6.19.2010

Why isn't Biden heading the effort in the Gulf? This is perfect....

Why isn't Joe Biden in the Gulf everyday, overseeing the effort?

Watch this video (the first 40 seconds are really funny) and tell me that he doesn't strike the right tone of concern, empathy and common sense. Obama might be handling this well internally, but the perception is terrible. Put Biden on it, let him be the message guy. He's the closest thing this administration has to an empathizer-in-chief, Bubba-style.

Is there really any point to this CBS? Has Murdoch bought you, too?

Balloon Juice via Cesca

So who would finish a story about Obama visiting Ohio to talk about the economy with this paragraph:

The trip Columbus probably cost taxpayers between $500,000 and $1 million.

Air Force One alone bills out at $100,000 per hour, and the round trip is nearly two hours. Adding to the cost are military aircraft to carry limos and secret service vehicles, Marine One on standby, Secret Service, local police and other factors.

Mark Knoller, CBS news journamamalist.

Apparently Obama should remain sequestered at the White House to save taxpayer money. Which makes sense, if you are complete moron or Mark Knoller. Which might be redundant.
Why? What's the point? Presidents and their security have been travelling at taxpayer expense since 1793. Why are you making a point about it now? Where were you when Bush was routinely commuting to Crawford for vacations? This is a shoddy excuse for journalism.

Let him know @markknoller.

6.18.2010

More Joe Barton: Rand sympathizes, Stewart destroys, GOP looks to him to lead

Rand Paul decided to stick his foot in his mouth. Again.

He offered support to Rep. Joe Barton of Texas who publicly apologized to BP yesterday for the "shakedown" where the White House tried to force them to accept financial responsibility for the disaster they created in the Gulf of Mexico.
HuffPost

Tea Party darling offered his sympathies for the Texas Republican, noting that he too understands what it's like to be at the bottom of a political pile-on. And in a re-airing of a critique he made weeks earlier, he accused the White House of taking too tough a tone with the oil giant.
Then comes a reminder from Press Secretary Robert Gibbs about the stakes of the November election.



Finally, Jon Stewart sums it up, calling Barton a "disdainful asshole".

6.17.2010

Republican apologizes to BP; Senate votes to protect Bil Oil tax giveaways

"It is a tragedy of the first proportion that a private corporation can be subjected to what I would characterize as a shakedown, in this case a $20 billion shakedown."

Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX)

image via Gawker


...Also, via Cesca

The Senate voted to preserve corporate welfare for Big Oil yesterday.
Yesterday, the Senate voted down an amendment to its tax extenders bill, proposed by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), that would have cut $35 billion in tax subsidies to Big Oil companies, redirecting $25 billion to reduce the deficit and $10 billion to energy-efficiency grants. The vote was 35-61.
In other words, 61 senators voted to preserve $35 billion in corporate welfare for oil companies. That includes 21 Democrats, by the way.

Jon Stewart takes on Obama's BP Speech, our obsessive demand for oil


6.14.2010

Teabaggers literally do not understand American Revolutionary History

From Bob Cesca's awesome site comes this video of a teabagging wingnut named Rick Barber running for Congress from Alabama's 2nd district.



Barber illustrates a point I've been trying to make: teabaggers and wingnuts either do not or choose not to understand U.S. history, especially the history of the American Revolutionary Government. The premise is that he's sitting down with a group of Founding Fathers and explaining to them how bad things are today. Rick's problem is that he makes excellent hyperbole, but he's almost universally wrong on his facts. He wouldn't pass my 9th grade American History class.

Let's dissect his issues:
He starts off with "and I would impeach him"
Clearly meaning President Obama, my question to Barber and the baggers is: "on what grounds?" The bogus nonsense about him being Kenyan? Because you don't like what he's done? Because he's black? My guess is that the last one is closest to the truth.

Barber complains about an income tax, that we have to report what we earn to the government
While it's true that there was no income tax or IRS in Washington's day, it is a bald-faced lie that Washington opposed taxes. Washington almost universally supported the ideas of Alexander Hamilton. The leading Federalist of his day, Hamilton believed in a government big enough to enforce the rules that he felt needed to be placed for the common good. This included a national bank (to build good credit with foreign nations - a rousing success) and an excise tax on whiskey in 1791.

We were in major debt, mostly to France, from the Revolution. In order to pay off our debts, Hamilton proposed, and Washington backed, a tax on whiskey. This tax was anathema to farmers in western Pennsylvania, many of whom had never heard about the Revolution and didn't give a whit who was in charge. These farmers rioted, severely injuring several tax collectors and creating general mayhem. Washington, realizing that the states rights government under the Articles of Confederation fell because Shay's Rebellion had created the (real) perception that the government couldn't keep the peace, knew he had to act decisively. And so Washington put his uniform back on, and with his former aide-de-camp Hamilton, led the U.S. military into western PA to force the farmers to pay the tax and acknowledge the supremacy of the federal government at the barrel of a gun.

So much for an anti-tax, states rights Washington.

He decries an "All powerful separate court system"
Wrong, wrong, wrong. One, the court system is not all-powerful. Checks and balances my friend. They exist. Show me where the courts have run roughshod on your rights over the will of the legislative and executive branches.

Two, yeah, it IS a separate court system, as directed by the same Founding Fathers Barber is hallucinating about meeting. Three branches, as proposed and approved by a very states rights-leaning James Madison.

