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Iowa

All of a sudden all kinds of people are coming out as Obama fans (I won’t mention names, but one sleeps with me). Talk about fickle. Not to take anything away from the guy, but if you wanted to design a system least likely to do the best job at picking a president, you might well come up with the Iowa caucuses. Nonetheless, and for the moment, he’s the guy who’s looking inevitable. Great victory speech:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tCWT4LQTeE[/youtube]

I’m still undecided, now that Dodd has dropped out. I’ll take whoever wins, to be honest. It’s nice to have a field you can say that about.

Right now I’m enjoying the fact that Republicans are going absolutely crazy at the thought of Huckabee. Today two of them (Republicans, that is) told me that they were scared of the guy. Hard to see why, really. They’ve been handing the country over to these people one judge at a time, but somehow making one of them president gives them the willies. Meanwhile, the media types are pushing McCain as hard as they can. It will be interesting to see if they can pull that off.

On Obama again: There have been two other presidents from Illinois. Let us set aside U.S. Grant. The first was a guy who served a couple of terms in the state legislature and one term in Congress. When people talk about Obama’s lack of experience he might remind them of one A. Lincoln, the first Republican president, but a guy who would certainly be a Democrat today.

Random notes

Good news and old news in the business section of the Times.

Apparently the new Fox Business Channel, it of the all good economic news, all the time (while there’s a Republican in the White House) mindset, has so few daily viewers that Nielsen cannot reliably report it. Leaked figures indicate that a little more than 6,000 people watch the channel on any given weekday. To put that number in perspective, it is only about 15 times more than the number of distinct hits I get on this backwater blog. My own personal theory for this cheerful news: people interested in business news are interested in hard facts: they’re not interested in being bullshitted or propagandized. They probably appreciate Fox News for doing that number on the masses, but count them out.

The old news is that the Detroit carmakers are once again hitting hard times because, gasp!!, people aren’t buying gas guzzling trucks anymore. Since the great gas shortage of the early 70s, Detroit has gotten hit on a periodic basis whenever gas prices take a sustained hit. After each beating, it goes back to the old game plan with a vengeance. If I had to bet, I’d say each time they have put even more chips down on the gas guzzlers, when of course they had to know that the days of (relatively) cheap gas were certainly numbered. How does it go: “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me”. What do you call someone that’s fooled five or six times?

Drinking Liberally a success; is there anything else going on?

Just returned from our Drinking Liberally get together, and, much to my surprise and relief, it was a success. We had about as big a crowd as we could handle and still stay as a coherent group, everyone seemed to have fun, and we did indeed drink liberally.

One of the hits of the evening was Syma Ebbin’s sinfully delicious Almond Bark, the recipe for which I have been directed to post. I do intend to do so, but can’t tonight, because I must confess that either Sima or I might have drunk a little too liberally, because I can’t follow it. My wife, to whom she gave it and who can probably decipher it, is in bed as I write this.

I can say this, other than nuts, there is not a single healthy ingredient in the mix, so you know it must be good. Some pics below

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The true test will be when we find out how many people come next time.

How I spent my evening

Among the many frustrations in my life at present is my position as Treasurer of the Groton Democrats. If you’ve ever served as a treasurer of a political campaign or committee in Connecticut you will understand what I’m talking about. The reporting requirements are such that it is virtually impossible for a non-expert to set up a database to generate usable reports. You can no longer file reports on-line. They provide a spreadsheet you can use to report, but it’s incomprehensible. They do, however, also provide PDF fillable forms, but of course you can’t save the data unless you buy Adobe Acrobat Superplus, which I am not going to do. That means you have to fill out the forms all at once. To make it just a little worse, they only provide one page to list individual contributors, so if you have more than 6 people who contributed more than $50.00 total in the year, you have to open another copy of the report file and merge them together. To add insult to injury, even if you get the form completely filled out, Adobe and/or the State won’t let you save the document as a PDF (standard in the Mac print dialog) with the data in the fields. That means scanning a printed copy if you want to save it do disk. All in all, a pain.

