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Election turnout matters, dammit

A lot of folk were worried that the far-Right National Front in France would gain a large foothold of power, based on an upswing in support from a stagnant economy and (especially) Islamicist terrorism over the last year. And the first round of election that fear seemed to be coming to pass. Then …:

'France's far-right National Front performed unexpectedly poorly in Sunday's regional elections, securing control of exactly zero regions. In the first round just one week ago, it finished in first place in six out of 12 regions and was expected to prevail in second-round voting in at least two, and perhaps as many as four, regions. The unexpected defeat came in the context of soaring turnout. Just 48 percent of eligible voters cast ballots last week, but, faced with predictions of National Front victory, that surged to 59 percent today.'

Turning out for elections matters. That's a lesson that the Democrats keep struggling with, especially in off-year elections, when turnout drops in general — and which the GOP then sweeps in and gains more seats in Congress. You think your going out and voting doesn't make a difference? The French just proved you wrong.




French far right faces unexpected defeat after turnout soars
Showing up to vote makes a difference.

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The Boehner dilemma and why things aren’t likely to improve

Short version: Boehner wants to be Speaker, and if he tries to corral the hardliners he's afraid they'll vote him out.  So he wants to be the leader … but that means he can't lead.

And those hardliners?

'When you get the members off the talking points you come to a simple conclusion: They don't face consequences for taking these hardline positions. When you hear members talk candidly about their biggest victory, it wasn’t winning the House in 2010. It was winning the state legislatures in 2010 because they were able to redraw their districts so they had many more conservative voters. The members get heat from the press but they don't get heat from back home.'

So the Speaker's afraid of the career consequences, nobody else wants the job, and the hardliners driving the truck through the guard rails don't face any electoral consequences.  Sounds like a recipe for … well, just what we're seeing now.

Reshared post from +Cynthia S.

Excellent interview with #RobertCosta   by +Ezra Klein 

Robert Costa: When you get the members off the talking points you come to a simple conclusion: They don't face consequences for taking these hardline positions. When you hear members talk candidly about their biggest victory, it wasn’t winning the House in 2010. It was winning the state legislatures in 2010 because they were able to redraw their districts so they had many more conservative voters. The members get heat from the press but they don't get heat from back home.

Why Boehner doesn’t just ditch the hard right
‘What we’re seeing is the collapse of institutional Republican power,

The One Percent of the One Percent

The 0.01% of the population who …

… contributed a quarter of all the money spent in the 2010 elections.
… contributed to the 2010 elections on average more than the average American citizen makes in an entire year.
… contribute 80% of the money raised by the political parties.
… are becoming increasingly important to all politicians, and without whose backing it's difficult for a candidate to be taken seriously.

That doesn't sound like democracy. #ddtb

Embedded Link

The Political One Percent of the One Percent
This piece was prepared in collaboration with Ethan Phelps-Goodman. If you think wealth is concentrated in the United States, just wait till you look at the data on campaign spending. In the 2010 elec…

I'm sure the GOP will be over new election laws over this

After all, they've spent a huge amount of time chasing a bunch of mythical "fraudulent voters" by adding all sorts of voter ID laws, restricting voter registration programs, reducing voting periods, etc.

So now that we have a real, honest-to-gosh case of election fraud, actually convicted in court, what sort of draconian measures will they impose to make sure it doesn't happen again? I await with bated breath! #ddtb

Embedded Link

Md. jury: Ex-gov. aide tried to curb black vote – CBS News
Aide to former Md. Governor Robert Ehrlich found guilty of conspiring to suppress black voter turnout in 2010 election

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 18-Apr-11 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Obama Is Now and Will Be a Great President – There’s a lot here I do very much want to believe in — and, to be sure, there’s a lot that Obama has managed to accomplish (esp. of one contemplates, shudder, a McCain/Palin administratino). I still think there’s a lot (in health care and budget matters) that he’s negotiated very poorly on, and other areas (in homeland security / civil rights) where I don’t see much difference between him and Bush.
  2. Brewer vetoes birther, campus gun bills – Good Lord — sanity from Arizona?
  3. Speechless On The House Floor | MoveOn.Org – There are election priorities, and then there are governing priorities. Sometimes they differ because folks have a different perspective once in office. Sometimes they differ because the election priorities were lies.
  4. DIA, developers want more stations on RTD east rail line – The Denver Post – I’m sure they do — but nobody wants to pay for it. Honestly, I think this is a case where it’s more important to get the line built, then get added stations and tracks lain. (I’m obliged to note my employer is involved in this project.)
  5. Watch the first clip from Harry Potter’s final movie, The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 [Video] – Oooooooh. (And, let me say, it’s so cool seeing more of John Hurt as Olivander …)
  6. “Hello Megan” drives him crazy, too – Actually, I don’t mind the “Hello, Megan!” bit, but this was still funny. In that “Hitler movie re-subtitled” way.
  7. If Aqualad could get be with the team on the right, I’d… – Fun. I’m enjoying the current YJ cartoon a lot — but the David/Nauck YJ comic rocked. Even if Superboy looked super-lame in those days.
  8. Organizational Levels – Hmmmm, wonder what you get at 221?
  9. When members of Congress forget who was president in 2008 – I’m a Congressman, dagnabbit! Don’t let the facts get in the way of my talking points!
  10. Pam’s House Blend:: The Bizarre Behavior Of An Apparently Hate Filled Man – Of Course It’s Peter LaBarbera – And they’ll know we are Christians by our love, right? I mean, isn’t that how the song goes?
  11. Box Turtle Bulletin » Leader of Maine’s Yes on 1 Campaign Admits to Lying – But of course, when the cause is great enough, the ends justify the means, right? Even when you’re doing it for Jesus?
  12. Christian protesters destroy controversial Andres Serrano art “Piss Christ” – But … but … but … I thought it was only Muslims who were intolerant and violent!
  13. Good Husbands Choose Marijuana – Heh. Though there are at least a couple of these I don’t need to be high for …
  14. 7 Basic Things You Won’t Believe You’re All Doing Wrong | Cracked.com – Some more interesting (and good) pieces of advice.
  15. 8 Movie Special Effects You Won’t Believe Aren’t CGI | Cracked.com – I already knew most of these (T2 and LotR especially) — but it’s still pretty cool.
  16. Michele Bachmann Tax Day rally draws sparse crowd – Andy Barr – POLITICO.com – Aw, man, if all the lunatic GOPers get abandoned by the voters too early, how will we have any fun in 2012?
  17. ThinkProgress » Boehner Hires $5 Million Lawyer To Defend Unconstitutional Law – “Of course, it wasn’t so long ago that Boehner brought the nation within inches of a government shutdown because of his alleged fears that the United States is spending too much money. Apparently, Boehner’s commitment to fiscal responsibility isn’t nearly as strong as his need to ensure that no gay American receives their constitutional right to ‘equal protection of the laws.'”
  18. The Science of Why We Don’t Believe Science | Mother Jones – On the surface, this indictment of human reason is pretty depressing. But what it really means is that humans integrate facts with feelings, and that we need to engage where people are coming from emotionally and “values”-wise in order to get them to listen to what the facts are. Which, really, isn’t that unusual a piece of advice when communicating to (and trying to persuade) an audience.

Psychotic stepdads

Jon Stewart on how the newly elected GOP governors across the nation have gone from “that cool new guy my divorced mom is dating” to “psychotic stepdads” in the course of just a few months.

