Friday, March 21, 2008

Happy Anniversary! We Beat Out Vietnam and WWII!




Anti-War Protesters Arrested in Corker's Office
Memphis Flyer Online

By BIANCA PHILLIPS
Seven people were arrested yesterday for refusing to leave U.S. Senator Bob Corker's Memphis office inside the Peabody Place complex. The seven were part of a nonviolent "die-in" protest to mark the fifth anniversary of the Iraq War.

In August, the Mid-South Peace & Justice Center demanded that Corker hold a town hall meeting in Memphis to allow constituents to express concerns over the war. The group claims Corker's office didn't provide response to repeated letters and phone calls, but Corker's spokesperson Laura Lefler says their records show the office did respond to each of the group's requests

MSPJC executive director Jacob Flowers and volunteer Ceylon Mooney went upstairs to Corker's office. The two had an appointment to discuss the town hall meeting request with a member of Corker's staff. While they waited in the lobby, Flowers and Mooney read the names of American and Iraqi victims of the war.

"They called security and the Memphis Police. But then Corker's [Washington] D.C. office called and instructed them not to have us arrested," said Flowers.

After the meeting with Corker's aide, Flowers and Mooney refused to leave the office until they received a fax from Corker agreeing to a town hall meeting. Several protesters joined them from outside.

"We were told we could wait until 5 p.m. and that we were welcome to read the names [of the war victims], but the senator would not hold a town hall meeting in Memphis," said Flowers.

"We welcomed them and I believe we served them refreshments," said Laura Lefler, a spokesperson in Corker's Washington press office. "We even allowed them to use our phone to order pizza."

"We certainly respect their opinions, as we do all of our constituents," said Lefler. "But they have to respect our office hours and the policy of the building where our office is located."

According to Memphis Police spokesperson Monique Martin, Peabody Place security called South Main officers to arrest the remaining protesters.

Flowers (27), Mooney (33), Jessica Butterworth (32), Kathleen Kruzek (42), Peter Gathje (50), Dennis Paden (50), and George Grider (67) were arrested around 5:30 p.m. and charged with criminal trespassing. All were released on their own recognizance from 201 Poplar early this morning.

--Bianca Phillips
Date created: 03/20/2008
URL for this story: http://www.memphisflyer.com/memphis/Content?oid=40782

Friday, March 7, 2008

Obama needs a clear edge

Obama....

....Gore?

If Gore would do it, it would end this race.

Am I the only one to think of this? No: here.

And Obama was ASKED about it: here.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Help me, I'm old


And I'm only getting older.
Loan me some Texan mojo, dear God, I want it SO bad.

Two Straight Shooting Mavericks


"Will the press buy our unctuous bullshit?"
"Of course they will. They need narratives because they're too damned lazy to gather any facts."
"Lazy little liberal shits."
"Our aces in the hole."
"Hug me, you fool."

Heil Ethanol, Good Buddy!


I love corn, John.
I love the way you love corn, George.
How could two guys like us love corn so much?
I have no idea.
Let's put the past behind us and salute.
10-4, good buddy.

I knew you were coming, so I baked you a cake


I love you, you draft-dodgin'-while-I-was-imprisoned-in-Vietnam-SOB!

Can You Feel the Love--Tonight?


Cootchie, cootchie, coo.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

John McCain: Maverick



Only a maverick can suck up so earnestly.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Holiday VP Picks

Republicans

Giulani-Soprano
Romney-Haggard
McCain-Dracula
Huckabee-Fife (Barney)
Tancredo-Marilyn Manson

Democrats

Clinton-Clinton (who do you think will actually be VP, anyway?)
Obama-Erkel
Edwards-Vigoda (Beauty and the Beast)
Kucinich-Chomsky
Gravel-Stockdale ("He could still suprise ya!")
Richardson-Smits
Biden-Your High School Principal

Did I miss anyone? Oh well.

Happy Holidays.

And please, God, let us stop hearing about Iowa. I mean, it's Iowa!

Monday, December 3, 2007

Rove at Newsweek? Is Newsweek on its Last Legs?


Maybe Newsweek is in financial trouble. I find it quite incredible that Newsweek would be willing to tarnish its journalistic reputation by hiring Karl Rove as a commentator. Rove is one of the last decade's most ingenious manipulators of the press. This is not in dispute. He was a master of limiting access to journalists, leaking when it served the Administration, and disclosing sensitive information to protect the Administration's war agenda. He gave public speeches in support of Republican candidates using the war as political propaganda while he repeatedly insinuated that anyone, especially Democrats, who did not support the Administration agenda was in league with terrorism. He was a confirming source of Valerie Plame's identity to Robert Novak and an originating source to Matt Cooper.