That’s how I spent most of my night tonight, since there’s a report due on the 10th. When I finished I attempted to print a draft, and presto: Adobe Reader crashed and all my work was lost. Luckily the draft did print, and I was able to use most of it to reconstitute the report. Anyway, it’s done, but I’m in no mood to do any heavy thinking tonight.

So, just a reminder that anyone who can make it is invited to join us for the inaugural meeting of Drinking Liberally, tomorrow at the Harp & Hound, Pearl Street, Mystic at 6:00 PM. So far feedback has been good.

Chris Powell: Excepting Chris, Joe’s critics are bigots

This morning’s Day ran a very curious column by Chris Powell, entitled Hatred of Jews Poisons Criticism of Lieberman.

The argument in a nutshell is as follows. Lieberman is indeed a slimy liar who, among other sins Powell enumerates, misled the electorate in the last campaign. However, many of those (but apparently not Powell) who attack him are motivated by anti-Semitism, because they attribute Lieberman’s positions to his support of Israel, which they don’t do to non-Jews. And besides, people who criticize Israel are hypocrites because the United States has done things just as bad as Israel, so who are we to criticize? The implied premise of the last point is that folks who lack standing to criticize Israel must be anti-Semitic if they criticize it anyway.

The column is odd for a number of reasons.

First, Powell offers no proof that anti-Semitism is, in fact, a significant factor in anti-Liebermanism. Here’s the sole evidence he provides in support of this theory;

But much of the criticism Lieberman is getting goes far beyond this now; it is plainly hatred of Lieberman for being a Jew.

Lieberman, it is often said now, is looking out for Israel and serving “Zionist expansionism” instead of his own country. Mocking Lieberman’s claim to be a political independent, critics are designating him not “I-Connecticut” but “I-Israel.”

That’s it. The quotes are not attributed. They may be real, or they may be meant as illustrative. Who, precisely is using the term “Zionist expansionism”? Who said Lieberman was “I-Israel”? We are not told. He provides not a single example. I don’t doubt that someone may have said both of these things, but the first, which he repeats several times, sounds like the phrasing of someone from a group or ideology so marginal that no one listens to them. Is this another example of a mainstream commentator attributing the statement of a lone commenter on a blog to a larger group? If much of the criticism aimed at Lieberman is fueled by anti-Semitism, it should be easy to provide specific examples of actual participants in the national discourse making such statements. Given the charge, it is incumbent upon Powell to do so. By the way, notice that Powell has left himself an out: the word “much” is fairly elastic in meaning; strictly speaking it means “a large quantity or amount”, but in common parlance it can be stretched (or contracted) to mean “more than a little”, or as Powell might say, “[more] than trivial”. It implies no percentages; see, contra, “most” which signifies at least 50%.

Another odd thing about this column is that it makes the very argument, while allegedly rebutting it, that Powell attributes to the anti-Semites: that Lieberman puts the interests of Israel ahead of those of the United States. Powell rebuts that argument not by denying it, but by pointing out that lots of non-Jewish politicians also cave to the Israel lobby. The sin of the alleged Lieberman bashers consists of the fact that they single Joe out for criticism on this score while giving a pass to other politicians for this very same sin. Of course, we can’t know that to be the case, since we don’t know who these people are. I suspect that anyone using the term “Zionist expansionism” would be ready to criticize their own mother for supporting Israel, but I can’t prove it in the case of the persons (if Powell knows who they are) to which he refers.

Powell also claims that none of us Americans have standing to criticize Israel because the United States is not without sin. And here we come to the unstated corollary of his argument. Criticism of Israel is wrong on the merits, so it follows that it must be rooted in anti-Semitism, a point made implicitly as Powell dispatches another straw man, his simplistic claim that opposition to Israeli policy is equivalent to opposition to “Zionist expansionism”:

Expansionism is far easier to identify with the United States itself, which, from a few settlements along the Atlantic coast, grew into an intercontinental empire hundreds of times larger without ever bothering to ask the opinion of the unoffending inhabitants when it acquired the territories of Louisiana, northern Mexico, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and so forth. In the history textbooks used without objection by the children of Americans who growl at “Zionist expansionism,” this growth is called “manifest destiny.” Indeed, compared to the growth of most nations, “Zionist expansionism” is less than trivial.

