Real Terrorists?

Well, I guess we won’t have to worry about the KKK, the IRA, the Basques, Timothy McVeigh, &c., because “the only terrorists are Muslim terrorists” according to Florida Congresswoman Ginny Brown. See the disgusting video here.

 

Lots. Way too many. This hurts my brain. Don’t look at this if you want to maintain your sanity.

Interestingly, the great masters of “fine art” and even most modern political cartoonists don’t have to explain their symbolism. For some reason, this guy does. . .

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Breaking from The Seminal, 30 Democratic senators have sent a letter to Majority Leader Reid demanding that a public option reminiscent of Medicare is included in any healthcare bill that is passed. The full text of the letter is here:

Dear Majority Leader Reid:

We have spent the better part of this year fighting for health reform that would provide insurance access and continuity to every American in a fiscally responsible manner.  We are concerned that – absent a competitive and continuous public insurance option – health reform legislation will not produce nationwide access and ongoing cost containment.  For that reason, we are asking for your leadership on ensuring that the merged health reform bill contains a public insurance option.

As it stands, the health insurance market is dominated by a handful of for-profit health insurers that are exempt from the anti-trust laws that ensure robust competition in other markets across the United States.  Without a not-for-profit public insurance alternative that competes with these insurers based on premium rates and quality, insurers will have free rein to increase insurance premiums and drive up the cost of federal subsidies tied to those premiums.  This is simply not fiscally sustainable.

We recognize that the two Committees with jurisdiction over health reform – the Senate Finance Committee and the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee – have taken two very different approaches with respect to this issue.  However, a strong public option has resounding support among Senate Democrats – every Democrat on HELP, three quarters of those on Finance, and what we believe is a majority of the caucus.

The Senate Finance Committee included a cooperative approach to insurance market competition.  While promoting more co-ops may be a worthy goal, it is not realistic to expect local co-ops to spring up in every corner of this country.   There are many areas of the country where the population is simply too small to sustain a local co-op plan.   We are also concerned that the administrative costs associated with financing the start-up of multiple co-op plans would far outstrip the seed money required to establish a public health insurance program.

Opponents of health reform argue that a public option presents unfair competition to the private insurance companies. However, it is possible to create a public health insurance option that is modeled after private insurance – rates are negotiated and providers are not required to participate in the plan.  As you know, this is the Senate HELP Committee’s approach.  The major differences between the public option and for-profit plans are that the public plan would report to taxpayers, not to shareholders, and the public plan would be available continuously in all parts of the country.  The number one goal of health reform must be to look out for the best interests of the American people – patients and taxpayers alike – not the profit margins of insurance companies.

Health reform is about improving access to health care, containing costs, and giving Americans a real choice in the insurance plan best suited to their needs.  We urge you to fight for a sustainable health care system that ensures Americans the option of a public plan in the merged Senate bill.

Sincerely,

Sherrod Brown (D-OH)                                              John D. Rockefeller (D-WV)
Russell D. Feingold (D-WI)                                        Patrick J. Leahy (D-VT)
Daniel K. Akaka (D-HI)                                              Tom Udall (D-NM)
Kristen E. Gillibrand (D-NY)                                      Roland W. Burris (D-IL)
Ron Wyden (D-OR)                                                     Debbie Stabenow (D-MI)
Barbara Boxer (D-CA)                                               Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI)
Michael F. Bennet (D-CO)                                         Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)
Jack Reed (D-RI)                                                        Jeff Merkley (D-OR)
Frank R. Lautenberg (D-NJ)                                      Benjamin L. Cardin (D-MD)
Al Franken (D-MN)                                                    Robert P. Casey, Jr. (D-PA)
Barbara A. Mikulski (D-MD)                                      Daniel K. Inouye (D-HI)
Edward E. Kaufman (D-DE)                                      Arlen Specter (D-PA)
Maria Cantwell (D-WA)                                              Robert Menendez (D-NJ)
Bernard Sanders (I-VT)                                              John F. Kerry (D-MA)
Herb Kohl (D-WI)                                                       Paul Kirk (D-MA)

I’m proud to be from Massachusetts, at this point. This is big, everyone.

