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Friday, January 16, 2004


There Goes That Phrase

You know how the anti-marriage folks are always going on about the "sanctity of marriage"? And how Shrub used that phrase the day after the Massachusetts SJC struck down the restriction on marriage?

Well, I think that phrase has pretty much lost all its value.
"I do believe in the sanctity of marriage, I totally do," Spears told MTV's "Total Request Live" in a telephone interview Wednesday.


posted by Arnold P. California at 6:24 PM




Thanks, We'll Take Those Highly Qualified Scientists

That's what Australia, Britain and Canada are saying about all the foreign students, mostly scientific postdoc workers, that our immigration policy is shutting out. There's a very good article about this is the most recent Nature magazine. A sidebar about an Iranian woman's experience offers this cartoonish, but real, example.
At the American embassy the officer rejected their visa applications once more. When Fakhraai asked why, she claims she was yelled at: "Never apply for a US visa again!"

She didn't. The couple returned home, and in November 2002, Fakhraai and Valadkhan were granted study visas from the Canadian government on the day of their application. One year into her studies at Waterloo, Fakhraai is pleased with her move to Canada. "You never feel like a foreigner," she says. "Living and studying here is one of the best experiences I've had."
The main question about our recent policy changes is this.
So will the United States' draconian response to the terrorist threat cause a fundamental shift in the international movement of researchers - and perhaps even alter the global balance of scientific power?
Time will tell. But one thing is for sure, the nerds are getting ornery.

posted by Helena Montana at 4:37 PM




Congratulations Again to the World's Biggest Asshole

The Supreme Court has denied a stay in the Texas redistricting case. Even if the Court eventually agrees to hear the case and finds that the mid-term re-redistricting last year was illegal, the damage will be done: the 2004 elections are going ahead with Tom DeLay's map, and it will be very hard to get back to the status quo ante later. Not to mention that the Republicans now cannot conceivably lose control of the House for the rest of the decade, no matter whether a majority of the public wants it that way.

But just wait for the pundits in November: a Dem wins the presidency by a healthy margin (certainly healthier than Shrub's), and they'll all say that clearly the country wants divided government because the Republicans gained seats in the House.

From a legal point of view, the ridiculous part of this case is the "nonretrogression" rule of Voting Rights Act section 5. The basic idea is that when you change election procedures, you can't make things worse for minorities than they were before. To ensure that you're not doing this, every time a covered state draws a new districting map, it has to submit the map either to a federal court or to the Department of Justice for "preclearance." But if the state goes to DOJ, then there is no appeal from DOJ's decision, either way (in other words, if DOJ says the map is a step backwards, then the state can't go to court to get a second opinion, and if DOJ says the map isn't retrogressive, then minorities can't appeal to the courts and argue that DOJ got it wrong).

Of all of the legal complaints about the new map, the one that was obviously correct was that it violated the nonretrogression principle. The Republicans took a Dallas district where African-American voters consistently elected the candidate they preferred, and they decimated it in order to get rid of Rep. Martin Frost, whom DeLay detests. Even the Republican map-makers knew this was a no-no; there was a big tussle between those who wanted to play it safe (and legal) by leaving the district alone and those, like DeLay, who wanted to f*** the Democrats as badly as possible. DeLay won.

So Texas submitted its plan to DOJ (of course), because the court would have taken about five seconds to come to the obvious conclusion that it is retrogressive to take a community of African-Americans who can elect a candidate of their choice and slice it into different districts dominated by Anglos who vote in a bloc against the candidates preferred by the vast majority of blacks. Rumor has it--but, this being the secretive Bush Administration, we'll probably never find out, FOIA notwithstanding--that the career lawyers at DOJ who are expert in the Voting Rights Act didn't want to grant preclearance, but Ashcroft took the decision away from them and ordered the plan precleared.

The next time a Republican natters on about "rule of law" and "result-oriented jurisprudence," remind them of the Ashcroft DOJ's blatant bad-faith refusal to apply the law when it didn't suit Ashcroft's partisan interests.

posted by Arnold P. California at 4:17 PM




It Must Be Friday Afternoon

Dubya has used a recess appointment to put Charles Pickering onto the Fifth Circuit until January 2005. Besides the Friday aftenoon timing--Pickering is controversial for alleged "insensitivity" on racial issues, and the President has done enough lately to piss off black folks without wanting this to be a big story--there are two interesting points here.


1. It's questionable whether the Constitution, read properly, permits a recess appointment when the Senate has had a chance to act on the nomination but hasn't done so. As Eugene's post of week ago and the comments point out, it seems as if the answer should be "no," but historical practice--including an appointment to the 4th Circuit by Clinton--contains plenty of precedent. But what sets this case apart is that the Senate didn't fail to act on Pickering's nomination. Back when the Dems had a majority in the Senate, they voted Pickering down. Bush, I think, really insulted the institution by renominating Pickering (and Priscilla Owens, another judge rejected in the 107th Congress) after the Republicans took back the Senate last year. It's one thing to fill a vacancy when the Senate hasn't taken action, but strikes me as going a bit further to install a judge whom the Senate has actually rejected.

2. The other point is the interesting juxtaposition of Pickering with Judge Gregory of the 4th Circuit, the person Clinton appointed during a Congressional recess. Gregory is black, and the 4th Circuit--which has a greater proportion of African-Americans in the states it covers than any other circuit--had never had a black judge. Clinton appointed a series of black nominees from North Carolina, but Jesse Helms used his power as a home-state Senator to block them all (Orrin Hatch has since clarified the rule: Republican Senators can singlehandedly block a nominee of a Democratic President, but Democratic Senators cannot; so, e.g., John Edwards couldn't engage in payback for Helms's tantrum by blocking all of Bush's N.C. nominees). Anyway, Clinton used the recess appointment to install the first black judge on the 4th Circuit after the Republican-controlled Senate failed to give Gregory the up-or-down vote that Hatch, Frist, et al. have since discovered is constitutionally required.

So: Clinton used this extraordinary (and arguably extra-legal) power to put a black judge on a court that the Republicans had kept all-white for eight years by simply never bringing Clinton's black nominees up for a vote; Bush used the same power to install a judge whose record includes things like an article defending Mississippi's ban on interracial marriage after Democrats gave him a vote and rejected him.

There are nuances and complications that make that capsule statement not entirely fair; but it's inarguably true, and if Bush tries the completely unfair attack that Dems are racist for blocking some of his nominees, I hope the Democratic nominee hits right back with this.

posted by Arnold P. California at 4:04 PM




Women's Rights: Whatever Happened to That "Obligation"?

On Nov. 17, 2001, the president's weekly radio address was delivered by First Lady Laura Bush. In the address, she spoke of successful U.S. efforts to topple the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, declaring, "The fight against terrorism is also a fight for the rights and dignity of women." Although the Bush administration considered the war with Iraq to be one phase of this war against terrorism, it remains to be seen how much "the rights and dignity of women" still matter to the administration.

Laura Bush bragged about the better life that women were enjoying in Afghanistan in the aftermath of Taliban rule. But the pendulum in Iraq could swing in the opposite direction if the Bush administration and Paul Bremer, the chief U.S. administrator in Iraq, fail to act.

An article in today's Washington Post explains what's happening:
"For the past four decades, Iraqi women have enjoyed some of the most modern legal protections in the Muslim world, under a civil code that prohibits marriage below the age of 18, arbitrary divorce and male favoritism in child custody and property inheritance disputes.

"Saddam Hussein's dictatorship did not touch those rights. But the U.S.-backed Iraqi Governing Council has voted to wipe them out, ordering in late December that family laws shall be "canceled" and such issues placed under the jurisdiction of strict Islamic legal doctrine known as sharia.

"This week, outraged Iraqi women -- from judges to cabinet ministers -- denounced the decision in street protests and at conferences, saying it would set back their legal status by centuries ....

"The order, narrowly approved by the 25-member council in a closed-door session Dec. 29, was reportedly sponsored by conservative Shiite members. The order is now being opposed by several liberal members as well as by senior women in the Iraqi government.

"The council's decisions must be approved by L. Paul Bremer, the chief U.S. administrator in Iraq, and aides said unofficially that his imprimatur for this change was unlikely."
Let's hope not. Once the U.S. leaves Iraq, the danger exists that pro-sharia clerics and others could again try to roll back women's rights and might well succeed. But it would be shameful for the U.S. to quietly acquiesce in such an unjust decision.

In that November 2001 address, Laura Bush said:
"All of us have an obligation to speak out. We may come from different backgrounds and faiths -- but parents the world over love our children. We respect our mothers, our sisters and daughters. Fighting brutality against women and children is not the expression of a specific culture; it is the acceptance of our common humanity ..."
The Bush administration should instruct Bremer to reject this order by the Iraq Governing Council. The administration should demonstrate that its commitment to women's rights in Iraq is at least as strong as was Saddam Hussein's.


posted by Frederick Maryland at 12:22 PM




Conservative Evangelists Think Outside the Bun

The fast-food, Tex-Mex chain Taco Bell has aired TV ads urging Americans to "think outside the (hamburger) bun." Apparently, conservative evangelists are doing just that.

While the food preferences of preachers might seem to be a mundane topic, Americans United for Separation of Church & State explains that such details are among the careful plans developed by a leading conservative evangelist who travels to public schools -- supposedly to deliver an anti-drug message -- and urges the captive audience of teens to attend off-campus pizza parties and other events. The obvious purpose, writes Boston, is "persuading youngsters to adopt his version of Christianity."

