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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.

Wednesday
Jul152015

The Commentariat -- July 16, 2015

Internal links & defunct video removed.

Michael Shear & Julie Davis of the New York Times: "President Obama on Wednesday urged lawmakers to support the nuclear deal reached with Iran, saying that failure to put it in to effect would increase the likelihood of war in the Middle East and accelerate a nuclear arms race in the region that would threaten the safety of the United States. 'That's the choice that we face,' Mr. Obama said in opening comments at a news conference in the East Room of the White House. 'If we don't choose wisely, I believe future generations will judge us harshly, for letting this moment slip away.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon; story has been updated.) ...

... Squeaky Wheel Refuses Grease. Julie Davis & Matthew Rosenberg of the New York Times: "When President Obama called Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday to discuss the nuclear deal with Iran, the American president offered the Israeli leader, who had just deemed the agreement a 'historic mistake,' a consolation prize: a fattening of the already generous military aid package the United States gives Israel.... Mr. Obama said he was prepared to hold 'intensive discussions' with Mr. Netanyahu on what more could be done to bolster Israel's defenses, administration officials said. But, as in previous talks with Mr. Obama, Mr. Netanyahu refused to engage in such talk 'at this juncture,' the officials said...." ...

... David Sanger & Michael Gordon of the New York Times: "... as the negotiations [on the Iran nuclear deal] went into their third week..., a major dispute lingered: whether a ban on Iran's ability to purchase conventional weapons and missile technology would remain in place. The American delegation, led by Secretary of State John Kerry, insisted on extending the ban. But Mohammad Javad Zarif, the Iranian foreign minister and his country's chief negotiator, was opposed. Backing him were the Russians and Chinese, equal parties in the talks, who saw a lucrative market in selling arms to Tehran. A compromise was struck that fully satisfied neither side: a five-year ban on the sale of conventional weapons and an eight-year ban on ballistic missiles." ...

     The Washington Post story, by Karen DeYoung & Carol Morello, is here. ...

... "Blame George W. Bush." Noah Feldman of Bloomberg: "Iran's rise wouldn't have been possible -- and the deal wouldn't have been necessary -- had the U.S. not unleashed Iran from the regional power that did the most to contain it: Saddam Hussein's Iraq.... Had the U.S. never invaded Iraq, Hussein's Iraq would probably have continued to play its traditional role of containing Iran.... A democratic Iraq was always going to be Shiite-led, and a democratically elected Shiite government in Baghdad was always going to be relatively positive toward Iran." ...

... Paul Waldman: Now that we have a nuclear deal with Iran, Republicans are jostling each other to determine who can make the most angry and apocalyptic statements about it..... If President Walker/Bush/Rubio/Trump walked away from the deal, it wouldn't actually hurt Iran that much. But it would mean saying that America is no longer interested in keeping tabs on Iran's nuclear program.... That's a plan so stupid that it's hard to imagine even the current GOP presidential candidates carrying it out.... At the moment Republicans can't articulate their own alternative, because it sure seems like that alternative is another war. But if they're fortunate enough to win the White House next year, they're likely to find that walking away from this deal is a lot less attractive than it seemed when they were trying to win over Republican primary voters." ...

... E. J. Dionne compares President Obama's dealings with Iran to those of President Reagan's with the Soviet Union. Oh, and the critics aren't much different: "the conservative activist Howard Phillips accused Reagan of being 'a very weak man with a very strong wife and a strong staff' who had become 'a useful idiot for Kremlin propaganda.'" ...

... Andrew Kaczynski of BuzzFeed: "Senator Mark Kirk, a Republican from Illinois, says the nuclear agreement with Iran 'condemns the next generation to cleaning up a nuclear war in the Persian Gulf.' Kirk, who has consistently spoken out against the deal with Iran, told WRKO's Financial Exchange radio program on Tuesday that he believes 'tens of thousands of people in the Middle East are gonna lose their lives because of this decision by Barack Hussein Obama.'... Kirk said he believed the only reason the president supported legislation from Republican Sen. Bob Corker, the chair of the Foreign Relations Committee, that allowed Congress to review the deal was because he 'wants...to get nukes to Iran.'"

Igor Volsky of Think Progress: "Obama Heroically Prevents Reporter [Jonathan Karl] From Diverting News Conference About Iran To Donald Trump."

