The Commentariat -- May 18, 2013
The President's Weekly Address:
... The transcript is here.
... Christi Parsons of the Los Angeles Times: " President Obama said Friday he wanted to put more Americans to work by slashing the amount of time it takes to grant federal approval for big job-creating projects. But Obama's choice of venue for his remarks -- a Baltimore company that makes mining and pumping equipment -- provided fodder for Republicans. They noted that the company president had, just the day before, testified on Capitol Hill in support of the Keystone XL pipeline, which the Obama administration has delayed for years over environmental concerns. Ellicott Dredges President Peter Bowe said the pipeline ... would pour money into his business. 'For us, it's all about jobs,' Bowe told members of the House Committee on Small Business on Thursday." ...
... CW: this is a good example of how second-term controversies develop. Odds are that if President Obama faced a re-election bid, his crack staff would have vetted Bowe & his business and would not have sent the President to Ellicot Dredges. Whether this oopsie was the result of B-team incompetence, laziness or political staff attrition, it is representative of second-term carelessness. ...
Craig Whitlock of the Washington Post: "Two senior military officers ... Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Air Force Gen. Mark A. Welsh III, the service's top commander ... said for the first time Friday that they were 'open' to proposed legislation that would overhaul military law in response to an epidemic of sexual assaults, acknowledging that victims lack faith in commanders to handle the problem.... A bipartisan group of lawmakers announced Thursday that they support a bill from Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) that would force the most significant changes in military law in 30 years by giving prosecutors, instead of unit commanders, the power to open investigations into serious crimes and send the cases to trial.... The Pentagon has resisted taking such power away from military commanders.... Ten days earlier, [Welsh] testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee that he was opposed to the idea.... Although neither Dempsey nor Welsh endorsed the proposal, their comments aligned them with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, who has said he is willing to discuss it with lawmakers."
Brendan Nyhan, in the Columbia Journalism Review: "... media scandals are a 'co-production' of the opposition party and the press.... Reporters [should take] more responsibility for their role in creating and sustaining the media narratives that they are covering."
It's They're Obama's Watergate! Or Worse! Steve Benen makes a list of some of the nothingburgers Republicans have compared to Watergate. (Links are Benen's):
* Benghazi is "worse than Watergate." [Update: this argument comes up quite a bit.]
* The IRS controversy carries "echoes of Watergate."
* National security leaks are "worse than Watergate."
* A job offer for former Rep. Joe Sestak (D-Pa.) might be "Obama's Watergate."
* "Fast and Furious" might be "Obama's Watergate."
* Solyndra "makes Watergate look like child's play."
* The White House's relationship with Media Matters might be "Obama's Watergate." ...
... Overreach? What Overreach? Dana Milbank on "Thursday morning's circus on the east lawn of the Capitol, where Republican lawmakers gathered with tea party leaders to declare their thoughts on the IRS scandal." CW: do read the quotes. And check out Ted Cruz's "sourcing." Milbank calls Cruz the "leader of the neo-McCarthyite wing of the GOP," a moniker that is precisely accurate. ...
Gail Collins reprises Friday's Congressional hearing on the IRS in which all the members of the committee expressed outrage. CW: maybe some of them will explode. ...
... For a more detailed retelling of the hearing, here's the final effort of Jonathan Weisman & Jeremy Peters of the New York Times. Also, Republicans are expanding the IRS scandalette into an attack on -- ObamaCare! ...
... John Cassidy of the New Yorker: "If there are any conservatively minded Inspector Clouseaus out there who would like to take the probe further, I suggest you get in touch with Committee chair Dave] Camp's office, or with [Paul] Ryan's. They need your help." ...
