Exactly How Stupid is Michelle Bachmann?
Posted: March 12, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, just because, U.S. Politics | Tags: American revolutionary war, Massachusetts, Michelle Bachmann, New Hampshire, stupid politicians | 37 CommentsHave you heard the latest imbecilic quote from Minnesota Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann? During a speech in New Hampshire this morning she said the following:
“What I love about New Hampshire and what we have in common is our extreme love for liberty,” Bachmann told the audience. “You’re the state where the shot was heard around the world in Lexington and Concord.
“And you put a marker in the ground and paid with the blood of your ancestors the very first price that had to be paid to make this the most magnificent nation that has ever arisen in the annals of man in 5,000 years of recorded history.”
Um…no. Lexington and Concord are in Massachusetts. Do you suppose she knows that the Boston Tea Party took place in Massachusetts too? I’m guessing no. The Boston Globe has more:
The remark demonstrated a surprising lack of basic facts about the historic events from which Tea Party derives its name. It is likely to go down as one of the bigger missteps of the early primary season.
Bachmann is touring the country and testing the idea of running for president. With her strong conservative views and sharp one-liners, she has gained a big following around the country. A number of people from Massachsuetts drove up to Nashua for the later fundraising event.
“We see you on Fox all the time! Keep up the good work!’’ called out Valerie Lallas, a retrired [sic] teacher from Lynnfield, as Bachmann signed autographs after her speech.
“I’m on CNN, too,’’ Bachman replied.
“But we don’t watch CNN,’’ Lallas said.
Her fans aren’t exactly the sharpest tools in the shed either.
What are your favorite stupid politician quotes? Dig them up and post them in the comments. Or treat this as an open thread.
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Lessons in Overreach
Posted: March 9, 2011 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Barack Obama, Democratic Politics, Domestic Policy, Elections, Federal Budget, Republican presidential politics, right wing hate grouups | Tags: bipartisanship, leadership, partisanship, Washinton Politics | 9 CommentsPoliticians within the beltway seem to live in a world of their own. No place is this more clear than in the results of the
last two elections where voters in desperate need of solutions for big problems have been misunderstood as providing ‘overwhelming mandates’ for the two party’s special interests’ agendas. The 2008 election was a resounding no to the direction the country ushered in by Dubya and his neocons. The 2010 election was a resounding no to the continued mess of partisanship and the passage of bailouts and a health care reform that no one understood. I don’t think voters understood why this issue was put above solving the basic unemployment and recession-based problems. Polls appear to indicate that neither side gets the message these days even though it appears very loud and clear to many of us.
There’s several places that this is really clear. First, the tea party is a prime example. This movement has been a hodgepodge of people looking for ways to send a populist message to the beltway. However, the movement has funding and leadership that’s hell bent on returning the country to the excesses of Robber Baron days. Some of the electorate voted for tea party candidates thinking more on the folksy rhetoric and less of the hardcore John Bircher philosophy championed by movement organizers. Plus, they just wanted some gridlock until they could get their minds around what was going on with a flurry of laws passed that seemed less related to what they asked for than what US bankers and businesses demanded. They wanted jobs. They got bailouts of Detroit and Wall Street and forced into a health care plan that benefited big Pharma and insurance company interests. It seems like the Democratic party just looked at the election numbers, smiled, and went their merry way. Republicans aren’t doing much better since they just looked at the last election numbers, smiled, and went their merry way.
A Bloomberg national poll indicates that the Washington crowd just doesn’t get it. It has to be a deliberate misconnect. You can’t be so wrong so many times. They just don’t want to listen. People don’t like paying taxes that are then used to fund politician’s pet projects and bailouts for big businesses and banks. They don’t mind tax cuts to the middle class but they’re getting tired of footing the bill for the beneficiaries of the nation’s army of lobbyists. The Republicans have missed the mark with their current assaults on collective bargaining and programs that impact just plain folks. Why can’t both parties just shut up and listen for a change?
Americans are sending a message to congressional Republicans: Don’t shut down the federal government or slash spending on popular programs.
Almost 8 in 10 people say Republicans and Democrats should reach a compromise on a plan to reduce the federal budget deficit to keep the government running, a Bloomberg National Poll shows. At the same time, lopsided margins oppose cuts to Medicare, education, environmental protection, medical research and community-renewal programs.
While Americans say it’s important to improve the government’s fiscal situation, among the few deficit-reducing moves they back are cutting foreign aid, pulling U.S. troops out of Afghanistan and Iraq, and repealing the Bush-era tax cuts for households earning more than $250,000 a year.