This article by AU's Rob Boston explains how one evangelist uses an anti-drug message simply as a "hook" to draw public school students to an off-campus, clearly religious event. As you read it, keep in mind that this M.O. is the kind of thing we're likely to see a lot more of if President Bush's so-called "faith-based" initiatives are approved by Congress.
"(Ronnie) Hill is a Southern Baptist evangelist who unabashedly talks about the need to preach to public school students. Based in Fort Worth, Texas, Hill travels the nation, and in partnership with fundamentalist churches, offers free anti-drug assemblies to public school audiences.

"... For years, fundamentalist groups have been using tactics similar to Hill's to fly under the radar and slip into public schools with sectarian messages designed to promote religious crusades off site.

"The technique is old, but Hill seems to have refined it to an art form. In a recent article in SBC Life, a publication of the Southern Baptist denomination, Hill lays out in detail how he preaches to public school students -- even recommending specific brands of pizza as a come-on.

" 'The key to being creative and reaching students is to remember the goal is to reach 'lost' students, not to go after the 'church' students,' Hill wrote. 'Each night is kicked off with a brand name food being served like Papa John's Pizza, Chick-fil-a, Taco Bell, etc. (This is a must!) The students then attend a lively service geared for them with a great praise band and then a gospel presentation that is entertaining, but centered on the cross, repentance, and being a Christ follower for life.'

"... Hill's ministry has prepared an entire booklet, titled 'Crusade Preparation Manual,' that advises local churches on the best way to bring Hill to town to reach public school students. Every conceivable detail is covered .... 'When Ronnie goes to a school campus, he does not need to drive up with the church name on the van,' advises the manual. 'This might hinder his chance of getting on campus.' "
Indeed it might. Teens have every right to attend religious meetings off-campus, but evangelical groups do not have the right to take valuable time from students' public-school day to pitch them on attending a sectarian event. It's sad that as much as conservatives have railed against Islamic extremism in the Middle East, they seem incapable of recognizing that this faith-based or faith-induced extremism is most likely to occur in nations that have traditionally mixed the functions of church and state.

posted by Frederick Maryland at 11:45 AM




God Help Us
Rep. Katherine Harris, who as Florida secretary of state oversaw Florida's contested 2000 presidential election, would be the immediate front-runner if she enters the GOP primary for U.S. Senate, polls show. [link]
Someone who is personally responsible for illegally knocking African-American voters off the rolls and depriving citizens of the right to vote really ought to be ashamed to run for elective office.

Update for Steve, fka Feddie: If you say that Katherine Harris is hot, I will have to doubt your sanity.

posted by Arnold P. California at 10:43 AM




Fool Us Once, Shame on You; Fool Us Twice . . . .
President Bush will use next week's State of the Union address to try to revive a proposal that would allow younger workers to invest a portion of their Social Security taxes in the stock market, aides say.
So says the AP.

This was one of the most elementary of Bush's campaign lies in 2000, yet it never really seemed to sink in with the public that what he was saying couldn't be true. Instead, when Gore pointed out that 1+1=2, Bush trotted out the "fuzzy math" line, and that became a mantra for the rest of the campaign.

It's really simple, folks: the taxes I'm paying now aren't put away somewhere to be paid back to me when I retire. My Social Security taxes go to the Social Security Administration, which uses them to pay benefits to people who are already retired. Just as their taxes, back when they were working, paid for the benefits that were going to the old folks of that era.

So, if you let me divert my taxes into the purchase of stocks, you diminish the stream of money available to pay today's senior citizens. When Bush said in 2000, as he will doubtless say next week, that we can "save" Social Security by letting young folks put their tax money into the stock market, he's just lying.

Here's the thing. Right now, the system is taking in more in taxes than it pays out in benefits. That's because, not too long from now, the baby boomers will start retiring, and the system will start paying out more than it takes in. Thanks to the foresight of Congress (what an unusual phrase that is to use!) in the 1980s, the system won't "run out" of money for many decades (claims of an impending crisis notwithstanding).

But if you divert the dollars that are now being put into the system and instead put them into individual investment accounts, you have less money to pay out benefits today and to build up the surplus that will be needed in a few years. It's that simple.

Shrub is already doing enough damage to Social Security with his massive deficits. He's effectively using future Social Security taxes to pay for non-Social Security Spending today. In 30 years, when I'm (I hope) getting Social Security checks, my kids will have to pay enough taxes to service the debt we're running up now. Which means they'll have less money for Social Security taxes. Which means either they'll have to pay an impractically high total tax bill, or they'll have to cut Social Security taxes. Which means we'll run through the Social Security surplus a lot quicker, or we'll have to cut benefits drastically.

So when conservatives claim there's a Social Security crisis looming, they should know: they're the ones who are creating it with their reckless non-Social Security tax cuts and spending hikes today.

posted by Arnold P. California at 10:39 AM




Now that's a great question...

From an unlikely place, an editorial in the Salt Lake City Weekly on the absurdity of the Federal Marriage Amendment supporters:
Homosexuals, homosexuals, homosexuals. Will American society never tire of its strange fascination with homosexuals?

While the rest of the industrialized world, a few New England states and our Canadian neighbors have accepted the fact that, besides being attracted to members of the same sex, homosexuals are basically the same as everyone else, our Puritan strain won't let this issue die. We argue what sorts of rights should be accorded gay men and lesbian women without answering this central question: Why on earth should heterosexuals decide what homosexuals can and cannot do? [ed: italics mine]



posted by Zoe Kentucky at 10:30 AM


Thursday, January 15, 2004


Great Words from a Great Man

On the occasion of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday (which is today), I'm sharing excerpts of one of the most eloquent political documents ever written -- the letter King drafted from the Birmingham jail to his ministerial critics:
One of the basic points in your statement is that the action that I and my associates have taken in Birmingham is untimely. Some have asked: "Why didn't you give the new city administration time to act?" .... We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed. Frankly, I have yet to engage in a direct-action campaign that was "well timed" in the view of those who have not suffered unduly from the disease of segregation.

.... I must make two honest confessions to you, my Christian and Jewish brothers. First, I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to "order" than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: "I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action"; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man's freedom ...

Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.

.... I had also hoped that the white moderate would reject the myth concerning time in relation to the struggle for freedom. I have just received a letter from a white brother in Texas. He writes: "And Christians know that the colored people will receive equal rights eventually, but it is possible that you are in too great a religious hurry .... The teachings of Christ take time to come to earth."

Such an attitude stems from a tragic misconception of time, from the strangely rational notion that there is something in the very flow of time that will inevitably cure all ills. Actually, time itself is neutral; it can be used either destructively or constructively. More and more I feel that the people of ill will have used time much more effectively than have the people of good will.

... Human progress never rolls in on wheels of inevitability; it comes through the tireless efforts of men willing to be co-workers with God, and without this hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the forces of social stagnation. We must use time creatively, in the knowledge that the time is always ripe to do right.



posted by Frederick Maryland at 3:20 PM




Anti-immigrant Backlash

Bush's new immigrant program isn't going over too well among his most devoted followers. However, I haven't read anything this DREADFUL in a long time.

Before opening the borders, seal up the wombs!
By Jane Chastain, WorldNetDaily

What is the dirty little secret that the Bush administration doesn't tell you about its proposed "temporary" guest-worker program?

These workers will come here in the prime of life and, while they are in our country as temporary workers, they will have babies, who immediately become U.S. citizens. These workers may be poor, but they are not stupid!

Can U.S. citizens be deported? Of course not!

The Bush administration says this plan would create a system that is "fairer, more consistent and more compassionate."

What compassionate country would deport the parents of underage U.S. citizens? Let's get real here. That will never happen!

Therefore, the only way to assure the American people that this "temporary" status truly is temporary is to seal up the wombs – sterilize – those who apply for guest-worker status. Or else change the law that grants citizenship to anyone who is born here regardless of the status of his or her parents.

Of course, the latter idea is a lot more humane and practical than the former – and a lot more compassionate to U.S. taxpayers who currently pick up the tab for the children of illegal aliens, as well as many children of those who simply drive or fly across the border on temporary visas to give birth, many at our expense.


posted by Zoe Kentucky at 1:34 PM




Support Your Lefty Radio

As expected, Al Franken has signed on with Progress Media to do a daily talk radio show. Good.

Via Cursor, we find this recent On the Media interview with conservative-turned-liberal radio host Ed Schultz. He calls himself a "gun-toting, meat-eating Progressive" and after reading this excerpt, I am going to check out his show more often.
I find it ironic that the right wing conservative talk show hosts in this country love to point the finger at the media elites, yet they're not representing the real people out there. These people are flying in Lear jets, drinking the best whiskey and smoking the best cigars - they're not down with America -- they're talking down to America. And so I, I see a real void in the media. And yes, I am bombastic. I am aggressive. I, I just love to tell the conservatives that Democrats died on Omaha Beach. I love to tell 'em that Democrats died in Vietnam. And I love to tell 'em that Democrats are dying in Iraq and that we have a stake in this country too. But if you listen to conservative talk radio in this country, and you're a Democrat, or you think differently from the way they do, it almost makes you feel like you don't belong in the country. And I say that there's more of us out there than them. And I say that half the country, more than half the country voted for Al Gore, and I think that there's a huge market for this.
Here's his site, if you want to check him out. I hope to hear more soon since his network is shopping his show around to many outlets this month. Talking about how O'Reilly and Limbaugh are idiots is all well and good, but we need to support these things too.

posted by Helena Montana at 11:42 AM




Nail Meets Hammer

Nice job Arianna.
The picture of a White House teeming with fanatics gets even clearer with O'Neill's depiction of Bush's brain trust's dogged devotion to cutting taxes for the wealthy.

