Author: HL

  • Pelosi Defends Herself Against Boehner: Some People Will Do Anything For Insurance Companies (VIDEO)

    Pelosi Defends Herself Against Boehner: Some People Will Do Anything For Insurance Companies (VIDEO)
    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said John Boehner would “do anything” for insurance companies as she sought to defend herself against the House Minority Leader’s claims…

    Michael Wenger: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom About November
    There already is evidence in a recent poll that African American voters are motivated to turn out in higher-than-usual numbers in November, and this legislative victory will increase such a likelihood.

    Clyburn: Racist Faxes, Image Of Noose Were Sent To Office (VIDEO)
    House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.) received racist faxes Monday in the wake of Sunday’s House vote approving health care reform legislation. Clyburn, a veteran…

    Arkansas Ballot Nicknames: ‘Colonel’ Not Allowed, ‘Porky’ And ‘Bubba’ Fine
    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — A retired Army colonel running for a U.S. Senate seat from Arkansas is criticizing a state law that prevents him from…

  • Right-wing media demonstrate “judicial activism” by urging landmark healthcare bill be overturned by courts

    Right-wing media demonstrate “judicial activism” by urging landmark healthcare bill be overturned by courts

    Despite their purported opposition to “liberal judicial activism” and supposed support for judicial restraint, right-wing media have responded to the passage of health care reform legislation by urging it be overturned by the courts. Media Matters has previously noted that despite the conservative myth that judicial activism is solely a “liberal” practice, at least two studies have found that the most “conservative” Supreme Court justices have been the biggest judicial activists.

    Right wing media urge historic health care bill be overturned by judiciary

    Wash. Examiner’s Stirewalt: “Either learn to love Obamacare, or sue to stop it.” In a March 21 said of the process of replacing Supreme Court Justice David Souter, “Republicans do have a role here, and it’s to talk about judicial activism and the dangers of it”; Barnes also stated that “liberal judicial activism” is “entirely results oriented.” And radio host Laura Ingraham asserted that Judge Sonia Sotomayor, nominated by Obama to replace Souter, has “been described as judicially liberal, which means you don’t favor the principle of judicial restraint.” Ingraham later added that Sotomayor is “a traditional liberal and does not believe in, I think, a strict adherence to separation of powers.”

    In fact, studies show that conservatives — not liberals — most likely engage in “judicial activism.” A 2005 study by Yale University law professor Paul Gewirtz and Yale Law School graduate Chad Golder showed that among Supreme Court justices at that time, those most frequently labeled “conservative” were among the most frequent practitioners of at least one brand of judicial activism — the tendency to strike down statutes passed by Congress. Those most frequently labeled “liberal” were the least likely to strike down statutes passed by Congress.

    A 2007 study by Cass R. Sunstein (subsequently named by President Obama to head the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs) and University of Chicago law professor Thomas Miles used a different measurement of judicial activism — the tendency of judges to strike down decisions by federal regulatory agencies. Sunstein and Miles found that by this definition, the Supreme Court’s “conservative” justices were the most likely to engage in “judicial activism” while the “liberal” justices were most likely to exercise “judicial restraint.”

    Numerous experts conclude that health care reform is constitutional

    Legal scholars say individual mandate and other parts of bill are, in fact, constitutional. In special counsel to Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) during Sotomayor’s confirmation proceedings — have pointed out the flaws in conservatives’ arguments, including that regulation of the health care sector falls under Congress’ broad power to regulate interstate commerce and that Congress has repeatedly passed laws regulating health care and health insurance. In a December 2009 paper for the American Constitution Society, National Senior Citizen Law Center public policy counsel Simon Lazarus added that arguments that the individual mandate is unconstitutional “have no basis in law, neither in the grants of authority to Congress in Article I nor in limitations on that authority in the Bill of Rights, nor in the case law interpreting these provisions. Opponents’ real grievance is with the law in its current state. Their hope is that a majority of the Supreme Court will seize on a challenge to mandatory health insurance as an occasion to make major changes in current law.”

