Pat Robertson Calls SNL Sketch “Anti-Christian Bigotry”
Posted: December 19, 2011 Filed under: just because, PLUB Pro-Life-Until-Birth, religious extremists, U.S. Politics | Tags: bigotry, Bill Belichick, Denver Broncos, football, Jesus, New England Patriots, religion, Tim Tebow, Tom Brady 11 CommentsYesterday Tom Brady and the New England Patriots crushed Tim Tebow and the Denver Broncos 41-23 at Mile High Stadium. Denver had won its six previous games. Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow wears his “Christian” faith on his sleeve. In fact he appeared in an anti-abortion ad for Focus on the Family in the 2010 Superbowl.
In a piece in Esquire, Tom Junod calls Tebow a “religious figure” who seems to be winning games because of his faith rather than his athletic skills.
Tim Tebow does not — and, for now, cannot — complete 60 percent of his passes. He’s strong, so he can shot-put and corkscrew the ball all over the field, but he often looks like he’s throwing the ball away when he’s not, and he avoids interceptions by coming nowhere near his intended receiver. It would be tempting to say that none of this matters to the legions he has inspired, but of course it’s all that matters: Because Tim Tebow is a religious figure rather than an athletic one, the limitations of his talent wind up testifying to the potency of his faith. The fact that he’ll be almost comically inept for three quarters and then catch an updraft of mastery in the fourth serves to demonstrate not that he’s a winner but that Jesus is — and, above all, that Christianity works.
So why did the Broncos lose yesterday? The most recent SNL presented a skit in which Jesus himself provided the answer.
See? Christianity works! Devilish Brady and Belichick won because Jesus was otherwise occupied. But “The Rev.” Pat Robertson was outraged by the “anti-Christian bigotry” demonstrated by the SNL skit.
On the latest episode of The 700 Club, the televangelist thought the segment was brought on by “an anti-Christian bigotry that’s disgusting.”
“If this had been a Muslim country and they had done that, and had Muhammad doing that stuff, you would have found bombs being thrown off, and bodies on the street,” he said. “We need more religious faith in our society, we’re losing our moral compass in our nation.”
Robertson went on to praise Tebow for his faith.
“I think he is a wonderful human being,” he said. “And this man has been placed in a unique position and I applaud him, God bless him.”
Monday Reads
Posted: December 19, 2011 Filed under: morning reads, U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics | Tags: abortion rights, kim jong il, payroll tax cut 24 Comments
Good Morning!
More news on the assault on the rights of US women and a case that may put Roe v. Wade back on the SCOTUS Docket. We’ve written of this one before; however, Newsweek has some extra analysis. Jennie McCormick was arrested for using RU-486 to terminate a pregnancy in her home state of Idaho. She got the pills from her sister and was reported to police by a friend. So, what exactly is her crime? Her pregnancy was a few weeks farther along than the one trimester.
McCormack, who thought she was about 12 weeks along, took the pills (the protocol involves two drugs, mifepristone and misoprostol) the afternoon they arrived. The drugs are FDA-approved only for ending early-stage pregnancies; McCormack had no complications, but the pregnancy turned out to be more advanced than she thought—perhaps between 18 and 21 weeks, experts later speculated—and the size of the fetus scared her. She didn’t know what to do—“I was paralyzed,” she says—so she put it in a box on her porch, and, terrified, called a friend. That friend then called his sister, who reported McCormack to the police.
Although RU-486 is legal and the fetus was not yet “viable” (that is, old enough to live outside the uterus), Idaho has a 1972 law—never before enforced—making it a crime punishable by five years in prison for a woman to induce her own abortion. The day after police arrested McCormack, her mug shot appeared above the fold in the local newspaper. “It’s hard to imagine the humiliation and fear,” says her lawyer, Richard Hearn, who is also a physician.
The case was dropped weeks later due to lack of evidence. Without solid proof, such as the envelope in which the pills came, her confession wasn’t enough to sustain the case. But prosecutors retained the right to re-file charges. In response, Hearn got a federal injunction to prevent any woman from being prosecuted under the state’s anti-abortion statute by the district attorney. He also filed a class-action suit against the state, claiming the statute is unconstitutional. But all that took nine months to play out, and McCormack lurched into depression and became a virtual shut-in.
“You’d have to know the climate here,” says Hearn, “to fully imagine the amount of pressure Jennie is under, how hostile people can be, how isolated she is.” Next week, motions will be heard in federal court to certify the suit as a class action. Last week, the prosecutor filed a motion to have Hearn’s injunction lifted.
