Tuesday, September 30, 2008

WOW... you really can't name one newspaper?



"Asked what newspapers and magazines she reads, Palin - a journalism major in college - could not name one publication."

"I've read most of them, again with a great appreciation for the press, for the media," she said at first. Couric responded, "What, specifically?"

"Um, all of them, any of them that have been in front of me all these years."

"Can you name a few?"

"I have a vast variety of source where we get our news," Palin said. "Alaska isn't a foreign country, where it's kind of suggested, 'wow, how could you keep in touch with what the rest of Washington, D.C., may be thinking when you live up there in Alaska?' Believe me, Alaska is like a microcosm of America."

-------------------------------------------

What the hell kind of a response is that? Just say a friekin newspaper and save yourself the embarrassment. She comes off sounding like she has no ability to answer a simple question like "where do you get your news?". "Um all of them" sounds pretty flighty. Clearly she doesn't read the Witchita Weekly or the Des Moines Dime.... or does she?

McCain... up to his same old tricks

Fact Check: Obama and the 'fundamentals' of the economy

Once again showing that he and his campaign have no shame.... they take Obama's statements out of context to try and make him out to be a hypocrite.

Johnny Boy.... please stop selling your soul to win the election. I mean realistically... it looks like you're going to lose anyway, so you might as well try and maintain what little credibility and honor you have left.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Could it be? The Department of Justice brought to justice?

Special prosecutor to investigate firings of U.S. attorneys

I'm not getting my hopes up that Alberto Gonzales (and possibly others in the Bush Administration) will actually be brought to justice for what seems like a subversion of the laws of this country. But it is nice to see that at least the issue isn't totally being forgotten.

I'm keeping my fingers crossed that the people in this country will one day actually care when their own government breaks the law and take them to task for it. Just because you work in the government doesn't mean you are above the law. Last time I checked the Constitution was still supposed to be relevant and followed.

The founders of this country are probably rolling in their graves knowing how bad the government has run a muck with unchecked power (especially in the Executive branch) lately.

Here are a few quotes to give you an idea of how far we've strayed from what the founders of this country intended.

"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent."
Thomas Jefferson

"Conquest is not in our principles. It is inconsistent with our government. "
Thomas Jefferson

"Every government degenerates when trusted to the rulers of the people alone. The people themselves are its only safe depositories. "
Thomas Jefferson

"I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them. "
Thomas Jefferson

"I sincerely believe that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies, and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, under the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale. "
Thomas Jefferson

A government of laws, and not of men.
John Adams

Democracy... while it lasts is more bloody than either aristocracy or monarchy. Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There is never a democracy that did not commit suicide.
John Adams

Fear is the foundation of most governments.
John Adams

Great is the guilt of an unnecessary war.
John Adams

Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people.
John Adams

Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism.
George Washington

Over grown military establishments are under any form of government inauspicious to liberty, and are to be regarded as particularly hostile to republican liberty.
George Washington

The administration of justice is the firmest pillar of government.
George Washington

The Constitution is the guide which I never will abandon.
George Washington

The constitution vests the power of declaring war in Congress; therefore no offensive expedition of importance can be undertaken until after they shall have deliberated upon the subject and authorized such a measure.
George Washington

The marvel of all history is the patience with which men and women submit to burdens unnecessarily laid upon them by their governments.
George Washington

Racism as Reflex: Reflections on Conservative Scapegoating By Tim Wise

Racism as Reflex: Reflections on Conservative Scapegoating
By Tim Wise
September 28, 2008

If hypocrisy were currency, conservatives would be able to single-handedly bail out the nation's free-falling financial system in less than a week, without the rest of us having to front so much as a penny.

So on the one hand, folks like this always tell others--especially the poor and people of color--to take "personal responsibility" for their lives, and not to blame outside factors (like racism, or the economic system) for their problems. But on the other hand, these same persons then demonstrate that their own ability to blame others for their personal setbacks, or the nation's problems, knows no rival.

So, for instance, if they or someone they know didn't get the job they wanted, it must be because of affirmative action or because the job was "taken" by an illegal immigrant; if their child didn't get into the college of his or her choice it must be because of some preference given to a black kid; if they can't afford to send their child to college it's because all the scholarship money was given to students of color; if their local schools are falling apart it's because of integration or multiculturalism; if their taxes are too high it's because of all those government programs for "those people." On and on it goes, with never so much as a nod to personal responsibility. Whatever goes wrong in the lives of white conservatives is almost always the fault of black and brown liberals, or so the story goes.

The right is so predictable when it comes to this kind of thing, that you can almost set your watch by their daily eruptions of stupidity.

And so in the past several weeks, we have been treated to three fresh examples of conservative scapegoating and buck-passing, in which they seek to blame the poor or folks of color for various social problems for which the latter are not the least bit responsible.

First, we have Neil Cavuto of Fox News, followed by Rush Limbaugh a few days later, along with smaller-market talk radio hosts and commentators, insisting that the nation's current financial mess is not the fault of greedy investors, free-wheeling bankers, speculators and other assorted rich people taking advantage of a largely deregulated market for bogus investments. Rather, it is the fault of poor people and those who seek to serve their communities, and especially folks of color, and those who insist on such things as civil rights.

How so? Simple: according to these blowhards, laws like the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act, which seeks to steer investments to economically marginalized communities so as to stimulate economic development and reverse the longstanding process of racial and economic redlining, is the real culprit. If banks hadn't been forced to throw good money after bad, and make loans to "minorities and risky folks" as Cavuto said on September 18th, none of this would have happened.

Of course, none of the reactionary cranks making this argument has seen fit to present even a single, solitary piece of statistical evidence to support their scapegoating of CRA. Evidence doesn't matter. Simply saying it, simply insisting that it's the black and the brown and the poor who are to blame is supposed to be enough. Sadly, for lots of Americans it will be. The kind of people who listen to the Limbaughs of the world, after all, rarely care much for facts. But for those who still put a premium on truth, and who place more value on honesty than their own need to nurture their anger, here are a few things to keep in mind.

First, the Community Reinvestment Act only applies to banks and thrifts that are federally-insured. This means that the independent mortgage brokers, who are responsible for half of all the nation's sub-prime lending--and who have been writing such loans at more than twice the rate of banks and thrifts--aren't even covered by the law. And make no mistake, it was the hand of the mortgage broker, more than any other, that precipitated the housing bubble. These are folks who were writing "stated income" loans (which means you don't have to prove your income, you can just tell them a number and get the OK), not caring about whether the borrower might default, since they were going to turn around and dump the loan at a profit, onto the secondary market, by pawning it off to investors who were gobbling up debt, betting on the further expansion of home values. In this scenario, neither the original broker nor the investor who bought up the debt was concerned about what would happen to the borrower who took out the initial loan. After all, if a borrower defaulted, but the housing market was still going up in value, they could swoop in, foreclose and sell the house again at a profit.

On neither end of this equation were poor people to blame. The persons getting stated income loans were overwhelmingly middle class, perhaps hoping to keep up with the richer folks down the block, but certainly not the poor. Most poor folks are still renters, or just hoping to get a modest home. And let it suffice to say that none of the vultures snapping up the mortgage debt on the secondary market were poor, and very few were persons of color. These were affluent white people, willing to gamble on the potential misfortune of others.

