Author: HL

  • Late Late Night FDL: You Say Yes, I Say Yes

    Late Late Night FDL: You Say Yes, I Say Yes
    Featuring music of Lella Fathia and VETO.

    Featuring music of Lella Fathia and VETO.

    What’s on your mind tonight?

    More man-on-dog Republicanism
    Republican projection is getting more disturbing all the time.

    Whether it be mules, box-turtles, or man’s “best friend” Republicans are sure the rest of you want to touch the naughty parts as much as they do.

    And this obsession has started to flower into dementia in other areas, for example, Mike Huckabee has made his stock in trade by being a pleasant fellow that is relatively sane as long as he’s compared the Republican standing next to him. But, as always, its a sad facade.

    Say, Mike, put down the doughnut and tell us what you think about same-sex couples adopting:

    “Children are not puppies”

    That’s nice Mike, but don’t tell it to me, tell it to David Vitter, he’s wearing the dog collar.

    But taking Huckabee’s “logic”, such as it is, on it’s own right-wing terms I believe that James Dobson can tell you the distinction.

    Dogs you beat, as much as possible.

    Children, you take in the shower and you show them your manly package.

    It’s all very clear now — and the rest of us we can settle this whole problem with a blanket restraining order.

  • The Vatican Now Officially Approves of the Beatles

    The Vatican Now Officially Approves of the Beatles
    The Vatican continues to be rocked by a wide-ranging sex abuse scandal, and the pressure it’s under could have something to do with its newly revised opinion of The Beatles. Although the Holy See’s official newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, pointed to the potentially Satanic … (continued)

    Beatles

    The Vatican continues to be rocked by a wide-ranging sex abuse scandal, and the pressure it’s under could have something to do with its newly revised opinion of The Beatles. Although the Holy See’s official newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, pointed to the potentially Satanic … (continued)

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  • Jackie Kennedy Interviews: Long-Sealed Transcripts To Be Published

    Jackie Kennedy Interviews: Long-Sealed Transcripts To Be Published
    NEW YORK — During the first half of 1964, just months after her husband was assassinated, Jacqueline Kennedy sat for seven interviews with historian and…

    U.S. Looking To Get More From Oil, Natural Gas Leases
    WASHINGTON — The Interior Department says it will study how other countries collect oil and natural gas royalties to determine whether the United States can…

    Robert Reich: The Future of American Jobs
    More Americans will be working, but for less pay. The approaching recovery will be tepid because so many people will lack the money needed to buy all the goods and services the economy produces.

    Mark Ridley-Thomas: Child Deaths Cannot Be Tolerated, Especially When They Can Be Prevented
    As a society we must treat the threat to children as seriously as we do the threat of terrorism. We can find ways to act both aggressively and fairly to protect the children in our custody.

    JPMorgan Chase Argues Against Mortgage Modifications, Citing Sanctity Of Contracts
    With millions of homeowners losing their homes to foreclosure during this recession, megabank JPMorgan Chase plans to argue against the Obama administration’s latest weapon in…

  • Wasting no time, Liz Cheney distorts Kagan’s record to call her a radical

    Wasting no time, Liz Cheney distorts Kagan’s record to call her a radical

    Liz Cheney said that Elena Kagan’s decision while she was dean of Harvard Law School to reimpose restrictions on military recruiters because of the military’s discriminatory “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy was “radical.” But Kagan made her decision only after a federal appeals court — including a judge appointed by President Reagan — struck down the law requiring access for military recruiters. Moreover, Kagan’s policy was similar to policies at many other law schools.

    Right-wing media distort Kagan’s position on military recruiters on campus

    Liz Cheney claimed Kagan’s position is “radical.” From a segment on the April 11 edition of Fox News Sunday discussing the possibility that President Obama will name Kagan — who is currently solicitor general — to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens:

    MARA LIASSON (NPR correspondent and Fox News contributor): There is some controversy about her [Kagan] too. You know, she banned legal recruiters at Harvard —

    CHRIS WALLACE (host): Military recruiters.

    LIASSON: — legal — military legal recruiters at Harvard. But, on the other hand, she did recruit more conservative professors to campus when she was the dean there. But I do think the threshold decision is how big a fight do you want to have?

    WALLACE: Liz, your thoughts about the choice the president has, and any thoughts about these specific nominees?

