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INAUGURATION 2029

Marie: I don't know why this video came up on my YouTube recommendations, but it did. I watched it on a large-ish teevee, and I found it fascinating. ~~~

 

Hubris. One would think that a married man smart enough to start up and operate his own tech company was also smart enough to know that you don't take your girlfriend to a public concert where the equipment includes a jumbotron -- unless you want to get caught on the big camera with your arms around said girlfriend. Ah, but for Andy Bryon, CEO of A company called Astronomer, and also maybe his wife, Wednesday was a night that will live in infamy. New York Times link. ~~~

Commencement ceremonies are joyous occasions, and Steve Carell made sure that was true this past weekend (mid-June) at Northwestern's commencement:

~~~ Carell's entire commencement speech was hilarious. The audio and video here isn't great, but I laughed till I cried.

CNN did a live telecast Saturday night (June 7) of the Broadway play "Good Night, and Good Luck," written by George Clooney and Grant Heslov, about legendary newsman Edward R. Murrow's effort to hold to account Sen. Joe McCarthy, "the junior senator from Wisconsin." Clooney plays Murrow. Here's Murrow himself with his famous take on McCarthy & McCarthyism, brief remarks that especially resonate today: ~~~

     ~~~ This article lists ways you still can watch the play. 

New York Times: “The New York Times Company has agreed to license its editorial content to Amazon for use in the tech giant’s artificial intelligence platforms, the company said on Thursday. The multiyear agreement 'will bring Times editorial content to a variety of Amazon customer experiences,' the news organization said in a statement. Besides news articles, the agreement encompasses material from NYT Cooking, The Times’s food and recipe site, and The Athletic, which focuses on sports. This is The Times’s first licensing arrangement with a focus on generative A.I. technology. In 2023, The Times sued OpenAI and its partner, Microsoft, for copyright infringement, accusing the tech companies of using millions of articles published by The Times to train automated chatbots without any kind of compensation. OpenAI and Microsoft have rejected those accusations.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I have no idea what this means for "the Amazon customer experience." Does it mean that if I don't have a NYT subscription but do have Amazon Prime I can read NYT content? And where, exactly, would I find that content? I don't know. I don't know.

Washington Post reporters asked three AI image generators what a beautiful woman looks like. "The Post found that they steer users toward a startlingly narrow vision of attractiveness. Prompted to show a 'beautiful woman,' all three tools generated thin women, without exception.... Her body looks like Barbie — slim hips, impossible waist, round breasts.... Just 2 percent of the images showed visible signs of aging. More than a third of the images had medium skin tones. But only nine percent had dark skin tones. Asked to show 'normal women,' the tools produced images that remained overwhelmingly thin.... However bias originates, The Post’s analysis found that popular image tools struggle to render realistic images of women outside the Western ideal." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: The reporters seem to think they are calling out the AI programs for being unrealistic. But there's a lot about the "beautiful women" images they miss. I find these omissions remarkably sexist. For one thing, the reporters seem to think AI is a magical "thing" that self-generates. It isn't. It's programmed. It's programmed by boys, many of them incels who have little or no experience or insights beyond comic books and Internet porn of how to gauge female "beauty." As a result, the AI-generated women look like cartoons; that is, a lot like an air-brushed photo of Kristi Noem: globs of every kind of dark eye makeup, Scandinavian nose, Botox lips, slathered-on skin concealer/toner/etc. makeup, long dark hair and the aforementioned impossible Barbie body shape, including huge, round plastic breasts. 

New York Times: “George Clooney’s Broadway debut, 'Good Night, and Good Luck,' has been one of the sensations of the 2024-25 theater season, breaking box office records and drawing packed houses of audiences eager to see the popular movie star in a timely drama about the importance of an independent press. Now the play will become much more widely available: CNN is planning a live broadcast of the penultimate performance, on June 7 at 7 p.m. Eastern. The performance will be preceded and followed by coverage of, and discussion about, the show and the state of journalism.”

 

Contact Marie

Email Marie at constantweader@gmail.com

Constant Comments

Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.

Success is not final, failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts. — Anonymous

A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolvesEdward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns

I have a Bluesky account now. The URL is https://bsky.app/profile/marie-burns.bsky.social . When Reality Chex goes down, check my Bluesky page for whatever info I am able to report on the status of Reality Chex. If you can't access the URL, I found that I could Google Bluesky and ask for Marie Burns. Google will include links to accounts for people whose names are, at least in part, Maria Burns, so you'll have to tell Google you looking only for Marie.

Saturday
Nov122011

The Commentariat -- November 13

** The Founding Fathers Would LOVE OWS. Rick Ungar in a Washington Monthly column, on how the Tea Party-deified founders regarded corporations: "... every single investment bank on Wall Street, as we know it today, would have been illegal in the days of our founding. And ... in the early days of the nation, most states had rules on the books making any political contribution by a corporation a criminal offence.... Were they around today, our founders would not only be standing on the front lines of the Occupy Wall Street movement, they would likely be pursuing a far more strident strategy than playing some bongo drums in Zuccotti Park." The Boston Tea Party itself was, after all, a revolt against England's most powerful corporation: the East India Trading Company. Care for a cup of originalist tea, Mr. Scalia?

Jeffrey Sachs, in a New York Times op-ed: Ronald "Reagan’s [edict that "government is the problem"] was a fateful misdiagnosis. He completely overlooked the real issue — the rise of global competition in the information age — and fought a bogeyman, the government. Decades on, America pays the price of that misdiagnosis, with a nation singularly unprepared to face the global economic, energy and environmental challenges of our time.... Both parties have joined in crippling the government in response to the demands of their wealthy campaign contributors, who above all else insist on keeping low tax rates on capital gains, top incomes, estates and corporate profits." Occupy Wall Street is poised to lead a new progressive movement that will get us out of the mess Reagan got us into. Sachs has some suggestions & observations about the way the movement will do that. ...