The results of the March 4-7 poll underscore the hazards confronting Republicans, as well as President Barack Obama and Democrats, as they face a showdown over funding the government and seek a broader deficit-reduction plan.
The rejection of Dubya and cronies in 2008 wasn’t an invitation for further bailouts of fat cats, expansion of unpopular wars and invention of a health care program while current programs have such severe issues. The Republicans need to understand that the ‘shellacking’ in November wasn’t an invitation for a full on assault on Sesame Street, Yellowstone National Park, and women’s ability to have a menstrual cycle without fearing manslaughter charges. Here’s the message.
When given five choices for the most important issue facing the nation, unemployment and jobs ranked first with 43 percent – – down from 50 percent in Bloomberg’s December 2010 poll — with the deficit and spending cited by 29 percent, up from 25 percent. Health care was chosen by 12 percent, the war in Afghanistan by 7 percent, and immigration by 3 percent.
Asked to choose between jobs and the deficit, 56 percent called creating jobs the government’s more important priority now, while 42 percent said cutting spending was.
Why couldn’t we have gotten a decent jobs program and stimulus right off the bat during the first few months of Obama’s term? We’d have been in a much better position politically, economically, and fiscally. Instead, we got a bunch of worthless tax cuts that siphoned money off to investments abroad and just enough money to stem about 2 years of fiscal disaster in the states.
There are two follies that should haunt a few leaders for the rest of their natural born days. Blame goes first to Obama for carving out the health care reform instead of focusing laserlike on job creation. He clearly created a lot of unnecessary strife and tempests in teabots by taking his eye off the job markets. The second heap of guilt goes to Mitch McConnell and his party of no. The Republicans seem intent on pleasing their base and burying the rest of the country in joblessness and despair. Clearly, this is a man that will do anything to regain a Republican White House. This includes taking our country down with the plan.
Some one needs to tell the President that ending bipartisan strife doesn’t mean selling out to other side. That’s what brought us a health care plan that assaults women’s rights and forces every one to pay and play. The Republican strategy of petulance has been paying off big time for them in terms of policy gains. They need to pay for that petulance. Giving into Republican demands is not bipartisanship. The Republican agenda is clear now. The political moves by Republican governors to force their will no matter what is being met resistance by Democratic legislators. Polls are showing that the public is taking the side of these legislators. The President needs to take a page from their playbooks rather than doing his version of bipartisanship (i.e. giving into Republican bullying on things like tax cuts for billionaires). The leadership shown by Democrats in the heartland is being rewarded and is clearly showing the politicians in Washington the type of future the voters want. Now, if we could only get Washington to listen before the presidential campaign silly season begins.
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Another Fox News Expert in Action!
Posted: March 1, 2011 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Barack Obama, Voter Ignorance, We are so F'd | Tags: Mike Huckabee | 39 CommentsWhen I heard this story on the evening news I had to admit that I was shocked but not the least bit surprised. After all, Faux News experts and Republican politicians prefer what they want to believe over the history, the science, and the data. This guy also polls high in Republican Presidential Straw Polls and Mike Huckabee thinks President Obama grew up in Keyna. He said so on the radio yesterday. It’s yet another Republican birther conspiracy show.
During a radio appearance yesterday, Mike Huckabee repeatedly falsely claimed that President Obama grew up in Kenya. After questioning Obama’s purported secrecy about the birth certificate, radio host Steve Malzberg asked Huckabee if “we deserve to know more about this man.” Huckabee responded, “I would love to know more. What I know is troubling enough.”
Speaking on WOR’s The Steve Malzberg Show, Huckabee — a Fox News host and potential presidential candidate — said that “one thing that I do know is his having grown up in Kenya, his view of the Brits, for example, very different than the average American … his perspective as growing up in Kenya with a Kenyan father and grandfather, their view of the Mau Mau Revolution in Kenya is very different than ours because he probably grew up hearing that the British are a bunch of imperialists who persecuted his grandfather.”
Frankly, this is embarrassing in so many ways that it’s hard to pick just one. The guy’s on Fox News all the time as some
kind of expert. He’s held political office and is thought to have presidential aspirations. Would you want to support any one that hasn’t even done his opposition home work enough to know something as simple as the major stump speech of a coulda been and could be political opponent?
Well, that’s just sad.
You can treat this as an open thread because I don’t know how many ways we can call this guy a dim bulb.
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Indiana’s Mitch Daniels: 2012 Republican Presidential Nominee?
Posted: February 24, 2011 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Anti-War, Barack Obama, Elections, U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics, We are so F'd | Tags: 2012 presidential election, Chris Christie, George W. Bush, George Will, Governor Mitch Daniels, Harley Davidson motorcyles, Jeb Bush, Marlon Brando, short people | 28 CommentsLots of Republicans are urging Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels to run for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012. Will he do it? Can he win?