    CHENEY: Well, I actually know Elena Kagan somewhat. She was one of my professors at the University of Chicago, and she was a very good professor. She didn’t let politics into the classroom, and she was rigorous and demanding, and so I have respect for her from that perspective. I think her decision on, you know, fighting — not allowing the military to recruit on campus clearly was very radical. I think there are two things that make this decision –

    WALLACE: This had to do with the issue of the military’s policy on gay in the militaries, right? That’s why she didn’t allow the military recruiters on campus.

    CHENEY: Right, and she fought it all the way to the Supreme Court and lost badly.

    Schlafly misleadingly claimed Kagan “defied the Solomon Amendment.” From Phyllis Schlafly’s March 31 syndicated column:

    Obama’s disdain for the military is no secret, and the leading names on his short list for possible Supreme Court appointment are as anti-military as he is. The number of veterans in Congress has declined to about 21 percent, but that’s enough for them to make a public demand that high-court diversity include a veteran.

    Elena Kagan, who tops Obama’s short list, banned military recruiters from the Harvard Law School campus where she was the dean. She defied the Solomon Amendment, passed by Congress and signed by President Bill Clinton, which requires withholding federal funds from any schools that exclude the military from their campuses.

    Kagan even signed a legal brief claiming that the Solomon Amendment was unconstitutional. The Supreme Court rejected that argument by an 8-to-0 vote.

    In fact, upon becoming dean, Kagan complied with Bush administration interpretation of law on military recruiters

    Solomon Amendment, enacted in 1994, required schools to provide access to military recruiters or lose funding. The Solomon Amendment currently states that no funds from various federal agencies may be provided to schools:

    if the Secretary of Defense determines that that institution (or any subelement of that institution) has a policy or practice (regardless of when implemented) that either prohibits, or in effect prevents –

    (1) the Secretary of a military department from maintaining, establishing, or operating a unit of the Senior Reserve Officer Training Corps (in accordance with section 654 of this title and other applicable Federal laws) at that institution (or any subelement of that institution); or

    (2) a student at that institution (or any subelement of that institution) from enrolling in a unit of the Senior Reserve Officer Training Corps at another institution of higher education.

    In the 1990s, before Kagan became dean, Harvard Law had banned military recruiters from using the school’s Office of Career Services. Harvard Law School’s Office of Career Services (OCS) maintains an anti-discrimination policy that bars employers who discriminate based on age, race, sex, or sexual orientation from recruiting through OCS. Up until 2002, Harvard Law barred the military from recruiting through OCS due to the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy regarding homosexuality, but allowed military recruitment through the Harvard Law School Veterans Association.

    In 2002, still before Kagan became dean, Harvard Law reversed policy and allowed recruiters access to OCS. In 2002, the Defense Department interpreted the Solomon Amendment to mean that if Harvard Law maintained its ban on military recruitment through the OCS then it risked losing federal funding. Harvard Law subsequently carved out an exception to its anti-discrimination policy to allow the military to recruit through OCS.

    Kagan continued to allow military recruiters access to OCS after becoming dean. Kagan became dean of Harvard Law School in 2003. In a September 2005 letter to the Harvard Law School community, Kagan stated that in 2003 and 2004, she maintained the exemption allowing military recruiters access to OCS in those years.

    Only after appellate court ruled the Solomon Amendment unconstitutional did Kagan ban recruiters from using OCS

    In 2004, federal appellate court ruled Solomon Amendment unconstitutional. In 2004, a three-judge panel of the U.S Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit held 2-1 in FAIR v. Rumsfeld that the Solomon Amendment violated First Amendment free-speech rights: “The Solomon Amendment requires law schools to express a message that is incompatible with their educational objectives, and no compelling governmental interest has been shown to deny this freedom.” In 2006, the Supreme Court reversed the 3rd Circuit decision.

    Reagan-appointed judge agreed with 3rd Circuit’s ruling. Judge Walter Stapleton, a Reagan appointee, joined the majority opinion in the case. Stapleton had previously been appointed to a federal district court judgeship by President Nixon.