 

Good for him, and can’t you just sense the, “dammit!” in this article from Time?

There was never a single moment when White House staff decided the major media outlets were falling down on the job. There were instead several such moments.

. . .

All the criticism, both fair and misleading, took a toll, regularly knocking the White House off message. So a new White House strategy has emerged: rather than just giving reporters ammunition to “fact-check” Obama’s many critics, the White House decided it would become a player, issuing biting attacks on those pundits, politicians and outlets that make what the White House believes to be misleading or simply false claims, like the assertion that health-care reform would establish new “sex clinics” in schools. Obama, fresh from his vacation on Martha’s Vineyard, cheered on the effort, telling his aides he wanted to “call ‘em out.”

The take-no-prisoners turn has come as a surprise to some in the press, considering the largely favorable coverage that candidate Obama received last fall and given the President’s vows to lower the rhetorical temperature in Washington and not pay attention to cable hyperbole. Instead, the White House blog now issues regular denunciations of the Administration’s critics, including a recent post that announced “Fox lies” and suggested that the cable network was unpatriotic for criticizing Obama’s 2016 Olympics effort.

. . .

White House officials offer no apologies.

“We were nice to him? Why won’t he play nice with us?” Think of the major networks’ owners. Won’t anyone think of the major networks’ owners?

This is overdue, on the part of the Obama administration. As the above article points out, the media has gotten them off-message far too much, and it was time for the White House to call them out on it.

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Why do we Bowl?

In Bowling Alone, Robert Putnam suggests that we act politically because of a shared trust and sense of community.Other political scientists (such as Benedict Anderson) believe that cultural cleavages are what drive us to act. Still others (Lipset, Almond & Verba) think that a shared tradition and shared cultural norms are what drive our political activity. These Culturalist schools of political science all have merits, and all can explain some past forms of political motivations.

Putnam’s idea of shared trust (Social Capital) and sense of community can explain a lot, and is closely related to those who believe in a shared tradition and cultural norms as motivational factors. For example, Putnam’s Social Capital in his neighborhood, as he discusses in his 2007 article E Pluribus Unum, is built by his neighbors’ close ties. They have barbecues, cocktail parties, &c. on a regular basis; Putnam himself, he admits, regularly skips these events. The social capital built by these parties and cook-outs benefits him regardless; his house is kept safer because his neighbors have a close sense of community. If the neighbors did not share at least some of the same tradition (e.g., religion, professional status, economic status, &c.), would this social capital be built up so well? Would Putnam’s neighborhood still have cocktail parties and barbecues if they did not share in the American cultural norm of getting together with one’s neighbors?

Another example of social capital, in a far more negative sense, is given to us by the terrorist organization Al Qaeda. This group of determined Islamic fundamentalists, hell-bent on waging a Jihad on America and the West, are held together by Social Capital, and would not be able to accomplish any of their goals if they did not band together. Again, however, a shared sense of values and cultural norms are strongly present–a certain bastardization of Islam, a shared idea of an ideal world, and the shared belief in certain Islamic prophecy are present and allow this group to come together and commit their dastardly deeds.

Between these two groups–Putnam’s peaceful neighborhood across the River Charles and the destructive fundamentalists an ocean away–we see the third Culturalist school appear; cultural cleavages, and how they can motivate people to act. What else drives Al Qaeda, Islamic Jihad, and other terrorist groups but major cultural cleavages and visions of society? As Osama Bin Laden himself put it,

The ruling to kill the Americans and their allies—civilians and military—is an individual duty for every Muslim who can do it in any country in which it is possible to do it, in order to liberate the al-Aqsa Mosque and the holy mosque from their grip, and in order for their armies to move out of all the lands of Islam, defeated and unable to threaten any Muslim.