Secondly, the idea that loans to the poor or to moderate income folks could create this mess is almost inherently absurd. Fact is, the risk involved with loans to such persons is quite low. The amount of money lost, even when a low income family does default, is quite minimal. On the other hand, when a middle class family, striving to live above their means, takes out a note that eats up half of their income, the amount lost when the bubble bursts is quite a bit more substantial. This is one of the reasons that, according again to the evidence, loans to those with more moderate incomes are actually less risky than those to the affluent. Looking at CRA-related loans, for instance, the fact is, these represent nearly one-fourth of all loans written, but less than 10 percent of the high-cost, high-risk loans that precipitated the current crisis. These loans actually have lower default and foreclosure rates than non-CRA connected loans, and are twice as likely to be retained in the portfolios of the banks that originated them than other loans. In other words, it is not CRA loans being dumped into the hands of greedy speculators, and then falling flat, taking the economy with them.

Finally, to the extent low-income folks of color are shuttled into the sub-prime market, and then unable to pay their house notes, this unhappy fact owes more to discrimination than anti-discrimination efforts such as CRA. As several studies have shown, banks often reject borrowers of color, even when they have credit records similar to whites with the same incomes. Then, these rejected applicants are steered towards sub-prime lenders which charge far higher interest and place the borrowers in great jeopardy by driving up the amount they must repay.

A few years back, a study of Citigroup (which includes Citi, the group's sub-prime lender), found that Citi in North Carolina was charging higher interest even to borrowers who could have qualified for regular loans. In the process, over 90,000 mostly black borrowers were roped into predatory loans, and as a result paid an average of $327 more per month for mortgages than those getting loans from a prime lender. This added up to over $110,000 in excess payments over the life of the loans, on average. In other words, folks of color who could have qualified for lower-interest loans (that they would have been able to pay back far more easily) were steered to higher-cost instruments by greedy financial institutions, looking to make a quick buck at their expense. That's not the fault of civil rights protection, it's the fault of economic civil rights violations.

As if blaming the global financial squeeze on the poor wasn't putrid enough, along comes the National Review Online, which descended even deeper into the pit of obvious racism on September 26th. To wit, the blog entry entitled "Cause and Effect?" by Mark Krikorian, executive director of an anti-immigration group in DC, in which he notes failed S&L Washington Mutual's stellar record on corporate diversity, as if this were somehow connected to their insolvency. The fact that WaMu had been ranked as one of the top ten businesses in the Hispanic Business Diversity Elite, and had received a perfect score on the Human Rights Campaign's Corporate Equity Index (which focuses on equity for lesbian and gay folks), are, in Krikorian's mind, linked to their financial troubles. Because, ya know, if you have too many Latinos and gays working for you, well, clearly you can't care anything about the bottom line. That Krikorian presents no evidence, or even logic, to suggest a linkage between workplace equity and financial incompetence doesn't matter: his readers, predisposed to scapegoat the non-white and non-straight for anything and everything, can be expected to take the bait.

And then there's Louisiana state lawmaker, John LaBruzzo, who proposes solving the problem of poverty by giving financial incentives to poor women on public assistance to be sterilized, so as to cut down on their birthrates. LaBruzzo, whose legislative district was once represented by neo-nazi David Duke (who also proposed something like this in 1991), insists his plan isn't racist, sexist, or classist, but merely aimed at cutting down on excessive welfare costs. He also claims that his plan would reverse the current pattern, whereby poor women are encouraged to have more babies so as to collect more welfare.

Putting aside the inherently Hitlerian, eugenic rationale for such actions, LaBruzzo, as with Duke, and most right-wingers, ignores every bit of logic and evidence so as to push this kind of nonsense. First off, he ignores the now-twelve-year-old welfare reform law, which prevents additional payments for persons on welfare who have additional children. Although these "extra" monies were never very much (in Louisiana they amounted to less than $100 per month at the time the law was changed), now they are essentially non-existent. Secondly, LaBruzzo ignores the evidence from more than twenty years of research, which indicates that persons receiving public assistance do not, in fact, have more children, on average, than non-welfare receiving families. So the idea that poor women need incentives not to have babies is nonsense. What they need is decent-paying jobs, something LaBruzzo has no idea how to create.

And finally, the underlying premise of LaBruzzo's plan--which, if the public comments posted to Nola.com (New Orleans' main media website) are any indication, is quite popular--is entirely bogus. Contrary to conventional wisdom (or at least, contrary to what a lot of white people think, whether wise or not), the numbers of people even receiving cash welfare in Louisiana are ridiculously small. LaBruzzo, who said the idea for this bill came to him after seeing folks in New Orleans during Katrina who were dependent on so-called government handouts, apparently doesn't feel the need to do any homework. For had he done so, he would have discovered that at the time of the flooding, there were fewer than 5000 households in the entire city receiving cash assistance, out of nearly 200,000 households in all. Fewer than four percent of black households, and only about one in ten poor households were receiving the kind of welfare that LaBruzzo would seek to tie to sterilization. Since Katrina, the number of persons on state aid have fallen even further, as the poor muddle through with very little assistance of any kind. But rather than push for rental assistance for low-income folks, which would improve the lives of poor folks and their communities dramatically, LaBruzzo is content--as conservatives almost always are--to blame the poor for their condition and seek to change their behavior (or in this case, compel their infertility) so as to solve the problem of economic deprivation. How very typical.

So there you have it: white conservatives who simply cannot bring themselves to blame rich white people for anything, and who consistently fall back into old patterns, blaming the poor for poverty, black and brown folks for racism, anybody but themselves and those like them. That anyone takes them seriously anymore when they prattle on about "personal responsibility" is a stunning testament to how racism and classism continue to pay dividends in a nation whose soil has been fertilized with these twin poisons for generations. Unless the rest of us insist that the truth be told--and unless we tell it ourselves, by bombarding the folks who send us their hateful e-mails with our own correctives, thereby putting them on notice that we won't be silent (and that they cannot rely on our complicity any longer)--it is doubtful that much will change.

What the hell is wrong with people?

South Carolina mayor ‘just curious’ if Obama is the antichrist.

I find it ridiculous that people are actually accusing Obama of being the anti-Christ. You would never hear people getting away with calling a white Christian man the "anti-Christ". It just wouldn't happen.

Sometimes the religious right really sickens me.

Friday, September 26, 2008

McCain's supposed campaign suspension

When is a suspension not a suspension?

So as McCain continues to grandstand by continue to talk about skipping the debates, I find it kind of ridiculous that he hasn't actually suspended his campaign. I mean, I think it was a stupid idea in the first place and very much a political stunt, but if you say you are going to do in order to get some media attention, the least you could do is actually suspend your campaign.

This is just another example of John McCain's consistent political stunts that are meant to keep the race focused on things other than the issues. It is also another example of him extolling empty words and rhetoric.

"Well done is better than well said." ~Benjamin Franklin

Reformer? Really?

Palin Accepted $25,000 in Gifts, Alaska Records Show


During the 20 months Sarah Palin has been the governor of Alaska she has accepted over $25k in gifts, mostly from "industry executives, municipalities and a cultural center whose board includes officials from some of the largest mining interests in the state".

Every time you see Sarah Palin talk she basically repeats buzz words like "reformer" and "maverick" over and over again while parroting the few lines she's been using since her acceptance speech. It's very easy to say you are a "reformer" and a "maverick", but it's a bit harder when your record doesn't exactly prove it. Yes, she took on her Republican counterparts in the state of Alaska, but that is looking like a power move to make her way to the top more than something she did because she's just that good of a person. The more we find out about Gov. Palin the more you hear stories of her throwing her close associates under the bus in order to move up the ladder. Then, it appears she acts just like they did by taking gifts and firing people who didn't support her run for Governor or who happened to not fire their ex-brother in law when pressured.