Michael Shear: "President Obama on Wednesday [in response to a question asked near the end of his press conference] said bluntly that the actions described in accusations that the comedian Bill Cosby drugged women for sex would constitute nothing less than rape, and he said the country should have 'no tolerance' for such actions. In his first comments on the decades-old accusations against Mr. Cosby, the president sought to carefully avoid a direct comment on civil legal actions that have been lodged against the longtime comedian and television star by several women in recent years. And he dismissed the idea that he might revoke the Presidential Medal of Freedom conferred on Mr. Cosby by President George W. Bush in 2002." ...

... Hunter Schwartz of the Washington Post: "Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) don't think [Cosby] deserves the highest civilian honor in America anymore. In a statement to Politico, a spokeswoman for Gillibrand said Cosby's medal must be revoked 'because we need to set a clear example that sexual assault will not be tolerated in this country.' But revoking the award isn't a simple matter of presidential decree or congressional vote. In fact, we don't actually know how the medal would be revoked because it's never happened before."

Jackie Calmes & Nicholas St. Fleur of the New York Times: "House Republican leaders on Wednesday announced a congressional investigation of Planned Parenthood, a day after anti-abortion activists released a video of an unsuspecting official from the organization explaining how it provides fetal tissue to researchers." CW: This would be Benghaaazi! for girls, except Benghaaazi! is already for one particular lady (see story linked under Presidential Race). ...

... Sarah Kliff of Vox: "The video itself raises two issues. The first is whether Planned Parenthood's actions are legal; selling fetal remains for profit is against the law. But Planned Parenthood says it only charges enough to cover its own costs for preserving and transporting the fetal tissues, and that's allowed under federal law. The larger issue raised by the video is harder to resolve, and it's about the medical ethics of using fetal tissue in research.... Fetal tissue has historically played an important role in scientific research because of fetal cells' ability to rapidly divide and adapt to new environments."

Ziva Branstetter & Dylan Goforth of the Tulsa Frontier: "When President Barack Obama arrives in Durant[, Oklahoma,] today and travels to the town's high school to give a speech, he will apparently be greeted by residents waving Confederate flags." CW: Nothing racist about this demonstration of "heritage," of course. Funny, the Chocktaw Nation kicked these fine patriots off Chocktaw land. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...

     ... Update. Bill Schammert of OKCFox: "The group was moved several times throughout the day.... The rally disbanded by early afternoon, prior to the president's arrival." ...

     ... Update 2. Katie Zezima of the Washington Post: "President Obama was greeted by protesters waving the Confederate flag during his visit to Oklahoma. About nine or 10 protesters waved the Confederate battle flag, as well as an American flag, across the street from the hotel where Obama is staying here, standing among a larger group that included Obama supporters.... Obama was also greeted by protesters waving the Confederate flag when he visited Tennessee earlier this month."

You know, there are three branches of our government. You have the Supreme Court, the legislative branch and the people, the people and their ability to vote. -- Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, explaining the Oklahoma constitution to people she had better hope are even more ignorant than she, in the context of her refusal to follow a state supreme court's order to remove a monument of the Ten Commandments from the statehouse grounds

One has to wonder where Fallin sees her job fitting into this scheme. -- Constant Weader

Thanks to Akhilleus for the news from Oklahoma.

Eric Tucker & Michael Kunzelman of the AP: "Capitol Hill lawmakers from Louisiana have intervened on behalf of a New Orleans company that has failed to stop a decade-old oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico but lobbied for a refund of money reserved for spill containment work, according to letters obtained by The Associated Press through public records requests.... Sen. Bill Cassidy (R), former Sen. Mary Landrieu (D) and Reps. Cedric Richmond (D) and Steve Scalise (R) have sent letters on Taylor Energy's behalf since December 2014.... Sen. David Vitter also made a telephone call to request a meeting between company and government officials...."

Erwin Chemerinsky in a Los Angeles Times op-ed: "Justice Antonin Scalia is setting a terrible example for young lawyers. Ignore, for now, his jurisprudence, his famously strict originalism; it's his tone that's the problem.... Scalia has long relied on ridicule.... Scalia's opinions this term, however, were especially nasty, sarcastic and personal.... Such mockery does not amount to a legal argument...."