  • In The Loop: The Pay-Day Lenders’ Ties To Powerful Beltway Influence-Peddlers

    In The Loop: The Pay-Day Lenders’ Ties To Powerful Beltway Influence-Peddlers
    The pay-day lending industry has ties to a well-regarded DC consulting firm founded by top former Clinton administration staffers, a key editor at the Andrew-Breitbart-created website BigGovernment.com, Dick Armey’s FreedomWorks, and a notorious corporate lobbyist known as “Dr. Evil.”

    Credit Card Firm: We Were Subpoenaed By Feds In Ensign Case
    eCommLink, the Nevada credit card company that reportedly contributed to the NRSC in exchange for help from Sen. John Ensign, has acknowledged that it was subpoenaed in the federal investigation.


  • Final Votes Were Not Easy for Pelosi

    Final Votes Were Not Easy for Pelosi
    Roll Call says that none of the final votes on the health care bill came easily to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) “as they muscled health care reform over the line. And the stories of the late-breaking votes illustrate just how tight the margin was for a Democratic majority that had potentially staked its future on the outcome.”

    “Pelosi had personally courted nearly every wavering Democrat over a period of months, intensifying dramatically in the past week, and the stakes could not have been higher with the fate of the party’s top priority, her Speakership and Obama’s presidency all hanging in the balance.”

    Health Care Reform Heads to the Courts
    Marc Ambinder: “Moments after President Obama signs the health reform bill today, mostly Republican aspiring governors — AGs — er, Attorneys General in at least twelve states plan file suit to prevent the legislation from taking effect. The chances of success in the Supreme Court are low, but the point of the lawsuits isn’t legal — it’s political. It advances the politics of conservative jurisprudence, and the political ambitions of conservatives, and it keeps the legislation itself in a state of suspended political animation. “

    Overheated Talk Undoing Republicans
    Former Bush speechwriter David Frum says the “overheated rhetoric” by Republicans over health care reform is paralyzing the party.

    “Yes, it mobilizes supporters — but by mobilizing them with hysterical accusations and pseudo-information, overheated talk has made it impossible for representatives to represent and elected leaders to lead.”

    “Now the overheated talk is about to get worse. Over the past 48 hours, I’ve heard conservatives compare the House bill to the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 — a decisive step on the path to the Civil War. Conservatives have whipped themselves into spasms of outrage and despair that block all strategic thinking.”

  • America, Here Are 10 Things You’ve Just Won With Health Care Reform

    America, Here Are 10 Things You’ve Just Won With Health Care Reform
    You already know about the health care reform vote, but you might not know what’s in it for you. Here’s 10 things that will kick in this year.

    You already know about the health care reform vote, but you might not know what's in it for you. Here's 10 things that will kick in this year.

    Are Americans Too Broken by Corporate Power to Resist?
    We need to take a look at what forces in American society are preventing people from being able to resist tyranny and dehumanization.

    We need to take a look at what forces in American society are preventing people from being able to resist tyranny and dehumanization.

    The Looming Water Disaster That Could Destroy California, and Enrich Its Billionaire Farmers
    There’s a disaster waiting to happen in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, and a handful of wealthy farmers seem to like it that way.

    There's a disaster waiting to happen in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, and a handful of wealthy farmers seem to like it that way.

    Behind the Shady World of Marketing Junk Food to Children
    Marketers spend billions attracting kids to junk food they hope will become a lifelong brand attachment. But the effect on kids’ health can be costly.

    Marketers spend billions attracting kids to junk food they hope will become a lifelong brand attachment. But the effect on kids' health can be costly.

    Aided by Glenn Beck, Conspiracy Theories Bloom Over FEMA ‘Concentration Camps’
    Fear that the federal govt will concoct a pretense for confining dissidents to prison camps spreads as the country experiences a surge in groups on the radical right.

