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Posts archived in Facts of Life

I suppose there is something to be said about accountability in this country. Deserved or not though, demanding accountability by threat of force evokes images of an ousted Honduran president, a Burmese junta, a deposed Chilean leftist. It does not evoke images however, of a modern, democratized America.

Alas, this is the context in which we find ourselves today. Extremists, paranoid and delusional, attempt to leverage a constitutionally guaranteed right to bear arms in order to oust democratically elected governors. When a Department of Homeland Security assessment, commissioned by the Bush administration, warned of the increasing threat of domestic, home-grown, violence and terrorism, the (conservative) media spun it as a lead-up to partisan policing of dissenting groups and ultimately tried to use it to discredit the incoming administration.

Do those media figures feel remorse about their indignant responses to a sober analysis of our country?

Probably not.

Does the appearance and publicizing of recent extremism in our nation suggest a new illness in our society’s politics?

Probably not.

Is there a connection between politicians’ publicly aired diatribes likening the Obama administration to past despotic regimes and the presence of these extremist threats towards government officials?

Absolutely.

But lets not jump to any conclusions just because of that acknowledgment. The DHS and the FBI have been responding to these sorts of threats for some time, as I’m sure they were just as pertinent during Bush’s administration. And if our country’s panic laden responses to airport security measures is any indication, the role of concerned citizens in this issue should be one of urging restraint and calm from our elected leaders. We need to be, as a nation, confident on certain things.

For one, no crackpot militia (or any militia for that matter) is going to overthrow our government.

Same goes for foreign terrorists – they simply have no chance of overthrowing our government and no chance of disrupting our ability to choose the way we live our lives. Whatever tangential threats exist, they are not existential threats, and to treat them otherwise is to give far too much credence to the power of these groups.

Criminals are criminals are criminals are criminals. Regardless of whether they attempt to hide behind a veil of patriotism or are honest in their intentions, we already have the means to deal with their effects. Any further discussion of issues regarding homegrown terrorism, militia violence or threats of violence should be isolated within an intellectual forum – it should not enter the legislative forum.

If ever these sorts of threats should teach us something, it is that the boundaries of legislative efficacy are true. The concerns about militias and domestic terrorism are concerns primarily for the communities in which they occur, and no amount of legislating can hope to change that fact.

I don’t take these instances of/the threat of violence lightly. They are indeed serious issues, issues that exist within almost every society. They are issues that will outlive the governments of today and issues that cannot be categorized into a notion of historical pertinence. They are basic issues of human nature.

As such, I cannot stomach the idea of our government trying to legislate away human nature any more than it already has through existing penal codes. If ever a slippery slope existed, it is the slippery slope that brings us from protecting our security toward confining our liberties. In the context of foreign terrorism, racial profiling has become an actual policy goal for conservatives who wish to seem tough on security. That slippery slope has already brought our country back towards institutionalizing the racial prejudices and discrimination that directly contradict the values enshrined in our founding documents.

So while it can be startling to hear/read news of threats of violence becoming more widespread within the political discourse, we may all need a collective moment to breathe.

The proper authorities are on the case, will continue to be vigilant, and can accomplish more than a bunch of up-tight, insulated politicians could ever hope to accomplish.

As our leading institutionalized voice of calm and rationality recently stated:

So as Americans, we reject the false choice between our security and our ideals. We can and we must and we will protect both. (Obama, 5/22/09)

I’ve never been an ideologue. Some find it impossible to move forward without adhering to ideologically drawn boundaries and paths, but it becomes similarly improbable that such adherence to ideology has a chance of creating positive consequences for society when one acknowledges that the world does not turn upon an ideology.

Government services play an important role in keeping the machinations of society running with the least possible conflict. The consequences of such action are readily apparent to some, though often the benefits become misconstrued through the lens of wealth and power. The most ideological thing about me stems from my inclination that government owes the least amount of aid/service to those who are wealthy, and this is similarly reflected in the propensity of wealthy folks to argue on ideological terms about the folly of social services. Indeed, this thinking begins to imply that those who are wealthy owe a certain amount of dues to the economy/government that created the circumstances in which their success could be realized. As may be expected, this social democratic perspective on taxes reinforces their necessity within society at large and relegates generic complaints about taxes to a position of “non-issue” in my mind.

