority for states to regulate the import and use of alcohol within their respective borders.

Clause three provides a seven year time limit for ratification.

We covered the controversial aspects of prohibition in our study of the Eighteenth Amendment, so I shall not repeat that.

Amendment XXII

1:  No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once.  But this article shall not apply to any person holding the office of President when this article was proposed by the Congress, and shall not prevent any person who may be holding the office of President, or acting as President, during the term within which this article becomes operative from holding the office of President or acting as President during the remainder of such term.

2:  This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by the legislatures of three-fourths of the several states within seven years from the date of its submission to the states by the Congress.

Ratified in 1951, the Twenty second Amendment limits a President to two elective terms.  Clause 2 contains a seven year time limit.  It is not controversial.  However, there was talk, during the second term of the Bush Regime, about staging a Reichstag Fire and suspending elections to keep Bush in office beyond his second term.  With the economy spiraling out of control, due to their malfeasance, Republicans decided it might be better to lose power and blame the Democrats.

I shall try to put up a new article in this series almost every day.  It will take some time to cover it all, but when we’re done, we shall be immune to the lies with which Republicans seek to undermine our freedoms.

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Aug 032010
 

Republicans are going hog wild supporting No Millionaire Left Behind.  They’re fighting to heep the Bush tax cuts for America’s richest two percent.  The most common lie they are using is that it is an Obama tax increase.  It is not.  The expiration was part of the original bill.  Robert Reich explained why we should let the tax cut for rich expier, but let it continue for the poor and middle classes.

GOPgreed The economy is slouching backward because consumers can’t and won’t spend enough to revive it. Congress is about to recess for the summer without doing anything to fill the gap. And it looks like the only issue it will be debating when it returns is who, if anyone, should pay more taxes next year — just the very rich, everyone, or no one? The cuts enacted by George W. Bush will expire in January, and with midterm election pending in November we’re about to be treated to months of tax demagoguery.

Here’s a guide to the perplexed.

From a strictly economic standpoint — as if economics had anything to do with this — it makes sense to preserve the Bush tax cuts at least through 2011 for the middle class. There’s no way consumers — who comprise 70 percent of the economy — will start buying again if their federal income taxes rise while they’re still struggling to repay their debts, they can’t borrow more, can no longer use their homes as ATMs, and they’re worried about keeping their jobs.

But the same logic doesn’t apply to people at the top, earning over $250K, who represent roughly 2 percent of tax filers. Restoring their marginal tax rates to what they were during the Clinton administration (36 and 39 percent) won’t inhibit their spending. That’s because they already save a large portion of what they earn, and already spend what they want to spend. (During the Clinton years the economy created 22 million net new jobs and unemployment dropped to 4 percent.)

But restoring those top marginal tax rates will help bring down the long-term debt, pulling in almost a trillion dollars of revenues over next ten years. That’s not nearly enough to make a major dent in the nation’s projected deficits, but it’s not chicken feed either. It would at least signal to financial markets we’re serious about cutting that long-term deficit — and the rest of us will chip in when the economy strengthens.

So-called supply-side economists don’t like raising taxes on anyone, of course, and argue that raising them on the well-off will slow economic growth. They say people at the top will have less incentive to work hard, invest, and invent.

Unfortunately for supply-siders, history has proven them wrong again and again. During almost three decades spanning 1951 to 1980, when America’s top marginal tax rate was between 70 and 92 percent, the nation’s average annual growth was 3.7 percent. But between 1983 and start of the Great Recession, when the top rate was far lower — ranging between 35 and 39 percent — the economy grew an average of just 3 percent per year. Supply-siders are fond of claiming that Ronald Reagan’s 1981 cuts caused the 1980s economic boom. In fact, that boom followed Reagan’s 1982 tax increase. The 1990s boom likewise was not the result of a tax cut; it came in the wake of Bill Clinton’s 1993 tax increase.

A final reason for allowing the Bush tax cut to expire for people at the top is the most basic of all. Although Wall Street’s excesses were the proximate cause of the Great Recession, its fundamental cause lay in the nation’s widening inequality. For many years, most of the gains of economic growth in America have been going to the top — leaving the nation’s vast middle class with a shrinking portion of total income. (In the 1970s, the top 1 percent received 8 to 9 percent of total income, but thereafter income concentrated so rapidly that by 2007 the top received 23.5 percent of the total.) The only way most Americans could continue to buy most of what they produced was by borrowing. But now that the debt bubble has burst — as it inevitably would — the underlying problem has reemerged… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Huffington Post>

Robert also appeared with Keith Olbermann.

