Author: HL

  • Ford won’t challenge Gillibrand for Senate in N.Y.

    Ford won’t challenge Gillibrand for Senate in N.Y.
    Former congressman Harold E. Ford Jr. has decided against challenging Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), ending a potential primary fight that Democrats in Washington and New York had actively discouraged.

    Hotheaded Emanuel may be White House voice of reason
    Rahm Emanuel is officially a Washington caricature. He’s the town’s resident leviathan, a bullying, bruising White House chief of staff who is a prime target for the failings of the Obama administration.

    Obama to sell stimulus package to a wary Savannah
    SAVANNAH, GA. — To hear President Obama tell it, his plans for reshaping the nation’s economy are aimed at helping people like Ray Gaster, whose small chain of lumberyards here has been walloped by the recession.


  • California State Government in Denial

    California State Government in Denial

    The Cubanization of Venezuela
    Jaime Daremblum, Weekly Standard
    “There is nothing more exhilarating than to be shot at without result." Republicans and conservatives have recently had reason to appreciate the truth of Winston Churchill's statement. President Obama and the Democratic Congress had a real shot at transforming American politics and public policy into European-style social democracy. When Obama spoke to Congress a year ago, on February 24, 2009, it certainly seemed he would have a chance to succeed. Â Â Â The Cubanization of Venezuela began a long time ago, but it took another large step in early February, when…

    The Case for High-Deductible Health Insurance
    Michael Tanner, Cato
    If President Obama's health care summit showed anything it is that when it comes to controlling health care costs there is bipartisan agreement in favor of looking for the easy solution. Both sides dragged out the traditional villains, “fraud, waste, and abuse.” There was the usual search for silver bullets. Republicans dwelled at length on medical malpractice Democrats talked about pooling and the advantages of comparative shopping through the exchanges. Everyone was in favor of preventive care.But both sides seem curiously unwilling to address the most important …

    Hoosiers & Health Savings Accounts
    Gov. Mitch Daniels, Wall St. Journal
    As Washington prepares to revisit the subject of health-care reform, perhaps some fresh experience from Middle America would be of value.When I was elected governor of Indiana five years ago, I asked that a consumer-directed health insurance option, or Health Savings Account (HSA), be added to the conventional plans then available to state employees. I thought this additional choice might work well for at least a few of my co-workers, and in the first year some 4% of us signed up for it. In Indiana's HSA, the state deposits $2,750 per year into an account controlled by the employee, out…

  • No to Consumer Protection Agency

    No to Consumer Protection Agency
    Plans to create an independent agency to offer consumer financial protection have probably been scrapped. According to a leaked document, Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd is proposing that the protection office be within the Treasury Department instead of being independent, a clear capitulation to the Republicans. —JCL Mother Jones: Mother Jones has obtained a copy of Sen. Chris Dodd’s plan to house a consumer financial protection office within the Department of the Treasury rather than creating an independent agency. Several other news sources have received copies, but none have made the leaked document publicly available. We’re posting Chris Dodd’s consumer financial protection plan here (PDF). It seems certain to disappoint experts and progressives who had called for a powerful new agency. (Andy Kroll has more on this.) This is the document’s top-line summary: Create a [Bureau of Financial Protection] inside of Treasury with a Presidentially-appointed director; a dedicated budget (through assessments on large banks, non-banks, and with the Fed making up the shortfall); autonomous rule-writing authority with the regulations to apply across-the-board to all entities offering financial services or products; and examination and enforcement authority for large banks and mortgage companies, small banks in a back-up capacity, and other non-banks on a risk basis, as described below. The independent agency proposal would be dropped. As Andy explained Saturday afternoon, Dodd’s decision to move financial protection inside an existing agency is an effort to gain Republican votes for financial reform. But it’s unclear whether either of the Republicans Dodd has negotiated with to date—Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Al.) and Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.)—will support the new plan. There hasn’t been any hint of GOP backing for the proposal in newspaper articles on Dodd’s leaked plan. Read more

    Dodd

    Plans to create an independent agency to offer consumer financial protection have probably been scrapped. According to a leaked document, Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd is proposing that the protection office be within the Treasury Department instead of being independent, a clear capitulation to the Republicans. —JCL

