Friday, August 17, 2007
Confused about Polls?
Newsflash: Tim, Chris, et al,
Polls happen when someone called a Pollster actually asks questions, and records the responses. Polls are not entrails to be divined, nor are they some sort of astological charts to be "interpreted."
If you want to know why the poll "says" something, why don't you ask someone why they said it. You could even ask the pollster himself, although in fairness they do sometimes do this.
I find in infuriating that Matthews will look at a "poll" like this:
Hillary Clinton: How likeable is she?
Yes 39%
No 29%
No answer 30%
and somehow conclude that she has a likeability "problem."
#1 who gives a sh%t?? If some pollster asked me a question this vapid, I would poke him in the eye with a sharp stick.
#2 Why does likeability even matter? Is she running for prom queen? What about competance, experience? I suppose these kind of things only matter to the personal responsibility crowd.
#3 Just for comparison purposes, I ran my own poll. Here it is:
George Bush, likeable?
Yes 0%
no 100%*
no answer 0%
sample size, 1**, margin of error +- 1.
** me
You may insert any name of any candidate in place of George Bush since he is probably not running again. But do you get my point?
#4 Is Chris Matthews illiterate or just retarded to conclude that if the answer is 29% say a candidate in not likeable, that she has a likeability problem?
#5 I suppose it would be impossible to think about why the respondents answered a poll question they way they did. That would mean having to talk to a pleb. Much nicer to have a lovely chit chat with all your millionaire pampered elite media darlings. Who cares if it is meaningless?
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
The Fourth Estate: R.I.P.
So in that vein, here is a post from Tiny revolution that succintly and expertly says exactly what I have been saying, only much better than I can:
One thing I repeat is that the mainstream media does a FANTASTIC job. Day in and day out, they turn in an extraordinary performance—at what they exist to do. And that is to make as much money as possible.
Of course, in terms of helping people learn about the world, they are an eternal catastrophe. But why would we ever expect any different? The mainstream media is made up of gigantic corporations. Like all corporations, they manufacture a product, which is their audience. They sell this product to their customers, which are other huge corporations.
Informing people about the world is not just irrelevant to the purpose of making money, but in many ways actually HURTS a corporation's profitability. No business goes out of its way to piss off its owners and customers.
Now, obviously it's true you hear constantly about the media's Unending Fight For Truth. But you also hear constantly that a fat man wearing a red suit breaks into America's homes at the end of each year to distribute new X-boxes. Neither of these things is real.
I was thinking this when I read this statement by the perspicacious Digby:This [the Judith Miller hoo-ha] is at its essence about a toxic political culture. The press has abdicated its responsibility to hold the powerful accountable.
I almost always think Digby is right, on every topic. But here's the thing: the press doesn't HAVE this responsibility. Gigantic corporations, by law, have one and only one responsibility, to make as much money as they possibly can.
Sure, they pretend they carry the awesome burden of holding the powerful accountable, just like Wal-Mart pretends it's deeply concerned with the well-being of its employees. And in fact, some New York Times managers may even believe they are engaged in the Unending Fight For Etc., Etc. But that doesn't change the fact that if the need for huge profits ever conflicts with holding the powerful responsible—and it will, constantly—you really shouldn't wait up.
Later, Digby wrote this about the talented Ms. Miller:How on earth does someone this vapid become an "expert" on national security issues for the New York Times?
Again, a huge corporation like the New York Times pretends—even to itself—it wants someone smart, hard-hitting, etc. to cover national security issues. But in reality, it selects for vapidity. Judith Miller rose to the top of the New York Times not IN SPITE OF being unbearably vapid, but BECAUSE she's unbearably vapid.
Christopher Dickey of Newsweek is, I think, completely right about this:Few newspapers, magazines or networks are willing to pay for high-priced low-volume journalism. It's so much easier--so much more cost effective--to take mass-produced information off the shelf and embellish it with a few opinions, or just to receive wisdom from the folks in power. Many critics are complaining about all the money that Judy's case has cost the Times. But maybe they're missing the point. Think of all the money she saved the Times by getting headlines day after day from top-level sources instead of working on a project year after year just to shoot those sources down.
So, progressives need to let go of the hope that the mainstream media is ever going to be much different from what it is today. We can't change much about reality if we keep hoping Santa Claus will bring us presents, because there is no Santa Claus.