Actually, the segment itself isn’t all that outrageously funny (though it does have a nice litany of cuts and restrictions and government impositions and cushy jobs for cronies). But the I thought the basic “psychotic stepdad” idea was darned cute.

Unblogged Bits (Thu. 4-Nov-10 1730)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Friendly Atheist » Trust Him; He’s a Pastor – Um … I wouldn’t give this guy cab fare, let alone my bank accounting information to pull out stuff. Heck, I don’t like doing that for utility bills, let alone some guy in a sharp suit with a big multi-media screen up on the megachurch state. (Relying on social peer pressure is a pretty dickish move, too.)
  2. The Plum Line – Dem memo: GOP doesn’t have mandate for repeal – Again, consider that Truman quote …
  3. Head of Belgian Catholic church: AIDS is justice for gays – So AIDS is “intrinsic justice” for “mistreating human love” through homosexuality. But elderly priests who “mistreated human love” through sexual abuse of children should get a pass from any sort of civil justice. Yeesh.
  4. Sophisticated Smuggling Tunnel Containing Rail System, Oxygen Pumps, And 30 Tons of Marijuana Discovered [Marijuana] – And you don’t go to that effort (and transport 30 tons of pot at a time) if marijuana isn’t a major money-maker for the drug gangs. Too bad their market didn’t get legalized this week; it might have put a crimp in their profitability.
  5. Best television adaptations of science fiction and fantasy novels – I love me some Tripods. (And the original books were some great YA SF, too. Hmmmm … need to pull those out for Kay.)

What the Election Was NOT Not About

Victor Davis Hanson. That’s Doctor Hanson to you! Because he’s a professor!

Victor Davis Hanson has responded to the Obama press conference yesterday, rising above the neener-neener-neener of most of the Right to provide a conservative response to what the election meant … rather, to what the Democrats are saying the election meant.

Except, rather than an analysis, Hanson’s decided that Obama’s a disingenous liar who’s spent the last two years race-baiting and trying to turn the United States into France.  Hanson seems filled with righteous anger at the suggestion that there might be reasons — any reasons — to blame the Democratic “shellacking” on anything other than an informed and profound repudiation of the President, the Democrats, the Pelosi/Reid cabal, liberalism, progressivism, socialism, and, probably, Woodrow Wilson.

He starts right off with his list of “What the Election Was Not About” …

1. Communication—As If You Would Have Liked My Agenda Had You Just Been More Informed

President Obama’s postmortem press conference was a near disaster. He seemed subdued, but also sometimes petulant—still convinced that we, in fear and distrust, “lashed out” in anger at the doctor rather than the disease. In fact, the same voter furor that turned on him is, he thinks, what earlier elected him: only his failure to channel it properly explains the setback.

Note the clever way Hanson frames it all as “furor.”  Obama only won in the first place, it seems, because his supporters were “angry” — and now that they’ve turned on him, well, Obama is “petulant” about it.

Finally he did admit that he was “shellacked,” but he believes that partisanship confused us voters into shellacking him.

This common complaint that he failed to communicate just how wonderfully he had done is quite an unhinged Carteresque/Kerryesque exegesis. The problem was not that the American voter did not know about the second stimulus, ObamaCare, the efforts to push cap and trade, card check, and $3 trillion more in debt, but that he knew them all too well. When framed by 10% unemployment, slow growth, record food stamp usage, and home foreclosures, the problem was, again, too much, rather than too little, information. Obama was overexposed, not underexposed.

Lovely. Hanson practically proves the point.  No, it’s not that what the Administration and Congress managed to accomplish was completely hidden.  It’s that everything that was done that was publicly known was tarred, feathered, and flogged by the Right — be it in Congress or the punditry — as evil, un-American, tyrannical, sinful, dangerous, and deranged, usually with a healthy dose of ad hominem attacks on the principals involved — e.g., “petulant,” “Carteresque/Kerryesque,” “ObamaCare” …

Were there achievements that were simply overlooked, hidden, masked, unknown by the  electorate?  Absolutely.  Look at polling data.  Most people thought their federal income taxes had gone up (they went down), that bailouts were costing trillions (most of the money has been recovered), that the stimulus hadn’t created a single job (um, yes it has), that unemployment is up (it’s down), that all the stimulus and bail-outs started with Obama (it started with Dubya), etc. Those misapprehensions haven’t come from overexposure, they’ve come from the GOP and its propagandists beating  the drum in the opposite direction, and the Dems not trying to take the narrative back.

The more he communicated on the campaign trail—“back seat,” “enemies,”“they” don’t want you to vote—the more the jaded voter turned from his cause. I fear very few will now listen to the new Obama in extremis calling for a new civility of the sort he helped destroy with his offensive and polarizing slurs and smears the last month.

Yes, heaven forbid that the President actually call out on the campaign trail the Republicans for what they’ve been saying and doing.  That’s “offensive” and “polarizing” and “slurs and smears.”  It’s the bully crying in outrage when someone finally punches him back in the nose.  Look at the rhetoric from GOP candidates and pols over the last two years, as abetted by Fox “News” and folks like Beck and Limbaugh.

In point of fact, Obama has been too reticent to burn a few bridges, to stop seeking consensus and bipartisanship and GOP buy-in in every single legislative conflict since January 2009.  He’s only stepped into the fray in extremis, at the last moment, when all nearly seemed lost, and then only to offer a mild chiding and a few more compromises.

The idea that his campaigning over the last month has destroyed his bipartisan “credibility” (as if he’s managed to get any significant bipartisan support over the last two years) is laughable. And, of course, has nothing to do with the effect of the Right-wing Noise Machine on people’s perceptions of what’s been happening the last few years, and the Democrats not addressing that effect dead on and constantly.

2. We Spent Too Little?

Given what we know of the models of Spain, Italy, Ireland, Greece, and California, we should not take seriously another lunatic explanation that we did not borrow enough. Supposedly Obama followed the conservative Japanese route of the 1990s and thus was too fiscally restrained. This is more than insane. Increasing government spending on the way to a planned 40% of the economy, while borrowing $3 trillion was not timid.

First off, those states were largely borrowing over time to support major social programs that couldn’t be sustained. Stimulus spending — spending to generate jobs and further private investment — is a very different thing.  It’s the difference between borrowing for a vacation and borrowing for an education.  And even that wildly oversimplifies the roots of the economic problems of the countries described; in short, they, and certainly not California, did not face economic crises because they spent to much trying to get out of an economic crisis; they were in trouble because they were already hocked to the gills and had no track record to indicate that they could get out of that debt.

And that spending by the US actually helped stimulate the economy — not enough because the amount got cut before it ever got to the President’s desk, but employment is up, tax receipts are up, and that growth is part of what’s getting the US going whereas places like Greece are going to be suffering mightily for the foreseeable future.

The real reason Obama turned a recession into a near depression?

He did? Really?  Everything I’ve seen indicates that within a few months of his getting into office, things began turning around … too slowly, to be sure, but definitely not a further plunge from recession to depression.  Granted, Hanson is a historian, but I think maybe he needs to check his sources.

Let us count the ways: a) He trash-talked business (from the Chrysler creditor mess to the “at some point I do think you’ve made enough money” toss-off) into stasis, and the private sector now sits on the sidelines hoarding trillions of dollars in fear of ObamaCare, more regulation, and government confiscation.

b) His team talked non-stop about raising taxes—income taxes, payroll taxes, capital gains taxes, inheritance taxes, health care taxes, even VAT taxes. Psychologically that frightened off investors and entrepreneurs.

Ah. The mean old president scared away the all the big businessmen and venture capitalists.  The crap economy and high unemployment had nothing to do with it.