If only there weren’t such glaring contradictions in the pursuit of what is oh so endearingly spun as “tax relief”, maybe this would be a serious issue that could have the propensity to improve people’s lives. But right now state governments are folding, unemployment coffers are emptying and only one state in this nation has been smart enough to enact a forward thinking policy to protect its citizens from the undulations and uncertainty of our economy. That state is Oregon, which recently passed the single largest tax increase in the state’s history (enacted by state-wide ballot initiative), and because of the tax increase vital public services like schools and health care facilities have been protected from an otherwise disruptive budget shortfall.

This is a topic of particular worth right now because of the lip-service that politicians are now required to pay to “combating the deficit/debt”. Especially with the media spinning the GOP’s shadow budget as something without precedent, a budget that finally attempts to seriously reduce the deficit and debt, it is all the more important to realize the effect tax revenues have on our government’s long-term viability. To suggest that current revenues in comparison to outlays of spending is unsustainable is a fair criticism, but this criticism often draws observers to falsely conclude that the issue can be resolved by spending less. This theory however, which has been co-opted by Tea Partier and GOPer alike, neglects to consider the inability of government bureaucrats to foresee the future accurately. Every time taxes are cut, politicians are gambling on public services and riding on unsubstantiated ideological claims.

Even Obama’s tax cut for 95% of working families played right into the hands of an ideologue’s fantasy. He justified it by adopting that old conservative catch phrase of “tax relief” and positioned the tax cut as being a necessary measure to provide economic stimulus (because remember these tax cuts comprised 55% of the overall budgeted spending for the Recovery Act). But working families already pay rather low taxes. Furthermore, it is ludicrous to propagate a framework that infers a working family’s economic woes can be alleviated by cutting some taxes. These tax cuts will do nothing to help homeowners in distress, or people who are out of work or underemployed. Rather contrarily, the tax cuts have put an excess burden on our federal government to cut spending on the exact social services that would be so helpful to such struggling families.

Namely, unemployment insurance has been put in jeopardy. Many states have no money left to provide this service and are increasingly relying upon the federal government to take responsibility, thus increasing debt/deficit. It must have been really hard for people to foresee that a recession where hundreds of thousands of people are losing their jobs would result in an increased demand for/reliance upon unemployment insurance. Nonetheless, precipitous complaints about tax burden all throughout the last 30 years continue to yield a tax scheme that famously allowed Warren Buffet to pay less in taxes than his secretary. All along the way though, hope was reserved for the day when facts would trickle in showing the positive economic effect of tax cuts, hope for vindication of conservative ideologies.

Conservative politicians have no shame in continuing to promote the centrality of taxation in their attempts to govern. These promises they sling produce nothing more than a false understanding of how the government effects the economy and how the economy effects individuals, bolstering false hopes of some magical tax rate that will create jobs for all and mark the end of poverty forever. If only the government was smaller, they say. If only it spent less money, if only it collected less taxes, if only it left the markets alone, everything would be better. Taxes oppress freedom, taxes restrict liberty, only markets can be trusted.

The fact remains though, that none of this is true, at least not demonstrably so. Empty promises, when bought wholesale, inflate despot regimes and thus is the story of modern conservative economics. Even when given their clean slate upon which to experiment with an ideological hypothesis, in Chile, Argentina, South Africe, Poland and Russia, free peoples were necessarily silenced as a means to enact the policies necessary. Upon their fruition, after state assets were sold to the lowest, most well-connected bidder, and after markets were made uninhibited by things like wages laws and workplace safety laws, these populations continue to wait for signs that this ideology and its proponents were working in society’s interest. Those signs haven’t come though.