... Nice to see AP stories like this one by Ken Thomas & Steve Peoples. I hope a lot of local newspapers pick it up: " There's an irony in the Internal Revenue Service's crackdown on conservative groups. The nation's tax agency has admitted to inappropriately scrutinizing smaller tea party organizations that applied for tax-exempt status. But the IRS largely maintained a hands-off policy with the much larger, big-budget organizations on the left and right that were most influential in the 2012 elections and are organized under a section of the tax code that allows them to hide their donors.... Karl Rove's Crossroads GPS and the Koch brothers' Americans for Prosperity were among those that spent tens of millions of dollars on TV ads and get-out-the-vote efforts to help Republicans. Democrats were aided in similar fashion by Priorities USA, made up of former Barack Obama campaign aides, and American Bridge 21st Century Foundation, an opposition research group led by a former adviser to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid." ...
... The Stupidest Part of the IRS Story. Bernie Becker of the Hill: "Steven Miller, the acting IRS commissioner, said Friday that last week's revelation that the IRS gave special scrutiny to Tea Party groups came from a planted question. Lois Lerner, an IRS official with oversight of tax-exempt groups, disclosed the scrutiny at an American Bankers Association conference last Friday after a question from a lawyer who has served on IRS advisory boards." ...
... David Kay Johnston calls on Lois Lerner to resign for multiple offenses. ...
... Garance Franke-Ruta of the Atlantic points out another lie Lerner told. ...
... Good piece by Lisa Rein & Dan Zak of the Washington Post: IRS personnel in Cincinnati -- the center of controversy -- are mystified by claims they are Nixonian political hacks out to get honest, law-abiding, tax-averse yahoos in tricorns. ...
... Nate Silver: Peggy Noonan is of the impression that the IRS is targeting conservatives for audits because she heard of four -- that's right, four -- conservatives who were audited last year. Noonan's storied "impressions" are absolute bunk. She doesn't have the barest understanding of the difference between an anecdote & statistical significance. CW: Here's the "logic": My rich Uncle Moe got audited right after he gave $2,500 to the Romney campaign. I don't vote & didn't get audited. Ergo, the IRS is targeting Republicans. So Obama can take away our guns & become dictator for life.
Greg Sargent: "Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is increasingly focused on the month of July as the time to exercise the so-called 'nuclear option' and revisit filibuster reform, and he has privately told top advisers that he's all but certain to take action if the Senate GOP blocks three upcoming key nominations.... Reid is eyeing a change to the rules that would do away with the 60-vote threshold on all judicial and executive branch nominations." Read the whole post. ...
... Jonathan Bernstein: "... Reid is doing an excellent job at this complex game; leaking this threat now and generally upping the ante on nominations in general seems to be exactly the way to go." ...
... Kevin Drum: "I think it's unlikely that Republicans will allow [Richard] Cordray's nomination [to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau] to go forward, since they're blocking him mainly as a way of blocking the operation of the CFPB itself. More than likely, then, they'll call Reid's bluff. Then we'll find out just how serious he is." ...
... Justin Green of the Daily Beast: "... there's something not quite right about requiring a 3/5 majority for a duly elected President to appoint a cabinet. In a perverse way, if Republican intransigence on appointments finally persuades Reid to embrace filibuster reform on the limited scale Sargent describes, they'll have done the entire country a favor. I strongly believe in the filibuster for the legislative process. Permanent changes to law should not be able to sail through on a majority vote. But a circuit court judge and the head of the EPA are not permanent legislative decisions, and they deserve a simple majority vote." (Green favors the 60-vote rule for Supreme Court justices.)
Jed Lewison: Congressional Republicans are changing their debt-ceiling/hostage-taking strategy: now, instead of trying to convince voters that raising the debt ceiling is the end of civilization as we know it, they'll try to convince voters that their way of raising the debt limit is a must-do -- a tactic that clearly undercuts their ability to wage "economic terrorism."
Jeffrey Nugent, formerly the head of Revlon, says in a Washington Post op-ed that his wacko little brother Ted & the NRA are wrong about gun registration: "I believe strongly that expanding and improving mandatory background checks will keep a lot of people who aren't entitled to Second Amendment rights from having easy access to guns. As of today, a convicted felon can find a gun show or a private seller and buy a firearm without a background check. That loophole should be closed.... Why would responsible gun owners want to protect people who threaten not only our safety but our gun rights? The NRA has it wrong: Irresponsible gun owners are bad for everyone."