Now, if you told me they were “hoarding trillions of dollars” in anticipation of being able to spend a fraction of it on the midterm elections (thanks, SCOTUS) and get a Congress in that would seek to kill health care reform, financial regulatory reform, and any taxes it could get its hands on … I’d believe you.

And non-stop talk about taxes?  Really?  Aside from the idea of any taxation seems anathema to the Right, and thus stands out as a red cape to them, any tax proposals seriously made by the Administration have been modest, at best, and hardly some sort of mighty crusade.

c) The government wasted the borrowed stimulus money on pork-barrel projects and spread-the-wealth social programs that produced no real wealth.

Bosh.  (Yes, that’s not much of an answer, but it’s as coherent and defensible as Hanson’s characterization.)

d) His advisory team simply quit and left town—Emanuel, Romer, Summers, Orszag—more or less confirming that they did not ever know quite what they were doing.

They’re not just quitters, they’re clueless quitters who are fleeing before the righteous mobs arrive with torches and pitchforks.  Because presidential advisory team members never leave an administration. Even if they have compelling personal reasons for doing so.  Especially when they can see that the president’s power is going to be more circumscribed the next term because of electoral losses.

e) He wasted millions of legislative hours on health care that terrified employers, and very little on incentives to businesses to create jobs.

Yes. It was all about terrifying employers.  And it was an intentional plan to “waste millions of legislative hours” (cunningly roping the GOP into that very move), because he’d never talked about health care reform during the campaign, but sprang it on everyone, complete with death panels, just when the crisis demand he spend everything on giving businesses incentives (i.e., tax breaks) which they would then automatically translate into jobs.

I could go on, but you get the point that Obama supposedly not following the Greek mega-borrowing model was not our problem. (By the way, for all its innate crises, Japan still is in far better shape today than Italy, Spain, and Greece).

And Italy, Spain, and Greece are hardly models for the structure and robust nature of the American economy.

3. Obstructionist Republicans

A third explanation often aired is that Republicans are good at destroying noble things like Obamism, but not good at governing.

When their stated goal is not to govern but to deny the president any wins, and in fact work to ensure his loss in 2012 — yeah, I’d say that’s a fair explanation.

Limbaugh, Hannity, Fox News and the usual partisan suspects deluded the gullible public.

Well, how many people (esp. among their audience) still think Obama is a Muslim, or a socialist, or a Kenyan?

The result is that we still do not appreciate the wonders of ObamaCare (check those rising premiums), …

Clearly HCR’s biggest mistake is that it was not implemented instantly, no matter the cost and disruption, rather than being phased in over time.

… and will soon choke without cap and trade, …

A policy that had widespread GOP support (including with Obama’s GOP opponent in 2008), but which suddenly became anathema when Obama floated the concept.  Great governing, GOP!

and will applaud Obama for the trivial things like the Government Motors Volt.

And a nice trivializing of both some fine R&D investment and mischaracterization of the highly successful auto manufacturer bail-out.  Far from being “Government Motors,” GM is coming back, buying back its stock, and doing well. As opposed to simply letting it (and its suppliers, and dealers) fail.

Yet Obama and the left seem oblivious to the fact that they gave as good as they got. Here in California Jerry Brown’s commercials, as well as Boxer’s, were as vicious as their opponents’, more so in fact.

In the eye of the beholder, perhaps. But vitriolic campaign ads (and I despise them regardless of the parties) have nothing to do with obstructionism.  Indeed, the point of noting that Republicans in Congress (particularly the Senate) were obstructionist, was not that they were mean and nasty (they were), but that they stopped government where they could and slowed it down where they couldn’t.  Between unconscionable stalling on approvals, constant filibuster threats, and refusals to close even to just have debate … the GOP obstructed the function of government, and did it more to keep the Obama Administration from succeeding than because of philosophical differences (witness the array of appointees who were approved on a bipartisan basis in committee, languished for months because of holds by GOP senators, then were eventually approved with large or unanimous bipartisan votes).

My only surprises are, one, that dozens of Republicans survived the smearing and character destruction, …

Oh, dear.  Those poor little hothouse flowers of the party of Karl Rove and Lee Atwater are being smeared, I tell you! Smeared!

… and, two, Obama et al. are now calling for a time-out and “can’t we all get along” brotherhood. Ask yourself this: had Obama enjoyed a 60-seat gain after his “enemies” talk, would he now have called for a new era of political healing and harmony?

Actually, he probably would have.  He did after the 2008 elections, even as the Right was talking about how they hoped that Obama would fail, and resolving to do all they could to make it happen.  I assert Obama’s error was in not realizing until too late (and perhaps not even now) that this sort of talk, in the face of an intransigent opposition, is not only futile, but it wastes time and encourages further opposition and extortion of concessions.

The notion that stonewalling conservatives derailed a successful president is adolescent.

Which you’ve proven, Victor, by not talking about it.

4. Race

Oh yes, race. I mention that because on election day Eugene Robinson in the Washington Post has already played that preemptory card to explain the repudiation of the Obama agenda.

I am not aware of anyone saying this is a primary motive for everyone opposed to the Obama presidency.  To claim it is not a factor among some voters and some opponents is not only disingenuous, but demonstrably false (as a casual browse at various Tea Party demonstrations and some select quotes from the right-wing punditry can demonstrate).

Here’s why that is also crazy:

a) The anger is against the Obama agenda and those who promote it. A Nancy Pelosi is as unpopular, or more unpopular, than  Barack Obama.

And certainly the idea there might be any connection between racism and misogyny is unheard of.

I don’t question that a lot of folks are largely unhappy over what they see as policy, or the policy results, or what they are told the policy is all about.  Again, that some carry along with them racial and/or misogynistic sentiments alongside that, or as a contributing factor for their unhappiness, doesn’t contradict that.

Lots of white-male entrenched incumbents lost not because they supported a black man, but because they oversaw the government takeover of health care,

Hanson blows any credibility by retreading this old canard.  The idea that a regulated private insurance industry providing universal private health insurance policies is somehow a “government takeover” is … well, I’ll call it a lie, and be generous in doing so.

… borrowed $3 trillion in 21 months, …

Not surprising in a major economic downturn (which started well before he was in office) and in the middle of two wars (also started before he was in office).  All of which is a lovely bookend to the $5 trillion in debt racked up (in “good times”!)  by the GOP and Dubya Administration, with nary a peep.

perpetuated the “culture of corruption,”

Defined? Examples? As opposed to?

…  and saw unemployment rise to 10%.

The peak of unemployment (10.6%) was in January 2009, the very month Obama took office.  It has declined since then.  Not fast enough, but attributing the rise in unemployment to the “Obama agenda” is simply dishonest.

b) The Tea Party zealots backed all sorts of candidates, women like Sharron Angle, Hispanics like Marco Rubio, blacks like Allen West, and Asians like Van Tran. Contrary to Robinson’s charges, race or gender was incidental — not essential — to their support.

Certainly there were very prominent TP candidates who were not white males (though most who weren’t were white females).  And, again, being a True Believer from a policy perspective does seem to be the primary prerequisite for TP candidacy.  That doesn’t invalidate the demonstrable supposition that racism doesn’t play a role in some TPers dislike of the President (and, thus, his allies).

c) Barack Obama has encountered no more venom—and in fact much less—than what George Bush or Bill Clinton endured.

Oh, please.

