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The Ledes

Thursday, April 25, 2024

CNN: “The US economy cooled more than expected in the first quarter of the year, but remained healthy by historical standards. Economic growth has slowed steadily over the past 12 months, which bodes well for lower interest rates, but the Federal Reserve has made it clear it’s in no rush to cut rates.”

The Wires
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Public Service Announcement

The Washington Post offers tips on how to keep your EV battery running in frigid temperatures. The link at the end of this graf is supposed to be a "gift link" (from me, Marie Burns, the giftor!), meaning that non-subscribers can read the article. Hope it works: https://wapo.st/3u8Z705

"Countless studies have shown that people who spend less time in nature die younger and suffer higher rates of mental and physical ailments." So this Washington Post page allows you to check your own area to see how good your access to nature is.

Marie: If you don't like birthing stories, don't watch this video. But I thought it was pretty sweet -- and funny:

If you like Larry David, you may find this interview enjoyable:


Tracy Chapman & Luke Combs at the 2024 Grammy Awards. Allison Hope comments in a CNN opinion piece:

~~~ Here's Chapman singing "Fast Car" at the Oakland Coliseum in December 1988. ~~~

~~~ Here's the full 2024 Grammy winner's list, via CBS.

He Shot the Messenger. Washington Post: “The Messenger is shutting down immediately, the news site’s founder told employees in an email Wednesday, marking the abrupt demise of one of the stranger and more expensive recent experiments in digital media. In his email, Jimmy Finkelstein said he was 'personally devastated' to announce that he had failed in a last-ditch effort to raise more money for the site, saying that he had been fundraising as recently as the night before. Finkelstein said the site, which launched last year with outsize ambitions and a mammoth $50 million budget, would close 'effective immediately.' The New York Times first reported the site’s closure late Wednesday afternoon, appearing to catch many staffers off-guard, including editor in chief Dan Wakeford. As employees read the news story, the internal work chat service Slack erupted in what one employee called 'pandemonium.'... Minutes later, as staffers read Finkelstein’s email, its message was underscored as they were forcibly logged out of their Slack accounts. Former Messenger reporter Jim LaPorta posted on social media that employees would not receive health care or severance.”

Washington Post: “The last known location of 'Portrait of Fräulein Lieser' by world-renowned Austrian artist Gustav Klimt was in Vienna in the mid-1920s. The vivid painting featuring a young woman was listed as property of a 'Mrs Lieser' — believed to be Henriette Lieser, who was deported and killed by the Nazis. The only remaining record of the work was a black and white photograph from 1925, around the time it was last exhibited, which was kept in the archives of the Austrian National Library. Now, almost 100 years later, this painting by one of the world’s most famous modernist artists is on display and up for sale — having been rediscovered in what the auction house has hailed as a sensational find.... It is unclear which member of the Lieser family is depicted in the piece[.]”

~~~ Marie: I don't know if this podcast will update automatically, or if I have to do it manually. In any event, both you and I can find the latest update of the published episodes here. The episodes begin with ads, but you can fast-forward through them.

Contact Marie

Click on this link to e-mail Marie.

Tuesday
Aug192014

The Commentariat -- August 20, 2014

Defunct video & related text removed.

NEW. Greg Miller, et al., of the Washington Post: In public remarks, "President Obama denounced the killing of American journalist James Foley and pledged that the U.S. will 'do what's necessary to see that justice is done.'" ...

... NEW. Peter Baker of the New York Times: "American intelligence agencies on Wednesday verified the authenticity of a video showing the beheading of an American journalist by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria amid angry outrage in the United States and Europe. President Obama was planning to make a statement from Martha's Vineyard at 12:45 p.m. to address the issue. The video posted by ISIS shows a masked man decapitating James Foley, an American journalist who was kidnapped in Syria nearly two years ago. It also shows another American captive, the journalist Steven Sotloff, and warns that he would be the next to die."

NEW. The Washington Post is liveblogging the McDonnell corruption trial. Here's one entry: "In February 2012, then-Gov. Robert F. McDonnell discussed with management consultants the possibility of his own wife moving out of the Executive Mansion as a possible solution to tension the first lady had with her staff, one of the consultants testified Wednesday." CW: This is the second day of Bob McDonnell's "defense," which so far has consisted of bringing forward witnesses to trash Maureen McDonnell. It's really unseemly. But I suppose one should not be surprised that Transvaginal Bob shows no respect for his own wife when he has no respect for other women.