    Mother Jones:

    Mother Jones has obtained a copy of Sen. Chris Dodd’s plan to house a consumer financial protection office within the Department of the Treasury rather than creating an independent agency. Several other news sources have received copies, but none have made the leaked document publicly available. We’re posting Chris Dodd’s consumer financial protection plan here (PDF). It seems certain to disappoint experts and progressives who had called for a powerful new agency. (Andy Kroll has more on this.) This is the document’s top-line summary:

    Create a [Bureau of Financial Protection] inside of Treasury with a Presidentially-appointed director; a dedicated budget (through assessments on large banks, non-banks, and with the Fed making up the shortfall); autonomous rule-writing authority with the regulations to apply across-the-board to all entities offering financial services or products; and examination and enforcement authority for large banks and mortgage companies, small banks in a back-up capacity, and other non-banks on a risk basis, as described below.

    The independent agency proposal would be dropped.

    As Andy explained Saturday afternoon, Dodd’s decision to move financial protection inside an existing agency is an effort to gain Republican votes for financial reform. But it’s unclear whether either of the Republicans Dodd has negotiated with to date—Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Al.) and Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.)—will support the new plan. There hasn’t been any hint of GOP backing for the proposal in newspaper articles on Dodd’s leaked plan.

    Read more

    Related Entries


  • Robert Kuttner: The Cure That Dares Not Speak Its Name

    Robert Kuttner: The Cure That Dares Not Speak Its Name
    How does the rest of the club of affluent countries manage to insure everyone for 9 or 10 percent of GDP, and have a healthier and longer-lived population, to boot? They do it, of course, through universal, socialized insurance. What every other nation has in common is that they have taken the commercialism out of their health systems. But most Democratic politicians and policy wonks behave as if the option of a national health plan simply did not exist.

    Jerry Brown: California Governor Run Still A Mystery
    SACRAMENTO, Calif. — With less than two weeks before he must enter the race for governor, state Attorney General Jerry Brown told college-age Democrats on…

    Nuclear Posture Review: Obama Rethinking U.S. Nuclear Weapons Policy
    As President Obama begins making final decisions on a broad new nuclear strategy for the United States, senior aides say he will permanently reduce America’s…

    Jo Comerford: A Titanic Budget in an Ocean of Icebergs: Will the USS Budget Go Down?
    A serious look at the budget reveals some “leaks” — two in actual spending practices and two in the basic assumptions that undergird the budget itself. Ship-shape as it may look on the surface, this is a budget perilously close to an iceberg.

    Obama Doctor: President ‘Fit For Duty’ And In ‘Excellent Health’
    WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama hasn’t kicked the smoking habit, takes anti-inflammatory medication to relieve chronic tendinitis in his left knee and should eat better…

  • Quick Fact: Perkins advances myth that DADT repeal could hurt morale, unit cohesion, readiness

    Quick Fact: Perkins advances myth that DADT repeal could hurt morale, unit cohesion, readiness

    On Fox & Friends Sunday, Family Research Council president Tony Perkins advanced the falsehood that repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” would undermine unit cohesion and morale in the military. Studies of other countries show that allowing gay men and lesbians to serve openly does not affect unit cohesion, morale, and readiness.

    From the February 28 edition of Fox News’ Fox & Friends Sunday:

    PERKINS: Well, as a veteran of the Marine Corps, I’ve served in the military and I understand exactly the environment in which men and women serve, and it’s much different than what civilians live in. And it’s troubling on a couple of points: one is the — how this will affect the men and women who serve.

    You’ve got 80 to 100 men that will live in one room, shower together, they stay together. I mean, it’s — you don’t have much privacy. But, secondly, and I think more importantly is the impact that this will have on national security from the standpoint of its impact upon military readiness. And now we’ve had 14 congressional studies in the last 16 years or congressional hearings and they’ve all come to the same conclusion that good order, morale, unit cohesion is essential to military success, and this policy, the current policy — “don’t ask, don’t tell” — upholds that. So, this is not just our opinion. Congress has come to the same conclusion 14 times in the last 16 years.