... Karen Garcia: "I don't think we have to worry too much any more about the Democratic Party co-opting OWS. The elite of the DNC have pretty much shut up about it.... If you're paying any attention at all to the Democratic leaks out of the SuperCommittee, you're finding out that they're bending over backwards, offering cuts in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid -- even permanent extension of the Bush tax cuts -- in exchange for some loopy closings of corporate tax loopholes.... But at the local level, in the cities, the encampments are under direct siege by..... Democratic mayors.... It's about time we 'Occupy the Democratic Party', too." ...

... Markos Moulitsas tells ten stories, some with videos, of big banks forcibly trying to stop customers from closing their accounts. They're pretty good stories. Since September 29, more than 700,000 customers have moved their money out of big banks to small banks & credit unions.

Julia Preston of the New York Times: "A new Obama administration policy to avoid deportations of illegal immigrants who are not criminals has been applied very unevenly across the country and has led to vast confusion both in immigrant communities and among agents charged with carrying it out."

Nicholas Kulish & Steven Erlanger of the New York Times: "The window of opportunity to save the euro is rapidly closing, as the sovereign debt crisis erodes the solvency of Europe’s banks and drives up borrowing rates for even once rock-solid countries like France." ...

... Jim Fallows of The Atlantic: "I am as happy as the next person to see the well-deserved end to Silvio Berlusconi's reign in Italy. But I don't think many people can, or should, feel too happy about this second resignation of a democratically elected government (after Papandreou in Greece) because of pressure from bankers outside the country's borders." Fallows includes a letter from Piero Garau, a retired UN official who lives in Rome, who is not optimistic about the future of the euro, or really, of the E.U. ...

... AND in a somewhat Manhattan-centric analysis, Seth Meyers takes "A Closer Look at Europe":

Jerry Markon of the Washington Post: "Republican lawmakers are objecting to the Department of Health and Human Services’ decision to deny an anti-human-trafficking grant to a Catholic group, a dispute that reflects deep divisions over access to abortion and birth control. In late September, HHS ended funding to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to help victims of trafficking.... The church group had overseen nationwide services to victims since 2006 but was denied a new grant in favor of three other groups. The bishops organization ... had refused to refer trafficking victims for contraceptives or abortion. HHS officials have said they made a policy decision to award the grants to agencies that would refer women for those services."

National Service -- Could It Happen? Ryan Cooper of the Washington Monthly: "... the idea of national service, mandatory or not, has ... been coming up amongst American thought leaders across the media spectrum. [Former NBC anchor] Tom Brokaw devotes a substantial portion of his new book The Time of Our Lives to it. [PBS newsman] Jim Lehrer said recently ... he would impose mandatory national service, and Joe Klein [of Time] ... mentioned non-military national service favorably. [Actor George] Clooney personally supported the idea.... House Republicans, many of whom voted just two years ago to triple AmeriCorps’ size, are now [in the thrall of the Tea Party and] attempting to zero out the program entirely.... Before the country can expand national service, national service has to survive." ...

... A cynic's view of the appeal of national service. From "The Ides of March" (in theaters now!):

Harvard, Tuition-Free. "Justice," with Prof. Michael Sandel. This tape includes two lectures. The first is titled "The Moral Side of Murder." The second, which begins about 24:30 in, is titled "The Case for Cannibalism":

Right Wing World

If I were president, I would use waterboarding. Barack Obama is letting the ACLU run the CIA! -- Michele Bachmann, in last night's GOP candidates' debate

I do not agree with torture — period. However, I will trust the judgment of our military leaders on what is and what is not torture. -- Herman Cain, having it both ways, as usual

"Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran." A Old McCain Refrain Returns. Karen Tumulty & Perry Bacon of the Washington Post: "With the International Atomic Energy Agency warning in a new report that Iran may be proceeding with developing a nuclear weapon, the leading Republican candidates for president accused President Obama of not being forceful enough to prevent that from happening. At the first GOP debate that focused on foreign policy, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and former House speaker Newt Gingrich indicated that if either of them were commander in chief, they would be willing to use military force against Iran, if tightened economic sanctions and support for the Iranian opposition did not work to deter nuclear weapons development in the country." ...

... Roger Simon of Politico: "Nothing awful happened. Rick Perry exhibited no brain freeze (at least no more than usual), Herman Cain did not stumble badly (at least no more than anybody else), Newt Gingrich did not attack the moderators (much) and the audience booed only once (when Ron Paul opposed torture)."

Mitt Romney, Corporate Raider. Michael Barbaro of the New York Times: "By the green-hued yardsticks of Wall Street, the 1990s buyout of an Illinois medical company by Mitt Romney’s private equity firm was a spectacular success.... But an examination of the ... deal shows the unintended human costs and messy financial consequences behind the brand of capitalism that Mr. Romney practiced for 15 years." ...

... CW: I wonder if we can't find some way to make things worse. Count on Mitt. "Vouchers for Veterans":

Sometimes you wonder, would there be some way to introduce some private sector competition, somebody else that could come in and say, you know, each soldier gets X thousand dollars attributed to them and then they can choose whether they want to go on the government [healthcare] system or the private system and then it follows them, like what happens with schools in Florida where they have a voucher that follows them. Who knows? -- Mitt Romney, "brainstorming" with a group of veterans in South Carolina ...

      ... Evan McMorris-Santoro of TPM: "The idea is similar to Romney’s plan for Medicare, which would allow recipients to choose a private plan instead of the classic government-run health care structure. Jerry Newberry, a spokesman for Veterans Of Foreign Wars, told TPM his group has long opposed policies along the lines of Romney’s proposal." ...