I love the little narrative that the McCain campaign has created for McCain andPalin, the "two mavericks". But the reality is... their record doesn't support it. Palin pretty much toes the far right party line, and McCain has sold his soul to get the nomination of his party, going back on many of the things he once stood for (especially in 2000 when a good portion of moderates in the nation, including me, would have rathered see him get the Republican nomination over Bush). Mavericks? Reformers? I don't buy it.

McCain Campaign Stonewalling Palin Investigation

Alaska lawmakers: McCain campaign interfering in Palin probe

For some reason the McCain campaign thinks they can do whatever they please and then whine about "partisan politics" and "bias" as an excuse for their actions. Why is it that Palin agreed to go along with the investigation before but now all of a sudden she has changed her tune? If she had nothing to worry about before... why won't she cooperate? Why, all of a sudden, are all the witnesses refusing to come forward?

This is ridiculous. The McCain campaign knows that the full Senate that can file sanctions against the witnesses who ignore their subpoenas doesn't convene again until January, so they think they can run out the clock until after the Nov. 4th election.

I don't know about the rest of America... but I don't want a VP that might be coming into office with ethics and corruption charges leveled against them without having found out whether they are guilty or not. If it turns out she's found guilty... do they just can her then? Or does McCain just pardon her? I'm guessing the latter.

Freak Friday Video: Sit on you



This guy's Canadian Tuxedo (no offense to our Northern neighbors) is possibly one of the best I've ever seen. The fact that it morphs into a mossy green near the top puts it off the charts.

Enjoy.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Postponing the Debates? Give me a break

McCain camp to propose postponing VP debate

With less than 40 days to the election and a lot of voters undecided, this circus that was already high flying is about to go even higher (and bring out the bearded lady while you're at it). Now McCain seems to be using this Wall Street bailout as a political ploy to push back the debates, saying that if a bailout deal isn't reached by tomorrow (Fri 9/26), he will not attend the debate that night. His grandstanding in trying to pretend that his care for the American people in this time of crisis is so great that he needs to suspend his campaign is just ridiculous. It's easy for him to suspend his campaign when his support in the polls is tanking. It's exactly what he did with the Palin pick, pulling the old sleight of hand so that the focus is taken off of the fact that John McCain offers no new direction for this country and onto something else that will create a media frenzy. It's much harder for the media to cover McCain's crappy health care plan, tax breaks for the rich (during a time when we are going to be taking on an additional trillion dollars in debt), and the fact that his campaign is run by lobbyists when they are enamored with McCain's call for suspending presidential campaigns 40 days before the election.

This election is going to decide who will be at the reigns of our country as we head into one of the most difficult periods since the Great Depression. This isn't something we can just let slide, regardless of what's going on with the financial system. Plus, let's be honest. What's John McCain going to do in Washington to help? This is a guy that's missed so many votes and has admitted he doesn't understand economic issues as much as he should. Is the bail out going to fail because John McCain isn't intimately involved? Give me a break.

It seems all too clear what the McCain campaign is trying to do here. First it was delaying the first presidential debate. Then it turned into "let's replace the VP debate with the first presidential debate", effectively pushing the VP debate out into the future. Judging by the shielding of Sarah Palin from the press, and her consistent gaffes and inability to look vice-presidential during the few interviews she has done, it's clear what is going on here. They are trying to buy Sarah Palin more time to prepare. She's cramming. She's pulling the all nighter so she doesn't fail the test.

Is that what America wants? Someone who is so woefully unprepared on the majority of the issues outside of abortion, oil taxes, and guns that they need to speed-date foreign leaders (without the press present, might I add) and cram for the debates?

This whole episode on the part of the McCain campaign is a blatant sham. He's losing support in the polls because America is getting hip to the fact that McCain isn't the one who is going to change the direction of this country and stablize our economy. The more the race focuses on the issues, the worse McCain does, so of course he's going to try and suspend his campaign.

I must admit... he's a great politician, like the majority of his Republican counterparts, seizing any opportunity to tip the race in his favor. Sadly, being a great politician doesn't make you a great leader. It just means you are good at winning elections. We've seen where that got us the last 8 years.

What's up with that? Shriners Edition

So I woke up this morning to my damn alarm as usual, however today was bound to be no normal run of the mill day. For some reason I woke up this morning thinking about Shriners. I have no clue why. I just did.

You with me? I'm talking about these guys:


They wear funny hats and have parades with little cars and administer hospitals for children. They're also Freemasons.

What's up with that?

UPDATE: McCain Campaign Manager still involved with lobbying firm

Unsevered Ties?

Regulatory filings indicate that McCain campaign chief Rick Davis remains an officer with his lobbying firm.


If this isn't a conflict of interest then I don't know what is. This just looks like it's getting worse and worse for McCain. I mean the sheer number of lobbyists involved in his campaign is enough to make you flinch. Then add in the fact that the lobbyist with the most sway in his campaign "has remained the treasurer and a corporate director of his lobbying firm this year, despite repeated statements by campaign officials that he had ended his relationship with the firm in 2006, according to corporate records." This is the lobbying firm that was taking $15,000 a month payments from Fannie Mae for what appears to be no legitimate work.

Something smells fishy.


Wednesday, September 24, 2008

McCain's Letters to the Editor: Faking the Funk



Remember what Shaq told us? Don't fake the funk (especially on a nasty dunk). Well it seems the McCain campaign has decided to do just that. They have been having campaign volunteers ghost write letters that were then sent to local newspapers in order to win over new voters. The problem is that the volunteers were told to basically say whatever they wanted, true or not, as long as it "added to the campaign". Now if this doesn't sound like some propaganda... then I don't know what is.

So John McCain... please stop faking the funk. This isn't the USSR.

I ghost-wrote letters to the editor for the McCain campaign

A look into how our country works.... (and how Rick Davis gets rich)

So it seems Rick Davis, McCain's campaign manager, has been on a "retainer" since 2005 for $15k a month from Fannie Mae. Some are saying this looks like it was a payment to secure access to a possible President McCain. Of course, John McCain has repeatedly said that Davis has had no ties to Fannie Mae since 2005, so this might put a bit of a nick in his "Straight Talk" armor. Now Davis is responding by ad hominem attacks on the NY Times who has led the investigation rather than trying to absolve himself.

Ain't it great to see how Washington works? Companies pay lobbyists that are tied to politicians (because unless they are dumb, the politicians don't normally take it themselves) to get things swayed in their favor. Guess who suffers? The taxpayers, as evidenced by us coughing up $700 billion dollars (which is more than we've spent on the Iraq Occupation so far).

I'm saying it now... as many other people have.... the fact that John McCain is still competitive with Barack Obama shows that partisanship and racism are alive and well in the good ol' U.S. of A.

McCain Aide’s Firm Was Paid by Freddie Mac

McCain aide: New York Times an 'Obama advocacy organization'

Monday, September 22, 2008

Elitists drive Ford Escapes

http://images.dailykos.com/images/user/3/MvO_compare.jpg

Is McCain starting up a Hertz Rent-a-car?

Boxing Ourselves In: The Sad Irony of White Supremacy

Repost from Tim Wise's Blog. I think Tim is one of the few people who logically lays out why racism on the part of 'whites' doesn't just hurt the folks it's directed at, but also 'white people' themselves.

Boxing Ourselves In: The Sad Irony of White Supremacy
By Tim Wise
September 21, 2008

I guess it would be amusing were it not so sad. After several days of combing through hateful diatribes, aimed at me because of previous commentaries I had written concerning racism and white privilege in the presidential campaign, it struck me: one of the most disturbing things about white racists is how they manage to confirm every stereotype about white folks that they would otherwise deny.

