Featured Posts
  • Romney Calls Santorum the ‘D’ Word

    Romney Calls Santorum the 'D' Word

    Mitt Romney believes that his best line of attack is making the claim that he has not spent a moment as a D.C. politician while his two main opponents, Newt ...

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  • Holy Rick Santorum, Batman!

    Holy Rick Santorum, Batman!

    No two ways about it, Rick Santorum had a good night. Not only did he sweep Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri but he also got off the best line of the ...

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  • “We the Rich…”

    We the Rich...

    Few would argue the fact that Citizens United has been a major player in the Republican primary...and many if not most would concede that none of it has been healthy ...

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  • A Romney Victory Is Ensured With Trump’s Endorsement ()

    A Romney Victory Is Ensured With Trump's Endorsement ()

    As if you needed another reason to not vote Romney. Celebrity business magnate Donald Trump endorsed Mitt Romney for president Thursday, telling reporters he will not mount an independent campaign if ...

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  • Why I Love Newt Gingrich

    Why I Love Newt Gingrich

    In a perfect world, the Republican contest to find a nominee to face Barack Obama would go on forever...or at least until August. You cannot attach a number to the ...

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  • Republican Cannibalism

    Republican Cannibalism

    I suspect there are a ton of conservatives secretly agreeing with Begala and while it's too early in the game for Dems to get cocky, it's difficult to not smile ...

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  • Romney Hood

    Romney Hood

    One of our readers sent me an email with an idea for an illustration - Mitt Romney as Romney Hood. I thought it was brilliant and came up with the ...

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  • Why Do People Take an Instant Dislike To Newt Gingrich?

    Why Do People Take an Instant Dislike To Newt Gingrich?

    Quotes don't get much better than this one by Bob Dole. "Why do people take such an instant dislike to me?" asked a perplexed Gingrich, to whom Dole bluntly ...

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  • Gingrich Takes A Thrashing

    Gingrich Takes A Thrashing

    After the beating Gingrich took last night, it's hard to imagine under what scenario he can make a comeback.  Florida is going to Romney and for Gingrich to regain the ...

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  • SOTU

    SOTU

    There's a lot out there on the President's SOTU, so I'll keep my thoughts short and sweet. The speech did what it had to do which was target liberals and independents ...

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  • Just Another GOP Debate

    Just Another GOP Debate

    The highlights from last night's debate. - Newt Gingrich can't wait to become president so he can revisit the early 60s and overthrow Castro in Cuba. War, baby, war. - Santorum, who ...

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  • No More Mister Nice Guy for Mitt Romney

    No More Mister Nice Guy for Mitt Romney

    It appears that the South Carolina verdict is forcing Romney to start taking Gingrich seriously. “We’re not choosing a talk show host, we’re choosing a leader,” Romney said, saying that their ...

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  • Mike Huckabee Solidifies His Birther Creds

    Mike Huckabee Solidifies His Birther Creds

    Mike Huckabee offers advice to Mitt Romney concerning his unreleased tax returns. Let him [Romney] make this challenge: "I'll release my tax returns when Barack Obama releases his college transcripts and ...

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  • Late Night Political Humor

    Late Night Political Humor

    Via Political Humor... "Mitt Romney is coming under fire because even though he is a multimillionaire, he only paid 15 percent in taxes. That's not a tax, that's barely a tip." ...

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  • The Last Word On Jon Huntsman

    The Last Word On Jon Huntsman

    Good line. My guess is that after Romney fails to beat Obama in the general, Huntsman will be back in 2016.  The most electable guy in the field and he could ...

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  • Does Romney Urinate Straight Down His Leg?

    Does Romney Urinate Straight Down His Leg?

    I found this pretty funny...and accurate. It comes from a reader over at Balloon Juice. So, let’s review. The contenders for the GOP nomination are A vulture capitalist who believes that any ...

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  • The Constitution – Libertarian’s False Idol

    The Constitution - Libertarian's False Idol

    Lively little debate going on at one of last week's posts with Libertarianism put under the microscope. ocLiberal: I know I am in sketchy territory here, (start the indignant shouting now) but ...

