Jul 192010
 

Yesterday I kept up with replying to comments and returning visits.  That should be no problem today.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 3:15.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Short Takes:

From Common Dreams: The top U.S. oil spill official on Sunday directed BP Plc to submit a plan for reopening its capped Macondo well to flow into the ocean after engineers detected seepage on the ocean floor near the well.

This “seepage” may interfere with plugging the GOP gusher via the relief well.

From Think Progress: The heads of the Republican congressional campaign committees — Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) and Pete Sessions (R-TX) — appeared on NBC’s Meet the Press today to discuss their party’s strategy for the November elections. Sessions began by saying that everyone knows exactly “what Republicans stand for,” but he quickly proved that even he doesn’t really know. Host David Gregory, visibly frustrated, repeatedly pressed the two campaign chiefs for substance, saying, “these are not specifics, voters get tired of that.” But all he got in return was vapid talking points, like how Republican candidates are “standing with the American people back home.”

We do know what they stand for.  Their only hope is that the general public never learns.

From The Nation: Consider: in 1928 the richest 1 percent of Americans received 23.9 percent of the nation’s total income. After that, the share going to the richest 1 percent steadily declined. New Deal reforms, followed by World War II, the GI Bill and the Great Society expanded the circle of prosperity. By the late 1970s the top 1 percent raked in only 8 to 9 percent of America’s total annual income. But after that, inequality began to widen again, and income reconcentrated at the top. By 2007 the richest 1 percent were back to where they were in 1928—with 23.5 percent of the total.

Republicans have destroyed fifty years of progress in just thirty years.

Cartoon: from Cagle.com

19bagley

OGIM!

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Jul 182010
 

 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]

In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.

The 7th Amendment is a little confusing.  It appears to guarantee a jury trial in all civil cases, but it does not.  It refers to British common law as it existed in 1791.  Common law divided civil cases into two categories: actions in law and actions in equity.  Thus we are guaranteed a jury trial for actions in law, but not for actions in equity.  Cases demanding monetary damages are actions in law.  Cases demanding injunctions, rescission, specific performance, etc. are actions in equity.

This is controversial in two places.

Republicans repeatedly claim that Justices may not refer to any document other than the Constitution in deciding cases.  Isn’t that rather obtuse given that the Constitution itself refers to another document?

Republicans support the notion that giant corporations may include arbitration clauses in financial and employment documents.  These clauses force resolution of civil disputes by arbiters the corporations choose.  Since such disputes involve monetary damages, they are actions in law, and the arbitration clauses attempt to circumvent the right to a jury.

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Jul 182010
 

God forbid that children should be taught that hatred is wrong.

Fox_News_Nazi Over 500 Helena, MT residents gathered at the Helena School District’s school board meeting Tuesday night to weigh in on a new K-12 health education plan released last week. The 62-page proposal, developed by community members and health officials over two years, promotes a broad health and nutrition education program for each grade. However, there is a small section dealing with sex education that has ignited a firestorm of backlash among conservatives, both locally and nationally.

The curriculum would teach first graders “that human beings can love people of the same gender;” second graders “not to make fun of people by calling them ‘gay’ or ‘queer;’” and fifth and sixth graders that “there are several types of intercourse.” These ideas spurred right-wing pundits Sean Hannity (and guest Fox News contributor Todd Starnes), Bill O’Reilly, and Laura Ingraham into a tail-spin on their shows this week over the curriculum as a weapon to promote the homosexual agenda:

– HANNITY: What right does a school district that can’t even teach kids to read and write — and this is, generally speaking, around the country — have to impose their values on the kids? [7/13/10] [Faux Noise delinked]

– STARNES: Sean, this is the report right here. Sixty-two pages. I have read every single word. And I’ve got to tell you something, Jack and Jill go up the hill, and they do some really inappropriate things once they get up there. […] Rub a dub dub, three men in a tub. [7/13/10][Faux Noise delinked]

– O’REILLY: This stuff comes from the school boards and the superintendent. They want to indoctrinate the children. The reason is they don’t want bullying. They want tolerance across the board. So you take a 5-year-old who just wants to play and, all of a sudden, it’s Heather has two mommies or Gary has 18 daddies. I don’t know what it is. [7/14/10][Faux Noise delinked]

– INGRAHAM: Children will learn that sexual relationships could happen between two men or two women. Why stop there? Why are they stopping at two? I mean that’s very exclusionary, don’t you think? No plant life invoked. [7/15/10][Faux Noise delinked]

Watch it:

 

Hannity, O’Reilly, Ingraham, and many right-wing conservatives actually have no problem imposing values onto students — as long as they’re the values they champion, as found in programs like abstinence-only education. Medical experts have concluded that not only do abstinence-only programs not curb teen pregnancy, but “there is evidence to suggest that some of these programs are even harmful and have negative consequences by not providing adequate information for those teens who do become sexually active.” Despite clear evidence and increasing recognition of their inefficacy, such programs continue to receive millions in federal funding.