    FACT: Experts say claims that “don’t ask, don’t tell” preserves “unit cohesion” are not supported by studies or experience

    Unit cohesion argument “not supported by any scientific studies.” In an essay published in the fourth quarter 2009 issue of Joint Force Quarterlywhich is “published for the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, by the Institute for National Strategic Studies, National Defense University” — Col. Om Prakash wrote of DADT, “[T]he stated premise of the law — to protect unit cohesion and combat effectiveness — is not supported by any scientific studies.” The essay won the 2009 Secretary of Defense National Security Essay Competition.

    At least 25 nations — including many U.S. allies — allow military service by openly gay men and lesbians. According to the Palm Center, a think tank at the University of California-Santa Barbara that studies sexuality and the military, as of February 2010, 25 nations allowed military service by openly gay men and lesbians, including U.S. allies Australia and Israel and the following NATO member countries: Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Slovenia, Spain, and the United Kingdom.

    GAO: Other countries say allowing gay men and lesbians to serve openly “has not created problems in the military.” In a June 1993 report to Congress, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) studied four countries that allow gay men and lesbians to serve in the military — Canada, Israel, Germany, and Sweden — and found that military officials said “the presence of homosexuals has not created problems in the military because homosexuality is not an issue in the military or in society at large.” It also found that “[m]ilitary officials from each country said that, on the basis of their experience, the inclusion of homosexuals in their militaries has not adversely affected unit readiness, effectiveness, cohesion, or morale.” GAO wrote that it chose those four countries to study because they “generally reflect Western cultural values yet still provide a range of ethnic diversity” and have similarly sized militaries.

    Palm Center: “No consulted expert anywhere in the world concluded that lifting the ban on openly gay service caused an overall decline in the military.” In a February 2010 report, the Palm Center reviewed the experience of the 25 nations whose militaries allow gay men and lesbians to serve and found: “Research has uniformly shown that transitions to policies of equal treatment without regard to sexual orientation have been highly successful and have had no negative impact on morale, recruitment, retention, readiness or overall combat effectiveness. No consulted expert anywhere in the world concluded that lifting the ban on openly gay service caused an overall decline in the military.”

    None of the 104 experts interviewed for study believed decisions to allow gay men and lesbians to serve openly in UK, Canada, Israel, or Australia undermined cohesion. In a 2003 article for Parameters, the U.S. Army War College Quarterly, Aaron Belkin wrote that the Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military (since renamed the Palm Center) had conducted a study of the impact of the decisions to allow gay men and lesbians to serve openly in the military in the United Kingdom, Israel, Canada, and Australia, and found: “Not a single one of the 104 experts interviewed believed that the Australian, Canadian, Israeli, or British decisions to lift their gay bans undermined military performance, readiness, or cohesion.”

    Participants in creation of DADT admit “unit cohesion” argument was “based on nothing.” In a March 2009 Huffington Post piece, the Palm Center’s Nathaniel Frank wrote of the process that led to the creation of DADT in the early 1990s:

    One group staffer provided a wealth of research to the flag officers in charge, but said it was never even considered. He said the policy was created “behind closed doors” by people who were totally closed to lifting the ban, and that it relied on anti-gay stereotypes and resistance to outside forces.

    Charles Moskos, the renowned military sociologist and close friend of Sen. Sam Nunn, advised the MWG [Military Working Group], and was ultimately credited as the academic architect of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” While he said publicly that the problem with openly gay service was that it would threaten “unit cohesion,” he told me privately something quite different: “Fuck unit cohesion,” he said, “I don’t care about that.” For Moskos, the last serious defender of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” the ban was about the “moral right” of straight people not to be forced into intimate quarters with gays. Shortly before he died last summer, he admitted that he clung to his policy, in part, because he was afraid of disappointing his friends if he “turncoated.”

    […]

    The MWG was also supposed to take recommendations from working groups convened by the individual services. Rear Admiral John Hutson, former Judge Advocate General of the Navy was a participant in the talks about whether to lift the ban in 1993. Hutson told me the assessment of gay service was “based on nothing. It wasn’t empirical, it wasn’t studied, it was completely visceral, intuitive.” The policy, he said, was rooted in “our own prejudices and our own fears.” Hutson now says “don’t ask, don’t tell” was a “moral passing of the buck.”

