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Speaking of Wallowing

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The Groton Democrats will be holding a victory party at which we non-traditional Americans will celebrate our deliverance from the specter of a Romney presidency, never mind the almost equally frightening specter of a Senator McMahon. If you hate America too, come join us at the Groton Motor Inn at 3:00 PM on Sunday as we celebrate the re-election of our Kenyan socialist fundamentalist-Muslim power mad president. Donation, strictly to cover costs, is $15.00. Here he is, by the way, on election night in Groton where he made a brief, little noted appearance.

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Friday Night Music-Still wallowing

Couldn’t resist. First saw this here.

Yes, Randy Newman yet again.You have to admit, though the words don’t always fit, the tone of the song goes great with the visuals.

I saw the video a few days ago and when I went searching for it on youtube to post it here, I stumbled on this, a version of the same song by a guy named Howard Tate, who I’m guessing is from New Orleans. The song is actually about the flooding that took place in 1927, so it became quite topical after Katrina. About a minute or so into this video the voice of our former president comes on, and it’s really quite shocking. How did a dunce like that ever manage to steal the office? I’d almost forgotten the way he talked in empty cliches, straight from an empty heart and an empty brain.

Ready to charge any price and impose any burden

…to assure the survival and success of the Republican Party.

The Ohio Secretary of State, Jon Husted, has been slapped down by a federal judge for unconstitutionally trying to deprive people of their right to vote, but he is undeterred:

Husted fired back, saying through a spokesman late Tuesday that the judge’s ruling would allow potentially fraudulent votes to be counted. Husted will appeal the ruling. (Emphasis added)

(via cleveland.com)

It’s simple really. Better that thousands of valid votes be rejected than that one fraudulent vote be counted. It’s the same noble sentiment expressed by Bismarck that “it is better that ten innocent men suffer than one guilty man escape”.

Take a gander, by the way, at the judge’s decision, which is reproduced in full at the link above. He makes good and creative use of Bush v. Gore. The court, as I recall, practically directed the lower courts not to use the case as precedent, because (and I’m injecting my reading here, the court did not admit this) it opened an equal protection loophole that might actually be turned against the interests of the right. Well, that’s what the court did in this case, basically ruling that the Secretary of State violated equal protection, citing Bush v. Gore, by threatening to apply different standards to different groups of voters. Exactly the sort of thing the Supreme Court wanted to leave in place if they could, for their sole objective was to find a rationale, however legally absurd, for installing Bush in office. The equal protection argument actually makes sense in the Ohio case, but it’s richly ironic that the judge is able to make it by citing to a case in which the court ruled as it did in order to keep votes from being counted.

Pundits and hypocrites

David Atkins, at Hullabaloo makes the legitimate point that the punditocracy has insisted on treating expressed concerns about the deficit as real, when recent and current history establishes quite definitively that the deficit scolds (Krugman’s spot on term) are really only interested in slashing benefits for everyone who isn’t them. But I take issue, sort of, with this:

The fact that everyone in the Village Media has bought into the deficit obsession as it were a real thing rather than simply the latest iteration of a decades-long tactic designed to further enrich the wealthy shows not just herd mentality and willful blindness. It shows a craven willingness to go along with direct economic sabotage and shameless lying in the guise of politics as usual.

(via Hullabaloo)

Yes, they’re willfully blind, but with good reason. Just as “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!”, it is easy to get him to parrot a lie when it enhances his financial position. We mustn’t forget, these folks are beneficiaries, albeit not to the grossly obscene extent as people like Romney, of the economic policies they claim we have no choice but to adopt. They are all rich, and they all benefit from low taxes on the rich. None of them need social security or Medicare or Medicaid, though to be fair, some of them know people who do. They just don’t care about them. They ignore and distort the truth because it suits their own purposes, as well as those of their corporate masters.

It would be wonderful if there were a law that required every pundit to disclose his or her net worth and annual income before allowing them to opine on anything.

Meanwhile, hypocrisy and deceit run rampant at the very epicenter of the Beltway. The Center for American Progress has proposed a long term (it’s in the long term that the deficit is a problem) solution to the cost of health care, which is the chief driver of the deficit. It involves squeezing money from the overpaid health providers and providing incentives for Medicare recipients to only go the doctor when they’re sick. No benefit cuts, just reductions in payments to bloated providers. But Republicans will have none of it:

Congressional Republicans call the approach wishful thinking. They argue that all health care programs, including Medicaid for the poor and Obama’s law covering the uninsured, must be on the table. They say any plan that walls off big portions of government health care spending is simply not credible.

(via Huffington Post)

These are the same Republicans who falsely claimed that Obama was cutting Medicare and only they could preserve the program inviolate. That was then, and this is now, and there’s nothing they’d like better than taking a crack at really cutting Medicare and, of course, turning around and blaming Democrats again.

Who would have thought?

The New London Day’s headline today:

Petraeus Hoped affair would stay secret

What would we do without the press to tell us these things?

A Good Idea out of Texas

A Republican official in Texas called for his state to separate from the United States and the “maggots” who reelected President Barack Obama in a newsletter he sent out this week.

Peter Morrison, who serves as treasurer of the Hardin County Republican Party, wrote in his post-election newsletter that there was a clear solution to the problem of Obama’s re-election.

“We must contest every single inch of ground and delay the baby-murdering, tax-raising socialists at every opportunity,” Morrison wrote. “But in due time, the maggots will have eaten every morsel of flesh off of the rotting corpse of the Republic, and therein lies our opportunity.”

“Texas was once its own country, and many Texans already think in nationalist terms about their state. We need to do everything possible to encourage a long-term shift in thinking on this issue. Why should Vermont and Texas live under the same government? Let each go her own way in peace, sign a free trade agreement among the states and we can avoid this gut-wrenching spectacle every four years,” he wrote.

