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Friday Night Music

Have I already done Linda Ronstadt? I should keep a list. Well, she deserves an encore if I have, since she’s one of the few rock stars who could also actually, really, sing. Here’s a couple of songs from 1977 performances, Desperado and Blue Bayou:

And one more for good measure, since I’m a big Gershwin fan, and by way of proving that she really can sing: Someone to Watch Over Me.

I really do plan, by the way, to get back to serious political blogging at some point. I mentioned last week that I had been laid up with babesiosis, a particularly nasty tick borne disease. Even after the medications got rid of the worse symptoms, I found myself constantly tired. Turns out that the babesiosis rested on a base layer of Lyme Disease, so I am just starting treatment for that. I am somewhat reliably informed that I should feel fairly normal in another couple of days. Meanwhile, for every cloud, as they say. I have lost about 9 pounds since this all started, and I am allowing myself to fantasize that I can keep that weight off once I’m back to normal. Doubt is creeping in, however, since even now, with only slight improvement, I can feel the ice cream cravings coming back. In any event, I am hoping to regain my energy, and with it my outrage, in the next few days so I can start ranting again.


Its own worst enemy

It is endlessly amazing that the Obama folks always seem to manufacture a distraction to keep the public eye off their accomplishments. You won’t be hearing much about Obama signing the Financial System Overhaul Act, because the media is all atwitter about the lightning fast firing of Shirley Sherrod at the command of Andrew Breitbart.

Just as with ACORN, the Administration just couldn’t wait to do this racist’s bidding. Why presume innocence, when you have the word of the master video editor? Unfortunately for the Administration, however, this time Breitbart’s story was disproven too quickly. The good guy was actually vindicated, much to the Administration’s chagrin.

This bodes very poorly for the Administration and the Nation should the Republicans take back Congress. The subpoenas will start flying the first day Congress is in session, and woe to the hapless civil servant to whom they are directed. This Administration will not have their back, nor will it have the guts to stonewall like Bush did.


The Globe swallows Republican lies whole

From Today’s Globe:

Senate Democrats yesterday revived an extension of unemployment benefits for 2.5 million Americans, managing to break through a GOP deadlock rooted in deep disagreements over the economy.

There is not a shred of reliable evidence that the deadlock was “rooted in deep disagreements over the economy”. The deadlock resulted from a purely political decision, made by the Republicans, that it would be to their long term political advantage to block these benefits. While the Republicans may say that they have some sort of philosophical problem with extending unemployment benefits, that position is undercut by the fact that they voted for these extensions as a matter of routine in the past. It is wrong to report as fact what is, at best, highly debatable, and is, in actuality, beyond doubt untrue.


Run against Bush, now and forever

Why do we on the left insist on being rational, and believing, despite all the evidence, that our fellow creatures are rational. Given that those fellow creatures appear poised to give huge gains to the Republicans as a reward for preventing the enactment of an effective recovery plan, the idea that we will fail if our arguments are not logically precise seems rather absurd.

The immediate cause for this rant is this observation by Steve Benen, at the Washington Monthly:

The notion that Democrats would gain traction this year by tying Republican candidates to George W. Bush’s failed presidency has always seemed implausible to me. The GOP’s lack of popularity still stems from the previous administration’s catastrophes, but it seems challenging, at best, to keep connecting the party to Bush two years later.

As I observed at a recent Blumenthal event (I think it was a Blumenthal event), the Democrats, who were not constantly on their heels back then, were still running against Herbert Hoover well into the 50s, for I can remember his name being invoked by Democratic politicians when I was back there in Catholic school. Republicans were running against Jimmy Carter well into the nineties and they are still, in places, running against George McGovern. And we are to believe that we can’t run against the worst president in history a mere two years after he departed the stage? If we can’t, it’s because our above the fray president threw the opportunity away, opting instead for the fantasy of “bi-partisanship”, something only a deeply deluded person could believe in. I read today that many people confuse the Obama stimulus package with the Tarp plan. Only Democrats could have let that happen, what with the handily alliterative “Bush Bailout” ready at hand, a term we should have heard daily since November of 2008. The only way to remind people that we were brought to this pass by George Bush is to constantly rub their noses in it. It appears to have escaped the attention of the present day Democrats that the average American has the attention span of a gnat, but if you keep saying something, as the Republicans constantly prove, it will eventually sink in.

So it’s not implausible that the Democrats could successfully use George Bush against the Republicans. What’s implausible, yet apparently true, is that it does not have occurred to them to do so.


Biggest unarmed robbery in history

In yesterday’s Times, Stanley Greenberg, who is supposed to be on our side, gives his prescription for the Obama battle plan against the Republicans after the Democrats hand them big victories in November:

The president will send up four big initiatives that have to be taken up on a bipartisan basis — or not at all. A Deficit Reduction Act that endorses his deficit commission’s proposed spending freeze, entitlement reforms, the purging of corporate loopholes and tax increases.

So do our betters blithely toss us overboard in pursuit of a political score-in this case by demanding that the Republicans help destroy Social Security.