    After the ruling, Kagan reinstated OCS ban but stated that Harvard Law School Veterans Association was coordinating military recruitment. Kagan — who became dean of Harvard Law in 2003 — reinstated the ban against military recruitment through OCS for one semester in 2005 after the 3rd Circuit held that the law was unconstitutional. As Kagan explained in a September 2005 letter to her colleagues:

    The Law School’s anti-discrimination policy, adopted in 1979, provides that any employer that uses the services of OCS to recruit at the school must sign a statement indicating that that it does not discriminate on various bases, including sexual orientation. As a result of this policy, the military was barred for many years from using the services of OCS. The military retained full access to our students (and vice versa) through the good offices of the Harvard Law School Veterans Association, which essentially took the place of OCS in enabling interviews to occur.

    […]

    I reinstated the application of our anti-discrimination policy to the military (after appropriate consultation with University officials) in the wake of the Third Circuit’s decision; as a result, the military did not receive OCS assistance during our spring 2005 recruiting season.

    Dozens of other law professors, Cato Institute argued against the Bush administration position on Solomon Amendment

    Kagan joined a brief with 39 other Harvard law professors arguing that Harvard’s policies did not violate the Solomon Amendment. A brief written on behalf of Kagan (in her capacity as a Harvard Law professor, not dean) and 39 other Harvard Law professors argued that because Harvard did not discriminate against military recruiters, but rather applied the same anti-discrimination policy to the military that it applied to all employers, it did not violate the Solomon Amendment. From the brief:

    First, the Solomon Amendment’s prohibition on funding is triggered only by policies that target the military or its recruiters for disfavored treatment. Second, once it is understood that evenhanded recruiting policies are beyond the statute’s ken, it is clear that Harvard Law School in full compliance — and the same is likely true of the vast majority of United States law schools.

    […]

    Accordingly, this case is not — and never has been — about whether law schools may “discriminate” against the military or whether they must provide “equal access” to military recruiters. Instead, the question is whether the Solomon Amendment confers upon military recruiters the unprecedented entitlement to disregard neutral and generally applicable recruiting rules whenever a school’s failure to make a special exemption might incidentally hinder or preclude military recruiting. The answer is “no.”

    The statute actually passed by Congress requires no such special exemptions. Instead, it targets university policies that “prohibit[], or in effect prevent[]” military recruiters “from gaining access” to campuses and students “in a manner that is … equal in quality and scope” to that provided to any other employer.

    Cato Institute: “[P]atently paternalistic” Solomon Amendment violates the Constitution. The libertarian Cato Institute filed a Supreme Court amicus curiae brief describing the position the government had taken in the litigation “patently paternalistic” and argued that it violated the First Amendment.

    Other law professors and law schools also submitted briefs arguing against the Bush administration’s position on the Solomon Amendment. Eight universities — including Harvard — filed briefs arguing against the government’s position, as did 56 Columbia University law professors, 44 Yale law professors, the Association of American Law Schools, and other organizations and individuals.

    Other law schools have had policies that accorded with Harvard’s. The Joint Appendix filed in connection with the appeal of FAIR v. Rumsfeld to the Supreme Court contains statements from numerous law professors detailing their law schools’ attempts to restrict military recruiters’ access to career services offices. Following the 3rd Circuit’s decision, in addition to Harvard, Yale and New York Law also reportedly reinstituted their restrictions against military recruiters.

    At least one other school had a more restrictive policy. According to the FAIR v. Rumsfeld complaint, from 1989-2002, at Whittier Law School, “Military recruiters were not permitted to post recruiting information, speak at school-sponsored events, sit at tables, access student/alumni addresses, leave material visible in any library area, or interview on campus. If a student expressed interest in a military JAG [Judge Advocate General] career, the director of career services would refer the student to a recruiting office.”

    After DOD objected, Kagan again allowed recruiters on campus

    In September 2005, after the Defense Department stated that it would continue to enforce its interpretation of the Solomon Amendment, Kagan wrote:

    Over the summer, however, the Department of Defense notified the University that it would withhold all possible funds if the Law School continued to bar the military from receiving OCS services. As a result, I have decided (again, after appropriate consultation) that we should lift our ban and except the military from our general non-discrimination policy. This will mean that the military will receive OCS assistance during the fall 2005 recruiting season.

  • Tea Party Movement Spreads To Military

    Tea Party Movement Spreads To Military
    A new Tea Party group, Armed Forces Tea Party Patriots, has grown quickly since being launched last month by an active duty Marine Corps sergeant. It vows to “stand up on the very soil we defended to preserve common sense conservatism and defend our Constitution that is threatened by a tyrannical government,” and has close ties to the broader Tea Party movement.