As of yet, thank God, we have not seen an Alfred Knopf novel like Checkpoint aimed at Obama, or anything like the 2006 Toronto prize-winning film Death of a President, which imagined the shooting of George Bush. I don’t recall Robinson at the time suggesting that such sick, unhinged hatred of Bush was either untoward or motivated by nefarious forces.

I’d suggest that, in part, that’s because overt racism is generally frowned upon.

Death of a President, from what I’ve read, is less a “sick, unhinged hatred of Bush” by a fictionalized assassination, than a story of politics and civil liberties and the state of the US with the assassination of Bush as the trigger point, so to speak. It’s a political thriller, not a wish fantasy.  Unlike, say, the huge spike in death threats toward Obama even as he started being a serious candidate, vs. other, um, non-black candidates.

d) By 2001 the two highest foreign policy officials of the U.S. government—Secretary of State and National Security Advisor—were both African-Americans—and appointed by George Bush. There was some racism directed at them, but it came mostly from the anti-war Left (cf. the despicable comments of a Harry Belafonte)— and especially from abroad, as in the case of the sick, anti-Rice cartoons that appeared in the Palestinian papers. Again, I don’t recall outrage from Robinson over that overt racism.

Hanson seems to feel that by disparaging Eugene Robinson, he can defuse the racism charge. This is known in the profession as an ad hominem attack.

e) To the degree racial divisiveness is more apparent after 2008, it is largely due to the Obama administration.

So we blame the victim.

The president himself called for Latinos to see Republicans as “enemies.” He appealed to racial groups to vote on the basis that the Republicans did not wish them to. He used racially loaded imagery to suggest that the Republicans should sit in the back of the car. He suggested that the Cambridge police, on no evidence, had engaged in stereotyping and had acted stupidly. His attorney general called Americans “cowards” for not wishing to talk about race on his terms. No need to repeat the past racist rants of Van Jones. His Supreme Court nominee gave reasons why a “wise Latina” intrinsically would make a better judge than a white counterpart. And all this came after the 2008 mess with the overt racist Rev. Wright, the “typical white person” slur, and the condescending put-down of the white clingers of Pennsylvania. To the degree racial polarization has surfaced, it has been due entirely to Barack Obama’s modus operandi, saying different things to different audiences, predicated on their race — and whether the comments are thought to remain private and not for public dissemination.

Right. Racist messages have been out there, but to point them out is racist.  Prominent Republican candidates and office-holders demonize killer hordes of Mexicans crossing the border to lop off our heads (and steal our jobs), but to suggest that the GOP might not be as Latino-friendly as they claim to be is racist.  Suggestions of diversity of life experience as something that might be worthwhile are obviously racist.

And calling the President racist — or a race-baiter, or responsible for any racism that has surfaced — certainly couldn’t be racist.

f) One thing has changed, however. The near obsessive use of the slur “racist” in lieu of an argument has now so inflated the currency of that charge that it has been rendered meaningless — and, in fact, tells us far more about the character of the accuser than of the intended target.

Sort of like “liberal” or “Nazi” or “socialist.”

So What Was Tuesday?

The truth is always the simplest explanation. Here it goes in simple language from the beginning: Obama was elected largely because of public furor over Bush/Iraq.

Well, certainly over Bush.  And Bush’s failed economic policies. And Bush’s wars. And Bush’s civil liberties record. And Bush’s palpable dumbness. And Bush’s cronies. And the “culture of corruption” amongst same.

There was furor, and anger.  But there was also a positive message of hope and change.  Compare the campaign banners of the Obama 2008 campaign to the signs of the Tea Party.  Start your look for real “furor” there.

The fawning media hid his socialist background.

Right.  All the Fox horses and all the News Corp. men couldn’t dig up what a die-in-the-pink-wool socialist he was.

He ran as a centrist.

And has presided as one, to the dismay of quite a few on the Left.

The Wall Street meltdown wiped away the small McCain/Palin lead.

Well, that and McCain looking like a buffoon in reacting to it (and in selecting Palin as a running mate).

Obama in his hubris took that flukish set of events and reinvented them into proof that he could deliver to the left a once-in-a-century EU-style socialist makeover of America.

That’s right! He promised mandatory paid holidays of six weeks a year, a national health service, and hiring all the unemployed to build Montessori Schools and arugula farms.  Oh, and we’d all go on the Euro and get rid of our flags.

That effort polarized the country, stalled the recovery, and terrified the private sector into stasis.

Right, the private sector was terrified, terrified, of the same-old, same-old Treasury officials he brought in.  They were so terrified they stopped any spending or investment, which they’d have been more than happy to make if only their taxes were given a holiday for a year or three.

Obama, who was always himself given something (take your pick—Harvard admission,Harvard Law Review billet, Chicago Law School tenure offer, Noble Peace Prize, etc.) without requisite achievement, …

What a poseur.  But a clever one, fooling folks into letting him into Harvard, to edit the Harvard Law Review, to be offered tenure, to win a Nobel (sp.) Peace Prize, all for stuff he hadn’t done yet.  (Well, maybe you’ve got me on the Nobel Peace Prize, but …).

… is thus stunned that the economy is not an animate Law dean whom he can hope and change into compliance.

Silly man! He wanted to institute an EU-style socialist makover without actually having any idea how to do it!  What a buffoon!  He should wear Joker make-up, don’t you think?

So naturally he is angry …

Right.  Just like Obama’s the racist, he’s also the angry guy.  Got it.

… and has turned to almost everything in the past that worked: the race card, …

Because we know racism is dead in America.

… the get-out-the-minority vote card, …

How dare he!? What a racist!

… the enemy Republican bad actors,

And after the GOP welcomed him to the White House with open and  humble arms, and begged, begged to be allowed to offer a few small suggestions in the legislative agenda, despite being a minority in both Houses of Congress.

… the greedy rich takers, etc..

Right! Next thing you know, people will be claiming that shadowy private forces in various industries whose high profit margins are threatened by Obama are now injecting hundreds of millions of dollars into mid-term political campaigns!  What a paranoid old saw!

But now none of the old “them” bogeymen work; …

The Democrats have always, as we know, been the party of “Us vs. Them” and “if you’re not for us, you’re against us.”

… the more that tactic is tried, the more the economy stalls and the people get angry.

Yes, the economy’s been in a free-fall since the inauguration! Unemployment is up! GDP is down!  And meanwhile, every weekend we have the Hour of Hate broadcast live from the White House to cover up for it. The sight of Obama, ranting and raving from the pulpit, spittle flicking from his lips … no wonder the Koch Brothers are terrified!

It’s that simple. He can talk all he wishes, but until he offers fiscal responsibility, …

… (cut off unemployment, but cut taxes on the richest 1% of Americans) …

… private sector encouragement, …

… (cut taxes on business, and provide them further incentives to boost their stock prices) …

… reassurance of adhering to singular American capitalism, …

… (abolish the minimum wage, abolish health and safety regulations, eliminate taxes on capital gains) …

… and pro-jobs tax policies, …

… (see above) …

… he will continue more of these Orwellian, thinking-out-loud press conferences.

And he’ll start rolling around little steel balls, muttering about how the Republicans stole his strawberries!

Remember, this is Victor Davis Hanson, history academic and fawningly addressed as “Dr. Hanson” and “Professor Hanson” by his commenters. He’s smart, by gum! And he writes history books! So he deals with truth, and history, and truth, and reality!  And as such a level, considered, rational analysis as the above demonstrates, who would ever dare think otherwise?