And so they write to me to say how I exaggerate the problem of white racism, and how they, of course, aren't racist at all, and then go on to tell me how they just don't like "the blacks," or "the Mexicans," or the "parasitic welfare cheats," whose race they never specify, but whose color in their minds is easy to guess, given the context of their remarks.

Or even better, they write to tell me that "racism isn't really a problem any more." The problem, they insist, is that "the blacks are just too damned lazy to get off their asses and work like the rest of us." Gee, glad to have that cleared up. I mean, if you can't see the irony embedded in that remark--after all, to deny that racism is a problem for black people, and then to cut loose with a racist generalization about those same people is the epitome of self-contradiction--then you're probably not prepared to enter a dialogue about much of anything.

I guess this is one of the aspects of racism that we don't think about often, but about which we should. Namely, it distorts the critical thinking skills of persons who may well be decent human beings, or at least capable of quite a bit better than what they show us in moments such as this. To hold such views as expressed above, and to then get angry at other whites when we reject those views, is to actually seek to limit white folks' humanity, by essentially insisting that all whites must see the world through the lens of white supremacy. That too is ironic: it means that white racists, by their demand for white unanimity, by their unwillingness to brook opposition to their sickness, are basically trying to force white people into a box in which our ability to define ourselves and to break out of the socially-constructed confines put upon us by racism is constrained. One would think that we would be offended by this; that perhaps we would begin to see white racism and its would-be enforcers as our enemies; that we would come to view race treason (if indeed, being white means going along with that kind of nonsense) as the highest calling of our people.

We rightly note how unfair it is when persons of color demand that other persons of color hew to a particular style or demeanor in order to be considered authentically black, for instance. When some suggested that Barack Obama wasn't really black, or at least not black enough, or when some within the black community, having internalized the strictures of white supremacist thinking, engage in intra-group harassment or invective against one another for being "too dark" or "too light," most everyone recognizes such things as unfortunate and regrettable examples of internalized racial oppression. But so too must we stand up to this notion, spread as it is by white racists, that to be white--authentically white--is to buy into anti-black and anti-brown stereotypes; that to be a strong white person is impossible unless we stand atop somebody else, as kings and queens of the proverbial hill.

How does this happen? And why do we allow it to happen? Why do we get angrier at people of color for pointing out white racism than we do at white folks for practicing it, and in so doing, perpetuating the notion that that's who we are--all of us? Do we not see that the reason we have so much anxiety about how someone might call us a racist if we say the wrong thing, is because we've been so silent in the face of white racism that folks of color logically come to wonder if we care, if we agree with the bigots in our midst, or if we're ever, ever going to stand up?

Don't get me wrong: I believe that all of us have internalized certain notions of white supremacy. It would be damned near impossible not to in a society that does such a marvelous job of teaching it. But we can also choose to turn on our teachers, those who have sought to condition us to go along, to remain silent, to accept the contours of American inequity and white privilege. That so few ever do so, not only implicates us in the suffering of those who are the targets of racism and white supremacy, but also implicates us in the negation of our own better selves. It is to say that we are OK with the box into which racism has placed us. It is to say that we don't mind having the confines of our humanity restricted in such a fashion. It is to say that we are not only in this skin, but even more, that we are *of* it: a terribly stultifying and depressing thought, which all but destroys the hope that one day we might evolve past such pathetic tribalism as this.

It is all the more disheartening because it doesn't have to be this way. And once upon a time it wasn't. There was a time, during the colonial period, when working class persons of European descent and those of African descent, seeing their common class interests, banded together to overthrow economic oppression, in places like the Virginia colony and elsewhere. Color meant very little to them, the notion of a unified "white race" didn't exist, and institutionalized white supremacy had yet to be fully actualized. But once the elite realized the dangers these growing cross-color coalitions posed to their power, they began to develop the divide and conquer tactics that are with us to this day. They ended indentured servitude for those who they began to label whites, they allowed them to own land, to testify in court, and to serve on slave patrols to keep blacks--those with whom they had previously seen a commonality of interests--in line.

It was a trick, of course, and it worked, and has continued to work for hundreds of years: working class white folks with nary a pot to piss in, ultimately contenting ourselves with what W.E.B. DuBois called the "psychological wage of whiteness," which is to say, the notion that we might not have much, but at least we're not black. When one has very little, one clings to what one has, and if the only real property one can claim is whiteness, then so be it, we'll do it, and have been doing it for generations. And of course those whose property is quite a bit more extensive than that are all too happy to watch the rest of us fight one another, over the pieces of a pie that we don't even own.

One would hope we had learned by now, after all these many years, that psychological wages--however comforting they may be in the moment--don't pay the mortgage or the rent, don't put our kids through school, and don't keep the lights on. They won't fill the pantry with food, nor take care of medical bills when we're sick. What they will do, is allow us to keep feeling ourselves superior, better, more entitled to the blessings of life, liberty, and happiness than our fellow human beings, even as we pursue political and social agendas that, in the end, put most all of us at risk. This we do in the name of whiteness. And this we do at the cost of our own integrity.

It would be amusing were it not so sad.

In case you missed it... SNL spot on McCain



...and odds are you probably did miss it, because seriously... who watches SNL anymore? Did they decide funny wasn't in the budget over at NBC?

Friday, September 19, 2008

Freaky Friday Video: Disco Rick - The Nasty Dance



As much as I appreciate Rick and his sweet dance moves... I think he could have used a little better judgment when picking his backup dancers. This isn't exactly a Nickelodean video. He probably should have at least went for dancers over 18. Disco Rick may or may not be on Megan's List. Anyone live in his neighborhood and get paid a little visit when he moved in?

More McCain Ads... More Lies

Economy takes center stage in bruising ads

It seems that McCain can't seem to put out an ad that is actually true. I love how McCain has changed his strategy to being a populist while lying about Obama and his record and proposed policies. McCain must realize he's screwed when it comes to the economy since he doesn't know what he's doing and the policies he has supported over the years are the same ones that got us into this mess in the first place.

WSJ criticizing McCain... no way.

Wall Street Journal editorial board skewers McCain

Wow. I never thought I would see the day. I used to read the Wall Street Journal until Murdoch took it over and went back on his promise to not skew the former independence of the journalism there. WSJ was pretty conservative before, but after he took it over it became even more so. That's why it's extremely surprising to hear them criticizing McCain, because before it's OpEd section could have been called the "Beat Obama to a Pulp" page.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Jerome Corsi and his smear book

If you haven't noticed, Jerome Corsi's book "Obama Nation" has been riding high on the NY Times best sellers list of a few weeks now. Aside from the fact that Jerome Corsi is known for making "anti-Islam, anti-Catholic, anti-semitic and homophobic statements" , the book is awash in factual errors and fallacies of logic. It's amazing what the American people will buy into.

Look no further than this breakdown from FactCheck.org:
Corsi's Dull Hatchet

In a time when the economy is in deep turmoil and families are hurting... it's sad to know that people are spending their money on trash like the "Obama Nation". Nothing like getting a hate monger rich, ay? USA! USA! USA!

Gov. Palin loves Obama's Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act

Palin's transparency proposal already exists in D.C.

This is just rich. This is what you get when you don't really have anything of substance to say and you keep using boilerplate phrases in all your speeches.