How much more fundamental can cultural values get than religious? It is his very own religious beliefs that pit Bin Laden and his gang of madmen against America and the Western world, and that very cultural cleavage that causes his violence. Thus, we see that all three Culturalist schools are at work here–a shared tradition of cultural norms leads to social capital that causes an exclusive group to make their cultural cleavage salient. All of these reasons can be traced back through history, as well; the Middle East as a Muslim region, and the radicalization of Islam in the 1930’s, as Austin Cline discusses here:

Many devout Muslims are aghast at the idea that their faith is being used to justify terrorism, yet they must understand that bin Laden and the people like him are not simply strange aberrations: they are, instead, a natural extension of extremist theology which has been in development since at least the 1930s, and in some cases well before that.

Institutionalists think about this sort of history and how it affects our current politics. Does the category of people we belong to have effects on our choices? According to Tilly and Gamson, the answer is maybe; Tilly puts forth the idea that if the benefits available to one’s group outweighs the costs to a person, then an individual will participate. Gamson goes further and suggests that the collective goals of political actors (interest groups, &c.,) instead of personal preferences are what are relevant to political action. Burns, Schlozman, and Verba put forth the idea that a group of disadvantaged people need an elite or wealthy sponsor to push them to action. Doug McAdams says that changes in society opens doors to social change–for example, 9/11 opened the door to George Bush to enact laws like the USA PATR… and to expand the power of the executive, and that opened the door for activists to protest not only the president, but the strength that the president has been acquiring for many years. In other words (for the tl; dr version,) if the circumstances are right, and people see a benefit to themselves that will outweigh the costs of their participation, then people will mobilize.

History, however, can often tell another story; people often do not participate, because they look back and see the benefits of free-riding on social movements, or simply see no way to accomplish what they want. Many, many workers today see the push for healthcare reform and a single-payer system that would benefit them, but do not participate. Indeed, while 83% of Americans (according to the EBRI) support a public option, we rarely see anyone going out and actively participating in a protest for healthcare reform, or even sending a letter to their representative. Email costs almost nothing, and still, almost no one seems to send their representative or senator a note letting them know that they want a public option.

This free-riding is a big problem in the healthcare debate, as there aren’t really exclusive benefits for those who participate, and the cost (in time) to get involved with the debate–to get educated about what’s happening, to find ways to participate, and then to actually start fighting for what you want–is great. So what is driving people to fight for it? Perhaps it’s something personal–someone who went bankrupt due to the lack of affordable healthcare in America. Perhaps it’s something statistical–people see that 45,000 people a year die from a lack of insurance. Perhaps it’s cultural–people believe that they should help their fellow man, and that it is a social norm to watch out for your neighbor. Perhaps it’s institutional–Americans help one another out and keep watch over each other (or, on the opposite side of the debate, rely on rugged individualism!). I certainly don’t have an answer as to exactly why people participate, perhaps because there are so many different possible causes. Who is to say why I participate except me? That being the case, who am I to say why anyone else participates in the system?

Cry Me A River

K Street lobbyists are ticked off at Obama. The reason? He’s kicking them off of federal advisory panels. From CQPolitics:

A tide of anger and dismay is rippling down K Street as the Obama administration implements a new policy limiting the roles of lobbyists on federal advisory committees.

The policy change, described by the White House as the next step in President Obama’s drive to limit influence-peddling in Washington, could affect hundreds of lobbyists who serve on the panels, which were created by Congress in the 1970s to provide private-sector advice to the government.

By removing a key point of access to the administration, many lobbyists will be less useful to their clients, who will be forced to appoint others to take up the slack. And the information about federal government intentions gleaned from committee meetings will now be unavailable to many lobbyists as they strategize on how to work various issues.

“There is fury,” said a lobbyist who sits on one of the committees. “Absolute fury.” K Street veterans say they sit at the intersection of policy wonk-dom, Washington savvy, and the needs of business, and are therefore best suited to populate the panels.

But the White House views the move as a key step in rolling back what officials see as the open-door policy for K Street created in previous years. According to a senior White House official, the panels have been excessively dominated by lobbyists. “It is one of the ways special interests have historically shaped policy to the detriment of the public interest,” he said.

Federally-registered lobbyists are no longer allowed to sit on advisory panels. So, in other words, the people who are paid to represent certain interests are no longer to advised the federal government. Lobbyists have to make a choice; they can either advise the federal government on a policy on which they are an expert, or they can work for a company to try to influence the federal government. Seems pretty straightforward, right?