For the deficit commission is not the Obama Deficit Commission, it is the Pete Peterson Social Security/Medicare Destruction Commission. Make no mistake, the only recommendations of substance that Commission will make will be aimed at Social Security and Medicare.

As economist Jamie Galbraith establishes here, Social Security has nothing to do with the deficit, yet Peterson’s commission has focused like a laser beam on Social Security.

Social Security is a transfer system. Part of the money earned by today’s workers is transferred to retired people, with the express promise that the workers of tomorrow will do likewise for the workers of today. Any excess in current payments, and currently there is plenty, is parked in government bonds until it is needed. As Galbreath puts it:

Social Security is a transfer program. It is not a spending program. A dollar “spent” on Social Security does not directly increase GDP. It merely reallocates a dollar from one potential final consumer (a taxpayer) to another (a retiree, a disabled person or a survivor). It also reallocates resources within both communities (taxpayers and beneficiaries). Specifically, benefits flow to the elderly and to survivors who do not have families that might otherwise support them, and costs are imposed on working people and other taxpayers who do not have dependents in their own families. Both types of transfer are fair and effective, greatly increasing security and reducing poverty — which is why Social Security and Medicare are such successful programs.

Transfers of this kind are also indefinitely sustainable — in fact there can intrinsically be no problem of sustainability with transfer programs. Apart from their effect on individual security, a true transfer program uses (by definition) no net economic resources. The only potential macroeconomic danger from “excessive” transfers is that the transfer function may be badly managed, leading to excessive total demand and to inflation. But there is no risk of this so long as the financial crisis remains uncured. Under present conditions Social Security and Medicare are bulwarks for stabilizing a total demand that would otherwise be highly deficient.

But, purely as a matter of ideology, folks like Peterson will refuse to see this basic truth, just as they somehow never see that the obvious solution to any long term problems Social Security itself might have is a rise in the level of income subject to the payroll tax, rather than a cut in benefits (raising the retirement age and/or changing the way benefits are calculated to make them lower). No, hard times demand hard choices, which always have a habit of requiring additional hardship on the poor or, in this case, middle class dupes. When, after all, was the last time you heard of a politician making a “hard choice” that involved imposing any inconvenience on the rich?

But there is a deficit related reason why it would be extremely handy for our aristocracy to cut social security benefits or, and this is the Holy Grail, destroy the program altogether. As I noted before, we working stiffs have been socking away excess social security payments for years, and during the past nine years the government, has been busily transferring that money to the rich in the form of the Bush tax cuts, which have been financed by government borrowing, including borrowing our collective pittances, which add up to a rather large amount when you put them all together. Peterson and his crew don’t want to give that money back. They prefer to steal from the poor to give to the rich and if we don’t watch out Obama and the Democrats will help them in order to score some debating points next year.


Groton Bank Art Show

Just a few pictures from the Art Show on Groton Bank, held yesterday. It seemed to me, and Audrey Heard, the event’s founder confirmed, that this was the biggest show ever, in terms of exhibitors. We arrived early, and attendance seemed to be good, but it was so hot yesterday that one has to wonder whether people showed up in the afternoon.

I probably should have made a point of getting the names of all the artists, but I’m a blogger, not a journalist, so I didn’t. The artist who painted the pictures below asked that I put her web address online (somehow she guessed the picture might end up on the web), which I was happy to do. According to her website her name is T. Miller, and her website is here.

This artist, whose name is Timothee (that’s all that’s on his card- no name, no address, no phone number, I guess he’s not interested in selling his stuff) was there last year as well. Last year Neal Young was featured, this year the late lamented Frank Zappa.

As I mentioned last week, the show was on the site of one of the only Revolutionary War battlefields, Fort Griswold, where Norwich’s least favorite son, Benedict Arnold, joined in a massacre of the fort’s defenders, before or after burning New London. The people of Groton erected a monument in 1826 (depicted below),

which is currently being renovated by our impoverished state, as can be seen here.

It’s supposed to re-open, better than ever, next Memorial Day.


Mothers Opposing McMahon

A group calling itself “Mothers Opposing McMahon” has started a facebook page and is circulating an “open letter” about the lady who wants to buy herself a seat in our house of lords. From the open letter:

As Mothers Opposing McMahon, we know you don’t have to be a mom- or even a woman- to recognize that what Linda McMahon has been marketing, especially to kids, is appalling and unacceptable. She is on her way to spending $50 million in an attempt to buy this election, money earned marketing extremely violent, sexually explicit content – featuring abusive, degrading treatment of women. This open letter is an invitation to women – to other moms, grandmothers, daughters, and sisters – and to every citizen of Connecticut, to join us in sharing the truth about Linda McMahon to make clear she should not represent us in the U.S. Senate.

There is a real price paid for what Linda McMahon calls “soap opera” by wrestlers who sustain terrible injuries in the ring, some even killed by an environment a Congressional investigation said encouraged steroid and illegal drug abuse. She earned her millions putting her workers at risk, and failing to provide health insurance or other disability benefits. The candidate now promising to create jobs laid off ten percent of her workforce to protect her personal profits.