And, before I go any further, one word of advice to the White House attack dogs now unleashed on O'Neill: If you want to belittle his bona fides, you've got to come up with something better than saying, "We didn't listen to him when he was there, why should we now?" Let's get real. Is there anyone more central to developing economic policy than the treasury secretary? One that was picked by, yes, George Bush? To be any more inside, O'Neill would have to have been George Bush's proctologist.

Now, of course, they're painting him out to be a cross between Jerry Garcia and Karl Marx. Yeah, what an antiestablishment wackjob: Former CEO of Alcoa and a friend of Don Rumsfeld's since the '60s.

Anyway, whether or not they listened to him, O'Neill certainly listened to them, and now he's doing what this administration makes a fetish of not doing: telling the American people what their government has been doing.
...
The most alarming thing that emerges from O'Neill's revelations is the total lack of leadership on the president's part. At the very moment that Rove and the Bush reelection team are gearing up to sell us on the image of the president as the macho, heroic cowboy from Crawford who is going to keep us all safe from terrorists, despots and Mad Cow meat, here comes O'Neill with his devastating assessment of Bush as "a blind man in a roomful of deaf people."

I had an interesting talk with my mom about this yesterday. She made a good point. She said the O'Neill thing is really stunning. While it honestly doesn't make her feel good that everything we suspected about Bush is confirmed-- simpleton, liar, Cheney's sockpuppet-- but now it appears that he's even worse than we suspected.


posted by Zoe Kentucky at 11:28 AM




Proud to be an American

Especially whenever I see poll results like this one!
By a whopping ratio of 60 percent to 21 percent, Americans say they would prefer to reduce the deficit by "canceling some recent tax cuts" - the course advocated to some degree by all the Democratic presidential contenders - rather than by spending less on programs like health and education.

Among Democrats, an even more lopsided 76 percent majority favors canceling some tax cuts to reduce the deficit. Spending restraint, combined with hoped-for economic growth, is the approach advocated by the White House.

In addition, Americans say by a solid 11-percentage-point margin that they prefer the Democratic Party’s approach to deficit reduction over that of the Republican Party. Indeed, on their handling of taxes and government spending-big Democratic liabilities before President Clinton presided over the return of budget surpluses in the 1990s-Democrats now essentially are tied with Bush’s party in respondents’ eyes.

Bush's tax cuts are one of his biggest claims to fame. The GOP presumes that people really don't care about deficit spending, that it's too abstract a concept for an ordinary person to understand "debt." The GOP also presumes that most people are greedy like they are and would prefer money in their pocket instead of a strong education and health care system. But people are starting to really see through all of that, realizing that they'll pay for the tax cuts in other ways.

Maybe I'm just feeling especially optimistic today but I see some early signs that Bush's facade could be cracking.





posted by Zoe Kentucky at 10:59 AM


Wednesday, January 14, 2004


A Leopard Can't Change Its Spots

While reading David Cay Johnston's discussion of the Earned Income Tax Credit in his book "Perfectly Legal: The Secret Campaign to Rig Our Tax System to Benefit the Super Rich - and Cheat Everybody Else," I learned that Ari Fleischer was a duplicitous prick well before he ever became White House Press Secretary

Taxpayers are not the only ones who make errors. Congress makes mistakes every time it passes a tax bill, the result of tax laws being drafted in secret and often passed without anyone having time to read the actual language. A solution has been instituted to deal with this. Congress regularly passes what it calls technical corrections law, as if to say, “Oops, ignore that law over there because we didn’t mean what we enacted.”

Just such an error turned up in the 1997 tax cut law. This mistake helped only beneficiaries of the 400 or so estates that each year are worth $17 million or more. The error was worth $200,000 in tax savings to each estate, a total of $880 million over a decade. As soon as the text of the law became available, tax lawyers and congressional staffers spotted the error and notified the Department of the Treasury, which recommended a technical correction. The Senate moved to fix the problem before anyone got the unintended tax break. But Representative [Bill] Archer [R-TX], the vehement foe of the earned income tax credit who complained at every opportunity about how much it was costing the government, stopped the corrective process. Archer explained his action in a letter to the National Federation of Independent Businesses, an ally in Archer’s efforts to eliminate the estate tax. “While some might argue that the proposed change is a mere correction of a drafting error made last year, I view it as an increase in federal death rates,” Archer wrote. “Accordingly, I cannot support any change in law that would go in the opposite direction by increasing death tax rates.”

Archer’s spokesman, Ari Fleischer, who later would become the White House press secretary, explained Archer’s stance in political terms which spoke to partisanship and political advantage, rather than any concept of principled conduct. “When the Democrats controlled Congress and drafting errors worked against the taxpayers, the Democrats let them stay in the law,” Fleischer said. “Now, when one works against the Government and for the taxpayers, we’re in no rush to correct it.”

Democrats disputed Fleischer’s two-wrongs-make-a-right statement. “Every time a technical error has been found, either way, we corrected it,” said John Buckley, the chief tax lawyer for the Ways and Means Committee Democrats.

Six years later this error by Congress remained uncorrected at a cost to taxpayers, and a benefit to heirs of the super rich, of more than a half billion dollars and growing.


posted by Eugene Oregon at 9:14 PM




Missing the Point About the Tenn. Case

The comments were quite animated in response to Eugene's post on the Tennessee v. Lane case that is now before the U.S. Supreme Court (oral arguments were Tuesday). At stake is the constitutionality of Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). In the comments concerning Eugene's post, Arnold touched on a point that I think is critical -- that no matter how seriously one might take Tennessee's "sovereign immunity" argument, the right of due process and "equal protection" both override it.

Bear in mind that George Lane, the lead plaintiff in the case, was not an employee of the courts system or simply an observer of proceedings. He was summoned to appear as a defendant in a criminal case. In 1975, the Supreme Court ruled in Faretta v. California that every American has "a right to be present at all stages of the trial where his absence might frustrate the fairness of the proceedings." There's no sound constitutional basis for denying or compromising this right for the disabled.

Physical barriers that restrict the independence of people with disabilities should be eliminated. But the most unacceptable barrier of all is one that imposes humiliating hardships on someone like Lane who simply seeks to have his day in court.

In the comments link, the conservative blogger Feddie writes that
"if Tennesseans are too weak to demand that such accommodations be made, then a pox on their collective house."
But it's absurd to blame the victim, to essentially say that a group of citizens that is politically weak or isolated must simply relinquish its rights. Indeed, the passage of the federal ADA (and similar laws) reflected the understanding that minority groups are, by definition, weaker than the majority and, therefore, less likely to secure rights and opportunities by simply demanding them.

When he signed the ADA, President Bush (the elder) called it a "basic civil rights" law. That's precisely what it is, and it's unthinkable that the high court would eviscerate Title II of this law -- the very provision that provides ordinary citizens with any leverage to ensure that states comply with the ADA.

Tennessee has dragged its feet this long. Does anyone really believe that by removing the threat of monetary damages, Tennessee officials will suddenly become enlightened and agree to fund the ADA-required accommodations in their courthouses?


posted by Frederick Maryland at 6:38 PM




Wal-Mart: Don't Take Our Own Audit Seriously

With 1.2 million employees nationwide, the discount chain Wal-Mart employs more Americans than General Motors, Microsoft or anyone other than the federal government. In a statement on its website, Wal-Mart explains why it opposes union representation for these employees:
"At Wal-Mart, we respect the individual rights of our associates and encourage them to express their ideas, comments and concerns. Because we believe in maintaining an environment of open communications, we do not believe there is a need for third-party representation.
But new reports about how Wal-Mart treats its employees strongly suggest that such a need does exist. Earlier this week, The New York Times reported on an internal Wal-Mart audit of 128 of its stores:
"The audit of 25,000 employees performed by Wal-Mart in July 2000 detailed 1,371 violations of child-labor laws, including minors working too late, too many hours in a day or during school hours. On more than 60,000 occasions, workers missed breaks and on 16,000 they skipped meal times, in violation of most state labor regulations.
Wal-Mart's response? According to the Times article:
"In a statement Tuesday, Wal-Mart said the audit was not a valid study and should not be taken at face value."
It's one thing to diss someone else's audit, but dissing one of your own?

posted by Frederick Maryland at 5:38 PM




Sen. Kennedy Turns Up the Heat on Iraq

In a speech delivered today to the Center for American Progress, Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) reviewed the history of events that preceded the administration's push for war with Iraq, specifically referring to a 1998 letter -- five years before the invasion -- in which Wolfowitz and others voiced fear that Saddam Hussein might "use weapons of mass destruction."

The '98 letter offers additional proof that Bush's top Pentagon officials exploited the 9-11 tragedy to garner support for an invasion that they'd long wanted to see happen. Here are excerpts from Kennedy's speech:
"During the first Gulf War, Paul Wolfowitz was a top advisor to then Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, and he disagreed strongly with the decision by the first President Bush to stop the war after driving Saddam out of Kuwait.

"... Wolfowitz's resolve to oust Saddam was unwavering. In 1997, he wrote, 'We will have to confront him sooner or later -- and sooner would be better ...'

"The following year, Wolfowitz, Donald Rumsfeld and 16 others -- 10 of whom are now serving in or officially advising the current Bush Administration -- wrote President Clinton, urging him to use military force to remove Saddam. They said, 'The only acceptable strategy is one that eliminates the possibility that Iraq will be able to use or threaten to use weapons of mass destruction. In the near term, this means a willingness to undertake military action ...'

"As soon as the current President Bush took office in 2001, he brought a group of conservatives with him, including Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld, and others, who had been outspoken advocates for most of the previous decade for the forcible removal of Saddam Hussein.