The same story is true in the US. The chorus of the faithful continue to promote the centrality of tax cuts to economic growth, the centrality of deregulation to individual freedom. Less people have been silenced in violent ways, but economic dissent is largely ignored. Even a president’s successful efforts to stop the worst of the insurance industry’s abuses perpetrated on consumers is slandered as apocalyptic, tyrannical and (to put it in ideological terms) socialist. The reality of how those efforts to stop the abuses allowed by the upholding of individual freedom through deregulation will benefit the lives of millions of Americans does not enter into the equation in the mind of ideologues.

So for the rest of this year, Americans will be forced to listen to a re-arbitration of a decades long debate that finally resulted in reform. This upcoming debate however, will be terribly biased and based on an unwavering tendency to inflate pre-conceived notion with sound logical reasoning supported by fact. We’ve seen it in the almost instantaneous reflex by the GOP to assert their position as “Repeal”. They proclaim that Obamacare is ushering in an end to individual freedom, they assert falsehoods about taxes and their effects, all with the hopes of silencing the possibility that government can legislate for the public good. The funny thing about all this health care related freaking out by conservatives is that it rests upon such a wobbly foundation that assumes a democratically enacted piece of legislation, that emerged in direct response to abuses perpetrated by industry, has the ability to usurp the constitution.  Various State Attorney Generals have made very clear that this is their view of health care reform, as is evidence by their attempts to sue the Federal Government to prevent a law from being enforced in their state. Pointless, self-interested or not, this has become the nature of minority-status politics in the 21st century (I refer not to racial or social minorities, but political/institutional minorities, ie the GOP).

My focus upon ideology and its habit of contaminating the political waters, while focused upon the outright hypocrisy and shamelessness of endless tax-cut platforms, extends to liberal ideologies as well. Hell, why attach contrived labels to this discussion, it extends to all ideologies.

I cannot recall a single historical instance of an ideology being infallible. Communism fell. Socialism flounders. Libertarianism went out with electricity. Capitalism implodes economies and takes citizens and governments with it. Don’t even get me started on the ideologies adjacent to theocracy, as they basically can be blamed for every instance of monarchy, empire, and all the other atrocities that mark the pre-enlightenment era and that continue to punctuate modern history.

So what in the world propels otherwise rational beings to submit to the constraints of ideology?

This question plagues me. It has no easy answer, beyond the assumption that ideologies take advantage of some common desire within humans to categorically understand the world around them. But that assumption really doesn’t explain why political ideologies survive so strongly. It explains why scientific endeavors are perpetually undertaken, but that science rests upon an ability to find, classify, reproduce and simulate factual realities. Political ideologies auspiciously rest without that burden of fact.

Let us drop the pretenses within which our political dialog exists. Let us stop prescribing for our future the tired, failed ideas of our past. Let us again raise skepticism of ideologues to the forefront of our national consciousness and propel forward an era of honesty, research and evaluation in our politics.

Did I mention that I loathe the ideologue?

Emerging from the mist of a settled Health Care Reform, we’ve watched a movement get loud, angry, violent, and we’ve watched them get nothing done. I speak of the Tea Partiers, teabaggers and pseudo-populist rage-fomenters that comprise such groups as the Tea Party Patriots and Freedom Works. I speak of the same absurd minority protest group whose numbers are constantly dwarfed by immigration rallies, anti-war rallies and pro-health-reform rallies but whose media presence implies a greater significance than any other movement that exists, past or present.

At this point however, when the Tea Partier’s cause celebre – preventing America from obtaining democratic reforms to the health care system – has fallen flat on its face, it is hard to distract from the fact that these folks have no real influence on policy. I don’t know if this statement can be regarded as at all controversial though, considering that it is infinitely hard to infer the policy consequences of such rallying cries as “Say NO to Socialism” or “Keep Government Out of my Medicare”…

Never mind the glaring contradictions of such sentiments when one acknowledges that this movement is fueled by our bunk economy’s bad habit of bringing innocent, hard-working Americans down with it. It began with the bank bailouts, where the policy sell was tough regardless of the facts on the ground because when viewed in the abstract, who would honestly be in favor of the Federal government handing hundreds of billions of dollars over to corporate mega-banks? Obama had his work cut out for him in trying to sell that policy after the fact, especially when one considers the immediate recoil Republicans have at any fleeting mention of the consequences of George W. Bush’s 8 year debacle, but now that the taxpayer has recovered nearly all the money that was spent on the TARP bailouts of 2008, populism is in favor of the Obama administration.

