The Ledes

Friday, August 1, 2025

CNBC: “Nonfarm payroll growth was slower than expected in July and the unemployment rate ticked higher, raising potential trouble signs for the U.S. labor market. Job growth totaled 73,000 for the month, above the June total of 14,000 but below even the meager Dow Jones estimate for a gain of 100,000. June and May totals were revised sharply lower, down by a combined 258,000 from previously announced levels. At the same time, the unemployment rate rose to 4.2%, in line with the forecast.”

New York Times: “Known to many as Mary K..., Dr. Gaillard, who died on May 23 at 86, was the first woman hired by the physics department at the University of California, Berkeley, and later became a senior scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. But much of her groundbreaking work occurred earlier, during a long stint as an unpaid visiting scientist at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, a laboratory on the Franco-Swiss border.”

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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.

Wednesday
Sep212011

The Commentariat -- September 22

I've posted an Open Thread on today's Off Times Square.

Final Thoughts. Andrew Cohen of The Atlantic on the history of the death penalty in the U.S. You'll have to read the whole post, which is a long one, to see why Cohen says Rick Perry's "wanton and freakish" disregard for the rights of the accused could help bring an end to the death penalty.

There is nobody on this country who got rich on his own. -- Elizabeth Warren ...

Ezra Klein has a good, short analysis for laymen on what the Fed did yesterday. ...

... Mark Thoma has a bit more; his conclusion: the Fed didn't do enough. Brad DeLong.: ditto, plus. ...

... AND Paul Krugman: "... they’re trying to use a water pistol to stop a charging rhino."

More on Class Warfare from Krugman: "One is that you have to beware of the old trick of saying 'taxes', then slipping into 'income taxes'. Most Americans pay more payroll than income taxes, but the reverse is true at high incomes. So focusing only on income taxes makes it seem as if the rich pay much more of the burden than they really do." Plus other tricks of the trade designed to fool you into thinking "the rich have done enough." ...

... Krugman is no doubt talking about this "fact check" by the AP's Stephen Ohlemacher.

E. J. Dionne: "... one of the Obama administration’s most successful programs is also its most 'socialist' initiative...: the bailout of General Motors and Chrysler.... Yes, this was socialism — or, perhaps, 'state capitalism' — because the government temporarily took substantial ownership in the companies.... Today, the companies are thriving. More than that: The auto industry exemplifies how unions can do their best to protect the interests of their members while also ensuring the prosperity of the companies that employ them. This month, the United Auto Workers and GM reached a tentative four-year contract that will add or save some 6,500 jobs, provide workers with a $5,000 signing bonus and enhance a profit-sharing agreement.... The union and the company are seeking to align the interests of workers and shareholders."

The Affordable Care Act Is Working. Kevin Sack of the New York Times: "Young adults, long the group most likely to be uninsured, are gaining health coverage faster than expected since the 2010 health law began allowing parents to cover them as dependents on family policies." ...

... Linda Greenhouse has a very fine post on the legal wranglings over the constitutionality of the individual mandate, an essential element of the Affordable Care Act. Greenhouse writes approvingly of "a unanimous three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, sitting in the heart of the old Confederacy, [which] offers a powerful reminder of a fact that a dismaying number of folks appear lately to have forgotten: the Civil War is over... and that p.s., the Union won."

Helene Cooper & Steven Myers of the New York Times: "A last-ditch American effort to head off a Palestinian bid for membership in the United Nations faltered. President Obama tried to qualify his own call, just a year ago, for a Palestinian state. And President Nicolas Sarkozy of France stepped forcefully into the void, with a proposal that pointedly repudiated Mr. Obama’s approach. The extraordinary tableau Wednesday at the United Nations underscored a stark new reality: the United States is facing the prospect of having to share, or even cede, its decades-long role as the architect of Middle East peacemaking." CW: in other words, we have willingly let Israel isolate us in the region; not good for us & ultimately not good for Israel.

Adam Goldman, et al., of the AP: "The New York Police Department put American citizens under surveillance and scrutinized where they ate, prayed and worked, not because of charges of wrongdoing but because of their ethnicity, according to interviews and documents obtained by The Associated Press. The documents describe in extraordinary detail a secret program intended to catalog life inside Muslim neighborhoods as people immigrated, got jobs, became citizens and started businesses. The documents undercut the NYPD's claim that its officers only follow leads when investigating terrorism." ...

... Timothy Williams of the New York Times: "On the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Shoshana Hebshi, 35, a freelance writer and stay-at-home mother ... from a suburb of Toledo, Ohio, was on a plane flying from Denver to Detroit when something she — or another passenger in her row of seats — had done caused the government to scramble F-16 fighter planes and escort Frontier Airlines Flight 623 until it landed safely. The plane was taken to a remote part of the airport, and armed federal authorities handcuffed Ms. Hebshi and her seatmates and took them off the plane. She was placed in a jail cell, strip-searched and interrogated by the F.B.I. before eventually being released.... Ms. Hebshi says she believes she was detained because she is 'dark-skinned' — she is half Arab, half Jewish." See also Fred Drumlevich's comment on today's Off Times Square.