"At first, President Bush was publicly silent on the issue. But as Paul O'Neill has told us, the debate was alive and well ...

"... But there was resistance to military intervention by those who felt that the existing sanctions on Iraq should be strengthened. Saddam had been contained and his military capabilities had been degraded by the Gulf War and years of U.N. sanctions and inspections. At a press conference a month after the inauguration, Secretary of State Colin Powell said: 'We have kept [Saddam Hussein] contained, kept him in his box.' The next day, Secretary Powell very clearly stated that Saddam 'has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction ...' [elipsis in original]

"Then, on September 11th, 2001, terrorists attacked us and everything changed. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld immediately began to link Saddam Hussein to al Qaeda and the attacks. According to notes taken by an aide to Rumsfeld on September 11th, the very day of the attacks, the Secretary ordered the military to prepare a response to the attacks. The notes quote Rumsfeld as saying that he wanted the best information fast, to judge whether the information was good enough to hit Saddam and not just Osama bin Laden. "Go massive," the notes quote him as saying. 'Sweep it all up. Things related and not.' "
Rumsfeld and company got exactly what they asked the intelligence community for -- "Things related and not."

posted by Frederick Maryland at 4:17 PM




Marriage=Bush Political Tool

What is Bush's new $1.5 billion dollar "marriage training program" really about?
"This is a way for the president to address the concerns of conservatives and to solidify his conservative base," a presidential adviser said.

and

"The president loves to do that sort of thing in the inner city with black churches and he’s very good at it,” a White House aide said.
Well at least they're being honest and aren't pretending that this has nothing to do with November 2nd. Now if they only admitted that Bush's support of the Federal Marriage Amendment is for the same exact reasons.



posted by Zoe Kentucky at 3:31 PM




The Objective Press

Washington Post writer Gene Weingarten recently wrote a column in which he chronicled a humorous e-mail debate he had with Ann Coulter that degenerated into this

Me: Have you no decency?

Ann: That's exactly what they asked Joe McCarthy.

Me: Whom you have defended!

Ann: He was railroaded.

Me: You're out of your mind.

Ann: Jerk.

Me: Bitch.

He was recently asked about his experience with Coulter in an on-line chat monitored by the Washington Post

Washingtonpost.com moderators retain editorial control over Live Online discussions and choose the most relevant questions for guests and hosts; guests and hosts can decline to answer questions.

Here is the question - I love the moderator's editorial comment

Alexandria, Va.: Gene, I just finished reading Al Franken's "Lies" book, in which does a rather sound job of berating Ann Coulter. Since you know both of them, (and perhaps have read the book) do you ever bring up these issues to Ann?

She seems nice, yet very opinionated. Do you find you're able to have intellectual debates with her -- or is she as closed for debates as her articles and debates suggest?

washingtonpost.com: NICE?! Are you on crack?


posted by Eugene Oregon at 2:10 PM




Dean and the Press

There have been so many articles about Howard Dean of late, so many of them lazy and flawed, that its worth noting when someone gets it right. Here are a couple of examples of good Dean reporting.

Salon has a feature that is less about Dean and more about the media's treatment of the Democratic frontrunner. The article's thesis goes like this:
Democrats haven't voted yet, but reporters have got the story: The former Vermont governor is angry, gaffe-prone and unelectable. How do they know? Republicans, and anonymous Democrats, told them so.

It goes on to debunk many of the criticisms of Dean that have been spread by the mainstream press, particularly that he's blinded by rage, gaffe-prone, and unelectable. The piece focuses much of its wrath (or should I say...criticism. After all, not all liberals are angry!) on the Washington Post for its anti-Dean tone in news stories and, especially, op/eds and editorials. (Contrast the Post editorial board's highly critical "Assessing Mr. Dean" with today's wet sloppy kiss for Joe Lieberman.)

If there's been one problem with Salon's own coverage of Dean it is that it is so eager to defend the candidate against unfair charges that it seems unwilling to criticise him when its warranted. A piece by William Saletan in today's issue of Slate strikes the right balance, properly crediting Dean's considerable skills (his ability to talk like a real person and a leader, his confidence, his thoughtfulness and innovative approach) while at the same time pointing out serious problems. I find Saletan's critiques of Dean's tax stance particularly compelling: "Dean and Dick Gephardt propose to repeal all the Bush tax cuts. The Dean-Gephardt position would lose the election, plain and simple."

Saletan is also right about Dean's "religion problem." Dean's recent efforts to discuss Christianity on the stump have been hamhanded at best. But, as Saletan notes, Dean is much more effective when he talks "about morals, not Jesus."

What's more, Saletan notes that Dean's problems are eminently fixable. The Governor should read over the Slate column and take it to heart.

posted by Noam Alaska at 1:48 PM




It Really Is Quite Simple

Just ask Uggabugga

Basic English:

plan - noun - a detailed formulation of a program of action

Did the Clinton administration have a plan (filed away somewhere) for toppling Saddam Hussein?

Yes.

Did the Bush administration have a plan for toppling Saddam Hussein?

Yes.

plan - verb - to have as a specific aim or purpose; intend: They plan to buy a house.

Did the Clinton administration plan to topple Saddam Hussein?

No.

Did the Bush administration plan to topple Saddam Hussein?

Yes, as early as the first weeks of Bush's term (according to Paul O'Neill).



posted by Eugene Oregon at 1:47 PM




The Phony Link to Al Qaeda

The Bush administration went to great lengths to try to create a connection between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda. This was used to fuel the administration's drumbeat for war. But an article in today's Washington Post reveals yet more evidence that the supposed Hussein-al Qaeda link was a concotion of the Bushies.

In today's Post, Dana Priest reports:
"In hiding after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Saddam Hussein penned a directive warning his followers not to join forces with Islamic jihadists and other foreign fighters seeking to make Iraq their new battlefield, according to a document found with Hussein when he was captured, U.S. government officials said last night.

"The document, which the CIA believes to be authentic, appears to be written to leaders of the Iraqi resistance and, as such, undercuts the argument of Bush administration officials that Hussein was working closely with al Qaeda and other religious extremists ...

"On the contrary, the directive, which was first reported in today's New York Times, adds to the mounting evidence that the insurgency is largely Iraqi-directed and -controlled and that Hussein's links to al Qaeda before the war were not strong.

"... Al Qaeda members in secret CIA detention centers abroad have told interrogators in the past year that Osama bin Laden had rejected the idea of working with Hussein, who as president of Iraq led one of the most secular governments in the Middle East."
The Post published this article on page A-20, the very last page of its front news section. Is it simply because The Times beat them to the punch that Post editors decided to stick this story where it will surely be missed by many readers?

posted by Frederick Maryland at 1:27 PM




Tennessee v. Lane

Dahlia Lithwick covers the oral arguments and gives us a hint of what the Supreme Court will look like if Bush gets to appoint another Scalia or two to the bench

Scalia starts: "It depends on what's meant by discrimination. The handicapped not getting an elevator may not be a constitutional violation." Clement replies that when the handicapped can't vote, that's a fundamental right being burdened, and it should trigger strict judicial scrutiny. Rehnquist says that voting discrimination means "a person is not allowed to vote, as opposed to not being facilitated in being allowed to vote."

Clement sees no difference. Nor do I. When groups are systematically barred from the polls, you have a constitutional problem whether you call it a denial or a refusal to facilitate. But Scalia contends that being "turned away because there is no elevator is not a constitutional violation." He adds, "An inaccessible voting place means nothing at all. It merely means the state didn't go out of its way to accommodate the handicapped."


posted by Eugene Oregon at 12:14 PM




Sex & Politics

According to alternet, the real reason Dean has the best chance against Bush is because Dean is butch.

This piece makes some brilliant observations about what should be obvious-- the essential difference between Democrats and the Republicans is sex, namely machismo. The GOP has successfully branded themselves as manly, tough, and macho and the Democrats as girly, weak and spineless. Bush represents this better than anyone before him, look no further than the first president action hero figure. It answers a lot of questions I've had about Bush. Why do so many Republicans have a slavish devotion to Bush, regardless of what he does? Because he's a "real man."

While "Sex and Democrats" is worth reading in its entirety, here are some of the highlights.

Dean is the only major Democratic candidate to evade the sissifying barbs of the GOP's shock-jock surrogates...Dean acts like a man who likes his steak blood-rare and his politics cutthroat. These traits are part of his campaign to achieve symbolically what he can't quite carry off ideologically, by competing with Bush for the most potent compliment in American politics today: You the man!
...
Can a Democrat be an alpha male? The question hasn't come up on CNN, but it may be the hidden issue of the campaign. After decades of associating Democrats with failed masculinity, the Republicans are faced with an opponent who knows how to put on a butch display. They are trying to get around Dean's fight-back persona by portraying him as a dyspeptic, impetuous fool. Whether this negative spin will stick remains to be seen, but there's another a-word that pops up regularly in pieces about Dean: anger. The Republicans and their allies are trying to undercut his brashness by calling him reckless. Still, fist-waving hasn't exactly hurt Donald Rumsfeld. Ever since 9/11, nothing seems to be over the top when it comes to macho in a pol. Think Arnold Schwarzenegger. His meteoric rise ? despite a record of groping and degrading women ? is ample proof that in American politics today Liberace's motto applies: "Too much is not enough!"
...
What is progressive masculinity? It has something to do with what the linguist George Lakoff calls "nurturant parenting." All the great liberal Presidents of the past century were nurturers (their weakness for war notwithstanding). But conservative leaders follow another model; Lakoff calls it "the strict father." The appeal of this harsh, punitive style is directly related to anxiety. People kept in a state of constant stress will sacrifice their best instincts and even their real interests for the illusion of safety ? and sheer sexiness ? that a bad dad can provide. That's why the Republicans put such energy into arousing anxiety and displacing it onto Democrats. If Dean is to beat the odds, he will have to counter this strategy in every move he makes.

