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Numbers

Yesterday I searched in vain for some authoritative accounting of the number of teabaggers that showed up for the demonstrations yesterday. It should certainly have occurred to me to check with Nate Silver at 538.com, which I did today. He says the total, across the entire country, was 262,025, with some smaller venues yet to check in. So, if we want to be generous that means that possibly 300,000 people showed up around the country.

That’s a lot of people, but it sort of pales in comparison to the numbers that the media (particularly Fox) routinely ignore when the protestors occupy the left side of the political fence. Estimates of the number of protestors at the NYC Republican convention in 2004 run anywhere from 120,000 to 900,000, with the truth probably being somewhere in the middle. That’s in just one city, so it sort of crushes the top crowd at any one teabag event (7,000 in Atlanta). The second Bush inaugural drew far more than the puny 1,000 that made it to Washington for the teabag event. That meager number is surprising, as you would expect the GOP Congresspeople would have ordered their staffs to attend. Of course, the total pales into insignificance next to the numbers that took to the streets to protest against the coming war in Iraq. Truly, the only numbers in which these protests excelled was in the Media Attention Department, with the New London Day (Front page headline: Tax Day Erupts in Protests), taking its lead from Fox. More sober media types, like the New York Times and the Globe, were more evenhanded, pretty much ignoring the teabaggers as they ignored the anti-war and anti-Bush folks.

Among those seeking to capitalize on all this incoherent rage was our former Congressman, Rob Simmons, who apparently feels that he has something to gain by pandering to folks who have a cumulative IQ approaching that of your average dog. Yet another example of the weird asymmetry of American politics. While Democrats run away from a huge percentage of their base, Republicans fall all over themselves to pander to the most extreme segment of theirs. In this case, as others have pointed out, they may have a tiger by the tail. These folks don’t have a cause, they merely have emotions. Simmons and his ilk believe they can direct that anger where they see fit, but it may not work out that way. This is nothing new for Simmons. In 2000 he shamelessly exploited what he knew were baseless fears about the Mashantucket attempt to annex land to their reservation.

I have one snarky question I’d love to have answered. How did all these folks, who are allegedly upset about their taxes (which are, for most of them, about to go down) get the time off from their jobs to go to a protest on a Wednesday afternoon?


Comfort Zone

When I was in college I used to amuse myself by reading the John Birch magazine, which was available in the school library.

Even then it struck me that the extreme right had a pronounced paranoid streak. Nothing makes them happier than portraying themselves as beleaguered, under attack, or victims. If possible, all three. They are in fact, far more comfortable and in their element when they are out of power, comfortably able to throw bombs at the grown-ups.

Today’s “tea-bag” demonstrations, despite the fact that they have been fomented in part as a Fox News event, demonstrate that the paranoid streak in American “conservatism” is alive and well. These folks have no coherent philosophy. The demonstrations are over, and no one is able to truly say what the demonstrators wanted. The one thing that seems to unite them is their belief that the government is somehow out to get them. After eight years of having to support that government, they are now free to play the victim once again, and they just love it. Who needs coherence? More telling is the rush by “conservative” commentators to assume that a Department of Homeland Security report on right wing extremism refers to them. This is mother’s milk to them. Nothing excites their followers so much as the idea that someone is out to get them. If that means that they must implicitly accuse themselves of political extremism, then so be it. Their followers can’t think clearly enough to figure that out, anyway.

What we don’t know is whether this kind of demagoguery can be a winning political strategy. It didn’t work during the Depression, but as bad as that crisis was, it still took place at a time when America was on the ascendant. There is a pervasive feeling now that America is on the decline, which in fact it may be. There’s nothing to say that the political turnaround that took place between 2004 and 2008 (remember, in 2004 the smart money was on Republican hegemony for the foreseeable future), couldn’t happen in reverse, and just as quickly. If it does, the disaffected will have nowhere to go but to a party that is now utterly dominated, as it has never been before, by people who are frankly mentally ill. Bush was bad enough, but like every Republican president since Eisenhower, he’ll look better than the next Republican to succeed him.