    Prosecutors: Hutaree Member Engaged In Dramatic Armed Standoff With Police
    One of the nine members of the Hutaree Christian militia prepared for a violent showdown with police — to the point that he “secreted weapons” around the rural Michigan home where he was holed up late last month — before finally surrendering after a daylong standoff, prosecutors allege in a new court filing.


  • Cuomo Crushes Little Known Republicans

    Cuomo Crushes Little Known Republicans
    A new Quinnipiac poll in New York finds Attorney General Andrew Cuomo (D) has a 74% job approval rating and commanding leads of 2-1 or more against the little-known Republican contenders in the gubernatorial race.

    Cuomo beats Rick Lazio (R), 55% to 26%, tops Carl Paladino (R), 60% to 24%, and beats Steve Levy (R), 57% to 24%. In each matchup, Cuomo gets at least 80% of the Democratic vote, plus 20% or more of the Republican vote and 50% or more of the independent vote.

    Stern to Resign from SEIU
    Ben Smith breaks the news that Service Employees International Union President Andy Stern, a prominent labor leader and a key player in the Democratic party, will resign from the organization he helped build after 14 years at the helm.

    The news came as a shock to many, though those close to Stern “had expected him to resign during the first term of the president he helped elect, and after the achievement he’d spent years focusing on, widening access to health care.”

  • Roadmap to a New Economics: Beyond Capitalism and Socialism

    Roadmap to a New Economics: Beyond Capitalism and Socialism
    We can all be leaders in building a social and economic system that really meets human needs.

    We can all be leaders in building a social and economic system that really meets human needs.

    How Financial Reporters Create Illusion to Cover Up Wall Street’s Scams
    The corporate media’s job is to sell confidence on Wall Street’s numbers, rather than tempered or even depressed expectations, no matter how realistic they may be.

    The corporate media's job is to sell confidence on Wall Street's numbers, rather than tempered or even depressed expectations, no matter how realistic they may be.

    Who’s on the Shortlist to Replace Justice Stevens?
    Three candidates are rumored to sit atop Obama’s shortlist to replace Stevens — will any of them garner a Republican filibuster?

    Three candidates are rumored to sit atop Obama's shortlist to replace Stevens — will any of them garner a Republican filibuster?

    Groups Call for Arrest of West Virginia Mine CEO
    A coalition of NGOs say Don Blankenship is "as criminally culpable as any mass murderer" for the mine disaster because he had systematically worked to avoid safety regulations.

    A coalition of NGOs say Don Blankenship is "as criminally culpable as any mass murderer" for the mine disaster because he had systematically worked to avoid safety regulations.

  • Biden Courts the Non-Aligned on Nukes

    Biden Courts the Non-Aligned on Nukes
    Vice President Joe Biden has been quietly carrying the water on Tuesday’s Nuclear Summit since Barack Obama got the keys to the White House. The challenge of convincing major global stakeholders and other key non-aligned nations to work towards tighter…



    Barack ObamaJoe BidenWhite HouseUnited StatesNuclear weapon

    Nuclear Security Summit: Realistic Expectations
    Tomorrow’s Nuclear Security Summit in Washington is a “big deal,” to paraphrase Vice President Biden. With 47 countries represented, it is the largest gathering of nations on U.S. soil since the founding conference of the United Nations met in San…


    United StatesNuclear weaponWarfare and ConflictWeaponsJoe Biden

  • VIDEO: Republicans Facing An Identity Crisis ? ?Party Of Yes? Or ?Party Of Hell No??

    VIDEO: Republicans Facing An Identity Crisis ? ?Party Of Yes? Or ?Party Of Hell No??
    GOP leaders converged on New Orleans this weekend for the Southern Republican Leadership Conference. During the conference, a rift among the speakers opened up after former House Speaker Newt Gingrich urged the GOP to move away from their obstructionist label as the “Party of No.” The American Solutions chairman called for Republicans to embrace […]

    GOP leaders converged on New Orleans this weekend for the Southern Republican Leadership Conference. During the conference, a rift among the speakers opened up after former House Speaker Newt Gingrich urged the GOP to move away from their obstructionist label as the “Party of No.” The American Solutions chairman called for Republicans to embrace a new monicker — “the Party of Yes”:

    What the left wants to do is say we’re the party of no […] So here’s what I want to ask you to encourage every candidate that you know, every incumbent you know, every staff person you know, every consultant you know. I think we should decide we’re going to be the Party of Yes.