It won't be easy. It doesn't take much to foment fear in white boys. What's more, as Al Sharpton reminds us, black voters aren't impressed by attitude that doesn't come with a progressive program. Then there's the chance that conquest and a patchwork "recovery" will prop up the illusion that things are getting better. This will be the mother of all long shots for the Democrats. Butching up is no guarantee of victory. Still, for better or worse, it's a necessary step.

We may resent the fact that Americans regard the penis and its symbolic projections as synonymous with strength. But psychic reality cannot be denied. At this moment, most voters are looking for a leader who reassures them with a manly presentation. The trick is to be a man women admire, blacks find credible and white guys bond with. It's a hard job, but someone's got to do it or Bush will ride the backlash to the White House ? with a real mandate this time.


posted by Zoe Kentucky at 12:13 PM




Three Cheers for Capitalism!

Perhaps this was where former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill saw the Bush administration heading when he decided to resign.

posted by Frederick Maryland at 12:09 PM




Understanding Our Tax System

I cannot recommend David Cay Johnston's "Perfectly Legal: The Secret Campaign to Rig Our Tax System to Benefit the Super Rich - and Cheat Everybody Else" highly enough.

Johnston is a Pulitzer Prize-winning tax reporter for the New York Times and he has written an entire book dedicated to explaining to idiots like me just how unfair our tax system truly is and why.

I am about halfway through the book and so far I have learned a great deal about how our taxes subsidize deferred compensation and business perks for corporate CEOs; how Bush's tax cuts are disappearing for the middle class because the bill was written in a way that pushes them onto the Alternative Minimum Tax; how elimination of the estate tax (or "death tax") became a cause du jour despite the fact that it only applied to 2% of the population; and how our Social Security tax works (and how the "lockbox" is currently being raided to fund Bush's tax cuts for the rich)

From 1984 to 2002 the government collected $1.7 trillion more in Social Security taxes than the agency paid out in benefits to retired widows and orphans and in disability benefits.

That is enough to double the value of all the 401(k) retirement plans in the country.

That is enough to pay off all the consumer debt in the country at the end of 2001.

It is an average of $16,000 that each family did not have to spend on improving their lifestyle or on investing for the future.

From 1983, when the overtaxing began, through 2002 Social Security benefits rose by half in real dollars while Social Security taxes almost doubled. As a result, three out of four households now pay more in Social Security taxes than in income taxes.

Social Security does not apply to all income so not everyone was affected in the same way by the tax increases. The government takes 6.2 cents out of each dollar of salary, but only up to a ceiling that was $87,000 in 2003. People whose salary is higher than this get a tax break on every additional dollar they earn.

In 2003, President Bush sought to eliminate taxes on dividends paid to shareholders, saying that it was wrong to tax a dollar twice. Since companies pay dividends out of their after-tax profits, and shareholders must then report these dividends as income, the president argued that the same dollar was being taxed twice and that this was fundamentally unfair. "It's a matter of principle," he said.

Social Security also represents a double tax. The Social Security tax applies to wages that have already been subject to the personal income tax. If double taxation is fundamentally unfair, a stronger case can be made for the unfairness of Social Security as a double tax than for the tax on dividends. Among other things, many dollars of corporate profit are not taxed, despite the seeming requirements of the law, and so in a system in which people can collect dividends tax-free they may earn income that is completely untaxed, escaping both the corporate income tax and the personal income tax.

I didn't know much about any of these things issues but Johnston explains it all clearly and does so in a way that leaves no doubt that he shares your outrage.

I cannot do the book justice. You really should check it out.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 10:58 AM




Spot On

I've plugged Mikhaela Reid before, but her latest is just too perfect to ignore (and, if you haven't checked out the other cartoons on her website, they're excellent).



posted by Arnold P. California at 10:25 AM




What's In a Name?

Zell Miller continues to prove that labels mean nothing

U.S. Sen. Zell Miller, a Georgia Democrat who has frequently broken with his party to support Republican policies, has agreed to campaign for President Bush's reelection, a campaign spokesman said on Tuesday.

I don't really care about Miller any more, but you have to wonder how a man who votes against the Democratic position 91.5 percent of the time can still call himself a Democrat.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 9:54 AM


Tuesday, January 13, 2004


Would Bush Bury Dean in California?

A friend e-mailed me today to ask if I'd heard about a poll that shows President Bush would easily defeat Democratic frontrunner Howard Dean in California. I hadn't. I surfed the Web, and the only thing I came up with was this article posted on WorldNetDaily (WND), the right-wing political Web portal.

The article describes a new poll showing that, in California, Bush would beat Dean by a whopping 15 percentage points. But before you start biting your nails, consider the source.

The poll was conducted last week by a Laguna Hills, Calif. group called Probolsky Research. WND's article describes Probolsky as if it is just another polling firm. But I'd never heard of the company before in mainstream media. Perhaps there's a good reason why.

The firm's namesake, Adam Probolsky, is hardly a disinterested, nonpartisan researcher. For starters, he has endorsed candidates for public office and served as an official campaign spokesman for them. In fact, the website of the Rush Limbaugh Club of Orange County, Calif. proudly describes Probolsky as the chairman of the
"400 Club of the Republican Party of Orange County -- the largest G. O. P. fund raising organization in Orange County ... Additionally, Mr. Probolsky is a member of the California Republican Party and its Initiatives Committee.

"Mr. Probolsky is founding co-chairman of the Republican Jewish Coalition, Orange County Chapter .... Mr. Probolsky lead [sic] the Central Orange County Voter Registration PAC which successfully registered thousands of new Republicans in Orange County."
Orange Juice, a web blog written by conservative Republicans in Orange County, even included this post from last October:
"We close our column this week with Happy Birthday wishes to some of the prominent Republicans in our midst here in Orange County: political consultant Adam Probolsky (Oct. 10) ..."


posted by Frederick Maryland at 6:51 PM




Dean Still Leads Big in NH

With all of the speculation that Gen. Wesley Clark is closing in on Howard Dean in New Hampshire, the latest tracking poll still shows Dean comfortably in front. Today, the Lieberman blog posted the latest numbers showing Dean ahead by 17 points over second-place Clark. Not exactly nipping at Dean's heels.


posted by Frederick Maryland at 6:02 PM




ACLU and Rush

Arnold's post on how the ACLU is coming to Rush Limbaugh's rescue inspired me to check and see what Rush has said about the venerated civil liberties group. Here's a sampling of recent Limbaugh comments....

Last September, when the ACLU voiced concern about punch card machines being used in the California recall election, Rush wondered aloud "why it's only dictators and the ACLU that fear elections." He also said:
I have to ask why the ACLU cares about voters at all. They get their agenda put into place by having activist judges override the will of the people as expressed in ballot propositions, elections and recalls.

One might also ask why the ACLU cares about Limbaugh at all. The answer, of course, is that the ACLU cares about fundamental constitutional rights for everyone, even those with which it might otherwise disagree.

In December, when the Ninth Circuit (Rush calls it the Ninth Circus) Court of Appeals overturned part of an anti-terror law, he complained about yet again about the ACLU's use of the courts to seek redress:
It's clear that people in these extreme groups like the ACLU are trying to run the country, but they're not doing so through the legislative process our democracy is built on. No, they're doing it through activist judges who write law from the bench - something that is totally at odds from a judge's function.

Today, of course, the ACLU is using the court to defend Limbaugh's right to privacy. I doubt we'll hear a peep from him re: judicial activism.

And now, the most deliciously ironic bit of Limbaughism. In a rant from last October, Rush echoes columnist Robert Novak in questioning why the ACLU didn't step in to help Limbaugh after the ESPN debacle. "Where is the ACLU?" he asked sarcastically. Now we know.

posted by Noam Alaska at 4:38 PM




An Inch and a Half

That is how much Subaru is raising the ground clearance on its Outback so that it can qualify as a light truck and thereby avoid the slightly tougher fuel economy and air pollution standards for cars.

Why are they doing this?

The move will let Subaru sell more vehicles with turbochargers, which pep up performance but hurt mileage and increase pollution.

Well, at least they have a good reason.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 4:20 PM




Hostile Trend in Poll on Gay Relations

Has the political environment in America turned increasingly hostile toward gays and lesbians since the two major court decisions on gay rights last year?

The result from a recent CBS News-New York Times poll would suggest that it has. I find the trend in this poll disturbing and very hard to believe. I don't recall seeing this poll reported in any newspaper in mid-December, when the last installment of it was apparently released. But here's the shift it detected between July and December:
"Do you think homosexual relations between consenting adults should or should not be legal?"

July 2003
Should ................ 54%
Should Not ......... 39%
Don't Know .......... 7%


December 2003
Should ................. 41%
Should Not .......... 49%
Don't Know ......... 10%
Just a statistical blip? An abberation? Let's hope so. It's one thing to oppose same-sex marriage, but it's mind-boggling to think that this many people would have shifted away from the view that whatever two consenting adults do in private is their own business.

posted by Frederick Maryland at 3:58 PM




Nick Nolte as Romeo Dallaire

From All Africa

HOLLYWOOD stars Nick Nolte, Joaquin Phoenix and Don Cheadle are to film a movie in South Africa.

The three will join London-based Sophie Okonedo, who was so powerful in the recent film "Dirty Pretty Things," and several South African actors in filming "Hotel Rwanda," a movie that is set against the backdrop of the Rwandan genocide.