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  • Gingrich’s Delusional Politics

    Gingrich's Delusional Politics

    In the contest to determine the winner of the Far-Right Politics gold medal, rack up a few more points for Newt Gingrich. “I think an intelligent conservative wants the right federal ...

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  • Late Night Political Humor

    Late Night Political Humor

    Via Political Humor... "Congratulations to Mitt Romney. He won the New Hampshire primary last night. See, this is proof that even the multimillionaire son of a multimillionaire can beat the odds ...

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  • What Do North Korea and Indiana Have In Common?

    What Do North Korea and Indiana Have In Common?

    Story 1: North Korea punishing those who 'didn't display enough sadness over Kim Jong Il's death' North Korean authorities are reportedly punishing citizens who did not display enough sadness over the death ...

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Why Does The Republican Party Hate America’s Children?

What is the matter with these people? Are Republicans out to make EVIL their personal brand?

House Republicans are pushing back against a series of public health measures, including school lunch standards and tobacco regulation, teeing up a confrontation with Senate Democrats and the White House over the reach of government in daily life.

The Republicans have used an agriculture appropriations bill to send several messages: They don’t want the government to require school meals that are more nutritional but also more expensive, they don’t want the government to prod food companies to restrain marketing to children, and they don’t want the Food and Drug Administration to regulate any substance based on anything but “hard science.”

[...]

On Tuesday, the GOP majority on the House Appropriations Committee approved a 2012 spending plan that directs the Agriculture Department to ditch the first new nutritional standards in 15 years proposed for school breakfasts and lunches. The lawmakers say meals containing more fruits and vegetables, whole grains and low-fat dairy will cost an additional $7 billion over five years — money they say the country can ill afford in difficult economic times.

Really?  And yet these scumbags have no problem keeping a war going on in Iraq which is costing hundreds of million per day. The two wars have cost over $1.2 trillion to date. Say what you will about the necessity for the Afghanistan war, but the war in Iraq was undeniably a war of choice – one which has cost over $780 billion.  What the U.S. spends in Iraq in less than 2 weeks would cover the “$7 billion over five years” to ensure nutritional breakfasts for American children. Yet Republicans say no in the name of fiscal responsibility. These guys are giving slime a bad name.

Here’s the bottom line: if a measure proposed by Dems does not in some way line the pockets of Republican donors, then GOP members are opposed to it no matter how beneficial it might be for Americans. Can it be any clearer?  They are more than willing to kill Medicare, hold back funds for tornado victims and the unemployed, cut school funding, refuse to increase taxes for the top 2% of wage earners which would reduce the national debt but they are adamant about keeping subsidies for big oil while refusing to spend $7 billion over 5 years for a measure which benefits America’s schoolchildren and helps ensure a healthier nation.

If you’re a supporter of the Republican Party than there is something seriously wrong with you. How can you defend these people? Supporting a party which clearly does not give a damn for average Americans makes you an idiot and/or a heartless bastard. There is no other way to put it.

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Quote of the Day – Bill Maher

Clear, concise…and true.

“Now that it’s become clear that the Republicans, the fiscally conservative, strong on defense party, are neither fiscally conservative nor strong on defense, they have to tell us what exactly it is they’re good at. Because it’s not defense. 9/11 happened on your watch. And you retaliated by invading the wrong country. And you lost a 10-year game of hide-and-seek with Osama bin Laden. And you’re responsible for running up most of the debt, which, more than anything, makes us weak. You’re supposed to be the party with the killer instinct. But it was a Democrat who put a bomb in Gaddafi’s bedroom and a bullet in bin Laden’s eye like Moe Greene. Raising the question: How many Muslims does a black guy have to kill in one weekend before crackers climb down off his ass?” – Bill Maher

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Republicans Conspire To Cut American Wages

Wherever Republicans have had the votes, they have used them to attack unions, attack retirement, attack health benefits and attack salaries. What do these assaults on personal prosperity all have in common? They increase the number of workers in the labor force. Why would that be good public policy? It’s not.