Posted by Jonathan Schwarz at October 19, 2005
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
Bush administration fueling change for the worst in America
July 16, 2007
Who are we? asks filmmaker Michael Moore in the movie "Sicko." It is a question I have been asking myself lately.
Moore asks the existential question relative to the kind of society Americans have. Why don't we have a national health care system on a par with other Western democracies? Why do we allow private health insurers to insert a profit motive into denying necessary care to sick people? What is it about American culture that has tolerated and even defended this abolition of responsibility to one another?
This brought me to a larger puzzle: What is American culture? When I randomly ask people I know this question, "hot dogs" comes up with rather distressing frequency.
I think it is indisputable that this nation's greatness emanated from its cultural roots in the Enlightenment. We as a people have few outward characteristics in common, but we share a set of understandings that have largely liberated human beings to live up to their potential. This includes a fealty to reason, the rule of law, individual rights, popular sovereignty, the common good and equal opportunity. With these cornerstones, American society was built. Even as we amalgamated our cultural soup with every new wave of immigrants, we held on to those core understandings.
But these ideas almost sound quaint today. The Bush administration has done more damage to our national identity than any administration before it. You can't be a nation of equal justice when the president has eyes only for the fairness of process for loyalists like Scooter Libby. You can't have the rule of law when the vice president claims laws don't apply to him. You can't have a nation of reason when the government elevates faith and politics over fact and science. And you can't have equal opportunity or a common good when the rules are rigged to solidify ever larger gains for those at the top. Bush has substituted our Enlightenment values for his own: crass materialism (go shopping to show your love of country,) class privilege, anti-intellectualism, cronyism, religious zealotry and American exceptionalism.
Without leadership to express a conceptual vision of the best of who we are, we have moved from a nation of ideas to one of things. Creature comforts and entertainment products define American culture as much as our Constitution once did. McDonald's and Xboxes are our ambassadors. We had been drifting in this direction long before Bush came to office, but his personal and political instincts accelerated it.
This change in our national character can be laid at the feet of government. When large numbers of people suddenly feel left behind by an increasingly stratified economy, they start struggling to appear not to be among the losers. Accumulating things is one way to convince ourselves we're still ensconced in the middle class. A prize-winning book by Michael Adams on the growing differences in the values of Americans and Canadians says that Americans are becoming more self-involved, focusing on personal needs and their own survival in society rather than broader social values.
That shift is inevitable when your government no longer appears to be on your side.
Moore clues us in to how Americans have been scared off of single-payer health care, one of the government benefits that gives Canadians and Europeans great peace of mind. The medical establishment called it "socialized medicine," raising the specter of communism. Even cowboy actor Ronald Reagan was enlisted to paint it as anti-American. Its cousin, a plan for universal coverage offered during the Clinton years, was killed dead by Republicans in the service of entrenched interests.
Then Moore points to other "socialized" services that Americans have come to expect as a benefit of citizenship. Things like police and fire protection, public schools and libraries, the postal service. When we are victims of crime, we expect the government to help. Why not when we are victims of a heart attack?
Even in our romanticized past, America's go-it-alone spirit and limitless opportunity was built on the free land granted homesteaders by the government.
The original G.I. Bill helped put millions of returning veterans through college, even granting them a monthly stipend above tuition costs. When we think nostalgically of the mid-20th century, we're remembering a time when government was a partner of the middle class, protecting workers, providing an economic launching pad for success and demanding, through progressive taxation, a shared prosperity.
Who we are now is not who we were. American culture is barely definable anymore. The go-go 1980s somehow convinced us greed is good and a caring society is weak. Building on this, Bush's "ownership society" is really a "you're on your own society." It's disturbing, harmful and more than a little bit sicko.
• Blumner is a syndicated columnist. Send e-mail to blumner@sptimes.com.
If you approve of this sentiment, please send Ms. Blumner some appreciation. It is not often that I see something so salient and apt appearing in print.
Published in the Athens Banner-Herald on 07/17/07
Thursday, July 12, 2007
Ms Robinson combines my love of cooking with my hatred of Right wing propaganda
"The right wing has perfected the art of the great, fluffy, confectionary fantasy. They take one or two muddled factoids, add a generous gallon or two of their own scrambled preconceptions, whip it all up into an airy froth, then flash-bake in the heat of their rage until the thing inflates like a giant souffle -- which they then serve up to their media audience piping hot in the hopes that it will be completely consumed before it collapses.