I'm glad she thinks Obama's and Republican Sen. Coburn's bipartisan (uhoh, is that 'reaching across the aisle like McCain says Obama never has?) bill was a great idea. Too bad she's going to have a tough job making a change in Washington that Obama already helped make happen. Better luck next time.

DANGER ALERT: Childhood Goat Trauma

Thanks to my cowboy-boot-wearing, big-belt-buckle-having, sizzurp-sippin', scraper-riding, DFW-representing BCSP-founding-member and friend, Tom, for bringing this epidemic to my attention. He and I encourage you to join in the fight to eliminate Childhood Goat Trauma.

Learn how to fight the good fight at the link provided below.

http://www.goat-trauma.org/

A Republican I actually like and his comments on the Palin pick

Chuck Hagel, as far as I can tell, does a good job of representing what the Republican party should be, not what Bush and the neocons have turned it into. He's very much a pragmatist who tries to do what is right, not what toes the party line.

Anywho, I found this interview to be interesting, especially because Hagel is known for his experience when it comes to foreign policy.

Chuck Hagel on Palin

These shams that the McCain campaign keeps trying to pull on the American people when it comes to Palin's foreign policy experience aren't going to work. Seeing Russia from your backyard doesn't give you foreign policy experience, no does sharing a border with Canada. They must think Americans are stupid. They should focus on areas where she does have experience and try to convince us as to why those are important, not make up ridiculous claims to boister her experience where she has none.

Is this for real?



What the hell is wrong with Greta Van Susteren? This might be the most bizarre interview ever.

My head will probably explode next time I hear "First Dude".

Abortion rights and their effect on the election

In a very telling moment, I was watching Larry King last night and even Ben Stein (a staunch Republican) agreed that McCain won't be able to fix the economy and pretty much agreed with the Democratic strategist and Obama's positions. When the Democrat asked him why he didn't come over to Obama, he said "because he doesn't support my views on abortion".

Now I understand abortion is a touchy subject for a lot of people, but is that the only issue some people vote on anymore? The thing about abortion, in my mind (and I am sure this wouldn't mesh with some folks, especially my fellow Catholics, but hear me out), is that it is a religious issue. Why you may ask? Well, because there has been no definitive scientific study that pinpoints exactly when life begins (even the definition of life is disputed). So when you are against abortion, for the majority of people I would guess, you are against it on religious grounds. Now last time I checked, our Constitution states that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion". This is my whole point. If we disparage the Taliban and other middle eastern countries for trying to establish a theocracy based on Islam, why is it OK to make laws based on religion here? We are supposed to be a secular nation, with a separation of church and state. I might not agree with abortion because of my faith, but does that give me the right to force that view upon another who might not share my religious views?

To be honest though, this is an issue I've always struggled with. I guess it's hard to decide where that line is when government should be involved in your personal life. I'm mainly throwing this out there because I'd like to hear the opinions of others. I've always known where I've stood on abortion personally (which I guess is easier if you are a guy), but I've had trouble reconciling that with what its place in America should be.

Another reason why a McCain presidency should scare the hell out of you

McCain economic policy shaped by lobbyist

Remember Phil Gramm? He's that guy that called America a "nation of whiners" because of the economic troubles we have been seeing (you know, the ones that just got a whole hell of a lot worse in the past week). He's also an extremely close friend of John McCain and was his campaign co-chair and most senior economic adviser until his comment about us all being whiners (he stepped down in order to blunt some of the criticism McCain got for his comment). He still travels with McCain and is said to give him advice on economic affairs.

Here's his Wikipedia entry.

Here's some choice exerpts:

Involvement in "Enron Loophole" Legislation

Gramm was one of five co-sponsors of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000[3]. One provision of the bill was referred to as the "Enron loophole" because the House Agriculture Committee drafted it and it was later applied to Enron. Some critics blame the provision for permitting the Enron scandal to occur.[4] At the time, Gramm's wife was previously on Enron's board of directors.


Banking Deregulation and the 2008 Mortgage Crisis

Later in his Senate career, Gramm spearheaded efforts to pass banking reform laws, including the landmark Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act in 1999, which served to reduce government regulations in existence since the Great Depression separating banking, insurance and brokerage activities.

Years later, critics of Gramm point out that this same legislation may have been pivotal in encouraging the corporate practices that led to the 2008 mortgage crises in America.[5]

Between 1995 and 2000 Gramm, who was the chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, received $1,000,914 in campaign contributions from the Securities & Investment industry.[6]


=============================================

Is this really who we want helping shape our economic policy? John McCain stands up and tells the world he's the man to fix the mess we're in, when he and Gramm both had a part in helping create it in the first place (McCain voted for the same deregulation that Gramm did). Is he serious?????????

How many strikes does one have to get before people wake the hell up and see McCain for what he is: a lock-step Republican, not a maverick. He's in the same Washington camp that got us into this quagmire in the first place, why would we hand him the reigns of the country? There is no way this election should be as close as it is if people actually looked at and researched the candidates positions and backgrounds with an open mind. I just don't understand it.... which leads to my next topic: abortion. See above.

Explaining White Privilege by Tim Wise

Tim Wise continues to amaze me. He is one of the few people in this nation that speaks so openly and eloquently about the issue of race. He sticks to the facts rather than getting emotional, which can't be said for most of his detractors. I've seen him speak in person and I have to say, he might be one of the best (if not THE best) public speakers I've ever seen. America would do well to listen to this man if we ever plan on living up to the, as he says, "promise of fairness and equity to which we claim to adhere as Americans".

Explaining White Privilege
(Or, Your Defense Mechanism is Showing)
By Tim Wise
September 18, 2008

Sigh.

I guess I should have expected it, seeing as how it's nothing new. I write a piece on racism and white privilege (namely, the recently viral, "This is Your Nation on White Privilege"), lots of folks read it, many of them like it, and others e-mail me in fits of apoplexy, or post scathing critiques on message boards in which they invite me to die, to perform various sexual acts upon myself that I feel confident are impossible, or, best of all, to "go live in the ghetto," whereupon I will come to "truly appreciate the animals" for whom I have so much affection (the phrase they use for me and that affection, of course, sounds a bit different, and I'll leave it to your imagination to conjure the quip yourself).

Though I have no desire to debate the points made in the original piece, I would like to address some of the more glaring, and yet reasonable, misunderstandings that many seem to have about the subject of white privilege. That many white folks don't take well to the term is an understatement, and quite understandable. For those of us in the dominant group, the notion that we may receive certain advantages generally not received by others is a jarring, sometimes maddening concept. And if we don't understand what the term means, and what those who use it mean as they deploy it, our misunderstandings can generate anger and heat, where really, none is called for. So let me take this opportunity to explain what I mean by white privilege.

Of course, the original piece only mentioned examples of white privilege that were directly implicated in the current presidential campaign. It made no claims beyond that. Yet many who wrote to me took issue with the notion that there was such a thing, arguing, for instance that there are lots of poor white people who have no privilege, and many folks of color who are wealthy, who do. But what this argument misses is that race and class privilege are not the same thing.

Though we are used to thinking of privilege as a mere monetary issue, it is more than that. Yes, there are rich black and brown folks, but even they are subject to racial profiling and stereotyping (especially because those who encounter them often don't know they're rich and so view them as decidedly not), as well as bias in mortgage lending, and unequal treatment in schools. So, for instance, even the children of well-off black families are more likely to be suspended or expelled from school than the children of poor whites, and this is true despite the fact that there is no statistically significant difference in the rates of serious school rule infractions between white kids or black kids that could justify the disparity (according to fourteen different studies examined by Russ Skiba at Indiana University).