This is basically the new frontier of the back alley abortion. Approximately 20 percent of abortions now involve pills abortion drugs. They are 95% effective and many can be mail ordered over the internet. Restrictions on abortion providers and funding all over the country may increase the necessity of using abortion drugs. This could be a central case in the fight for women’s reproductive rights and our constitutional rights.
Last night North Korean leader Kim Jong Il died. His third son will replace him. Frontline has an interesting series of programs on Kim that you may want to watch.
Speaking of Tin Pot dictators, John Boehner and his house republicans have blocked the payroll tax cuts. Only tax cuts for billionaires seem to be acceptable to the minions of Grover Norquist.
In an interview on “Meet The Press” on NBC, John A. Boehner, the House speaker, said his members broadly opposed the two-month extension that passed the Senate 89 to 10 on Saturday, believing that it would be “just kicking the can down the road.”
“It’s time to just stop, do our work, resolve the differences, and extend this for one year,” Mr. Boehner said. “How can you have tax policy for two months?”
The surprising setback threatened the holiday plans of lawmakers and President Obama, deeply embarrassed Republican leaders in both chambers and raised the specter of a year-end tax increase that economists have warned could set back the already fragile economic recovery
The House is to take up the Senate bill — passed in a rare Saturday session — when members return to Capitol Hill on Monday night. House leaders expect the bill to fail and their members to then consider and perhaps vote on an amended version that same night.
Horrifying violence in Egypt extends to women protestors. Two women were photographed being brutally beaten and molested by Egyptian Security forces.
In a video broadcast on the internet, security forces dressed in riot gear are seen chasing a woman and beating her to the ground with metal bars before stripping her and kicking her repeatedly. One soldier stamps his foot hard on her chest.
Other images showed women beaten unconscious.
After being viciously beaten by the ten-strong mob, the woman lies helplessly on the ground as her shirt is ripped from her body and a man kicks her with full force in her exposed chest.
Moments earlier she had been struck countless times in the head and body with metal batons, not content with the brutal beating delivered by his fellow soldier, one man stamped on her head repeatedly.
She feebly tried to shield her head from the relentless blows with her hands.
But she was knocked unconscious in the shameful attack and left lying motionless as the military men mindlessly continued to beat her limp and half-naked body.
Before she was set upon by the guards, three men appeared to carry her as they tried to flee the approaching military.
But they were too slow and the soldiers caught up with them, capturing the women and knocking one of the men to the ground.
I’m just glad we didn’t share our armed drone technology with Mubarak.
For years, I have wondered why, for some people, enough is never enough. For example, what could have possibly motivated Jon Corzine — a respected former senator, governor and Wall Street big shot with hundreds of millions in the bank — to take the top job at MF Global Holdings Ltd (MF) in the first place?
He was 63 years old, six months away from getting remarried. He was one of the few remaining high-profile Wall Street Democrats around, and an avid supporter of President Barack Obama. He was routinely mentioned as a possible successor to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, if Obama were to win a second term.
Why couldn’t Corzine just enjoy his fortune, perhaps set up an eponymous foundation to do good works, bide his time and then use his connections to become Treasury secretary? He already had a cushy perch at Princeton University, where he invited any number of finance types to teach his class while he basked in their reflective glory. Life was good. (Disclosure: I once taught the class, although the amount of glory reflected is debatable.)
There’s a fascinating set of articles on the CERN particle collider and the hunt for The Higgs boson particle at The Economist.
The announcement, by Fabiola Gianotti and Guido Tonelli—the heads, respectively, of two experiments at CERN known as ATLAS and CMS—was that both of their machines have seen phenomena which look like traces of the Higgs. They are traces, rather than actual bosons, because no Higgs will ever be seen directly. The best that can be hoped for are patterns of breakdown particles from Higgses that are, themselves, the results of head-on collisions between protons travelling in opposite directions around CERN’s giant accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Heavy objects like Higgs bosons can break down in several different ways, but each of these ways is predictable. Both ATLAS and CMS have seen a number of these predicted patterns often enough to pique interest, but not (yet) often enough to constitute proof that they came from Higgses, rather than being random fluctuations in the background of non-Higgs decays.
The crucial point, and the reason for the excitement, is that both ATLAS and CMS (which are located in different parts of the ring-shaped accelerator tunnel of the LHC) have come up with the same results. Both indicate that, if what they have seen really are Higgses, then the boson has a mass of about 125 giga-electron-volts (GeV), in the esoteric units which are used to measure how heavy subatomic particles are. That coincidence bolsters the suggestion that this is the real thing, rather than a few chance fluctuations.