    Fear that the federal govt will concoct a pretense for confining dissidents to prison camps spreads as the country experiences a surge in groups on the radical right.

  • Ground Shifts at AIPAC + DERSHOWITZ SCREAMS THAT J STREET’s PRO-PEACE IDF VET IS ANTI-ISRAEL

    Ground Shifts at AIPAC + DERSHOWITZ SCREAMS THAT J STREET’s PRO-PEACE IDF VET IS ANTI-ISRAEL
    I’m not going to do a major post until after Prime Minister Netanyahu speaks. I’m worn out from yesterday which was one of the most exciting and best political days in my life. I don’t remember the last time I…



    American Israel Public Affairs CommitteeUnited StatesPrime ministerIsraelMiddle East

    Swing Low, Sweet Narrative
    A friend of mine, an editor of a major magazine, chortled Saturday night how much fun it was going to be, once the House voted for health care reform, to watch the media’s master narrative swing from Obama the overreaching…


    HouseHealth careUnited StatesPoliticsHealth Care Reform

    Is Congress Biting the Postman?
    We expect dogs to occasionally attack letter carriers. It’s part of their biological make-up. However, we expect better behavior from our representatives in Congress; after all, members of Congress get paid good salaries, not just table scraps. That is why…



    Postal ServiceUnited States CongressCongressUnited StatesUnited States Postal Service

  • Democratic Offices Vandalized In Days Surrounding Health Care Vote

    Democratic Offices Vandalized In Days Surrounding Health Care Vote
    Rhetoric surrounding the health care debate has often been very violent, with Rep. Steve King (R-IA) just yesterday promising to “beat that other side to a pulp” and at least one Tea Party sign threatening gun violence if health care reform passes. In recent days, several Democratic offices around the nation have also been vandalized. […]

    Rhetoric surrounding the health care debate has often been very violent, with Rep. Steve King (R-IA) just yesterday promising to “beat that other side to a pulp” and at least one Tea Party sign threatening gun violence if health care reform passes.

    In recent days, several Democratic offices around the nation have also been vandalized. Although it’s unclear who the perpetrators are, all the incidents took place shortly before or after the House’s vote on health care yesterday:

    The glass front door of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords’ (D-AZ) Tuscon office was “smashed out” a “few hours after she voted in favor of health care reform.” Giffords’ spokesman C.J. Karamargin “said it was unclear if the glass had been shot out with a kind of pellet gun, if it had been kicked or smashed with an object. The door has been covered with plywood.”

    – On the morning of March 19, someone threw a brick through the front window of Rep. Louise Slaughter’s (D-NY) Niagara Falls office. Monroe County Democratic Committee officials also said that a brick shattered the glass doors at their party’s headquarters in Rochester, NY on Saturday or Sunday.

    In a more confusing incident, someone spray-painted the word “DORKS” on the window of the Knox County Democratic Headquarters in Mount Vernon, OH. ThinkProgress spoke to Jim Zak, Democratic Party chairman, who said that this morning, he received a call about the vandalism, which seems to have happened sometime after midnight last night. He said that he has “no idea who would have done it,” but noted that “things are running pretty high here in Knox County, as far as the health care reform bill was concerned.”

    At the Code Red protest this weekend, Tea Party activists also spat on a lawmaker and shouted racist and homophobic slurs at others.

    Vandalism

  • How Obama revived his health-care bill

    How Obama revived his health-care bill
    It was the Barack Obama the American public rarely sees — irritated and wondering if he had arrived at the moment of defeat. Shortly after 6 p.m. on Jan. 19, with a political crisis about to explode, the president summoned the two top Democrats in Congress to the Oval Office for a strategy session. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) sat alongside Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.), the tension in the room acute.

    Obama to sign health-care bill into law Tuesday
    President Obama will sign landmark health-care legislation into law Tuesday without waiting for the Senate to deal with a package of revisions that was also approved by the House late Sunday, administration officials said.