As for poor whites, though they certainly are suffering economically, this doesn't mean they lack racial privilege. I grew up in a very modest apartment, and economically was far from privileged. Yet I received better treatment in school (placement in advanced track classes even when I wasn't a good student), better treatment by law enforcement officers, and indeed more job opportunities because of connections I was able to take advantage of, that were pretty much unavailable to the folks of color I knew growing up. Likewise, low income whites everywhere are able to clean up, go to a job interview and be seen as just another white person, whereas a person of color, even who isn't low-income, has to wonder whether or not they might trip some negative stereotype about their group when they go for an interview or sit in the classroom answering questions from the teacher. Oh, and not to put too fine a point on it, but even low-income whites are more likely to own their own home than middle income black families, thanks to past advantages in housing and asset accumulation, which has allowed those whites to receive a small piece of property from their families.

The point is, privilege is as much a psychological matter as a material one. Whites have the luxury of not having to worry that our race is going to mark us negatively when looking for work, going to school, shopping, looking for a place to live, or driving for that matter: things that folks of color can't take for granted.

Let me share an analogy to make the point.

Taking things out of the racial context for a minute: imagine persons who are able bodied, as opposed to those with disabilities. If I were to say that able-bodied persons have certain advantages, certain privileges if you will, which disabled persons do not, who would argue the point? I imagine that no one would. It's too obvious, right? To be disabled is to face numerous obstacles. And although many persons with disabilities overcome those obstacles, this fact doesn't take away from the fact that they exist. Likewise, that persons with disabilities can and do overcome obstacles every day, doesn't deny that those of us who are able-bodied have an edge. We have one less thing to think and worry about as we enter a building, go to a workplace, or just try and navigate the contours of daily life. The fact that there are lots of able-bodied people who are poor, and some disabled folks who are rich, doesn't alter the general rule: on balance, it pays to be able-bodied.

That's all I'm saying about white privilege: on balance, it pays to be a member of the dominant racial group. It doesn't mean that a white person will get everything they want in life, or win every competition, but it does mean that there are general advantages that we receive.

So, for instance, studies have found that job applicants with white sounding names are 50% more likely to receive a call-back for a job interview than applicants with black-sounding names, even when all job-related qualifications and credentials are the same.

Other studies have found that white men with a criminal record are more likely to get a call-back for an interview than black male job applicants who don't have one, even when all requisite qualifications, demeanor and communication styles are the same.

Others have found that white women are far more likely than black women to be hired for work through temporary agencies, even when the black women have more experience and are more qualified.

Evidence from housing markets has found that there are about two million cases of race-based discrimination against people of color every year in the United States. That's not just bad for folks of color; the flipside is that there are, as a result, millions more places I can live as a white person.

Or consider criminal justice. Although data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration indicates that whites are equally or more likely than blacks or Latinos to use drugs, it is people of color (blacks and Latinos mostly) who comprise about 90 percent of the persons incarcerated for a drug possession offense. Despite the fact that white men are more likely to be caught with drugs in our car (on those occasions when we are searched), black men remain about four times more likely than white men to be searched in the first place, according to Justice Department findings. That's privilege for the dominant group.

That's the point: privilege is the flipside of discrimination. If people of color face discrimination, in housing, employment and elsewhere, then the rest of us are receiving a de facto subsidy, a privilege, an advantage in those realms of daily life. There can be no down without an up, in other words.

None of this means that white folks don't face challenges. Of course we do, and some of them (based on class, gender, sexual orientation, disability status, or other factors) are systemic and institutionalized. But on balance, we can take for granted that we will receive a leg-up on those persons of color with whom we share a nation.

And no, affirmative action doesn't change any of this.

Despite white fears to the contrary, even with affirmative action in place (which, contrary to popular belief does not allow quotas or formal set-asides except in those rare cases where blatant discrimination has been proven) whites hold about ninety percent of all the management level jobs in this country, receive about ninety-four percent of government contract dollars, and hold ninety percent of tenured faculty positions on college campuses. And in spite of affirmative action programs, whites are more likely than members of any other racial group to be admitted to their college of first choice.* And according to a study released last year, for every student of color who received even the slightest consideration from an affirmative action program in college, there are two whites who failed to meet normal qualification requirements at the same school, but who got in anyway because of parental influence, alumni status or because other favors were done.

Furthermore, although white students often think that so-called minority scholarships are a substantial drain on financial aid resources that would otherwise be available to them, nothing could be further from the truth. According to a national study by the General Accounting Office, less than four percent of scholarship money in the U.S. is represented by awards that consider race as a factor at all, while only 0.25 percent (that's one quarter of one percent for the math challenged) of all undergrad scholarship dollars come from awards that are restricted to persons of color alone. What's more, the idea that large numbers of students of color receive the benefits of race-based scholarships is lunacy of the highest order. In truth, only 3.5 percent of college students of color receive any scholarship even partly based on race, suggesting that such programs remain a pathetically small piece of the financial aid picture in this country, irrespective of what a gaggle of reactionary white folks might believe.**

In other words, despite the notion that somehow we have attained an equal opportunity, or color-blind society, the fact is, we are far from an equitable nation. People of color continue to face obstacles based solely on color, and whites continue to reap benefits from the same. None of this makes whites bad people, and none of it means we should feel guilty or beat ourselves up. But it does mean we need to figure out how we're going to be accountable for our unearned advantages. One way is by fighting for a society in which those privileges will no longer exist, and in which we will be able to stand on our own two feet, without the artificial crutch of racial advantage to prop us up. We need to commit to fighting for racial equity and challenging injustice at every turn, not only because it harms others, but because it diminishes us as well (even as it pays dividends), and because it squanders the promise of fairness and equity to which we claim to adhere as Americans.

It's about responsibility, not guilt. And if one can't see the difference between those two things, there is little that this or any other article can probably do. Perhaps starting with a dictionary would be better.


*U.S Federal Glass Ceiling Commission, Good for Business: Making Full Use of the Nation's Human Capital. (Washington DC: Bureau of National Affairs, March 1995); Fred L. Pincus, Reverse Discrimination: Dismantling the Myth. (Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2003), 18; Roberta J. Hill, "Far More Than Frybread," in Race in the College Classroom: Pedagogy and Politics, ed. Bonnie TuSmith and Maureen T. Reddy. (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press), 169; Sylvia Hurtado and Christine Navia, "Reconciling College Access and the Affirmative Action Debate," in Affirmative Action's Testament of Hope, ed. Mildred Garcia (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1997), 115.

**U.S. General Accounting Office, 1994. "Information on Minority Targeted Scholarships," B251634. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, January; Stephen L. Carter, "Color-Blind and Color-Active," 1992. The Recorder. January 3.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Whoops!

Scientist concedes 'honest mistake' about weaponized anthrax


How much more inept could our government get? I mean seriously. The guy is a specialist in viruses, yet he is the one we are going to for expert testimony regarding bacteria. I mean... I can't say I know much about either, but if I was looking to get expert testimony on an airplane... I wouldn't go to someone who works on helicopters.

So basically the Bush administration is either dumb, or they intentionally used this "expert testimony" to mislead us and try to create links from the anthrax scare to Saddam. All of the deception this administration has perpetrated over the past 8 years leads me to believe that there is no way it was all just a coincidence.

Quote me on this: one day when the truth finally comes out about the last 8 years, this administration will be show to be one of the most corrupt and treasonous in the history of this country.