Manu Raju of Politico: "Mitch McConnell has a game plan to confront President Barack Obama with a stark choice next year: Accept bills reining in the administration's policies or veto them and risk a government shutdown. In an extensive interview here, the typically reserved McConnell laid out his clearest thinking yet of how he would lead the Senate if Republicans gain control of the chamber. The emerging strategy: Attach riders to spending bills that would limit Obama policies on everything from the environment to health care, consider using an arcane budget tactic to circumvent Democratic filibusters and force the president to 'move to the center' if he wants to get any new legislation through Congress. In short, it's a recipe for a confrontational end to the Obama presidency."

CW: You knew there were lots of catches to Paul Ryan's newfound interest in "helping" the poor. Here's a big one. Benjamin Goad of the Hill: "Paul Ryan is moving to reframe the debate on regulations, arguing that the nation's poor are the real victims of the red tape spewing from Washington.... 'The regulatory component trades on the fallacy that deregulation creates job growth and can alleviate poverty,' said Amit Narang, a regulatory policy advocate for Public Citizen. 'The empirical evidence simply doesn't back this up, and the 2008 financial crash is a strong reminder that deregulation can be disastrous for our economy.' ... 'It's really a wolf in sheep's clothing,' said Ron White, director of regulatory policy at the Center for Effective Government.” No kidding. ...

... Don't give up. Ryan has more excellent ideas. See below.

Maureen Dowd devotes her 800 words to dissing President Obama. Again. Her column seems to be based on this: "The Constitution was premised on a system full of factions and polarization." ...

     ... CW: But Dowd is wrong. The Founders didn't even envision political parties. They didn't envision anyone's voting except themselves & their fancy friends. (They were so convinced the government would be so full of righteous men of good will, they didn't even mention the rights of the governed till they discovered the damned thing would not be ratified unless they tacked those rights on as an afterthought.) Like future Senator/President Obama, the Founders did not see "red states & blue states." What they did see, of course, were slave states & free states, which more than two centuries later turned out to be pretty much the same thing as red states & blue states. Still, just like the newly-minted President Obama, the Founders -- who actually had experience reaching compromise -- believed the governing gentlemen would work out their differences. They did not envision Mitch McConnell & Ted Cruz.

Beyond the Beltway

Frances Robles & Michael Schmidt of the New York Times: "As a county grand jury prepared to hear evidence on Wednesday in the shooting death of a black teenager by a white police officer that touched off 10 days of unrest here, witnesses have given investigators sharply conflicting accounts of the killing." CW: Robles & Schmidt have done some serious reporting here; this is a good first pass at trying to reconstruct what actually happened in the confrontation between Brown & Darren Wilson. ...

... Nigel Duara of the AP: "Police and protesters in Ferguson were finally able to share the streets again at night, putting aside for at least a few hours some of the hostility that had filled those hours with tear gas and smoke. The St. Louis suburb still had plenty of lively protest Tuesday over the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown. And tensions rose briefly when someone hurled a bottle at officers. But the overall scene was more subdued than the past five nights, with smaller crowds, fewer confrontations and no tear gas." ...

... St. Louis Post-Dispatch: "Missouri Highway Patrol Captain Ron Johnson said 47 people were arrested and three loaded handguns were seized during the protests Tuesday night and early today. In a news conference that began at about 2:15 this morning, Johnson said officers interrupted criminal activities and prevented violence." ...

... CW: Missouri has an open-carry law (with municipalities being able to pass some restrictions), so it's unclear to me if the people carrying loaded handguns were violating the law. If you're going to write open-carry laws, expect people to be carrying. As for interrupting criminal activities, I expect that's true; at the same time, the authorities apparently criminalized the most benign of activities, including non-activity: Carol Leonnig, et al., of the Washington Post: "... only some officers seemed to be enforcing a rule that protesters could walk, but not stand still or congregate. 'I saw the police arrest a lady because she had stopped walking,' said Bryan Maynard, 35, who had come to see the protests.... 'It's more than heavy-handed.'" If Maynard is correct, one of those 47 was a woman detained for standing still. ...

... Attorney General Eric Holder in a St. Louis Post-Dispatch op-ed: "At a time when so much may seem uncertain, the people of Ferguson can have confidence that the Justice Department intends to learn -- in a fair and thorough manner -- exactly what happened." ...