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

As I see it, Republicans with threaten Democrats that, unless Democrats extend the tax cuts for everyone, they will filibuster extending the tax cuts for anyone.  My greatest fear is that Democrats will cave in again.  If they do, Republicans will continue to blame them for the Bush/GOP deficit, so they will gain nothing.  If they fight, they will either win or Republicans will have to face the voters about why their taxes are going up.  It’s a fight we’d rather win, but one we can afford to lose.  But we cannot afford not th have this fight.

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Easy Fix for Social Security

 Posted by at 1:51 am  Politics
Aug 032010
 

While the cat food commission ponders how to cut the benefits we eared through years of contributions, there remains one sure4 fix for social security.

3social-security

If you believe Social Security is broken, here’s proof that it’s easy to fix:

  1. CBO analysis shows that if all income were subject to the Social Security tax (as opposed to just the first $106,800), Social Security’s trust fund would last through 2083. Given the imprecision of 75-year economic forecasts, that should be good enough for now.
  2. A poll conducted for USA Today by Gallup shows that 67% of Americans support lifting the cap on income subject to the Social Security tax.

Problem solved. In fact, it was so easy to solve, it’s really not much of a problem… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Alternet>

You’ve heard this solution from me many times before.  We need to keep repeating this until it takes root.

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Aug 032010
 

Yesterday I managed to stay current with replying to comments and returning visits.  Today I have a meeting, and I don’t know how much time I will have.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 4:56.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Fantasy Football:

Because it was clear that we will not get enough players, and CBS will not let us publish the league to get players from the general pool, I moved the league to Fox Sports, because they will let us go public.  I have sent an email initiation to everyone who was in and two have responded, so far.  If you would like to play, sign into Fox Fantasy Football with any MSN ID.  The League ID is 1023560.  The Password is nogop

Short Takes:

From Think Progress: Tamara Scott, the state director for the conservative Concerned Women of America, told the NOM rally crowd that “part of the country’s current economic downturn was to blame on the social costs of the threatened traditional family unit through the legalization of gay marriage.”

Lady, the idea that the Republican Recession had anything to do with gay marriage is nuts!  Are you going to blame gays for the GOP gusher too?

From Raw Story: The Republican National Committee will invite Andrew Breitbart to its rescheduled "big donor" fundraiser in Southern California, which had been set to feature the conservative columnist and online-media mogul, along with numerous California Republican politicians.

I had hoped they would keep them.  He’s a walking definition of who they are.

From TPM: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has come out in support of congressional hearings into the matter of whether the US Constitution grants citizenship to every person born in the United States — so-called ‘birthright’ citizenship.

As we have learned in our Constitutional study, there is nothing for hearings to investigate.  All people born here are citizens.  Mitch “Bought Bitch” McConnell has joined the Republican “anchor babies” meme, proving that GOP racism goes all the way to the top.

Cartoon: from Cagle.com

3matson

What’s up?

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Aug 022010
 

Our fifth full month since we moved from Blogger was excellent.  While we did not soar, as we did in June because of one article that went viral, we continued our previous pattern of steady growth.

Here are our basic stats:

vv710

Note that taking June out, we have a curve with an increasing slope, a pattern of accelerating growth.

Here is our most recent Clustrmap.

map710

Our durations are up a bit:

Number of visits: 17059 – Average: 240 s

Number of visits

Percent

0s-30s

13762

80.6 %

30s-2mn

702

4.1 %

2mn-5mn

593

3.4 %

5mn-15mn

739

4.3 %

15mn-30mn

374

2.1 %

30mn-1h

481

2.8 %

1h+

408

2.3 %

That’s expected, with fewer hit and run visits.

Search engine responses still good.

12 different referring search engines

Pages

Percent

Hits

Percent

Stumbleupon (Social Bookmark)

2158

75 %

2875

74.7 %

Google

641

22.2 %

889

23.1 %

Yahoo!

34

1.1 %

34

0.8 %

Windows Live

11

0.3 %

16

0.4 %

Unknown search engines

8

0.2 %

8

0.2 %

AOL

8

0.2 %

8

0.2 %

Bing

6

0.2 %

6

0.1 %

Google (Images)

4

0.1 %

4

0.1 %

Dogpile

2

0 %

2

0 %

Ask

1

0 %

1

0 %

ix quick

1

0 %

1

0 %

Yandex

1

0 %

1

0 %

Our top 15 referrers (blogs) are:

http://www.reddit.com/

http://crooksandliars.com/

http://jbm479.blogspot.com/

http://www.timsscaredstiff.com/

http://carolinaparrothead.blogspot.com/

http://jackjodell.blogspot.com/

http://whohijackedourcountry.blogspot.com/

http://annette-justmylittlepieceoftheworld.blogspot.com/

http://parsleyspics.blogspot.com/

http://infidel753.blogspot.com/

http://themanwhowalksalonewalksfaster.blogspot.com/

http://www.jimhightower.com/node/7208

http://disaffectedanditfeelssogood.blogspot.com/

http://thebeekeepersapprentice.com/

http://oakcreekforum.blogspot.com/

http://reconstitution.us/rcnew/

http://truthshallrule.blogspot.com/

http://theleftinme.blogspot.com/

While Reddit is not a blog, I included an extra link for them as they are our overall top referrer.  There are two more extra links because the last three blogs are tied at seven referrals each.  Enjoy the linkey-love

One of the best ways you can publicize Politics Plus is to use the share button at the bottom of each post to list our articles on the the sites where you belong.