The whole "lesbian gangs with pink pistols" silliness was a perfect example of this baker's art in action. At the remove of a few days, now that the whole thing has cooled into a sticky and embarrassing mess, I'd like to wind up our coverage of this with a look at the real-world facts that supported (and, ultimately, didn't support) Billoworld Baking's bizarre but fact-free confection of a story."
If this appetizer teases your palate and leaves you hungry for more, sample the rest here.
Thursday, July 5, 2007
Finally, WaPo does Haircuts!
Read it and weep!
Splitting Hairs, Edwards's Stylist Tells His Side of Story
Man Behind Pricey 'Dos Details Long Relationship
By John Solomon
Washington Post Staff Writer
At first, the haircuts were free. But because Torrenueva often had to fly somewhere on the campaign trail to meet his client, he began charging $300 to $500 for each cut, plus the cost of airfare and hotels when he had to travel outside California.
Torrenueva said one haircut during the 2004 presidential race cost $1,250 because he traveled to Atlanta and lost two days of work. ... if $400 seemed a lot for a haircut, how about one for three times that? {That's a good question, Post!}
The stylist said he has a vivid memory of the first time he met Edwards, in 2003.
The Beverly Hills hairstylist, a Democrat, said he hit it off with then-Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina at a meeting in Los Angeles ... Since then, Torrenueva has cut Edwards's hair at least 16 times. {The start of a long beautiful gay relationship perhaps?}
"He has nice hair," the stylist said of Edwards in an interview. "I try to make the man handsome, strong, more mature and these are the things, as an expert, that's what we do."
{It does take an expert to make a democrat seem handsome or strong, doesn't it?}
"I'm disappointed and I do feel bad. If I know someone, I'm not going to say I don't know them," he said. "When he called me 'that guy,' that hit my ears. It hurt." He paused and then added, "I still like him. . . . I don't want to hurt him." {"Oh Jon, how could you do this to me?" wept Torrenueva.}
It is some kind of commentary on the state of American politics that as Edwards has campaigned for president, vice president and now president again, his hair seems to have attracted as much attention as, say, his position on health care. {That's true. I wonder just what kind of commentary it is? Perhaps, a sad commentary.}
But wait, there is more...
Torrenueva agreed to meet Edwards at the Century Plaza hotel in Los Angeles along with several fashion experts.
"There was a woman, an award-winning clothes designer -- I think she works in film and onstage, too. She was there with her swatches with materials for colors of suits, ties and what we were doing there was discussing his look. I was there for hair. {Could that have been Naomi Klein?}
"What I did was, there was too much hair on top, always falling down, and it made him look too youthful. I took the top down and balanced everything out. He couldn't see it. But then we went into the bathroom. He looked in the mirror and said, 'I love this,' and that was it."
{There is then a chronicle of all the many heartbreaking trysts to "cut hair."}
And despite the best efforts of Edwards, his wife and their campaign aides, there's been an obvious political impact. With each punch line on late night TV his image as a self-styled populist making poverty his signature issue was further eroded.
{class traitor, anyone?}
Thank goodness, the Washington Post has the journalistic credibility to finally tackle this important issue.
Stop the presses! The Post cites Aristotle and Edmund Burke!
I had to rush to tell you of the strangest thing that happened to me this morning as I was reading the Post. I was confronted by the following offensive paragraph:
"From Aristotle to Edmund Burke, philosophers have written of the healthy tension that normally exists between the understanding and strategies of leaders and the sentiments and opinions of their people."
Aristotle? Edmund Burke? Before you know it we will be up to our ears in those weirdos Abe Lincoln and Thomas Paine! But wait, where had I heard this before?
It sounded to me like that fat, pompous windbag Al Gore was reaching into his esoteric bag of erudite tricks once again. I braced myself to begin the flagellation when I was suddenly struck by a odd happenstance.
It wasn't Gore speaking, much to my shock and dismay, it was the Post's own David Broder! Yes, that's right, Dean Broder spoke the horrid erudite words. Surely, this must be some mistake? Does the Dean think he is now The Smartest Smarty Pants in the Room? Does he think he is as smart as Gore? The Guy Who Invented the Internets?
You may want to walk across the hall and tell David to stop sounding like a pompous windbag! Hurry, before it is too late! Once those strange strange people like Aristotle and Edmund Burke are invoked it is only a matter of time before Jurgen Halbermas descends to crush us all.