Skid Row, Rural South. Sabrina Tavernise of the New York Times: "The falloff of the economy of Greenwood County, [South Carolina,] a district of almost 70,000 people that once pulsed with busy factories and mills, was the steepest in the country by two counts. According to an analysis of Census Bureau figures made public on Thursday, its poverty rate more than doubled to 24 percent from 2007 to 2010, the largest increase for any county in the nation. The decline also engulfed the middle class. Median household income plunged by 28 percent over the same period...."

... Skid Row, Urban North. Sam Roberts of the New York Times: "Poverty grew nationwide last year, but the increase was even greater in New York City, the Census Bureau will report on Thursday, suggesting that New York was being particularly hard hit by the aftermath of the recession. From 2009 to 2010, 75,000 city residents were pushed into poverty, increasing the poor population to more than 1.6 million and raising the percentage of New Yorkers living below the official federal poverty line to 20.1 percent, the highest level since 2000. The 1.4-percentage-point annual increase in the poverty rate appeared to be the largest jump in nearly two decades." CW: tell it to Wall Street.

Presidential historian Matthew Dickinson is unimpressed with the so-called sensational aspects of Confidence Men, Ron Suskind's book about Obama White House infighting: "... based on reading memos and documents from thirteen previous presidencies, the scenes Suskind describes regarding dissent in the Obama White House are neither uncommon nor nearly as problematic as he would have us believe."

And speaking of books, here's another excerpt -- looks like a prologue -- from Roger Ebert's book Life Itself. Via NPR. Ebert is an easy guy to like and his style is instructive if you're thinking of writing your own memoir for the grandkids, for the public or just to organize your thoughts. Thanks to reader Haley S. for the link.

David Streitfeld of the New York Times: "As speculation swirled Wednesday that Meg Whitman might be brought in to save the troubled Hewlett-Packard, the tech world rendered a verdict: You have got to be kidding." See also today's News Ledes below.

"Let Him Die," an advocacy ad by Protect Your Care:

Right Wing World *

We're going to have a relentless focus on creating jobs. -- John Boehner, late 2010 ...

... Mike Stanfill started RepublicanJobCreation.com as a joke. He began "a chronological list of activities by the GOP beginning 2-10-2011. I'm sorry to report that none, so far, have resulted in a single new job being created in America." CW: Keep returning to Stanfill's site. As he says, "No job creation here. Seriously. Not a fucking employment sausage.... I'll keep adding to this list until the Republican House does something to create jobs. I unhappily predict this is gonna be one lonnnnng list. After all, you don't get rid of a sitting president by helping the economy."

Via AlterNet.Down the Memory Hole. Joshua Holland of AlterNet lists nine policies conservatives were for before they were against them; i.e., before Democrats adopted them. Thanks to a reader for the links to this & to RepublicanJobCreation above.

 

 

Michael McAuliff of the (ugh!) Huffington Post: "The GOP-led House Oversight Committee may be accusing the White House of a 'job killing' green energy agenda in a hearing Thursday -- but at least ten Republicans on the panel have signed letters seeking to land green energy jobs in their districts." ...

... AND. Jim Snyder of Bloomberg News: "Republican Representative Darrell Issa, who said government subsidies to specific companies can encourage corruption [& who heads the House Oversight Committee accusing Obama of "job-killing" green energy], sought U.S. help in the past for clean-energy projects in his home state of California. Issa ... wrote Energy Secretary Steven Chu to support an Energy Department loan for Aptera Motors Inc., a Carlsbad, California, electric-car maker, according to a letter received by the department Jan. 14, 2010. 'Awarding this opportunity to Aptera Motors will greatly assist a leading developer of electric vehicles in my district,' Issa wrote...."

I certainly have some concerns [about the creation of a Palestinian state]. The first step in any peaceful negotiation for a two-state solution for the Palestinians is to recognize the right of Israel’s existence. They have to denounce terrorism in both word and deed. And they have to sit down and negotiate with Israel directly. Anything short of that is a non-starter in my opinion. — Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R), in an interview with Time magazine, Sept. 15, 2011

Glenn Kessler of the Washington Post: "Perry is stuck in a time warp. He’s describing a situation that existed in the 1980s, not really today.... We sent Perry’s remarks to three experts on Middle East diplomacy — an Israeli, a Palestinian and an American. All three said he appeared to be remarkably uninformed. We contacted Perry’s spokesman for an explanation but as usual he did not respond. (The Perry campaign has become a fact-free zone, not responding to Fact Checker queries, ever since Perry received Four Pinocchios for his comments on climate change.)

Steve Benen posts a couple of photos you should look at.... Now, do you think Democrats will use the Perry, et al., shot the way Republicans used the Obama, et al., shot? Again and again and again? I don't. Maybe it's because Democrats don't think their voters are stupid bigots, which Republicans are pretty sure about a bloc of their voters.