[edit]

[Director Terry George says]

"I was looking for a story about Liberia or Sierra Leone, but then I found this true story about Paul Rusesabagina, who strove to keep his own family safe during the Rwanda genocide."

He ended up caring for over 2 000 people, some of them members of the Tutsi elite who were prime targets of the Hutu assault. Not one person under his care died in the conflict." ...

"I want to shame audiences by showing them what really happened and how little they understood it.

"Ninety-nine percent of the people in the world don't know that the Hutus and Tutsis were never clearly defined rival tribes until the Belgian colonialists came. They created a separation between the tribes on the 'divide and rule' principle and that lay at the heart of what happened in 1994.

"I also plan to expose how the United Nations simply castrated the UN troops on the ground.

Nick Nolte plays the UN commander whose force could have halted the conflict in the first month, but he was ordered by the UN not to do anything and it escalated into the fastest genocide in modern history. I want the audience to see that and feel the shame of it." George has been working in close collaboration with the real Paul Rusesabagina to ensure the story is accurate. Some preliminary shooting was done in Rwanda in December.

Philip Gourevitch's "We Wish To Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families" covers Rusesabagina's story.

Romeo Dallaire's "Shake Hands With the Devil" will be available in paperback in August.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 2:43 PM




Jonah v. A Straw Man

Check out this post by Sausage-Neck Goldberg

CHANGING THE TONE
I hear Bush's critics saying that President Bush has violated his promise to change the tone in Washington. I agree that the tone hasn't changed too much, and frankly I don't care. But I don't really see how Bush is up for much criticism on this score. Consider his statement yesterday when asked about O'Neill's allegations. He said, "I appreciate former Secretary O'Neill's service to our country. We worked together during some difficult times," Bush said. "We worked together when the country was in recession, and now we're coming out of recession, which is positive news. We worked together when America was attacked on Sept. 11, which changed how I viewed the world." This is hardly the sort of destroy the accuser politics of the previous administration, now is it?

That is your argument? That Bush, when questioned publicly on a controversial topic, was cordial and somewhat noncommittal? What exactly did you expect him to say while he is holding a news conference during a summit in Mexico? Did President Clinton ever personally attack his accusers during a press conference? No, that was the job of administration allies who leaked info and smeared people in the press.

NRO, on the other hand, prefers to cut out the middle man and just pay David Frum and Stephen Moore to produce hit pieces.

Goldberg, you are an idiot, but if it wasn't for you, I'd have very little to blog about.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 12:58 PM




Dean Needs to Tweak His Iraq Message

One of the challenges faced by Democratic frontrunner Howard Dean or whomever should secure the party's presidential nomination is to craft an anti-Bush message on the Iraq war that can resonate both with: 1) those voters who opposed the war, and 2) voters who aren't fans of President Bush, but who worry about rogue dictators abroad who might develop or sell WMDs.

Months ago, I began thinking about this challenge. Here is the soundbite that I keep hoping to hear from Dean:
"By misrepresenting the intelligence it received about weapons of mass destruction, the Bush administration has severely damaged our nation's credibility. What happens if, down the road, we get good intelligence -- intelligence that is confirmed by multiple sources -- telling us that a regime in some foreign country is about to use weapons of mass destruction against America or enable terrorists to use them against us? Many of our allies will see America as "the boy who cried wolf" and not take us seriously. We need a new president who can rally our allies to help us take appropriate action."
Dean has already said what anti-war voters want to hear. Now, he needs a compelling message for moderate voters who aren't "hawks" but who remain anxious about the potential misdeeds of cruel, unstable regimes abroad.

I like Dean; I just voted for him in today's District of Columbia non-binding presidential primary. But he needs to begin building this theme into his foreign policy message. Whatever your views were about the Iraq war, President Bush damaged our country's credibility in ways that could come back to haunt us when we can least afford to be isolated and alone.

posted by Frederick Maryland at 12:52 PM




How Dare You Release Sensitive Documents ..... Like We Did

The willingness of former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill to share his observations of White House discussions on tax cuts, the Iraq war and the like has definitely gotten under the skin of top Bush advisors. As Arnold's post reminds us, the Bush administration is willing to get vicious when it perceives a potential threat to its political future and agenda.

Yet the way Bush administration officials are reacting to the O'Neill revelations, you'd assume that they would never release sensitive notes or transcripts for the sake of a book. Of course, if you assumed this, you'd be dead-wrong. In today's Washington Post, staff reporter Dana Milbank explains:
The (Bush) administration previously allowed the release of some sensitive documents. Bob Woodward, author of "Bush at War," writes that his information included "notes taken during more than 50 national security council and other meetings," as well as "other personal notes, memos, calendars, written internal chronologies, transcripts and other documents."
It isn't the documents that O'Neill released to author Ron Suskind that really bothers Bush's inner circle. What really irks them is that someone would dare challenge the myth sold by the Bushies about how and why America waged war on Iraq.

posted by Frederick Maryland at 12:21 PM




Today in the Supreme Court

The Justices are hearing oral arguments in Tennessee v. Lane, a case stemming from an incident in which a paraplegic man was forced to crawl up two flights of stairs in order to reach a public courtroom because the courthouse had no elevators. So he sued the state of Tennessee for violating his rights under the Americans With Disabilities Act.

After various appeals, the case is now before the Supreme Court, with Tennessee making a "states' rights/sovereign immunity" argument and claiming that Congress over-stepped its authority in writing the ADA and cannot force state government to face lawsuits in federal court.

At least that is my layman's understanding of the case.

And if my layman's understanding is correct, then I have yet one more reason for opposing the confirmation of William Pryor who, as Alabama's Attorney General joined six other states in filing briefs in support of Tennessee's ridiculous position.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 11:11 AM




Standard Operating Procedure

Joseph Wilson discloses the truth about what the administration knew about yellowcake and when it knew it; so a "senior administration official" leaks classified information and blows the cover of Wilson's wife as a CIA operative to retaliate.

Paul O'Neill reveals embarrassing, but hardly sensitive, information about Dubya's pre-9/11 desire to invade Iraq; so what does the administration do?

It publicly announces an investigation of O'Neill and "60 Minutes" regarding a pretty flimsy question of whether a classified document was pictured during the latter's interview of the former.

Call it Intimigate II.

Anyone else with true but inconvenient information about Shrub and his buddies, you've been warned.

posted by Arnold P. California at 9:27 AM




There Are Principled People in the World

The ACLU has filed papers in a Florida court to support Rush Limbaugh's contention that investigators violated Limbaugh's rights by seizing his medical records.

At least there's someone out there who stands on principle irrespective of whose ox is being gored. (And I'm not talking about Limbaugh, if you were wondering).

posted by Arnold P. California at 9:22 AM




Talk About a Litmus Test

TalkLeft posted an excerpt from an article that appeared in the Broward Daily Business Review on allegations that members (appointed by Jeb Bush) of various Judicial Nomination Commissions are asking improper questions during the screening process.

Since the article isn't available on-line you can't read the whole thing, and therefore can't really appreciate what a total jackass JNC member, and fundamentalist pastor, O'Neal Dozier really is (Update: The article is available here)

In an interview, the Rev. Dozier, a non-practicing attorney, acknowledged asking some of the questions. But he defended their appropriateness. "I want to know the applicants' spiritual makeup," Dozier said. "It tells me a lot about a person. I think a judge should be God-fearing."

[edit]

In 2001, Bush appointed Dozier, a black Republican, to the Broward JNC for a two-year term, and reappointed him to a four-year term last year. Dozier said he did not particularly want to be on the JNC, but was nominated by a group of black leaders in the community. "I didn't think I'm qualified for the JNC," he said. "I don't practice law. I thought it should be made up of practicing lawyers."

But now that he's on the JNC, he isn't shy about pressing his views on judicial candidates. "This country is founded on the principles of Christianity, not the principles of Buddhism, not the principles of Judaism," the South Florida Sun-Sentinel quoted him as saying Nov. 30, 2003. "I don't believe the developers of the Constitution would want us to compromise our Christian values."

Dozier is vehemently opposed to homosexuality, which he called in the Nov. 27, 2003, issue of New Times Broward Palm Beach "something so nasty and disgusting that it makes God want to vomit," according to the .

Dozier said he has received complaints from "atheists" who heard about his line of religiously oriented questioning during JNC interviews. But he argues that religion belongs on the bench. "There is no such animal as separation of church and state in the Constitution," he said.

[edit]

Dozier does not deny asking Broward General Master Marina Garcia Wood how she felt about the U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down the Texas prohibition against homosexual activity. "I am totally against that ruling," Dozier said. "We cannot have a judge who feels sodomy is OK."

Dozier, however, said he is not opposed to gays or lesbians serving on the bench - "as long as [they] can assure me [they] would not promote sodomy."

Last year, after voting to recommend one candidate for a Broward judicial vacancy, Dozier said he was surprised and disconcerted to get information that the person is gay. "If I had known, I would have taken the opportunity to search further and investigate," he said. "It's up to us to ask questions and investigate."

It is also interesting to note that the Florida legislature just recently gave Jeb Bush near total control over who ends up on the JNCs

The governor formerly shared responsibility with the Bar for appointing JNC members. But Bush and Republican legislative leaders complained that the state judiciary was blocking their legislative agenda.

In 2001, in a move widely seen as greatly increasing the governor's power to shape the judiciary, the GOP-dominated Legislature gave the governor the right to appoint all nine members of each JNC; the Bar's role was reduced to merely recommending four candidates to the governor.