Eruditely yours,
V. Publius
Friday, June 29, 2007
Milbank goes fourth!
Kudos!
While I had thought it impossible to exceed the vapidity of your Washington Sketch entitled "Is it wise to be so smart?" from the May 30 edition of the Washington Post, your recent Sketch from June 28th, awkwardly entitled "Bill Had His Al, and Hillary Might Have Her Bill" has heroically triumphed!
Once again our intrepid reporter finds himself assailed by speeches in which "words such as "fissionable" and "Abrahamic dialogue" were invoked." How vexing! Yet all was not lost. At least the "speech was in a gilded ballroom of the Willard hotel, where waiters served roasted chicken and orzo salad at tables decorated with blue hydrangeas coordinated with the candidate's blue pantsuit." Thank goodness, at least there was something coordinated and appetizing about this miserable and tedious excursion.
Yet all was not well in Versailles! Some poor souls actually had to endure the indignity of "plastic boxes containing tuna sandwiches and bags of potato chips." "Balanced on their laps," no less. Quel damage!
And what a speech it was! Detestably it "occupied nine single-spaced pages and had the warning "3,325 words" at the top." The odious speech "lulled the crowd of 200 into utter silence. Eyelids drooped. Listeners shifted in their seats." How vexing. How utterly tedious! I am sure it was very tiresome indeed for our intrepid reporter. Why, don't they know you could have been out playing tennis instead. How discourteous! How unsolicitous!
I do wish to thank you for enduring this in our stead and reporting only the kernel of the tiresome ordeal and sparing our delicate sensibilities from the inexhaustible details. What could one possibly need to know about a speech which "laid out this great policy, a lot of intricate detail, to a bunch of policy wonks?" Why simply the highlights, darling, such as these "bon mots:" "I revert back to the Nunn-Lugar initiatives, which have been underfunded," and "the IAEA naturally has the lead on nuclear issues," and "there are at least six major reasons why Iran is strategically significant."" In fact, "He could be heard to utter phrases such as" these. No need to bother us with what those six tiresome reasons could possibly be. At least we were served up a few delectable "bon mots," the most appealing of which was no doubt the long denied "in conclusion."
My esteemed Mr. Milbank, once again, the Nation owes you a debt of gratitude for sparing us the noxious details of what are clearly boring policy speeches that last the entirety of "a detailed, hour long discussion." How can our poor brains be expected to retain focus for an entire hour? It is simply too ghastly. It defies time itself. "Tonight? This afternoon." The mind boggles.
Please do yourself a favor and get out of this business before it damages your health.
Admiringly yours,
V. Publius
Dana Milbank is a simpleton
I am still trying to wrap my brain around your recent offering "Is it
wise to be so smart?" from the May 30 edition of the paper.
Apart for your kooky imaginings of Iowa hog farmers, references to the
great thinkers of our age, like "Schwartz from Germantown" and
thinking Abe Lincoln is somehow "esoteric", there really wasn't much
of the actual Gore book presented. In fact, I think you were able to
summarize (incorrectly) the whole thesis of the book in about one
sentence. Here it is: "The Bush administration has manipulated the
facts on the Iraq war and a range of other policies, the public has
been easily manipulated, and Americans watch too much television."
Brilliant!
Would you like to see how a real journalist might do it? Someone who
is literate perhaps?
Someone who knows the difference between Adam Smith and Thomas
Jefferson? Someone with a nodding acquiantance with learning or
history or facts? Well, here for the record is Jonathan Alter over at
Newsweek:
"Gore starts from a trenchant premise that our means of processing
information and finding rational solutions are badly corrupted by
television, a theme he has been exploring since college. Without any
misplaced nostalgia for a pre-TV age, he argues that the "marketplace
of ideas" that grew out of the rise of the printed word and the
Enlightenment has been largely supplanted by a medium best suited to
stoking fear, which is, he notes, "the most powerful enemy of reason."
The human mind, Gore writes, is now nearly hard-wired to respond to
emotional but fundamentally trivial human-interest stories on TV."
(Or apparently also in the Post.)
You can read the rest here, and you should.
Isn't it amazing the way he organizes words so that they form coherent
thoughts? And that the thoughts he writes actually have something to
do with the book he is discussing?
You may need to consult a dictionary for some of the difficult or
"erudite" words, like "trenchant", "premise" and "supplanted". You
should not feel ashamed to do so. Writers should know what words
mean. Also, "medium" here refers to a means of conveying information,
not something of middle size.