When it comes to curriculum content, the right-wing watchdogs are clear on what values are acceptable. Hannity slammed an Arizona school district for “refusing to end its Mexican-American studies program,” citing a Chicano civil rights textbook as evidence that the class radicalizes students to overthrow the government… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Think Progress>

People can love people of the same gender.  They object to that.  Those religious right hate-mongers had better start preaching in their pulpits that Jesus loves only the women in the congregation.

Don’t make fun of people by calling them gay or queer.  When I was a second grader, we insulted people by calling then fags and queers.  We had no idea what it meant, but we saw the big kids doing it, so we thought it was cool.  I regret that now, because I was inviting children to experience self-loathing as they grew up and discovered they were attracted to the same gender.  The Republicans object to teaching that this hatred is wrong.

There are several types of intercourse.  By the time I was in fifth grade, I already knew that oral sex existed and also knew of at least half a dozen positions.  I knew that homosexuality existed and had already been preconditioned by social intolerance to be disgusted by the idea.  We’re talking 1959 here, and half a century later, kids know a lot more than we did.  My point is that we won’t be teaching these kids anything they don’t already know.  The Republican objection to the teaching of this is the absence of hate in the presentation.

These Republicans are hypocrites.  They have no objection to teaching values, as long as they are their values.

Jesus would have no problems with this curriculum.  He hung out with social outcasts of all flavors, and accepted them.  He would object to the legalism and bigotry of the Pharisees and Sadducees of today, the Republican religious right.

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Poll Results: 7/18/2010

 Posted by at 3:02 am  Blog News
Jul 182010
 

Here are the results of the November Election Poll:

Poll0717

And here are your comments:

From Annette on July 11, 2010 at 2:19 pm

 

I think it will be small gains in certain areas… I really don’t believe the rethugs will get control of anything.

 

From rjs on July 6, 2010 at 5:48 am

 

saw this when i was here yesterday…

The Intrade odds for the Democrats to maintain control of the House of Representatives after the November elections have been trading below 50% for the last week, and the odds have fallen from 62% on May 21 to 46% today.

so you can put your money on it if you want:

http://www.intrade.com/jsp/intrade/common/c_cd.jsp?conDetailID639645z1278352526638

 

From Infidel753 on July 2, 2010 at 3:04 pm

 

The party in power always always loses some seats, but teabaggers and radicals have saddled the Republicans with nutjob or extremist candidates in Kentucky, Nevada, Florida, and eslewhere. I don’t think the losses will be large.

 

From Grung_e_Gene on July 2, 2010 at 1:02 pm

 

I went with the small losses because there are districts out there who consider Virgina Foxx, Steve King and Michele Bachmann to be sane

 

From Otis on July 1, 2010 at 6:54 am

 

Not a clue. There is no, even semi-reasonable/reliable means of judging what the electorate is thinking. The primaries are party specific, so that doesn’t mean much. The news is crap, so that means even less.

 

From Lisa G. on June 30, 2010 at 7:38 pm

 

I said big gains only because I think people are realizing how obstructive the Repubs are with their threats of filibustering practically everything. And killing the unemployment extension I think is really going to hurt them.

clip_image001

 

Small losses was the big winner with big losses a distant second.  I voted small losses.  By rights, it should be total victory, or at least big gains, because this Democratic Congress, in the face of unprecedented Republican obstruction, has done more for the American people than any Congress since the LBJ administration.  Sadly most American voters are so apathetic that they do not take the time to learn the issues and party track records, and the media present GOP lies as fact.

We have a new poll.  Note that it is multiple choice.

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Jul 182010
 

Yesterday I replied to comments, returned visits, and visited several additional locations.  I expect to stay up to date today.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 3:59.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Fantasy Football:

To join our fantasy football league, click here.

Short Takes:

From McClatchy DC: The new cap plugging the gusher in the Gulf of Mexico was holding up on Saturday but BP officials still weren’t sure if and when they would begin siphoning oil to containment ships on the surface.

I heard on the news last night that they will start siphoning oil today.

From The Independent: Royal Bank of Scotland could be poised to sue Goldman Sachs for hundreds of millions of dollars after the American investment bank paid out $550m (£358m) to settle fraud charges brought by the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Goldman neither admitted nor denied the SEC’s charges. However, as part of the settlement it did admit that it should have told investors in a controversial mortgage derivative known as Abacus that a hedge fund client which helped with the portfolio was betting on it failing.