Please share the short but explicit video we’ve attached and the truth about Linda McMahon with your family, friends, neighbors, and coworkers. We do not believe this video is appropriate for children, though Linda McMahon originally created, broadcast, and marketed its content to children. This is what she has been selling:

· Female wrestlers, forced to strip to their underwear, then beaten, kicked, and dragged around by their hair in the ring, before being throw on top of each other like trash;

· Females wrestlers forced to bark like dogs, strip, and touch each other, while being screamed at and insulted by jeering crowds yelling “slut” and other words that can’t be printed here;

· Wrestlers beating their opponents with folding chairs – some wrapped in barbed wire – and smashing glass pitchers over their opponents’ heads

Here’s the video, which is really quite tame compared to some of the stuff already out there:

Democratic front group? Simmons Front Group? The enemy of my enemy is my friend, as we all know, so well done to whoever is behind this.

Also, it’s good to see that the Times has finally seen fit to examine Linda’s past, though you’re left with the feeling that they were going through the motions, but would really rather have been making up stuff about Blumenthal. The Times ignores the angle that Mothers Opposing McMahon plays up: the nature of the “entertainment” that McMahon was dishing up. Personally, I think it’s that aspect of her past, properly presented, that would do more harm to her campaign than the steroid issue.


Equal sins

If any proof were needed that the Catholic Church either a) really doesn’t give a shit what anyone thinks about it, or b) is incapable of grasping the way it is perceived by others, here is that proof via (Why Evolution is True):

The Vatican is preparing to update the 2001 norms that deal with priestly sex abuse of minors, in effect codifying practices that have been in place for several years.

At the same time, it will include the “attempted ordination of women” among the list of most serious crimes against church law, or “delicta graviora,” sources said.

Sexual abuse of a minor by a priest was added to the classification of “delicta graviora” in 2001. At that time the Vatican established norms to govern the handling of such cases.

That’s right, ordaining a woman is as serious a sin as sexually abusing a child. Actually, the Church is just kidding, because in the real world, the Church would never forgive the bishop who ordained the woman, but it would gladly accept a sincere act of contrition from a priest or bishop who ruined the lives of scores of children, would cover up for him, provide him a sheltered but comfortable retirement, and of course forgive him his trespasses. So long as he didn’t steal money from the church-that’s another story.


Friday Night Music

I actually marked this song down as a possible last week. It didn’t quite fit in with the summertime theme for last Friday, but it came to mind while I was coming up for titles. I decided that it was a go for this week since, at least the title, pretty much sums up my week. I can relate first hand that this is yet another one of those instances where the metaphor gets a bit too extended; I don’t really think I’d care to be involved with someone who actually did give me Fever. Here’s Peggy Lee, with one of her signature songs:

As a bit of a bonus, here’s Rick Derringer and the McCoys singing a version that they made a top 40 hit. Not too badly done, but I’m including this mostly because I just can’t resist giving everyone a chance to see the type of stuff that was standard issue on Hullabaloo-a-Go-Go (yes, there actually was a show), back in the day, which is why the lip syncing gets a pass. I say this with a straight face-this stuff did not seem completely, nay, not even remotely absurd at the time, not even to those of us who weren’t high.

I understand, by the way, that Derringer, a Colchester resident for a while, and a client of mine for an even briefer time, will be touring with the Ringo Starr All Starr Band this summer. He’s the only rock star of any level of magnitude I’ve every met personally, and I can honestly say he was an extremely nice guy.

The earliest version of Fever I stumbled on over at youtube was this one by Little Willie John, who must have come and gone before I got my first transistor radio. I’m not including it because there’s no video, but he is definitely worth checking out. Clearly someone who has been wrongly forgotten. Peggy Lee’s Wikipedia page says that her song was a cover of his.


Political Campaigning (Republican Style) 101

Things not to do:

When you are campaigning as an anti-big government candidate, never, never actually get specific about what you intend to do. Certainly never let the victims beneficiaries of your anti-government zeal know how your policies are going to affect them.

Case in point, Minnesota Republican Gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmer, who recently proposed that big government should lighten up on small restauranteurs by reducing the minimum wage for tipped employees, many of whom, according to him, were pulling in a 100 grand or more a year while their employers were inches from bankruptcy.

Poor Emmer may never get to be governor now, because for reasons only he can’t figure out, those waiters and waitresses (hereafter, sporadically, “waiters”, sorry but there’s no good non-sexist term) aren’t willing to believe his protestations that he didn’t mean what he said, particularly because if you listen to the protestations, he still really means it.

If the man were a pro, he would have railed against big government, maybe even posed with one of those waiters, and promised, with the bemused or smiling (depending) waiter beside him, that he would free that person’s employer from the dead hand of big government that was preventing the business from thriving. Then, a good half, more or less, of those waiters and waitresses would have voted for him, along with half of those waiters and waitresses close friends and relatives. Once in office, he could have stuck it right to those folks and they would never know what hit them.

Now, poor guy, he may never get the chance.

I’ve always thought the flaw in Honest Abe’s formula is that, in a democracy, you only have to fool most of the people most of the time. But you have to put at least a little effort into fooling the people, even American people. Emmer has failed on that score, and, especially for a Republican, that is a mortal sin.