Kevin McDermott of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: "Evidence in the shooting of Michael Brown by a Ferguson police officer will be presented to a grand jury beginning Wednesday. 'We are going to attempt to start giving evidence to the grand jury (Wednesday), depending upon the ability to get the witnesses in and the witnesses showing up,' said Ed Magee, spokesman for St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCulloch. 'It will be handled by the attorney regularly assigned to the grand jury. It will not be by Mr. McCulloch.' The standing St. Louis County Circuit Court grand jury, not a special assembly, will hear the evidence." ...

... WJLA-TV-St. Louis: "Capt. Ron Johnson of the Missouri Highway Patrol ... said bottles and Molotov cocktails were thrown from the crowd and that some officers had come under heavy gunfire [Monday night & Tuesday morning]. At least two people were shot and 78 were arrested, he said. He did not have condition updates on those who were shot. Johnson said four officers were injured by rocks or bottles. According to arrest records obtained by ABC News, only four of the 78 arrested are from Ferguson while 18 people arrested are from locations across the country...." ...

** Read this account by Ryan Devereaux of the Intercept. Police arrested Devereaux in Ferguson early Tuesday morning & held him overnight in jail. ...

... Chris McGreal of the Guardian: "Racial tensions in Missouri were stoked again on Tuesday when police killed another African American man as authorities struggled to quell the nightly confrontations over the shooting of an unarmed teenager, Michael Brown, in Ferguson last week. Angry residents of a black neighbourhood in St Louis, not far from Ferguson, accused the police of excessive force after two officers fired several bullets into a 23-year-old man described as carrying a knife and behaving erratically. The man has not yet been named but he was well known in the area and was said to have learning difficulties." ...

... The St. Louis Post-Dispatch account, by Joe Holleman & Lisa Brown, is here. ...

... Emma Roller of the National Journal: "... since he was shot to death on Aug. 9, Brown has been the subject of character assassination by the police and by the media." ...

...John Oliver comments on events in Ferguson, on the militarization of U.S. police force & on racism in the U.S. Thanks to James S. for the link:

The real looting is legal looting. People don't have their fair share of police jobs, fire jobs, accounting work, legal work. That's looting. The looting by night -- should not take place, but neither should the accepted level of legal looting. And that must stop. -- The Rev. Jesse Jackson

... ** Jeannette Cooperman of Al Jazeera on the history of apartheid policies in the St. Louis area: "In reaction, St. Louis 'has spent enormous sums of public money to spatially reinforce human segregation patterns,' [Michael] Allen[, director of the Preservation Research Office,] said. 'We tore out the core of the city around downtown, just north and south and west, and fortified downtown as an island, by removing so-called slum neighborhoods. Then we demolished vacant housing in the Ville [where rocker Chuck Berry and opera singer Grace Bumbry grew up] and other historic black neighborhoods. These were not accidents. These were inflicted wounds.' 'Black communities in urban areas don't have Whole Foods. They don't have Starbucks. They don't have work,' said Gerald Early, director of African-American studies at Washington University. 'And that goes back to legalized segregation. They were basically set up to not be able to compete with white communities, to remind people every day that they were inferior to whites.'" ...

     ... CW: This is precisely why Republicans keep making fun of Michelle Obama & her efforts to improve nutritional standards & habits; one of her initiatives is to eliminate "food deserts." These opinionators want "to remind people every day that they [are] inferior to whites." And you can bet these asswipes believe in their hearts they're not racists. Some probably even have a black friend. ...

... Tom Edsall of the New York Times compares & contrasts socioeconomic & political developments surrounding the Watts riots of 1965 & the Ferguson protests. "The urban riots of the second half of the 1960s prompted Washington to pump out money, legislation, judicial decisions and regulatory change to outlaw de jure discrimination, to bring African-Americans to the ballot box, to create jobs and to vastly expand the scope of anti-poverty programs. Civil unrest also drew attention to the necessity of addressing police brutality. Today, however, political and policy-making stasis driven by gridlock -- despite a momentary concordance between left and right on this particular shooting -- insures that we will undertake no comparable initiatives to reverse or even stem the trends that have put black Americans at an increasing disadvantage in relation to whites."...