Go RBS!!  Put a kilt over Blankfein’s head and bash him with bagpipes!!

From Alternet: Instead of saying racism is unacceptable in their movement, Palin and Tea Party leaders pretend the NAACP called them all racists.

That’s a lie, of course.  The GOP and their brownshirts refuse to condemn Teabagger racism, because that would alienate a significant portion, although not all, of their base.

Cartoon: from Cagle.com

18matson

Be blessed.

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Jul 172010
 

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]

In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.

The Sixth Amendment deals with defendants’ rights.

First we have the right to a speedy trial.  But Bush and the GOP held defendants incommunicado for months with no trial and pushed for secret trials.

Next we have the right to a an impartial jury.  Nevertheless prosecutors, especially in red states, frequently manage to empanel all white juries in areas that are predominantly African American.

We have the right to know with what and we are accused, a right regularly denied terrorism related defendants by Bush and the GOP.

We have the right to confront witnesses against us, usually, but not always upheld.

We have the right to obtain witnesses on our defense.  Today, many cases hinge on highly specialized expert witnesses.  Prosecutors can obtain them at will, but only very rich defendants can afford them.  Public defenders typically operate on a small fraction of the budget provided for prosecution.

We have the right to counsel.  There are some highly motivated and skillful defense attorneys doing pro bono work, but for the most part, public defenders are overworked and underpaid.  Success as a prosecutor is the most stepping-stone to a successful political career, so prosecution attracts the best lawyers.  As a result, the conviction rate for cases taken to trial is over 90%.

The Sixth Amendment has become so undermined that our criminal justice system is broken.

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Jul 172010
 

I keep hearing on the media that the November elections will be a referendum on the current economy, that Republicans will make major gains because of Obama’s failure to reduce unemployment.  If so, voters need ask themselves this question.

gop-no As the partisan cable networks breathlessly discuss what will happen in the midterm elections in November, there is much talk about how Americans are angry and, as a result, the Republicans are set for major gains in Congress. But the connection between these two assertions — Americans’ dissatisfaction and GOP success — strikes me as incredibly lazy, both by the media and the voters.

Nowhere is this disconnect more clear than in the financial regulation battle, which finally concluded with a bill passing the Senate yesterday.

Americans have every right to be angry. Oil has been spewing into the Gulf of Mexico for nearly three months (hopefully, it’s finally been contained). Islamic extremists seek to kill Americans. We have such a muddy immigration situation, that, no matter which side of the ideological fence you sit on (pun intended), you can’t be happy with the way things currently operate.

GOP-wallstreet But the main point of anger is the economy. The official unemployment rate is hovering around 10 percent (with millions more not counted because they’ve given up on looking for a job). People are concerned about their ability to pay their bills and see an unfair system that rewards Wall Street’s reckless risks while punishing middle class workers.

But if Americans want to assess blame for these woes, and if they want to choose who should help get us out of these messes, they have an obligation in a democracy to make an effort to really look at the issues before making a decision. And the media, likewise, has an obligation to sort through these complicated issues more carefully.

If the Republican campaign message for 2010 was something like, "Yes, we know that we caused all these problems in the Bush years, but we’ve learned our lesson, and now we are offering these new ideas to fix things in the future," I would understand (if not agree with) the equating of the problems with Republican gains. But that’s not what the Republicans are offering. Rather, the GOP campaign message for 2010 is essentially the same message as the Bush years, only more militant (and more wacky, thanks to the Angle-Paul tea party influence). Their pitch is built around deregulation, lower taxes for the rich, and less government, the very things that got us into this mess in the first place.

The Republican congressional record for the Obama years consists of opposing any initiative the president offered (in an effort to make him look ineffectual), even if he proposed something the GOP itself had supported earlier, and to offer as solutions the same tired policies from the Bush years (tax cuts, even if they add to the deficit, as Sen. Jon Kyl suggested). That shouldn’t be a winning election argument. But with incendiary rhetoric and right-wing-propaganda-machine-fueled lies taking center stage, the focus for the midterms hasn’t been on the facts (how we got here and what the two parties have offered since).

In fact, the Republicans have been at the heart of the causes of these problems, and they have offered little other than the same policies as solutions.

Which brings us back to financial regulation, an issue directly tied to the current economic problems. We did not magically morph from prosperity to recession. Rather, the current recession and massive job loss began with the near collapse of the financial system in 2008. Wall Street played a win-lose game (they won no matter what, but we all lost) with risky financial instruments. The housing market collapsed under the weight of subprime mortgages. So the deregulation trumpeted by Republicans caused this mess, and yet the party still touts deregulation.