    Another advisor to the MWG was Lt. Col. Robert Maginnis, a deeply homophobic evangelical who became vice president of the Family Research Council. While Maginnis admitted that he found homosexuality “morally repugnant,” he cast the question of gay service in terms of “unit cohesion” for what he called “political reasons”–because he knew this approach would be more effective than moral tirades against equal treatment for gays. Maginnis, who believes gays are “unstable” hedonists who can’t control themselves and are tainted by something called “gay bowel syndrome,” was only the tip of the iceberg: in fact the “unit cohesion” rationale was an elaborate strategy created by a network of evangelical military officers and supporters who knowingly sold an anti-gay policy rooted in religion as though it were essential to protecting national security. And for too long, the nation drank the coolaid.

  • Army’s Iraq Handbook: Avoid War Crimes And Beware Arab Paranoia

    Army’s Iraq Handbook: Avoid War Crimes And Beware Arab Paranoia
    A 2003 handbook for the U.S. First Infantry Division in Iraq exhorts soldiers to “Do your best to prevent war crimes” and warns that “when an Arab is confronted by criticism, you can expect him to react by interpreting the facts to suit himself or flatly denying the facts.”


    John Sweeney Jailed For Drunk Driving
    John Sweeney, the former GOP congressman and Abramoff crony, will serve 30 days in jail after pleading guilty to driving drunk, reports the Albany Times-Union.

    Former DOJ-ers Doubtful On Missing Yoo Emails Story
    An internal Justice Department report on the Torture Memos noted that investigators were told that key emails from John Yoo had been deleted and could not be retrieved. But several former DOJ staffers expressed intense skepticism that the emails could in fact have been rendered unrecoverable — at least without a deliberate effort to destroy them.

  • Ye Olde Scribe Presents More Spam

    Ye Olde Scribe Presents More Spam
    wiki “Let it snow! Let it snow! Let it… damn stuff.” Spam from the great white North: no relation to Ollie… December 8 – 6:00 PM It started to snow. The first snow of the season and the wife and I took our cocktails and sat for hours by the window watching the huge soft flakes drift down […]

  • Conservative Character Assassination of Kennedys Must Be Stopped

    Conservative Character Assassination of Kennedys Must Be Stopped
    Robert Greenwald appeared on CNN Sunday to slam a right-wing script for a series about the Kennedys.

    Robert Greenwald appeared on CNN Sunday to slam a right-wing script for a series about the Kennedys.

    Joe Bageant: Americans Are "Hope Fiends" Because Honestly Looking at the Present Situation Would Destroy Just About Everything We Hold As Reality
    An awareness of class makes clear who is screwing whom. That’s why American capitalism’s official line is that we are a "classless society."

    An awareness of class makes clear who is screwing whom. That's why American capitalism's official line is that we are a "classless society."

    Glenn Beck, Radical Hit Man for the Tea Partiers, Is Breeding Potential Violence
    I wish this were just a bad joke, but Beck isn’t messing around — he’s painting bull’s-eyes on the backs of progressives.

    I wish this were just a bad joke, but Beck isn't messing around — he's painting bull's-eyes on the backs of progressives.

    Bill Maher: Stop Saying Sex Addiction Like It’s a Bad Thing
    Sex addiction is not a real mental disease: not like delirium or bipolar disorder or any of the other things Glenn Beck suffers from.

    Sex addiction is not a real mental disease: not like delirium or bipolar disorder or any of the other things Glenn Beck suffers from.

    Heads Up: Prayer Warriors and Sarah Palin Are Organizing Spiritual Warfare to Take Over America
    The New Apostolic Reformation, the largest religious movement you’ve never heard of, aims to take control of communities through ‘prayer warriors.’

    The New Apostolic Reformation, the largest religious movement you've never heard of, aims to take control of communities through 'prayer warriors.'

