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Patriots in Indiana

Indiana is not a very enlightened state, but it leads the nation in one respect: robocalls are illegal. If you want to spread slime, you have to hire real people to do it. The only trouble is that real people, even the poorly paid folks who really need the money they make in what must be a horrible line of work, have consciences, and there’s only so far you can push them:

Some three dozen workers at a telemarketing call center in Indiana walked off the job rather than read an incendiary McCain campaign script attacking Barack Obama, according to two workers at the center and one of their parents.

Nina Williams, a stay-at-home mom in Lake County, Indiana, tells us that her daughter recently called her from her job at the center, upset that she had been asked to read a script attacking Obama for being “dangerously weak on crime,” “coddling criminals,” and for voting against “protecting children from danger.”

Williams’ daughter told her that up to 40 of her co-workers had refused to read the script, and had left the call center after supervisors told them that they would have to either read the call or leave, Williams says. The call center is called Americall, and it’s located in Hobart, IN.

“We were asked to read something saying [Obama and Democrats] were against protecting children from danger,” this worker said. “I wouldn’t do it. A lot of people left. They thought it was disgusting.”

This worker, too, confirmed sacrificing pay to walk out, saying her supervisor told her: “If you don’t wanna phone it you can just go home for the day.”

Representatives at Americall in Indiana, and at the company’s corporate headquarters in Naperville, Illinois, didn’t return calls for comment.

Obama should give these people an all expense paid trip to the Inaugural ball.

A bit of detail on some right wing nonsense

Yesterday, I posted about my foray into the world of right wing radio, and my astonishment that in these critical times, the intellectual underclass is more concerned about Obama’s birth certificate than financial meltdown, imperial madness, health care, global warming, or even their own pet causes like abortion.

I confess that the issue took me aback. I was vaguely aware that there were some right wing rumblings about Obama’s birth certificate, but they seemed so absurd on their face that I never paid much attention. Today a couple of things came across my RSS feeder, so I pass them on to my readers in case any of you have the occasion to disabuse anyone of the notion that Obama is not an American born.

First, I should say that one of the callers said that Obama had refused to respond to a lawsuit brought by a highly respected lawyer. Turns out the lawyer is Philip J. Berg, a former Pennsylvania deputy attorney general (don’t let the title fool you, every lawyer who works for the state in the civil area is a deputy attorney general. Many of them are every bit as incompetent and nutty as the random crackpot private practitioners one runs into now and then) who has brought several high profile frivolous lawsuits. His case was recently dismissed for lack of standing, but the facts are really not in dispute:

Obama was born in Honolulu on Aug. 4, 1961, and the campaign posted a document issued by Hawaii on its Web site, fight thesmears.com, confirming his birth there.

Berg said in court papers that the image was a forgery.

The nonpartisan Web site FactCheck.org examined the original document and said it was legitimate.

Further, a birth announcement in the Aug. 13, 1961, Honolulu Advertiser listed Obama’s birth there on Aug. 4. *

Even the wingnut Website WorlnetDaily has admitted the birth certificate is authentic, but that hasn’t stopped the vile Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage and Jerome Corsi from claiming that Obama recently went to Hawaii to cover up his true origins, rather than visit his dying grandmother. Precisely what he could do in Hawaii to effect the cover up is, of course, not explained. They moan about the fact that Obama has not “answered” the lawsuit, which he has not done because he has had it dismissed, as any responsible lawyer would have done.

I submit these facts to my readers only so that they will be better prepared than I, should someone bring up this particular piece of lunacy. Not, of course, that the facts matter to these people.

Note: I should clarify here that the show that I was on was not hosted by a right winger. My impression is that she is a no-winger, someone with no discernible political views. But the station’s political listenership is definitely right wing, and the folks my debate opponent encouraged to call (they were from all over the U.S.) were definitely of the thought-free stamp.

Some thoughts for the homestretch

Frankly, I’m getting tired of reading about the election campaign. It’s actually beginning to look like opinions have hardened. Unless modern day polling techniques have gone off the rails, or the Republicans manage to steal it again, Barack Obama will be the next president. All we have to do is endure another week or so of ever more desperate and vile campaign tactics from McCain. Those tactics are becoming ever harder to take, as it becomes increasingly clear that the net effect will most likely be not a McCain victory, but a hardening of attitudes among the morons who populate the Neanderthal wing of the Republican party. At this point I just can’t get excited about discussing the latest McCain atrocity, like the disturbed young McCain campaign worker who tried to ignite racial tensions in order to get her man elected. I just want it over.