Bradley Manning begins his 4th day of his preliminary hearing. The third day brought some interesting testimony on the atmosphere surrounding the sort of intelligence Manning saw.
However, the witnesses also said soldiers at the intelligence analysis center Manning worked at in Iraq routinely flouted the Army’s safeguards for classified information by playing music, movies and video games on computers that were part of the military’s secure network for classified information.
Some in the brigade even used a “password-crack program” to break into the administrator account and add software, a civilian computer contractor who handled Manning’s unit, Jason Milliman, testified.
“They thought they had full rights and were able to whatever they wanted to do,” said Milliman, who said he couldn’t stop the unauthorized practices because he had no authority over the soldiers.
Capt. Thomas Cherepko, who was in charge of the computer network at Manning’s base in eastern Iraq, said the presence of unauthorized programs on the classified computers was routine
Asked if the rules were “violated on a daily basis,” Cherepko said: “More or less, yes sir.”
Well, that should start things off today. What’s on your reading and blogging list today?
Gingrich Jumps the Shark
Posted: December 18, 2011 Filed under: Republican politics, Republican presidential politics, We are so F'd | Tags: judiciary, Newt Gingrich 25 CommentsWhat won’t this man say for a vote? Since when do Presidents get to arrest judges that disagree with them? Where did this guy get his history degree?
Right wing attacks on the judiciary are a campaign staple but this takes it a new level.You would think something in this “historian’s” education would have shown him that there are the co-equal branches of government.
Continuing his crusade on the judicial system, GOP presidential frontrunner Newt Gingrich said Sunday morning that he wouldn’t mind arresting any judge who he disagreed with.
When asked by CBS’ Face The Nation host Bob Schieffer him if he would “send capital police down” to make any arrest, Gingrich specified further his comments from Saturday.
“Sure, if you had to,” he said. “Or you’d instruct the Justice Department to send a U.S. Marshal.”
Gingrich called the judicial branch of the U.S. government “the weakest branch of the three.”
Damn! How much of the constitution are you willing to sell out just to pander to the angry, ignorant base?
Light Bulbs Saved But American Light Diminished
Posted: December 18, 2011 Filed under: abortion rights, Bailout Blues, Banksters, corruption, Economy, fetus fetishists, fundamentalist Christians, globalization, poverty, U.S. Economy, unemployment, Women's Rights | Tags: Financial Crisis, U.S. Economy, unemployment, Women's Rights 9 CommentsWe can no longer call Congress a do-nothing farce. In case you haven’t heard our esteemed legislators have ‘saved’ the incandescent light bulb from its 2012 banishment. Which means incandescent hoarders can display their beloved bulbs in public, display them with pride and patriotism—let freedom shine–without the fear of neighborly condemnation or the riot police knocking down the door.
Let there be light!
If only.
Other things we might have considered saving in 2011:
The Middle Class; Death by Strangulation
This week we were gifted with the sobering statistic that 50% of the American public is now considered ‘low income.’ Of course, the naysayers are quick to point out that this is a gross exaggeration, that terms like ‘low-income’ and ‘poverty’ are relative terms. Go to Africa, they say. Perhaps, Haiti would do. Or North Korea. Then you’ll know the ‘real’ meaning of misery.
Sorry but this strained logic belies the fact that unlike the above examples the United States of America is a developed world power. We beat our chests and claim ‘exceptionalism’ on the world stage yet are willing to use third world comparisons to shrug off bad news? Lame comparisons are simply an exercise in don’t believe your lying eyes and for God’s sake never distrust the status quo. What are you? Some sort of Commie!
A small factoid from the St. Louis Federal Reserve, Economic Research group: the average length of unemployment in the United States is now over 40 weeks. And another from the New America Foundation:
The share of middle-income jobs in the United States has fallen from 52% in 1980 to 42% in 2010.
Middle income jobs have been replaced by low-income jobs, which now make up 41% of the work force.
The American Economy; Bleeding Out While Doctors Look On
While average citizens lost wealth and continue to struggle with unemployment and underemployment, face prospects of social programs stripped down to nothing, we’ve been gifted once again with startling news. The Federal Reserve over a three-year period bailed out large banks and corporations, domestic and foreign, to the tune of 29 trillion dollars.