Shortly after our country fully realized that we have a bona-fide Black President, we began to realize the political and legislative potency of that President with the passage of a historic economic stimulus package. The facts more than a year later reveal the positive impact of the stimulus, with hundreds of thousands of Americans put back to work, state governments helped to stay afloat, and tax cuts offered to 95% of Main St. America. Apparently this all threatened the egos of Republicans and Tea Partiers alike because nothing says I’m confident in the strength of my ideas like calling the opponent Hitler.

Then came Health Care Reform, the legislative priority that dominated the protest signs of teabaggers for the next year and will likely continue to exist at the forefront of anti-government activism in the year to come. All these agitations by the Obama Administration, these efforts to realign the priorities of the government from top to bottom, these audacious attempts to stave off the inevitable courses as set by the most powerful moneyed interests in the years prior, these actions incited the most virulent conservative activism in the last few decades.

The NYTimes profiles some connected figures in the Tea Party network, and the narrative that was sparked by cries against socialism and big government contrasting the ever present, supported, and oft-lauded role of government in these folks’ lives continues seamlessly. In my mind, one has no ground to stand upon to protest big government while accepting unemployment benefits, Medicare, Social Security or any of the other completely non-controversial, popular and necessary programs. This shallow margin by which Tea Party rhetoric has made its way into the halls of Congress is necessarily shallow. To delve deeper into the political discourse of the teabaggers, one must overlook the logical gaps of arguments that are created by the emotions of a populist reaction to economic uncertainty.

But that glaring hypocrisy is not a concern for much of the Tea Party movement. Principle and integrity of political arguments be damned, because these people are pissed! They are entitled to their government handouts, but fuck anyone else who tries to balance the scales. Fuck anyone else who has found themselves a victim of machinations larger than themselves. Fuck anyone whose woes lead them to vote for Democratic candidates or to support Democratic platforms. But to what avail is all this resentment being levied?

Rooting out government waste and spending taxpayer money more wisely is not some new idea that the Tea Party owns. Being against totalitarianism and facism isn’t new, but for christsake only the most paranoid and conspiratorial among us would actually buy into the notion that this Health Care Reform is even related to those despot regimens. Not trusting the notion of government is not an excuse for being completely and utterly irrational in one’s rhetoric. In fact, when such sentiments of paranoia and fear are allowed to prevail in political movements the result can be nothing but more paranoia and fear. As we’ve seen, the Tea Partiers and Republicans could not thwart the democratic will of the electorate or the administration to reform our health care system. But what have they done?

I can’t honestly answer that question. I can’t produce a single tangible result of this movement, beyond the ratings boost Fox News enjoyed by creating a fictional picture of America in revolt. The Tea Party movement really has no objectives beyond trying to elect Tea Party candidates and agitate for agitation’s sake. Does anyone really know what Tea Party candidates are for? What would a government run by Tea Partiers look like? Do Republicans really have to do much to convince the Tea Partiers that they are friendly? Would a Republican administration or a Republican congress just give in to the demands of this minute faction of the electorate simply because they are afraid of agitation from within?

I’m not trying to pose these questions or ruminate on this subject to salt the wounds created by Health Care reform becoming law, but because I think that any political movement needs to justify its existence in no uncertain terms. And they need to do it constantly. This isn’t a call for more delusional rhetoric to stir up the passions and prejudices of the tea-baggers, but a call for this movement to grow up and try to dispel the facts surrounding their inadequacy. I say this because I’m tired of the rigor that is applied to criticizing liberal politics and liberal movements not being applied to these Tea Partiers and the Republican/conservative ideologies that they push. This criticism is being levied not only at conservative outlets like Fox, but at similarly mainstream outlets like CNN and MSNBC who have dedicated countless hours of coverage to the Tea Party cohorts while unwaveringly ignoring other legitimate movements.