Technorati increased our Technorati Authority from 141 to 494.  That means we have 494 links in the last six months from blogs that are registered with and recognized by Technorati.  Thus we are officially a High Authority blog and are very high on the B-list.  we need six more to reach 500 and the A-list.  If we make it, we’ll be in the same category as giants like Daily Kos and Huffington Post.  Since so many blogs have never registered with them, and since it takes up to a year after that to be recognized, we have more blog links than that.  But keep using our material.  The motto here is Thou shalt steal.  Even if you want to embed an occasional whole article, that’s OK.  I just ask that you include a link to the original  here.  It’s not an ego thing.  The more recognition we get, the more effect we can have toward ending the right-wing insanity.

We have 45,301 links on other websites, up from 26,564 last month.

We have 1,235 posts and 8,870 comments, as of midnight 8/1.

If you are tired of our funky avatars and would like your own avatar, go to Gravatar.  Sign up using the email address you use to post comments here and upload the image you want to use.  Whenever you comment under that email address here or on any WordPress blog (several others too), that will be your avatar.

I’m very happy with our progress, and thank you for it.  This success belongs to all of us.

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Another Hand Job from Sarah

 Posted by at 1:46 am  Politics
Aug 022010
 

Sarah Palin has been writing on her hand again.  But when what she writes is a lie, she only echoes her Republican colleagues.

2Palin Since he was on the campaign trail, President Obama has proposed renewing the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts for the lower- and middle-class, while allowing them to expire on schedule at the end of the year for the richest two percent of Americans. Republicans, however, have begun to obfuscate the issue by saying that the end of the year will bring history’s largest tax increase, deliberately leaving out that Democrats have proposed extending most of the cuts.

Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN) pulled this rhetorical trick last week, saying “Democrats are poised to allow the largest tax increase in American history to take effect,” and on Fox News Sunday today former half-term governor Sarah Palin went down the same road. Fox’s Chris Wallace rightly pointed out that “the Republicans keep talking about being deficit hawks. This is $678 billion you are not going to pay for.” Palin responded “no, this is going to result in the largest tax increase in U.S. history. Again, it’s idiotic.”

Wallace proceeded to let Palin spend the next minute reading from notes on paper that she had written down. He interrupted her just for a moment to ask if she had anything written down on her hand, to which she responded that she did:

PALIN: My palm isn’t large enough to have written all my notes down on what this tax increase, what it will result in.… Democrats are poised to cause the largest tax increase in U.S. history, it’s a tax increase of $3.8 trillion in the next ten years and it will have an effect on every single American who pays an income tax. Small businesses, especially, will be hit hardest. Small businesses account for roughly 70 percent of our job creation in this country. So raising taxes on these employers is the worst thing that can happen.

WALLACE: Can I ask you, what do you have written on your hand?

PALIN: $3.8 trillion in the next ten years, so I have didn’t say $3.7 trillion and get dinged by the liberals saying I didn’t know what I was talking about.

Watch it:

 

Despite the preparation of her “cheat sheet,” she still doesn’t know what she is talking about.

For one thing, according to the Pew Economic Policy Group, an extension of all of the Bush tax cuts will cost $3.1 trillion over ten years, once the costs of servicing the debt are factored in. But no one has proposed allowing them all expire, and it’s incredibly disingenuous of Republicans to claim otherwise, especially since it was a budget gimmick by former President George W. Bush to include the ten-year sunset at all.

Extending just the cuts for the wealthiest two percent of Americans will cost $830 billion over ten years. As Center for American Progress Associate Director for Tax Policy Michael Linden wrote, “to put that figure in perspective, $830 billion is enough to pay for all veterans’ hospitals, doctors, and the rest of the Veteran’s Affairs health system, plus the United States Coast Guard, plus the Food and Drug Administration, plus the operation and maintenance of every single national park for the entire 10-year period — with more than $100 billion left over.”… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Think Progress>

Wallace was better that the standard for Faux Noise.  He did call her on some things.  But during the piece neither he or Palin ever mentioned that Obama plans to extend the tax cut for everyone except the riches 2%. So people who watch this Fox have no way to know that this will not effect their taxes.  They have every reason to believe it will, because of Palin’s inflammatory language and her lie about the amount.

