Friday, March 20, 2009

Crazy Rep. Michele Bachmann Calls for Armed Revolution


Someone really needs to do something about Ms. Bachmann, (A padded cell comes to mind), before she starts something she can't deal with, let alone finish.

There are a few others among the Rethugs who should join her. These people are NUTZ!


By Steve Benen, Washington Monthly
Posted on March 23, 2009, Printed on March 25, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/132980/

It's obviously just rhetoric from overly-excited far-right lawmakers. It's no doubt intended to fire up the activists (and donors) who help Republicans succeed.

But when Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) casually refers to elected Democratic officials as the "enemy," and nonchalantly refers to keeping her supporters "armed and dangerous," it's probably a good time to remind Republican lawmakers to turn the temperature down a bit. (via the University of Minnesota and the Dump Bachmann blog.)

Bachmann appeared over the weekend on the First Team radio show with John Hinderaker and Brian Ward, speaking about the horrible stuff that the Democrats are doing: "I'm a foreign correspondent on enemy lines and I try to let everyone back here in Minnesota know exactly the nefarious activities that are taking place in Washington."

Bachmann also spoke out against the cap-and-trade proposals currently making their way through Washington, and how she'll be distributing information against it at an upcoming event in the district. "I want people in Minnesota armed and dangerous on this issue of the energy tax, because we need to fight back," said Bachmann. "Thomas Jefferson told us, having a revolution every now and then is a good thing. And the people -- we the people -- are going to have to fight back hard if we're not going to lose our country."

On the one hand, it seems clear that Bachmann was speaking figuratively. On the other hand, is it appropriate for a member of Congress to speak in any context about being armed for revolution?

No, probably not. But this seems to fit in with a larger trend. We have one GOP lawmaker saying the party should emulate the insurgency tactics of the Taliban. We have another arguing the party should position itself as "freedom fighters" taking on the "slide toward socialism."

And now Bachmann is throwing fuel on the fire of right-wing rage.

Obviously, Bachmann and other unhinged conservatives have the right to say what they please. But at a minimum, I think it's fair to describe this kind of talk from elected leaders in positions of authority as irresponsible.

Steve Benen is "blogger in chief" of the popular Washington Monthly online blog, Political Animal. His background includes publishing The Carpetbagger Report, and writing for a variety of publications, including Talking Points Memo, The American Prospect, the Huffington Post, and The Guardian. He has also appeared on NPR's "Talk of the Nation," MSNBC's "Rachel Maddow Show," Air America Radio's "Sam Seder Show," and XM Radio's "POTUS '08."

© 2009 Washington Monthly All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/132980/


Let The Sun Shine In......

A Gooper With Guts?

God deliver us from these greedy, self-centered, thieving, lustful....just plain evil-doers in our own midst.

If we had the money that Bush/Cheney and pals made off their illegal war in Iraq, there would be enough money to put a green car in every driveway in America, but why should we expect that kind of common sense from two oilmen and a hive of fascists called Neocons?

Paul Craig Roberts: Was the Bailout Itself a Scam?

Professor Michael Hudson (CounterPunch, March 18) is correct that the orchestrated outrage over the $165 million AIG bonuses is a diversion from the thousand times greater theft from taxpayers of the approximately $200 billion “bailout” of AIG.

Nevertheless, it is a diversion that serves an important purpose. It has taught an inattentive American public that the elites run the government for their own private interests. Americans are angry that AIG executives are paying themselves millions of dollars in bonuses after having cost the taxpayers an exorbitant sum.

Senator Charles Grassley put a proper face on the anger when he suggested that the AIG executives “follow the Japanese example and resign or go commit suicide.” Yet, Obama’s White House economist, Larry Summers, on whose watch as Treasury Secretary in the Clinton administration financial deregulation got out of control, invoked the “sanctity of contracts” in defense of the AIG bonuses.

See what we mean about the false duality of Republican and Democrat?


Let The Sun Shine In......


The Big Takeover


On CNN today, I caught a brief blah, blah, blah about how N.Y. A.G. Cuomo had the names of all of the bonus babies. The CNN folks were concerned that the names would be made public, as apparently there have been death threats and such.