Nice work, Rev. Al:

..."Romney Calls for a Tax Policy that Will Help "Us" in the Middle Class." Sarah Boxer of CBS News on Mitt Romney, Regular Joe, struggling along like "80 or 90 percent of us"; never mind that actually "he's in the bracket that President Obama is targeting with his proposed 'Buffett rule' to tax millionaires."

As if you had no idea, Michael Crowley of Time writes about why Jon Huntsman, Jr., can't gain any traction in the Republican presidential primaries. The article does provide an interesting overview of Huntsman's campaign.

* Where leaders are rewarded for hypocrisy.

News Ledes

New York Times: "A day after the Federal Reserve announced another measure to stimulate the economy, global financial markets on Thursday declined steeply as pessimism about the outlook for the economies of the United States and Europe was deepened by weak data and the Fed’s own grim assessment. The downcast mood appeared to be reflected across the board. Stocks fell in Asia, Europe and on Wall Street, where equities were down more than 3 percent as the market closed."

Washington Post: "The Obama administration for the first time Thursday openly asserted that Pakistan was indirectly responsible for specific attacks against U.S. troops and installations in Afghanistan, calling a leading Afghan insurgent group 'a veritable arm' of the Pakistani intelligence service. Last week’s attack on the U.S. Embassy in Kabul and a Sept. 10 truck bombing that killed five Afghans and wounded 77 NATO troops were 'planned and conducted' by the Pakistan-based Haqqani network 'with ISI support,' said Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff."

New York Times: "Meg Whitman, eBay’s former chief executive, was named to lead Hewlett-Packard on Thursday, the company said."

President Obama speaks about the American Jobs Act at the Brent Spence Bridge:

President Obama spoke about the American Jobs Act in Cincinnati, Ohio, this afternoon. A Bridge to Somewhere. Washington Post: "Obama’s scheduled appearance at the Brent Spence Bridge, which connects the home states of House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), has drawn rebukes from his two Republican rivals." AP post-speech story here.

AP: "The number of people applying for unemployment benefits fell last week, though the decline isn't enough to signal improvement in the job market. Weekly applications dropped by 9,000 to a seasonally adjusted 423,000, the Labor Department said Thursday."

New York Times: "Proclaiming his innocence, Troy Davis was put to death by lethal injection on Wednesday night, his life — and the hopes of supporters worldwide — prolonged by several hours while the Supreme Court reviewed but then declined to act on a petition from his lawyers to stay the execution."

New York Times: "White supremacist gang member Lawrence Russell Brewer was executed Wednesday evening for the infamous dragging death slaying of James Byrd Jr., a black man from East Texas. Byrd, 49, was chained to the back of a pickup truck and pulled whip-like to his death along a bumpy asphalt road in one of the most grisly hate crime murders in recent Texas history."

Washington Post: "World markets plunged Thursday after the Federal Reserve took a dramatic step to help revive the U.S. economy — and in the process sent a message that America’s financial malaise seems unlikely to dissipate any time soon. Key European and Asian indexes were down more than 4 percent. Investors took the Fed’s surprise action to purchase longer-term bonds--an effort to push down long-term interest rates even further -- as a sign that it felt the U.S. downturn could last for a long time."

AP: "The general commanding NATO's mission in Libya said Thursday that isolated groups of forces loyal to ousted strongman Moammar Gadhafi continue to be a threat to local people but are unable to coordinate their actions. Canadian Lt. Gen. Charles Bouchard said in a conference call with reporters that many Gadhafi forces are surrounded with no way out. On Wednesday, NATO's decision-making body, the North Atlantic Council, granted approval to extend the mission for another 90 days."

AP: "Palestinian protesters have denounced President Barack Obama for his opposition to their bid to win U.N. recognition of a Palestinian state. Dozens rallied on Thursday outside Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' office in Ramallah."

Wednesday
Sep212011

Around the Virtual Watercooler

Here is an excerpted virtual conversation I had with friends today. The subject, mostly, is whether or not President Obama is up to the job, and if not, why not? Names are changed to protect the intelligent:


Marie
:

My Off Times Square question du jour is “Does Obama Really Mean It?” Will he really fight for progressive ideals or is he just shitting us the way he did in 2008?


Aphrodite (part of this response follows an earlier thread):

I think the most likely reason the Bush war crimes were never prosecuted is that Congress has dirty hands too.  They were briefed.... maybe not the whole story but enough so they are accessories after, even during, the fact.  Pelosi made it clear that impeachment was off the table.  The corruption in the Bush Justice Dept. ran deep too, and doubtless vestiges of it still exist.  There is a cover-up of the cover-up.  Holder is less than useless. And Obama?  Add weakness and inexperience into the mix.  The generals rule him, so wouldn't be surprised if the CIA does too.