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 3-Nov-10 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Pompeiians Flash-Heated to Death—”No Time to Suffocate” – Wow. Which makes you wonder about what could happen there today.
  2. India Says Harry Potter Mania Hurting Country’s Owls – Yikes.
  3. Geek Hit Phineas and Ferb, From Butcher Paper to Boob Tube | Magazine – We love Phineas & Ferb in our household, and for the reasons described here — it’s funny, it’s witty, and it’s ultimately constructive. It’s one of the rare non-toddler cartoons out there that isn’t all about insulting each other, or insulting the stupid adults, or insulting the viewer. Triffic stuff.
  4. Elections are always the beginning – A bit of perspective. This, too, shall pass.
  5. Darrell Issa: Obama must answer ‘several hundred’ inquiries – It’s gracious of Rep. Issa to state his goal is “make the president a success” (has he talked with the House leadership about that yet?), but I’ll believe it when I see it.
  6. Politico is the latest publication to just make stuff up about liberals – I guess the problem is the assumption that the Left is somehow has absolutist as the Right … which, even were it true, would be seen as a weakness / flaw / sin for the Left, while it’s just accepted SOP for the Right.
  7. Consumers driving business Windows 7 adoption; XP is on the way out at last – It is a new reality for businesses (my company included) that home PCs and other devices are now driving expectations in the workplace, not the other way around. People are getting home PCs more powerful and upgraded than what they are being issued at work, and it’s not sitting well. It’s a real challenge both for company budgets and for their IT departments.
  8. Senator Jim DeMint Vows Not To Fund Health Care Reform – Gee, why do I suspect a little thing like what the law currently requires won’t stand in the way of a determined GOP House Majority?
  9. The Pentagon Considers Some of Oil’s Many Costs : The Pump Handle – Very cool — and kudos to the Pentagon for being more pragmatic and open-minded about this kind of thing than many industries (and many more politicians). Will the pundits who were mocking Obama putting solar panels (back) on the roof of the White House mock the Army putting solar panels in their camps?
  10. @AI_AGW Twitter Chatbot Argues with Global-Warming Deniers Automatically : TreeHugger – Very cool idea — though, yes, something I could see becoming a real annoyance in the wrong hands.
  11. Great Sphinx’s Walls Rise Again : Discovery News – Cool stuff …
  12. US law does not forbid rendition of terror suspects to countries that torture, says CIA lawyer – Boing Boing – And Pilate washed his hands …
  13. Box Turtle Bulletin » Not a good night for NOM – A few threads of silver lining …
  14. By the Book – Reason Magazine – Phone books are an amazing resource. I hope someone has been archiving the old ones for research purposes in the future.
  15. The Maddow Blog – On the subject of Evan Bayh. – Those who seek to rewrite history are doomed to hoping we forget how to Google it.

Colorado election wrap-up

On the major state offices:

John Hickenlooper (D) won handily over Tom Tancredo (ACP) and Dan Maes (R) to be the next governor of the state.  That’s … a good thing.  On the other hand, the GOP seems to have taken back one, if not both, houses of the state legislature, and many of the other state offices also look like they are going GOP. Hick may be feeling pretty lonely this term, after the euphoria wears off.

Michael Bennet (D) is still running neck-and-neck with Ken Buck (R) to keep his Senate seat.  Latest numbers I see have him at 47.4% vs 47.0% for Buck.  I’m not a huge fan of Bennet, but Buck is a nut (and, of course, would be another Republican in the Senate).  Many of the uncounted ballots are from Denver and Boulder, so they might trend toward Bennet.  We’ll see.

On the “Ugly Three”:

Amendments 60 and 61, and Prop 101, were soundly defeated by the voters of Colorado, with decisive (70-75%) margins.  That doesn’t solve the state’s fiscal crisis, by any means, but it keeps it from getting much, much worse.

On the other Colorado ballot measures:

Amendment 62: Personhood:  Rejected (again) soundly (again) by over 70% of the voters.  Will they keep trying?

Amendment 63: No Obamacare: Rejected by just over 50%.  It was meaningless, but symbolic.

Amendment P: Who Runs Games of Chance?: This would have shifted around some of the state responsibilities in a more rational manner.  Rejected by over 60%, perhaps because there was no case that anything was really broken.  This was my one “loss” on the ballot measures, but hardly anything I’ll lose sleep over.

Amendment Q: Moving the seat of government in a disaster: Won by almost 60%. I voted for it, but it was mostly just kind of common sense, not a huge battle of principle.

Amendment R: Exempting lesser use of public lands from property taxes:  Lost by over 60%. The voters didn’t seem gung-ho on any anti-tax measures this year.  Interesting.

Prop 102: Restricting bail and bond criteria:  Despite heavy lobbying by the state bail bondsmen, the voters have rejected this by over 60%.

Littleton Prop 3A: Property tax levy increase: A critical stopgap measure for school funding in face of ongoing state budget cuts.  Passed (thank heavens) by 57%.

Remarkably enough, of the ten ballot measures I voted on, I “won” on 9 of them.  Don’t think that’s ever happened before.  Small comfort, perhaps, but a comfort nonetheless.

That Truman quote

Margie’s mentioned this quote to me a couple of times recently, so I went and looked it up.

“I’ve seen it happen time after time. When the Democratic candidate allows himself to be put on the defensive and starts apologizing for the New Deal and the Fair Deal, and says he really doesn’t believe in them, he is sure to lose. The people don’t want a phony Democrat. If it’s a choice between a genuine Republican, and a Republican in Democratic clothing, the people will choose the genuine article, every time; that is, they will take a Republican before they will a phony Democrat, and I don’t want any phony Democratic candidates in this campaign.”

— Harry S Truman (1884-1972) US President (1945-1953)
Address, Americans for Democratic Action Convention (17 May 1952)

It’s worth noting that of the 46 members of the House Democratic Blue Dog Coalition — the ones who were constantly on the fence for many of the key debates in Congress this year, demanding compromise after compromise in order to deliver their votes — 23 lost their seats in last night’s election. That a far higher proportion than the Democrats in general.

I don’t want the Democrats to be as ideologically purist as the GOP voters have driven them to be this cycle, nor as “step out of line and we’ll cut your throat” as their leadership over the last few years. But there are consequences to being consistently “independent” of the party, and taking advantage of it to extract concessions.

Or, for those of a more Biblical bent:

I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.

— Revelations 3:15-16

Something the remaining Dems in Congress might want to consider in the coming months. Fleeing to the center and away from the party and past positions — trying to be more like a Republican — is not going to help you practically (as a political matter).  You might as well stand up for your avowed principles.

Election Potpourri

I am still trying to figure out why Kentucky vote Rand Paul (R/TP) as their new Senator. How he will represent the people of Kentucky remains a mystery to me.

On the other hand, it looks like we won’t have any (known) SS war re-enactors in Congress this year, nor professional wrestling executives.

Also, Christine O’Donnell looks to have crazied her way out of an election victory (as, it appears, Sharon Angle has done in losing her Senate bid against Harry Reid). On the other hand, Michelle Bachmann is angling for a House leadership role, God help us.

Blanche Lincoln (D) is out. As a Blue Dog, that doesn’t change a whole heck of a lot.

Alan Grayson (D) has lost his seat in Florida, badly.  He drew a lot of national support for his refreshing nasty criticism of the GOP, but a goodly amount of national fire for some nasty advertising. Regardless, Florida wasn’t going to be friendly this year, and all the blogger-love in the world doesn’t mean diddly in one’s own district.

While some GOP felons are seeking redemption, James Traficant demonstrated that Dems can’t expect the same breaks.