GOP-Recession Certainly, Americans should be angry. And it would seem obvious that action was needed. Nevertheless, all but three Republicans in the Senate didn’t think so. Given a choice of standing with the banks or the American people, the Republicans announced their allegiance loud and clear: It is the party of the financial institutions.

So what is the Republican solution to our economic woes? Based on the actions of their leaders, it seems to be to blame the victims, cut taxes and protect the banks. Not only have Republicans opposed extending unemployment benefits, they have tried to blame the unemployed for their plight, particularly cruel since it was their policies that put them out of work in the first place. Arthur Delaney pointed out two examples in HuffPost last week: Sen. John Kyl said unemployment benefits provide a disincentive for the unemployed to seek work, and Sen. Judd Gregg claimed that unemployment insurance encourages the unemployed to stay out of work. (Again, Kyl won’t support adding to the deficit for unemployment insurance, but he is fine with doing so for tax cuts for the wealthy.)

Republicans have used increasing government debt as a pro-GOP argument. Generally, it is, of course, better for the government not to run large deficits. But the Republican argument ignores history and is overly simplistic. After all, Bill Clinton handed a surplus to George W. Bush, who proceeded to leave Obama with a gaping deficit. Republicans were happy to run up debt in the 2000s on tax cuts for the rich and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, none of which were paid for. But now that the tens of millions of Americans face unemployment, these same GOP leaders complain about the deficit and say we can’t afford any programs to help. How is it that we could afford to spend when it was for tax cuts (and still can, according to Kyl), but not to help those hurt by the Republican-policy-induced recession?

Two polls released on Tuesday showed that Americans care more about unemployment than the deficit. Which party is more concerned with each of those issues? So why should the anger translate to GOP votes? It shouldn’t.

In general, Republican policies precipitated the recession, and the party’s solutions are to offer more of the same. And when it came to deciding who to stand up for, the Republicans attacked the unemployed and stood with the banks. Americans’ anger is legitimate, but directing that anger by giving power back to the GOP is misplaced. The connection makes no sense… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Huffington Post>

The author elucidates the same points I have been making for months.  They are points we need to keep driving home over and over again.  The November elections should be no contest whatsoever, based on comparative records.  But the media want it to be a horse race.  They make more money on advertising that way.  In addition, they have their own right wing interests that set their agenda, because it is the Republicans who support consolidation of the media to concentrate the ability to control what we see and hear in the hands of a few giant corporations.

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Jul 172010
 

Why are Megan Kelly and her associates still defending these lies?

FoxFandB For weeks now, Megyn Kelly has been suggesting that scary black men with billyclubs are on their way to a voting booth near you, thanks to the racial favoritism of the Obama Justice Department supposedly at the heart of their decision not to prosecute a small band of fringe African American activists. Yet two days after Kelly had a prima donna meltdown on the air when a Fox News colleague, Democrat Kirsten Powers, challenged the significance of the story, there was almost no discussion about it on Kelly’s America Live show yesterday (7/15/10).

Kelly did take time out to visit the O’Reilly Factor last night but the discussion was more about media coverage – i.e. attacking the so-called "liberal media" for not seeing the "importance" of the story – than it was about the supposedly earthshaking accusations of a GOP activist that Kelly dubbed a "whistleblower."

In other words, on the same day that Kelly turned the temperature way down on her own coverage of the case, she and Bill O’Reilly complained that other media should be ramping it up. Was there absolutely nothing new in the "explosive" story of black radicals threatening the integrity of our voting system that Kelly had trumpeted so many times an hour on so many previous shows? Or was she feeling the heat of the spotlight that Fox News Democrat Kirsten Powers shone on her "news" agenda?

Meanwhile, if Kelly truly thinks the story is so important, why hasn’t she expanded her coverage to examine the larger picture of voter crimes prosecuted by the Department of Justice? Why hasn’t she investigated just how big a problem black intimidation of white voters is? Why hasn’t she showed any interest in any cases of voter intimidation against AFrican [sic] Americans?… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <News Hounds>

While this article points out the hypocrisy of the GOP Reichsministry of Propaganda, Faux Noise, it misses a couple key points.  First, the DOJ decided not to prosecute these individuals while Bush was still in office.  Obama had nothing to do with it.  Also, I saw Keith Olbermann comment the other night that the NBPP has only three members.  It may be slightly more than that, but the group is tiny.  The real Black Panther Party disavows them completely.  You can be certain that voter intimidation by the NBPP is moot.  Republican intimidation of minority voters, however, is another matter.

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