Joshua Partlow of the Washington Post: "Mexican authorities released the surveillance footage of [Joaquin] Guzman's dramatic prison escape on Tuesday night. From a hole in the shower floor, one of the small blind spots for the surveillance camera, Guzman's allies had built a hatch over a shaft dropping 30 feet underground and leading to a tunnel that ran to a small cinder-block house in the corn fields south of the prison." Includes video. (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Sam Roberts of the New York Times: "More than six decades later, the prosecution of Ethel Rosenberg remains one of America's most controversial criminal cases: Her conviction -- and eventual execution -- for joining in her husband Julius's espionage conspiracy rested largely on trial testimony from her younger brother. But in private testimony to a grand jury seven months before the 1951 trial, Mrs. Rosenberg's brother, David Greenglass, never mentioned involvement by his sister in Mr. Rosenberg's delivery of atomic secrets to Soviet operatives, according to a grand jury transcript released Wednesday."

Presidential Race

Eric Lichtblau & Nicholas Confessore of the New York Times: "Presidential contenders provided a glimpse inside their campaign war chests on Wednesday, releasing financial statements.... The reports showed, for instance, that Jeb Bush has relied largely on wealthy donors giving the maximum contribution -- attracting far less financial support from more modest donors -- and that Rick Perry, Ben Carson and Rick Santorum are burning through the money they have raised much more quickly than most of their opponents. Hillary Rodham Clinton raised the most money for the primary of any candidate, $46.7 million, while Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, running against Mrs. Clinton for the Democratic nomination, brought in $15 million, the vast majority of it from donors giving $200 or less.... The reports, filed with the Federal Election Commission..., did not include money being raised by the 'super PACs' and other outside groups that are supporting many of the candidates." ...

... Matea Gold & Anu Narayanswamy of the Washington Post: "A small cadre of super-wealthy Americans is dominating the fundraising for the 2016 Republican presidential nominating contest, doling out huge sums to independent groups that overwhelm total contributions to the candidates. Nearly $4 out of every $5 raised so far on behalf of GOP White House contenders has gone to independent groups rather than the official campaigns." ...

... Shane Goldmacher of the National Journal: "Only 3 Percent of Jeb Bush's Campaign Cash Came From Small Donors."

Jamelle Bouie: The "dueling speeches" of Hillary Clinton & Scott Walker on Monday "are clear: There is no middle ground or overlap between Walker's America and Clinton's coalition of blacks, Latinos, women, and young people. Which means that there's no amount of 'leadership' -- of rhetorical restraint, of triangulation, of closed-door maneuvering -- that would yield a 'governing majority' that's capable of serious progress. Indeed, there's no national -- or at least, no bipartisan -- agreement on what 'progress' means."

Martin Matishak of the Hill: "Democrats serving on the House Select Committee on Benghazi say the panel's GOP chairman has 'abandoned' plans for hearings to shift the focus of the investigation to Hillary Clinton. 'At the beginning of this year, Select Committee Republicans provided Democrats with detailed information about their plans to hold 11 hearings between January and October on a wide range of topics relating to the Benghazi attacks,' the panel's five Democrats wrote Wednesday in a letter to chairman Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.). Since then, however, Republicans have completely abandoned this plan -- holding no hearings at all since January and instead focusing on former Secretary Hillary Clinton.'..." CW: No kidding.

Jonathan Easley of the Hill: "C-SPAN is partnering with a handful of regional newspapers in early-voting states for a nationally televised forum with the Republican presidential candidates just days before Fox News Channel's first scheduled debate. The network has invited all 17 of the GOP presidential hopefuls to the Aug. 3 Voters First Forum in New Hampshire. Publishers at the New Hampshire Union Leader, The Post and Courier of South Carolina, and Iowa's The Gazette say the forum was prompted in part by Fox's controversial decision to cap the number of candidates in its Aug. 6 debate at 10." ...

     ... Ed Kilgore: "The 64k question about this 'forum' is whether it's in danger of being deemed an 'unsanctioned debate' by the RNC, which would mean participants would be barred from sanctioned debates right on through to the end of the primary process."