... Radley Balko of the Washington Post: "There's no question that, had the Ferguson, Mo., Police Department mandated that its officers wear body cameras, use dashboard cameras or both, there would be far fewer mysteries about the events leading up to the shooting of Michael Brown. The department apparently had these cameras; it just hadn't gotten around to using them. But simply mandating that the cameras be used isn't enough." Oftentimes the police refuse to release videotapes of controversial confrontations; many times the cops accidentally forget to turn on their cameras or, um, inexplicably turn them off just before a confrontation. At other times, they accidentally forget where they put the tape. "One policy that would go a long way toward achieving those three objectives is what defense attorney Scott Greenfield calls the missing video presumption.... Under the missing video presumption..., the courts will assume that the video corroborates the party opposing the police...." ...

... AND Now, for a Different POV. Sunil Dutta, an LAPD officer & professor, in a Washington Post op-ed: "We are still learning what transpired between Officer Darren Wilson and [Michael] Brown, but in most cases it's less ambiguous -- and officers are rarely at fault. When they use force, they are defending their, or the public's, safety. Even though it might sound harsh and impolitic, here is the bottom line: if you don't want to get shot, tased, pepper-sprayed, struck with a baton or thrown to the ground, just do what I tell you." ...

Time to Look at the Politics. Let's Hear First from a Limited-Government Tenther: There is no problem with the federal government having a role [in the investigation into Michael Brown's shooting]. But in all of these things, local control, local government, local authorities who have the jurisdiction, who have the expertise, who are actually there are the people who should be in the lead. -- Rep. Paul Ryan

Yeah, the Ferguson police have the "expertise" to lead, all right. -- Constant Weader

Think I'm wrong? Hah! Paul Waldman is totally on my side. He's made a list of "The Ferguson Police Department's Top 10 Tips For Protester Relations." ...

... Ian Millhiser of Think Progress: Partly because local elections are held in April in odd-numbered years when no statewide or national races are in play, "In 2013..., just 11.7 percent of eligible voters actually cast a ballot. Turnout is especially low among Ferguson's African American residents, however. In 2013, for example, just 6 percent of eligible black voters cast a ballot in Ferguson's municipal elections, as compared to 17 percent of white voters.... So the solution to the fact that Ferguson's black majority is nearly unrepresented in its government could be as simple as rescheduling its municipal elections so that they are held in November of even-numbered years -- the same time that federal elections are held." ...

... Jeff Smith of the in a New York Times op-ed (August 17): "... because blacks have reached the suburbs in significant numbers only over the past 15 years or so, fewer suburban black communities have deeply ingrained civic organizations.... Many North County towns -- and inner-ring suburbs nationally -- resemble Ferguson. Longtime white residents have consolidated power, continuing to dominate the City Councils and school boards despite sweeping demographic change. They have retained control of patronage jobs and municipal contracts awarded to allies. The North County Labor Club, whose overwhelmingly white constituent unions (plumbers, pipe fitters, electrical workers, sprinkler fitters) have benefited from these arrangements, operates a potent voter-turnout operation that backs white candidates over black upstarts." ...

... AND This. Charlie Spiering of Breitbart "News": Missouri GOP chairman Matt Wills thinks it's "disgusting" & "fanning the political flames" that "liberal organizers" have set up voter registration tables near the site of Michael Brown's killing & at the QT convenience store. ...

... Charles Pierce: "Registering people to vote is 'fanning the political flames,' because you know how Those People are when you get them all hopped up on voting, that's probably why Matt Wills and the state party that he directs executively worked so hard to minimize the 'disgusting' spectacle of black people at the polls." ...

... Alan Grayson Saw This Coming. His Colleagues Didn't Care. Jennifer Bendery, et al., of the Huffington Post: "The militarized police response to protests in Ferguson, Missouri, is forcing members of Congress to explain their ongoing support for a Pentagon program that provides local law enforcement with weapons used in war zones.... House lawmakers overwhelmingly voted in June to block legislation by Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) that would have ... banned funding for a specific set of heavy-duty gear, including grenade launchers, toxicological agents and drones, all of which may legally be transferred to police departments under current law." Democrats voted 3-1 against the Grayson amendment. ...

... CW: I suspect this is one of the bad outcomes of ending earmarks (a practice which Not-President-Thank-God John McCain decried for years). Since MOCs can no longer promise their constituents a bridge or a community center or a museum, they're dolling out tanks & grenades. Absent earmarks, the U.S. is becoming a vast militarized zone with substandard infrastructure. That is, Congressional policy, in the name of "reform," is turning the U.S. toward a third-world-country model.