McCain and Regulation

FACT CHECK: Biden on McCain's regulatory history

McCain Embraces Regulation After Many Years of Opposition

"In 2002, McCain introduced a bill to deregulate the broadband Internet market, warning that "the potential for government interference with market forces is not limited to federal regulation." Three years earlier, McCain had joined with other Republicans to push through landmark legislation sponsored by then-Sen. Phil Gramm (Tex.), who is now an economic adviser to his campaign. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act aimed to make the country's financial institutions competitive by removing the Depression-era walls between banking, investment and insurance companies.

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That bill allowed AIG to participate in the gold rush of a rapidly expanding global banking and investment market. But the legislation also helped pave the way for companies such as AIG and Lehman Brothers to become behemoths laden with bad loans and investments."


"As far as a need for additional regulations are concerned, I think that depends on the legislative agenda and what the Congress does to some degree, but I am fundamentally a deregulator." - John McCain

So now, John McCain, the great deregulator for the last 26 years, is all of a sudden the man to fix the problem that he (and the economic adviser to his campaign) helped create???? Give me a flipping break. His tune changes faster than a broken piano lately. Talk about someone who will say anything depending on the weather.

I don't think it's any mystery that the rampant deregulation over the last 20 years that has been championed by the Republican party has hurt this country. Deregulation helps a few corporations and their CEOs who can then run wild and do whatever they want with little oversight. These are the same people lobbying and donating tons of money to our politicians campaigns, both Democrat and Republican.

Deregulation is another scam of the "free market - corporate welfare" crowd. If everyone was a saint that didn't have any motives for greed or personal gain, then yeah, deregulation would be awesome. The problem is, there are people out there who are so greedy that they don't mind a multitude of people suffering if it means they get to have a solid gold umbrella stand. This is why we need regulation, to ensure these people can't take advantage of the system for their own benefit while millions of us suffer through the loss of our retirement or 401k.

If we decide to tune out and let our government be taken over by special interests and corporations, then I guess we get what we deserve (which looks like 10 extra years of working in order to retire). Maybe now people that people are really hurting they will realize that the key to a functioning representative democracy is the participation of the people that are supposed to be represented. Think about that next time you are deciding whether to vote or whether paying attention to politics is worth your time.

I apologize for getting off topic....

A Conservative for Obama

A Conservative for Obama

This guy hits on some of the points that I think are lost in the back and forth of 'liberal' this and 'liberal' that. His rationale of why the supposed "conservative" Republicans have truly lost their way hits the nail right on the head. The Republicans say they are conservative... but talk is cheap.

A new age imperialism, the department of Homeland Security, warrantless wiretapping, deficit spending... these are not marks of a conservative party.

This is more like it...

ISSUE: Health Care

New Studies Report Wide Disparity in Health Care Plans

It seems the numbers to pay attention to here are the number of currently uninsured (47 million) that would be covered under each candidates health care plans.

Obama: 34 million
McCain: 5 million

Clearly a pretty huge difference. Neither health care plan is perfect, but one surely does more to help the uninsured in America. McCain's plan, which would include taxing employer sponsored health care benefits, would also cause some people to be dropped from their current health insurance. People have said it's basically a plan that would reward young, healthy individuals while still making it hard for people with existing conditions to get health care.

It seems to me that in this country when it comes to health care, like most of the problems we face, we focus on the symptoms and not the actual cause. Our new health care system (and I admit I am no expert on health care policy, this is just one man's opinion) seems like it should be based on preventative care so less people end up getting sick in the first place. Currently it feels like people avoid going to the doctor like the plague because of the costs associated with it and the mentality in this country that you only need to go if you are really sick. To me it seems like it would make more sense to have people make regular visits to monitor their health and make sure they are eating and living right in order to stave off common ailments in this country like obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. Our nation spends so much money caring for people that are already sick. We might be able to save a lot of money by making sure people live a little more healthy and catch possible trouble spots early on before they become an even worse (and more expensive) problem.

Another thing that irks me about the current system is that even though the government is one of the biggest customers of the pharmaceutical companies (through Medicare, etc), they don't haggle on price. Once again, another example of a government that preaches "free market" not actually abiding by free market principles when it comes to one of the industries that heavily lobbies (and funds the campaigns of) the people that run our country. No wonder health care is so expensive in this country. Big Pharma profits out the kazoo and the people suffer. Sometimes I really question if we should change the Constitution to say "We the Corporations" instead of "We the People".

Elitists calling other people elitists

Prominent Clinton backer and DNC member to endorse McCain

"Forester is the CEO of EL Rothschild, a holding company with businesses around the world. She is married to international banker Sir Evelyn de Rothschild. Forester is a member of the DNC’s Democrats Abroad chapter and splits her time living in London and New York."

"“This is a hard decision for me personally because frankly I don't like him,” she said of Obama in an interview with CNN’s Joe Johns. “I feel like he is an elitist. I feel like he has not given me reason to trust him.”"

This is just rich. This lady calling Obama (yes, raised by a single parent, comes from working class background, just recently got money, Obama) an elitist. This smacks of racism. "Frankly I don't like him", "he hasn't given me a reason to trust him", "I feel like he is an elitist", let the coded racism begin. At least she stopped before calling him an "uppity Negro".

If she's doing this because she is super rich and will get a bigger tax break under McCain, that's fine, but at least be honest about it. I would hope that's the reason actually, cause otherwise she's just showing her true colors. Obama and the rest of his grassroots campaign don't need her support anyway. London can have her.

UPDATE:


Ha. Ha. Wow, smooth move lady. Way to label the small town people "rednecks". John McCain can have you.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Back to school

Since it's that time of year when the kiddies go back to school... I thought it might be interesting to look at what our potential president and vice-president studied after they graduated high school. This hasn't been an issue that's been talked about much, but it probably should be. Not that what you studied in college is the end all when it comes to running the country... but it gives you a sense of the persons ability and what they might be well versed in.

On that note, let's take a look at the education backgrounds of the two presidential tickets:

Obama:
Occidental College - Two years.
Columbia University - B.A. political science with a specialization in international relations.
Harvard - Juris Doctor (J.D.) Magna Cum Laude

& Biden:
University of Delaware - B.A. in history and B.A. in political science.
Syracuse University College of Law - Juris Doctor (J.D.)

vs.

McCain:
United States Naval Academy - Class rank 894 of 899

& Palin:
Hawaii Pacific University - 1 semester
North Idaho College - 2 semesters - general study
University of Idaho - 2 semesters - journalism
Matanuska-Susitna College - 1 semester
University of Idaho - 3 semesters - B.A. in journalism

As the economy gets even closer to meltdown...

Obama says he's better on economy

Watch as John McCain tries to squirm his way out from his comment yesterday about the fundamentals of the economy being strong. I love how he came back and tried to say by "fundamentals" he meant "American workers" (cause, really, they are absolutely interchangeable) and then said Obama didn't respect American workers. Holy shit McCain... you gotta be kidding me. This is some Orwellian doublespeak if I've ever seen it. Instead of coming up with solutions you start making shit up. It's unreal.

Anyway... the telling part of this article is this:
"But Jeffrey Sachs, a renowned economist and special adviser to the U.N. secretary-general, said neither candidate will be able to stop continued financial woes in the near future.
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"I think right now that this is a recession that's going to happen," he said."I don't see anybody being able to stop that giant wave. The question is how we get out if it."

Sachs said he thinks Obama's plan is "closer" to being on target, with his calls for regulation. McCain also has started talking about increased regulation, but Sachs said McCain has "reinvented himself in the last 24 hours" with such talk."

