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Friday Night Music-Early Edition

My wife and I are leaving early today for a mini-vacation, and we may, alas, be without the internet tonight.

I had intended to try to find something to post to make fun of Little Ricky’s lamentable exit from the race, or perhaps something to show my empathy for the hard time Ann Romney has had raising five kids with only 200 million dollars of ill gotten gains to back her up.

But, I couldn’t resist passing this on, which my wife passed to me, who in turn got it from Katrina vanden Heuvel of the Nation via Twitter. Try to not enjoy it.

Guess who’s pulling Coutu’s strings?

Joe Courtney, our very excellent Congressman, is going to face a tea party type in the next election. His name is Chris Coutu, and he’s a representative type. A young man on the make who is looking to ride extremism and Republican cant into political office or, lacking that, a lucrative right wing sinecure or lobbying job. He differs from most of his Republican colleagues in Connecticut only in that he’s closer to the national norm than they. I should add that, though I only work there, I feel a sense of shame that Norwich sent him to Hartford. Why Norwich would elect a Republican to any office is a mystery to me, but being from Groton, where we can’t seem to quit Republican town councils (though our state reps are now all of the one true political faith), I can’t criticize too much.

Coutu is of the new breed of Republicans that take their orders from ALEC, the right wing lobbying group that relieves its Republican lackeys from the messy job of actually drafting, or even thinking about, legislation. It just hands its minions its proposed legislation, gives them their marching orders, and off they go. We have ALEC to thank for “stand your ground” a/k/a “right to kill” laws in more than 20 states. They are also hard at work depriving people of the right to vote, right to unionize, and right to education. More here and here. If folks like Coutu had their way, we’d be blessed, here in Connecticut, with legislation that would put us right down there with Mississippi. It’s nice to know that he’ll be out of Connecticut politics come November. Good riddance.

Joe McCarthy redux

Allen West one-ups Joe McCarthy. At least McCarthy claimed to have the goods on his targets and claimed to have them written down.

Well, two can play this game. I heard that Allen West has a gay Muslim illegal immigrant lover in Washington and another one in Florida. And I truly did hear it, because I read this post out loud before I pushed the publish button.

Fraud legalized

Required reading. Just when you think you can start loving Obama again, he does something like this. (Not to excuse the many Congressional Democrats who voted for the thing just because they were afraid of the acronym, or the others who are pocketing Wall Street money.)

 

The moving middle moves again

The following tells you all you need to know about today’s media. It consists of the first two paragraphs from a column absurdly titled Common Sense, by James Stewart in the business section of the New York Times.

 

This week, President Obama called him a social Darwinist. The conservative Club for Growth criticized him for wimping out on Medicare and military spending, and Ron Paul, the libertarian Republican, blasted him for not cutting tax rates more deeply.

I figure Paul D. Ryan, the Wisconsin Republican who is head of the House Budget Committee, must be doing something right.

If there is any sense in these two paragraphs, it is of the non kind, rather than the common. It would be nonsensical in any context. There is no reason to believe that someone attacked by both “sides” on a question is therefore closer to being correct than either, or that he or she is doing “something right”. It is particulary nonsensical regarding the Ryan budget.

 

As has been demonstrated ad nauseaum, Ryan’s plan doesn’t add up even on its own terms. It is balanced only if one assumes that Ryan can find tax loopholes to close that will equal the gigantic tax breaks to the rich that Ryan proposes. Ryan himself won’t identify a single such loophole, so the depths of his dishonesty is clear. If adopted, the plan is a recipe for outsize deficits as far as the eye can see. The fact that there is a right wing group attacking him does not give his plan an ounce of credibility; it merely means that there are groups on the right fulfilling their historic role: pushing the Republican party ever farther to the right and in the process, by the way, providing the cover that they know people like Stewart will deliver. As to the Social Darwinist remark, it is absolutely accurate. If Ryan’s proposal became law, and were implemented as he suggests it would be, all programs designed to help the poor and middle class would be eliminated.

 

The fact that Obama is “on the left”, a statement most of us lefties consider to be a joke, does not mean that his criticisms were invalid. They were not. They were accurate. As the math shows, Ryan’s budget would result in the extinguishment of the federal government, except for defense, health care, and social security by 2050. Obama’s statements regarding Ryan’s budget were objectively true. His characterization of the plan as Social Darwinism is accurate. The fact that Ryan is under attack from the “left” and the right does not make his plan any more credible. Stewart’s opening paragraphs do, however, perfectly encapsulate the attitude of our modern media. It matters not where the truth actually lies, for today’s media it lies at a midpoint between two media defined extremes, the right extreme being as far right as one can imagine, the left extreme being so close to the right that a common sense notion like single payer is not even on the continuum.

UPDATE: Methinks Paul Krugman may be referring to Stewart (Brooks and Douthat, too) in this post, discussing Ryan’s defenders, though he’s too polite to publicly name or shame fellow Timesmen:

What’s going on here? The defenders of Ryan come, I’d argue, in two types.

One type is the pseudo-reasonable apparatchik. There are a fair number of pundits who make a big show of debating the issues, stroking their chins, and then — invariably — find a way to support whatever the GOP line may be. There’s no mystery in their support for Ryan.

