Jack Willke, Todd Akin’s Rape Expert, Claims He Met Privately with Mitt Romney Last Year

Dr. Jack Willke

Via TPM, according to the Daily Telegraph, Dr. Jack Willke, who was identified by the NYT as the source of Todd Akin’s belief that “legitimate” rape victims cannot get pregnant, says he had a private meeting with Mitt Romney in October 2011.

Mr Romney and Paul Ryan, his running mate, have denounced Mr Akin’s remarks. Dr Willke has been given no role in Mr Romney’s 2012 campaign and aides stress that the candidate disagrees with his theory on rape.

However, Dr Willke told The Daily Telegraph that he did meet Mr Romney during a presidential primary campaign stop in the doctor’s home city of Cincinnati, Ohio, in October last year. Local news reports at the time noted that the candidate held “private meetings” during the visit.

“He told me ‘thank you for your support – we agree on almost everything, and if I am elected President I will make some major pro-life pronouncements’,” Dr Willke said in a telephone interview on Tuesday.

“I thanked him, and said I knew where he was – that he was 99 per cent of what we wanted,” he said of the roughly ten-minute meeting. “I told him I would help in any way I could”. A spokesman for Mr Romney declined to comment.

Willke has also met with VP candidate Paul Ryan several times.

He said that after listening to Dr Willke’s views on abortion during their last encounter, Mr Ryan replied: “That’s where I’m at”.

This is getting interesting. This is the first time I’ve ever looked forward to watching a Republican National Convention.

This is an open thread.


Here’s an idea: civil rights for everyone!

You know, everyone. Including those everyones who are female.

Rights are the solution to the Todd Akinses of the world, and it would be unspeakably obvious if people could remember that rights matter.

For some reason, even people on the left don’t get it. I had somebody say, when I was carrying on about free speech rights and Pussy Riot, “Fuck theories of speech. Free Pussy Riot.” So, let’s see. “Forget about rights. Give ’em their rights.” Uh huh. That makes a lot of sense. And that’s the “thinking” on the left.

People don’t even get it when it concerns their own rights. There are way too many examples, but here’s just one from Lexia commenting at Reclusive Leftist: “…the woman’s mother, who had worked as a nurse (she had wanted to be a doctor), but mostly as a wife, and so was left at retirement age, divorced, impoverished and living in a trailer with thirty seven leaks….

“The woman’s mother said to me, in response to some remark I made about women’s rights: ‘But that has nothing to do with us.'”

I’m not sure where this reluctance to think about principles comes from, but that’s why we have a problem. That’s why we can’t see that

SOME RIGHTS ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN OTHERS.

I know we’re not supposed to shout, but, honestly people, what is so hard about that concept?

Take religion, for instance. At this point, it’s enough to say, “But it’s my religion!” to excuse just about anything. The media just stand there, being respectful, when a Todd Akin says “Women don’t count. I’ll tell ’em when they’ve been raped. I’ll tell those uterine incubators what to do. It’s my religion.” The Left mostly nodded along when Obama quite agreed that Catholic bishops shouldn’t have to put up with anything so anti-religious as female citizens making their own medical decisions. (But because he’s such a nice guy, it won’t be as bad as if that horrible Other Party was giving the bishops their wishes).

May I make a suggestion? I think we need a Church of Savage Death to all Godbags. They’re interfering with my religion, which is that we all leave each other in peace.

Yeah, I know. That’s about as logically consistent as destroying women while Allah is said to be Merciful and God is said to be Love.

It always takes only about one step to fall into complete logical absurdity if religion is put above civil rights.

It’s obvious if you think about it at all. No other right means anything if you are not, as the old language had it, secure in your own person. If you can be imprisoned until you agree with me, you have no freedom of thought. If I can requisition a kidney from you (because I’m dying and my life is at stake and you’re a perfect match and my religion is pro-life), you’re nothing but ambulatory organ storage.

If all that drivel was understood in the context of rights, the Todd Akinses and their spiritual cousins, on up to the mild-mannered and socially acceptable versions in the White House, would all be obvious for the antidemocratic throwbacks they are. They’d never get near the teevee. Because the media are dimly aware that no religion is so important that it can demand human sacrifices. Not even female ones.

Crossposted from Acid Test


Texas Judge: Extra Law Enforcement Staff Needed in Case Obama is Reelected

Judge Tom Head with Texas Gov. Rick Perry

You just can’t make this stuff up. Lubbock County Judge Tom Head appeared on Fox 34 News in Lubbock, TX on Monday night to warn the population of the danger that lies ahead if President Obama wins reelection in November. The threat is so serious that he wants to increase property taxes in order to increase salaries for attorneys in the DA’s office and hire seven more sheriff’s deputies to deal with the possible Obamapocalypse.