Unbelievable. No, Really. Unbelievable. Will Englund of the Washington Post: "All that low-tech equipment that Russian security officers displayed for the TV cameras after detaining Ryan Fogle, American diplomat and alleged spy, made it look as though he stepped right out of the annals of 1980s Cold War espionage. Now, the Interfax news agency is reporting that the wigs he allegedly had with him match a wig seized from Michael Sellers, a U.S. diplomat kicked out of the Soviet Union back in 1986. That wig is in the archives of the FSB, Russia's Federal Security Service.... It all looked a bit goofy. A compass? A street atlas? And the whole sequence of events is reminding some Russians of a popular Cold War miniseries here, about KGB agents dramatically thwarting Western spy plots...." ...
Local News
Rosalind Helderman & Laura Vozzella of the Washington Post: "While it's illegal for [Virginia] politicians to accept a gift in direct exchange for official acts, gifts often arrive from those who have sought or will seek some benefit from state government. In addition, the wording on the disclosure forms is so vague that it's difficult to discern any details about what the gift is for and about.... In Virginia, many members of the state legislature take gifts from people or firms with something to gain from government action. [Gov. Bob] McDonnell's predecessors, former Democratic governors Mark R. Warner and Timothy M. Kaine, took similar gifts.... But McDonnell's $19,000 gift [from the Redskins] last year was by far the largest reported by a Virginia governor in recent years." The Redskins' gift directly followed McDonnell's decision -- which was opposed by the state legislature -- to give the team $4 million of public money. Also, Virginia AG & former Kate Madison ward Ken Cucchinelli -- who is running for governor -- has taken large gifts that suggested a direct conflict-of-interest, at least one of which he failed to disclose.
Erik Eckholm of the New York Times: "A federal judge on Friday temporarily blocked enforcement of one of the country's most stringent abortion laws, an Arkansas ban on the procedure at the 12th week of pregnancy, saying the law was likely to be declared unconstitutional."
News Ledes
ABC News Denver: "Witnesses tell police a Federal Heights woman was killed when the new assault rifle she was showing to friends accidentally fired on Tuesday night. Witnesses and the husband told police the group had been drinking in the garage of the couple's home at 10024 Elliot St. when 22-year-old Anastasia Adair, a new gun enthusiast, went upstairs to a bedroom to get her recently purchased assault rifle."
AP: "Two commuter trains packed with rush-hour commuters collided in an accident that sent about 70 people to the hospital, severely damaged the tracks and threatened to snarl travel in the congested Northeast Corridor."
AP: "French President Francois Hollande has signed a law authorizing gay marriage and adoption by same-sex couples, after months of nationwide protests and wrenching debate. His signature means the first gay marriages may be celebrated in France within about 10 days. Hollande's office said he signed the bill Saturday morning, a day after the Constitutional Council struck down a challenge to the law."
AP: "North Korea fired three short-range guided missiles into its eastern waters on Saturday, a South Korean official said. It routinely tests such missiles, but the latest launches came during a period of tentative diplomacy aimed at easing tensions."
Chicago Tribune: "Siding with patients who say cannabis is the only drug that can safely ease their chronic pain, the Senate sent Gov. Pat Quinn a measure Friday that would make Illinois the 19th state to legalize marijuana for medical purposes."
Reader Comments (5)
Okay, Harry, GO FER IT! It is waaay past time for filibuster reform for judicial and presidential appointees--except the Supreme Court. Do ya have the balls (or gloves) to go fer the "nucular" option? Or do we have to carry you to the Capitol lawn and waterboard you? I am lining up voluteers. Let me know.