The other type is more interesting: the professional centrist. These are people whose whole pose is one of standing between the extremes of both parties, and calling for a bipartisan solution. The problem they face is how to maintain this pose when the reality is that a quite moderate Democratic party — one that is content to leave tax rates on the rich far below those that prevailed for most of the past 70 years, that has embraced a Republican health care plan — faces a radical-reactionary GOP.

What these people need is reasonable Republicans. And if such creatures don’t exist, they have to invent them. Hence the elevation of Ryan — who is, in fact, a garden-variety GOP extremist, but with a mild-mannered style — to icon of fiscal responsibility and honest argument, despite the reality that his proposals are both fiscally irresponsible and quite dishonest.

UPDATE 2: Since Obama is routinely attacked from both the left (see, e.g., his failure to support single payer) and the right (see, e.g., everything he does) why don’t the pundits draw the conclusion that he must be “doing something right” instead of the more common conclusion that the left is irrelevant and he’s being insufficiently bipartisan by not caving to the right?

 

UPDATE 3: Everyone is piling on. See here and here, and these are only examples. I may not be the best, but I think I got there first.

 

Crazy person has a point

Without a doubt, Lee Whitnum is a crazy lady. But as they say, even a stopped clock is right twice a day, and she’s right about AIPAC. It is the NRA of the foreign policy lobbies. There are very few members of Congress that do not rush to do its bidding. I can’t speak to whether Chris Murphy is among the worst offenders or even whether he’s an offender at all, but it would be ever so nice if our politicians would declare their right to think for themselves when it comes to policy in the Mid East. It is not healthy when the tail wags the dog.

 

Friday NIght Music, Double Feature

It appears that this week was really, truly, finally the week that Mitt Romney became inevitable. So this is the song Republicans are singing. They didn’t get what they wanted, so now they’re desperately hoping-desperately trying to convince themselves-that they got what they needed.

Well, this isn’t any old Friday, this is Good Friday, and it wouldn’t be Good Friday here at CTBlue unless I re-posted this video. I’ve watched this movie several times, and this excerpt several more than that, but I only just noticed, unless I’m sadly mistaken, that Brian actually does get into the spirit of things at the end.

Joe Courtney visits Drinking Liberally

Joe Courtney joined the regulars at the SE CT Drinking Liberally get together in New London tonight. Mayor Finizio put in an appearance as well. That’s Matt Shafner on the right.

 

 

Google dumps independent booksellers

A few months ago I was delighted to learn that I could buy e-books through my local bookstore, meaning I could funnel at least part of my money to someone local, instead of handing it to Apple or Amazon. Bank Square Books, of Mystic, sold books through an e-book distributor named Blio, which, to my way of thinking, had one of the better e-readers around, clearly superior to Googles.

A few weeks ago Bank Square shut down its website as it underwent alleged improvements, including improvements to its e-reader service. A day or two back up it went, and much to my surprise and disappointment, Blio was out, and Google was in. I would likely have made the transition, much against my preference, but now I see that the folks at Bank Square, all unknowing I’m sure, backed the wrong horse:

On Thursday, Google announced that it would sunset its retailer partner program for e-books by the end of January 2013. Google’s announcement followed the release of a letter from the American Booksellers Association to its members informing them that their partnership with Google would end at the end of the year. ABA CEO Oren Teicher also added that the association was already engaged in talks with other partners to give independent bookstores a way to continue to sell e-books on a major platform.

Here’s hoping the ABA goes with Blio, or some other outlet more dedicated to meeting its members needs. It would be a tragedy if independent bookstores disappeared, but unless they can get a share of the e-market that would appear to be their fate.

Let them eat shit

Even Marie Antoinette might have qualms about this one, but in this day and age, it’s merely par for the course.

According to the good folks at the Daily Kos (via Grist), shit is pretty much what we’ll be eating, if the Department of Agriculture gets its way. It is proposing that we allow poultry producers to inspect themselves.

Under the current rules, the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is responsible for inspecting all chicken and turkey carcasses for things like bruises, bile, and yes, shit, before they’re sent for further processing. The proposed HACCP-Based Inspection Models Project (HIMP) would remove those USDA inspectors from the lines, leaving poultry plant employees, who already stand in a fast moving I-Love-Lucy style line to flag unsanitary or otherwise flawed birds

Isn’t this where we came in? Weren’t the first moves toward a federal system for assuring product safety taken in response to grotesque conditions at meat packing establishments, which conditions were uncovered by journalists, back when we still had some? Has the nature of capitalism changed in the past 100 years so that we have any reason to suspect that handing the hen coop (literally this time) over to the foxes will have a different result? What was Einstein’s definition of insanity again?

The truly depressing thing about this is that this is being proposed by a USDA controlled by Democrats. Imagine what the Republicans could come up with.

There is one glimmer of hope here. We’ll be eating more than just shit if this proposal becomes law. That’s a good thing, because “shit” is one of the seven words you can’t say on television, and therefore this particular ingredient in our nutritional basket, should it be reported at all, must be reported as a euphemism. What we need is for someone to come up with a word or phrase to describe the whole disgusting stew of ingredients that we’ll be eating. We need the genius who came up with “pink slime” to describe “lean finely textured beef” to come to the rescue again.