As a last aside, the Tea Parties are not doing themselves any favors by enlisting the inept former gov. Sarah Palin to be their poster child. Didn’t they get the memo that this person hurts things more than she helps things? Or maybe they really just want to ride the media coattails of a future reality TV star?

When the First Lady is trumpeting the tackling of childhood obesity as her cause celebre, it is hard to ignore the subtle wisdom of the Onion:

EVANSVILLE, IN—In an effort to keep pace with the rapid growth of American mouthfuls, flatware manufacturer KitchenMaster announced yesterday the addition of a fifth tine to its line of dinner forks. “These days, a traditional four-tined fork is just not enough to handle the quantities of food people shove down their throats,” said company spokesman Ken Krimstein, holding up a fork supporting six separate tortellini, two turkey sausages, and some mashed potatoes. “To stay relevant to our customer base and bring back some of those who have given up on using utensils entirely, this was an adjustment we just had to make.” Krimstein added that the augmented forks would soon be followed by 25 percent deeper spoons and 3-gallon gravy boats.(2/17/10).

Likewise, 7/11 will debut the Super Big Gulp this spring – the cup doubles as shelter for homeless children!

For anyone continuing to think that the Recovery Act (the stimulus) was a waste, think again.

These provide countenance to the fact that not only has our economy turned around, but that said turn-around occurred like clockwork with the Recovery Act becoming law. I was propelled to include these charts after criticism mounted over the supposed “bias-nature” of the graphic released by the White House that was created with the same data that created the above graphs. For a refresher, or for those who didn’t happen to see it, this is the White House’s graphic on job loss/the recession/the stimulus:

Beyond the obvious red/blue divide, nothing more partisan exists. One cannot simply claim the graph is partisan because it displays facts that support the arguments and views of a political party, especially not when these facts are indeed true. Add to the overall objectivity of the White House’s release of stimulus-related and economic data these charts on real GDP and Payroll Job Losses and you can see that there isn’t much room to claim on principle that the stimulus failed. (Both come from a Feb 17th report on the 1 year progress of the stimulus issued by VP Joe Biden).

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10:57 AM

Move On, Evan Bayh

So the latest thing to shake up Washington’s frail bones is the news that a conservative blue-dog Democrat from Indiana is not going to seek re-election. Sure, he had an easy 20 point lead over his nearest Republican contender in prospective polls, but the man just has got to be moving along.

What is the problem here though? It seems like from the way people are already reacting to it, that something inconceivable is happening. But really, he is a 2 term Senator – 12 years! Let him go. He has been in Washington too long already.

I’m no fan of political dynasties. Bayh had a certain edge in his pursuit of national politics, as his father was a notable Indiana political figure, which many pundits and pollsters are already saying makes any other Democrat’s chances of winning in Indiana in November slight. But fuck that. For the first time in more than half a century there will not be a single Kennedy in Congress. Yet, we continue to bemoan the electoral downfalls that occur when political dynasties end. The people who comprise these dynasties may indeed be high caliber statesmen and women, worthy of their service to our country, but I refuse to consider the political dynasty as an inherently good characteristic of any government.

There is something to say about political/congressional veterans, those who know how the machine works, in their ability to help grease the gears of legislative agendas. But is that information that cannot be communicated to someone new?

I’m the type of partisan who likes my party’s goals, but lordy do I hate my party’s tendencies. We exalt the virtues of participatory democracy, but somehow that only extends so far. For one thing, why don’t Democrats support Congressional term limits? The logic applies wonderfully to the executive, and the public implicitly accepts that as good for our country. So why does that logic not extend to the Congress?

That is what I mean by how I hate my party’s tendencies. If they ever came out to support term limits for Congress (I have no idea how much/what portion of the public would support this idea – any polls out there?), their whole electoral strategy would be flipped on its head. Political party’s love incumbents. There is no way to hide that fact. But do incumbent politicians do any better for those who elect them than freshmen would?