     ... Steve Benen: "Even the most conservative Republicans rarely venture into privatizing veterans’ health care benefits.... The taxpayer-financed, government-run V.A. hospitals are some of the finest medical facilities in the country.... Romney ... prefers to change this, and would apparently rather hand vets a voucher. Perhaps the inexperienced former one-term governor with no background on military policy hasn’t fully thought this through. For him to go this far on Veterans’ Day, of all days, seems remarkably tone deaf, even for him." ...

     ... Paul Krugman: "This is awesome on multiple levels. First..., the vouchers would be inadequate, and become more so over time, so that veterans who don’t make enough money to top them up would fail to receive essential care. Patriotism! Second, the VA is one of the great policy success stories of the past two decades. But the VA clearly delivers care as good or better than most civilians receive, at sharply lower cost. So naturally Romney wants to privatize it. Because let’s remember, he’s the serious Republican.... So, our serious Republican is committed on ideological grounds to demolishing successful programs and replacing them with conservative fantasies that have failed repeatedly in the past.

        "Maybe we would actually have been better off with Rick Perry, who might have left good government programs in place because he couldn’t remember what they were."

Truth in Advertising. Americans for Prosperity, the Karl Rove managed Koch Brothers front group, recently held a summit they called 'Defending the American Dream.' Based on their priorities and goals, I think a better name for their group should be 'America for the Prosperous' and their summit should have been called 'Defunding the American Dream.' -- Reality Chex reader Lisa

Dana Milbank: "The era of personal responsibility, if it ever began, has surely ended with the 2012 Republican presidential campaigns. The candidates blame the media, the elites, the Democrats, the government and each other for their problems, but never themselves.... But none has a blame game quite like Cain’s. When the allegations of sexual harassment first arose, he blamed the accusers for failing to get his 'sense of humor.' Then he blamed a 'witch hunt.' Then he claimed it was 'the Perry campaign that stirred this up.' ... Cain moved on to blame 'the D.C. culture' for his troubles, before blaming 'the Democrat machine in America.' Naturally, he blamed the media, winning cheers at the debate [last Wednesday].... Cain even played the same race card that he condemned Democrats for using, claiming that he was victimized because he’s 'a black conservative.'”

** Lies and the Lying Liars.... Steven Levingston of the Washington Post: "Of all the places you’d expect to find Bill O’Reilly’s new history'“Killing Lincoln: The Shocking Assassination That Changed America Forever,' Ford’s Theatre — the site of the dreadful act — should rank right at the top. But you’d do better to search for the bestseller on Amazon because it has been banned from the theater’s store. The crime? O’Reilly and his co-author Martin Dugard have displayed a serial disregard for historical fact. For a purported history of the assassination..., 'Killing Lincoln' is sloppy with the facts and slim on documentation, according to a study conducted by Rae Emerson, the deputy superintendent of Ford’s Theatre National Historic Site...." Sen. Al Franken must find this hilarious.

News Ledes

Raleigh News & Observer: in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, "a police tactical team of more than 25 police officers arrested eight demonstrators Sunday afternoon and charged them with breaking and entering for occupying a vacant car dealership on Franklin Street. Officers brandishing guns and semi-automatic rifles rushed the building at about 4:30 p.m. They pointed weapons at those standing outside, and ordered them to put their faces on the ground. They surrounded the building and cleared out those who were inside. About 13 people, including New & Observer staff writer covering the demonstration, were forced to the ground and hand-cuffed."

Politico: "President Barack Obama announced Saturday that a group of Pacific Rim nations reached the 'broad outlines of an agreement' on a key trade partnership and warned Iran that the U.S., Russia and China would work together to counter its attempts to develop its nuclear capability." ...

... BUT. AP: "President Barack Obama prodded the skeptical leaders of Russia and China for support in reining back Iran's nuclear ambitious, but without winning public endorsement from either man. Neither Russian President Dmitry Medvedev nor Chinese President Hu Jintao publicly echoed Obama's push for solidarity over renewed concerns on Iran as Obama met separately on Saturday with each leader on the sidelines of a Pacific Rim economic summit here." ...

... Reuters: "Asia-Pacific leaders will call on countries on Sunday to do what they can to prop up economic growth, rallying around the common threat from Europe's debt crisis despite divisions over trade and currency policies. Fresh off a rare success in securing agreement on the outlines of a regional trade deal, the heads of the 21 nations that make up the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum will turn their attention to the more immediate problem of preventing contagion from Europe."

AP: "Anti-Wall Street protesters and their supporters flooded a city park area in Portland early Sunday in defiance of an eviction order, and authorities elsewhere stepped up pressure against the demonstrators, arresting nearly two dozen. Crowds converged on two adjacent downtown Portland parks where protesters are camped after city officials set a midnight Saturday deadline to disperse. But hours later, the protesters were still there, backed by many supporters who spilled out into the streets next to camp, tying up traffic. At one point the numbers swelled to thousands but then started to thin in the early morning hours." ...

... Oregonian: "Portland police held off from sweeping two downtown parks early today as thousands of chanting people converged on the city center to support the Occupy Portland movement. A police officer was injured shortly before 2 a.m. from a projectile thrown by someone in the crowd. One person was arrested as tensions rose. At one point, police warned people that they would use chemical agents to keep control as the crowd pushed against police lines. Before then, demonstrators remained peaceful and even festive at times as officers watched and directed traffic, but didn't move to clear Lownsdale and Chapman squares." ...