Rosalind Helderman & Tom Hamburger of the Washington Post: "In the year before Donald Trump launched his presidential campaign, booming real estate markets increased the celebrity mogul's wealth by more than $1 billion, Trump said Wednesday. Trump's 2014 gains were announced by his campaign with typical Trump flair -- spelled out in all capital letters in a press statement proclaiming that his net worth as of now 'is in excess of TEN BILLION DOLLARS.'... But Trump did not release the document.... The FEC confirmed receiving Trump's form and has up to 30 days to review it before releasing it publicly.... The eventual release of the FEC form, which carries stiff penalties for false information, would provide a rare look into Trump's finances." ...

... Julie Bykowicz of the AP: "Federal documents Trump filed Wednesday show that he has lent his high-profile campaign $1.8 million." CW: Not sure why the AP has access to the filing but the WashPo doesn't.

Molly Beck of the Wisconsin State Journal: "Clearing a potentially serious obstacle from Gov. Scott Walker's intended path to the White House, the Wisconsin Supreme Court on Thursday blocked a secret investigation into millions of dollars spent on financing of recall election victories by Walker and other Republicans." ...

... Mary Bottari & Brendan Fischer, in a Cap Times op-ed, explain how Scottie's good fortune came about. Thanks to Nadd2 for this depressing news. ...

... While the Koch-sponsored team cheers, let us note that its designated hitter's foot-in-mouth slump continues ...

... Allegra Kirkland of TPM: "On Tuesday, a day after entering the 2016 race, [Scott] Walker, an Eagle Scout, was asked about the recent decision by the Boy Scouts of America to lift its longstanding ban on gay troop leaders. Walker told the Independent Journal Review he supported the ban because it 'protected children and advanced Scout values.'... The comments were met with outrage by LGBT rights groups.... But during a Wednesday press conference in South Carolina, according to the New York Times, Walker said his comments had been misunderstood. 'The protection was not a physical protection,' he said, according to the Times. Instead, it was about 'protecting them from being involved in ... the political and media discussion about it, instead of just focusing on what Scouts is about, which is about camping and citizenship and things of that nature.'" CW: Very believable walkback, Scottie.

Beyond the Beltway

Jon Swaine of the Guardian: "Witnesses have told Mississippi state investigators that an unarmed black man died after being kept in a chokehold by a police officer for more than 20 minutes and denied CPR, according to his family's attorneys, who said an autopsy confirmed he was fatally strangled. State medical examiners provisionally found Jonathan Sanders died through homicide by manual asphyxiation, according to attorneys Chokwe Lumumba and CJ Lawrence."

All Quiet on the Western Front. Tom Dart of the Guardian: "A small town near Austin[, Texas,] with a quaint Victorian downtown, Bastrop is supposed to be a hub of the vast US military training exercise that spans seven states and runs until 15 September. But Wednesday seemed to be a day like any other in Bastrop -- which is to say not much was happening. It was certainly not the imposition of martial law, ice cream trucks being used as portable morgues and empty Walmarts being turned into concentration camps, as some of the more extreme conspiracy theorists had predicted...."

News Ledes

New York Times: "A Colorado jury has reached a verdict in the murder case against James E. Holmes, a former neuroscience student whose shooting rampage three years ago killed 12 and wounded 70 inside a suburban Denver movie theater. The verdict will be announced shortly, court officials said Thursday." ...

     ... Denver Post UPDATE: "A jury on Thursday found James Holmes guilty of murder for the Aurora movie theater attack, one of the worst mass shootings in American history. The jury of nine women and three men delivered the verdict at 4:15 p.m., after deliberating for about 12 hours over two days. In doing so, they rejected Holmes' plea of insanity."

New York Times: "A gunman opened fire on a Navy and Marine reserve center in Chattanooga, Tenn., on Thursday, leaving four Marines dead, and wounding several others, including a Marine recruiter and a police officer, officials said. The gunman was also killed." ...

     ... Washington Post UPDATE: "The gunman who opened fire at a Naval facility in Tennessee on Thursday morning, killing four Marines, has been identified as Muhammad Youssef Abdulazeez [of Hixson, Tenn.], according to the FBI."