Labor is a demand commodity just like oil or water or soy beans. When the labor pool includes everyone who should be retired, it means more workers are competing for each job. Too many workers (more than a few percentage points more than total jobs) and employees lose bargaining power. When supply exceeds demand, workers are compelled to work longer and harder for less money. After the last few years, that problem probably seems familiar.

“It’s just Capitalism” Republicans will tell you. But government that is organized to favor corporations and the rich is an economic theory called Fascism. I’m not using the word just to get your attention. President Franklin D. Roosevelt framed it in 1942, at a time when Fascism was fresh in the mind of every American:

“…democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is fascism—ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power.”

Governor Walker’s vision for Wisconsin is a perfect example. He argues evidence that unions lead to better pay is de facto evidence of harm. Harm to whom? Walker demonizes the very notion of good pay whenever he can. He likes to repeat this story about his brother, whom he describes as a “banquet manager”:

“In every way, they are a typical middle-class family here in Wisconsin. David mentioned to me that he pays nearly $800 a month for his health insurance and the little he can set aside for his 401k. He—like so many other workers across Wisconsin—would love a deal like the benefits we are pushing in this budget repair bill.”

To him, this story is not about why his brother’s job stinks. It is an argument for lowering the pay of government workers. The median salary for restaurant managers is $10.28 an hour. So by Walker’s logic, teachers should make $21,382. On the face of it, Walker’s brother doesn’t appear to have amounted to much. But maybe he is struggling because he doesn’t have the benefit of collective bargaining. Just sayin’.

By the way, Wisconsin teacher’s pay averages $51,121. They make what a loan officer makes, or an insurance salesman. They just don’t make a low wage, which seems to irk Walker.

Paul Ryan’s cynical Plan to Eliminate All Services to Citizens, is another example. He wants to end Medicare. He’d replace it with vouchers, but since everyone is wise to the voucher thing, he calls it a “payment support plan.” Ryan’s plan pays some. The rest, old guy, is your problem. Does anyone actually believe that an 80 year old man who spent his career as a banquet manager going to be able to afford the additional cost of commercial health care for a man his age? Not without a job, he won’t.

Still not convinced? Ryan’s plan keeps tens of billions in oil subsidies. Defense, as America’s biggest source of corporate welfare, is sacrosanct. Today, corporations pay less than ten percent of all taxes. In the Ryan plan, government collects taxes from you, gives you nothing in return, and passes your tax payments along to corporations. Fascism? Yep. In the age of kings, it was called “tribute.”

Lastly, Speaker John Boehner is fond of saying “Where are the jobs?” His party ran on “job creation” but has no intention of creating any. So they’ve thrown up two smoke screens. One is that government spending is responsible for high unemployment. Don’t look for the logic because there isn’t any. Spending of any kind—public, private, or piggy bank—leads directly to jobs.

Boehner’s other slippery explanation is “uncertainty.” It’s an invaluably generic concept he uses to justify claims that otherwise make no sense. Yet while the government has wasted fully two weeks preparing to shut down, Boehner has made every effort to increase uncertainty. In doing so he has revealed just how little he really believes of what he says.

So keep your eyes open. Whenever someone proposes an idea, ask yourself if it will make the labor pool bigger or smaller. Whatever else is good about it, this is a critical measure of how the plan will change your daily life. If it makes the pool of workers bigger, your wages will be lower. If it makes it smaller, your wages will grow. If it tanks the economy once more, you’ll be back to doing two jobs for the price of one. Again.

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Jimmy’s post first appeared on Technorati.

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Will Republicans Pay For Their Deeds in 2012?

E.J. Dionne:

The battle for the Midwest is transforming American politics. Issues of class inequality and union influence, long dormant, have come back to life. And a part of the country that was integral to the Republican surge of 2010 is shifting away from the GOP just a few months later.

Republican governors, particularly in Wisconsin and Ohio, denied themselves political honeymoons by launching frontal assaults on public employee unions and proposing budgets that include deep cuts in popular programs.