  • Pelosi Welcomes Tea Partiers To Join Progressives In Fighting Against Special Interests

    Pelosi Welcomes Tea Partiers To Join Progressives In Fighting Against Special Interests
    Last year, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) proclaimed that the tea party movement is “astroturf [and] not really a grassroots movement. It’s astroturf by some of the wealthiest people in America to keep the focus on tax cuts for the rich instead of for the great middle class.” Pelosi has been repeatedly attacked […]

    Last year, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) proclaimed that the tea party movement is “astroturf [and] not really a grassroots movement. It’s astroturf by some of the wealthiest people in America to keep the focus on tax cuts for the rich instead of for the great middle class.” Pelosi has been repeatedly attacked since then by many on the right who object to the notion that the tea party movement is being hijacked by Republican operatives.

    Today, during an appearance on ABC’s “This Week” with host Elizabeth Vargas, Pelosi reiterated her belief that much of the tea party movement is “orchestrated from the Republican headquarters.” But, she also explained that progressives “share some of the views of the Tea Partiers in terms of the role of special interest in Washington” and welcomed tea partiers to join progressives in battling special interests:

    PELOSI: the Republican Party directs a lot of what the Tea Party does, but not everybody in the Tea Party takes direction from the Republican Party. And so there was a lot of, shall we say, Astroturf, as opposed to grassroots. But, you know, we share some of the views of the Tea Partiers in terms of the role of special interest in Washington, D.C., as — it just has to stop.

    Watch it:

    Indeed, as ThinkProgress has documented, many of the principal organizers of the local tea party events are the well-funded right-wing astroturf organizations Americans for Prosperity and Freedom Works. Both provided logistical support and public relations assistance, including “sign ideas, sample press releases, and a map of events around the country.”

    Yet, as Pelosi states in the interview, opposition to entrenched special interests cut across party and ideological lines. She rightly notes that for example, Americans overwhelmingly oppose the recent Supreme Court decision in the Citizens United case that eliminated decades of campaign laws that restrict corporate spending in election campaigns. A recent poll found that 80 percent of Americans oppose the decision with 85 percent of Democrats, 76 percent of Republicans, and 81 percent of independents opposed.

    Sen. Alexander: Using Reconciliation To Pass Health Care Reform Would ?End The Senate?
    Today, Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) appeared on ABC’s This Week to discuss last week’s bipartisan health care reform summit. During the summit, Alexander urged the President and Congressional Democrats to “renounce” the idea of using budget reconciliation to pass health care reform. Alexender went even further today, saying that the use of reconciliation would be […]

    Today, Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) appeared on ABC’s This Week to discuss last week’s bipartisan health care reform summit. During the summit, Alexander urged the President and Congressional Democrats to “renounce” the idea of using budget reconciliation to pass health care reform. Alexender went even further today, saying that the use of reconciliation would be “the end of the Senate“:

    The reconciliation procedure is a little-used legislative procedure — 19 times, it’s been used. It’s for the purpose of taxing, spending, and reducing deficits. But the difference here is, that there’s never been anything of this size and magnitude and complexity run through the Senate in this way. There are a lot of technical problems with it, which we could discuss. It would turn the Senate, it would really be the end of the Senate as a protector of minority rights, the place where you have to get consensus, instead of just a partisan majority.

    Watch it:

    If using reconciliation were really “the end of the Senate,” the Senate would have died a long time ago, and Lamar Alexander would have been complicit in its death.

    Reconciliation has been used to pass at least 19 bills, including major pieces of health care reform legislation like the Children’s Health Insurance Program and the Medicare Advantage Program. Fourteen of the times reconciliation was employed it was used to advance Republican interests.

    Furthermore, Alexander himself has personally voted for reconciliation at least four times, as Igor Volsky pointed out:

    – 2003 Bush Tax Cuts: The Congressional Budget office, Bush’s tax cuts for the rich increased budget deficits by $60 billion in 2003 and by $340 billion by 2008. The bill had a cost of about a trillion dollars. [Alexander voted yes.]

    – 2005 Deficit Reduction Act of 2005: The bill cut approximately $4.8 billion over five years and $26.1 billion over the next ten years from Medicaid spending. [Alexander voted yes.]

    – 2005 Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005: The bill extended tax cuts on capital gains and dividends and the alternative minimum tax. [Alexander voted yes.]