MEANWHILE in New York City. Jake Pearson of the AP: The fatal beating of Rikers Island inmate Angel Ramirez in "July 2011 ... is among three deaths in New York City's jails over the past five years in which inmates were alleged to have been fatally beaten by guards. Yet in none of those cases was anyone ever charged with a crime.... The lack of accountability in the city's jail system was singled out time and again in a scathing federal review issued this month.... The government lawyers focused on juvenile facilities at the huge jail complex called Rikers Island but said their conclusions probably extend to all Rikers jails. They found that beatings often occurred out of view of security cameras, internal investigations took months to complete, and guards falsified or otherwise failed to properly fill out use-of-force forms documenting incidents."

Rosalind Helderman, et al., of the Washington Post: "The sister of former Virginia governor Robert F. McDonnell took the witness stand Tuesday at her brother's corruption trial to make the case that the former Virginia governor's marriage was far more strained than his finances.... Maureen C. McDonnell, who shares a name with her brother's wife, testified that her sister-in-law was erratic and mentally unstable, a reluctant first lady who did not like living in 'that prison mansion.'" CW: Thanks, Sis.

Stephanie Simon of Politico: "A Louisiana judge on Tuesday swatted down Gov. Bobby Jindal's attempt to use his executive authority to repeal the Common Core in his state. Jindal is trying to unilaterally scrap the new academic standards and a related series of exams -- a move that's put him at odds with business leaders, the state superintendent, members of the board of education and many Republican legislators in Louisiana. In a blistering five-page ruling, District Judge Todd W. Hernandez of Baton Rouge ruled that Jindal's plan would cause 'irreparable harm' to students, teachers and parents who have been preparing for the new standards for years." ...

... AP: "Jindal once supported the standards as improving student preparation for college and careers. But Jindal, who is considering a 2016 presidential campaign, now opposes them as a federal intrusion in state education policy." CW: Because Obama.

Cindy Carcamo of the Los Angeles Times: "At least five, perhaps as many as 10, of the 42 children slain [in San Pedro Sua, Honduras,] since February had been recently deported from the U.S.... Immigrant aid groups and human rights organizers say the Honduran government is ill-equipped to assist children at high risk after they have been returned." ...

 

... "Intended Consequences." Charles Pierce: "It is now the stated position of most of the Republican party in this country, and of Republican politicians like Steve King and most of the prospective 2016 presidential field, that more children must be sent home to die this way. People should remember that."

Senate Race

Dermot Cole & Nathaniel Herz of the Alaska Dispatch News: "Dan Sullivan, the former Alaska attorney general and natural resources commissioner, declared victory early Wednesday in one of the most divisive Alaska Republican primaries in decades, while Fairbanks lawyer Joe Miller ran 8 points behind in second place. Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell trailed third in the fight to take on Democratic Sen. Mark Begich in the fall."

Presidential Race

Alexandra Jaffe of the Hill: "Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) will turn himself into authorities on Tuesday evening, following his indictment by a grand jury on charges relating to abuse of power last week.... The governor's arraignment has been set for Friday, but Perry reportedly has no plans to attend and will go forward with a weekend trip to New Hampshire to rally Republicans there." ...

What, no glasses?? Still, wins prize for Best Hair in a Mugshot.     ... Update. Jesse Byrnes of the Hill: "Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) was booked at a courthouse in Austin on Tuesday, getting his fingerprints taken and a mug shot, following his indictment by a grand jury on abuse of power charges. 'I'm here today because I believe in the rule of law, and I'm here today because I did the right thing,' a defiant Perry said to mostly cheers from those gathered outside the Travis County Courthouse."

... David Montgomery of the New York Times: "A prominent legal team has taken shape to assist Gov. Rick Perry in fighting a felony indictment, with the lead lawyer denouncing the abuse of power charges as 'nothing more than banana republic politics.'"

News Ledes

AP: "At least 34 sailors are being kicked out of the Navy for their roles in a cheating ring that operated undetected for at least seven years at a nuclear power training site, and 10 others are under criminal investigation, the admiral in charge of the Navy's nuclear reactors program told The Associated Press."

New York Times: "Israeli airstrikes killed a wife and baby son of the top military commander of Hamas, the Islamist movement that dominates the Gaza Strip, hours after rocket fire from Gaza broke a temporary cease-fire Tuesday and halted talks aimed at ending the six-week conflict collapsed in Cairo. The fate of the commander, Mohammed Deif, the target of several previous Israeli assassination attempts, remained unclear, though Palestinian officials and witnesses said his was not one of three bodies pulled Wednesday from the rubble of the bombed Gaza City home." ...