    Gingrich can expect an uphill battle as he attempts to re-frame the GOP as anything other than the party of obstructionism, given that the right wing seems most excited about the prospect of stopping anything Obama wants to do. After Gingrich delivered the call, it didn’t take long for Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin to double down on their party’s obstructionism, touting the nickname “The Party of Hell No.”

    Think Progress compiled a video illustrating the Republican confusion. Watch it:

    With Republicans saying no to Wall Street reform, no to an extension of unemployment benefits, and preemptively saying no to the next Supreme Court appointee, it seems the GOP could resolve its internal conundrum by sticking to calling themselves “The Party of Hell No.”

    Cuccinelli mocks dangers of CO2, telling Tea Partiers to hold their breath and make the EPA happy.
    On Saturday, Virginia Attorney General attended the Powhatan Taxpayers’ Alliance Tea Party rally to address his beloved base. Cuccinelli reportedly greeted the crowd by saying that it was “great to be with so many people who appreciate the Constitution” and then talked about his challenge to the Environmental Protection Agency’s conclusion that greenhouse gases […]

    Ken Cuccinelli On Saturday, Virginia Attorney General attended the Powhatan Taxpayers’ Alliance Tea Party rally to address his beloved base. Cuccinelli reportedly greeted the crowd by saying that it was “great to be with so many people who appreciate the Constitution” and then talked about his challenge to the Environmental Protection Agency’s conclusion that greenhouse gases should be regulated under the Clean Air Act. In particular, the crowd loved when he made fun of the EPA and joked that they could hold their breath for a few seconds and make the EPA “happy”:

    “The Attorney General’s office is a very reactive office. We wouldn’t be suing the EPA if the EPA did not abandon all semblance of science and law to put out its endangerment finding on the CO2. Now, let’s make them all happy just for a moment and everybody just hold your breath,” Cuccinelli waited several seconds before saying “There you go, just a short period of time with no CO2. Now the trees are going protest but at least the EPA will be happy”.

    Cuccinelli is a full-on global warming denier, saying that climate change is “unverifiable and doctored” science. However, environmental and energy groups in Virginia are increasingly pushing back on Cuccinelli’s attempts to dismantle regulations.

  • Obama team points to smaller deficit numbers

    Obama team points to smaller deficit numbers
    The federal deficit is running significantly lower than it did last year, with the budget gap for the first half of fiscal 2010 down 8 percent over the same period a year ago, senior Obama administration officials said Monday.

    Attorney general Eric Holder to attend hearing before Senate Judiciary Committee
    Last month, Attorney General Eric Holder narrowly escaped a grilling before the Senate Judiciary Committee — thanks to the signing of President Obama’s health-care reform package on March 22, which preempted all other activity on the Hill.

    Jobless benefits advance in Senate with Republican votes
    The Senate moved closer Monday to extending jobless benefits that expired a week ago, overcoming a procedural vote over the objections of deficit-conscious Republicans.

    Obama spokesman Gibbs sounds eager for future strategist role
    Robert Gibbs does not seem particularly attached to his office.

  • Ariz. House OKs No-Permit Concealed Guns

    Ariz. House OKs No-Permit Concealed Guns
    The Arizona House voted Thursday to make the state the third in the nation to allow people to carry concealed weapons without a permit. Last week Gov Brewer signed a bill which declares that guns manufactured entirely in Arizona are exempt from federal oversight/taxes and are not subject to federal laws restricting the sale of firearms or requiring them to be registered.

  • KT Boyle: Tales From the Census Trail: KT’s Bit

    KT Boyle: Tales From the Census Trail: KT’s Bit
    I saw the recession’s effects on small town America when I took the test to become a Census worker, and found myself in a room full of businessmen and soccer moms in suits, most over age 40.

    Ari Melber: Dawn Johnsen’s Fall and Justice Stevens’ Replacement
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    Steven G. Brant: Wall Street, Nuclear Weapons, MLK Jr, and the Road From Ruin
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    Judge H. Lee Sarokin: Senator Hatch’s Warning About Whale Is All Blubber
    What Senator Hatch and conservatives really do not want are judges who render decisions with which they do not agree.