Apollo
:

I think we were all way to happy to be rid of Bush to see that Obama was just not ready for this job. He was a great campaigner, but as a president? I think he's a middle of the roader. Granted, if we're honest, we have to admit he did a few good things. But it was the way he did them and the fact that had he been more forceful and hit the ground running with a staff that wasn't ready to stab him in the back (Summers, et al) and question his manhood (because Larry is such a stud) and if he had been ready to fight back against the kind of evil that Bush and company spread across the land, he could have been one of the truly great presidents. I remember Clinton once complaining that he never had the kind of opportunities that presidents need (crises, wars, etc) that thrust them into the ranks of the great. I think he's right on that one. Of course Clinton deep sixed himself on many scores as well. There was no lack of hubris there. But he had no problem going toe to toe with the execrable Newtie when Gingrich shut down the government. Obama would have asked permission to please can he keep the lights on in the White House because his kids have homework to do.

Obama was never the guy we all hoped he'd be. Probably not even the guy HE hoped he'd be.  And I have to agree with Marie who recently said something along the lines of him not being able to change who he is at this late date.  I think those kinds of change are possible. Asclepius [see below] could probably describe the technical apparatus behind life-changing psychological change (such as losing a loved one in a horrible way, or falling in love), the kind that come either from trauma or from some kind of massively epiphanous events. God knows there have been enough of those events over the last 3 years but none of them appear to have penetrated the Obama dome just yet. So, no, I don't think he'll be changing anytime soon.

So, I think this latest gambit is just that. Although "gambit" might be a little too aggressive a term. In chess one attempts a gambit with the idea of following through with any opening that may occur in your opponent's game plan. Obama has had any number of chances to plunge into the breach but each time he's decided it would be better to let his enemies carry away their wounded and rebuild their defenses. It reminds me of the maddening intransigence of the civil war general McClellan who ran the Army of the Potomac, preferring to drill and practice at war for month after month while incredible opportunities to strike at the heart of confederate troops passed him by. When his patience had finally run out, Lincoln sent McClellan a telegram saying "General, if you are not going to use your troops, I'd like to borrow them for a while."

I feel the same way about Obama. If he's not going to use his position as President, use the bully pulpit, and the FUCKING FOLLOW THROUGH ON THE GODDAM FUCKING RHETORIC....I'd  like to use it for just a month. I would leave a bloody trail through the ranks of these traitorous goddam fucking Republicans. "Pyhrric victory" I hear someone saying? Fucking right. I'd take any victory right now just as long as I take some of those pig-faced lying traitors down with me.


Marie
:

Someone quoted in a news article (I’m a lot of help – can’t remember the article; can’t remember the someone) said Obama believed in a Washington that just doesn’t exist – where reasonable people sit down and work out reasonable solutions to the nation’s problems. I think that guy was right. Obama thought he could wave his magical presidential powers wand & charm a bunch of hardline, fuck-you-all-I’m-in-it-for-myself officially elected sociopaths just as he charmed millions of American people, including me. Rhetoric gets you elected; hardball gets your policies passed. Obama is like the Robert Redford character in “The Candidate” who says as the end of the film, after he’s just been elected, “Now what do I do?” Obama had no fucking idea – just dreams of getting his minions to send him daily to-do lists so he could solve the problems, one-by-one. His first full day’s schedule probably looked like this:

(1) Work out with Michelle in White House personal gym. (1 hour)
(2) Call world leaders. Accept congratulations. (2 hours)
(3) Call Mitch McConnell. Get him to agree to stimulus bill. Remind him to get his caucus behind him. Accept congratulations. (30 min.)
(4) Get Chief Justice Roberts over here to re-administer the oath. Accept congratulations. Pose for photo with CJ Fuck-Up. (10 min.)
(5) Play a little B-ball (1 hour)
(6) Have an apple & some cottage cheese. (15 min.)
(7) Close Gitmo. (5 min.)
(8) Call Wall Street CEOs. Tell them to quit giving themselves big bonuses, stop making those crooked deals, & start lending more. Accept congratulations. Hit them up for 2012. (1 1/2 hours)
(9) Talk to the kids about how their school day went. Congratulate them on doing so well. Show them the secret panel in the Oval Office desk. (15 min.)
(10) Tell Geithner to put those fucking banks in receivership & make sure there are no presidential fingerprints on the move. Give Geithner some public relations pointers. (15 min.)
(11) Stop by the Lincoln Memorial & ask Lincoln why he thought the job was so tough. Thank Secret Service detail. (30 min.)

 

Somehow it didn’t work out that way.


Aphrodite:

I read somewhere (forget where) that since Biden will be too old to run for president in five years, he will step down and become Sec. of State.  And that Obama will ask Xavier Becerra to be his running mate to get the dwindling Hispanic support back, especially given that Marco Rubio may be no. 2 on the GOP ticket.  This would set Becerra up to run in 2016 and snag the vote of the fast growing demographic in the USA.  And I betcha Hillary is on the short list for Supreme Court.