... AFP: "An Israeli cabinet minister on Wednesday justified an air strike on Gaza that killed the wife and child of Hamas military leader Mohammed Deif, saying he was a legitimate target. 'Mohammed Deif deserves to die just like (the late Al-Qaeda leader Osama) bin Laden. He is an arch murderer and as long as we have an opportunity we will try to kill him'" Interior Minister Gideon Saar told army radio."

New York Times: "After nearly a week of inaction, a Russian aid convoy destined for the besieged, rebel-controlled Ukrainian city of Luhansk rumbled to life on Wednesday, with 16 of its trucks passing through a Russian border checkpoint. Before heading to Luhansk, though, the trucks still have to be checked by the Russian border service, Ukrainian border guards and representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Sergei Karavaytsev, an officer in Russia's Emergencies Ministry, said in a telephone interview."

Guardian: "Russia has shut down four McDonald's restaurants in Moscow for alleged sanitary violations in a move critics said was the latest blow in its tit-for-tat sanctions tussle with the west." CW: Now that could make Putin unpopular.

AP: "Germany says it is prepared to arm the Kurdish fighters battling Sunni insurgents in northern Iraq. Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier says Germany would closely coordinate its efforts with France, Britain and other European countries who are already delivering weapons to the Kurds."

Reader Comments (10)

Can anyone identify the source of MoDo's problem with Obama? The first chapter of her American history primer must have begun with Reagan's election. If I ever again trouble to comment--let alone read- one of her anti-Obama rants, maybe I'll send her a reading list.

And Poor Paul.

The man must be even more ignorant--or forgetful-- than I thought Economics is one thing. Many are confused, though they shouldn't be-- about that sometimes abstruse subject. But recent history shouldn't be that hard to follow.

From his remarks I'd have to guess Ryan must have had George Wallace and "Bull" Connor in mind, or possibly the many other similarly-minded "locals" who display the kind of expertise that repeatedly proves their devotion to the welfare of "blah" people. Some are easy to identify. They wear hoods.

Ryan needs a reading list too. Ayn Rand didn't know or say it all.

August 19, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

Here's another likely example of police attempts to assassinate the victims character:
http://www.thepeoplesview.net/main/2014/8/19/christine-byers-tweeted-what-how-authorities-use-the-press-to-disseminate-their-narrative
Here they use a gullible reporter, on leave from the St Louis Post Dispatch, as their mouthpiece. She tweeted their message, which was widely retweeted and picked up by a large number of conservative media outlets, including most of the biggies. (The thrust of the message was that police have twelve witnesses supporting the officers version that he was defending himself)

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterVictoria D.

Thomas Edsall has an excellent piece in the Times today. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/20/opinion/thomas-edsall-ferguson-watts-and-a-dream-deferred.html

"One optimistic note is that the white reaction to events in Ferguson, including the commentary of some outspoken white conservatives, has been sympathetic to the anger and outrage over the police shooting of an unarmed black teenager. This stands in sharp distinction to the aftermath of the violence in Los Angeles in 1965."

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterMAG

Marie,

Don't want to see this buried in all today's words; it's too good:

You wrote, "Absent earmarks, the U.S. is becoming a vast militarized zone with substandard infrastructure. That is, Congressional policy, in the name of "reform," is turning the U.S. toward a third-world-country model."

Don't think it's all about absent earmarks, but the trend is clear and unarguable, the instances depressingly numerous.

Have to leave for the day but would propose a game.

America on the road to the third world. If we can stand the pain, let us count the ways.

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterKen Winkes

@CW and MAG, Edsall also had a fine piece on the unintended (sic) boost to corruption of absent earmarks:

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/06/opinion/thomas-edsall-the-value-of-political-corruption.html

Took me back to my youth in '50's and '60's South Louisiana and the original bridge to nowhere:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunshine_Bridge

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterWhyte Owen

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/08/18/1322562/-What-Could-Possibly-Go-Wrong-Just-Did-Georgia-s-Carry-Protection-Act-in-Action?detail=email#

Guns and alcohol, a combination frowned upon in the Old West. Now it's suddenly not a problem? Race isn't a factor; north Georgia is predominately white. I've been to Helen many times. In no case did I feel the need to carry a firearm. You give idiots guns, and add alcohol, you shouldn't be surprised at the results. Indeed, we are turning into a third world country.