     ... Reuters Update: "Occupy Portland encampments were nearly empty on Sunday as protesters packed up and left after warnings by city officials that they would be evicted over the weekend. Fewer than a dozen tents remained at two downtown parks where protesters have camped since early October as part of the nationwide Occupy Wall street movement against alleged economic injustice. City officials said they planned to put up fences around the two Portland parks to close them to protesters on Sunday afternoon."

... AP: In Salt Lake City, "police arrested 19 protesters supporting the Occupy Wall Street movement who refused to remove tents from a downtown park late Saturday but avoided the violent clashes that have occurred in other cities. Although police entered the park at sundown with a significant show of force — including a couple dozen cars, two buses for prisoner transport and spotlights — officers were not wearing riot gear or flashing batons. Instead, Chief Chris Burbank and other officers worked their way methodically from tent to tent, asking people to leave and arresting those who didn't comply." ...

... Denver Post: "Denver police in riot gear forced stubborn protesters out of Civic Center park Saturday evening, tearing down illegally pitched tents. A cloud of smoke rose — not from tear gas, but from wood smoke as the protesters' cooking fire was extinguished. Seventeen people were arrested, according to Sonny Jackson, spokesman for the Denver Police Department. Five of those arrests were made on the 16th Street Mall, where some protesters headed after the encampment was cleared. The confrontation came about five hours after Occupy Denver demonstrators marched through downtown for the sixth straight Saturday." ...

... St. Louis Post-Dispatch: "After 27 protesters spent Friday night in jail, Occupy St. Louis said Saturday it would continue to keep an around-the-clock presence at Kiener Plaza.... On Saturday night, about 10 protesters followed police orders and moved to the sidewalk surrounding the park. Another 20 people stood outside the St. Louis Justice Center awaiting the release of three protesters who remained in jail. Mayor Francis Slay's staff reiterated Saturday that it was amenable to Occupy St. Louis staying around, as long as the protesters obey the ordinances." ...

... San Diego Union-Tribune: "More than 80 self-described 'everyday, middle-class women' brought rainy-day supplies and food to Occupy San Diego Saturday.... The woman, mostly in their 40s and 50s, filled five wheelbarrows with food, tarps, blankets, socks and other items."

AP: "The Syrian government has called for an urgent Arab summit to discuss the deepening political unrest in the country. The Arab League on Saturday voted to suspend Syria over its bloody crackdown on the country's eight-month-old uprising."

Reuters: "Italy's president [Giorgio Napolitano] raced to appoint an emergency government on Sunday to face a crisis endangering the whole euro zone and replace Silvio Berlusconi who resigned as prime minister to the humiliating jeers of thousands of protesters."

Friday
Nov112011

The Commentariat -- November 12

The President's Weekly Address (Has Just a Hint of that "Mission Accomplished" Look). The transcript is here:

Tim Dickinson of Rolling Stone: "The staggering economic inequality that has led Americans across the country to take to the streets in protest is no accident. It has been fueled to a large extent by the GOP's all-out war on behalf of the rich. Since Republicans rededicated themselves to slashing taxes for the wealthy in 1997, the average annual income of the 400 richest Americans has more than tripled, to $345 million – while their share of the tax burden has plunged by 40 percent. Today, a billionaire in the top 400 pays less than 17 percent of his income in taxes – five percentage points less than a bus driver earning $26,000 a year." Oh, and Dick Cheney is even worse than you knew. Think that's impossible? Dickinson outlines Cheney's central role in creating new tax cuts for corporations & the rich. Thanks to Jeanne B. for the link.

... Rosalind Helderman of the Washington Post: "President Obama called the Democratic and Republican chairmen of Congress’s special deficit reduction supercommittee Friday and urged them to reach a deal...." But he also said if the supercommittee doesn't reach a compromise, Congress should allow the automatic cuts, half of which would come from the Pentagon, to go through. Obama, who has sign-off authority on the deficit reduction cuts, "made clear Friday that he would not agree" to allow a repeal of the automatic cuts. CW: this story is so unclear itself that it's hard to comprehend, but I think this is what Helderman means. I'm not sure the chart below is 100 percent current, as the GOP members of the supercommittee have made at least one new proposal in the past week, but it's close enough:

Parties no longer compete to win elections by giving voters the policies voters want. Rather, as coalitions of intense policy demanders, they have their own agendas and aim to get voters to go along. -- From A Theory of Political Parties, by Kathleen Bawn, et al. ...

... ** Ezra Klein: "'As [the authors of A Theory...] see it, political parties are basically groups of people with intense policy preferences who are trying to figure out how much they can get away with. But you can’t get away with anything if you don’t hold office. So the basic work of political parties is figuring out precisely how much of their agenda they need to sacrifice on the altar of electability.... That basically explains the dilemma the Republican Party faces right now. Its members sense that this election might end with Republicans controlling the House, the Senate and the presidency. In that event, Republicans could get away with quite a lot. So they don’t want to blow it. What a shame it would be to have wasted this opportunity on a centrist candidate [Mitt Romney] who will just end up compromising with Senate Democrats and looking to burnish his image with independents. On the other hand, it would be even worse to blow the opportunity on an extremist candidate who will scare voters into reelecting President Obama." ...

... Jamison Foser of Media Matters on how Republicans are using faux-populism to further expand income inequality. In their "populist" mode, Foser notes, some Republicans have agreed to cut minor expenditures on the rich. "While the substance of the GOP efforts is largely inconsequential, the symbolism is quite insidious. Consider the targets of the Republican faux populism: Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance, Medicaid. These aren't programs that contribute to the ever-widening gap between the rich and the rest of us — they are the safety net that protect the middle class from falling into poverty.... Yet Republicans seek to use the symbolism of (largely non-existent) millionaire unemployment recipients and Rolls Royce-driving Medicaid enrollees to undermine [the programs themselves].... The goal isn't to save $18 million in unemployment payments to millionaires: It's to dismantle the unemployment insurance system that protects middle-class and low-wage workers."