    Randy Shaw: SEIU at the Crossroads
    SEIU, a union once known for winning through grassroots power rather than financial might, now faces an uphill battle against a growing cadre of committed activists.

  • Sons Of Confederate Vets Split On McDonnell Apology

    Sons Of Confederate Vets Split On McDonnell Apology
    Some neo-Confederates aren’t happy about Governor Bob McDonnell’s apology this afternoon for failing to mention slavery in his proclamation of Confederate History Month. One member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans called it “an insult.”


    Vote-Suppression Guru Spakovsky Is Back At It
    Hans Von Spakovsky, now on the Fairfax County Board of Elections, is back in the saddle, voting to stop distributing voter registration forms in languages other than English — despite the county’s diverse population. “A step backward,” says one Democrat.

  • Would Palin Really Like to Compare Her Experience on Nukes with Obama’s?

    Would Palin Really Like to Compare Her Experience on Nukes with Obama’s?
    “Now, the president, with all the vast nuclear experience that he acquired as a community organizer and as a part-time senator, and as a full-time candidate, all that experience, still no accomplishment to date with North Korea and Iran.” – Sarah Palin at the Southern Republican Leadership Conference, April 9, 2010, as quoted by Media Matters. In […]

  • Romney Edges Paul in Straw Poll Vote

    Romney Edges Paul in Straw Poll Vote
    In case you missed it over the weekend, Mitt Romney edged out Ron Paul to win the SRLC straw poll by a single vote, reports Dave Weigel.

    Romney took 439 votes (24%) to Paul’s 438 votes (also 24%), a result that disappointed a Paul-heavy crowd that had stuck around to watch the results. Sarah Palin came in third with 330 votes (18%), and Newt Gingrich came in fourth with 321 votes (18%); Mike Huckabee, who did not attend the event, scored 4%. Total ballots cast: 1,806.

    Proving that he’s the Republican party frontrunner in 2012, Romney won the straw poll without even attending the event.

    Quote of the Day
    “We need to purge the Republicans of the weaklings. And we’re on a RINO hunt. And we’re going to drive them to extinction.”

    — Tea Party Express 3 Chairman Mark Williams, in an interview with CNN, on “Republicans in name only.”

    1994 Casts a Shadow Over 2010 Midterm Elections
    “In many ways, the 1994 election has become the template both Republicans and Democrats are looking to as they set their strategies for the fall Congressional elections,” the New York Times observes. “Democratic campaign operatives, who are girding for big losses, began meeting quietly with party strategists involved in the 1994 contests last summer, looking for lessons on how to avoid another rout.”

    “Yet 1994 seems an imprecise way to predict how this contest will play out. While there are intriguing parallels, there are some important differences as well. And though Democrats might look to those differences as glimmers of light … the divergences seem as likely to benefit Republicans as Democrats, analysts in both parties said.”

    “Further, it seems too early to measure the effect of what is perhaps the biggest difference between the two cycles — that Democrats this time succeeded in passing a major health care bill.”

  • Small-City Mayor Takes on the Pentagon — War Spending Should Be Spent on Americans, Not on Killing Afghans

    Small-City Mayor Takes on the Pentagon — War Spending Should Be Spent on Americans, Not on Killing Afghans
    We don’t just have a revenue problem in this country — we have a values and priorities problem.

    We don't just have a revenue problem in this country — we have a values and priorities problem.

    Why Working People Are Angry And Why Politicians Should Listen
    We must fight the forces of hatred in the Tea Parties by organizing to elect public officials committed to addressing economic suffering.

    We must fight the forces of hatred in the Tea Parties by organizing to elect public officials committed to addressing economic suffering.

    The Five Creepiest Moments of the Southern Republican Leadership Conference
    If anything can make you forget 3,500 Republicans chomping reindeer jerky, it’s Sarah Palin screaming "Who dat!"

    If anything can make you forget 3,500 Republicans chomping reindeer jerky, it's Sarah Palin screaming "Who dat!"

    How a New Generation Can Avoid Getting Bankrupted by Student Loan Payments
    The insanity of the private loan market is part of the excesses of the entire credit industry in the past few years. Understanding one means understanding the other.