Judge Head said he and the county must be prepared for many contingencies, one that he particularly fears, is if President Obama is reelected.

“He’s going to try to hand over the sovereignty of the United States to the UN, and what is going to happen when that happens?,” Head asked.

“I’m thinking the worst. Civil unrest, civil disobedience, civil war maybe. And we’re not just talking a few riots here and demonstrations, we’re talking Lexington, Concord, take up arms and get rid of the guy.

“Now what’s going to happen if we do that, if the public decides to do that? He’s going to send in U.N. troops. I don’t want ’em in Lubbock County. OK. So I’m going to stand in front of their armored personnel carrier and say ‘you’re not coming in here’.

“And the sheriff, I’ve already asked him, I said ‘you gonna back me’ he said, ‘yeah, I’ll back you’. Well, I don’t want a bunch of rookies back there. I want trained, equipped, seasoned veteran officers to back me.”

How on earth does the Stupid Party GOP find these people?

Apparently some people were a bit concerned about the good Judge’s remarks, so today he recorded a rambling video in which he attempted to “clarify” things. According to the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, the Sheriff has no recollection of any conversation with Judge Head about revolution or whatever Head is planning.

Just minutes ago, Sheriff Kelly Rowe said he’d never discussed any of the scenarios described by Head.

The White House media office had no immediate response Wednesday morning to Head’s remarks.

AJ reporter Andrea Sinclair is at the Lubbock County Commissioner meeting, and, Head said his remarks were taken out of context. He said he was referring to a “worst case scenario” if Obama is re-elected.

Sorry, Tom, that dog won’t hunt. Just like your fellow Stupid Party GOP members Todd Akin and Paul Ryan, you said what you said on videotape. We can all judge your remarks and their “context” for ourselves.


Wonder How His AssHoliness Pat Robertson will Spin this One?

Pat Robertson–that crazy old diviner of all things gawdly–has blamed both 9-11 and Hurricane Katrina on the GLBT community and abortion access in this country. He’s said it’s okay for a man to leave his sick wife and find another and he’s just said he doesn’t blame a man for not wanting to take on any woman’s ‘weird’ adopted kids.  It appears Hurricane Issac is bearing down on Tampa and the Party of Crazy’s National Convention.  Will Pat say it’s because they are nominating  Mormon?  Maybe, it’s because they want to distance themselves from Fetus Fetishist Akin? What has the Republican Party Convention done to piss off Pat’s Almighty Jeebus and his weather angels?  Perhaps it’s that they’re just downwind of the gawdless Disney Epcot Center and some might wander over to enjoy  an openly pro-gay establishment?

In Tampa this year, where some Republican delegates and officials are already gathered for pre-convention activities, the possibility of a hurricane was the subject of a good deal of worry and not a small amount of gallows humor.

Local news reports are filled with updates on the storm “bearing down on Florida just as Republican delegates come to town.”

And the city was hit by strong rain storms from Monday evening through Tuesday, a not uncommon summer occurrence but a reminder of how unpleasant the weather could make life for the 50,000 people expected for the convention next week.

The hurricane even came up even at a news conference marking the conclusion of work by the committee drafting the party’s platform, where the panel’s chairman, Virginia Gov. Robert F. McDonnell, was asked about RNC preparations in case a storm hits.

Having just emerged from hours seated at a dais in front of the 112-member committee in a darkened hotel ballroom, he looked briefly puzzled by the question. “If you want to talk to me about Miller-Bs or low pressure systems or derechos, I can talk to you about that,” he said, referring to storm systems that have hit Virginia in recent years. “This tropical storm, I’m not up to date on,” he said, as RNC staff shouted from the back of the room that the storm is under close watch.

Actually, ol Pat isn’t the only gadfly in the fruitcake to bring up Divine Retribution for weather.  What will Michelle Bachmann think?

By their own logic, Republicans and their conservative allies should be concerned that Isaac is a form of divine retribution. Last year, Rep. Michele Bachmann, then a Republican presidential candidate, said that the East Coast earthquake and Hurricane Irene — another “I” storm, but not an Old Testament one — were attempts by God “to get the attention of the politicians.” In remarks later termed a “joke,” she said: “It’s time for an act of God and we’re getting it.”

The influential conservative broadcaster Glenn Beck said last year that the Japanese earthquake and tsunami were God’s “message being sent” to that country. A year earlier, Christian broadcaster and former GOP presidential candidate Pat Robertson tied the Haitian earthquake to that country’s “pact to the devil.”