In a comment, lobbyists had this to say:

K Street sources describe a process they say was completely opaque and undertaken without their input. Several lobbyists who sit on the panels said they were not consulted and don’t know of anyone who was. Indeed, some sources on the panels contacted just before the Sept. 23 announcement said they were either unaware of the new policy or had heard little more than rumors.

“This was done in a vacuum,” said another business lobbyist who sits on one of the panels. “The decision was made in a room of the White House without consultation.”

My question: so what? You’re already being dishonest by being paid to represent certain interests while sitting on an advisory board to the federal government, and President Obama promised to reduce the influence of lobbyists in federal government. In other words, stop whining.

Sources also complained that they had to search for the new policy, finding it finally on the White House blog.

“We had to do our own homework! Waaah!”

K Street is now mulling its next steps. Missives have been sent to officials who run the trade committees grumbling about the new policy. Many expect an effort to gin up opposition from Congressional panels that handle trade.

Officials are particularly eyeing the Finance Committee, where Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and ranking member Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) are believed on K Street to be closely following the issue.

Who would have thought that the lobbyists would turn to Senator Baucus (a known taker of large corporate donations, see “Healthcare Reform”, and a DINO), and Senator Charles Grassley, a Republican? The same party whose presidential candidate promised to rid Washington of the influence of lobbyists, while having several on his senior campaign staff? Color me surprised.

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Healthcare Approval Rating

From the Boston Globe via Boston.com:

[A]pproval of his [Obama's] handling of health care – while somewhat better than in August – is at 47 percent

I can think of 2 reasons that this may be happening:

  1. Heat death: Obama has been pushing this plan for so long, and the Blue Dogs and Republicans have been stalling it for so long that people are getting tired of it, or starting to believe the Republican propaganda machine on it.
  2. People are sick of the democrats, who have a majority in the House and Senate, making concessions to a childish, obstructionist opposition party. A thought that doesn’t seem to come to many is that the majority, or at least plurality, of Americans may actually want Obama to act more liberally in this case. They may want a public option, or fully socialized healthcare. Support for a public option is strong, according to EBRI, the Employee Benefit Research Institute,

Most Americans also support some form of a public plan option and “guaranteed issue”—the requirement that
insurance companies not deny coverage to persons based on health status. More than one-half (53 percent) strongly
support the availability of a public plan, while another 30 percent somewhat support it. Fourteen percent oppose the
idea. Similarly, 55 percent strongly support guaranteed issue and 25 percent somewhat support it. (Here)

So come on, Democrats, get the picture! People WANT a public option. An overwhelming majority support it. So stop wimping out, and do something about it!

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Isn’t This What I Just Said?

From FoxNoise:

Even as Republicans pummel President Obama’s health care proposals, some GOP leaders worry their party is being hurt by a Democratic counterattack: Where is your plan?

Republican leaders chose not to draft their own comprehensive bill, focusing instead on attacking Democrats’ plans as too costly and bureaucratic. Some prominent Republicans now fear they are getting tagged as the “party of no,” and they want the GOP to offer more solutions to the nation’s health care problems.

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, a potential GOP presidential contender in 2012, said it’s time for Republicans “to pivot and say, in addition to emphasizing what we oppose, here are our proposals” for health care. The two parties can agree on some important improvements, he said in an interview Thursday, but Democrats must trim their proposed costs.

Minority leader Mitch McConnell had this to offer:

Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told reporters Friday that Republicans have not offered their own bill because “we’re not in the majority. The majority has the responsibility to go forward.”

So if you aren’t in the majority, you can’t offer a bill? Even if you think it won’t go forward? Roy Blunt said,

“I guarantee you, we will bring you a bill that costs far less, far less than the Democrats’ and will provide better results for the American people.”

But a month later said

“Our bill is never going to get to the floor,” he wrote in a blog, “so why confuse the focus? We clearly have principles; we could have language, but why start diverting attention from this really bad piece of work they’ve got to whatever we’re offering right now?”