While I’ve got you on a tangent, I predict that the only way for a Congressional term-limit system to work would be within a public campaign finance system. Maybe that would be the way to get the Dems/Repubs behind this, to ease their purse string concerns over how expensive it would be to elect so many less incumbents. That seems pretty realistic to me though, especially considering how the gridlock and partisanship of Congress has become “common wisdom”.

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1:19 PM

Tea-bag your Sanity

Daily cartoon from the Independent :

- and then accuse the other side of being radical leftists!

Oh, if there has been anything to bring the hilarity back to Washington, it is those wacky teabaggers. It is too bad that they’ve all spurned Ron Paul’s brand of reform politics in favor of a snarling, anti-tax, anti-government, anti-factual, pro-war, pro-calling-people-Hitler platform (now with fmr Gov. resign-after-2-years-Palin at the helm). Before that ideological re-alignment happened, the establishment Republicans were campaigning against that movement in the primaries (remember when Ron Paul kept getting pushed out of the national Republican primary debates?). But nay, are those the “grass-roots” tea-baggers or the “astro-turf” tea-baggers who are pushing away from the movement created by Paul and toward the movement co-opted by Palin? Hard to tell, hard to tell.

One dead give-away though, is that the Republican establishment (Palin included) embraced the tea party movement after, not before, the movement gained corporate sponsorship and moved further to the right of the ideological spectrum.

News is that the east coast, which includes Washington DC, which is where our national politicians live, is getting some snow. Oh wait, scratch that, not really news, because it is February. Despite that little fact of life (winter tends to mean snow, sometimes lots of it), the NYTimes decided to run an article in their Science/Environment section titled, “Climate-change debate is heating up in deep freeze,”. This article basically provides an outlet for all the shenanigans pulled by climate-change skeptics who like to take advantage of the average American’s shaky grasp on science, with seemingly anecdotal rebuttals by “scientists” provided as the factual context to this debate (which is heating up, but wait it’s cold outside – leave it to the NYTimes to spend more time coming up with a witty headline than writing a worth-while article).

Sorry, but it isn’t debate that is heating up. It is opportunism. The Republicans pulling these stunts, like building an igloo and declaring it “Mr. Gore’s new home”, don’t care what the factual basis for climate change is. They care that they have an opportunity to reinforce the conclusion that they and their constituents have already come to, science be damned. Rachel Maddow covered this last night, eviscerating those climate-change deniers with the help of Bill Nye, but she did so in an entirely appropriate way – by condescendingly mocking the shallow logic that these Republicans are subscribing to. But the NY Times has decided that all this agitation on the right, completely devoid of evidence-based arguments to buffer their case, constitutes debate.

If you want to know what is wrong with Washington, look no further than what constitutes debate in the media. I had more conclusive, heated debates in high school.

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6:21 PM

Profit for Taxpayers?

A headline on the Huffington Post caught my eye just now. It read “Paulson, Buffet : Bank bailout may result in profit for U.S. taxpayers”.

The article was a terrible let-down, as it provided the least thorough of an analysis possible. They basically provided some out-of-context quotes and short narrative descriptions in between. Very limited. And I really wish they sourced their articles better, it is nearly impossible to look further into an issue when presented by the Huffington Post. I usually don’t get any deeper than the headlines, for this reason.

But that sounds good doesn’t it – the bank bailout resulting in a profit for the taxpayer? It would be great for it to actually be true and not just the educated guess of two very rich, white men. Despite how often that scenario leads to let-down, this time it seems likely to be true.

Now that is where the Obama administration has hit a home-run. Never mind the lock-step opposition by Republicans to Obama’s every policy, this policy really sells itself especially in a time when lob losses on Main St. are high and Wall St. is reporting record bonus payouts. You might know what I’m talking about here, especially if you watched the State of the Union. If not, look below and pay special attention around 1:40.