Apollo:

Hillary on the Supreme Court.....hmmm. I guess it would allow her to drop her pretense of being a war loving demagogue as she was during Bush II, if it was a pretense. When you're on the court you can just be your own true self. Like Sam Alito is an asshole and John Roberts is a lying piece of shit and Clarence Thomas is a far-right extremist who sleeps his way through arguments and the Dark Lord is a smug, know-it-all far right-wing wise ass, and....


Well, you get the idea.

It's not that I think it would be a bad idea. I think she might make a fine justice. Politically she might be one of the few Democrats who could make the cut seeing as Republicans would lambaste anyone without her political pedigree and connections whom they thought might actually rule in favor of actual justice rather than right-wing expediency. Hillary has worked hard at building connections across the aisle. But even those connections would evaporate in a congress ruled by the Issas and Ryans and Bachmanns, not to mention the Lil' Randys [Paul] in the senate who would vote against anyone who didn't masturbate to Ayn Rand.

Marie, too bad that list [above] is probably close to Obama's actual fantasy of day one.


Marie:

I see no chance of Hillary’s being nominated to the Court. Because of Washington acrimony, presidents have to nominate young candidates; they don’t have the luxury of giving their cronies Lifetime Achievement Awards. I haven’t done the statistics, but it’s a sure bet that turnover on the Court today is way lower than it ever has been. Of course people died younger in the old days (tho that was less true of people who could afford the best health care of the day), so you’d have to factor all that in. But still. Probably half of Americans weren’t even born when Scalia took the oath. Haven’t done the demographics there, either.


Apollo
:

The biggest problem, as I see it, for us, is what, or who, next? If the political pendulum swings the way it usually does (and since Reagan, that pendulum swings much farther to the right with every cycle) we will have a Repuke president in five years. Five more years for Obama to hem and haw and let the Tea Party set the agenda. His eight years will end with some kind of dramatic flourish, something he can highlight in his memoirs, or more depressingly, it will end in disaster, despondency, spiritual destitution. And what will he say then?

"Apres moi, le deluge" would probably be appropriate. And truthful.

For who do the Democrats have in the wings? Hillary will be too old. Biden? LMAO. Who? There are no rising stars, even no faux stars a la Bobby Jindal. At one point I thought Jim Webb might be someone we could look to but I haven't heard a word from him in years.

So what we have to look forward to is one of the intellectual dwarfs now running on the Repuke side. Or someone even worse.

There will be no appetite for another Democratic president after this guy is through. None. So thank you for that, Mr. President.


Asclepius (weighing in late in the conversation [doctors are always late]):

Re: Obama's character and ability to change, the way I see it is that he has the temperament and intelligence of an excellent constitutional law professor, but not of a savvy, down in the dirt pol -- which, of course is exactly what he needs to be. He just does not have the guts for dirty fights, and what a shame that he needs to. But he does.

I think Obama is basically his mother's son.  She was a scholar and mediator par excellence. However, she was quite impractical in many ways and found it hard to stay focused. She was loved and honored for her fairness and decency and her ability to research and write simply and beautifully about the importance of craftmaking in the  Indonesian culture, especially among the women, who had for generations sustained their families and contribute to their culture. She  researched endlessly about the various villages and their differing customs and contributions. Some say she probably got too nitty-gritty. But that was her passion. She also "held court" among expatriates and Indonesians alike -- which is a bit what Barry enjoys doing. And she always stayed above the fray as a non-judgmental, tolerant role-model.

Obama inherited his mother's fluency and ability to write beautifully, and I think her values. However, he had no useful male role model, so never learned to deal with bullies who tormented him, much less bullies who were supposed to serve him -- i.e., Larry Summers. I do not think it is in his nature to be a warrior (as Hillary is) and all the male Republican candidates are, with the exception of Rick Santorum (who is just a wart).  He is a good strategist about things he deems important and stays on course like a laser beam -- think bin Laden. But he can't seem to grasp the concept and necessity of fighting the foe every day, and is unable to get his own hands dirty, although he is certainly able to let others do it for him. So ... he depends on his silver tongue and golden rhetoric to "play dirty," and we have seen how ineffectual that is.

I do think he has the news about the Republicans, but it remains to be seen whether he will just travel around and speechify to the American people about how obstructive "those people" are or whether he can take his silver tongue to the Hill and smite down the toads. I'm not very hopeful. The Bully Pulpit should be his strong suit, but he cannot manage the necessary strong or vile language!

The other part of Barry's character is the genetic inheritance from his ambitious, overly confident father -- a crazy alcoholic with hubris coming out of every pore. Put that together with his mediating professorial style and  essential decency and -- yikes. Not a fit.

I agree with Marie that he cannot change who he is. None of us can, really. We can change our perspective, come to new understandings, and gain wisdom (or not), but we cannot change our essential temperament. Whatever repetoire we learn and put into practice will be in our own style.

Tuesday
Sep202011

The Commentariat -- September 21

John Dickerson of Slate thinks this time the President really means what he says -- because "the previous approach [of caving] didn't work." CW: yeah, we noticed. ...

... I've posted a "Does He Really Mean It This Time?" page on Off Times Square today. You can write on this or something else, as usual. ...