Complains that the IRS can perform it's duties "without representation"
Really? The IRS was created in it's quasi-current form by the 16th Amendment after it's initial inception by Republican Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War. The 16th Amendment was lawfully proposed by progressive Republican Theodore Roosevelt and approved by a lawfully-elected (yes, elected!) Congress via the mechanics of the Constitution.

Furthermore, Congress has the power to eliminate the IRS anytime it sees fit. That it hasn't doesn't make the IRS illegal.

Barber can dislike the IRS (I do, though for different reasons, I'm sure), but he can't claim usurpation of power. Congress created it and Congress makes the rules for it. It didn't generate itself out of a little ball of evil sent to earth by aliens via asteroid.

We are entitled to our own opinions, but not our own facts.

"IRS is going to force us to buy health insurance"
No, they're not. A lawfully passed piece of legislation may force you to buy health insurance (the same way you're forced to buy auto insurance), and the IRS may be directed to enforce that edict via that same lawful legislation. But a direction to enforce is much different than "the IRS forcing us", which sounds like more implied usurpation.

Wrong again. Not liking it isn't the same as illegal.

Health care + government = "cram it down our throats"
What IS it with teabaggers and cramming stuff down their throats? Come up with a different euphemism. Of course, they named themselves teabaggers, so wha'da'ya want?

"You gentlemen (referring to the mystically-gathered Fathers) revolted over a tea tax. A TEA TAX!"
Oversimplified bullshit. They revolted over a litany of minor taxes because those taxes were placed by a government over which they had no say. It wasn't the taxes, it was that they had no say in those taxes. There is a HUGE difference here: as English citizens, they were used to paying taxes. The growing problem was a lack of say in the government that placed those taxes.

Further, it was frustruation that those taxes were going to pay for England's wars in Europe that were accomplishing nothing good here. These wars were sucking us in to conflicts (The French and Indian War) that had nothing to do with this continent. They were wrecking our economy and we didn't think we should be obligated to fund them.

But it was also about many events besides taxes. It was the feeling that, after almost 170 years here we had earned the right to self-determination (as Thomas Paine said "It was absurd for an island to rule a continent"). It was about alienation from Britain and a feeling that we were really no longer English. Any ties we had were residual.

It was about mercantilism, that England was using us as a cash-generating ATM. They told us who we could buy from and who we could sell to and at what prices. Mercantilism and the Navigation Acts, over which we had no electoral say, caused a lot of law-abiding families to have to resort to criminal smuggling.

And it was a bit about hooliganism. Sam Adams and the Sons of Liberty were intimidating bullies. Not that they didn't have a valid point, but they were roughnecks looking for an excuse to pick a fight. The Tea Act (and more importantly, the Stamp Act) and the lack of representation in Parliament were those excuses. The Boston Massacre and the propaganda created by Paul Revere, silversmith and member of the Sons, was the spark that blew the powderkeg.

Argue the merits of the Revolution all day, but there is no tax or law on the books in America that has not been lawfully passed by your representatives in Congress and signed by the President as proscribed by the Constitution.

Rick Barber and his wingnut friends might not like the laws - hell, there are lots of them I don't like. But that doesn't mean I get to cry "unfair! illegal!". Barber has representation in Congress that he is allowed to petition for redress of any perceived grievances. He is, obviously, allowed to run for Congress to bring his idiotic views to light.

This situation of "I don't like the laws, so they must be illegal" is so different from the complaints of the Sons of Liberty. The American colonists literally had no representation in Parliament (not representation that they disagreed with like the teabaggers, they literally had no representation). This claim would be laughable if there weren't so many uneducated schmucks buying into the Palin/Fox/Beck line of horseshit.

"Gather your armies"
Barber might want to educate himself on the term "sedition". It means to encourage the overthrow of one's own government. This phrase, "gather your armies", like so much of the wingnuttia lexicon, treads ever so close to that seditious line.

6.13.2010

Obama hammers teabaggers on oil spill

Almost 2 months in, Obama is strating to talk tough about the oil spill. His points below are correct and allude to what's been said for months - the right-wing doesn't care about issues, they care about dinging Obama. He's damned if he does and damned if he doesn't.
Politico

In an interview with POLITICO, the president said: “I think it’s fair to say, if six months ago, before this spill had happened, I had gone up to Congress and I had said we need to crack down a lot harder on oil companies and we need to spend more money on technology to respond in case of a catastrophic spill, there are folks up there, who will not be named, who would have said this is classic, big-government overregulation and wasteful spending.”
The president also implied that anti-big government types such as Tea Party activists were being hypocritical on the issue.

“Some of the same folks who have been hollering and saying ‘do something’ are the same folks who, just two or three months ago, were suggesting that government needs to stop doing so much,” Obama said. “Some of the same people who are saying the president needs to show leadership and solve this problem are some of the same folks who, just a few months ago, were saying this guy is trying to engineer a takeover of our society through the federal government that is going to restrict our freedoms.”
Washington Post

"Even though I'm president of the United States, my power is not limitless," he told Grand Isle, La., locals in the video, released Friday. "So I can't dive down there and plug the hole. I can't suck it up with a straw. All I can do is make sure that I put honest, hard-working smart people in place ... to implement this thing."

Stewart On Latest BP Developments: "We Are So Fucked"