    At AIPAC conference, Clinton pledges White House commitment to Israel security
    Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Monday pledged the Obama administration’s “unwavering” commitment to Israel’s security, including sanctions on Iran that “bite.” But she defended White House opposition to Jewish construction in a disputed area of Jerusalem as an essential part of getting peace talks back on track.

    Abortion foe from Texas says he regrets outburst
    Rep. Randy Neugebauer (R-Tex.) acknowledged Monday that he is the lawmaker who yelled “Baby killer!” as a Democrat and fellow opponent of abortion explained why he would support health-care legislation. Neugebauer stood by his attack on the bill, saying he was representing the people of his district.

  • Health Care Bill Imposes New Taxes

    Health Care Bill Imposes New Taxes

    Israel in Midst of Clash of Civilizations
    Avigdor Lieberman, Der Spiegel

    The GOP’s New One-Word Agenda: Repeal
    Bill Kristol, Weekly Standard
    After his 1851 coup d'état, Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, nephew of the real Napoleon, pronounced himself Napoleon III. It was the rise to power of this great-man-wannabe that prompted the famous opening of Karl Marx's Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis-Bonaparte: “Hegel remarks somewhere that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice.The editors of National Review sensibly counsel conservatives, in the wake of last night's victory for Obamacare: “”�Nil desperandum'”"never despair.”� I agree, though I'm more…

    Historic Achievement, Political Suicide – or Both?
    David Sanger, NYT
    With his party rallying around him on health care, President Obama is now assured, whatever the ultimate cost, of going down in history as one of the handful of presidents who found a way to reshape the nation's social welfare system.A blog from The New York Times that tracks the health care debate as it unfolds.Share your thoughts about the health care debate.Top Discussions: The White House Proposal | Taxes and the National Deficit | The Senate BillAfter the bitterest of debates, Mr. Obama proved that he is willing to fight for something that moved him to his core. Skeptics had begun…

  • Millions in Bangladesh Poisoned by Arsenic

    Millions in Bangladesh Poisoned by Arsenic
    Up to 20 million people in Bangladesh are at risk of suffering early deaths because of arsenic poisoning — the legacy of a well-intentioned but ill-planned water project that created a devastating public health catastrophe. Bangladesh’s arsenic crisis dates back to the 1970s when, in an effort to improve the quality of drinking water and counter diarrhoea, there was large-scale international investment in building tube wells. It was believed the wells would provide safe supplies for families, otherwise dependent on dirty surface water which was killing up to 250,000 children a year. The arsenic contaminating so much of Bangladesh’s water occurs naturally in the water courses of the rivers that sustain hundreds of millions of people.

  • Obama: ‘This Government Still Works’

    Obama: ‘This Government Still Works’
    The president, speaking after the passage of health care reform, said, “We proved that we are still a people capable of doing big things.”

    The president, speaking after the passage of health care reform, said, “We proved that we are still a people capable of doing big things.”

    Related Entries


  • Lincoln Mitchell: What the Health Care Bill Might Mean

    Lincoln Mitchell: What the Health Care Bill Might Mean
    The health care bill has finally passed, but its meaning is still unclear. The process and debate around the health care bill has been extraordinary…

    Steven Weber: War of Choice: Part 2
    Armed with a successfully enacted program for progress and led by an articulate, capable and intelligent leader, the war for truth is being waged against the corporate funded right wing. The passing of health care reform is the first step.

    Mary Lyon: America Just Grew Up A Little More
    My Facebook friend worried: “how will it affect my family when I’m working part time and just getting by? Am I on my own? I…

    Valerie Taliman: US Human Rights Record Challenged
    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Where do Indian nations go when United States’ courts have failed them, and justice is unattainable? The Haudenosaunee Confederacy – the oldest…

  • Wallace falsely claims water allocations, ND bank provisions are “special deals” that are “in the bill”

    Wallace falsely claims water allocations, ND bank provisions are “special deals” that are “in the bill”

    Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace falsely claimed that deals for “one bank in North Dakota” and “more water supplies for farmers in central California” were “special deals” to ensure passage of health care reform legislation. In fact, the water allocations are a Department of the Interior decision based on heavier winter rainfall, and a provision that would have benefited the Bank of North Dakota was removed from the bill.