... David Kocieniewski of the New York Times: "President Obama's proposal for a new tax on millionaires echoes a call in many countries struggling with budget deficits and overwhelming debts to make the wealthy pay more. Britain and France have imposed new taxes on their highest earners — and Italy, Spain, Greece and Japan are considering similar moves.... Obama ... has also framed his plan as a way to make the system more equitable. Specifically, his proposal would counteract decades of tax reductions for most Americans that have given the wealthy the most benefit. But the idea being embraced by much of the world faces strong opposition in the United States from Republicans and other conservatives who say it would harm the economy and cost jobs." CW: another he said/he said report. ...

... Steve Benen finds some cracks in the Republicans' no new taxes ever policy. Benen notes that this is because all the polls are against the GOP policy; Americans want the rich to pay more.

** "Doom!" The Lessons of History Fall on Deaf Ears. John Judis has an excellent long piece in The New Republic: "Unless there is a fundamental — and difficult-to-imagine — change in the way our politics interacts with our economy, the United States and much of the world are headed for a very grim future." I highly recommend it, especially to our conservative readers who are trying to decide which Republican candidate will do the least harm. Answer: None of 'em. ...

... Paul Krugman recommends Judis' article & adds, "The amazing thing now is not that we’re having a crisis, it’s the fact that we’re having the same crisis, and making the same mistakes. A lot of the blame goes to the economists, by the way, who abandoned what they used to know — and many of whom are giving bad advice now, I firmly believe, based more on ego and political affiliation than on analysis. That is, I believe that we’re looking at a moral failure as well as an intellectual failure."

David Corn, in The New Republic, parodies & takes down David Brooks for his nasty little lies about the Obama deficit-reduction plan. ...

... Tim Noah, also in The New Republic, is just plain sick of Brooks' bullshit about the rich paying all the taxes & how Obama is being "mean and intransigent" because he won't give the rich a break. Noah writes, "Oh, please. The top 10 percent pays nearly 70 percent of all income taxes [about which Brooks whined] because the top 10 percent makes half the income." ...

... AND ...

... "you people" being Brooks. Krugman writes, "Tax policy has very much leaned into that growing inequality, not against it — and anyone who says otherwise should not be trusted on this issue, or any other." (Emphasis added.) CW: it is stunning that one NYT columnist would call another completely untrustworthy, and that's what Krugman said about Brooks today: that David Brooks cannot be trusted to be honest about any issue.

New York Times Editors: "Troy Davis is scheduled to be executed on Wednesday for the 1989 killing of a police officer in Savannah, Ga. The Georgia pardon and parole board’s refusal to grant him clemency is appalling in light of developments after his conviction: reports about police misconduct, the recantation of testimony by a string of eyewitnesses and reports from other witnesses that another person had confessed to the crime.... The board’s failure to commute Mr. Davis’s death sentence to life without parole was a tragic miscarriage of justice." ...

... Steve Kornacki of Salon on the implications of Davis' impending execution for the death penalty -- and, implicitly -- what it says about Americans.

President Obama should take a moment out of his very busy schedule today to commute the sentence of Mr. Davis to life without possibility of parole. Yes, he can. -- Constant Weader

CW: Bob Reich agrees with me (almost word-for-word! -- see today's Ledes): "Whatever shred of doubt you may have harbored about the determination of congressional Republicans to keep the economy in the dumps through Election Day should now be gone. Today, in advance of a key meeting of the Federal Reserve Board’s Open Market Committee to decide what to do about the continuing awful economy and high unemployment, top Republicans ...  stated in no uncertain terms the Fed should take no further action to lower long-term interest rates and juice the economy.... Besides, they've never met a government institution they don’t mind trashing." ...

... Steve Benen: "... the leaders of a major political party appear eager, if not desperate, to prevent steps that may improve the economy. The top four GOP members of Congress, including the Speaker of the House, practically demanded yesterday that no steps be taken at all as our anemic growth stalls and the job crisis intensifies. [CW Note: all links that follow are Benen's, & they point to the evidence of his assertions.] The 'sabotage' question comes up from time to time, and this certainly won’t help. As things stand, Republican leaders, some of whom have admitted that defeating President Obama is their single highest priority, now want the Fed to sit on its hands, want to strip the American Jobs Act of its most effective measures, and want to raise middle-class taxes. Oh, and they’re threatening to shut down the government, too. These are just the positions they’ve talked up over the last week." ...

     ... CW: Actually, Matt, I think the story of the day is the execution of Troy Davis -- a man who may be innocent (see links above). I am physically sick about it.

Massachusetts Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren appeared on Morning Joe today. And she sticks it to assholes Mark Halperin & Joe Scarborough who think they're going to hit her with a gotcha question:

Josh Boak of Politico: Contra a Republican Congressional parade of industrial whiners, "Federal regulations may not be so bad after all. Challenging a flood of firsthand business testimonials about the burden of federal red tape, new research by environmental and consumer groups suggests some regulations might even lay the groundwork for a lasting economic recovery." Thanks to Doug R. for the link.