Now I know McCain isn't big on economics or economists (look no further than the gas tax holiday farce), but I just hope the American people decide that maybe we should listen to the experts this time instead of voting on who we want to have a beer with. Listening to logic and facts doesn't make you an elitist, it makes you smart and reasonable.

Cat singlehandedly fights the "War on Printer"

F for Failure

5 questions: Why AIG matters to you

Here's an informative little piece on the next big financial firm that's likely to bite the dust. AIG, the world's largest insurer. This will likely hit mutual funds pretty hard and in tandem with Lehman Bros tighten up the credit market. Basically... say goodbye to about 25% of your 401k.

Thanks conservatives for your de-regulation! I really wanted to work for an extra 10 years in order to retire comfortably. Thanks for forcing me to have a strong work ethic.

P.S. I find it funny how much people preach "free market" philosophy but then have the government and taxpayers bail out all these corporations. Corporate Welfare... ain't it grand?

UPDATE:

Fed takes over AIG - $85B loan

Wow. That was fast. Hooray taxpayers... you just bought yourself an insurance company!

Ouch.



Carly Fiorina, depending on who you ask, either sucks or is awesome. Everyone at the company I work for (which used to be part of HP) thinks she sucks because of what she did to HP. Everyone at the Univ. of MD business school that I attend thinks she's awesome cause she is an alumni.
I can think of two people who probably thinks she sucks after today: John McCain and Sarah Palin. Sadly they probably thinks she sucks because she actually told the truth for once.

MD folks: Make sure you're registered to Vote

http://mdelections.umbc.edu/voter_registration/v2/vote_prod.php

Click the link.

Getting cash for good grades?

Good grades pay off literally - USA Today

In an American society already being destroyed by commercialization and the "buy! buy! buy!" mentality, I find it abhorring that we are trying to motivate kids to learn by basically bribing them. No wonder why China and India are surpassing us in education. Instead of teaching kids that learning is something that should be held in high regard, we try to bribe them so they can buy more video games and iPods. Instead of telling them that it will increase the likelihood that they will be paid a better wage, or get a better job, or retire earlier, we slip them a Benji. Instead of parents taking on the responsibility of instilling values in their children and congratulating them when they do well, we can give the kids more money so they can buy things that will occupy their time so they can spend even less of it with their parents. Great idea. It's like Pavlov's Dogs all over again. If we keep this up, soon enough people will see money and lose all control.

I guess Puff Daddy must have been right, it is "all about the Benjamins". We should probably put him in our kids textbooks while making sure we leave out that part about "Mo Money, Mo Problems".

Seeing as offshore drilling is up for discussion in the House today...

I thought this little graphic gives us a nice way of picturing what offshore drilling would actually mean for the U.S. and its citizens.

Offshore Drilling

Seems this offshore drilling issue shouldn't even be a concern considering everything else that's going wrong in this country, and considering it will literally mean a drop in the pond of our addiction to oil.

Anyway... here's a link to the bill being debated...
H.R.6899

Call up your Representative or send them an email and tell them to move on to the real issues facing this nation, not the one that will put more profit in the pocket of big oil.

McCain gets Barack Roll'd



Awesome.

Even Conservatives can't pretend to like her anymore...

Why Experience Matters - David Brooks (NY Times)

Sarah The Unready - Ross Douthat (The Atlantic)

The Ugly New McCain - Richard Cohen (Wash Post)


Seems like people tried to pretend during the convention and for a few weeks afterwards. Reality (especially after the Charlie Gibson interview) is starting to set in. This is someone who is not well versed enough in national issues to handle being the VP, let alone running the country should something happen with McCain. I'm glad some conservatives are putting "country first" and actually admitting it.

Pakistan.... now even more pissed

Pakistan orders troops to open fire if US raids

Considering Pakistan has nuclear weapons... I really hope we don't cause a conflict. We've already managed to piss off the majority of the world... maybe it's time for some diplomacy... yes?

Monday, September 15, 2008

If she's innocent... why is she refusing to meet with the investigator?

Palin won't meet with 'Troopergate' investigator

It sure seems like she has something to hide considering the secrecy and unwillingness to release emails that she copied her husband, a civilian, on (which should by law make them public).

Do the American people really want a VP who is under investigation for abuse of power being elected to office before the conclusion of the investigation? I certainly don't.

Just because McCain did a slack job vetting his VP doesn't mean we should all suffer through VP Cheney II.

Let the deception begin (or more like continue)

Jewish voters report calls disparaging Obama

I wonder who might be behind these calls attempting to smear Obama to Jewish voters....

In the last 7 weeks before election day, get used to hearing about stuff like this. It's known that a certain party is well versed in these techniques and have no shame about using them. I guess it's irony that McCain who was highly critical of push-polling would have it done on what can we assume is his part.

Race and the race

For Obama, Race Remains Elephant in the Room

Seems few want to talk about it... understandably. But let's be honest, racism still exists in America even though some will try to use examples such as Tiger Woods, Oprah, and even Obama himself to disprove that notion. I just wonder how profound an effect it will have when voters go to the polls. Will lower and middle-class whites go against their own self-interests and cast their vote for McCain just because he happens to be running against a black (half, I guess) man? Will racism put John McCain over the top so that his continuation of the policies of the last 8 years can continue to wreak havoc on our nation? Cause let's be honest, as much as McCain uses the words "change", "reform", and "maverick", the reality is his positions and plans for this country don't differ much from what we have and had under Bush II.

I just pray that for once people can put their bigotry aside for a second and do what's right for this nation.



And one of the scribes came and heard them arguing, and recognizing that He had answered them well, asked Him, "What commandment is the foremost of all?" Jesus answered, "The foremost is, 'Hear, O Israel! The Lord our God is one Lord; and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength.' "The second is this, 'You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' There is no other commandment greater than these." (NAS, Mark 12:28-31)

Notice how it says "your neighbors", not "only your white neighbors".

OHHHHH SICK BURN



I think this pretty much about says it. Hey Republicans.... thanks for being so concerned about offshore drilling lately that nothing else matters. I know you are just looking out for us Americans by trying to lower gas prices in 10 years by 6 cents, cause we all know it has nothing to do with making oil companies more profitable.

Ridiculous.

Pakistan is getting pissed

Pakistan soldiers 'confront US'

I'm not sure how I feel about the recent incursions into Pakistani territory. I think we need to be vigilant in rooting out the terrorist groups responsible for attacking our soldiers and destabilizing Afghanistan and Iraq, but entering into a sovereign nation without their permission to do so doesn't seem like the best way to go about it. This is further complicated by the fact that we haven't been able to carry out all of these missions without killing civilians, which will quickly turn the locals and the government against the U.S. We seem to miss the point that people get pissed when you kill their family and other innocent civilians.

It seems like too often in this ridiculously termed "war on terror" we end up pissing off more people and creating even more animosity towards the U.S. than there was in the first place. I think the government, and the people, of the U.S. needs to really take a look at how "terror" comes about. We keep fighting the effect, rather than the cause. I find it hard to believe that people are born to be "terrorists". We need to address the poverty and lack of opportunity in places like Iraq and Afghanistan if we really want to win this "war on Terror". Going around killing everyone isn't going to do anything besides make more people hate us. In Afghanistan, a country still reeling from the war against the Soviets, we need to help people rebuild their country so that they can create a future for themselves, then the Taliban and other militant groups will be persona non grata. We need to do what we can to help these people without creating military bases on their land and having them see us as occupiers.

Put the shoe on the other foot and think about what it would be like if someone came to our country, disposed of the government (whether we liked the current administration or not), and then started policing our country. I doubt we would greet them as "liberators".