The arguments against this will be tenuous, but hopefully they will be based on facts, not like that Republican representative who used some fuzzy math during the lead-in to his question to the President. An interesting NYTimes article gives some numbers associated with this proposal, and arguments from both sides. I just don’t see there being much of an upside for the Repubs to push back on this, especially not while simultaneously trying woo the tea partiers (I’m forgetting, do they like the bank bailout?)…

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12:17 PM

Populism at its most Egomaniacal

The once closed-to-the-press Tea Party Convention was ultimately elevated to prime time, with America’s most-watched news network, FOX, providing live coverage of the speech by headliner Sarah Palin. That is right, the same Sarah Palin: former Governor of Alaska, former vice-presidential candidate and abuser of democratically-bestowed powers. While Palin has come to brand herself has the maverick, rogue, embodiment of all that is “real” about America, the fact remains that she has repeatedly made decisions while in power (and now while out of power) that would maximize her own personal gain. She latched onto the opportunity to be a heart-beat away from the presidency, without the slightest inkling of reserve based upon her own capabilities or limitations (i.e., not having a clue about a plethora of major issues). Shortly after her national political debut and subsequent national electoral defeat, she decided her time was better spent not doing the job she was elected to, but furthering her own political agenda (that she has conveniently projected onto “real America”). As she declared in her resignation speech: “My choice is to take a stand and effect change – not hit our heads against the wall and watch valuable state time and money, millions of your dollars, go down the drain in this new environment. Rather, we know we can effect positive change outside government at this moment in time, on another scale, and actually make a difference for our priorities – and so we will, for Alaskans and for Americans.” Now however, we’ve seen that this “positive change outside government” translates in the real world into employment as a talking head by FOXnews. Well, I guess I jumped the gun – it first translated to a multi-million dollar book deal (that she was not allowed to accept as a sitting Governor), and national press tour (including 2 stops on Oprah!).

But for the sake of continuing Palin’s narrative, let’s put all these events aside and just say that she was trying to correct the record that she thinks has been skewed by a liberal media conspiracy by ghost-writing a book, and affixing herself as a media notable. So this next move was perfect, being the headliner at the National Tea Party Convention! That maverick, rogue group of tea-baggers, yelling so passionately for the policies that Palin so emphatically advocates – that is, the policy of anti-Obamaism. Among the memes she adopted, we find:

On Scott Brown:

You know, considering the recent conservative election sweep, it’s time that they stop blaming everyone else. When you’re 0-for-3, you’d better stop lecturing and start listening.”

On America’s problems:

“That’s where you got to look because that’s what got you into this mess — the Obama-Pelosi-Reid agenda. It’s going to leave us less secure, more in debt, and more under the thumb of big government.”

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If ever there was a self-depreciating-comedy-news host who speaks truth to the inane, it was John Stewart.

And if ever there was a self-proclaimed-integral-left-wing-news blog that became exactly what it claimed to be providing an alternative to, it was Huffington Post.

I’m appalled at precisely how sensational all of their headlines are, with these media spats being just one facet of their practice of media engineering.

Another example that resonated with me is the rampant exalting of Congress-people’s bickering. They run headlines proclaiming that the public option is dead (or some other inflammatory, controversial proclamation straight from the mouth of someone like Sen. Mary Landrieu) and then the next day run headlines proclaiming that the same public option is actually alive and kicking it (coming straight from the talking points of some other Dem Senator). I’m not saying they shouldn’t report on what Congress-people are saying, but damn – can’t they prevent their headlines from wholly contradicting each other the next day? Just because some person who happens to be in the Congress says so, does not make it so, nor does it mean that their out-of-context quotations should instantly become the headlines.

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
The Blogs Must Be Crazy
www.thedailyshow.com
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1:08 PM

Demand Question Time?

The recent enthusiasm over the President’s “question time” with House Republicans and now Senate Democrats that were aired live on most of the national news networks has led to the petitioning by bloggers and wonks alike for more of these unscripted, televised dialogues. The petition thus far has collected almost 3,000 signatures (mine included), punctuated by notable media figures such as Nate Silver, Katrina vanden Heuvel, Andrew Sullivan and David Corn.

America could use more of this — an unfettered and public airing of political differences by our elected representatives. So we call on President Barack Obama and House Minority Leader John Boehner to hold these sessions regularly — and allow them to be broadcast and webcast live and without commercial interruption, sponsorship or intermediaries.

Suggestions here, and a slight reality check here

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