But you will eventually get the hang of it. Keep trying.
Trenchantly yours,
V. Publius
P.S. I cannot possibly improve on Jonathan Alter's review of The Assault on Reason, however, I would like to quote just one brief passage that occurs on page 248:
"I believe that the viability of democracy depends upon the openness, reliability, appropriateness, responsiveness, and two-way nature of the communications environment. After all, democracy depends upon the regular sending and receiving of signals -- not only between the people and those who aspire to be their elected representatives but also among the people themselves. It is the connection of each individual to the national conversation that is the key. I believe that the citizens of any democracy learn, over time, to adopt a basic posture toward the possibilities of self-government. ... My generation learned in our youth to expect that democracy would work. ... Many young Americans now seem to feel that the jury is out on whether American democracy actually works or not."
Crass, self-centered, pedantic, smug, erudite, and esoteric
or
cogent, clear, straight-forward, prescient, compelling and principled?
I ask you.
Bravo Mika!
Monday, June 4, 2007
Prime Cuts
"We know from documents obtained in discovery proceedings against [the] Cheney Energy Task Force, by the odd combination of the conservative group Judicial Watch and the Sierra Club, that one of the documents that was receiving scrutiny by the task force during ... [the run up to the start of the war] was a highly detailed map of Iraq -- showing none of the cities, none of the places where people lived, but showing in great detail the location of every single oil deposit known to exist in the country, with dotted lines demarcating blocks for promising exploration -- a map that, in the words* of a Canadian journalist, resembled a butcher's drawing of a steer with the prime cuts delineated by dotted lines."
* "Cheney Energy Task Force Documents Feature Map of Iraqi Oilfields" July 17, 2003. www.judicialwatch.org/IraqOilMap.pdf
Which put me in mind of:
"On the wall a chart shows an outline of a steer, like a map covered with frontier lines that mark off the areas of consuming interest, involving the entire anatomy of the animal except only horns and hoofs. The map of the human habitat is this, no less than the planisphere of the planet; both are protocols that should sanction the rights man has attributed to himself, of possession, division, and consumption without residue of the terrestrial continents and of the loins of the animal body."
Italo Calvino "Marble and Blood." Mr. Palomar. Pg. 77.
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
John McCain proves he is irrelevent, possibly racist, nazi
From noted "assasination" website, Media Matters:
Obama, responding in part to McCain's criticism of his recent Iraq war vote, issued a May 25 press release arguing that "the course we are on in Iraq" is not "working." Obama said "a reflection of that [is] the fact that Senator McCain required a flack jacket" and other military protection when walking through a Baghdad market during a trip to Iraq in April. In a response the same day, McCain took issue with Obama's spelling: "By the way, Senator Obama, it's a 'flak' jacket, not a 'flack' jacket."
Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary defines "flak" as:
Main Entry: flak
Variant(s): also flack \flak\
1: antiaircraft guns
2: the bursting shells fired from flak
3: also flack : criticism, opposition
Thereby entirely demolishing Senator Fudd's argument in the time it takes to look up one word. But more telling, to me anyway, is the etymology of the word.
Etymology: German, from Flugabwehrkanonen, from Flieger (flyer) + Abwehr (defense) + Kanonen (cannons)
Date: 1938
So, John McCain clearly prefers the Nazi spelling, even though the word has been incorporated into the English language. Hmmm, troubling.
Not only does Senator Fudd correct the spelling of his esteemed African-American collegue, he does it incorrectly. Troubling, indeed.
UPDATE: The New York Daily News is reporting:
An unnamed McCain aide piled on, telling the Politico Web site that "Obama wouldn't know the difference between an RPG and a bong."
I thought that had to be a joke when I first heard it.
So Senator "Grampa" McFudd thinks an effective rebuttal to criticism on the Iraq War is to critique the spelling??? Whiskey Tango Foxtrot!!?
Gut Check Time!
It's MSNBC's new reader talk-back forum.
Not surprisingly it is full of all the usual
excrement.
Ok, how about this then?
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Small Change
I was struggling yesterday to identify what it is about the upcoming "change" election that has me filled with trepidation. It was sparked by the tidbit I caught on the radio about the Iraq Funding Bill. The moderator (ABC News Radio) opened by saying -- "Democrats reach compromise on Iraq war funding bill, no timelines for US troop withdrawals, benchmarks for the Iraqi government, Democratic leadership says this is not a defeat, then a soundbite of Harry Reid saying "we don't have the votes to overturn a veto so its a cinch we won't get what we want, but this is pretty good."