Bush repeatedly has said that he wants a judiciary that reflects his philosophy of government, and has appointed many conservatives to the JNCs. "I'm looking for people who share my philosophy: respect the separation of powers and recognize the judiciary has an important role," Bush said at a JNC training seminar in Orlando last September. "They don't need to be legislating."


posted by Eugene Oregon at 9:17 AM


Monday, January 12, 2004


Hell Hath No Fury Like ....

...an angry, destined-to-lose presidential candidate. In this case, the Rev. Al Sharpton. In the last major debate of Democratic presidential hopefuls, Sharpton blasted frontrunner Howard Dean for not having had an African-American member of his cabinet during his gubernatorial terms in Vermont. But wait a minute, firebrand Al. This is Vermont we're talking about, not Brooklyn.

According to the most recent U.S. Census data, Vermont's population was only 0.5% black. Diversity is an important goal. But the realities of who lives in Vermont certainly make it understandable -- if not necessarily "excusable" -- that Dean had no such person.

For the record, Dean told Sharpton that he did have a senior staff adviser in Vermont who was African-American.

posted by Frederick Maryland at 7:08 PM




Scoring on Your Own Goal

John Fund join in the ad hominem attacks on Paul O'Neill and reaches the following conclusion

Mr. O'Neill may like to see himself as a contemporary Cyrus Vance, who in 1980 left as Jimmy Carter's Secretary of State over principled disagreements on foreign policy. But instead he resembles Don Regan, the temperamental White House chief of staff who, after President Reagan fired him, went on to write a tell-all book embarrassing his old boss with revelations about Nancy Reagan's fondness for astrologers. The book made Mr. Regan look small and it didn't do much damage to Mr. Reagan's reputation. The same will be true of Mr. O'Neill's poison-pen recollections.

That may very well be the case, but, from what I know, the revelations about Nancy Reagan's reliance on astrologers and other such embarrassing details were all true. Spilling them may had made Regan look bad but that doesn't negate their veracity.

Administrative Issue: While writing this, I began thinking that there really ought to be some term we can attach to things like this where people, while trying to make one point, offer up arguments that make exactly the opposite point. Maybe such a term already exists. If it doesn't, we should try and coin one. Any and all suggestions are welcome.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 3:34 PM




Fuzzy Math

Daniel Gross on how the Bush administration is plundering Social Security to hide the deficit (this excerpt is a little long, but it is all important)

Back in 1983, as part of a deal to save Social Security from impending demographic doom, Congress enacted legislation to essentially increase payroll taxes and reduce benefits. As a result, the government began to collect more Social Security payroll taxes than it paid out to beneficiaries each year. The theory was that the government would use these surpluses to pay down the national debt. That way, when baby boomers retire—and comparatively more people are collecting benefits while comparatively fewer people are working—the government would be in a better position to borrow the necessary funds to provide the promised benefits.

So much for theory. The reality? For the first 15 years, every penny of the surplus was spent, first by Republican presidents and then by a Democratic president. According to figures provided by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, the surpluses were relatively insignificant for much of this period. Between 1983 and 2001 a total of $667 billion in excess Social Security payroll taxes was spent—about $35 billion per year. It was only in fiscal 1999 and 2000, when the government ran so-called on-budget surpluses, that excess Social Security funds were actually used to retire debt.

In the 2000 campaign, Vice President Al Gore said we should sequester the Social Security surpluses in a "lockbox" to prevent appropriators from spending them. Bush agreed in principle. But that commitment went out the window soon after the inauguration. In his first three budgets, Bush (who had the good fortune to take office at a time when the surpluses were growing rapidly) and Congress used $480 billion in excess Social Security payroll taxes to fund basic government operations—about $160 billion per year!

By so doing, Washington spenders have masked the size of the deficit. For Fiscal 2004—which began in October 2003—if you factor out the $164 billion Social Security surplus, the on-budget deficit will be at least $639 billion, rather close to the modern peak of 6 percent of GDP. And according to its own projections (the bottom line of Table 8 represents the Social Security surplus), the administration plans to spend an additional $990 billion in such funds between now and 2008. That year, according to the Office of Management and Budget's projections, the on-budget deficit will be about $464 billion. Only by using that year's $238 billion Social Security surplus does the administration arrive at a total, unified deficit of $226 billion. And the ultimate on-budget deficit will almost certainly be worse. OMB has proven in the past few years that its projections can't be trusted.

The accounting for Social Security surpluses has always been dishonest. But in the past few years, the Bush administration has made this shady accounting a central pillar of its fiscal strategy. The unprecedented reliance on these funds hides the failure of the administration to ensure that there is some reasonable correlation between the resources it has at its disposal and the spending commitments it makes. Bush & Co. have redesigned the tax system so that collections of the progressive taxes that are supposed to fund government operations—like individual income taxes—have plummeted. Instead, with each passing year we rely for our current needs more on the regressive payroll taxes that are supposed to fund our collective retirement.

The persistence of the administration and its credulous allies in eliding these facts is flabbergasting. Of course, for the Bush administration to give an honest accounting of the deficits, and of the role that Social Security surpluses play in keeping them down, would be to admit the fundamental bankruptcy—no pun intended—of its adventuresome fiscal experiment.


posted by Eugene Oregon at 3:04 PM




Fear of New Experiences Can Kill?

A new study has found that rats who are fearful of new experiences live shorter lives.
"Sonia Cavigelli and Martha McClintock of the Department of Psychology and Institute for Mind and Biology at the University of Chicago found in a recent experiment that individuals who fear novelty—a condition scientists have named "neophobia"—are likelier to die at an earlier age than those who are unafraid of change. It is the first time, says Cavigelli, that a study has demonstrated that an emotional trait that shows up in infancy can shorten life span.
...
Is it possible that neophobia in humans can affect life span in the same way?

Cavigelli thinks so. A number of parallels exist between humans and their rat surrogates. Neophobia shows up in human infants as early as 14 months of age, and like the rats, fearful children have a faster and stronger hormonal response than children who are not afraid of new situations. It's also been shown that if you are neophobic at a young age, you tend to remain that way throughout childhood."




posted by Zoe Kentucky at 2:56 PM




Forget ANWR-- let's drill on the Moon!

When I first heard about Bush's moon/Mars plans I thought the idea seemed silly and just a part of Rove's "big idea" strategy that was bandied about mid-December. Not only would the new plan of a human moon/Mars mission cost billions, if not trillions, of dollars, the folks in the Bush administration have been thinking about it since last summer.

Well, big thanks to Joe Conasan for pointing out the obvious-- is it a coincidence that Halliburton has been working with NASA on plans to mine/drill Mars as early as 2007?

posted by Zoe Kentucky at 2:43 PM




Repetition

I know that I already linked to this "60 Minutes" interview with Paul O'Neill, but if you haven't read it yet, you really should. There is so much good stuff in there that it is almost impossible to highlight the key passages in blog-friendly form.

So I'll just encourage you all to read it for yourselves.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 1:38 PM




Who Made These Statements?

1) The Bush administration's war in Iraq "was a war-of-choice distraction from the war of necessity against al Qaeda."

2) The administration's military engagements have stressed the U.S. Army to the point that it is "near the breaking point."

3) The administration's war on terrorism "is strategically unfocused, promises more than it can deliver, and threatens to dissipate U.S. military resources in an endless and hopeless search for absolute security."

Are these the words of Howard Dean? New York Times columnist Paul Krugman? The editorial pages of The Nation? No, none of them.

These conclusions were reached in a new report published by the Army War College. The report was written by Jeffrey Record, a visiting professor at the Air War College at Maxwell Air Force Base in Alabama. Record is an author of six books on military strategy, was an aide to former Senator Sam Nunn (who chaired the Armed Services Committee) and is described by The Washington Post as "a veteran defense specialist."

These credentials don't, in and of themselves, make Record right, but they certainly lend credibility to him. Obviously, those with opposing views -- Wolfowitz, Perle and the rest -- deserve every chance to scrutinize Record's conclusions and offer their own rebuttal. After all, a robust, back-and-forth debate helps to produce better, more enlightened policy.

On the one hand, there is hope. Retired Army Col. Douglas C. Lovelace Jr., director of the Strategic Studies Institute, told The Post that "the substance that Jeff brings out in the article really, really needs to be considered." On the other hand, there is the Pentagon. As the Tailhook Scandal, the failed "don't ask, don't tell" policy, and the USS Iowa charade demonstrate, the Pentagon believes its actions and policies are not subject to question by anyone. As The Post reported:
"Larry DiRita, the top Pentagon spokesman, said he had not read the Record study. He added: 'If the conclusion is that we need to be scaling back in the global war on terrorism, it's not likely to be on my reading list anytime soon.' "
In other words, any report that reaches a conclusion that differs from the Pentagon's official views is automatically DOA.


posted by Frederick Maryland at 12:19 PM




The Human Rights President?

Let's hope that as the campaign gears up, Bush will give more access to reporters and say more things like this

Yet George W. Bush tells New Yorker writer Ken Auletta: "No President has ever done more for human rights than I have."

[edit]

The President's eyebrow-raising assertion comes during some Oval Office chitchat after Auletta - writing about the testy relations between the Bush White House and the news media - sits in on an interview with a British newspaper reporter.

Link via The Progress Report.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 12:15 PM




Ever Met a Pacificist Who Was Pro-War?

Apparently, syndicated columnist Robert Novak has. Or perhaps he just needs a quick geography lesson. In a column that was published today in both the Washington Post and Chicago Sun-Times, Novak seemed to forget that the State of Iowa is situated in the Midwest. (Indeed, many would say that Iowa is perhaps the geographic center of the American Midwest.)