Twenty-nine trillion! To put this in some perspective one trillion dollars could be imagined thusly:
If you were to count to one thousand, one number every second, it would take seventeen minutes. Counting to one million at the same rate would take twelve days (counting nonstop, btw, day and night). Counting to one billion would take thirty-two years.
Now, drum roll please: Counting to one trillion? Would take 32,000 years.
Then multiply by 29.
Meanwhile, with the money spigots wide open spewing a gusher of magic money, small business loans [the sort that Main Street depends on to fuel growth and employment, loans of 1 million or less] dropped to a 12-year low. Why is this a problem? Because despite the GOP’s drone that the top 1% of the population are the ‘job creators,’ businesses with fewer than 500 employees created 65 percent of the jobs between 1993 and 2009, according to the Small Business Administration.
Another withering fact: between 2001 to 2009, 42,000+ factories and manufacturing-related businesses closed for good. And, of course, the jobs associated with those companies went bye-bye, moved off-shore to exploit lower wages and the nefarious environmental regulations that vulture capitalists love to hate.
In addition, our trade deficits with China [84 billion in 2001 to 278 billion in 2010] and other countries [oil imports represent over 60% of our current deficit] have bled and continue to bleed jobs and wealth from the US. Trade deficits represent a countries’ imbalance in terms of importing to exporting and the rate at which a nation’s wealth is transferred into foreign markets. As a country, we’re being bled to death, according to the AAM.
The impact of the trade deficit with China extends beyond U.S. jobs lost or displaced, according to the Alliance for American Manufacturing (AAM). Competition with China and countries like it has resulted in lower wages and less bargaining power for U.S. workers in manufacturing and for all workers with less than a four-year college degree.
And yet the trade deficits go on unabated. A recent example was the passage of the trade deals with Panama, Columbia and S. Korea, heralded as a great deal for the United States. But according to Dylan Ratigan, MSNBC:
The key question we have to face as a country is how we want to govern ourselves. From World War II until NAFTA, our trading policies were based on geopolitical needs and what would increase prosperity for America. Since NAFTA, however, the mantra of free trade has been warped to generate rights for international capital and nothing else. The agreements Congress and the President are pushing continue this unfortunate trend. What unfettered capital wants is to avoid taxes, regulations, or any state power whatsoever.
In regards to oil imports, the drumbeat for several years has been: Drill, Baby, Drill. It’s all about jobs and keeping America strong, our oil-financed legislators are likely to say. The problem is regulation, they’ll add, and big government working against the blessings of the free market. Really? Not so, says Dylan Ratigan.
We do not have a free market for energy, because the actual cost of fossil fuel in our economy is not reflected at the pump; the military’s not in there, the environment’s not in there, and there’s a wide variety of differing fuel subsidies and tax treatments for all sorts of different fuel sources depending on their relation with our government. So, how can a marketplace decide the fuel source, when one fuel, particularly being gasoline and fossil fuels, have such a substantial comparative subsidy?”
The answer is: the marketplace cannot decide the cost of fossil fuel or entertain the cost-effectiveness of alternative sources because the game is rigged as it has been for a century+ where fossil fuels rule the day, pay off politicians and are willing to drive us into economic and environmental ruin for the sake of profit and power.
Vulture Capitalism writ large.
The American Homeowner; Death by Drowning
In the second quarter of 2011, 10.9 million Americans or 22.5% of homeowners were ‘underwater’ with their mortgages, namely they owed more on their mortgages than their houses were actually worth, a result of the real estate collapse of 2007-2008. Although the Home Affordable Refinance Program [HARP] has fallen short to relieve homeowners from onerous, often ballooning mortgage payments and subsequent home foreclosure, the Obama Administration has attempted to remove the key barriers in the refinancing procedures. This is expected to expand mortgage refi at today’s lower interest rate to larger numbers of struggling homeowners, particularly those with little to no equity in their homes.
Will it work?
The jury is still out, but at best this expanded program will only be available to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac-backed loans.
In addition to providing relief, many citizens expected a thorough and public investigation into exactly what went wrong in the mortgage industry. We expected our own Pecora moment.
But that didn’t happen.
In fact the Administration has attempted to rush through settlements with major banks, requiring no admission of wrong doing and attaching immunity from civil or criminal liability to sweeten the deal. Countering this, several state Attorney Generals [five to date] have refused to accept the 50-state agreement and have proceeded with independent investigations of their own. And just this past week, House Representative Tammy Baldwin [D-WI] introduced a resolution to block any agreement on the national foreclosure question, without proper and thorough investigation. Immunity from civil and/or criminal liability would be stripped and fraudulent practices prosecuted fully under the Rule of Law.