    – 2007 College Cost Reduction and Access Act: The bill forgave all remaining student loan debt after 10 years of public service. [Alexander voted yes]

    In the end, Alexander’s mere presence on television this morning seems to indicate that using reconciliation does not, in fact, end the Senate.

  • Chile reels in aftermath of quake, emergency workers provide aid

    Chile reels in aftermath of quake, emergency workers provide aid
    SANTIAGO, CHILE — After experiencing one of the most powerful earthquakes to strike the earth in more than a century, Chileans accelerated their rescue, aid and security efforts in damaged regions Sunday but also took pride in the comparatively low death toll, a result widely attributed to the…


    Democrats will have votes for health bill, Obama aide says
    Raising the prospect of a “simple up-or-down vote” on health-care reform, White House adviser Nancy-Ann DeParle said on Sunday she thinks Democrats will secure enough ayes on the measure and signaled that the administration could be moving toward trying to pass it along party lines.

    D.C. mayor faces racial divide as he prepares for reelection
    Mayor Adrian M. Fenty was racing through the District’s Southeast neighborhoods, shoveling sidewalks for seniors in Fairlawn, whacking tennis balls with youngsters in Hillcrest and posing for photos with teenage boxers at a recreation center in Bellevue.

  • DC is Working Fine. The Public is the Problem

    DC is Working Fine. The Public is the Problem
    Evan Thomas, Newsweek
    Washington is working just fine. It's us that's broken.Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.Separate multiple addresses with commasWatching your government at work can be an appalling spectacle. Politicians posture and bicker, and not much gets done. It's gotten so bad"”or at least seems so bad"”that pundits are beginning to wonder if the system is broken in some fundamental way and to cast about for a big fix. Some little fixes might help"”reforming the Senate filibuster would be a…

    Obama Should Pack the Supreme Court
    Stan Isaacs, Philadelphia Inquirer

    We Can’t Wish Away Climate Change
    Al Gore, New York Times
    It would be an enormous relief if the recent attacks on the science of global warming actually indicated that we do not face an unimaginable calamity requiring large-scale, preventive measures to protect human civilization as we know it. Of course, we would still need to deal with the national security risks of our growing dependence on a global oil market dominated by dwindling reserves in the most unstable region of the world, and the economic risks of sending hundreds of billions of dollars a year overseas in return for that oil. And we would still trail China in the race to develop smart…

    The Axis of the Obsessed and Deranged
    Frank Rich, New York Times

  • Racializing Abortion in Georgia

    Racializing Abortion in Georgia
    A Georgia anti-choice group has a “choice” strategy to cater to African-Americans in an effort to diversify its majority-white membership: launch a public outreach campaign that argues that abortion is a decades-old conspiracy to kill off black people. —JCL The New York Times: For years the largely white staff of Georgia Right to Life, the state’s largest anti-abortion group, tried to tackle the disproportionately high number of black women who undergo abortions. But, staff members said, they found it difficult to make inroads with black audiences. So in 2009, the group took money that it normally used for advertising a pregnancy hot line and hired a black woman, Catherine Davis, to be its minority outreach coordinator. Ms. Davis traveled to black churches and colleges around the state, delivering the message that abortion is the primary tool in a decades-old conspiracy to kill off blacks. The idea resonated, said Nancy Smith, the executive director. Read more

    A Georgia anti-choice group has a “choice” strategy to cater to African-Americans in an effort to diversify its majority-white membership: launch a public outreach campaign that argues that abortion is a decades-old conspiracy to kill off black people. —JCL

    The New York Times:

    For years the largely white staff of Georgia Right to Life, the state’s largest anti-abortion group, tried to tackle the disproportionately high number of black women who undergo abortions. But, staff members said, they found it difficult to make inroads with black audiences.

    So in 2009, the group took money that it normally used for advertising a pregnancy hot line and hired a black woman, Catherine Davis, to be its minority outreach coordinator.

    Ms. Davis traveled to black churches and colleges around the state, delivering the message that abortion is the primary tool in a decades-old conspiracy to kill off blacks.

    The idea resonated, said Nancy Smith, the executive director.