Louisiana has reelected their lack-of-family-values Vitter (R) back to the Senate.

A shame that Russ Feingold (D) lost his Senate bid, while John McCain (R) won his. Though, honestly, I’d rather see McCain in office than the guy he almost lost to in the primaries.

It’s interesting to note that there will be no blacks in the Senate this term.

It’s also interesting that if Dan Maes doesn’t hit 10% of the vote for Governor, the GOP will lose its “major party” status here in Colorado. Which basically means that the GOP candidates will get shuffled down in the listing amidst the Greens and American Constitution Party and other fringe groups. Thanks, Dan!

It appears that Jerry Brown will once again be “Governor Moonbeam” in California (why anyone would even want that job surpasseth all understanding), and Boxer will return to the Senate. Kind of admire Brown, really don’t like Boxer, but glad to see Fiorina and Whitman go down in flames.

Looking around at the various analyses of who turned out, who didn’t, etc., some broad conclusions:

  1. It’s the economy, stupid. Whether it was successful framing by the GOP, poor arguing from the Dems, or whatever, the fact that the economy is still doing so poorly (regardless of who’s  to blame) was a key point in zapping the Dems.
  2. Things are grim for the Dems, no doubt — the House lost, the Senate barely held onto. It’s worth noting that it’s not the blow-out that some Republicans and pundits were predicting — but it’s not a happy time.
  3. Did the Dems fail though a failure to tack far enough to the center, or a failure to tack far enough to the left?  Or a failure to communicate what they actually managed to get accomplished.  Expect to see massive infighting over  the issue, even as the GOP spins it as, well, duh, their being liberal-socialists whose evil Kenyan-Marxist agenda must be erased.

I’m not looking forward to the next two years. And so it goes.

“I am a Tea Partier …”

Nice. Nice, nice, nice.

Vote on November 2nd.

Unblogged Bits (Fri. 29-Oct-10 1130)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Barber Wants Obama Investigated for “High Crimes and Misdemeanors” – And if the GOP takes one or both houses of Congress next week, I’m sure there will be just enough Republicans to go along with Mr Barber’s suggestion.
  2. Barton: God Will Hold You Accountable For How You Vote – “For Christians, voting is not a right, it’s a duty. It’s a stewardship that we owe to God and it’s a stewardship for which we’ll answer directly to him. One day we’ll stand before him and he’ll say ‘what did you do with that vote I gave you?’ And we’ll have to answer.” Actually, I agree with him fully on that one. Voting is an act of engagement with the people around us, and we are called to the touchstones of loving God and loving our neighbors through voting as much as with any other action. Of course, I suspect my conclusions of how my religious values guides me to vote will be a bit different from Barton’s.
  3. Ohio McDonald’s Tells Employees To Vote Republican If They Want To Continue Receiving Raises And Benefits: Tanya Somanader
  4. Relatives Says Man Arrested For Threatening Democratic Senator Was ‘Under The Spell That Glenn Beck Cast’ – Is Beck legally culpable? No, and I’d defend him against any such charge. Is he ethically culpable, though? That’s another question.
  5. What Conservatives Have Taught Me This Election Season: James Frye
  6. Stranded, Stubborn Mars Rover Actually Makes a Big Discovery [MarsRover] – Go, Spirit, go! (In a metaphorical, “do great stuff” sense, of course.)
  7. Southwest Airlines $5 Bucks for WiFi onboard Flights – A price I would very seriously consider indulging in on some flights.
  8. Watch Five Minutes of ‘The Walking Dead’ and the Real Opening Title Sequence – Everything I’ve seen and heard about this indicates it’s going to be awesome.
  9. The boiling, erupting Sun – “… The mornin’ sun is shinin’ like a red rubber ball …”
  10. Drug Wars – While there’s certainly cocaine involved, note the several pictures of hundreds of metric TONS of marijuana. That’s a huge cash crop for the drug lords, reason enough for all the violence, and it’s something we could trivially deprive them of if US drug policy were rationally administered.
  11. Indiana suggests leaving disabled family members at homeless shelters – “Are there no workhouses …?” Welcome to yet another face of cheap-labor conservatism and taxed-enough-already partygoing. Is this the America the electorate is looking for? Because it’s where we’re headed.
  12. Karl Rove And Sarah Palin Going To War? – Given the number of comments Rove has had to dial back in the past months, I don’t see him standing up to much criticism if Palin and her variety of supporters decide to fire back.
  13. Dean Kamen unveils revamped bionic arm and water machine, LED light bulb powered by Cree – Many levels of coolness here.
  14. Government Withholds Records on Need for Expanded Surveillance Law – “A mandate requiring an easy-to-open ‘back door’ to electronic communications is an idea that was proposed and rejected over fifteen years ago because it would be ineffective, cause security vulnerabilities, and hurt American business — on top of the damage it would do to Americans’ privacy and free speech rights. Any attempt to require the same mandate today should start with a concrete and realistic evaluation of how often the government investigations are stymied by the lack of a ‘back door.’ Anything less than that is asking the public to blindly rubber stamp a flawed plan at a very high cost to Americans and American business.”
  15. The Message of Firesheep: “Baaaad Websites, Implement Sitewide HTTPS Now!” – Unfortunately, per EFF’s efforts, there’s not a trivial way to do this for IE or Chrome. I have implemented this on my various machine this week (esp. ones I travel with) with, so far, no harm.
  16. Climate change facts, for what that’s worth – “But do not always expect facts to convince. Someone who has arrived at their current stance due to something other than facts will not likely be persuaded to budge from it due to the facts. Some small percentage, some few, are honestly misinformed, and for them facts and information will be persuasive and liberating. They will be grateful for the link. But for most the problem is not simply one of a lack of accurate information. For them, finding their way back to the truth will require retracing the steps that led them away from it — a path that had little to do with information or facts.”

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 27-Oct-10 1130)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. The Ken Buck Rape Case | Mother Jones – This wasn’t a “she-said, he-said” case. It was a “she-accused, he-confessed” case, and Buck still didn’t prosecute. The other factors mentioned are interesting, but fail to address this core fact.
  2. Rand Paul Head-Stomper To Victim: ‘I Would Like For Her To Apologize To Me’ – The last refuge of the bully: playing the victim.
  3. Asked If Being Gay Is A Choice, Joe Miller Dodges And Says ‘It Really Is A State Issue’ – It’s a state choice! Except when the states choose wrong! Then it’s a federal choice! Except when the feds choose wrong! Then it’s a state choice! Except …
  4. Nook Deletes All Your Files, Barnes & Nobles Shrugs – I have not updated my bookshelves in a while, but, mercifully, the used books I have there have not vanished. Except the ones I chose to give away.
  5. Arkansas School Board Member Says He’ll Only Wear Purple If “Queers” “Commit Suicide” – Stay classy, Arkansas!
  6. Alaska GOP Senate Nominee Joe Miller Admitted Lying About After Being Caught In Ethics Violation – Note this is all of two years ago.
  7. The Hobbit Shall Not Pass… Out of New Zealand After All – Huzzah!
  8. Is Downward Dog The Path to Hell? – Yes, because once you start taking yoga, “loneliness, alcoholism, and promiscuity” are the well-known, inevitable results …
  9. The US Religious Right and the LGBT Crisis In Uganda – And they’ll know we are Christians by our love …
  10. Viagra for convicted rapists?: Bizarre false claim gets anti-Ed Perlmutter ad yanked (VIDEO) – Denver News – The Latest Word – I’m finding it interesting the number of stations that are (belatedly) fact-checking and yanking some of these ads.
  11. The New No. 2 – Wow — some pretty massive changes to Disney California Adventures. Kind of glad I finally got a chance to see the “before,” so I can hopefully appreciate the “after” …
  12. Calvin and Hobbes for October 27, 2010
  13. Dudes At Yale Pick Knuckles Up Off the Ground Just Long Enough to Type Some Nonsense [On Becoming a Domestic and Laboratory Goddess] – Translated: “Well, yes, they went too far with their little button-pushing shenanigans, but boys will be boys and no harm, no foul, right? Lighten up, ladies! Come on over for a brewski or two!”
  14. U.S. College Degrees by County – The concentration of higher education in urban areas is much greater than I’d expected – and rather disturbing, too. Compare the “reddest” areas with the “red states,” too.
  15. Cookie – strip for October / 26 / 2010 – This is why I don’t keep cookies around me. Well, not for long, anyway.
  16. BBC News – US mid-term election spending nears $2bn mark – The best government money (er, “corporate free speech!”) can buy.
  17. San Francisco Earthquake & Fire – Remarkable post-Fire films. Devastated landscapes, still-smoldering ruins, building demolitions, tent cities … but also, a lot of folks still carrying out life and living as before.
  18. San Diego Zoo Gets Funky – Cool.
  19. Star Trek cited by Texas Supreme Court – Not sure if I should be amused, or make a snarky comment about the uproar from some quarters if the same lines had been attributed to a European court.