I say, who the hell cares about their security?

Make the names public!

The masses have more to worry about than these greedy SOBs' security. Let them spend their bonuses on their own security. They can surely afford it.


.....So it's time to admit it: We're fools, protagonists in a kind of gruesome comedy about the marriage of greed and stupidity. And the worst part about it is that we're still in denial — we still think this is some kind of unfortunate accident, not something that was created by the group of psychopaths on Wall Street whom we allowed to gang-rape the American Dream.

When Geithner announced the new $30 billion bailout, the party line was that poor AIG was just a victim of a lot of shitty luck — bad year for business, you know, what with the financial crisis and all.

Edward Liddy, the company's CEO, actually compared it to catching a cold: "The marketplace is a pretty crummy place to be right now," he said. "When the world catches pneumonia, we get it too." In a pathetic attempt at name-dropping, he even whined that AIG was being "consumed by the same issues that are driving house prices down and 401K statements down and Warren Buffet's investment portfolio down."~~~~~~~The global economic crisis isn't about money - it's about power. How Wall Street insiders are using the bailout to stage a revolution


Let The Sun Shine In......

Want to Prevent Another AIG? Let the Sunshine In

The simple fact is that our elite government, all of them, suck to the high heavens as do their pals on Wall Street.

Tea Party, anyone?


BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS
by Meg White

The fact that Americans are mad as hell has not escaped the media or government. Indeed, it seems that everyone is racing to be first to tell the American people where to direct their rage.

Blame AIG! Those greedy bastards are already sucking us dry and giving our money to foreign banks, and then they take millions in bonuses for the very employees that precipitated this crisis in the first place.

Blame Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT)! He wrote in a change to the stimulus bill that allowed the AIG bonuses to be paid.

Oh wait, no. Looks like we got that one backwards, so...

Blame Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner! He's the one that asked Dodd to change the stimulus bill, fearing that Dodd's amendment to prevent all bonuses being paid out to rescued bankers might expose the government to lawsuits.

Let's just blame President Barack Obama, because he doesn't look pissed off enough! Or because he's too pissed off!

All this anger is understandable, but it isn't helping us out of this crisis. This kind of infectious anger is an emotion that fosters putrefaction and corrosion. We need a cure, not a supplement. But most cures are costly, and the American body politic is running low on cash as well as political capital. Thankfully, the best antiseptic is cheap: sunshine.

So where do we turn for help but the Sunlight Foundation? This group has been working toward greater government transparency for years now, but they've recently renewed their push to have Congress actually read the bills they vote on.


Read The Bill from Sunlight Foundation on Vimeo.

Lisa Rosenberg, a Sunlight Foundation government affairs consultant, talked to BuzzFlash about their Read the Bill initiative, which proposes that all non-emergency legislation be available and posted online 72 hours before Congressional debate begins.

The list of rushed bills according to Sunlight is massive: the stimulus, the Wall Street bailout, FISA, the Fannie/Freddie bailout and more. And that's just the most recent history. Don't forget about the past eight years of tossing accountability like a hot potato between a pushy executive branch and a negligent legislature. Um, Iraq war resolution anyone? How about the PATRIOT Act? And while we're on the subject of eliminating civil liberties, who wants seconds?

According to Rosenberg, the AIG bonus situation shows why the status quo is "really problematic right now." If the 72-hour window was already in place, things would have been different with the bonus loophole.

"Someone would have found it and the outrage would have been directed at Congress at a time when they could have changed it," Rosenberg said. "Instead they're going to write a whole new bill [to tax the bonuses]. Congress hasn't learned from their mistakes."

The initiative was introduced in the last Congress, but it didn't go anywhere. Rep. Brian Baird (D-WA) sponsored legislation that would require posting legislation on the Internet for 72 hours before vote consideration in 2007, but it died in the House Committee on Rules.

"It's on his radar," Rosenberg said of the possibility of Baird taking up the measure in the 111th Congress. She didn't have any immediate predictions for the initiative, but it's possible the infusion of fresh faces from the 2008 election cycle could break up some of the previous resistance.