Steve Thomma of McClatchy News: "A new McClatchy-Marist poll finds that Obama looks increasingly vulnerable in next year's election, with a majority of voters believing he'll lose to any Republican, a solid plurality saying they'll definitely vote against him and most potential Republican challengers gaining on him." CW: Hmm, maybe progressives should be defending Obama more. ...

... AND Andy Borowitz of the award-winning Borowitz Report, always a reliable source for public polling results: "Frustration with President Barack Obama has grown to the point where some voters are now considering replacing him with people who appear to be blatantly brain-damaged, according to a new poll released today."

AlterNet: "Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has been stripped of legal immunity ... for acts of torture against US citizens authorized while he was in office. The 7th Circuit made the ruling in the case of two American contractors who were tortured by the US military in Iraq after uncovering a smuggling ring within an Iraqi security company [which] ... was under contract to the Department of Defense.... The ruling comes as Rumsfeld begins his book tour with a visit to Boston on Wednesday, September 21, and as new, uncensored photos of Abu Ghraib spark fresh outrage across [the] Internet." CW Warning: horrendous photos accompany the article.

What Ron Suskind wrote in his book on the Obama White House:

Looking back, this place would be in court for a hostile workplace.... Because it actually fit all of the classic legal requirements for a genuinely hostile workplace for women. -- Anita Dunn

What Dunn actually told Suskind, based on his recorded interview of Dunn, which Washington Post reporters reviewed:

I remember once I told Valerie [Jarrett] that, I said if it weren’t for the president, this place would be in court for a hostile workplace.... Because it actually fit all of the classic legal requirements for a genuinely hostile workplace to women. -- Anita Dunn

     -- Via Kevin Drum of Mother Jones. CW: Substantive difference? You betcha.

A Sweatshop in Allentown. Spencer Soper of the Allentown, Pennsylvania, Morning Call documents conditions in Allentown's Amazon.com warehouse where summer temperatures regularly rise to 100 degrees with a heat index well above that,they keep a team of paramedics [in an air-conditioned room] to deal with all the heatstroke victims, there have been numerous OSHA complaints including at least one from a doctor who treated heatstroke sufferers, Amazon demands workers perform at super-human speed even under such conditions, and most workers are temps, many of whom get fired & marched out in front of others as examples. CW: Now wonder they call it "Amazon." Allentown has always been a factory town, & it's had a high unemployment rate for decades. There is a high immigrant population there, and it's rough. When I lived in nearby Western New Jersey, politicians used to like to scare their constituents by warning, "If we don't do [whatever], they'll bus people in from Allentown." You might want to think twice before you buy your next book or doodad from Amazon. I'm boycotting the bastards. Thanks to Kate M. for the link.

Would you buy a $16 muffin or pay $8.24 for a cup of coffee? Oh, wait, you already did. But somebody in the DOJ ate it. Jerry Markon of the Washington Post: "A report released Tuesday by the [Justice] Department’s acting inspector general, Cynthia A. Schnedar, is full of what she called 'wasteful or extravagant spending' at 10 law enforcement conferences spanning the George W. Bush and Obama administrations. Descriptions of cookies and brownies costing the government nearly $10 each and beef Wellington hors d’oeuvres at $7.32 per serving struck a nerve in Washington, where austerity and belt-tightening are the watchwords at a time of economic hardship."

Ed Kilgore, the Democratic Strategist, has a fairly funny piece about Phony Pundits Universal, Ltd. a few of whom immediately crawled out of jumped from the woodwork to decry Obama's dastardly "shift to the left."

Right Wing World

Israel is our oldest and most stable democratic ally in that region.... I also as a Christian have a clear directive to support Israel. So from my perspective, it's pretty easy. Both as an American and as a Christian, I am going to stand with Israel. -- Rick Perry, September 20 ...

... Rick Perry, Way Dumber & More Dangerous than Bush. William Saletan of Slate: "By framing U.S. foreign policy in terms of a religious alliance between Christians and Jews, Perry is validating the propaganda of Islamic extremists. He's jeopardizing peace, Israel, and the United States. [President George W.] Bush understood that the terrorists who struck us on 9/11 wanted a religious war. The key to defeating them wasn't to wage that war, but to refuse it. That's why Bush constantly praised Islam, emphasized American freedom of religion, and dismissed Osama Bin Laden as a renegade killer of Muslims."

Dahlia Lithwick in Slate: "The same Republicans who are dubious of government's ability to do anything right have an apparently bottomless faith in the capital-justice system. Everything is broken in America, they claim—except the machinery of death." CW Note: Lithwick wrote her post before the U.S. Supreme Court stayed the execution of Duane Buck, another person Perry was sure it was fine to send to his death.