My first thought was, if I was the Democratic strategist, I would have played this differently. Something like this:
"I regretfully inform the American people that we failed you today in the US Congress. We failed to obtain from the Republicans any compromise on ending this pointless and costly war. We failed to place any restrictions on this President's reckless and wanton deployment of our troops. We failed to obtain timetables for their return home. We failed to prevent their tours of duty from being extended. Because this President and the Republican party refuse to concede to reality and instead cling stubbornly to a hopeless strategy, we have failed to carry out the clear will of the American people, to do what they sent us here to do in November.
Now 78% of the American people believe we are on the wrong track in this country and a majority agree that a military solution t this war is no longer possible. To date the surge is not turning the tide, but rather putting even more troops into harms way. Because this President's callous disregard for the will of the electorate and his repeated threat to abuse his veto power and overturn any bill which includes any measure of accountability for his administration and its abysmal war strategy, we are left with no choice. We could prolong this stalemate, but we lack the votes necessary to overturn a veto, because the Republicans in Congress are more concerned with loyalty to their party and their President, then they are with concern for our soldiers or respct for the will of the American people.
We, the Democratic majority in the House and Senate, out of concern for the troops that have been and now will continue to be deployed in Iraq for the foreseeable future, have agreed to put their interests first and extend funding to ensure that they will have the resources necessary. However we strongly object to this President's failed plan, his continued reckless unaccountability and the abuse of his veto power in the face of overwhelming support by the American people to put limits on the duration of our troops occupation of Iraq."
I cannot figure out what is accomplished by spinning an obvious loss as something of a compromise. It just makes the Democrats look weak. I also can't help but notice that whenever the war is called into question, Republicans keep saying, "if you want to end it so bad cut off the funding. Why do you keep funding it?" Acquiescence is tacit approval and that is the way all of the '08 candidates are going to be taken apart. "You were for it before you were against it."
Then this morning I happened to come across this at TomDispatch:
As Andrew Bacevich, author of The New American Militarism, puts it: "None of the Democrats vying to replace President Bush is doing so with the promise of reviving the system of check and balances.... The aim of the party out of power is not to cut the presidency down to size but to seize it, not to reduce the prerogatives of the executive branch but to regain them."
Or as Dave Lindorff puts it:
"Why is the party leadership blocking impeachment? Machivellian self-interest. They don’t care about their oaths of office to uphold and defend the Constitution. All they care about is winning re-election in 2008, and they have come to the conclusion that the Republicans are in such bad shape that by doing nothing or next to nothing but talking a good game from now to November ‘08, they can win, whereas if they take any decisive action, whether halting funding for the war or initiating impeachment hearings, they might hurt themselves."
I think that is a good explanation for why the party of change sounds an awful lot like the party of same ole, same ole. Click here for more.
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Republicans weak on planning.
REPUBLICANS WEAK ON PLANNING
To quote former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, "You go to war with the army you have, not the army you [want]." This is a true statement, but I think Rumsfeld and the rest of the war hawks missed its implications. You only go to war if the army you have can achieve preset victory conditions.
If clear victory conditions had been set when we went to war in 2003, I have no doubt that our troops would have achieved them. But the point of this war has been as deceptive and unclear as its justification. Conservative apologists try to rationalize around every fact, but they can't obscure the poor planning behind this war any longer.
Planning is what wins wars, not rhetoric. And I hear a lot of rhetoric on the right about "victory" and "winning," but, by their actions, conservatives and their Republican representatives have shown the American people that they never had the competence to take this nation to war. That is why the preferred Republican course of action now is to do nothing. What is more ineffectual and weak than refusing to change to meet the circumstances?
Our sons and daughters are being sacrificed for no good reason, and the message from President Bush and his supporters is clear: If you don't like it, shut up and sit by while we let even more soldiers die. Well, I think that's unreasonable and, frankly, disgraceful.
Saturday, May 19, 2007
Getting to Know MORA
(Upcoming Legislation to Restore the Fairness Doctrine)
Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-NY22)
Rep. Hinchey's Website
Bill Summary
I. Guarantees Fairness in Broadcasting
Our airwaves are a precious and limited commodity that belong to the general public. As such, they are regulated by the government. From 1949 to 1987, a keystone of this regulation was the Fairness Doctrine, an assurance that the American audience would be guaranteed sufficiently robust debate on controversial and pressing issues. Despite numerous instances of support from the U.S. Supreme Court, President Reagan's FCC eliminated the Fairness Doctrine in 1987, and a subsequent bill passed by Congress to place the doctrine into federal law was then vetoed by Reagan.