"I think seniority has a lot more to do with it," she said. "Freshmen are more open to the idea."

Perhaps the most important outcome of this sort of legislation is the deflation of the moral high ground so many politicians stand on when they claim they didn't know what was in a particular bill after a controversy turns up. The argument goes that if lawmakers don't have enough time to read legislation before they are forced to vote on it, they shouldn't be held responsible for the dirty details. Plenty of lawmakers claim they want more time to read bills. But do they really want that kind of accountability?

"A lot of it is lip service," Rosenberg said, noting that "you'll see a lot of Republicans complain about not having time to read" legislation sponsored by Democrats, and vice-versa. On the other hand, there are plenty of reasons for Congress to let the bill die yet again.

"My best guess is a combination of a fear of really altering the way they've always done business," Rosenberg said, adding that there is also an "unfounded fear" that the 72-hour window would slow Congress down to a standstill.

Some lawmakers may be equating a loss of speed with a loss of force. Rosenberg offered a third reason why the initiative might encounter resistance: "Certain members think they have a lot more power when they can slip things into a bill at the last minute."

The argument can certainly be made that simply allowing enough time for a bill to be read doesn't guarantee it'll make it onto The New York Times Bestseller List. In other words, you can lead a lawmaker to legislation, but you can't make him read.

Thank goodness for that other cheap cure: the information superhighway. Turns out that if you put stuff up on the Internet, there's a good chance people will look at it. Some of those people won't have behinds to cover and donors (or, ahem... constituencies) to cater to.

Remember that it wasn't Congress or the White House or the Treasury that revealed the existence of the AIG bonuses. It was the fourth estate. If the information is there, someone will look at it.

So let us trade in our tirades for change. A frown makes a terrible umbrella, but if it weren't raining, we wouldn't need one. Let's use this anger for something more productive and let the sunshine in.

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS

Learn more and sign the petition at the Sunlight Foundation's ReadTheBill.org.


Let The Sun Shine In......

Maddow: Pentagon reversal coming?




more about "Maddow: Pentagon reversal coming?", posted with vodpod

Bush, Cheney, PNAC, 9/11 & The Criminal Conspiracy To Invade Iraq




more about "Bush, Cheney, PNAC, 9/11 & The Crimin...", posted with vodpod

Monday, March 16, 2009

Keep Internet Open And Health Reform Alive


Right-wing broadcasters, who outnumber liberal/progressive talkers by more than 9 to 1, have been up in arms about the possibility that the Federal Communications Commission under Barack Obama might try to restore the Fairness Doctrine, which until the 1980s required the holders of broadcast licenses to provide some balance in the presentation of controversial issues of public importance. Ronald Reagan’s FCC in 1987 abolished the Fairness Doctrine and Reagan vetoed a bill to reimpose the doctrine.

We think changes in media technology have made the doctrine largely irrelevant but we still don’t understand why Senate Democrats knuckled under to Republican demagogues Feb. 25 to pass a measure that would prohibit the FCC from restoring the doctrine. The 87-11 vote was on an amendment to an unrelated bill giving the District of Columbia a voting member of Congress.

We’d rather see the Obama administration move toward promoting more diversity in radio and TV stations, including repeal of rules that allow media conglomerates to own multiple stations in a market and approval of community radio stations and low-power radio stations that operate at 100 watts or less.

We also think Congress should create a permanent, independent funding mechanism for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which supports PBS and NPR, and change the governance structure to prevent partisan meddling by political appointees, as occurred under the Bush administration when the CPB chairman sought to meddle in programming.

We also believe the FCC should support public access cable TV channels against telecoms such as AT&T that community media groups accuse of relegating the nonprofit channels to second-class status, in violation of the 1984 Cable Act and FCC rulings and policies.

But the most revolutionary new outlet for public media is the Internet, as technology makes it possible for any website or blog to reach across the World Wide Web.

Progressive talkers have gotten a hostile reception in the executive suites of media conglomerates, as the liberal Air America network hovers around 60 stations nationwide, along with other syndicated talkers such as Ed Schultz, Thom Hartmann, and Stephanie Miller. In most of the country, including the liberal bastion of Austin, Texas, the only way you can listen to progressive talkers is over the Internet.