Why I’m voting for Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper

I already did my ballot proposition analysis for Colorado this year.  Now I’ll (briefly) tell you how I’m voting on our major state candidates this year.

For Senate: Michael Bennet

Michael Bennet
Michael Bennet

Campaign site | Senatorial site | Wikipedia

I am not a huge Michael Bennet fan.

Bennet was appointed to his position when Obama appointed Ken Salazar to be Interior Secretary.  From the beginning, he tried to show he was “independent” of the Washington establishment and the Democrats, though he eventually came through on most votes.  He is, by all accounts, a centrist Democrat (by sentiment or design). I find myself irked (not outraged, but irked) by him as often as not, and there are any number of candidates I’d prefer, but I don’t particularly dislike him. Damning with faint praise, I suppose that is.

Bennet, though,  has one huge, massive, undeniable thing going for him as candidate for the US Senate: he’s not Ken Buck. Buck, who was the surprise candidate for the GOP  is on the list of top crazy radical conservative Tea Partistas on the national ballot this year.  Electing this loon to the US Senate would be a horrible mistake. Feel free to search around here, or online, for all of the zany stuff Buck’s been saying and doing and proposing.

That’s why I’m voting for Michael Bennet.

For Governor: John Hickenlooper

John Hickenlooper and Joe Garcia
John Hickenlooper, with running mate Joe Garcia

Campaign site | Mayoral site | Wikipedia

I’m going to take the flip direction from the Bennet endorsement above.  It’s true that Hick has the huge superior qualities of being neither ultra-conservative non-entity Dan Maes or xenophobic ego-balloon Tom Tancredo, either of which would be awful for this state.

But, all things considered, I actually like John Hickenlooper.  He’s not a traditional politician, though he’s learned to move in political circles. He was a geologist, then went on to own a brew-pub.  He’s been Denver mayor now for a couple of terms.  He’s squarely pro-business, but not in a knee-jerk anti-consumer or anti-environment or anti-anything-but-profit way. He’s done some positive things, environmentally, as well as dealing with budget issues and trying to build coalitions. He has a good set of newspaper endorsements from around the state.

More importantly, he been running one of the nicer campaigns out there, his ads focusing mostly on … well, what he’s done, what his message is about, etc.  A sampling:

Now, there’s more to a politician than ads, but the combination of positive message, a sense of humor, and style that’s not polished to the max does say something.

Hickenlooper for Governor logo
Plus, I really like this non-traditional campaign logo

Plus, as I mentioned, he’s not Tom Tancredo, a man so determined to prove that he’s indispensable to the nation with his message that “The Illegals are coming! The Illegals are coming!” that he broke (multiple times) his own pledge for term limits, ran (quite unsuccessfully) for President, and now, hating being out of the limelight, is running as the largely-self-appointed American Constitutional Party candidate for governor.

And that’s why I’m voting for John Hickenlooper.

Note: Bennet has been running behind Buck, but has pulled up close to him.  Hickenlooper originally had a commanding lead over the split Tancredo/Maes opposition, but as Maes has justly faded away, Tancredo has pulled closer. Thus one of my reasons for posting all of this, in case it makes any difference.

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 25-Oct-10 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Sharron Angle Pits Brown Against White In Anti-Immigrant Attack Ad – I’d dearly love to have Sharron Angle lose because she intentionally torqued off a portion of the electorate this way.
  2. Amazon’s New Sale-Stealing Book Scanner Is Great for Cheapskates, Bad for Bookstores, Worse for Me – I confess I’ve done this, though only at “big box” stores.
  3. Go To This Site When You Can’t Find Your Phone [Web] – Cool …
  4. Wi-Fi Direct certification begins today, device-to-device transmission starting soon – Cool. And WiFi’s a lot better for a lot of purposes than the range-constrained Bluetooth.
  5. Fake TV for fooling burglars – That’s actually pretty clever. And at $35, not wildly outrageous.
  6. Self-appointed guardians of TV decency fall on hard times – Couldn’t happen to a bunch of nicer folks.
  7. YouTube – The Mighty Hercules-Kids Cartoon Theme Song-Johnny Nash – This one’s for Mom & Dad.
  8. Brand-new Batmobiles – Wow. Wish I had a LOT more disposable income.
  9. “Bound for Glory”: America in Color from 1939-1943 – Glimpse into another world, but one so close.
  10. World’s tallest buildings c.1884 – Amazing how quickly things change. That, and the value of steel-reinforced concrete.
  11. Star Trek Re-watch: “Spock’s Brain” – Okay, I don’t care what hesitations the review writer (and commenters) have, this is, IMO, the Worst. TOS. Episode. Ever. Yeah, there are plenty of other bad, awful, wretched, improbable S.3 eps, but this one is unrelentingly awful, except where it’s unintentionally hysterical, except where it’s both.
  12. Paul Tobin Counts Down the 40 Greatest Comic Cover Artists – I don’t necessarily agree with all his choices, but it’s an interesting collection and an intriguing premise — not necessarily best artists, but best artists at making covers.