British girl makes good

Watch this:

Half the world has seen it already. If you don’t shed a tear you’ve got a harder heart than me. Some pertinent thoughts here.


A few announcements

Two events this weekend. Saturday the Groton Democrats will honor Nancy DeMarinis and Nancy Driscoll, both of whom richly deserve the recognition. Nancy DeMarinis is a former state representative of long standing, and Nancy Driscoll is a union activist and campaign worker extraordinaire. If you want to learn how to make get out the vote phone calls, just spend some time listening to Nancy work the phones.

On Sunday, a Courtney Fundraiser at Scott Bates home in Stonington.


Noted in Passing

According to the print edition of today’s Day (page B4), property owned by Susette Kelo, located at 6 Chappell Street, is about to be sold at a marshal’s sale due to non-payment of taxes. Can’t someone find a way to help her extort a few bucks from New London because of this?


Verbal Gymnastics

We lawyers are often called upon to formulate rather elaborate ways of avoiding saying something that we would rather not say. It’s a bit of an art, really. The trick is to avoid conceding a point while sticking to the literal truth. Sadly, when you need to do such a thing, you’re probably fated to lose anyway.

Despite years of practice in the trade, and having come up with many ways to avoid stating the obvious, I must take by hat off to the headline writer at the Day. By way of background, I have noticed that this person, whoever he or she may be, has a slight rightward tilt (the headline are not, or so I understand, penned by the reporters that write the articles). Anyway, here’s the headline that impressed me no end:

COURT DECLARES FRANKEN LEADING VOTE-GETTER

Okay, I’ll admit that the term “vote-getter” is a little clunky. The only “word” that comes close in artlessness is the baseball term “come-backer”. But really, you have to hand it to the unknown author. Anyone else might simply say: “Court Declares Franken Winner”, which is, after all, precisely what the court did. But if you want to avoid conceding that point, it would be hard to beat the Day’s formulation.


The Day Shills for the Right

The right wing population in this area is small, but it has disproportionate influence with one of our institutions: the New London Day. Over the years the Day has been inundated with letters accusing it of right wing bias (while it was endorsing Republicans such as Simmons and George Bush). In response, the Day has gone to great lengths to appease its critics. Some time back it decided that it made eminent good sense to offer those critics regular gigs as op-ed writers, despite the fact that they had a lot of trouble constructing reasonably coherent sentences.

Today, on the front page, the http://www.theday.com/re.aspx?re=3ab94dd0-131c-436b-970e-a81143193f7c. (It is my understanding that the term “tea-bagging” has a sexual connotation that the demonstrators prefer to ignore. To be honest I’m not entirely certain of the mechanics of that kind of tea-bagging. In any event, I will resist the temptation of making any puns or cheap sexual wordplay. ) In any event, these folks will be gathering locally and “across the nation” in favor of positions that are contrary to their own interests, to the extent that they have a coherent message at all.

The Day plays it straight. This is a grassroots effort. Is the Day covering up the fact that this is an astroturf movement from first to last, or is it simply uninformed. Who knows?

The Day isn’t Fox News, but maybe it’s auditioning. Why else would it give handy directions for getting to these demonstrations “If You Go”? I can’t recall the Day being quite so accommodating when the protests concerned real things, such as wars. Isn’t it amazing how these sparsely attended gatherings are getting media coverage far in excess of that garnered by the literally millions of people who protested Bush’s Iraq adventure, or the demonstrations at both Bush inaugurals, each of which was ignored by the media and each of which drew a great number of participants (real grass above those roots, too).