    The insanity of the private loan market is part of the excesses of the entire credit industry in the past few years. Understanding one means understanding the other.

  • AIPAC CUTOUT: THE RISE & FALL OF THE WASHINGTON INSTITUTE FOR NEAR EAST POLICY

    AIPAC CUTOUT: THE RISE & FALL OF THE WASHINGTON INSTITUTE FOR NEAR EAST POLICY
    Please read to end. A TPM reader sends his own recollections of the Washington Institute’s founding after reading my TPM Cafe piece. I already wrote once about Bob Satloff and the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. It is, and…


    IsraelMiddle EastAmerican Israel Public Affairs CommitteeWashington Institute for Near East PolicyWarfare and Conflict

    Grief For Poland
    What a disaster. My wife’s family is Polish Jewish. We have visited the country three times and enjoyed every minute there (except, of course, at the Nazi death camps). Our kids’ great-grandmother actually is buried in the Warsaw Jewish cemetery…


    PolandWarsawExtermination campWorld War IIHistory of the Jews in Poland

    The Best Quote On AIPAC EVER!
    You never know where Jeff Goldberg will end up on a particular issue except that he will never deviate more than a few degrees from the AIPAC line. It is then no surprise that his piece today is called “AIPAC…


    American Israel Public Affairs CommitteeUnited StatesIsraelMiddle EastWarfare and Conflict

  • Lieberman Gets A Chuckle Out Of Peddling Far-Right Nuke Myth

    Lieberman Gets A Chuckle Out Of Peddling Far-Right Nuke Myth
    Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT), once a reliable vote in favor of nuclear arms reduction efforts, has now bought into the right-wing myth that our nuclear arsenal is deteriorating and that the U.S. needs to build new nuclear weapons. Lieberman on Fox News Sunday said he is “real hesitant” to vote for a New START treaty […]

    Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT), once a reliable vote in favor of nuclear arms reduction efforts, has now bought into the right-wing myth that our nuclear arsenal is deteriorating and that the U.S. needs to build new nuclear weapons. Lieberman on Fox News Sunday said he is “real hesitant” to vote for a New START treaty unless the US effectively builds new nuclear weapons:

    LIEBERMAN: Anytime we are working on something with our old Cold War enemy, Russia, cooperatively, it’s a good sign. Anything we can do to reduce the number of nuclear warheads in the world is a positive development. But in my opinion as we reduce the number of nuclear warheads… we have to make darn sure that are nuclear warheads are capable and modern and a lot of them are decades old. So I feel very strongly that I am going to be real hesitant to vote for this treaty unless we have a commitment from the Administration that they are prepared to modernize our nuclear stockpile.

    In a demonstration of just how seriously Lieberman is taking these issues, as Chris Wallace shifted the conversation — noting that the treaty would need 9 Republican votes instead of 8 since “Lieberman was gone” — Lieberman audibly chuckled. Watch it:

    On the one hand, this should mean that Lieberman’s vote is a slam dunk. The Obama administration has already demonstrated a massive commitment to modernizing the nuclear weapons infrastructure. Vice President Biden in a speech in February attacked the Bush administration for neglecting the nuclear infrastructure and called for a dramatic 10 percent annual increase in its budget.

    But what Lieberman is really saying is that he agrees with those on the far right that want to needlessly build new nuclear weapons, nearly two decades years after the end of the Cold War. The far right insists that the U.S. is falling behind because it is not building new nuclear weapons and that our existing nuclear arsenal is deteriorating. This is a myth and demonstrates a complete, if not willful, ignorance of our approach to maintaining our nuclear weapons.

    The U.S. continuously refurbishes and renovates its existing weapons, such that it doesn’t have to build new ones. This is by definition modernization. These refurbishing programs are getting the job done, according to an independent panel of scientific experts, called the JASON advisory group. As long as we continue these programs, as the Obama administration has committed to do, there is no need to build new nuclear warheads and weapons.

    Yet building new nukes, along with conducting new nuclear tests, has become a right-wing dream. Lieberman is therefore willing to vote against a treaty — something that would have dire consequences for the US-Russia relationship, our mission in Afghanistan, and the entire nuclear non-proliferation regime — in order to symbolically demonstrate his support for the far-right’s dangerous nuclear agenda.