So it’s helpful to pause a bit, even now, to consider what’s happening. Our country has been so near destroyed by the Bush regime that it’s difficult for us to remember that our country has strengths that even Bush couldn’t destroy. Indeed, there are social trends that proceed apace, despite the best efforts of the Republicans to retard them. Keith Richburg, a black reporter for the Washington Post, recently penned a column for the Guardian, and he makes some interesting observations. He is stationed in Europe, and points out that an Obama could not happen there:

..[I]t’s difficult, if not impossible, to imagine a Barack Obama emerging in Europe soon.

One reason is that Europeans for the most part do not talk about race and race relations as openly as we do. In America, we wallow in it. We self-analyse and form committees, workshops and seminars to talk about it. There are countless organisations and associations dedicated to racial issues. Bookshops stack shelves talking about our racial history and problems. We take measurements of pretty much everything, from black student school test scores to minority living standards.

A year ago, no one here would have predicted that a black candidate would become the nominee of a major party and have a more than realistic chance of winning the White House on 4 November. And it’s a testament to Obama’s considerable skill that he has largely managed to make his race an afterthought. America is on the verge of something historic and it almost seems anticlimactic.

But black Americans are still pinching themselves, still not quite able to believe what has been achieved. And all Americans should pause from the heated political rhetoric and reflect on the sense of accomplishment, win or lose, that his candidacy represents – an affirmation of that American ideal.

It is worth remembering that, for every voter that refuses to vote for Obama because of his race, there are many for whom it truly is an afterthought, or, for that matter, a small bonus. I’m certainly not voting for Obama because of his race, but I’m glad our highly qualified candidate happens to be black. That’s one more landmark reached in our 400 year old struggle against racism. I never thought it would happen in my lifetime, and now it looks like it will. Thats something to think about and savor as we endure the foulness of the final days.

Mea culpa

I want to apologize to those who check in to see Friday Night Music. I had to trek up to Logan Airport yesterday to pick someone up. I left at 4 and returned at 9, by which time I was pretty much exhausted. I wasn’t capable of writing, and I totally forgot about the music.

Still seething

The story begins Thursday evening, at the Groton Democratic Town Committee. Our esteemed chairman announced that she had been approached by Anne Buonocore, host of a weekly radio program on WXLM, out of New London. She hosts a show that is normally dedicated to “the celebrity in ordinary people” or some such thing, meaning she normally interviews people about their jobs. But in the weeks before the election, she is featuring ordinary pundits, people just like you and me. She had a McCain “ordinary pundit” lined up, who happened to be from Illinois. She needed an Obama person, and Betsy thought I would be just the person.

I was not particularly enthusiastic about the prospect of being on the show. The geographic origin of my ordinary person opponent gave me pause, as did the format. I eventually agreed to talk to Ms. Buonocore, who assured me that, though the station did carry the likes of Hannity and Limbaugh, she would host a friendly show where we would engage in reasoned conversation. Against my better judgment, which I always seem to be doing things against, I agreed to appear.

I showed up at 9:45 this morning and we went on the air at 10:06. Just before we started I learned that my opponent, Joe Porter (Oh, Lord, deliver us from “Joes”) was the author of a right wing whacko email that had made the rounds of the cretinous levels of the internet. Joe would be calling in from Illinois. Needless, to say, my antennae were quivering. My suspicions were confirmed when all but one of the phone calls were from out of state, obviously drummed up by Mr. Porter.

So what was on the mind of the folks who called in? If you guessed the economy, the war, civil liberties, or even abortion, you’d be totally wrong! No, judging by the calls, the most important issue out there is Barack Obama’s birth certificate, followed closely by Bill Ayers and Acorn. Now, I consider myself pretty well informed, and was prepared for Ayers and Acorn, but the birth certificate thing tore it for me. I gather the issue is not whether Obama was in fact born, which they apparently concede, but where he was born. Hawaii is too easy an answer, and apparently the suspicion is that he is actually Osama bin Laden’s twin or something.

I’m told I did well, though my critics were biased. I left the place quietly steaming. I don’t really blame the host. I don’t think she quite understood that just because some people insist that a fact is in dispute, or even important, that it is worth spending time actually discussing. The earth is round no matter how many flat-earthers dispute that, and Obama is an American no matter how many say otherwise. There are important things going on out there, and these are the things these folks want to talk about. And silly me, I had actually spent time thinking about the points I wanted to make about actual issues.