I have no problem with the Day covering these events. They are news, of a sort. It wouldn’t hurt, though, if the Day would take the trouble to inform its readers of the folks that are behind these events: the usual suspects such as Dick Armey, Newt Gingrich, Richard Mellon Scaife, etc, with a healthy push from “fair and balanced” Fox News. The poor fools attending these demonstrations are wasting their precious time in order to preserve low tax rates for millionaires. This is not just an opinion, this is fact and it should be reported.


Leave Tom Paine alone

Some people can never rest easy. Consider Poor Tom Paine. During the latter years of his life he was hounded, even on his deathbed, by what passed at the time as the American right-both secular and religious. His name was mud from the early nineteenth century until the mid twentieth, despite all he had done to bring about and sustain the American Revolution. Why? Because he wrote The Age of Reason, a frontal assault on faith based mental processing (we can’t call it thinking).

But far worse has been his treatment since 1980 when the American Right, starting with Ronald Reagan, tried to adopt him as their own. As with so much of their fact free cogitating, there is no evidence that Paine would be at all sympathetic to their creed. He was, after all, not sympathetic to any creed.

Apparently, Glenn Beck is now trying to wrap himself in Paine’s mantle, encouraging folks to follow where, he asserts, Paine would surely lead in the struggle against creeping socialism.

Some of us actually believe that it might not be such a bad thing if there were some truth to Beck’s fears about socialism, but let’s put that aside for the moment.

Paine as a free market, Ayn Rand acolyte? Has Beck read any Paine lately? (answer, no.) Well, I’ve read it all and I agree with this Kos diarist that Paine was a socialist in all but name. This diary is well worth a read for those not familiar with Paine’s thinking. It discusses Paine’s Agrarian Justice. I remember thinking, when I first read that pamphlet, that Paine was something of a proto-Marx.

In Agrarian Justice Paine develops a theoretical justification and a practical program for a system akin to social security. The theoretical basis is interesting. Paine argues that we own the earth in common, and those that have secured large portions for their own use owe the rest a “rent”. It’s socialist thinking from first to last. The practical program may or may not have been all that practical, but he was clearly not a fan of social security privatization. It’s government run and government funded from first to last, and let’s not even get into the class warfare aspect of it.

We on the left can’t let the right confiscate Tom Paine. He’s ours, from his socialist ravings, to his most effective promoters (e.g., Howard Fast, who wrote Citizen Tom Paine, a book I’ve owned since I was eight, and Moncure Conway, slave-holder turned abolitionist and free thinker) to his religious principles. They can have Alexander Hamilton. He’d probably turn in his grave to be in their company, but who cares?


This should not be an option

According to the Times the big banks are suffering from a brain drain as the best and the brightest, their work done at the failed banks, go on to other things:

Top bankers have been leaving Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup and others in rising numbers to join banks that do not face tighter regulation, including foreign banks, or start-up companies eager to build themselves into tomorrow’s financial powerhouses. Others are leaving because of culture clashes at merging companies, like Bank of America and Merrill Lynch, and still others are simply retiring early

If we allow a financial system to rise out of these ashes in which anyone doesn’t face tighter regulations, we will deserve the inevitable recurrence of this bubble and bust cycle.


Easter Pictures

This is a holiday, and though it’s decidedly low key, I’m taking the day off from thinking, so I’m posting a few pictures documenting the ever approaching (but perhaps never arising) dawn of real Spring. You know, with reasonably warm weather, birds, flowers and sunshine. Here along the coast we suffer through many years when Spring is merely a damp, cloudy interlude between the cold of Winter and the heat of Summer, but hope springs eternal.

There’s no action in the vegetable garden this week, but there are some flowers blooming. This is a humble vinca:

This Hellebore is blooming near the house, which accounts for the less than satisfactory backgrounds:

The daffodils are beginning to bloom:

And finally, though this is cheating, a few shots of a yellow Clivia Miniata, the yellow color being rather unusual, according to my wife. This is cheating because it’s an indoor plant, but I posed it outside.

No lilies, as my wife isn’t a fan.