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At least we know he can read

 

You truly couldn’t make this country up. Anyone who's been paying attention knows that for reasons no one has ever bothered to explain, the right thinks that Obama’s use of a teleprompter proves how stupid he is. Yes, I know it’s really a shorthand way of saying he’s stupid because he’s black, but still.., a decent respect for the opinion of mankind and all that would seem to require some small measure of consistency, at least from someone, like Mitt Romney, who has joined in the anti-teleprompter chorus.

Well, take a look at the video here (I can't find it on youtube to get the embed code) , where it’s perfectly clear that Romney is reading from his teleprompter without paying the slightest attention to what he’s saying. Not only is he reading the words, he’s reading the prompts.

But on second thought, it’s perfectly reasonable that Romney should use a teleprompter while Obama should not. Obama, after all, is reasonably consistent and pretty much knows what he’s going to say at any given time. He should have it down cold. Romney, on the other hand, can’t be expected to remember what he’s supposed to say to whichever group he may be in front of at the moment. It’s a tough world out there for serial liars, and a teleprompter is just a reasonable accommodation to their handicap.

 

Just what they had in mind

 

Seems Karl Rove has been pretty blatantly coordinating with the Romney campaign, secure in the knowledge that no one will do anything about it.

WASHINGTON — Karl Rove was the featured speaker at a previously unreported luncheon held just outside the Mitt Romney campaign’s recent retreat for high-dollar donors, according to three Republican fundraisers who attended the event.

Rove’s luncheon speech did not appear on the retreat’s official agenda because Romney’s campaign didn’t host it. Instead, the event was hosted by Solamere Capital, a private equity firm founded by Tagg Romney, the candidate’s eldest son, and Spencer Zwick, the Romney campaign’s chief fundraiser who is often described as Romney’s “sixth son”.

(via The Huffington Post)

The article goes on to make a fairly damning case that Rove is violating both the spirit and letter of what is now the law (until the Supreme court gets to rule), and includes this paragraph:

“This kind of activity [by Rove] is the last thing the Supreme Court had in mind when it ruled that spending by an outside group had to be ’totally independent’ and ’wholly independent’ from a candidate the group is supporting with expenditures,” Fred Wertheimer, the president of Democracy 21, said in an interview. “The FEC lives in a pure fantasy world in the way it attempts to define coordinated activities as not being coordinated activities.”

I beg to differ. I’m not sure which Supreme Court ruling Wertheimer is referencing, but it seems pretty clear from Citizens United, and the court’s recent brush off to Montana, that this is precisely the type of activity the court has in mind. The country is now up for sale, and the Supreme Court ordered the auction.

 

Spamalot

 

So today I opened up my email and wasn’t I surprised and honored to find that Maricel Anderson thought so highly of my blog that she (he?) wanted to submit a post of earth shaking importance for exclusive appearance here:

Hi John,

I’m a writer for an online resource about healthcare management and am getting in touch with you because I’m interested in contributing an article to your blog. I came across your blog ctblueblog.com as I was conducting research about geriatric care management.

I’m interested in writing an article about the current state of geriatric care and the ballooning number of chronic conditions for the elderly today. Furthermore, I’m interested in how we as a country will be dealing with this ongoing issue in the future. I’d be happy to work with you on the topic if you have any insights. Thanks, and I look forward to hearing from you soon.

Best,Maricel

But imagine my surprise to learn in my very next email that my fame had spread beyond the world of politics to the world of grammar, as Alexa Russell weighed in:

Hi ,

I'm a researcher/writer for a resource covering the importance of English proficiency in today’s workplace. I came across your blog ctblueblog.com as I was conducting research and I’m interested in contributing an article to your blog because I found the topics you cover very engaging.

I’m thinking about writing an article that looks at how the Internet has changed the way English is used today; not only has its syntax changed as a result of the Internet Revolution, but the amount of job opportunities has also shifted as a result of this shift. I’d be happy to work with you on the topic if you have any insights. Thanks, and I look forward to hearing from you soon.