This paragraph is absurd for a number of reasons, but let’s confine ourselves to the main argument. Powell is asserting that given our history, we (presumably even those of us who don’t use loaded phrases like “Zionist expansionism”) can’t criticize Israel. Powell’s argument also implies a peculiar sort of collective multi-generational guilt-the same sort of multi-generational guilt Christians used to justify anti-Semitism in the first place. According to Powell, I’m not allowed to criticize Israel because my country (at a time when my actual ancestors were picking turnips in Poland and olives in Sicily) stole New Mexico, and I won’t give it back. If we concede a sort of surface legitimacy to this argument, we must ask if Powell would expand it to every international issue with which we are faced. We have a history replete with genocide, slavery, imperialism (economic and territorial), and now torture, to name just a few. Does that mean we, as individuals, must stand silent whenever others engage in these acts, or is Israel a special case? If so, why?

Powell is right that anyone who criticizes Saint Joe because of “Jew hatred” is disgraceful, but its equally disgraceful, without offering some substantial evidence, to attribute anti-Semitism to those who oppose Lieberman or disagree with the Israeli government or its most hard line supporters here in the United States.

Postscript: I make mention of the Israel lobby above. I should point out that the Israel lobby is not synonymous either with the Israeli government, Jewish Americans or the Israeli people. It represents instead a conglomeration of interests here in America (read section 3 at the link. Unfortunately this article at the New York Review of Books website is now available only for a fee.) that pushes for an American foreign policy toward Israel and its foes that is often far more hard line than that of the Israeli government, not to mention the Israeli people or most American Jews. Much like the NRA or the pharmaceutical interests, the Israel lobby is able to have its way on its issues despite the fact that its positions do not have majority support (even among American Jews) and despite the fact that its positions are not good from a policy standpoint. Like the NRA and big Pharma, it is able to exert substantial pressure on politicians that incur its displeasure and able to richly reward those that do its bidding.

Happy New Year

Here’s hoping that anyone stopping by here tonight (don’t you have something better to do?) has a Happy New Year day, and a good 2008.

The New York Times wonders how we got to this point

The New York Times takes the White House to task this morning for its systematic assault on the Constitution:

There are too many moments these days when we cannot recognize our country. Sunday was one of them, as we read the account in The Times of how men in some of the most trusted posts in the nation plotted to cover up the torture of prisoners by Central Intelligence Agency interrogators by destroying videotapes of their sickening behavior. It was impossible to see the founding principles of the greatest democracy in the contempt these men and their bosses showed for the Constitution, the rule of law and human decency.

I can’t argue with a word in the editorial. I can’t recognize the country either, but I didn’t help disfigure it. In all fairness, the Times should point out that Bush could not have dragged the country into the gutter of history without the assistance of a compliant media, with the Times itself bearing a good deal of responsibility. If we can all agree that torture is barbaric and a betrayal of our constitutional principles, then we must wonder why the Times just hired a columnist who advises against obsessing about such minor issues.

Why, we must also ask, does the Times, along with most of the rest of the media, resort to euphemisms such as “harsh interrogation techniques” to refer to practices, such as “waterboarding” (itself a euphemism for drowning), which have long been recognized as torture. Even the article that the Times cites in its editorial avoids applying the term to any technique actually employed by the U.S. government, though admittedly, and finally, it comes close.

We are not where we are solely because we have a despicable president surrounded by despicable advisors or because we have a supine Congress. Our mass media, including the Times, has consistently refused to hold a true mirror in front of us. It’s not just torture. Our language has undergone harsh manipulation techniques, while a compliant media looks the other way at best, or joins in the torture at worst. Lies are not lies and mercenaries are not mercenaries, but if Bush says so insurgents in Iraq are al Qaeda, be it true or no. Besides being complicit in language abuse, the media has largely allowed Bush and his minions to freely alter reality. If the best scientific methods indicate that the United States invasion of Iraq has caused almost a million Iraqi deaths, it is sufficient that Bush, a self appointed expert on everything, dismisses the number, and it disappears down the memory hole. Meanwhile, the “surge” is successful, despite the fact that it has not achieved its original goals, because those goals are now forgotten and success is defined in terms of a temporary reduction in violence that almost all observers expected would take place.