MORA would amend the 1934 Communications Act to restore the Fairness Doctrine and explicitly require broadcast licensees to provide a reasonable opportunity for the discussion of conflicting views on issues of public importance.
II. Restores Broadcast Ownership Limitations
Nearly 60 years ago, the Supreme Court declared that "the widest possible dissemination of information from diverse and antagonistic sources is essential to the welfare of the public, that a free press is essential to the condition of a free society." And yet, today, a mere five companies own the broadcast networks, 90 percent of the top 50 cable networks, produce three-quarters of all prime time programming, and control 70 percent of the prime time television market share. One-third of America's independently-owned television stations have vanished since 1975.
There has also been a severe decline in the number of minority-owned broadcast stations; minorities own a mere four percent of stations today.
* MORA would restore a standard to prevent any one company from owning broadcast stations that reach more than 35 percent of U.S. television households.
* The legislation would re-establish a national radio ownership cap to keep a single company from owning more than five percent of our nation's total number of AM and FM stations.
* The bill would reduce local radio ownership caps to limit a single company from owning more than a certain number of stations within a certain broadcast market, with the limit varying depending upon the size of each market.
* Furthermore, the legislation would restore the Broadcast-Cable and Broadcast-Satellite Cross-Ownership Rules to keep a company from aving conflicting ownerships in a cable company and/or a satellite carrier and a broadcast station offering service in the same market.
* Finally, MORA would prevent media owners from grandfathering their current arrangement into the new system, requiring parties to divest in order to comply with these new limitations within one year.
III. Invalidates Media Ownership Deregulation
MORA would invalidate the considerably weakened media ownership rules that were adopted by the Federal Communications Commission in 2003; rules that are now under new scrutiny through the FCC's Future Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. The legislation further prevents the FCC from including media ownership rules in future undertakings of the commission's Biennial Review Process.
IV. Establishes a New Media Ownership Review Process
MORA creates a new review process, to be carried by the FCC every three years, on how the commission's regulations on media ownership promote and protect localism, competition, diversity of voices, diversity of ownership, children's programming, small and local broadcasters, and technological advancement. The bill requires the FCC to report to Congress on its findings.
V. Requires Reports for Public Interest
MORA requires broadcast licensees to publish a report every two years on how the station is serving the public interest. The legislation also requires licensees to hold at least two community public hearings per year to determine local needs and interests.
Source: Rep. Maurice Hinchey's (D-NY 22) House Website
Bill Text
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Some "Fair Tax" Insight
Huckabee: "If we had a fair tax, it would eliminate not just the alternative minimum tax, personal income tax, corporate tax, it would eliminate all the various taxes that are hidden in our system, and Americans don't realize what they're paying."
Huckabee isn't the only GOP presidential candidate endorsing the "fair tax" proposal. Reps. Tom Tancredo and Duncan Hunter are among the 60 House and Senate cosponsors listed by "Americans For Fair Taxation," which backs the proposal.
Whether it is "fair" or not is of course a matter of opinion. The "fair tax" does propose a "prebate," which would soften its impact on low-income persons, in the form of a monthly check equivalent to the amount of tax paid up to the poverty level, which varies according to family size. But any sales tax also would lower taxes for those upper-income persons who save and invest large portions of income that would be taxed under current law — but not under the "fair tax."
In fact, President Bush's bipartisan Advisory Panel on Tax Reform rejected the idea, saying it would substantially increase taxes for 80 percent of U.S. taxpayers while benefiting those at the top. The panel calculated that a sales tax would have to be set at 34 percent of retail sales prices to bring in the same revenue as the taxes it would replace, meaning that an automobile with a retail price of $10,000 would cost $13,400 including the new sales tax. Furthermore, the panel said, a monthly cash rebate to every American would amount to the largest entitlement program in history, costing approximately $600 billion to $780 billion per year and making most American families dependent on monthly checks from the federal government for a substantial portion of their incomes.
From Factcheck.org
Monday, May 14, 2007
Lou Dobbs sinks even lower
I for one would like to applaud your foray into this brave (and mostly) unexplored new world of journalism ... just making shit up!