Previously, Robertson had argued that Hurricane Katrina was God’s punishment for abortion, while the Rev. John Hagee said the storm was God’s way of punishing homosexuality. The late Jerry Falwell thought that God allowed the Sept. 11 attacks as retribution for feminists and the ACLU.

Even if you don’t believe God uses meteorological phenomena to express His will, it’s difficult for mere mortals to explain what is happening to the GOP just now.

This one even has an old Testament Name or does it?

You can consider this an open thread as I ponder the potential irony of it all.


In Search of that Rare Breed: A Conservative Intellectual

I wrote about the Niall Ferguson article which was bombastic and wrong simultaneously. I didn’t even have to do any heavy lifting on it because the majority of well known economists and public policy wonks had already picked through all of his stuff and found it lacking per usual. Ferguson–like Brooks, Ryan and a shitload of nitwits–is a person that supposedly comes under the heading of “intellectual” and “conservative” these days. I don’t think those words conjoined mean what any one thinks they do.  If there is such a thing as an “intellectual conservative”, it seems to have gone the way of the DoDo.  However, John Cassidy at The New Yorker is on the hunt for one.  I’m not sure he’ll actually find one because–quite frankly–being an intellectual takes openness, honesty, and the ability to think critically.  None of these come in the conservative ‘toolbox’ .  He pits the prowess of Krugman against the perpetually wrong Ferguson in this link.  Ferguson loses as usual.

The cause of their latest spat: a characteristically overstated Newsweek cover story by Ferguson arguing that it’s time to replace Obama. (Headline: “Hit the Road Barack: Why We Need a New President.”) Krugman, who has been spending the last few weeks hiking through some pretty-looking hills, interrupted his vacation to accuse his old nemesis of misrepresenting the factsin claiming that Obamacare will add more than a trillion dollars to the deficit over the next ten years.

Nothing very surprising there, you might say. Ferguson, a prolific author whose “end is nigh” worldview makes him a popular speaker on the hedge-fund/Davos circuit, has been railing away at the Obama Administration since 2009, warning that its profligate spending policies were sending the U.S.A. the way of Greece. The equally indefatigable Krugman has been lecturing Ferguson for almost as long about his ignorance of elementary (Keynesian) economics and the bond market. (If people in the markets truly believed Ferguson’s analysis, the U.S. government would never be able to issue ten-year bonds with a yield of well under two per cent.)

What is pretty remarkable about the latest dustup is the weakness of the arguments presented by Ferguson, a streetwise public intellectual who, according to his Web site, now holds positions at four different élite academic institutions. If called upon three months before an election to pen a provocative cover story in a national newsmagazine clamoring for the President to be chucked out, most writers would make every effort to avoid giving the other side easy opportunities to tear down their arguments. And yet, here comes Ferguson blatantly twisting a report from the Congressional Budget Office and presenting numerous other distortions and half-truths that anybody with access to Google could discredit in a few hours.

The conservative–and business–backlash against intellectualism exercised through curiosity, critical thinking,and honesty is definitely with us. It’s what the yammering pundits and masses crave.  It’s also creating institutions full of folks that are complete flakes that get hired just to appease conservative ideologues who want their doctrine pushed no matter what the “truthiness” of it.  Intellectualism demands that you seek out the truth and adapt it once you find it.  Conservativism demand that you ignore the truth and push the dogma no matter how many times it’s been proven wrong.  Let me ask you a question.  How on earth did any one decide Paul Ryan was brainy?  I’ve never seen any indication of it at all.  Since when has blind obedience to disproved dogma become emblematic of smarts?  The only thing that gets trotted out on TV these days that can parse a sentence are the trio of Bill Kristol, George Will, and Charles Krauthammer.  Neither of them holds a candle to Stiglitz, Krugman, or even Bill Clinton. Yet, if one needs pithy comment, one turns Kristol, Will, Krauthmer and prozac and scotch.

I’ve decided Cassidy’s search is fruitless now that I’ve read the last paragraph.

Reaganism/Thatcherism, for all its faults, was a genuine intellectual movement, or counter-movement. These days, the right seems unable to rise above rabble-rousing. The end of the Cold War robbed it of an external enemy. The tensions between its social and economic wings robbed it of any internal cohesion. The financial crisis and Great Recession robbed it of a creed—laissez faire. It’s still got plenty of willing foot soldiers, and a lot of big money behind it, but where is the fresh thinking and intellectual direction? All that’s left is anti-government posturing, waving the flag, and Obama-bashing. And even in pursuing this limited agenda, it often gets its facts wrong.

What he appears to recognize as the last throes of conservative intellectual movements is actually the beginning of the new group of conservative hacks.  Maybe he believes in fairies too.  Clap you hands!!!