Complex Regulations -- A Banker's Second Best Friend. Kevin Drum of Mother Jones: "The 'Volcker rule' is a simple thing. Basically, it says that if you're a bank that takes deposits and benefits from federal deposit insurance, you can't also make risky trades that might blow up your bank and cost the taxpayers a bundle. Wall Street ... fought the idea in Congress, but in the end, the Dodd-Frank bill that passed in 2010 included a version of the Volcker rule in its final draft.... Last month regulators unveiled their first take on the actual implementation of the Volcker rule, and it had become a monster.... When it comes to financial regulation, fighting against new laws is merely [the banks'] first line of defense. When they lose..., the action simply moves to the regulatory agency charged with implementing the law.... Businesses don't like simple rules, because simple rules are hard to evade. So they lobby endlessly for exemptions both big and small.... Keep this firmly in mind the next time you hear someone from the Chamber of Commerce complaining about how many thousands of pages of regulations they have to comply with.... In public they bemoan complexity, but in private they fight endlessly for more of it."

Joe Nocera of the New York Times: "... in 2009, Penn State football generated a staggering $50 million in profit on $70 million in revenue.... Protecting those profits is the real core value of college football — at Penn State and everywhere else. What goes on in the typical big-time college football program constitutes abuse of the athletes who play the game. It’s not sexual abuse..., but it’s wrong just the same. For 46 years, Joe Paterno averted his eyes to the daily injustices, large and small, that his players suffered — just like Nick Saban does at Alabama and Steve Spurrier at South Carolina, and all the rest of them. When Paterno averted his eyes from Jerry Sandusky, he was just doing what came naturally as a college football coach." ...

... Nina Bernstein of the New York Times: "The Penn State scandal ... is ... emblematic of a parallel judicial universe that exists at many of the country’s colleges and universities. On most of these campuses, law enforcement is the responsibility of sworn police officers who report to university authorities, not to the public. With full-fledged arrest powers, such campus police forces have enormous discretion in deciding whether to refer cases directly to district attorneys or to leave them to the quiet handling of in-house disciplinary proceedings.... The Penn State case is expected to intensify the federal Education Department’s recent push to enforce laws that require public disclosure of such crimes and civil rights protections for victims and witnesses."

David Willman of the Los Angeles Times: "Over the last year, the Obama administration has aggressively pushed a $433-million plan to buy an experimental smallpox drug, despite uncertainty over whether it is needed or will work. Senior officials have taken unusual steps to secure the contract for New York-based Siga Technologies Inc., whose controlling shareholder is billionaire Ronald O. Perelman, one of the world's richest men and a longtime Democratic Party donor.... Siga was awarded the final contract in May through a 'sole-source' procurement.... The price of approximately $255 per dose is well above what the government's specialists had earlier said was reasonable.... Smallpox was eradicated worldwide as of 1978 and is known to exist only in the locked freezers of a Russian scientific institute and the U.S. government. There is no credible evidence that any other country or a terrorist group possesses smallpox." CW: Read the details. I'd like to see a credible defense of this.

Talking Past the Problem. Piers Morgan of CNN tries to steer Very Serious Person Colin Powell into a polite discussion about the 99 Percent. Shouldn't the VSPs just STFU?:

Anthony Faiola of the Washington Post: Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who is scheduled to step down as head of the government on Saturday, recalled the words of Benito Mussolini in reflecting on his "betrayal" by members of his government. CW: well, that's appropriate.

Right Wing World

The Little Cable Network that Could. Michael McAuliff of the (ugh!) Huffington Post: "An ad by Karl Rove-backed Crossroads GPS was yanked from rotation on a Montana cable show because it made claims that the network deemed false. Recently a number of ads by the well-funded conservative outfit have been declared misleading and false, but the spot targeting Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) is apparently the first pulled from the air. The Associated Press reported that other outlets are still running the ad."

Herman Cain & His Supporters Think Sexual Harassment Is Pretty Funny. Holly Bailey of The Ticket: "Herman Cain is defending himself from sexual harassment allegations, but that didn't stop him from joking about Anita Hill, the college professor who made similar allegations against Clarence Thomas ... 20 years ago. A Fox News cameraduring a campaign stop in Kalamazoo, Mich., Thursday, when a supporter brought up the professor's name. 'You hear the latest news today? Anita Hill is going to come …' a man told Cain, the conclusion of his statement muffled by the crowd. 'Is she going to endorse me?' Cain joked, as he and the crowd laughed heartily." The audio is difficult to hear:

Running on Empty. Matt Bai of the New York Times: "The problem [with Rick Perry's Oops! moment] is that he didn’t seem to know the basic details of his own proposal.... It seemed the idea was not his own, but rather something he had tried and failed to memorize.... Mr. Perry violated one of the core tenets of modern politics, which is that you have to at least sustain the artifice of ownership.... There’s nothing more central to Mr. Perry’s campaign than the idea of scaling back the government in Washington ... and what he proved last night, in 60 or so agonizing seconds, is that he hasn’t thought deeply enough about it to even master the basics of his own agenda."

Rebecca Kaplan of CBS News: "Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann on Friday called the Occupy Wall Street protesters who have been disrupting her campaign events 'ignorant and disrespectful.' ... Bachmann has been surprised at several events recently by groups of OWS protesters who have boisterously interrupted her stump speeches."