(via TPMMuckraker)

So Pete, don’t let the door hit you on the way out, and make sure you take some friends with you. In fact, you have to take some friends, because we’ll be taking Texas in a few years, but we’ll never get Alabama. I couldn’t agree less with your views, but I’m in total accord with at least one of your aims.

Little noted

In keeping with their fear and loathing of effective messaging, the Democrats themselves will probably never mention this, but tell your friends that the GOP only kept control of Congress because they managed to gerrymander every state they control beyond recognition. More people voted for Democrats for Congress than Republicans. It’s a point that should be hammered home, but of course, it is a fact to which neither pundit nor politician will allude. In any rationally structured country, we would have swept the table.

 

It is an unfortunate fact that Democrats have a habit of losing big in years ending in zero. The Republicans get to draw the districts, as a result of which the House of Representatives is well stocked with buffoons. The Senate is too, but not quite so abundantly. The Senate is crippled by the filibuster, and the House by gerrymandering. We are probably the least democratic “democracy” in the world. 

Obama to pull a Ryan?

Now that the election is over, and having successfully circled the wagons to protect our guy, it is incumbent upon us to maintain our positions, turn our attention inward, and form a circular firing squad. Let me be among the first to take a shot, though, as always, as I work days (even on this federal and state holiday ) there are those that have beat me to it.

The Grand Bargain is in the air. The Democrats having won, they are busily trying to figure out ways to win the approval of those that Krugman has aptly named the “deficit scolds”; give the Republicans a club with which to beat them; and quickly disappoint the base that had to work so hard to re-energize itself in order to deliver the victory.

In this morning’s Times we learn that Obama may just do now what he should have done with health care and the stimulus: rally the people for support:

As he prepares to meet with Congressional leaders at the White House on Friday, aides say, Mr. Obama will not simply hunker down there for weeks of closed-door negotiations as he did in mid-2011, when partisan brinkmanship over raising the nation’s debt limit damaged the economy and his political standing. He will travel beyond the Beltway at times to rally public support for a deficit-cutting accord that mixes tax increases on the wealthy with spending cuts.

(via NYTimes.com)

A great idea, but I see trouble ahead. Paul Ryan spent much of the campaign defending himself from well-founded charges that his numbers didn’t add up, and that the voters were entitled to know where he would cut. Of course we knew where he was going to cut, but he didn’t want to say because, after all, he wanted to win. So, will we now be treated to the spectacle of Obama touting what may be illusory tax increases on the rich while he evades or misrepresents the details of the cuts? If this is any indication of his current thinking, he’ll be selling us all out and doing his best to reinvigorate the Republican party which will be able to do what is supposedly impossible: have its cake and eat it too. Gleefully will it cut Social Security and Medicare, and then just as gleefully will it blame those unnecessary cuts on the Democrats, who will indeed be guilty of both bad policy and bad politics.

So look for Obama, should he hit the road, to get at least some supporters to cheer for their own destruction, while Ryan-like, he avoids telling us what he has in store for us. Not needing to run again, he is free to burnish his legacy by shepherding a bi-partisan shafting through Congress. Here’s hoping that the likes of Warren, Sanders and Murphy will disabuse the White House of the notion that all Democrats will go along, and lemming like, follow him off that non-existent “fiscal cliff”.

Friday Night Music

Late posting tonight, as we were out with friends celebrating a birthday and the election results.

Earlier in the week I downloaded Neil Young’s last two albums, one of which is called Americana, which consists of Young’s take on an eclectic mix of standards. The iTunes version comes with grainy black and white video versions of each song. I haven’t had a chance to view them all yet, this having been a busy week, but I enjoyed this one, and since it’s patriotic and all, and since this is a week in which Americans did themselves proud (it’s not their fault that the Republicans gerrymandered themselves into control of the House…well, it’s a little bit their fault) I thought I’d put this one up. Neil’s version of a song that sets patriotic hearts aflutter on both sides of the pond, but I think, and I think Neil thinks, our version is better.

Both sides don’t do it

The Christian Science Monitor reports that the fact that right wingers are apparently really truly surprised at Romney’s defeat, despite the fact that it was being predicted by almost every number cruncher, is evidence of a growing partisan divide. I won’t argue with the basic premise, but the piece undercuts itself by repeating yet again the common media trope: both sides do it.

Both sides of the media equation are at fault, Professor Tremayne says, noting that despite the presence of many national polls suggesting Obama was ahead, many media outlets all over the political spectrum continued to call the race extremely close.

“This is understandable because this creates a sense of drama and therefore ratings, which all for-profit media want.”

(via CSMonitor.com/2))

It’s truly hard to even discern which media outlet is on the other side of that equation, but lets get to a far more basic fact. Both sides don’t do it. We lefties may be opinionated, but we’re not deluded, nor do we demand that others act as if our delusions, if we so indulged, are true. We don’t shoot messengers. I never went to Nate Silver’s site in 2010, not because I didn’t believe him, but because I did, and it was far too depressing to face the numbers. I don’t recall a single lefty calling for his head, nor do I recall anyone at MSNBC, assuming any validity to the claim that it is the anti-Fox, insisting that the Democrats were about to triumph. We are reality based. We may be wrong sometimes, but it’s not because we insist on believing our own fantasies.

I’m not complaining, mind you. It is my fervent hope that the Republicans cling to the delusion that Romney lost because he was not “conservative” enough. There is a natural rhythm to presidential elections, such that it might normally be their “turn” to win in 2016. But if they continue to embrace the crazy, it will make it all the easier for us to elect President Warren.

Speaking of people believing their own delusions, check this out.