Karl Rove is the closest the United States has ever come to having a full time propagandist on the public payroll. That Newsweek would so easily give him a public microphone speaks volumes about the mainstream media, and Newsweek in particular.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Lapdogs of the Corporate Press!

Turn off that football game and get some truth!

Friday, November 2, 2007

Nominee Goes A Boardin'


After weeks of pretending not to know what "waterboarding" is, and if it constitutes torture, the nominee for the highest law enforcement position today volunteered to be subjected to the procedure today, Senate officials said. "This is the only way I can stop the terrorists," said the nominee. "If I remain comfortable and ignorant as my minions rain blows and tortures down on my fellow man, I'm no better than a common criminal. You know, like Cheney. I could never live with that."


In preparation for the experiment, an old dunking booth from the Washington Mall 1899 fairgrounds was brought out of storage, hosed down, and filled with water drained from the Supreme Court pool.


"We're gonna strap him down, and ride 'em 'til he's pink!" said a CIA agent from Texas who preferred to remain anonymous.


Staffers in John Conyers office are eager waiting to transcribe what Mukasey reveals under the procedure.


About his nominee, Bush said, "He's a good man. We can't give in to terror. I'm confident that Judge Muskasey will not sob like a Huntsville inmate. God, I hate that."



The dunking will begin 9 a.m. Friday.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Journalism and its Discontents

Sidney Blumenthal's afterward to the newly-released volume of Walter Lippmann's Liberty and the News has been published on Salon. It is a powerful piece of writing. In it, Blumenthal includes a history of Lippmann's career -- and ties is writing directly to the crisis we now face.

"Everywhere today," Lippmann wrote in Liberty and the News, "men are conscious that somehow they must deal with questions more intricate than any that church or school had prepared them to understand. Increasingly they know that they cannot understand them if the facts are not quickly and steadily available. Increasingly they are baffled because the facts are not available; and they are wondering whether government by consent can survive in a time when the manufacture of consent is an unregulated private enterprise."

Lippmann had witnessed firsthand how the "manufacture of consent" had deranged democracy. But he did not hold those in government solely responsible. He also described how the press corps was carried away on the wave of patriotism and became self-censors, enforcers, and sheer propagandists. Their careerism, cynicism, and error made them destroyers of "liberty of opinion" and agents of intolerance, who subverted the American constitutional system of self-government. Even the great newspaper owners, he wrote, "believe that edification is more important than veracity. They believe it profoundly, violently, relentlessly. They preen themselves upon it. To patriotism, as they define it from day to day, all other considerations must yield. That is their pride. And yet what is this but one more among myriad examples of the doctrine that the end justifies the means? A more insidiously misleading rule of conduct was, I believe, never devised among men."


Be sure to check it out.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Bob Drogin's Curveball


Great interview with Diane Rehm about the shadowy figure "Curveball"
who supplied German intelligence with false information to be granted
asylum from Iraq.
As Drogin's book makes clear, the lies of this man were just the
catalyst many were looking for to fulfill the false pretext for war
in Iraq.
It's also clear from this interview that Colin Powell has a lot to
answer for, and that George "Medal of Honor" Freedom is about as low
a form of life as you could ever want keeping you safe.
Interview is here: http://www.wamu.org/programs/dr/07/10/22.php#13773

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

William Kristol on Iraq: Wrong, wrong, wrong: 2003-7



Here is a great blog post chronicling how wrong Kristol has been, over and over again.

Why is he on TV, in print, or anywhere at all, given this track record?


Here's a snippet:

Kristol has indeed been so consistently wrong that one can safely discount his current euphoria on the principle that even a stopped clock is right twice a day....But on the other hand, it turns out that anyone who wanted to understand Washington and Iraq during the last four years should have been reading Kristol. In detailing the arguments raging in Washington-arguments in which he has emerged as one of the victors-he was way ahead of me, and of just about anyone else that I can remember. The man may be an ideologue who has been repeatedly wrong, but he's well-connected and very much in tune with President Bush, and during the last four years he has triumphed over his enemies in the bureaucracy and the older generation-leaving the American people, of course, stuck with the bill.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Diane Rehm interviews Paul Krugman

New book: The Conscience of a Liberal

What does it mean to be a liberal? Why should one be proud of this word?

Universal healthcare.

A society which asks its rich (and everyone else) to contribute to the general welfare.

The principle that we are better individually when we take care of each other, rather than letting the young, old, weak, and sick fend for themselves.