Novak's column examined the campaign messages of Democratic Congressman Dick Gephardt. This is an excerpt from Novak's column:
"[Gephardt] does not mention his votes to authorize the (Iraq) war and to finance the occupation.

"That silence is not an effort to evade overwhelmingly anti-war sentiment in the pacifist Midwest, charmed by Dean's anti-war rhetoric. Polling data indicate that most Iowans support the war, and that includes many Democrats ..."
In one breath, he tells us that Iowans are "pacifist" -- in the very next breath, he tells us they are pro-Iraq war. A rather glaring example of an oxymoron. It seriously makes you wonder the last time Bob Novak looked at a map of the United States. Shall we take up a collection and send him one?

posted by Frederick Maryland at 11:47 AM




Gay Family Values

A New York Times story highlights the growing trend of gay couples with children choosing for one to leave the workforce and be a full-time parent. Considering how much harder it is for gay couples, especially men, to even have children these numbers are really quite significant. Comparatively speaking, recent census figures show that 26% of male couples with children include a full-time parent compared to 25% of married, heterosexual couples and 22% of lesbian couples. However, undermining the stereotype that gays are somhow more "affluent" than straights, "same-sex couples with a stay-at-home parent are doing this even though census figures show that their median household income, $35,000, is lower than the $45,000 for a heterosexual married couple with a stay-at-home parent."


posted by Zoe Kentucky at 11:31 AM




Logic 101

Back when I was in college, I took a class called "Introduction to the Philosophy of Logic" in which I learned about all sort of fallacies, including the ad hominem sort

An Ad Hominem is a general category of fallacies in which a claim or argument is rejected on the basis of some irrelevant fact about the author of or the person presenting the claim or argument. Typically, this fallacy involves two steps. First, an attack against the character of person making the claim, her circumstances, or her actions is made (or the character, circumstances, or actions of the person reporting the claim). Second, this attack is taken to be evidence against the claim or argument the person in question is making (or presenting).

[edit]

The reason why an Ad Hominem (of any kind) is a fallacy is that the character, circumstances, or actions of a person do not (in most cases) have a bearing on the truth or falsity of the claim being made (or the quality of the argument being made).

If you would like a more concrete example, just read Sausage-Neck Goldberg's discussion of Paul O'Neill's appearance on "60 Minutes"

So let me just say that I learned nothing from O'Neill that dissuaded me from the view that he was a pompous, self-indulgent prima donna far more concerned with global warming, education policy and worker safety than he was in the robustness of the American economy or the strength of its currency.

So O'Neill's allegations that Bush began planning to invade Iraq well before 9/11 or that this administration does not care about deficits are clearly lies based on the fact that Sausage-Neck disliked O'Neill the one time he met him.

posted by Eugene Oregon at 10:48 AM




The Right Winger's Way: Lying To Prove Your Point?

Last week the anti-gay zealot group the Coalition for Marriage released a poll they had commissioned from Zogby International that they claimed was proof that "a majority of Massachusetts residents oppose the recent court decision mandating same-sex "marriage," and they favor a constitutional amendment which would protect marriage as the union of one man and one woman."

Not so fast. Ron Crews of the Massachusetts Family Institute has admitted that they omitted the poll results they didn't like. "I want to apologize. I misspoke. I misspoke primarily out of ignorance, but that does not excuse misspeaking. There were other questions, and we are ... going to release those other questions."

Here's the stats they left out:
The group didn't release information that poll respondents opposed the constitutional amendment, by a split of 49-48 percent. It also didn't mention that poll respondents, by a margin of 48-46, did not want lawmakers to prevent marriage licenses from being issued to homosexual couples in May, when the Supreme Judicial Court decision legalizing gay marriage takes effect.

So, why did they CFM come forward about this? Perhaps they recognized it was unethical? That omitting the truth is the same as lying? Naw. Zogby forced CFM's hand when the company released the full list of poll questions. Reportedly CFM is now in discussions with Zogby over the "unauthorized disclosure" of the poll questions. Hmm, they're unhappy about this? I wonder why? Perhaps because it totally undermines their argument that the vast majority of Massachusetts folks are anti-gay marriage? That gay marriage is against the will of the electorate? At best, they can say the state is split down the middle over the issue, with a slight advantage given to the pro-gay marriage side. So, are CFM and the right-wing organizations going to spill any ink recanting some of the stuff they said last week? I wouldn't bet on it.

posted by Zoe Kentucky at 10:41 AM




Some of My Favorite Judges Are Conservative

My problem with Bush's picks is that he doesn't seem to care how good they are, nor how qualified; the only criteria that seem to matter are ideological purity and long life expectancy. But the federal judiciary would be much poorer without conservative judges who are among the most excellent thinkers and writers on the bench, such as Alex Kozinski of the Ninth Circuit and Richard Posner of the Seventh Circuit.

A remarkable recent opinion authored by Posner points to the scandalous state of administrative immigration review. Many aliens' rights are adjudicated by immigration judges who are appointed by the Justice Department. Review is by the Board of Immigration Appeals, also a creature of the Justice Department. Ashcroft has recently purged the BIA of "immigrant-friendly" judges and virtually eliminated three-judge appellate panels of the BIA, so that most appeals are now rubber-stamped by a single BIA judge who knows his or her continued employment depends on being reliably anti-immigrant.

In reversing a pair of asylum denials and remanding for further immigration judge proceedings (one is actually about withholding of removal, but I won't bore you with the technical points), Posner was scathing. His concluding paragraph sums it up well:
In view of the performance of these immigration judges and the criticisms of them that we have felt obligated to make, we urge the service to refer the cases to different immigration judges.
In one case, Posner wrote, "The immigration judge’s analysis was so inadequate as to raise questions of adjudicative competence," and the court sent the case back to the agency for "a proceeding free from the errors of the immigration judge that, taken as a whole, deprive the order of removal of a rational basis." In the second case, "we encounter startling omissions plus a striking non sequitur" in the IJ's opinion.

My favorite bit is this discussion of a professor who was prepared to testify about conditions in Bulgaria, where the asylum applicant came from:
When the hearing before the immigration judge was held, Dr. Johnson was in Prague, and the Blagoevs’ lawyer suggested that she be permitted to testify by phone. The immigration judge had already ruled that she could testify by phone from Dartmouth, where she was then teaching, if she didn’t want to come to Chicago. But when he discovered that she was abroad, he forbade her to testify by telephone. This is one of the odder rulings in our experience. Prague does have phone service after all, and in fact the phone service between Prague and Chicago is quite comparable in acoustic quality and other relevant quality dimensions to the phone service between Hanover, New Hampshire and Chicago; nor did the immigration judge or anyone else suggest otherwise. So we’re baffled.
Vintage Posner. And, sadly, vintage IJ adjucation in some parts of the country. When Ashcroft speaks of "efficiency" in administering these proceedings as a justification for his drastic cutback of appellate rights and purging of politically incorrect judges, remember what's really at stake.

posted by Arnold P. California at 10:22 AM




Do Republicans Hate Women?

If they are Republicans running for office they sure do

Men and women may have achieved equality in many areas of American life, but they sure aren't treated the same by Republican primary voters.

At least that's the finding of political scientists David C. King of Harvard University and Richard E. Matland of the University of Houston, who found that female candidates don't seem to do as well as similarly qualified men in GOP primaries. On the other hand, the researchers found, political independents and Democrats seem to prefer Republican women running for office over GOP guys.

[edit - the following data was not collected by King and Matland but is cited in their research.]

The telephone survey of 820 randomly selected adults included a novel experiment. Respondents were read a description of a hypothetical congressional candidate, who was identified as a Republican. They were told the congressional wannabe was a successful businessperson who had "never run for public office before" and was running because "Congress just doesn't get it." The prospective lawmaker's top priority was to "reduce government spending and waste," survey participants were informed.

To test for gender bias, the researchers did one other thing: Half the sample was told that the candidate was a woman, the other half was told the candidate was a man. In all other ways, respondents heard the identical description.

The survey revealed that sex matters, at least among Republicans. A majority of GOP men (57 percent) and a slightly smaller proportion of Republican women (53 percent) said they would be "very likely" to vote for the man. But when the candidate was identified as a woman, support plummeted by 14 percentage points among men and 11 percentage points among women.


posted by Eugene Oregon at 10:17 AM




American Dynasty

Jonathan Yardley reviews Kevin Phillips' new book "American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune, and the Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush"

In this angry, devastating examination of "the House of Bush," Kevin Phillips asks the question that seems to have occurred to no one else: How did these people get so entitled? How is it that a family in no way distinguished by genuine accomplishment, moral and/or political conviction or exceptional intelligence has managed to lay claim as a matter of right to the American presidency, and how is it -- this is the real puzzler -- that the American people seem to have acquiesced in this presumption? How did we manage to put ourselves in the hands of a family that clearly believes it has dynastic stature, with all the privileges and entitlements attendant thereto, and behaves accordingly?

[edit]

Tracing the family lineage through four generations -- beginning with the president's great-grandfathers, George Herbert Walker and Samuel Prescott Bush, moving along to his grandfather, Prescott Bush, then to his father and himself -- Phillips paints a portrait that can only be deeply disturbing to anyone concerned about how power is now gained and maintained in this country.

Apart from the differences already mentioned between the Bushes and the Adamses, Roosevelts and Kennedys, one stands apart from and above all others: The Bushes have nothing to commend them to the public save rank ambition. Other than accumulating a certain amount of money and achieving a measure of what passes for aristocratic social position in this country, the Bushes have achieved nothing of distinction and appear to believe in nothing except their own interests.


posted by Eugene Oregon at 9:54 AM



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