But still, for the 22.5% of American homeowners, the water level is already chin-high and rising fast.
Civil Liberties; Gutting of the Bill of Rights
Perhaps no other images brought home the dwindling nature of American civil liberties than the recent round up of Occupy Wall Street protesters. We’ve watched young women pepper-sprayed, protesters manhandled and in one instance a young Iraqi veteran nearly killed by police who appeared ready for WWIII rather than crowd dispersal. On several occasions over-zealous police action was caught on film not by the press but by protesters and onlookers.
In addition, we now know that drones developed for war applications have been deployed in country and that drone use is being marketed to police departments throughout the country. Security is big business.
Obviously, the First Amendment’s guarantee to peaceable assembly is not. And privacy? Forget about it!
Add this to the Administration’s successful kill order on extremist cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, an American citizen operating in Yemen, a kill order without benefit of due process. Otherwise known as execution without trial. We can argue about the threat of the man but there is no argument about the danger of precedent and the shredding of the Rule of Law. And so, should we be surprised by the most recent outrage, the passage of an indefinite detention authority tucked inside the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act? The bill codifies the right of the President to order the arrest and indefinite detention of US citizens suspected of terrorism. No trial, no appeal. You can now be ‘disappeared,’ lawfully.
One fight that did end well [at least temporarily] was the controversial and previously reported Stop Online Piracy Act [SOPA]. The discussions between legislators were abruptly adjourned after stiff condemnation by online biggies Google, Wikipedia and even computer scientist Vint Cerf , one of the founders of the Internet, who claimed that the bill’s passage would begin “a worldwide arms race of unprecedented censorship of the Web.”
Rights of Women; Assaults Continue
In the contradictory world of Far Right extremists, where individual liberty is celebrated and government intrusion condemned, the individual
rights of women and their reproductive decisions are the lone exception. Family planning, contraception, abortion, even ordinary ob/gyn screenings are suspect and thereby targets of defunding and all manner of attack. Bills have littered the landscape calling for the elimination of all abortive measures, even when a woman’s life and/or future fertility is in jeopardy. The heartbeat of the unborn is made sacred, while the lives of the fully realized female is continually denigrated, dismissed and derided. Personhood resolutions have been raised in referendums [and thankfully voted down], where the fertilized egg would be designated as a person with full legal rights under the law.
Fertilized eggs and corporations. Perfect together.
The insanity of these rigid, ridiculous demands from zealots are all too real and dangerous when applied to the actual world. Miscarriage, for instance, a completely normal biological occurrence, would take on the aura of a criminal act, requiring an investigation. By the egg or zygote police, I imagine. Or a woman who suffers an ectopic pregnancy could be left to bleed until doctors were convinced of the unborn ‘person’s’ lack of viability. The woman’s health is secondary in this scenario.
The personhood resolutions would also deny women certain contraceptive measures. For instance, the day after pill would be in violation. And, in fact, Health and Human Services’ recently overruled the FDA’s recommendation on Plan B for young women under the age of 18 and refused to lift the emergency contraception’s restriction.
The assault on women’s rights have been unrelenting, not only in terms of reproductive decisions but in basic health services. Planned Parenthood and their related clinics and facilities provide services to many poor to middle income women, offering important medical screenings, tests for cancer, diabetes, high-blood pressure, etc. Only 3% of what Planned Parenthood does is related to abortion services. And yet, the 90-year organization has become the Boogie Man for right-wing fundamentalists, who would deny many women the only health provider they have.
Sorry, the barefoot and pregnant dictum has no place in the 21st Century.
Our Children; Gross Neglect of Our Most Important Resource
A higher percentage of children today are living in poverty than was the case in 1975. The rate of poverty has increased every year for the last four years, from 16.9 percent to nearly 22 percent as of 2010. In the UK and France that number is under 10%. The 2011 Child Well Being Index indicates that it is American children, the country’s future, who will bear the greatest damage by widening income disparities and proposed cuts to education, food stamps and health insurance programs.
Some sobering factoids:
Child homelessness has risen 33% in the last 3 years to 1.6 million
There are over eight million children in the United States today that are not covered by health insurance.
Today, one out of every seven Americans is on food stamps and one out of every four American children is on food stamps.
Nearly 20 million children participate in school lunch programs.
This is not what Democracy looks like.