Democrats in the region are elated at the quick turn in their fortunes. A few months ago, they worried that a region President Obama dominated in 2008 was turning against him. Republican triumphs in Wisconsin and Ohio, as well as in Indiana, Michigan and Iowa, all pointed to trouble for the president.

Now, for reasons having more to do with decisions by GOP governors than with anything the president has done, many voters, particularly in the white working class, are having second thoughts.

Commenting on this story, the DailyKos made the following observation: “Unfortunately, the only way for the country to get [to know] how extreme the GOP is these days seems to be to elect them.”  True.

Floridians are finding out (or will find out) that electing Tea Party favorite Rick Scott as governor might not have been a great idea. He has made the decision to rule his state in the manner of a CEO with little regard to what state Congress has to say on matters.  His rejection of $2.4 billion in federal stimulus money to build a high-speed rail in his state has many state Republicans angered…and concerned.

Meanwhile, back in Wisconsin, the actions of Koch brothers-backed Gov. Scott Walker illustrates perfectly what happens when people who serve and bow to corporate overlords attain power.  The middle class suffers.  Period.  One can only imagine in horror what would happen if a Michele Bachmann type ever did win the White House.  It would make the Bush 43 presidency look like the Age of Enlightenment.

Hopefully Dionne is right and voters will remember what GOP rule feels like and have them pay the price in 2012.  The problem is, of course, that the election is 18 months away.  In a filthy and corrupt business where six months is an eternity and political propaganda is better funded and more sophisticated than it has ever been, one cannot ever count on the electorate as a whole to remember actions which occurred a year ago.  The GOP is praying that they could do their dirty work now and then spend the year leading up to the elections spinning the hell out of their actions and those of their opponents. No one does spin better than Republicans.

Dionne recounts this parable making the rounds.

“…a zillionaire, a Tea Party person and a union member” confront a plate of 12 cookies: “The zillionaire takes 11 of the cookies, and says to the other two, ‘That guy is trying to steal your cookie.’?”

Republicans know that if you say it just right, back it up with a thousand campaign ads, use with abandonment a cable ‘news’ network dedicated to your cause and make good use of a noise machine which understands the intricate workings of the Big Lie better than anyone, you’ll get enough fools to believe your story.  And when it comes to political warfare, does anything else really matter?

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Mitch McConnell’s Hypocrisy

Mitch McConnell and his fellow Republicans are on a mission.  The budget has become their number one priority and they’re willing to slash spending no matter who (i.e.  middle class) suffers as a result. Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are all on the table. The budget fight has turned into a gam.e of chicken between Republicans and Dem and at stake is the government going into default.

Steve Benen gives a little perspective.

I’d be remiss if I neglected to mention how amusing it is to hear Mitch McConnell express concern about the debt. The Kentucky Republican voted for the Bush tax cuts, and added the costs to the national debt. McConnell then voted to finance the war in Afghanistan by adding the costs to the national debt. He then voted to put the costs of the war in Iraq onto the national debt. McConnell supported a massive expansion of the government’s role in health care, Medicare Part D, and voted to pile all of its costs right onto the national debt, and then backed the financial industry bailout, and added the bill to the national debt. All the while, McConnell had no qualms about voting to raise the debt limit.

But now McConnell is willing to risk default unless Democrats agree to a plan to help clean up the mess McConnell helped create. Fascinating.

Classic Republican strategy. Spend the country into financial crisis and then pin the blame on Dems once they took control and started to deal with the fallout. This strategy works because in tough economic times the only time frame that matters for most is now. Deregulation, wars and tax cuts got the country into this economic crisis and if the situation can’t be fixed in a week or month, the blame goes to the party in power. That’s the way it works and Republicans are quite aware.

My thinking is that they’re hoping for a government shutdown and a further tanking of the economy.  It’s all about 2012 and every move Republicans make between now and then is one which furthers their chances for victory.  And if that means more home foreclosures and job losses, so be it. They know who’ll get the blame.

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