CW: I did not get around to reading Our Mister Brooks yesterday, but apparently he took the occasion of his Friday quotient of 800 words to make fun of the hilarious and growing inequality between the rich and the rest of us: the very stuff Tim Dickinson highlights above. Besides the obvious Herman Cain-y message: "If you're not rich, blame yourself!" the column presents a subliminal message (there always is, with Brooks): "Occupy Wall Street protesters are a bunch of whiney-babies." Fortunately for us, Driftglass has made a more thorough analysis of Brooks' official MSM prose. A sample graph:

So while both George Wallace's guest column -- 'On the Amusing Differences Between the Quadroon and the Octoroon amongst the Lower Orders' -- in the June, 1962 issue of 'Modern Confederate Bride Magazine' and Prescott Bush's 1939 essay -- 'Ten Things to Love about German National Socialism' -- were both arguably more shudderingly tone-deaf than Mr. Brooks' efforts today, had Our Mr. Brooks written his column in a powdered wig while lobbing magnums of champagne off his balcony at the homeless in his pajamas, he might have given the old boys a run for their money.

        ... Not having read Brooks, I cannot know who is the more humorous writer -- Brooks or Driftglass -- but there's a better than 50-50 chance I'd get it right on the first guess.

News Ledes

AP: "Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi resigned Saturday after parliament's lower chamber passed European-demanded reforms, ending a 17-year political era and setting in motion a transition aimed at bringing the country back from the brink of economic crisis. A chorus of Handel's 'Alleluia,' performed by a few dozen singers and classical musicians, rang out in front of the president's palace as thousands of Italians poured into downtown Rome to rejoice at the end of Berlusconi's scandal-marred reign."

AP: "President Barack Obama is heading into a day of heavy diplomacy in his native Hawaii with some of the United States' most important and complicated allies, as he starts a nine-day tour of the crucial and growing Asia-Pacific region with domestic concerns front and center. Obama ... was to meet Saturday on the sidelines of a U.S.-hosted economic summit with Chinese President Hu Jintao, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda.... Obama was to meet with leaders from eight Asian nations that are the U.S. partners in an ambitious but not-yet-completed free trade deal the U.S. hopes will one day be the anchoring pact for the region." For the President's schedule of events today, see the Politico widget further down this column. ...

     AP Update: "Placing high hopes on the economic power of Pacific rim nations, President Barack Obama on Saturday declared the Asia-Pacific region the heart of explosive growth for years to come. For businesses, he said, "this is where the action's going to be."

Reuters: "Tensions were rising at anti-Wall Street protests in three western U.S. cities on Friday as demonstrators in Portland, Salt Lake City and Oakland defied orders by police to dismantle their camps." ...

... AP: "Oakland police handed out eviction notices at an anti-Wall Street encampment and officials elsewhere urged an end to similar gatherings as pressures against Occupy protest sites mounted in the wake of three deaths in different cities, including two by gunfire." ...

... San Francisco Chronicle: "After an intense day of behind-closed-door meetings Friday, Oakland officials are moving forward with plans to evict Occupy Oakland from Frank Ogawa Plaza. The eviction, which has the blessing of a majority of the City Council and the reluctant concurrence of Mayor Jean Quan, is likely to come sooner rather than later." The Oakland Tribune has a liveblog here.

... Oregonian: "The mood Friday at the Occupy Portland encampment was one-third somber, one-third defiant and one-third business as usual as Sunday's deadline for campers to leave two downtown parks ticked closer. Just before noon, campers were sprucing up the park, rolling up broken or abandoned tents, collecting garbage and recyclables into huge piles and sweeping up leaves and trash. Organizers planned to have a potluck meal and concert Saturday...." ...

... Oregonian: "Occupy Mosier may have been the country's humblest [OWS spinoffs]. Set in a park-and-ride greenspace in an apple and cherry growing hamlet of 433 at a bend on the Columbia River midway between Hood River and The Dalles, organizers dubbed Mosier the smallest town to host an Occupy encampment. In this intimate setting, dozens turned out for seven days of succinct protests against corporate power, income inequality and big-money politics." ...

... Knoxville, Tennessee, News Sentinel: "Downtown [Knoxville] felt the presence of the national Occupy Wall Street movement Friday when Occupy Knoxville protesters reserved Market Square from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. At least 100 musicians, singers and actors filled The Bill Lyons Pavilion at Market Square throughout the day as part of what coordinators called a "creative protest." Others took the stage to speak about personal experiences, salute veterans in honor of Veterans Day or to host teach-ins — educational lectures about everything from sustainable agriculture to the financial crisis." ...

AP: "President Barack Obama says the Penn State sex-abuse scandal should lead to 'soul-searching' by all Americans, not just Penn State. 'Obviously what happened was heartbreaking, especially for the victims, the young people who got affected by these alleged assaults,' he told Westwood One Radio in an interview Friday night', in his first public comments on the scandal. 'And I think it's a good time for the entire country to do some soul-searching — not just Penn State. People care about sports, it's important to us, but our No. 1 priority has to be protecting our kids. And every institution has to examine how they operate, and every individual has to take responsibility for making sure that our kids are protected.'"

Reuters: "The Arab League called on the Syrian army to stop the killing of civilians on Saturday and said it was suspending Syria from the regional body in a move that turns up the heat on President Bashar al-Assad. The League will impose economic and political sanctions on Assad's government and has appealed to its member states to withdraw their ambassadors from Damascus, said Qatar's Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassim."

Thursday
Nov102011

The Commentariat -- November 11

... Mark Thompson of Time: "We have a professional military of volunteers that has been stoically at war for more than a decade. But as the wars have droned on, the troops waging them are increasingly an Army apart." CW: This is a synopsis of Thompson's cover story. It contains a link to the magazine story, which you can access if you're a subscriber (I am, but I've never bothered to hook up. I'll try to do so in the next week or so to see if my posting a link to a firewalled article allows Reality Chex readers to link through.)