    Read more

    Related Entries


  • Democrats, Republicans Still Can’t Agree On Remedy For Ailing Health Care System

    Democrats, Republicans Still Can’t Agree On Remedy For Ailing Health Care System
    In the aftermath of President Obama’s White House health-care summit, it’s clear that both sides are certain they are right on substance. Where they differ…

    Joseph B. Margolick: Needed: Another Cooper Union Speech
    February 27 is the 150th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s speech at Cooper Union. Why was his address that night so successful, and what does it mean for us today? The answer is, a lot.

    Mark Axelrod: The Slow and Senescent Death of Health Care in America
    Eldridge Cleaver said, “You’re either part of the solution or you’re part of the problem.” Republicans, obstreperous to the point of obscenity, are part of the problem.

    Saul Friedman: Gray Matters–A reach too Far–Who is Alan Simspon?
    This time President Obama, in his obsessive reaching across the political aisle, may have gone a stretch too far. For the Republican he picked…

    James Zogby: Abuse of Language Threatens American Freedoms
    The last Administration displayed a rather perverse and dangerous penchant for dressing up their behavior, providing it with religious or patriotic intent. President Bush packaged…

  • DOJ Urged To Probe Deleted Yoo Emails

    DOJ Urged To Probe Deleted Yoo Emails
    The Justice Department is being urged to probe claims that emails written by John Yoo could not be provided to internal investigators because they had been deleted and were unrecoverable.

    Ethics Panel Finds Rangel Broke House Rules
    The AP is reporting that the House ethics panel has found Rep. Charlie Rangel (D-NY) broke House rules.


    Leahy At OPR Hearing: ‘Where Are Mr. Yoo’s Emails?’
    Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy just kicked off a hearing on the Justice Department torture memo report, and he immediately raised the question of John Yoo’s missing emails.

  • Blogging GREAT Chile Quake/Tsunamis; Bachelet A Steady Leader; Japan Experiences Tsunami

    Blogging GREAT Chile Quake/Tsunamis; Bachelet A Steady Leader; Japan Experiences Tsunami

    by Linda Milazzo <b>UPDATED: Feb, 28, 2010/2:25AM (local Chile time)</B> The death toll in Chile is now confirmed at 300. <B>UPDATED: Feb, 28, 2010/12:00AM (local Chile time)</B> CNN reports there have been 67 aftershocks in Chile, many over 6.0 and thus far over 240 people have died in the quake. Japan is preparing for possible tsunamis, employing extreme precaution having […]

    As Calif. Goes Bankrupt, State Employees Rake In Vacation Time, 6-Figure Severances
    State officials have let employees amass vast amounts of leave time and end their careers with six-figure payouts – one topping $800,000, an investigation has found.

    State officials have let employees amass vast amounts of leave time and end their careers with six-figure payouts – one topping $800,000, an investigation has found.

  • Conservatives Strive to Repel Jewish Support, Again

    Conservatives Strive to Repel Jewish Support, Again
    You’ve perhaps heard by now that Texas Republican Rep. Ron Paul won this weekend’s presidential straw poll at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) gathering in Washington, D.C.You may also have heard that Paul surprised the pundits with his strong…



    Ron PaulConservative Political Action ConferenceCPACStraw pollMitt Romney

    Nuclear Posture Review — I Repeat Myself
    Nearly every major policy address by the administration’s top officials — from the president to the vice president and secretary of state — has stressed that the forthcoming Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) will “reduce the role of nuclear weapons” in…


    Nuclear weaponWeaponsWarfare and ConflictNuclearUnited States

  • Rubio raises Terri Schiavo case in an attack on Crist.

    Rubio raises Terri Schiavo case in an attack on Crist.
    Yesterday, TPM’s Eric Kleefeld noted that the gloves were coming off in the Florida GOP Senate primary. Orlando Sentinel columnist Mike Thomas provided a prime example of this yesterday when he reported that former Florida House Speaker Marco Rubio had issued a release “whacking Charlie Crist for not being tough on social issues like abortion,” […]

    Yesterday, TPM’s Eric Kleefeld noted that the gloves were coming off in the Florida GOP Senate primary. Orlando Sentinel columnist Mike Thomas provided a prime example of this yesterday when he reported that former Florida House Speaker Marco Rubio had issued a release “whacking Charlie Crist for not being tough on social issues like abortion,” in which he invoked the infamous case of Terri Schiavo:

    Marco Rubio’s campaign has put out a new release, whacking Charlie Crist for not being tough on social issues like abortion.