Mixed Signals. Michael Finnegan of the Los Angeles Times: "On her visit to a traffic-signal plant Monday, Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann called it an example of how President Obama's policies are 'continuing to dig us deeper into the hole toward another recession.' Standing before a row of shiny orange trailers carrying portable solar-powered traffic lights, she said her plans for a smaller government with fewer rules and lower spending would help OMJC Signal Inc. 'grow, grow, grow, grow, grow.' ... OMJC thrives on the kind of road and bridge spending that Obama has promoted as a key remedy to the nation's economic slowdown. As much as 80% of OMJC's revenue comes from government, according to the company's chief executive, Arlen Yost..., a conservative Republican.... Yost acknowledged that his company has profited from the infrastructure spending promoted by the president." CW: I'd day Bachmann & Yost are tied for Dumbest. But I'll warrant it's a close one.

Listen to Jerry Brown, Mr. Obama. Adam Nagourney of the New York Times: California Gov. Jerry Brown, who served two terms as governor three decades ago, "has told friends he was unprepared for the extent, in his view, to which Republicans have not made sufficient efforts to accommodate him on critical issues, like putting on the ballot measures to extend taxes to avoid budget cuts.... Again and again, he said, he has found that approaches that once worked ... were no longer effective." CW: the local leaders of Right Wing World want you to fail, Governor.

Not a big deal, BUT ... Juana Summers of Politico: "... a new poll by Public Policy Polling ... showed [Texas Gov. Rick] Perry with a negative approval in Texas: while 45 percent of the state’s voters approve of Perry’s job performance, 48 percent of Texas voters say they don’t approve."

News Ledes

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution is updating their Webpage on Troy Davis. The New York Times is also updating their story regularly. You'll have to refresh the pages. Pete Williams on MSNBC-TV just (at about 7:15 pm ET) said it appears Georgia is waiting to hear whether the U.S. Supreme Court will grant a stay. At 8:00 p.m. ET, MSNBC is still reporting Davis' execution has been delayed pending the U.S. Supreme Court decision. ...

     ... New York Times Update: "The United States Supreme Court rejected a last-ditch request to step in late Wednesday to stay the Georgia execution of Troy Davis, who was convicted of gunning down a Savannah police officer 22 years ago, after Mr. Davis filed an eleventh-hour plea Wednesday with the high court." ...

     ... At about 10:50 pm ET, Pete Williams of NBC News said it was likely Mr. Davis would be executed tonight. ...

     ... MSNBC Update: Davis was executed at 11:08 pm ET. This is a tragic day for the nation.

President Obama at the U.N.:

     ... The White House site has videos of President Obama meeting in New York City with other world leaders.

President Obama addressed the United Nations General Assembly this morning. The text of the speech, as prepared, is here (pdf). New York Times: "President Obama declared his opposition to the Palestinian Authority’s bid for statehood through the Security Council on Wednesday, throwing the weight of the United States directly in the path of the Arab democracy movement even as he hailed what he called the democratic aspirations that have taken hold throughout the Middle East and North Africa."

Reuters: "The Federal Reserve on Wednesday looks set to launch a fresh effort to invigorate the faltering economic recovery, embarking on what could be the first in a series of incremental steps to foster stronger growth." ...

     ... New York Times Update: "The Federal Reserve announced a new plan Wednesday to stimulate growth by purchasing $400 billion in long-term Treasury securities with proceeds from the sale of short-term government debt, defying Republican demands to refrain from new actions. In extending its campaign of novel efforts to shake the economy from its torpor, the Fed said that it was responding to evidence that there was a clear need for help." CW: What? And ignore extraordinary pressure from Republicans to let the country go to rack and ruin? I guess Ben Bernanke is "almost treasonous," after all. Good for him. (See next link.)

... BUT New York Times: "Even though the financial markets have been counting on the Federal Reserve to take action, Republican Congressional leadership sent a letter to the Federal Reserve chairman on Tuesday evening urging it not to engage in further stimulus." CW: this should end any lingering doubts you might have that Republicans don't really want the economy to tank. Yes, they do.

Washington Post: "The Obama administration has sharply warned Pakistan that it must cut ties with a leading Taliban group based in the tribal region along the Afghan border and help eliminate its leaders, according to officials from both countries. In what amounts to an ultimatum, administration officials have indicated that the United States will act unilaterally if Pakistan does not comply."

Washington Post: "The two Americans held in Iran for more than two years will be freed within hours, their lawyer said on Wednesday. After waiting several days for a judge to return from vacation, lawyer Masoud Shafiei secured a second signature that was needed to free Shane Bauer and Joshua Fattal on $1 million bail." ...

     ** New York Times Update: "Two Americans arrested while hiking along the Iran-Iraq frontier two years ago and sentenced to eight years for espionage were released Wednesday on $1 million bail by the Iranian authorities, news agencies reported. The men, Shane M. Bauer and Joshua F. Fattal, both 29, were seen by reporters for The Associated Press leaving Evin prison in a diplomatic convoy including Swiss and Omani officials. Press TV, a state-controlled broadcaster in Iran, also said that the men had left the prison and were headed in the direction of Tehran’s international airport."