The Poor, the Immigrant and/or Muslims; The Inadequacies of Scapegoating
Scapegoating has a long history, even Biblical references, where a goat is used as a vessel of purification. The sins of the community are spiritually transferred to the animal after which Mr. Goat is banished to the wilderness.
Out of sight, out of mind.
In times of social unrest and/or economic distress, the act of scapegoating is often employed as a distraction, a way of diverting the public’s attention from the real problems and their causes . . . to something or someone else. Scapegoating has been popular of late.
It’s the fault of the poor, the hangers on, the moochers. Michelle Bachmann quoted Paul the Apostle:
“He who does not work, neither shall he eat.”
That would imply the poor are merely shirkers, those expecting a free lunch. Tell that to the one in four children surviving on food stamps. If Newt Gingrich and his ilk are to be taken seriously, the problem can be solved by revoking Child Labor Laws or having school children take on the school’s janitorial services.
Better yet, cut all safety nets.
Immigrants, too, have been cast as the country’s main economic problem. Too many Latinos taking away American jobs. We’ve all heard it. Only the number of illegal immigrants entering the country has been shrinking dramatically since the Great Slump, the biggest population decline in the last 20 years.
Unemployment, however, is still with us.
With the immigrant bashing, deportation and subsequent population shrinkage, Georgia and several other states had a difficult time harvesting their crop this year without their standard work force in place.
Be careful what you wish for.
Since 9/11, Muslims have been targeted as the root of all our problems, basically an evil agent working to undermine the country . Anti-Muslim sentiment has risen with irrational fears over Sharia Law dominating, perhaps even replacing the American Constitution. Last week, hardware giant Lowe’s pulled ads from a reality show, ‘All American Muslim,’ in response to a conservative Christian group, that contended:
Clearly this program is attempting to manipulate Americans into ignoring the threat of jihad and to influence them to believe that being concerned about the jihad threat would somehow victimize these nice people in this show . . .
It’s disturbing to read something that ugly. And it created a huge PR stink for Lowe’s, rightfully so.
Also important to note is that Muslim Americans represent approximately 6 million citizens, a quarter of whom are African American converts. In a country of 311 million? That’s a tiny, tiny percentage.
And on 9/11? People of all faiths died, including Muslims.
Pointing fingers in all the wrong directions will not cure the country’s financial crisis, anymore than wishing for quick, easy solutions. Saving what’s best about our country–our religious tolerance—is far more important.
There were many things worth saving in 2011. But hey, at least we rescued the American incandescent light bulb.
I feel so much better. How about you?
Obama believes he accomplished more in his first two years than any president except Lincoln, LBJ, and FDR
Posted: December 17, 2011 Filed under: just because 24 CommentsWell he certainly tops most presidents in terms of positive self-regard. I found this story on the right wing blog News Busters (via Memeorandum), and at first I wondered if it was legit. Did Obama really say that?
Yes, yes he did. CBS edited it out of their 60 Minutes interview, but the whole interview is posted on their website “60 Minutes Overtime” along with a transcript.
STEVE KROFT (60 Minutes): Tell me, what do you consider your major accomplishments? If this is your last speech. What have you accomplished?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, we’re not done yet. I’ve got five more years of stuff to do. But not only saving this country from a great depression. Not only saving the auto industry. But putting in place a system in which we’re gonna start lowering health care costs and you’re never gonna go bankrupt because you get sick or somebody in your family gets sick. Making sure that we have reformed the financial system, so we never again have taxpayer-funded bailouts, and the system is more stable and secure. Making sure that we’ve got millions of kids out here who are able to go to college because we’ve expanded student loans and made college more affordable. Ending Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. Decimating al Qaeda, including Bin Laden being taken off the field. Restoring America’s respect around the world.
The issue here is not gonna be a list of accomplishments. As you said yourself, Steve, you know, I would put our legislative and foreign policy accomplishments in our first two years against any president — with the possible exceptions of Johnson, F.D.R., and Lincoln — just in terms of what we’ve gotten done in modern history. But, you know, but when it comes to the economy, we’ve got a lot more work to do. And we’re gonna keep on at it.
Here’s my list of accomplishments:
Defending CIA torturers
Defending Bush and Cheney
Continuing the Patriot Act
Watering down the financial reform bill
Preventing prosecution of banksters
Extending the Bush tax cuts
Preventing single payer health care and public option
Assassinating American citizens on foreign soil
Ensuring the ability to indefinitely detail American citizens on U.S. soil
Ramping up Afghanistan war
I’m sure there’s lot’s more. Can you think of any more accomplishments?






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