    The release includes this mention of the Terri Schiavo case, “Crist also received criticism on the Terri Schiavo debate about where he really stood on a Congressional bill that would have let Terri’s parents take their lawsuit to save her life to federal courts.”

    Thomas interprets the release as evidence that Rubio “seems to favor government intervention in this case.” According to a Nexis search, Rubio hasn’t explicitly commented on the Schiavo incident, in which conservatives brought a personal tragedy to national attention in 2005 to energize their pro-life base. The GOP tried to write legislation forcing doctors to reinsert Schiavo’s feeding tube and taking the “extraordinary step” of subpoenaing the critically brain-damaged woman to testify to Congress. Rubio did vote for the law giving then-Gov. Jeb Bush the authority “to issue a one-time stay to prevent the withholding of nutrition and hydration from” Schiavo. Crist was the attorney general of Florida at the time, but he refused to get involved in the case.

  • Dan Balz’s Sunday Take: The political divide over the health-care debate

    Dan Balz’s Sunday Take: The political divide over the health-care debate
    In the aftermath of President Obama’s White House health-care summit, it’s clear that both sides are certain they are right on substance. Where they differ is over the politics. Democrats and Republicans believe that, in the end, they can win the political argument. As Obama said at the end of…

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    Obama ready to move forward on health-care reform
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  • Danish Paper Apologizes for Cartoon

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    A Danish newspaper that published a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban has apologized for offending Muslims. The penitence was part of a settlement between the paper and eight Muslim groups. The apology has been denounced by other members of the Danish media, which previously stood united in rejecting calls to back down in the face of Islamic outrage over the cartoon. —JCL The Telegraph: A Danish newspaper on Friday became the first in the country to apologise for offending Muslims by printing a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed with a bomb-shaped turban, rekindling a heated debate about free speech. Politiken said its apology was part of a settlement with a Saudi lawyer representing eight Muslim groups in the Middle East and Australia. The daily drew strong criticism from Danish media, which previously had stood united in rejecting calls to apologise for 12 cartoons that sparked fierce protests in the Muslim world four years ago. Lars Loekke Rasmussen, the prime minister, expressed surprise at Politiken’s move, saying he was worried that Danish media no longer were “standing shoulder to shoulder” on the issue. Politiken said it did not mean to offend Muslims in Denmark or elsewhere when it reprinted one of the most controversial cartoons, showing the Prophet wearing a turban shaped like a bomb with a lit fuse. Islamic law generally opposes any depiction of the Prophet, even favourable, for fear it could lead to idolatry. Read more  

    A Danish newspaper that published a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban has apologized for offending Muslims. The penitence was part of a settlement between the paper and eight Muslim groups. The apology has been denounced by other members of the Danish media, which previously stood united in rejecting calls to back down in the face of Islamic outrage over the cartoon. —JCL

    The Telegraph:

    A Danish newspaper on Friday became the first in the country to apologise for offending Muslims by printing a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammed with a bomb-shaped turban, rekindling a heated debate about free speech.

    Politiken said its apology was part of a settlement with a Saudi lawyer representing eight Muslim groups in the Middle East and Australia.

    The daily drew strong criticism from Danish media, which previously had stood united in rejecting calls to apologise for 12 cartoons that sparked fierce protests in the Muslim world four years ago.

    Lars Loekke Rasmussen, the prime minister, expressed surprise at Politiken’s move, saying he was worried that Danish media no longer were “standing shoulder to shoulder” on the issue.

    Politiken said it did not mean to offend Muslims in Denmark or elsewhere when it reprinted one of the most controversial cartoons, showing the Prophet wearing a turban shaped like a bomb with a lit fuse. Islamic law generally opposes any depiction of the Prophet, even favourable, for fear it could lead to idolatry.

    Read more

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