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterBarbarossa

Maybe what we call "third world country" is really the normal habitat for our species--a kind of industrial-age tribalism.

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterJames Singer

This morning I heard some interviews with residents of Ferguson who were anything but thrilled about the protests of the murder of an unarmed kid. They were white, of course. And most of the interviews sounded as if they could have been recorded in 1965. "What do these people hope to accomplish with all this trouble-making?" "They need to go home and let the authorities do their job", "Why don't they just go out and vote? You know these people don't vote, don't you?"

There is, of course, no sense of the irony in suggesting that black residents go out and vote after you've put into office people who make it their business to ensure that voting is a near impossibility, or that it is extremely difficult.

The disconnect is visceral. It's almost as if these people inhabit a separate world.

And they do.

An article on Salon the other day points to a recent social science study that examined the "knowledge distortion" index that takes into account partisanship in reporting and receiving information. It's no surprise that conservative outlets manufacture their own reality free from facts, which bleeds into other media, poisoning the well, so to speak, for everyone, making knowledge distortion on the right practically de rigueur.

"Citizens are misinformed — often badly so. It’s not just that they lack good information — which would merely make them uninformed — they have plenty of bad information that leads them to believe untrue things. Or more likely the other way around: They believe untrue things, and that leads them to collect — even invent — bad information to flesh out what they already believe."

And, as Marie points out today, many conservative opinion makers, now working hard to smear Michael Brown and the black residents of Ferguson--the better to protect the police and "the system" and, into the bargain, not letting those blacks get any more uppity than they already are--may actually believe the bullshit they're selling and see themselves as completely without bias or racially tinged motivations.

This reminded me of a a startling piece of unhinged fantasy treacle by conservative icon Ben Stein a few months back in which he announced--you can practically hear choirs of angels singing in his head--that racism, especially in the South, is no more. Finito. Dead and gone. I kid you not.

In his recitation of the wonders of the South's extirpation of racial demons, Stein lectures us that that region "...has no time for hate or racial fear. Tears came to my eyes as I thought of how magnificently the South has risen to meet and defeat the challenges of racism. I am thinking of how this country has shown its essential nobility in Greenville and all over the nation. Again, this country is far too busy to hate..."

Tears came to his eyes. Precious, ain't it?

These assholes really believe this crap. How? They don't live in the same world, that's how. Stein can go into a Waffle House in Greenville, SC and note all the happy darkies smiling away, shinin' shoes, pickin' cotton, getting pepper sprayed, being shot and killed while unarmed, and to him it's all cherry blossoms, rose petals, sweetness and light. Sure. If you're white, rich, and a fucking idiot.

But it's this same alternate reality that allows wingers to whine, again with not the slightest sense of irony or even the barest awareness, that Rick Perry is now being "lynched" by liberal mobs. The guy who owns a hunting lodge named "Niggerhead" is being lynched. But those uppity nigras in Ferguson need to just shut up and go home and let th'authorities git on with it. Fuckin' darkies. Always stirrin' up trouble.

But most of the root causes (tempted to say "all"--but we've had that discussion before) of black anxiety and distress in America have their origins in right-wing policies and an ongoing effort to keep them in their place, even if it means countenancing the kind of brutality on display in Ferguson. I mean, someone's gotta keep those nigras on the straight and narrow, am I right?

Thus, outrage on the part of the wingnuts that activists see the Ferguson moment as the perfect time to sign people up to vote.
Blacks voting? An OUTRAGE!

Conservative ideology has proven to be the single biggest deterrent to equality, to opportunity, to economic well being, to the ability to vote, to quality of life, to decent education, to personal safety, and to peace, for people of color in this country, and plenty of whites outside the crenellated walls of economic security. We'll just add those to the list of all the other topic headings for which right-wing thinking and legal shenanigans are the most toxic poisons in the American well.

It's not just knowledge that the right distorts, it's the very idea of America itself.

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Voter participation rate in Ferguson, MO: 12%. We get the government that we choose.

http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/ferguson-lack-diversity-goes-way-beyond-its-cops?cid=sm_m_main_1_20140814_29785586

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterJack Fuller

In Perry's mugshot he appears to me to bear an eerie resemblance to GW Bush. Not in features, but in smirkiness and cockiness. I'm starting to get a bad feeling about Perry and his presidential possibilities - we never thought Bush would get to occupy the Oval Office either.

August 20, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterVictoria D.
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