Why divert attention? Why offer your own bill? If your bill costs far, far less than the Democrats’ bill and will indeed provide better results, don’t you think that at least some of your Blue Dog friends will cross the aisle and support it? Let’s see what you have to offer! Of course, you’d have to tel us why a program based entirely on the magical free market would outdo a public option, or how it would be cheaper or better. You’d essentially have to disprove the system that most first-world countries use now, but, hey, you can handle that.

Right?

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Right Wing Hates America

From TPM:

When the International Olympic Committee voted against Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Olympics this morning — after the President and First Lady flew to Copenhagen to push for it in person — the Weekly Standard newsroom burst into applause.

“Cheers erupt at Weekly Standard world headquarters,” wrote editor John McCormack in a post titled “Chicago Loses! Chicago Loses!”

The line was quickly removed, but ThinkProgress caught it in time and posted a screenshot of the post.

But even with the edits, McCormack is still obviously reveling in America’s defeat.

“As a citizen of the world who believes that No one nation can or should try to dominate another nation, I’m glad that the Obama White House’s jingoist rhetoric and attempt to pay back Chicago cronies at the expense of undermining our relationships with our allies failed,” he wrote.

McCormack’s fellow conservatives joined in the celebration.

“Chicago and Tokyo eliminated. No Obamalypics,” Michelle Malkin tweeted, following up with, “Game over on Obamalympics. Next up, Obamacare.”

“Please, please let me break this news to you. It’s so sweet,” said Glenn Beck on his radio show.

“Hahahahaha,” wrote Red State’s Erick Erickson. “So Obama’s pimped us to every two bit thug and dictator in the world, made promises to half the Olympic committee, and they did not even kiss him. So much for improving America’s standing in the world, Barry O.”

The Drudge Report announced the news like so: “WORLD REJECTS OBAMA: CHICAGO OUT IN FIRST ROUND. THE EGO HAS LANDED.”

“The worst day of Obama’s presidency, folks. The ego has landed. The world has rejected Obama,” echoed Rush Limbaugh.

“For those of you … who are upset that I sound gleeful, I am. I don’t deny it. I’m happy,” Limbaugh said. “Anything that gets in the way of Barack Obama accomplishing his domestic agenda is fine with me.”

“President Obama fails to get the Olympics while unemployment goes to 9.8% Iran continues nuclear program. America needs focused leadership,” Newt Gingrich tweeted. Then he added, “Somehow charm and oratory dont seem to work in foreign affirs but historians have warned that foreign policy is different than campaigning.” (sic)

“ChicagP\/\/n3D!” tweeted Newsmax, of recent fame for running, then pulling, a column about an impending military coup against Obama.

Apparently no one read the tweet from former Bush flack Scott Stanzel.

“Note to GOP officials/consultants – resist the temptation to pile on about Chicago losing the Olympic bid just because Obama made the pitch,” he wrote, advice reportedly passed on by Former Mitt Romney spokesman Kevin Madden.

Fox News, however, saw it coming. A Fox anchor told senior adviser David Axelrod she could “imagine the headlines” that would come out of this, that Obama had been “rebuked,” and had “failed.” Axelrod simply responded that no one could doubt Obama’s influence after watching the G-20, and said neither he nor the President have any regrets about trying.

So, the President makes a last-minute attempt on an application that was made last year, and when Chicago doesn’t get the bid it’s his fault. The right seems to have set pretty low standards.

UPDATE: Couldn’t one think of an Olympiad taking place in an American city as a way to boost our economy? Between tourism, construction jobs, unskilled and skilled on-site labor for the event itself, this could have had major positive effects on our economy. Guess that doesn’t really matter, does it?

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A short paragraph from this HuffPo article illustrates so much:

Obama is considering a range of ideas for changing course in Afghanistan, including pulling back, staying put and sending more troops to fight the insurgency.

Let me reiterate for those of you who are slow readers: Obama is considering pulling back, staying put, or sending more troops.

He is considering pulling back, staying put, or sending more troops.

This is what we need in a commander-in-chief; not a “decider” who considers either staying the course so he won’t look bad, or staying the course so he can push the blame off on the next president, but someone who considers all options and makes a decision based on weighing numerous, different options.

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