The New York Times eXaminer picked up my post "New York Times to You: 'Drop Dead.'" They included a copy of the letter that the Times sent to those exemplary "Trusted Commenters." If you'd like to see the invitation you didn't get, click here. Oh, and leave a comment. Plus, I'm happy to say NYTX even gave me a byline on the front page (look now; it won't be there long), right alongside Glenn Greenwald & Matt Taibbi. Wowza!

Chris Spannos of the New York Times eXaminer interviews Prof. Henry Giroux, who held an endowed chair at Penn State, about the culture of corporatism and militarism at Penn State. Giroux mirrors my own sense of what has happened to American universities and the larger ramifications for our so-called culture. Audio only. Highly recommended. ...

... The Washington Post has the grand jury report on Sandusky here. If you can't stand to read the whole report, the section on Victim 2, which begins on page 6, is enough. Paterno knew. He knew specifically that a graduate student (identified elsewhere as now Assistant Coach Mike McQueary) saw Sandusky having anal sex with a 10-year-old in the Penn State locker room. Paterno covered it up. It would appear Paterno lied in his grand jury testimony, too. President Spanier, ironically an expert on family counselling, is implicated, too. The grand jury charged Sandusky as well as the two officials Curley & Schultz. ...

... Nancy Armour of the AP: "The school said Thursday night that there had been 'multiple threats' against McQueary, now the team's receivers coach, and he would not attend Saturday's home finale against Nebraska 'in the best interest of all.'" CW: so, this young man reported Sandusky for sodomizing a child, about which university officials did next to nothing, and people are threatening him?? This has to be the first time in history that thousands of students have stood up for the aiding & abetting of a child molester, & some have threatened the life of his accuser. There's something wrong with Pennslyvania. ...

... Andrew Sullivan is one of a few pundits who gets it right, comparing Paterno to the Pope -- two Papas who covered up child sex abuse. ...

... ** Tod Kelly in the League or Ordinary Gentlemen on the Penn State riot: "When you see these kinds of reactions in the face of such a horrific crime, it’s easy to see how this tribalism-based denial can lead to the circumstances that allowed the crimes to occur in the first place." ...

... Valerie Strauss of the Washington Post: "The U.S. Department of Education is launching an investigation into the scandal at Penn State University to see if officials there failed to comply with a law that requires institutions of higher education to disclose criminal offenses that occur on campus each year." ...

... AND Joe Paterno has lawyered up. He'd better.

Ron Brownstein of the National Journal: "... the scale of the union-led victory Tuesday in the drive to repeal Republican Gov. John Kasich's anti-collective bargaining legislation in Ohio is bound to encourage Democrats who want President Obama to pursue a class-conscious populist appeal in 2012." Brownstein analyzes the numbers that show "the repeal vote reached well into the groups that powered the Republican surge in 2010."

Paul Krugman: "With Italy following Greece off a cliff, it’s hard to see how the euro can survive.... Beware of ideologues who are trying to hijack the European crisis on behalf of their agendas." Krugman debunks the anti-socialism agenday and the austerity agenda.

Elizabeth Warren Responds to Rove Attack. (See more in Right Wing World below; also in yesterday's Commentariat.) In an interview on Boston's WCVB. The interviewers try again & again to box Warren into bad spots. They fail:

I’m a free market person. I just don’t believe in casino capitalism. -- Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) ...

... "Ascent of a Woman." Tim Egan: Sen. Maria Cantwell "has been after the lords of big finance for almost a decade, and is furious now that reforms intended to rein in the kind of car-bomb speculation that brought down the global economy have been seriously diluted.... Cantwell voted against the bank bailouts — 'turning the keys of the Treasury over to Wall Street,' she called it.

Joe Stephens & Carol Leonnig of the Washington Post: "At a number of points in its troubled history, the solar company Solyndra faced dire financial problems that threatened its survival. Yet at each crisis, Energy Secretary Steven Chu and officials at his agency failed to take steps that critics say could have limited taxpayer losses when the company collapsed last summer. Instead, Energy Department officials monitoring the solar panel manufacturer and its $535 million federal loan stepped in with financial assistance, or worked to dispel concerns raised by industry analysts and other Obama administration staffers...."...

     ... CW: this story fits neatly into the conservative agenda of the WashPo, but I have no reason to doubt the reporting. Do bear this in mind: any taxpayer money that DOE "wasted" on Solyndra, that stayed in the U.S. via employee compensation or equipment purchase (for instance) was stimulus money, akin to food stamps or unemployment insurance. I'm not advocating for government waste; I'm just saying that in a recession, any government spending helps stimulate the economy. Ask those gung-ho GOP military enthusiasts about that.

Right Wing World

Amy Sullivan of Time on why religious conservatives, ostensibly such a powerful force within the GOP, can't find a viable presidential candidate to represent them. It turns out this group isn't really a group -- it's a melange of factions who disagree on politics and religion.

More Fake Concern for the Little Guy. Suzy Khimm of the Washington Post: though Republican presidential candidates are usually vague about what they hate the Dodd-Frank Act, "... one concrete criticism that they bring up, time and again [is] that Dodd-Frank is “a killer for the small banks.... But ... the country’s biggest lobbying group for community banks praises Dodd-Frank for helping to level the playing field by reining in big banks, while also criticizing specific provisions of the legislation.... The community banking industry isn’t pushing to repeal Dodd-Frank. Instead, it’s lobbying to change parts of the law...."