The Southern Poverty Law center reports that you are spreading stories that immigrants are bringing leprosy to America, and concocting numbers to support your position. I even heard you say to Leslie Stahl "Well, I can tell you this. If we report it, it's a fact." and "Because I'm the managing editor, and that's the way we do business, We don't make up numbers, Lesley. Do we?"
Unfortunately, it seems like you pinched your numbers from a far-right nutcase named Madeleine Cosman.In addition to writing about the prevalence of leprosy, Cosman, who died in March 2006, told an anti-immigrant conference in 2005 that "most" Latino immigrant men "molest girls under 12, although some specialize in boys, and some in nuns," a variation on a speech she has given elsewhere.Madeleine Cosman's false claim that there were 7,000 cases of leprosy diagnosed in the United States from 2001 to 2004 was included in her article, "Illegal Aliens and American Medicine." More than once, "Lou Dobbs Tonight" reporter Romans repeated Cosman's statistic, saying, "Suddenly, in the past three years, America has more than 7,000 cases of leprosy."
Cosman's piece was published in the Spring 2005 issue of the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, published by the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, which represents private practice doctors. The journal is known as a right-wing periodical whose science has been the subject of harsh criticism.
Though the article notes her Ph.D., it does not say that the degree is in English and comparative literature. Cosman had no medical training other than as a medical lawyer.
In the article, Cosman provides no source for her claim of 7,000 cases of leprosy, also known as Hansen's Disease, in three years — presumably 2001 to 2004, given the article's publication date.
The claim has no basis in fact.
But please don't let that stop you from continuing to say it and defend your actions. You should probably start conferring with Dan Rather over how well his career has progrsssed using fictious sources.Keep up the demagogery, Lou.
Sincerely,
V. Publius
Please let Lou know what you think of this at lou.dobbs@turner.com
Thanks to Orcinus and Media Matters for providing some timely quotes, research and general factcheckery.
Thursday, May 3, 2007
Alan Colmes On the Air
He describes himself as "progressive," however, it is not just a one man blab fest, like Rimbaugh or Billo...
From www.alan.com (how's that for an easy-to-remember url?):
"Every viewpoint is welcome. In our “Friday-Night-Free-For-All” you, the listeners, get to choose the topics. Remember, Alan ends every night with his trademark one sentence and one sentence only, “Radio Graffiti!” You've gotta be quick, though.
There are several phone lines at 1-877-367-2526, which are normally occupied by callers from across America all night long. The Alan Colmes Show tries to get as many of you on air as possible. Sometimes it’s a long wait, but everyone says it’s worth it because you really are given the opportunity to present your opinion."
Actually all of the callers I have heard so far I would classify as "right wing," and Colmes does not just shut them off, he duels with them until they are (even more) tired and befuddled than they were when the called. When was the last time you saw Rimbaugh do that? The only calls he takes are from the ditto-heads.
I Hate Sean Hannity
Here is a sample:
"Here is the secret formula for an hour of a Hannity radio broadcast:
1. Bring up a news point (1 minute)
2. Complain about how the liberal-biased media has taken it out of proportion (14 minutes)
3. Whine about how liberals are ruining the country, even if it has nothing to do with the news story (45 min)
Try it! I've put a clock to him over and over again. He is trying like crazy to become famous for being more outrageous than Ann Coulter. Forget it Sean, she has something you'll never have. Balls."
I made the mistake of listening to Sean "interview" Bernard McGurk (sp?) from the Imus program, the other day. It was an insensible diatribe against "political correctness" and an exercise in misdirection and also sour grapes. McGurk seemed to feel "we treated everyone the same," Irish, Catholic, Jew, black, women, etc. and he proceeded to prove it by reading as many offensive racist and hateful "jokes" as he could in 15 minutes. He also said it was "a locker-room mentality." I am not sure why he felt that this was somehow exonerating him.
When I say that he said these two things, I mean it! He must have said them each two dozen times, sometimes strung together and peppered with disgusting jokes like this: "
The actual Hannity website is here. I noticed that they are on the ABC Radio network. When I visited it, the banner was showing an ad for Pepto-Bismol, ironically.
He also mentioned that there are two call in lines the regular line (3-6PM EST)
800.941.7326 and the "Hate Hannity" line, "if you are a liberal." I can't find the Hate Hannity Hotline # on the website. Too bad. I will keep looking.