On another subject, Cruz-Missile is NOT a neo-McCarthyite; he and his buddies are more in the mold of retro-McCarthyism--as are most righty rights. They have zoomed downhill past retro and headed straight down the molten mountain into the aptly named crude-slime, which is amazingly fitting for Cruz-Missiles. Kinda makes that crude oil more part of the picture, doncha think? And is not that where it all belongs? Do ya think Teddy purposely changed his name, or is he just lookin' fer a "few good men?" Uh Oh....been there, done that, didn't work then; won't work now. Maybe Teddy and friends should plop their sleeping bags down at the bottom of that molton mountain. It will be plenty warm there, and they can all sit around and wait for the election of 2014 to be over--and contemplate their smegma. I am sure meals-on-wheels will take resposibility for their getting 3-squares a day, and we will be saved from their mind-numbing rhetoric and constantly split infinitives. Sound like a plan?
Me--I am waiting in line to help waterboard Harry--if that becomes necessary. I will tell him it is for his own healing. Wazoo!
Okay, Harry, GO FER IT! It is waaay past time for filibuster reform for judicial and presidential appointees--except the Supreme Court. Do ya have the balls (or gloves) to go fer the "nucular" option? Or do we have to carry you to the Capitol lawn and waterboard you? I am lining up voluteers. Let me know.
On another subject, Cruz-Missile is NOT a neo-McCarthyite; he and his buddies are more in the mold of retro-McCarthyism--as are most righty rights. They have zoomed downhill past retro and headed straight down the molten mountain into the aptly named crude-slime, which is amazingly fitting for Cruz-Missiles. Kinda makes that crude oil more part of the picture, doncha think? And is not that where it all belongs? Do ya think Teddy purposely changed his name, or is he just lookin' fer a "few good men?" Uh Oh....been there, done that, didn't work then; won't work now. Maybe Teddy and friends should plop their sleeping bags down at the bottom of that molton mountain. It will be plenty warm there, and they can all sit around and wait for the election of 2014 to be over--and contemplate their smegma. I am sure meals-on-wheels will take resposibility for their getting 3-squares a day, and we will be saved from their mind-numbing rhetoric and constantly split infinitives. Sound like a plan?
Me--I am waiting in line to help waterboard Harry--if that becomes necessary. I will tell him it is for his own healing. Wazoo!
On a far away island, Caribbean sunshine filters through the stunted windows. Its comforting warmth glows the skin a bright red as the morning breeze rustles through the palm trees.
Lucifer's Paradise
The warmth gives way to the cold gloved hands tearing at your clothes, ripping you out of dreamland. The cement floor numbs your foundations as you stumble toward the heartless chair.
A dead-eyed stare at the peeling paint reinstates reality as the alien tube pierces your nostril and slides down your throat. The cold plastic groping along, violating you from the inside out.
The sludge unloaded, the restraints ease the pressure but not the pain.
A numbed passage back to the cell. The Caribbean sunshine now resembles Satan's guiding light, it's flames toasting your flesh. A reminder that hell exists amongst the sea of morals.
Not a word spoken, but everyone knows the story.
http://www.aljazeera.com/video/americas/2013/05/201351719348602566.html
SUGGESTION: Before every congressional hearing from now on the Youngbloods should be played nice and loud: "Come on People now––smile on your brother and everybody get together––try to love one another right now." Would kind of set a different tone and maybe melt the stone hard hearts of all those jamokes–––there might even be dancing!
PD,
Great idea. The Youngbloods were representative of an exceptional spirit in the air in their time. That spirit has long been extinguished by Republicans and those who despise the idea that we all bear a certain responsibility for other human beings (what a horrific idea!!!).
Interestingly, many of these haters thrust their chins out and declare themselves followers of Jesus who seems like he would have been, at least, based on his teachings, a huge fan of "Get Together". But they refuse to follow those teachings, deciding, instead, to give the finger to any who don't align exactly with their ideology.
So much for Jesus, I guess. And the Youngbloods.
Stone cold hearts remain the standard.