Best,Alexa

Well, I don’t consider myself worthy of this sort of attention, so I’m not planning on responding, but I would love to know the nature of the scam.

Speaking of spam, Josh Marshal relates an interesting story here. Apparently Google has found a way to penalize the websites to which spam comments link, so one such website sent Josh what he characterized as a “cease and desist” letter telling him to take down the offending comments that it had paid someone to post. But, reading it as a lawyer, I recognized it for what it was: not a “cease and desist” letter, but a letter designed to look as much as possible like a “cease and desist” letter without actually being one. The use of the word “request”; is the tell. Right to the edge, but not quite over the line. Still, pretty ballsy.

 

And furthermore…

Paul Krugman points out, with the aid of this handy spreadsheet:

070812krugman2 blog480

that:

Tax rates for the super-elite, the top .01%, have fallen in half since Mitt Romney’s father ran for president; or to put it differently, after tax income for this group has doubled due to policy alone. And bear in mind that the US economy flourished just fine under those 60-70 tax rates …

It is also the case, as he neglects to mention, that since 1960 tax rates have increased for everyone else, except the lowest, who have been turned to stone from which no blood can be gotten. That includes everyone below the bottom 1%, but of course the disparity is really more dramatic at the very top, where our overlords dwell. Once again, it is not enough that they succeed, everyone else must fail.

What a cheapskate!

My wife has somehow found herself on right wing Republican mailing lists. Today she got a mailing from the Mittster himself.

Now, we've taken a sort of infantile pleasure in stuffing the stamped reply envelopes full of as much weight as possible and sending them back from whence they came, doing our infinitesimal bit to drain the coffers of the folks on the dark side. So imagine our disappointment when we saw that Romney expects his supporters to affix their own stamps when they send him their tribute! That's right, the best financed campaign in history can't afford to pay postage. Here's a guy who can't cut the little guy any sort of a break. The money must flow up. Well, just for that, he will not have the courtesy of a reply from us.

Friday Night Music

A bit hurried tonight. I got a new computer today, and have been busy migrating my data and applications from the old one.

Anyway, I don’t think I’ve done Carole King before. A great songwriter.

Republicans and Democrats

So true

 

Don’t mention climate change

 

Something missing here:

Across a wide stretch of Midwestern farms, sweltering temperatures and a dearth of rain are threatening what was expected to be the nation’s largest corn crop in generations.

Already, some farmers in Illinois and Missouri have given up on parched and stunted fields, mowing them over. National specialists say parts of five corn-growing states, including Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio, are experiencing severe or extreme drought conditions. And in at least nine states, conditions in one-fifth to one-half of cornfields have been deemed poor or very poor, federal authorities reported this week, a notable shift from the high expectations just a month before.

Crop insurance agents and agricultural economists are watching closely, a few comparing the situation with a devastating drought of 1988, when corn yields shriveled significantly, while some farmers have begun alluding, unhappily, to the dust bowl of the 1930s. Far more is at stake in the coming pivotal days: With the brief, delicate phase of pollination imminent in many states, miles and miles of corn will rise or fall on whether rain soon appears and temperatures moderate.

“It all quickly went from ideal to tragic,’’ said Don Duvall, a farmer in Illinois who has already watched two of his cornfields dry up and perish as others remain in peril. For him, it has been a virtually rainless month.

‘‘Every day that passes, more corn will be abandoned,’’ Duvall said. ‘‘But even if it starts raining now, there will not be that bumper crop of corn everyone talked about.’’

(via Boston Globe)

Not word one about climate change. Almost like a conspiracy of silence. It's the most important issue of our times, and therefore the most ignored.

 

Why I won’t be giving to the DCCC

 

The phone calls come on a regular basis. So regular in fact, that my wife and I have thought about ditching our land line, on which the bulk of incoming calls are solicitations. When the DCCC calls I tell them I pick and choose my candidates, and I’m not interested in giving to DINOs. Same with the DSC, which seemed to want to send money to Ben Nelson uber alles.