Who’s touting Daniels? New Jersey Governor Chris Christie loves the guy.
Chris Christie, the governor of New Jersey, said Wednesday that his counterpart in Indiana, Mitch Daniels, is the only prospective Republican presidential candidate who is honestly talking about how to confront the nation’s biggest fiscal challenges.
Jeb Bush thinks Daniels is “the best Republican candidate.”
Jacksonville’s Florida Times-Union reports that former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush favors Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels for president in 2012.
Bush reportedly told a private reception for business leaders, “Mitch is the only one who sees the stark perils and will offer real detailed proposals.”
Daniels’ speech at CPAC 2011 was very well received, and get this–George Will introduced Daniels to the CPAC audience as “the thinking man’s Marlon Brando,” apparently because Daniels likes to right around the Indiana countryside on a Harley Davidson chopper. Judge for yourself.
Daniels has some other problems too. For one thing he thinks Republicans should forget about social issues and focus on economic ones (cutting deficits, natch). Conservatives are not at all happy with Daniels for asking Indiana Republican legislators to withdraw their proposed “right to work” bill. In addition, he reportedly is a pretty serious policy wonk who likes to talk to his fellow wingnuts as if they were adults.
By far, the most important speech at CPAC was delivered by two-term Gov. Mitch Daniels of Indiana at Friday night’s banquet. It was an eloquently crafted, intellectually compelling call to arms against the red-ink forces of the national debt. Daniels, who was George W. Bush’s budget director, proposed dramatically revamping Social Security and Medicare as he called for “an affectionate thank you to the major social welfare programs of the last century.”
What was most striking about Daniels’ speech, which inspired careful listening rather than pep-rally applause, was that it treated his CPAC audience as adults rather than as just another constituency group demanding pandering. Whether it was dismissing the easy-answer attacks on earmarks (“in the cause of national solvency, they are a trifle”) or suggesting that most voters do not appreciate the sharp-edged rhetoric of the Republican right (“it would help if they liked us, just a bit”), Daniels’ speech was an exercise in speaking truth to conservatives who have the power to derail a presidential candidacy.
Come on, that’s never going to work with Republican primary voters!
On top of that, several media outlets reported today that Daniels was busted for drugs when he was in 1970 when he was a junior at Princeton. And it wasn’t for possession of just a little pot, either.
Read the rest of this entry »
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Monday Reads
Posted: February 7, 2011 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign, Barack Obama, morning reads, psychology | Tags: AOL Buys HuffPo, Bill OReilly interviews obama, financial contagion, Krugman on High Food Prices, Neuroscience and buddhism, Obama speech Chamber of Commerce | 31 CommentsBreaking NEWS update:
Rep. Jane Harman of California to resign
Democrat Jane Harman, who represents a Los Angeles-area district, is expected to leave Congress to lead the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, a congressional source says.
U.S. Rep. Jane Harman (D-Venice), a leading congressional voice on anti-terrorism issues, plans to resign from Congress to head up the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, a senior congressional source confirmed Monday, setting up a special election to choose her successor in a coastal district that stretches from Venice into the South Bay.
There’s plenty of news to share today so grab a big mug of whatever it is that you drink and join in!!
First, some big news in business and the blogosphere. AOL Is Buying The Huffington Post.
The two companies completed the sale Sunday evening and announced the deal just after midnight on Monday. AOL will pay $315 million, $300 million of it in cash and the rest in stock. It will be the company’s largest acquisition since it was separated from Time Warner in 2009.
The deal will allow AOL to greatly expand its news gathering and original content creation, areas that its chief executive, Tim Armstrong, views as vital to reversing a decade-long decline.
Arianna Huffington, the cable talk show pundit, author and doyenne of the political left, will take control of all of AOL’s editorial content as president and editor in chief of a newly created Huffington Post Media Group. The arrangement will give her oversight not only of AOL’s national, local and financial news operations, but also of the company’s other media enterprises like MapQuest and Moviefone.
I’m not sure if any of you caught the O’Reilly interview of Obama, but President Obama is insisting that he’s not moving to the center. The one thing I keep hearing about this interview is that O’Reilly couldn’t stop interrupting the President. I can only imagine how large that studio had to be to contain those big heads.
President Obama on Sunday dismissed the notion that his administration in recent weeks has pivoted toward the political center to raise his approval ratings as the 2012 campaign nears.