    Wallace claims water allocations, bank provision are “special deals” in health care bill

    Wallace cites “special deals” that are “still in the bill.” On the March 21 edition of Fox Broadcasting Co.’s Fox News Sunday, Wallace asked Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), “[D]idn’t Speaker Pelosi end up using a lot of taxpayer money to buy votes for this bill?” Wallace listed what he claimed were “special deals” that would ensure passage of the health care reform bill, citing as examples “the one deal for the one bank in North Dakota” and “more water supplies for farmers in central California.”

    Will brings water-allocation conspiracy theory to ABC. Appearing on This Week, Washington Post columnist George Will stated, “Now, I understand politics is a transactional business, but some of the transactions in this — are you a little all embarrassed about water suddenly being released to the California valley because of health care?”

    Provision benefiting Bank of North Dakota is not “in the bill”

    Manager’s amendment removed state-owned bank provision. A proposal that would have exempted state-owned banks from a provision to eliminate federal subsidies for private lenders — originally contained on Page 145 of the reconciliation bill — was removed from the reconciliation bill that will be voted on by the House. From the manager’s amendment:

    Page 145, beginning on line 18, strike section 2213 (and redesignate the succeeding section accordingly).

    Politics Daily:Special Provision for North Dakota Bank Removed From Health Bill.” A March 18 Politics Daily article reported that “Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) Thursday sought the removal of a special provision he had written into the package of fixes to the Senate health care bill that would have applied only to the Bank of North Dakota. The provision would have allowed the Bank of North Dakota to continue to originate and service student loans even though a pending overhaul says that all such loans will originate through the U.S. Department of Education, beginning July 1.”

    NPR: “OUT: A student-loan provision for North Dakota, from Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND).” A March 19 National Public Radio article provided examples of “what’s in, what’s out and why” and reported that the “student-loan provision for North Dakota” is “out.” According to the article, “when the exemption became controversial, Conrad asked the House to remove it.”

    Increased water allocation is not “in the bill”: DOI announced it as a result of increased winter rain and improved storage in California

    DOI: “Interior Announces Increased Water Supply Allocations in California.” A decision to increase water allocation for farmers in California’s Central Valley is not “in the bill,” as Wallace claimed. The U.S. Interior Department announced increased water supply allocations, citing “additional precipitation, improved snowpack, and improved storage at Shasta Reservoir.” From a March 16 Department of the Interior press release:

    Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar today announced that the Bureau of Reclamation’s 2010 Central Valley Project Water Supply allocations have increased throughout the valley as a result of additional precipitation, improved snowpack, and improved storage at Shasta Reservoir. As forecast by Reclamation on February 26, California is having a near-average water year following three years of drought.

    The Department is deeply committed to working with all stakeholders to find solutions to the challenges — both short term and long term — facing water users throughout the Central Valley,” said Secretary Salazar, who was joined on the teleconference by Deputy Secretary David J. Hayes and Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Mike Connor. “In this case, we accelerated our reporting of updated allocations, hoping to get the best available information to agricultural water service contractors as quickly as possible. This allocation update shows improvements from the previous allocation — just as we hoped in our recent announcement.

    WSJ: Salazar said, “Winter rains have helped replenish the state’s biggest reservoir.” In a March 17 article, The Wall Street Journal noted that California’s Central Valley had been experiencing severe drought and that the “increase is made possible, Mr. Salazar said, in part because winter rains have helped replenish the state’s biggest reservoir, Lake Shasta, which now stands at 81% of capacity, compared with 55% a year ago.” Salazar also “said he moved up the announcement by a week or so ‘because people on the ground and farming need to have certainty.’ ” The Journal reported that Salazar’s announcement “further eas[ed] drought concerns in a state where El Niño rains have raised the mountain snowpack after three severely dry years.”