Opie, Andy and the Fonz

How can we lose?

See more Ron Howard videos at Funny or Die

Who could have known, take 217

Via Calculated Risk, from the Wall Street Journal, Alan Greenspan confesses error:

The panel chairman, Henry Waxman (D., Calif.) criticized Mr. Greenspan’s approach to mortgage regulation while he was Fed chairman. The Fed “had the authority to stop the irresponsible lending practices that fueled the subprime mortgage market,” Waxman said, but Mr. Greenspan “rejected pleas that he intervene.”

[W]hen Mr. Waxman pressed “were you wrong” about the benefits of deregulation, Mr. Greenspan responded, “partially.” The “flaw” in the assumptions he had over four decades, Mr. Greenspan said, was that lending institutions themselves were best able to protect the interest of their shareholders.

It’s odd, really. Doesn’t Greenspan’s economic theory tell him that people act in their own interests? Haven’t the Republicans, with Greenspan’s active connivance, built an economic system that absolutely allows the people who run these banks to act in their own interests. And why should anyone believe that the interests of the avaricious CEOs and shareholders correspond? In fact, the interest of the CEO is to acquire as much money as s/he can in as little time, damn the long term consequences to anyone but themselves. This is entirely consistent, isn’t it, with the Ayn Rand way of thinking. If I can get bonuses of mega millions a year while the getting is good, why should I care if the company tanks after I’ve socked my mega-millions away, particularly when I know that I won’t suffer any adverse consequences and that I may even keep getting those bonuses even after my incompetence is found out.

In fact, it’s we liberals who have understood for years that these people will act in their own interests, and that only the restraining hand of government would stop them.

My future as a pariah

Okay, probably everyone on Moveon’s mailing list (and I think that’s everyone) has gotten one of these emails (I got three) with a customized video, but what the heck, I’ll pass it on anyway. I thought it was pretty funny, but then, I’m still half asleep.

Seriously, though, if I’d voted it would have been a tie, and the Republicans would have stolen it in the courts.

13 days and counting

These should be the best of times for a political blogger, but lately, and oddly, it seems that there is not all that much to write about. We are in the middle of what may be the most important election since 1860. The fate of constitutional government may very well hang in the balance. Yet the news cycle beast, which apparently requires fresh food every day, is dominated by coverage of the latest McCain talking points, or the latest Palin stupidity. The talking points, such as the current “socialism” meme, are becoming so absurd that I would be insulting the intelligence of anyone who cares to read this to discuss or debunk it. It debunks itself. The Palin stuff is funny, but even that is getting tiresome. I mean, there are bloggers out there actually taking the time to point out that Palin’s latest string of words about “preconditions” confuses “preconditions” with “preparations”. As Horatio might say, “There needs no blogger, come from the tubes of the internet, To tell us this”.

So, at least for me, despite the vast implications of this election, at the moment there seems to be little to write about, or at any rate, little that I can bestir myself to write about. Adding to the problem is my heritage. I was born both a Red Sox fan and a Democrat, always expecting the worst and usually getting it. At this point in the election cycle I instinctively curl myself into a mental fetal position. It’s not a position conducive to a lot of incisive thinking, or, for that matter, non-incisive thinking. Many of you, I’m sure, know the feeling. Every piece of bad news drives me toward depression; every piece of good news convinces me that I’m being set up. I’m just waiting for Lucy to snatch the football, yet again. Not the best mental attitude for an amateur pundit.

Ah well, tomorrow’s another day. Meanwhile, amuse yourself with the latest McCain freudian slip.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnE-YJ—GI[/youtube]

Apparently I was wrong

This would be embarrassing, if it was not so satisfying. Yesterday, I opined that the Sarah Palin wardrobe story would sink from sight. Apparently, I was wrong, as I am reliably informed that it dominated the morning talk shows, at least. That means, if I understand the rules of cable news at all, that it will continue to dominate the entire day, unless something truly major diverts the herd.

It’s always good to be wrong about things like this. Life is full of ironies. John McCain hit on the magic formula for getting the press in the tank. It worked for years. He made the strategic decision that he could abandon past practice (e.g., easy “access”, faux maverickness, fawning attention to the press, etc.) and keep them on his side while simultaneously running what has perhaps been the dirtiest campaign in American history. When he has needed their loving attention most, the press has now gone all journalistic on him. Couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.