An estimated 33 million people age 12 or over listened to radio stations over the Internet during an average week in January 2008, Edison Media Research reported. That was around 13% of the total American population over 12. And the Internet audience is growing.

Michael Bassik, chief digital officer of Air America Media, said the Internet is creating a new era of talk radio, allowing listeners to “stream” programs online and, in many cases, download “podcasts” to replay shows they miss. They also can engage with talk show hosts and producers by email as well as by telephone.

More than 700,000 people listen to Air America programming via airamerica.com, which streams up to 1.5 million hours of content every month. That does not include streaming from affiliated radio stations that carry Air America shows.

Approximately 70% of US households have some Internet access, but Leichtman Research reported in March 2008 that only 57% of those homes had broadband access, which is needed for quality streaming.

We need a national broadband policy that keeps the Internet open under the principle of Net Neutrality and promotes more broadband Internet access, particularly in underserved areas, such as rural areas and low-income urban neighborhoods that phone and cable companies choose not to serve.

The problem is particularly acute in rural areas. Megan Tady of Free Press recently reported that 61% of rural homes across the country are not connected to high-speed Internet. “This isn’t just a statistic. It’s a daily reality for the millions of people who can’t go online to apply for jobs, attend classes, start home-based businesses, get news and information, and participate in the global economy,” she wrote.

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, also known as the Stimulus Bill, allots $7.2 billion for expanding broadband connections to underserved areas. The US Department of Agriculture’s Rural Utilities Service will get $2.5 billion to expand rural broadband services while $4.7 billion goes to the Commerce Department for assistance in expanding broadband access with the requirement that those Internet providers adhere to open Internet principles established by the FCC.

President Obama, whose campaign took advantage of the Internet, has pledged to “take a back seat to no one” in his commitment to Net Neutrality. His selection of Julius Genachowski as new chairman of the FCC has been hailed by Net Neutrality advocates. Genachowski, a former FCC legal counsel, anchored the drafting of Obama’s comprehensive media policy agenda that promotes fast and neutral Internet connections and more competitive choices for the consumer. “It is clear that he understands the importance of open networks and a regulatory environment that promotes innovation and competition to a robust democracy and a healthy economy,” said Gigi Sohn of Public Knowledge and SaveTheInternet.com. This will be important as Open Internet supporters face off against telecom interests who would like to become the gatekeepers on the Internet tollway.

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

President Obama deserves credit for getting interested parties together for his Health Care Summit March 5, even if the White House had to be pressed to invite Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), sponsor of HR 676 (the Medicare for All bill), and Dr. Oliver Fein, president of Physicians for a National Health Program, which supports Conyers’ single-payer bill.

Roger Hickey, co-director of the Campaign for America’s Future, noted that Obama reached out to deficit hawks who disagree with him fundamentally on the budget, as well as insurance companies who want to preserve their role in the health system. The health insurance lobbyist promised to help pass health care reform this year. But sooner or later, Hickey predicted, the insurance industry will break with Obama, and he will have to assemble a majority in the Congress that supports his approach. Then he will need progressives to help him win.

One of the top priorities of the insurance lobby is to prevent the public from getting the option to buy into Medicare or a similar public insurance program.

Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee has ruled out a single-payer solution, such as Conyers proposes. But Baucus has proposed creation of a public insurance plan similar to Obama’s that would compete with private insurers. The Commonwealth Fund recently reported that a public health insurance plan could offer premiums averaging 20% less than private insurance companies.

That’s the sort of competition insurance companies don’t want. At the close of the White House Summit, Obama asked Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), ranking Republican on the Finance Committee, for his thoughts. Grassley said he would work for health reform but he added, “there’s a lot of us that feel that the public option, that the government is an unfair competitor and that we’re going to get an awful lot of crowd-out.” Other Republicans have taken to belittling “government-run” solutions.

Baucus also bears watching as he says he’d prefer funding health care reform by taxing workers’ health benefits rather than phasing out tax breaks for the richest Americans. Pray that Ted Kennedy can rise from his sickbed to pull this one out. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, April 1, 2009


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