So what have we learned?  Mooseolini is still an idiot and Faux Noise is still the Republican Reichsministry of Propaganda.

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Why Not Here?

 Posted by at 1:45 am  Politics
Aug 022010
 

Around the world, governments are admitting their participation in the Bush/Republican torture program.  Why not here?

2torture Eight years ago today, armed with two legal opinions that gutted the prohibition against torture, CIA agents and contractors began the month-long "enhanced interrogation" of Abu Zubaydah in a secret CIA dungeon in Thailand.

Throughout August, drawing from the specific menu of "techniques" the memos offered, interrogators slammed Abu Zubaydah repeatedly into walls, locked him in "confinement boxes," deprived him of sleep, shackled him naked in stress positions, and waterboarded him 82 times. They stopped waterboarding him when they finally concluded he was not concealing information — and then officials flew from Washington to Thailand and insisted on watching an eighty-third session.

Today, nobody argues that Abu Zubaydah wasn’t tortured. His name has disappeared from dozens of charge sheets against other detainees because the information he gave was so clearly tainted by his treatment. And yet we have done practically nothing to address the abuse that he and many others suffered, as U.S. and international laws against torture require — no prosecutions or investigations of senior officials who oversaw the torture program, no meaningful acknowledgment or redress for the program’s survivors.

President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, legal memo author John Yoo, and the other architects of the program brazenly discuss their crimes in public appearances, still pressing the memos’ flawed line that the brutal treatment of prisoners was necessary, that it was justifiable as self-defense, or simply that the President can ignore the law in the name of national security.

Meanwhile, the world is beginning to shame us for our inaction.

We now know that Abu Zubaydah’s treatment in Thailand was the foundation of a kind of Ponzi scheme for torture, in which others were tortured until they confessed to fictitious plots that Abu Zubaydah had invented for his interrogators. One of those caught in this scheme was Binyam Mohamed, who was tortured in Pakistan and then rendered to Morocco and tortured some more to press him to confess to participating in a fantastical "dirty bomb" plot with Jose Padilla. There never was such a plot, and finally, last year, Mohamed was released from Guantanamo; he is now back home in the U.K. There, the entire country knows his story, thanks partly to the fact that U.K courts refused to be bullied by the U.S. into suppressing evidence of his abuse.

The British are responding to the Binyam Mohamed revelations as they should: they are demanding that British intelligence agents who aided and abetted the U.S. torture program be investigated and held accountable for their actions. A few weeks ago, in announcing an official national inquiry into these allegations of complicity, British Prime Minister David Cameron told the House of Commons that "the longer these questions remain unanswered, the bigger the stain on our reputation as a country that believes in freedom, fairness, and human rights grows."

Similar processes are unfolding in other countries.

An Australian high court has ruled that its government, too, must answer allegations that it aided the U.S. in the rendition and torture of one of its citizens. Prosecutors in Munich and in Rome have issued indictments against CIA agents in connection with renditions carried out on their soil. Poland and Lithuania are investigating their government’s connection to CIA black sites in their countries. And Canada conducted a national inquiry leading to an official apology and millions of dollars of compensation to Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen whom the U.S. mistakenly sent to Syria to be tortured.

war criminal By contrast, both the Bush and Obama administrations fought to keep Maher Arar’s case out of American courts, arguing that airing his uncontested and internationally accredited story could damage diplomatic relations and national security. Last month, the Supreme Court refused to reconsider the dismissal of the case. A low point in the United States’ undignified slink from accountability, the symbolism of our nation’s highest court literally refusing to hear the case of a man that the world knows was kidnapped and tortured couldn’t be clearer.

The situation we are facing now will only get worse.

Even here, lower courts hearing the habeas corpus petitions of Guantanamo detainees are routinely adding to the damning record of abuse.

"Throughout his detention, a constant barrage of physical and psychological abuse was employed to manipulate him and program him into telling investigators what they wanted to hear," one recent opinion reads; another, "There is unrebutted evidence in the record that, at the time of the interrogations at which they made the statements, both men had recently been tortured."

Every week we stand more exposed—before the world, and before ourselves… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <McClatchy DC>

Republicans may question my blaming the torture on their party.  The claim that senior Democrats knew.  That may or may not be the case, as the senior democrats deny it, but even if they did know, the context under which Republicans claim they learned of it was top-secret CIA briefings.  Thus they would have been powerless to respond to the knowledge, because for them to tell anyone is a criminal act.  Add to that, once it became public, most Republicans voted against ending the torture.  So the torture was Republican Torture.  Democrats are complicit for our failure to hold Bush, Cheney and the rest criminally liable for their war crimes.  The time is now!

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