It should be a pretty old idea for a nation that understands its own religious principles about peace and justice, but somehow these ideas have be argued for again and again.

Krugman does a good job of making the case.

The interview is here: http://wamu.org/programs/dr/07/10/15.php#13763

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Arianna Huffington Interviews Nancy Pelosi

You can watch her answer the question: "Are you too well-behaved to get us out of Iraq?"

The Arc of History Bends Towards Justice

Andrew Leonard has a review up on Salong about Paul Krugman's new book, The Conscience of a Liberal.

Leonard says Krugman's book takes on the notion that American politics simply swings back and forth, and doesn't respond to situations, or movements, or political action.

... the most meta-level of all political economy arguments is the one that says that transient shifts in political direction don't really make that much of a difference to fundamental long-range changes in things like inequality. To this school, the rise and fall of inequality in the United States is like plate tectonics -- you can observe it, and try to understand it, but you can't actually do much about it.

To which Krugman convincingly says: Hogwash. The gross inequality of the Gilded Age that led up to the Great Depression morphed into a stunningly middle-class economy because of concrete initiatives forced through via Roosevelt's New Deal. The growing inequality of the past 30 years is directly attributable to policies enacted by the conservatives who first broke through with Ronald Reagan and reached their apogee with George W. Bush.

Middle-class societies don't emerge automatically as an economy matures, they have to be created through political action.


The corollary is that they can also be destroyed.


Krugman concludes: "Republicans increase economic inequality, Democrats decrease it, and so, politics matter."

He ties the long running disputes between the parties of race and civil rights to specific policy disagreements today, like health insurance. (He says Republicans originally opposed national health insurance, in the 1960s, because they feared it would lead to desegregated hospitals.) Leonard sums up 100 years of GOP history: "The transformation of the party of Lincoln to the party of Willie Horton is one of the abiding tragedies of American political history."

But Krugman believes this is a good time to be a progressive. And one signal trend on which he pins his hopes is increasing diversity among Americans, and a general tolerance toward each other.

Beyond the blunt, crude fact that America is getting less white, there's a more uplifting reason to believe that the political exploitation of race may be losing its force: As a nation we've become much less racist. The most dramatic evidence of diminishing racism is the way people respond to questions about a subject that once struck terror into white hearts: miscegenation. In 1978, as the ascent of movement conservatism to power was just beginning, only 36 percent of Americans polled by Gallup approved of marriages between whites and blacks, while 54 percent disapproved. As late as 1991 only a plurality of 48 percent approved. By 2002, however, 65 percent of Americans approved of interracial marriages; by June 2007, that was up to 77 percent.


We could certainly be in better hands than the current Democratic Party to seize this moment. But, if Krugman is correct, history seems to be on our side.

Monday, October 15, 2007

A Map of the Federal Budget

If you've ever wondered what the federal discretionary budget "looks" like, here's a great map. It divides the budget into its major categories, connects them to their subdivisions, and depicts them to scale.

It's particularly helpful to give some proportion to things that take up a very small portion of the budget, but an enormous portion of the right-wing's vitriol. The anecdote that justifies their hatred of government, even though it's a sliver of a sliver of the budget.

What will our interrogators say when they're 90?

Frank Rich, in his NYT column, quotes some World War II interrogators who kept their humanity while questioning some of the most ruthless people in history. This whole argument that "9/11 changed everything," and our Constitution has become a "suicide pact," ignores and betrays the courage Americans have shown throughout our history. (h/t Steve Benen.)

Our moral trajectory over the Bush years could not be better dramatized than it was by a reunion of an elite group of two dozen World War II veterans in Washington this month. They were participants in a top-secret operation to interrogate some 4,000 Nazi prisoners of war. Until now, they have kept silent, but America's recent record prompted them to talk to The Washington Post.

"We got more information out of a German general with a game of chess or Ping-Pong than they do today, with their torture," said Henry Kolm, 90, an M.I.T. physicist whose interrogation of Rudolf Hess, Hitler's deputy, took place over a chessboard. George Frenkel, 87, recalled that he "never laid hands on anyone" in his many interrogations, adding, "I'm proud to say I never compromised my humanity."

Our humanity has been compromised by those who use Gestapo tactics in our war. The longer we stand idly by while they do so, the more we resemble those "good Germans" who professed ignorance of their own Gestapo. It's up to us to wake up our somnambulant Congress to challenge administration policy every day. Let the war's last supporters filibuster all night if they want to. There is nothing left to lose except whatever remains of our country's good name.