A week or so ago I urged the party to shut out the Congresspersons who sided with the NRA against Eric Holder. Turns out, and this is no surprise, that those very people have gotten a disproportionate share of DCCC funding.

WASHINGTON — The 17 House Democrats who voted to hold Attorney General Eric Holder in criminal contempt last week have received more than $1.3 million in financial aid from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee since the start of 2009, a review of campaign finance records shows. That total constitutes roughly one out of every nine dollars that the committee either spent or earmarked for candidates during that time period.

The aid isn’t atypical for the campaign committee, whose priority is numerical majorities rather than ideological purity.

“The DCCC is a member participation organization that supports Democrats for Congress with the goal of electing a Democratic majority,” said Jesse Ferguson, a spokesperson for the DCCC.

But with anger mounting among the Democrats over the GOP’s treatment of Holder, the money breakdown threatens to re-ignite a long-simmering debate over what type of lawmakers are best suited to fill the party’s ranks. The 17 Democrats who voted to hold Holder in contempt for the invoking of executive privilege in the Operation Fast and Furious investigation did so under pressure from the National Rifle Association. Their votes demonstrate the gun lobby’s continued power within the halls of Congress, while raising the question of why the DCCC lacks that same institutional clout.

In addition, seven of those 17 Democrats have said they either are skipping the party’s convention this summer or remain unsure of their intentions. One member has declined to endorse President Barack Obama’s reelection campaign.

“[DCCC Chairman Steve Israel] is spending gargantuan amounts of money and energy on hopeless Blue Dogs … [rather] than working on winnable campaigns for independent-minded, progressive Democrats,” said Howie Klein, the co-founder of Blue America PAC, an organization devoted to promoting progressive candidates. “Those 17 Democrats didn’t just suddenly join [Rep. Darrell] Issa’s witch hunt and stray from the Democratic fold. All 17 — no exceptions — are among the Democrats who vote with [Speaker John] Boehner and [House Majority Leader Eric] Cantor most frequently for the far right’s anti-family agenda.”

The vast majority of the support the DCCC offered these members (approximately 95 percent) came in the form of earmarked donations — money that came from other groups and donors but was solicited by the campaign committee.

“What the DCCC is doing for those candidates is what Act Blue does for other Democrats,” explained a prominent campaign finance lawyer who advises congressional candidates. “They are sending out an email saying, ‘Here are our top 10 target races. Will you give money to those races?’”

Because the DCCC is thereby prioritizing those races, the lawyer continued, it is fair to categorize an earmarked donation as a form of support from the committee. It’s “a conscious decision” to help that candidate.

The extent of that support is disproportionate to the help the DCCC is offering House members and candidates at large. During the same period that the committee funneled $1.3 million to those 17 anti-Holder lawmakers, it sent just over $9.1 million to all House Democratic candidates.

(via The Huffington Post)

At this point, we as a party would be better off if these pseudo-Dems would be replaced by Republicans, yet we shovel money at people who are the first to join forces with Republicans to frustrate progressive initiatives, while ignoring real Democrats struggling to take over Republican districts. In the process they confer a “bi-partisan” legitimacy on Republican extremism that the press just eats up. We'd have a leaner, meaner, more effective party if we got rid of these losers, or whipped them into shape. That assumes, of course, that the Democrats would stop drawing the lesson they always draw when they lose: that they weren’t Republican enough. (In this they agree with the Republicans, in that the Republicans always blame their own losses on not being Republican enough). If the Democrats would learn some other lessons from the Republicans, they might learn that it’s vital to speak with one more or less unified voice. We don’t need Congressmen who won’t support the party’s incumbent president, or Congressmen who will join a political witch hunt against a Democratic Attorney General. We’ll never truly win so long as we have this dead weight in the party. It’s particularly infuriating that the party seems so bent on preserving them, to the exclusion of supporting real Democrats.

 

Quote of the Day

 

A Barclays manager:

“I would sort of express us maybe as not clean clean, but clean in principle.”

(via The New York Times)