    AP: “Interior secretary: Recent storms mean California farmers, cities will get more water.” In a March 17 article, the Associated Press wrote, “A series of drenching storms have replenished many of California’s reservoirs, freeing up more water for parched farms and cities throughout the state, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced Tuesday.”

  • Ominously For Ensign, Probe’s Focus Appears To Shift To Possible Quid Pro Quo

    Ominously For Ensign, Probe’s Focus Appears To Shift To Possible Quid Pro Quo
    Buried under the pile of details that have emerged in the last 48 hours on the John Ensign investigation is one crucial over-arching development: The federal probe into the matter appears to have expanded, and shifted its focus in a way that may could make it an even graver threat to the Nevada senator than before.


    California Bar Now Investigating Orly Taitz
    The State Bar of California is investigating Orly Taitz, a process that could ultimately result in the Birther attorney’s disbarment, Taitz and her lawyer confirmed to TPMmuckraker.


  • Reactions to the Health Care Vote

    Reactions to the Health Care Vote
    Matthew Yglesias: “Now that it’s done, Barack Obama will go down in history as one of America’s finest presidents. It’s always possible of course that, like LBJ, he’ll get involved in some unrelated fiasco that mars his reputation. But fundamentally, he’s reshaped the policy landscape in a way that no progressive politician has done in decades.”

    Marc Ambinder: “Republicans had bet that throwing everything into killing the bill would result in the bill’s defeat. The entire strategy was predicated on killing the bill. Now that the bill has passed, it means that the health care system has been fundamentally changed, and there’s no way — and there will not be the votes — to repeal it. No one will tell seniors that the donut hole will be opened up, or people promised new insurance that they’ll have to look elsewhere, or that rescission will once again be legal. Democrats will work for to force Republicans to talk about repeal as often as possible.”

    Matthew Continetti: “Do not believe anyone who tells you they understand the path American politics will take after this vote. It is truly unique.”

    Jonathan Chait: “Let me offer a ludicrously premature opinion: Barack Obama has sealed his reputation as a president of great historical import. We don’t know what will follow in his presidency, and it’s quite possible that some future event–a war, a scandal–will define his presidency. But we do know that he has put his imprint on the structure of American government in a way that no Democratic president since Lyndon Johnson has.”

    David Frum: “No illusions please: This bill will not be repealed. Even if Republicans scored a 1994 style landslide in November, how many votes could we muster to re-open the ‘doughnut hole’ and charge seniors more for prescription drugs? How many votes to re-allow insurers to rescind policies when they discover a pre-existing condition? How many votes to banish 25 year olds from their parents’ insurance coverage? And even if the votes were there – would President Obama sign such a repeal?”

    Josh Marshall: “Again, I don’t want to paint any rosy pictures. And, as I said, I don’t want to hazard any predictions. But I think this conventional wisdom is quite mistaken. Hard fought victories don’t deplete political capital; they build it. And political wins themselves often have a catalyzing effect that shapes political opinion far more than we realize.”

    Story of the Day
    New York Times: “House Democrats approved a far-reaching overhaul of the nation’s health system on Sunday, voting over unanimous Republican opposition to provide medical coverage to tens of millions of uninsured Americans after an epic political battle that could define the differences between the parties for years.”

    Washington Post: “House Democrats scored a historic victory in the century-long battle to reform the nation’s health-care system late Sunday night, winning final approval of legislation that expands coverage to 32 million people and attempts to contain spiraling costs.”

    Wall Street Journal: “The biggest transformation of the U.S. health system in decades won approval on Capitol Hill late Sunday, the culmination of efforts by generations of Democrats to achieve near-universal health coverage.”

    USA Today: “Congress completed action Sunday night on the major portion of President Obama’s top priority, a historic restructuring of the nation’s health care system that has eluded his predecessors for more than a century.”