Unblogged Bits (Thu. 21-Oct-10 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. The misjudgments of a poor prosecutor – And yet, Buck remains a leader in the contest. Crikey.
  2. Joseph Farah: Mitt Romney Is Worse Than Satan – Wow. If I were Obama, I’d feel slighted.
  3. GOP House Candidate Keith Rothfus Threatens To Defund Supreme Court Decisions (Updated) – And another dozen flavors of craziness here, too.
  4. Buck Embraces Inhofe: ‘Global Warming Is The Greatest Hoax’ – There’s just eleven kinds of crazy in the quotes in this post.
  5. How to pet a kitty – The Oatmeal – You have been informed!
  6. Most Expensive Cities to Live In – Take that, Boston and San Francisco!
  7. How Many Hours Does The Human Race Spend Playing Facebook Games Every Month? [Casual] – Wow. That’s just … insane.
  8. Peter Jackson Announces ‘The Hobbit’ Cast – Well, it certainly SOUNDS like good news …
  9. The Republic of T. » Minimal Wages for All – The cheap-labor conservative mantra. The result? “Wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation’s gross domestic product since the government began recording the data in 1947, while corporate profits have climbed to their highest share since the 1960′s.”
  10. The Continuing Ethical Collapse of Our Elite Institutions: The Yale Rape Chant Edition : Mike the Mad Biologist – I recall with humor Harvard grad Thurston Howell III recoiling from someone he thought of as a cultural barbarian with the epithet, “A YALE man!” And yet, suddenly, that recoil is no longer nearly so funny.
  11. Koch Brothers Get Their Buddies On The Supreme Court In Trouble – “It’s a good thing for Scalia and Thomas that in the letter of invitation Charles Koch sent out for their event in Palm Springs next January, he explicitly asked all invitees to keep the meeting a secret from the media. Otherwise the general public would find out that Supreme Court justices secretly meet with Republican politicians, and billionaire business executives to discuss how to impose more corporate-friendly policies on the American people. That might cause the average American to seriously question the integrity of the venerable U.S Supreme Court in its current form.”
  12. Palin & Huckabee want to slash NPR’s funding for firing Juan Williams over racist anti-Muslim remark – Okay, let me say this slowly and in small words so that Ms. Palin can understand it: “The First A-Mend-Ment to the Con-sti-tu-tion protects people against bad people in gov-ern-ment from throwing you in jail because you said things they don’t like. The End.” Juan Williams being ousted from NPR for talking about how nervous Muslims make him is no more a violation of the First Amendment than Walmart firing some guy for saying on the air how nervous Evangelical Christians make him.
  13. Liquid Nitrogen Explosion – Fun. (And local!)
  14. More privacy headaches for Facebook: gay users outed to advertisers – While Facebook certainly facilitates this sort of thing, the fact is that online behavior can be aggregated in such a way as to reveal all sorts of unexpected things about one. It’s, ultimately, part of the cognitive and society shift we will have to make as the Internet insinuates itself into our lives,
  15. The Floating Cube – You literally can’t believe your eyes.
  16. Parkour on a skateboard? – Wow. Impressive.
  17. The Evolution of the Geek / Flowtown (@flowtown)

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 20-Oct-10 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Tim Lynch: Pot Shots at Prop 19 Fall Flat – The War on Marijuana has done little to reduce drug use, has cost tremendous amount of time and money in the law enforcement arena, and has crammed our jails with folks accused of possession or sale. It’s also been a huge money-maker for drug cartels. Will decriminalizing marijuana solve drug problems in the state of California? I doubt it — but it will certainly not make them worse.
  2. The problem we’re not supposed to talk about: Steve Benen
  3. What populism isn’t – “The Chamber didn’t even have to lift a finger — a deranged media personality told his audience, many of whom are middle-class and having a tough time in a struggling economy, to start throwing money at one of the nation’s wealthiest lobbying groups. And these folks did as they were told, voluntarily handing over donations to some of the country’s richest corporations. Why? So these corporations could elect candidates who will, in turn, favor policies that hurt the middle class, undermine workers and consumers, and boost these businesses’ profits.”
  4. Quote of the Day – And in thirty years, Americans will be asking themselves, “How did we stop being the most important country on the planet?”
  5. Limbaugh plays constitutional scholar – The “Left” has not been excluding religious people from government. It has been arguing, successfully, that using religion as the rule of law is unconstitutional. Ironically, the folks screaming the loudest about this (because it’s denying them the “right” to impose Christianity as the law of the land) also scream the loudest about how awful the prospect of Islamic “sharia” law becoming the law of the land is … even as they try to dismantle the constitutional provisions that would prevent that from happening.
  6. SBA: It Is Unconstitutional To Not Let Us Lie About Democratic Candidates – Don’t you dare stop us from speaking stuff that’s demonstrably wrong! Especially if you can’t demonstrate that we’re doing it maliciously!
  7. ‘This Isn’t The Lotto’: Sheriff Halting All Foreclosures Until Banks Prove Evictions Are Legal And Legitimate – “Cook County, Illinois Sheriff Tom Dart recently assembled a team to investigate the foreclosures in his area. His team found that out of 350 cases reviewed, ‘only 17 of them had the proper paperwork.’ Following the investigation, Dart announced Monday that he would be halting all evictions of homeowners — a step he took two years ago at the height of the financial crisis — and would not take part in any foreclosures unless the banks could provide the documentation to prove that the evictions were legitimate and legal.” Good for him. The sheriff should not be enforcing illegitimate and illegal requests.
  8. The Long Road to Not Making The Hobbit Continues – Yeah, that sure doesn’t sound good …
  9. Harry Potter and the Naked Cash-Grab – Not at all surprising … but I hope Warners’ earlier decision indicates they will make an effort to take the time to do it right. (For the record, I have no intention of picking up any HP3D flicks, but more power to those who do.)
  10. Why Do Americans Have Yards? « Gambler’s House – I enjoy having a yard, to at least some degree — I could probably live easily with one half the size we have, but I do enjoy growing green things and adding some sparks of color to the neighborhood.
  11. Virginia textbook claims blacks fought for Confederacy – Education – Salon.com – “Writers: Verify, verify, verify. Then verify some more. The Internet is not the ultimate source of human knowledge. 

Parents: Read through your kid’s textbooks and give them the old smell test. If something seems to stink, follow it like a bloodhound back to its source. And if it’s foul, raise hell.”
  12. Did Sarah Palin desecrate the American flag? – Sarah Palin – Salon.com – Noted only because y’gotta know that if it were a Dem who’d done this, certain factions on the Right would be having conniptions.
  13. Fuzzy Critters’ Crystallized Pee Changes Climate Record?
  14. Pictures: Dead Sea Scrolls Being Digitized for Web – It’s about damn time.
  15. George Soros’ “foreign” money – Glenn Greenwald – Salon.com – He’s been a US citizen for almost as long as I have been — wonder if that makes my donations somehow “foreign” to their perception of the body politic?
  16. What Role Have Scalia And Thomas Played In The Koch Money Machine?: Ian Millhiser
  17. MEMO: Health Insurance, Banking, Oil Industries Met With Koch, Chamber, Glenn Beck To Plot 2010 Election – There’s nothing wrong per se with people opposing governmental policies they feel hurt them, and pursuing that opposition through the ballot box. But it’s very worth-while for all of those “Hey, it’s us grass-roots Tea Party folk who are tired of Washington business as usual who are leading the charge against Obama and his crowd” crowd to consider whose deep pockets are helping fund all of this … and how … and why.
  18. YouTube – Otter Pups Swim Lesson – TEH CUTE!!!!

Hitting new highs (or lows) in Right-wing Apocalyptic Zaniness

I can understand the anti-abortion sentiment backing Colorado Amendment 62, the “Personhood” amendment (more info here). I disagree with it, and I think the nature of the amendment itself is highly flawed, but I can understand how thoughtful people, considering fetuses to be fully vested human beings, would attempt to write that into the state constitution so as to stop abortion.

What I don’t understand is this:

I could write all day about the goofiness here — the idea of Obama as the “Angel of Death” whose administration is focused solely on cheap abortion for everyone; the idea of a conspiracy of “Men in Black Robes” who “hated traditional American values especially life and liberty;” the idea of a multi-billion dollar “abortion industry” (the only industry, apparently, that the GOP doesn’t avidly support no matter what — maybe it should join the US Chamber of Commerce) — but mash it all together and … yeesh.

As a commercial to encourage support of protecting and cherishing life, it pretty much sucks. It does a mich better job as an expression of rabid fearmongering and anger-stoking.