After ushering through Congress measures to throw a lifeline to troubled U.S. corporations, stimulate the economy and dramatically overhaul the nation’s healthcare system, Obama has since cut a deal with congressional Republicans on taxes and called for a freeze on most federal spending.
But when pressed Sunday during a live interview with Fox’s Bill O’Reilly on what political analysts say is a clear sprint toward the center, Obama dismissed the notion with a “no.”
“I haven’t — I didn’t move to… I’m the same guy,” he said.
When O’Reilly said the president’s critics call him “a big government liberal,” Obama replied that he inherited a nation on the brink of an economic crisis. That situation required his administration to take a number of “extraordinary steps” to avoid a severe economic depression, Obama said.
I wrote on the role of speculation in high food prices a few days ago . Paul Krugman believes it’s a supply problem and wrote about it Sunday on the NYT. He also considers climate change to be a factor. You may want to check it out.
Overall grain production is down — and it’s down substantially more when you take account of a growing world population. Wheat production (this time not per capita) is way down.
You might ask why a production shortfall of 5 percent leads to a doubling of prices. Part of the answer is that some kinds of demand are growing faster than population — in particular, China is becoming a growing importer of feed to meet the demand for meat. But the main point is that the demand for grain is highly price-inelastic: it takes big price rises to induce people to consume less, yet collectively that’s what they must do given the shortfall in production.
Why is production down? Most of the decline in world wheat production, and about half of the total decline in grain production, has taken place in the former Soviet Union — mainly Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan. And we know what that’s about: an incredible, unprecedented heat wave.
Here‘s a wonky link to VOXEU that discusses financial contagion. It’s pretty interesting. The article deals with contagion in the market for European Sovereign bonds but you can extrapolate the basic intuition to other assets. Here’s one surprising insight. It seems that many stocks that performed well during the financial crisis were frequently the one’s most likely to be subjected to ‘fire sales’ later on. That’s a tidbit worth remembering.
First, the fire sale discount is most pronounced for stocks which performed best during the crisis. Figure 2 illustrates this aspect by depicting the relative performance of non-exposed and exposed stocks as a function of the stocks overall return from July 2007 to July 2008. Most of the return shortfall of exposed stocks is concentrated among the stocks with the highest returns. This somewhat counterintuitive result can be explained by fund discretion about which asset positions to liquidate. Faced with funding constraints and investor redemption requests, distressed equity funds liquidated the best performing stocks rather than stocks with recent large capital losses. Thus, fire sales were more pronounced for stocks among the 10% best performing stocks. For these stocks we find average fire sale discounts above 75%.
President Obama addresses the US Chamber of Commerce today. You can watch it on CSpan.
Picking up on the themes expressed in his State of the Union Address, President Obama will reaffirm his commitment to invest in rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure during a speech at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce today.
During that address before Congress, the President identified innovation, education, and infrastructure as the keys to stimulate the economy by increasing job growth and entrepreneurial opportunities.
Here’s a post for our BostonBoomer from Psychology today. Okay, it’s also for me. It’s called Buddhism and Neuroscience: Neuroscience finds a friend in Buddhism. Here’s an interesting scientific view of a practice we Buddhists do to realize that there is no “soul”.
When a Buddhist applies the idea of constant change to the self and the soul, he gains an insight that other religions lack. What we call a mind (or a self, or a soul) is actually something that changes so much and is so uncertain, that our terms for it do not find meaning. The Buddhist word for self is anatta and it means ‘no self.’ It is used to refer to oneself, while cleverly reminding the user of the word that there is such thing.
Within this framework, one is immediately struck by the disconnect between perception and religious teaching. All is endlessly changing, but I feel unified and unchanged from moment to moment, year to year. The way things feel becomes suspect, just as it does in modern neuroscience. Broadly, both Buddhism and neuroscience converge on similar points of view: the way it feels to be you isn’t how it is, that even our language about ourselves is to be distrusted (witness the tortured negation of anatta), and there is no permanent, constant soul in the background.
Despite saying there is no self, Buddhism does posit an immaterial thing that survives the brain’s death. Through life there is a consciousness, always changing like the world, one mental state rising like a wave to crash on the beach, then another and another. After a person’s death, the consciousness re-incarnates. This isn’t much of a trick, since even during a Buddhist life, each moment can be considered a re-incarnation from the moment before. The waves still lap, the beach shifted. If you’re good, they might lap at a higher organism. If you’re not, well, insects clearly have consciousness and someone’s waves need to supply it.
So how does Buddhism do? Pretty well. Buddhism lays out the concept that there is no mind the way we tend to consider them (as we consider our self). In broad strokes, neuroscience and neurology agree.
Kinda cool hmm?
So, what’s on you reading and blogging list today?
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