Guardian: "Eurozone finance ministers are to begin discussions on delivering Greece's bailout after MPs in Athens adopted the contentious package, amid angry scenes in parliament and violent clashes on the streets. The Eurogroup of finance ministers is due to hold a conference call to discuss the situation at 8.00 GMT (9.00 BST) on Thursday, as they scramble to assemble a short-term financing package -- expected to be worth about €7bn -- to keep Greece afloat until the new bailout can be finalised." ...

     ... New York Times Update: "The European Central Bank on Thursday expanded the emergency line of credit for Greek banks, raising it by an amount -- 900 million euros, or almost $990 million -- meant to meet the banks' needs for an additional week. That decision, announced at a news conference by Mario Draghi, the central bank's president, does not give the banks much extra breathing room. But it is likely to be welcomed by Greek banks and their depositors as a sign that the central bank intends to continue providing support while the country's bailout negotiations continue."

Reuters: "The Liberal Democrats, the former junior coalition partners of Prime Minister David Cameron, on Thursday named left-leaning Tim Farron as their new leader, two months after the party was virtually wiped out in May's British election. Former Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, who in 2010 led the Liberal Democrats to their first ever spell in government alongside Cameron's Conservatives, stood down as leader after all but seven of his 56 colleagues lost their seats in the election."

New York Times: "Former President George H. W. Bush broke a bone in his neck in a fall at his home in Kennebunkport on Wednesday, his official spokesman said. Mr. Bush, the 41st president, was in stable condition, but he will have to wear a neck brace, the spokesman, Jim McGrath, said on Twitter. The former commander-in-chief has Parkinson's disease and uses a wheelchair."

Los Angeles Times: "Uber -- plagued by problems with regulators, drivers and taxi unions around the world -- took a big blow in its home state Wednesday when an administrative judge recommended that the ride-sharing giant be fined $7.3 million and be suspended from operating in California. In her decision, chief administrative law judge Karen V. Clopton of the California Public Utilities Commission contended that Uber has not complied with state laws designed to ensure that drivers are doling out rides fairly to all passengers.... She said Uber's months-long refusal to provide such data is in violation of the 2013 law that legalized ride-hailing firms. Uber said it would appeal." Also, they're mean to MoDo.

AP: "One of the seven FIFA officials arrested in Zurich as part of a corruption probe has been extradited to the United States, the Swiss Justice Ministry said Thursday. The Federal Office of Justice said the man, whom it did not identify, was extradited on Wednesday."

Reader Comments (16)

Our President was in his element during the presser yesterday–- confident, assured that what had taken place– finally– after years of negotiations along with a lot of sweat and heavy handling was the best deal that could be reached. And he had the back-up of those that know a thing or two about all things nuclear. Of course we always seem to have a journalist or two that wants the limelight, but even here Obama––and you could tell he was furious––answered a question pertaining to the American hostages in Iran with aplomb coupled with a parental, "You should know better than that."

And his handling of Bibi––such a difficult ally––reminded me of the schoolyard bully who after he punches you in the nose, draws blood, calls you names you offer him half of your Little Debbie during lunch.

Last night on the Teevee our man from the world of green eggs and ham seemed to be everywhere backing up the Donald––"so refreshing to have someone speak honestly about immigration"––Cruz croons. And I wonder. What's he up to? Could it be that he's doing a bit of cow tailing? Wants some of that Trump dump to land on him?

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterPD Pepe

@PD Pepe: It's probably not coincidental that both Trump & Cruz are the sons of legal immigrants -- people who were able to become U.S. citizens because the married natural-born U.S. citizens.

Marie

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterMarie Burns

Scott Walker can breathe more easily now that he is no longer under investigation: (both links are at madison.com)

http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/govt-and-politics/supreme-court-ends-john-doe-probe-that-threatened-scott-walker/article_50f22c3b-27c9-5906-92e8-ded75ed50954.html

For a fuller explanation of how the moneyed rightwing maneuvered to get the investigation suppressed and how this will smash Wisconsin's campaign finance laws, read:

http://host.madison.com/ct/news/opinion/column/mary-bottari-and-brendan-fischer-the-disappearance-of-john-doe/article_c8989882-85cc-5539-97b9-fdc9cd417324.html

This is not unexpected and the changes to the state's limits on fundraising are more depressing to me than Walker skating on this. He's making so many mistakes these days that I dare to hope he'll be exposed as the doofus we in Wisconsin know him to be.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered Commenternadd2

Marie,

It's the same with faux budget "expert" Lyin' Paul Ryan who climbed the ladder to fame and fortune on rungs paid for by you and me. But when these guys get to the top, the first thing they want to do is pull that ladder up behind them.

I'm not sure how to characterize this particular pathology. I'm pretty sure "asshole" is not the correct clinical term.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

I wanted to acknowledge the comment Elizabeth made yesterday about trolls on boston.com and droolers in Texas.

First, this line:

"I figured it out when I used to read Ellen Goodman's columns for the Globe online. The comments were shockingly hateful; the misogyny, in particular, thick enough to use as vinyl siding."

"Misogyny thick enough to use as vinyl siding" is a steal-worthy line. Very nice.

But regarding the paranoia and fear on display in Texas over the Jade-Helm military exercises, I have to agree with the unlikelihood of the beady-eyed locals, who've been out in the heat burying their guns because OBAMA being influenced by Orwell.

I'm not going to say they don't read, but if your reading is restricted to conspiracy newsletters, Soldier of Fortune, and Guns and Ammo, it's unlikely that your shelves are groaning with books like "1984".

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

The Education of a Hack

It was so great to see the president backhand ABC's resident right-wing hack Jonathan Karl.

For the life of me, I cannot see how anyone can claim that major TV news outlets are liberal or even liberal leaning. Most of the "reporters", even if they don't actively lean to the right, are more than happy to exchange their reporter's hat for a stenographer's when transmitting, unfiltered, unedited, and unquestioned bullshit from winger pols and spin doctors. Both Sides Do It is their standing order.

But then we have people like Jonathan Karl, who actively work to promote right-wing lines of attack.

He comes by it naturally. You see, Karl was not trained as a reporter, someone who, traditionally, sniffs out stories, works the background, talks to all sides, collects quotes and notes, puts them altogether and sees what he's got before coming to a conclusion. No, Karl was trained by the Collegiate Network, a far-right organization dedicated to teaching and placing wingers in TV and print media. Karl is one their stars. Collegiate Network doesn't train reporters. It doesn't train writers. It does train propagandists for the express purpose of challenging anything and anyone not sharing their ideology.

Other winger stars trained by the Collegiate Network include Dinesh D'Souza who got his start at Dartmouth by looking through keyholes and spying on students suspected of pursuing homosexual activities, then outing them across campus. Sound reportorial to you? Ann Coulter is a CN alum as are Michelle Malkin, Rich Lowry, and Laura Ingraham. Do any of them seem even vaguely like real journalists? No. Because they're not. They're there to spread right-wing lies.

As a demonstration of Karl's "skills", I direct you to the contretemps he created a couple of years ago when he claimed to have personally seen White House e-mails indicating a desire to cover up certain elements of Benghazi, Benghazi, BENGHAZI! He lied. He never saw a single e-mail. What he did see was doctored files slipped to him by a Confederate operative who got Karl to help him push a story about the Obama White House. Karl willingly complied. A well trained, proper reporter would never have gone public with uncorroborated documents coming from a questionable source. But Karl wanted it to be true, so the conclusion was foregone. As with the winger pols who are screaming about the Iran deal without having read a single word, it simply the Republican Way.

And revealingly, even after his scam was outed and the e-mails entirely discredited, rather than apologize, Karl proclaimed the revelation of the scam just a "distraction" and said that his conclusion of a White House talking points story "still entirely stands". Even though the evidence points in the opposite direction, his decision that Obama was in the wrong is still correct.

He's not even a bad reporter. He's not a reporter at all. He's a hack. And it's great to see the president give him the back of his hand.

Schmuck.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Nadd,

One can fully understand why Confederates are working so tirelessly to control the judiciary in this country. That way, it doesn't matter how bad things get, your pet poodles in the courts will let you off.

Short of being found in bed with an underage boy, a couple of bodies, and, maybe, one of the poodles, Republicans may be able to get away with almost anything. Just look at Scott Walker.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Re Texas paranoia I can't resist a personal anecdote.

In June 1993, I and a team of colleagues from Goddard Space Flight Center were at the NASA Scientific Balloon Facility in Palestine, Texas. We were testing an experimental imaging device on a high altitude balloon flight. After launch, we chased the balloon and payload across Texas with a small aircraft, and a convoy of cars and trucks to recover the payload when it was brought down near the Mexican boarder.

A 20 million cubic foot balloon, floating at 120,000 feet, looks to the unaided eye exactly like a child's toy balloon floating at 30 feet. A bunch of strangers in NASA caps and tee shirts, with binoculars and radios, chasing an apparent UFO, did attract some attention in the small towns we passed through. (You also have to picture me and a 6 foot tall female astrophysicist leading the convoy, while singing along to opera tapes at the top of our lungs. We did a darn good "Au fond du temple saint" if I say so myself.)

I have often wondered what sort of watering hole conversations we provoked, and whether anyone still talks about the time they saw the 'Gummit Agints' chasing a flying saucer. The infamous 'Roswell Incident' was after all, inspired by a similar balloon flight.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterD.C.Clark

Damn, I forgot to add the name of one other glorious winger hack trained by the Collegiate Network and unleashed on the world pretending to be an actual journalist.

James O'Keefe.

That should set your mind to rest if you think I may have been exaggerating the quality of people turned out by this organization.

A dog food factory does not turn out Filet Mignon.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

The other day, one of the female defenders of the Confederate flag had the gall to ask me what the Confederate flag had to do with slavery??????????

Robert E. Lee was correct, they all should have been destroyed after the war.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterBarbarossa

D.C.,

Great story.

I'm betting many local folkloric stories begin that way, picking up details and background along the way. Just look at the wild stories that grew like poisonous weeds among the birthers. I'm surprised no one ever tried to tie Obama's birthplace and provenance to Area 51. Hmmm.....those ears are a touch alien looking, dontcha think?

Now I want to know which of you was the baritone and which the tenor doing that Pearl Fishers aria. Don't know why that opera is never done. I'd sit through page after page of mediocre music to hear that thing done well.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Barbarossa,

Has she recently had brain surgery?

Not sure what else to say to that....how 'bout "Wow"?

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Akhilleus,

The tenor role was sung by my dear friend and mentor, the late Dr. Carol Crannell:

https://ggstem.wordpress.com/2013/04/09/carol-jo-crannell-2/

Carol was also active in Girl Scouts, and lead an effort to bring Scouting to inner city girls. When she proposed holding evening meetings in a neighborhood school, she was told this was impossible -- that the streets were owned by pimps and pushers. Carol wasn't having it. Now picture this crazy looking white woman leading a troop of little black Brownies through the mean streets singing campfire songs. The bad guys fled before them.

Carol's favorite quotation was by Margaret Meade:
“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed, citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”

Her courage and optimism, in contrast to the craven negativity that characterizes so much of our politics, is a continuing inspiration to all of us who knew and loved her.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterD.C.Clark

D.C.,

Wonderful remembrance. Sounds like we could use a few more like Dr. Crannell.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Okay class, who here is from California?

I understand there's a shortage of water there, is that right? Well here's a snap quiz. What's causing the drought? It's not because there hasn't been significant rainfall across much of the state since Dick Cheney was yanking strings of raw meat out of his teeth with toothpicks dipped in Yellowcake, and it's not because the snow melt typically relied upon for much of that state's water supply is way below what's needed. You know why there's a drought in California?

Dollars to donuts Cheeto Man Boehner knows.

Obama did it.

Yup. He caused it all. The drought, according to Boehner, who slurred this accusation, apparently, just before sliding into an alcoholic coma, is man-made. Barack-Hussein-Obama-man-made, that is.

I never thought of it like this, but once you decide that science is just another crazy belief system, like believing that stepping on a crack will break your grandmother's back, it's kinda liberating. In a stupid way. I mean, you can make up all kinds of whacko stuff. Lack of rain doesn't cause droughts. That black guy in the White House; he did it!

Hope Boehner hasn't been reading any Shirley Jackson. Nah, prob'ly too drunk to read.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterAkhilleus

Ak:
Out here in the Bay area, instead of the cool fog in the am in July, we see stunning blue skies with cirrus clouds and delicate virga, fronds flowing down, never able to let what moisture they have get to earth. I haven't usually seen these cloud formations outside of Death Valley in the past. It is DRY here.
Obama did it.

July 16, 2015 | Unregistered CommenterVictoria
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