Most of us have no ability to affect the course of events. Those who do have a special obligation, one that the Times, along with most of the rest of the mass media, has ignored during the entire Bush Administration. Who knows what the editors of the Times might have achieved had they avoided the euphemisms and told the truth when it mattered.

How I spent my Saturday

I went a whole day yesterday without turning on my computer. My family and I, along with my sisters and their kids, went to New York to see a play and drop a ton of money on a couple of restaurants. Unfortunately, my brother in law was not with us, so I have no one to cajole into writing a review of the play, which he most likely would have panned anyway, had he seen it.

We went to Is He Dead?, a farce written by Mark Twain in 1898. It was an extremely silly play, the premise of which is that Jean-François Millet (a then deceased French artist) had faked his own death increase the value of his paintings. In order to collect the cash, he posed as his own sister, appropriately cross-dressed. Needless to say, at the time the French were not amused. The play was never performed during Twain’s lifetime, though the original plan was for simultaneous openings in New York and London.

The Times, to whose review I have linked above, gave the play a generally favorable review. I’m easily satisfied. It has some good laughs, and I think most people left the play smiling. The actors played it just right, right down to the Snidely Whiplash-like bad guy, complete with all black suit, black hat and sinister mustache.

Say what?

Per usual, the South Carolina Republican primary promises to be nasty. Latest case in point is a bogus holiday card purportedly sent by Mitt Romney that brings to light some of the doctrines of the Mormons that some Christians might call heretical, while the rest of us would just call them delusional. Be that as it may, I got a kick out of this:

Such a mailing isn’t surprising for South Carolina politics, a state known for political mudslinging and backdoor maneuvering.

Those tactics backfire, said Warren Tompkins, a political consultant who ran George Bush’s 2000 campaign in South Carolina and now is Romney’s top consultant in the state. “Anything this outrageous and childish and nonsensical would have a significant fallout on whoever did it and on whose behalf it was done,” Tompkins said.

Wouldn’t that be the same Warren Tompkins who ran the campaign in South Carolina that anonymously smeared John McCain by spreading a rumour that he had fathered a black child? As Tompkins must know, that smear worked all too well. McCain’s substantial lead melted like snow on a warm spring day and Tompkins, with considerable help from the invisible hands of Karl Rove, gave us the gift of George Bush.

It’s great to see Republicans forming their own circular firing squad. One must wonder, however, why the reporter in this instance let Tompkins’ statement go unchallenged.

I demand a column in the New York Times

The newspaper of record is about to hire Bill Kristol to regularly ooze political poison on its op-ed page..

Is it too much to ask that the Times at least try to hire people who know what they’re talking about? Here, I set Maureen Dowd to the side, as her columns are all really about herself. Kristol has a proven track record of being wrong almost all the time. For this he is rewarded with near constant exposure in the mass media. With the exception of Steven Colbert, no one has ever called him on his dismal record. Now he is given the most coveted journalistic real estate in the land.

I would be willing to bet that if you stacked my predictions or observations against his, you would find that I have been right more often than he. And I only do this part time, sandwiched in between too many hours of honest work and too few hours of sleep. I realize that I am merely the son of a working stiff, instead of the son of a famous neocon who was also always wrong, but fair is fair. We people who are right most of the time deserve equal time. No, I take that back. We deserve more than equal time. Krugman and Herbert are not enough. The Times needs me, and I could use the cash.

Seriously, the Times appears to be a bit confused in its journalistic obligations. There is no obligation to balance truth with error. I have no objection to presenting a wide range of viewpoints, but is there any justification for giving a forum to a warmonger who is always, consistently, invariably, totally, absolutely, downright, flat, out-and-out, perfectly, plainly, thoroughly, unequivocally, unqualifiedly, unrelievedly, unreservedly wrong?