Steve Kornacki of Salon on Karl Rove's Crossroads GPS “independent advocacy” against Occupy Wall Street & Elizabeth Warren. Kornacki looks at the ad reader Julie L. pointed us to yesterday (see the November 10 Commentariat) that is running in Massachusetts "to fan the culture war flames." Kornacki writes, "voters seem to be sending a mixed message about OWS. The actual protests themselves may be losing favor, thanks to the right’s campaign and to the recent increase in reports of violence. But the issues that the protests have forced into the political debate — about Wall Street accountability, income inequality, and the decline of the middle class — all play to Warren’s advantage; she is where most voters are on these topics, and Brown isn’t." ...

... Greg Sargent, in a post titled, "Rove-founded group again blanketing airwaves with falsehoods, distortions, and sleaze," writes, "the right has responded to the protests by exploiting a cultural fault line that’s been key to our politics since the 1960s. Conservatives have elevated the protesters’ outsized tactics and violence to push the cultural buttons of blue collar whites and independents — who will be central to the Massachusetts race — in an effort to distract them from the populist message embodied by the protests and Warren’s candidacy. The new Crossroads ad — which is backed up by a buy of nearly $600,000 — takes this to an almost comical level." Read the whole post. ...

... Ari Berman of The Nation takes apart the Rove ad. AND, he writes, "... the Rove-directed campaign against her could actually boost the Warren campaign. If the Massachusetts Senate race becomes a debate between the ideology of Rove versus the ideology of Warren, Elizabeth’s got to like her chances." ...

... AND Digby gets to what went on in the "brain" behind the ad: "Karl Rove has always had a good sense of the right wing id so I'm guessing he senses this is a good line of attack.... This isn't ideological. It's sheer lizard brain tribalism." CW: Nicely put.

Herman Cain & the Politics of Race. Karen Bigsby Bates of NPR reports:

     ... A partial transcript is here. Thanks to a friend for the link. Here's he video ad by Americans for Cain, which Bates cites:

... Tabbasum Zakaria of Reuters: "[Herman Cain's] two public accusers -- [Sharon] Bialek and Karen Kraushaar -- had planned to hold a joint press conference, but on Thursday Kraushaar decided against it. ...

News Ledes

President Obama speak aboard the USS Carl Vinson docked in San Diego this evening. Following remarks, he attended the Carrier Classic.

Reuters: "MF Global fired all 1,066 of its brokerage employees on Friday, triggering anger and resentment about the firm's collapse after bad bets on European debt under former CEO Jon Corzine's leadership. How the final blow was delivered upset many staff -- with some learning by email and others through news on the television."

Washington Post: "The Securities and Exchange Commission, which failed to stop Bernard Madoff’s long-running investment fraud despite repeated warnings, has disciplined eight agency employees over their handling of the matter but did not fire anyone...."

AP: "Penn State assistant coach Mike McQueary, a key witness in the child sex abuse scandal that has engulfed the school, has been placed on administrative leave. School president Rod Erickson announced the move Friday, a day after the school said McQueary would not be present when the Nittany Lions play Nebraska on Saturday because he has received threats. McQueary testified in a grand jury investigation that eventually led to child sex-abuse charges being filed against former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky."

President Obama participated in a wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery this morning:

AP: "Police are investigating a fatal shooting just outside the Occupy Oakland encampment in Northern California and the apparent suicide of a military veteran at an Occupy encampment in Vermont's largest city.... A preliminary investigation into the gunfire Thursday that left a man dead suggests it resulted from a fight between two groups of men at or near the camp on a plaza in front of Oakland's City Hall, police Chief Howard Jordan said." ...

     ... San Francisco Chronicle Update: "Oakland police say they have no reason to believe that a man shot and killed outside the Occupy Oakland encampment had ever spent a night there, despite the claims of a camp resident who said he was her cousin and had slept in her tent. The victim, who appeared to be in his 20s, was shot in the head about 5 p.m. Thursday outside a BART station exit in Frank Ogawa Plaza, at 14th Street and Broadway. He was taken to Highland Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. No arrests have been made."

     ... Reuters Update: "The man who shot himself at an Occupy protest camp in downtown Burlington, Vermont, this week was 35 years old, homeless and had briefly trained to be in the Army, police said on Friday. Joshua Pfenning apparently shot himself in the head inside a tent at the encampment in City Hall Park on Thursday afternoon and later died at a city hospital.... After the shooting, police banned camping at the park because of safety concerns."

NEW. Oakland Tribune: "A day after dozens of protesters were arrested at UC Berkeley, police defended their crackdown on Occupy Cal and vowed to react the same way if demonstrators pitched tents again. The campus was relatively quiet for much of the day Thursday, but protesters were debating whether to set up their camp in front of Sproul Hall again. Previous attempts on Wednesday brought immediate responses from police in riot gear. Campus police, aided by Alameda County sheriff's deputies, had arrested 40 people by Thursday afternoon...."

Washington Post: "Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta on Thursday ordered the Air Force to review whether it had been tough enough in disciplining — but not firing — three supervisors at the Dover Air Force Base mortuary.... Panetta also said he had faith in Air Force Secretary Michael B. Donley, despite harsh criticism from lawmakers and an independent federal agency about the credibility of the Air Force’s 18-month investigation into missing body parts and mishandled remains at the Dover mortuary, which handles the remains of American troops killed overseas."

AP: "Italy's Senate has approved economic reforms demanded by the European Union, paving the way for Premier Silvio Berlusconi to resign as early as this weekend and a new government to be formed. The Senate voted 156-12 Friday to pass the budget bill, which contained the reform measures. The lower Chamber of Deputies is expected to approve the legislation by Saturday. Berlusconi has promised to resign as soon as parliament passes the reforms." New York Times story here.

AP: "Greece's incoming prime minister is due to name his cabinet Friday, a day after being appointed to head an interim coalition government that will push through a new European debt deal and secure continued bailout funding to prevent a catastrophic default."