    Los Angeles Times: “Ending the Democrats’ decades-long quest to create a healthcare safety net to match Social Security, the House of Representatives on Sunday night approved sweeping legislation to guarantee Americans access to medical care for the first time, delivering President Obama the biggest victory of his young presidency.”

  • The Future of Drug Reform Is Bright

    The Future of Drug Reform Is Bright
    The Students for a Sensible Drug Policy conference in San Francisco was a major demonstration of youthful, activist energy to change the drug paradigm.

    The Students for a Sensible Drug Policy conference in San Francisco was a major demonstration of youthful, activist energy to change the drug paradigm.

    Most Progressive Legislation in My Lifetime Passes

    This post was originally published on the Booman Tribune. Here’s the Roll Call for the Health Care bill that passed tonight with a 219-212 tally. Thirty-four Democrats voted against it and no Republicans voted for it. The Republicans are totally steamed. One, as yet unidentified, member of Congress yelled ‘Baby-Killer’ at Bart Stupak on the House floor. […]

    Are Greedy Water Bottlers Siphoning Your City’s Drinking Water?
    Bottled water giants are pilfering water from rural towns and cities, while their products are trashing the planet and putting a hole in our pockets. It’s time to call it quits.

    Bottled water giants are pilfering water from rural towns and cities, while their products are trashing the planet and putting a hole in our pockets. It's time to call it quits.

    Winograd vs. Harman in CA Primary: Will U.S. or Israel?s Interests Come First?

    (This article is based on one that will appear in the upcoming May/June 2010 issue of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs: http://www.wrmea.com) Sunday, March 14, 2010, ushered in two welcome events to Southern California: the inauguration of the headquarters of the bustling Winograd For Congress primary campaign, and an extra hour of daylight to […]

    200,000 March For Immigration Reform in Massive D.C. Rally
    The message was clear: fix our broken immigration system, stop the deportations that split up families, and allow immigrants to come to the US legally and to earn legal status.

    The message was clear: fix our broken immigration system, stop the deportations that split up families, and allow immigrants to come to the US legally and to earn legal status.

  • Book Review: Zionism’s Invented State

    Book Review: Zionism’s Invented State
    Israeli Exceptionalism: The Destabilizing Logic of Zionism by M. Shahid Alam Palgrave Macmillan, 272 pp., £55.00 Israeli Exceptionalism: The Destabilizing Logic of Zionism arrived in the mail shortly after I completed sending a thank you note to two other authors…


    ZionismState of IsraelMiddle EastPoliticsIsrael

    Can House Democratic Committee Chairs Oppose the Party’s Signature Legislation and Keep Their Posts?
    As we wait to find out if the Democratic Party will round up enough votes to pass health reform, proving they can deliver on a priority they have declared for more than half a century, much of the media…


    DemocraticHealthcare reformUnited StatesPoliticsParties

  • Fox ?News? cheerleads for Tea Party protesters.

    Fox ?News? cheerleads for Tea Party protesters.
    Serving its traditional role as the voice of the Tea Party movement, Fox News has been dedicating inordinate coverage today to the couple thousand anti-health care protesters gathered outside the U.S. Capitol. Fox host Megyn Kelly breathlessly reported every movement and rallying cry of the protesters, declaring at one point: “Fox News alert! … Protesters […]

    Serving its traditional role as the voice of the Tea Party movement, Fox News has been dedicating inordinate coverage today to the couple thousand anti-health care protesters gathered outside the U.S. Capitol. Fox host Megyn Kelly breathlessly reported every movement and rallying cry of the protesters, declaring at one point: “Fox News alert! … Protesters are outside and, now we are getting word, inside the U.S. Capitol!” Kelly invited Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-NY) onto the show to ask him about the protesters. Weiner dismissed the question, noting, “The important action is going on the floor of Congress.” He added, “The important story today is whether or not there we are going to be able to get 216 votes to save the taxpayers a lot of money and provide insurance for people that don’t have it.” Watch a compilation of Fox’s promotion of the Tea Party protest: