Author: HL

  • Think Twice on Iran

    Think Twice on Iran
    The conventional wisdom in Washington seems to be that the Iran-Brazil-Turkey deal to take about half of Tehran’s enriched uranium out of the country in exchange for access to fuel for a medical isotope reactor was merely a ploy to…


    Class in America
    John Williams runs a site called Shadow Government Statistics, based on the premise that the Federal government has been lying to you since the mid 1990’s about some crucial statistics. His most critical calculation is on unemployment. I have regularly…

    Harvard Needs To Fire Dershowitz & Ha’aretz’ Gideon Levy On The Israel Of Israelis’ Dreams
    The media went into a frenzy this week over some kid who lied his way into Harvard. Big deal. Some 22 year old is incapable of doing the damage to Harvard done by a major law professor who uses his…


    Middle EastAlan DershowitzWarfare and ConflictUnited StatesIsrael

  • Texas Board Of Education Members Largely Stay Silent When Man Says ?Islam Brings Death?

    Texas Board Of Education Members Largely Stay Silent When Man Says ?Islam Brings Death?
    One of the most contentious issues in the debate over what to include in Texas’ social studies textbooks surrounds the separation of church and state. The far-right members of the State Board of Education (SBOE) argue that America is a Christian nation and separation of church and state is a myth. In March, a majority […]

    One of the most contentious issues in the debate over what to include in Texas’ social studies textbooks surrounds the separation of church and state. The far-right members of the State Board of Education (SBOE) argue that America is a Christian nation and separation of church and state is a myth. In March, a majority of SBOE members voted “against requiring high school American government students to learn that the nation’s Founders barred government from favoring or disfavoring one religion over all others.”

    At the opening of yesterday’s session — where the board gave final approval to the social studies standards — far-right member Cynthia Dunbar gave the invocation, in which she used the prayer to pusher her anti-church-state separation agenda:

    Whether we look to the first charter of Virginia, or the charter of New England or the Charter of Massachusetts Bay, or the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, the same objective is present: a Christian land governed by Christian principles. I believe the entire Bill of Rights came into being because of the knowledge our forefathers had of the Bible and their belief in it. … I like to believe we are living today in the spirit of the Christian religion.

    Watch it:

    Additionally, during a session this past week that included debate and comment from members of the public, a man stood up and said, “I have to tell you: Islam is coming, and Islam brings death. So I say, ‘Repent America, repent.’” CNN said that Lawrence Allen, the one Muslim member of the board, called the man out for his “insulting” comments, but not one of the other 14 members complained. Watch it:

    A May 4-12 poll conducted by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research for the TFN Education Fund found that “68 percent of likely Texas voters agree that church-state separation is a key principle of the Constitution.” That number included “59 percent of Republicans, 76 percent of Democrats and 74 percent of political independents believing it is a key principle.”

    Rove Ludicrously Claims Bush White House Never Questioned Opponents? ?Motives? Or Called Them Names
    Former White House advisor Karl Rove made a name for himself as President Bush’s “architect” by employing underhanded tactics to win elections and smear opponents. So it was startling that during a book signing in Oklahoma this week Rove declared that Bush “never allowed” staffers to call their opposition “disparaging labels,” or “question their […]

    Rove3 Former White House advisor Karl Rove made a name for himself as President Bush’s “architect” by employing underhanded tactics to win elections and smear opponents. So it was startling that during a book signing in Oklahoma this week Rove declared that Bush “never allowed” staffers to call their opposition “disparaging labels,” or “question their motives“:

    “President Bush, for example, never allowed a White House staffer or administration spokesman to go out and do what this administration and our predecessor routinely did — that is to engage in calling the leaders of the opposition party disparaging labels and question their motives,” he said.

    As The Oklahoman’s Ryan Dean noted, “In fact, Rove and other members of the Bush administration were routinely critical of opponents to the Iraq war and questioned their patriotism.” In a 2007 speech, Rove directly challenged the “motives” of his political opponents when he implied that Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) intentionally used rhetoric that would endanger American soldiers:

    ”Let me just put this in fairly simple terms: Al Jazeera now broadcasts the words of Senator Durbin to the Mideast, certainly putting our troops in greater danger. No more needs to be said about the motives of liberals.

    During the 2008 campaign, Rove cast doubt on now-President Obama’s patriotism by attacking him for not wearing a flag pin — even though Rove wasn’t wearing one at the time — and criticized Michelle Obama for not showing “adequate enough” patriotism after she had given a lengthy speech professing her love of country.

    And in the very same speech where Rove touted the honesty of the Bush White House, Rove falsely attributed a statement to President Obama that was actually made by Michelle.

  • Hawaii holds special election for House seat; Democrats expect loss in Obama’s birthplace

    Hawaii holds special election for House seat; Democrats expect loss in Obama’s birthplace
    Democrats are bracing for the loss of a House seat Saturday in President Obama’s birthplace of Hawaii, where a special election in a heavily Democratic district has inflamed tensions within the party .


    DemocraticUnited StatesBarack ObamaHawaiiPresident

    Primaries school: What GOP can learn before midterm elections
    Democrats got an election-year wake-up call in January when they lost the Massachusetts Senate seat long held by Edward M. Kennedy. Did Republicans get their wake-up call last week?


    RepublicanUnited StatesElectionsPoliticsDemocratic

    Months of intense negotiations led to passage of financial overhaul bill
    When Christopher J. Dodd arrived at the White House that Wednesday morning in March, he was wrestling with a fateful choice.


    BusinessFinancial servicesBarack ObamaUnited StatesDemocratic

    TALK SHOWS
    Guests to be interviewed Sunday on major television talk shows:



    TelevisionTalk showConan O’BrienTonight ShowTalk radio

    Results of Kandahar offensive may affect future U.S. moves
    The Obama administration’s campaign to drive the Taliban out of Afghanistan’s second-largest city is a go-for-broke move that even its authors are unsure will succeed.


    KandaharUnited StatesTalibanAfghanistanWar in Afghanistan

  • Unified Action Needed Against North Korea

    Unified Action Needed Against North Korea

    A Progressive Agenda to Remake Washington
    David Leonhardt, NYT
    With the Senate’s passage of financial regulation, Congress and the White House have completed 16 months of activity that rival any other since the New Deal in scope or ambition. Like the Reagan Revolution or Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society, the new progressive period has the makings of a generational shift in how Washington operates.First came a stimulus bill that, while aimed mainly at ending a deep recession, also set out to remake the nation’s educational system and vastly expand scientific research. Then President Obama signed a health care bill that…

    Jimmy Carter’s Lesson for Tea Parties
    Sen. Bob Bennett, Washington Post
    Jimmy Carter won the White House in 1976 by riding the wave of anger and disillusionment that followed Gerald Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon. Carter tapped into that anger with the slogan “I will never lie to you.” An angry electorate, disgusted with Nixon, decided that was reason enough to give Carter the presidency. He won, in large part, because he made it clear that he wasn't Richard Nixon.Pundits called Carter a political genius. 

    Iran: Can Sanctions and Diplomacy Be Combined?
    Tony Karon, Time
    “The purpose of sanctions is to bring the Iranian side to the negotiating table,” said Li Baodong, China's U.N. ambassador, this week, explaining how Beijing could simultaneously support a new uranium-swap deal brokered by Brazil and Turkey and endorse new U.N. sanctions. The Obama Administration appears to have convinced China of its view that sanctions pressure is integral to achieving a diplomatic compromise. That two-track concept of combining punitive pressures with diplomatic engagement may also partly explain the U.S. slap-down of the deal brokered by Turkey and…

  • Financial Reform Won’t Alter Capitalism’s Icarus Trajectory

    Financial Reform Won’t Alter Capitalism’s Icarus Trajectory
    Perhaps the most troubling reality in the 21st century is that our economics now dictates our cultural values, rather than the reverse, where we the people would decide how resources, production and mutual prosperity should be systematized to achieve the best society for all. By Stuart Whatley

    Perhaps the most troubling reality in the 21st century is that our economics now dictates our cultural values, rather than the reverse, where we the people would decide how resources, production and mutual prosperity should be systematized to achieve the best society for all.

    Related Entries


  • James Carville Takes On Obama On Oil Spill: He’s ‘Risking Everything’ With ‘Go Along With BP Strategy’

    James Carville Takes On Obama On Oil Spill: He’s ‘Risking Everything’ With ‘Go Along With BP Strategy’
    Democratic strategist James Carville and MSNBC anchor Chris Matthews, two reliable supporters of President Barack Obama, have issued withering critiques of the administration’s handling of…

    HUFFPOST HILL – MAY 21, 2010
    Dems want Wall Street reform signed by July 4th, but the fireworks won’t stop until the midterms. Everyone will be taking a hit of that…

    Joseph A. Palermo: And Carter Thought He Faced National Malaise
    The spectacle of British Petroleum literally killing off the Gulf of Mexico before our eyes while the Obama Administration apparently believes that BP is honorable…

    Richard Blumenthal Wins Connecticut Democratic Nomination, Linda McMahon Wins Republican Nomination
    HARTFORD, Conn. — Connecticut Republicans have endorsed former World Wrestling Entertainment executive Linda McMahon for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Democrat Chris Dodd….

  • Fox?falsely suggests?financial reform to blame for market drops

    Fox?falsely suggests?financial reform to blame for market drops

    Fox & Friends repeatedly falsely suggested the stock market declines in the U.S. and Asia were solely in response to the Senate passing financial reform, despite the fact that guest Stuart Varney said the drops were “not about” the legislation. Indeed, the declines are largely blamed on economic instability in Europe.

    Fox & Friends blames market drops on financial reform 

    Carlson: “At first blush the markets don’t like it at all.” Fox & Friends co-host Gretchen Carlson stated on May 21, “[w]ell the Senate makes a historic move in other news, and at first blush, the markets don’t like it at all. The Senate passed the president’s financial reform bill last night. This morning, Dow futures down 3. European markets are off about 20 and the Asian markets are down about 10.”

    Doocy: “So far this morning, the markets haven’t really reacted positively to” financial reform. Co-host Steve Doocy reported later in the program, “[i]n a late night session, the U.S. Senate has approved an historic crackdown on financial reform. And so far this morning, the markets haven’t really reacted positively to it. The Dow futures are down about 10. European markets are off about 1 1/2 percent and the Asian markets already closed down a little better than 2 percent because of the sell off here in the United States yesterday.”

    Varney told Fox & Friends the market decline was “not about” financial reform

    Varney: Stock market drop was “not about” financial reform. During the program, Doocy stated, “Meanwhile, yesterday, the stock market crashed as the Senate passed that bill that clamps down on Wall Street. A coincidence?” Doocy then asked Fox business analyst Stuart Varney, “Are these connected or are they two separate things?” Varney stated:

    VARNEY: Largely separate. Largely separate.The big decline in the stock market, 1,000 points down, by the way, in a couple of weeks, that’s everything to do with the American situation that is a slow recovery with no jobs, some say the failure of Obama’s economic policies, and Europe, collapse in Europe, chaos in Europe. This financial regulation reform bill, that really hasn’t had that big of an impact on the stock market. It’s not about that.

    Varney: Friday’s activity is a “replay of yesterday.” Later on America’s Newsroom, Varney stated that Friday’s drop is a “replay of yesterday in many respects” and that “[e]verybody’s nervous because you’ve got chaos in Europe, a weak U.S. economy”:

    VARNEY: If it were open for trading right now, the Dow would be below 10,000. It will be off around 85, 90 points. You’re seeing a replay of yesterday in many respects. Oil is down, gold is down, the stock market is down, but you’ve got Treasury bond prices way up. Now that’s a technical thing but it means there’s a flight to safety. Everybody’s nervous because you’ve got chaos in Europe, a weak U.S. economy, flooding to safe havens like the U.S. treasury market. That’s what’s happening now.

    Reports: Current market declines primarily due to European economic instability

    WSJ: Market decline is ”an accumulation of worrisome developments, primarily out of Europe.” The Wall Street Journal reported May 21:

    New worries about the health of the global economy flared Thursday, driving U.S. stocks to their first official correction since the bull market began last March, roiling credit markets and causing big swings in currencies.

    […]

    There was no one particular piece of news that drove Thursday’s market swoon. Instead, investors said it was an accumulation of worrisome developments, primarily out of Europe, where officials are struggling to convince the market they have the Greece crisis under control. Worries mounted that the troubles may spread beyond Europe to stymie growth elsewhere. And China’s effort to tighten monetary policy has made investors increasingly nervous about growth slowing in that country.

    Concerns are building that the progress made in pulling the global economy out of recession is slipping away. That contrasts with the sentiment this time last year when central banks and governments seemed to be working effectively together to stabilize the markets and economy.

    NY Times: ”Stocks on Wall Street were unsettled in early trading on Friday following declines in Europe and Asia.” The New York Times reported on May 21 that, “[s]tocks on Wall Street were unsettled in early trading on Friday following declines in Europe and Asia amid continued fears that the debt crisis could undermine the economic recovery in the euro zone and perhaps beyond”:

    The decline in Europe came even as German lawmakers voted to approve their country’s share of the nearly $1 trillion rescue deal to save the euro and contain the debt crisis.

    The Dow Jones industrial average fell below 10,000 within minutes of the opening bell, declining 143.59 points, or 1.4 percent, before regaining some ground. Shortly before 10 a.m., both the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index and the Nasdaq composite index crept into positive territory.

    The last time that the Dow closed below 10,000 was Feb. 8, when the index finished at 9,908.39. The reason for the decline back then: Greece’s debt crisis.

    “Certainly when you saw Europe stall you knew it wasn’t going to be pretty,” said Uri Landesman, president of Platinum Partners, speaking soon after the opening. “I expect there to be more of the same today,” with riskier assets selling off.

    NY Times: “[B]iggest factor unnerving markets” was fear that European economic stability “might spill to the United States.” The New York Times also reported in another May 21 article that “traders and analysts said the biggest factor unnerving markets was the continuing prospect that European governments might not have done enough to stem the panic over Greece and other heavily indebted nations, and that their problems might spill to the United States, affecting the pace of economic recovery.” From the article: 

    Stock markets in Asia fell sharply in early trading on Friday after continuing declines on Wall Street and in Europe.  

    Fears that the fragile economic recovery in the United States might be threatened by the financial and political crisis inEurope gripped Wall Street on Thursday, sending the stock market into a sharp decline and leaving anxious traders wondering where the pain might stop, The New York Times’s Mark MacDonald reported.

    […]

    Nagging worries that Europe’s debt crisis could spread, compounded by uncertainties over financial regulation on both sides of the Atlantic, have set investors on edge the world over.

    […]

    But traders and analysts said the biggest factor unnerving markets was the continuing prospect that European governments might not have done enough to stem the panic over Greece and other heavily indebted nations, and that their problems might spill to the United States, affecting the pace of economic recovery.

    Some economists warn, for example, that weakness in Europe’s economies combined with the ongoing appreciation of the dollar against the euro could hurt American exports.

    The Times also reported that ”uncertain progress of financial reform in the United States” and in Germany, the labor strike in Greece, and violence and political tension in Asia were also partially responsible.

    Bloomberg: Stocks fell “on concern that Europe’s debt crisis will slow global economic expansion.” Bloomberg reported on May 21 that, “[s]tocks fell for a seventh day and oil declined on concern that Europe’s debt crisis will slow global economic expansion. The euro erased gains that drove it to its strongest in a week.”

  • Greek general strike: Is the Gaza flotilla caught in the middle?

    Greek general strike: Is the Gaza flotilla caught in the middle?
    Several friends of mine just left for Greece in order to join an eight-ship flotilla that plans to sail from Athens to Gaza at the end of May. The eight ships will be carrying humanitarian supplies designed to help break a four-year siege of the Gaza strip — or at least that was the plan. […]

  • Can Small Farms Survive?

    Can Small Farms Survive?

    Cross-posted from Food Politics. Many of us have been heartened to learn that the number of small farms in the U.S. is increasing for the first time in a century.  The latest Census of Agriculture reports more small farms in 2007 than in 2002. But the USDA, which tracks such things in reports such […]

  • US Rejects Brazil, Turkish Iran Offer — Chooses The AIPAC Route

    US Rejects Brazil, Turkish Iran Offer — Chooses The AIPAC Route
    The Obama administration is essentially ignoring the Iranian nuclear deal brokered by Turkey and Brazil. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton responded today by announcing that the United States has reached an agreement on sanctions with the other permanent members of…


    IranUnited StatesBrazil and TurkeyHillary Rodham ClintonIsrael

    Peter Beinart Unbound?
    Anyone who actually writes anything about Israel that perfect strangers are likely to read had better believe he’s got the wisdom, pointillist clarity and courage to unmask others’ astigmatism, myopia and bad faith. Too often, though, the would-be Truth-teller, no…


    IsraelPeter BeinartMiddle EastWarfare and ConflictNew York Review of Books

    Think Twice on Iran
    The conventional wisdom in Washington seems to be that the Iran-Brazil-Turkey deal to take about half of Tehran’s enriched uranium out of the country in exchange for access to fuel for a medical isotope reactor was merely a ploy to…


  • The LiberalOasis Radio Show: Pleasant Conversation With A Conservative Edition

    The LiberalOasis Radio Show: Pleasant Conversation With A Conservative Edition

    Today’s LiberalOasis Radio Show podcast features our interview with Politics Daily’s Matt Lewis about the conservative reaction to the Kentucky and Pennsylvania primary elections. Plus, Traci Olsen and I discuss the Wall Street reform, the elections and the series finale of “Lost.”

    You can download the podcast at these links: (iTunes / XML feed / MP3).

  • Rand Paul Cancels His Meet The Press Interview

    Rand Paul Cancels His Meet The Press Interview
    Kentucky Republican Senate nominee Rand Paul has been lampooned in recent days for his radical anti-government views. First, he expressed opposition to parts of the Civil Rights Act and the Americans With Disabilities Act. Today, he attacked President Obama’s criticism of BP as “un-American,” and refused to say whether or not the minimum wage is […]

    Kentucky Republican Senate nominee Rand Paul has been lampooned in recent days for his radical anti-government views. First, he expressed opposition to parts of the Civil Rights Act and the Americans With Disabilities Act. Today, he attacked President Obama’s criticism of BP as “un-American,” and refused to say whether or not the minimum wage is legal. MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell joked that Paul is the “gift that keeps on giving.”

    But he is giving no more. He “simply does not want to answer direct questions about the proper role of the Federal government in regulating the private sector,” the Washington Post’s Greg Sargent noted. “He visibly bristles when asked to clarify his views on these matters,” Sargent added.

    After his upset victory Tuesday night, Paul agreed to appear on NBC’s Meet The Press Sunday for what would surely be wide ranging interview that would delve into these issues:

    MTPPaulPromo2

    But Meet The Press’ executive producer Betsy Fischer revealed an hour ago that Paul was “trying to cancel” his big interview:

    MTPPaulTweet2

    The Washington Post reports that Paul has indeed canceled because “he’s had a long week.” A Paul spokesperson explained, “Rand did Good Morning America today, set the record straight, and now we are done talking about it. … No more national interviews on the topic.” Paul joins Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan and Saudi Arabia’s Prince Bandar as the only guests to cancel a Meet the Press interview in recent history.

    As MSNBC host Joe Scarborough told ThinkProgress today, referring to Paul’s embarrassing interview with fellow host Rachel Maddow, “if a politician can’t handle an interview, they can’t handle the Senate.”

    Texas Board Of Education: Jefferson Davis And Obama?s Middle Name Are Essential For Students To Learn
    Today, the right-wing Texas State Board of Education (SBOE) will give final approval of content for state social studies curriculum. The standards will “dictate what is taught in all Texas schools and provide the basis for textbooks and student achievement tests over the next decade.” Yesterday, this unqualified board — which includes a woman who […]

    Today, the right-wing Texas State Board of Education (SBOE) will give final approval of content for state social studies curriculum. The standards will “dictate what is taught in all Texas schools and provide the basis for textbooks and student achievement tests over the next decade.” Yesterday, this unqualified board — which includes a woman who thinks public education is a “tool of perversion” and a chairman whose real profession is a dentist — continued to inject their right-wing ideology into the state’s standards, pushing for inclusion of more conservatives, more Confederate glorification, and more distortion of progressive viewpoints.

    Whether To Require Students To Learn Obama’s Middle Name: Republican David Bradley is one of the leaders of the SBOE’s far-right faction. Yesterday, he suggested that if students were going to learn about Barack Obama as the first African-American president, they should also learn his middle name — Hussein. However, fellow Republican Bob Craig objected, saying, “The intent of what you’re doing is pretty obvious, but I don’t think it is necessarily correct,” pointing out that other presidents like Kennedy and Reagan don’t have their middle names in the standards. Bradley eventually withdrew his amendment, and the board decided to list Obama as he is on the White House website: Barack H. Obama.

    Elevating Confederate Leader Jefferson Davis To The Level Of Abraham Lincoln: There was “prolonged debate” yesterday over whether to “include Confederate President Jefferson Davis’ inaugural address with a lesson on Abraham Lincoln’s philosophical views.” Far-right Republican Cynthia Dunbar said that excluding Jefferson would be an attempt to “whitewash” history. (TFN Insider adds, “But that’s what Davis’s address does! The address doesn’t even mention the reason southern states seceded: slavery.”) Eventually, the SBOE votes to keep in Davis and require students to “contrast” his speech to Lincoln’s speeches.

    Requiring That Historical Figures — Except Conservative Ones — Must Be Dead For Students To Study Them: Yesterday, SBOE voted to strip United Farm Workers of America co-founder Dolores Huerta from a third-grade list of “historical and contemporary figures who have exemplified good citizenship.” Several officials argued that she is a socialist and therefore should be excluded. But perhaps the most blatantly biased objection came from Bradley, who said:

    I am very reluctant to include persons who are still alive. By definition of “history,” you must be dead, because you never know when you might embarrass us later.

    Watch the debate here:

    Of course, the board has had no problem including Wallace Jefferson, the Republican chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court, or right-wing figure Phyllis Schlafly.

    This week, ThinkProgress spoke with Judy Jennings and Rebecca Bell-Metereau, two progressives who are running for seats on the SBOE. They both promised to try to undo any textbook changes the right-wing board approves.

  • James Cole nominated for No. 2 job at Justice Department

    James Cole nominated for No. 2 job at Justice Department
    The White House nominated James M. Cole as deputy attorney general Friday, turning to a veteran Washington lawyer to fill a critical position that has been vacant for months.


    United States Department of JusticeUnited StatesGovernmentJustice DepartmentAmerican International Group

    Va. Politics: Bob McDonnell pick called ‘Jew counter’
    Del. Scott Surovell (D-Mount Vernon) said he and Del. David L. Englin (D-Alexandria), both of whom are Jewish, are scheduled to appear Friday morning on WTOP’s Politics Program with Mark Plotkin to denounce anew Fred Malek’s appointment to the Governor’s Commission on Government Reform and Restru…


    Bob McDonnellUnited StatesVirginiaPoliticsRepublican

    Corporate PACs betting on Republicans to regain control of Congress
    Corporate America is gambling on the minority in its political giving this year, assuming that Republicans will win big in the November midterm elections, an analysis of campaign finance reports shows.


    Political action committeeUnited StatesRepublicanCongressPolitics

  • Terrorists Caught by Behavior Police: 0

    Terrorists Caught by Behavior Police: 0
    Though the U.S. government has paid nearly $200 million in 2009 for 3,000 “behavior detection” agents to work at 161 airports, they’ve never caught a single terrorist. The GAO uncovered 16 individuals later accused of involvement in terrorist plots who flew 23 times through U.S. airports since 2004. None were stopped by behavior officers working at those airports. “It’s a disgrace,” said aviation security analyst Charles Slepian.

  • How Baseball Became America vs. the Damn Yankees

    How Baseball Became America vs. the Damn Yankees
    Baseball has always proceeded according to the law of the jungle with the Yankees as King Kong, but in the past even they never dominated financially as they do now.

    By Mark Heisler

    Baseball has always proceeded according to the law of the jungle with the Yankees as King Kong, but in the past even they never dominated financially as they do now.

    Related Entries


  • Mark Souder Affair May Not Break Congressional Rules

    Mark Souder Affair May Not Break Congressional Rules
    The good news for soon-to-be ex-Rep. Mark Souder: There are no rules that expressly prohibit Members of Congress from sleeping with their staff. The Indiana…

    Calderon Speech To Congress: Mexican President To Address Immigration During Joint Session
    WASHINGTON — Mexican President Felipe Calderon is taking his case for a fair and orderly overhaul of U.S. immigration policies to the people who can…

    Al Eisele: Nancy Pelosi to GOP and Tea Party: Bring It On
    I’ve covered eight Speakers of the House since coming to Washington as a young reporter for a string of midwestern newspapers in 1965, including six…

    Gary Rivlin: The Payday Industry’s Powerful Friend
    This past fall, Lynn DeVault, the head of the trade association representing the country’s payday lenders, spoke frankly about what her group was doing to…

    ‘Modifying’ Miranda Rights Modifies The Political Debate
    WASHINGTON — Hammered for months by Republicans as soft on terrorism, Attorney General Eric Holder and the rest of the Obama administration are suddenly playing…

  • Wash. Times op-ed falsely claims Kagan wouldn’t let “willing Harvard law students” meet with military recruiters

    Wash. Times op-ed falsely claims Kagan wouldn’t let “willing Harvard law students” meet with military recruiters

    A Washington Times op-ed baselessly claimed that Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan promoted an “anti-military campaign” while dean of Harvard Law, citing the false claim that Kagan “den[ied] JAG officers and willing Harvard law students the opportunity to meet and talk about opportunities to serve in the military.” In fact, students had access to military recruiters throughout Kagan’s tenure as dean, and Kagan’s respect for the military is well established.

    Wash. Times op-ed falsely claims Kagan “ban[ned]” military recruiters from Harvard Law

    From a May 19 Washington Times contradicted by data Media Matters for America obtained from Harvard Law School’s public information officer. The prohibition on Harvard Law’s OCS working with military recruiters existed during the spring 2005 semester, meaning that it could have affected only the classes of 2005, 2006, and 2007. However, the number of graduates from each of those classes who entered the military was equal to or greater than the number who entered the military from any of Harvard’s previous five classes.

    Kagan did not “discriminat[e]” against the military

    Kagan: Anti-discrimination policy applied to “any employer that uses the services of OCS.” Kagan did not, as Rotunda claimed, “discriminat[e]” against the military, but rather briefly ended the military recruiter exception (created in 2002) to Harvard Law School’s broad op-ed by Flagg Youngblood labeling Kagan an “anti-military zealot,” three Iraq war veterans attending Harvard Law School wrote in a letter to the editor that Kagan has “created an environment that is highly supportive of students who have served in the military” and that “[u]nder her leadership, Harvard Law School has also gone out of its way to highlight our military service.” The veterans also stated that their support for military recruiting at the school “has not diminished our appreciation for Miss Kagan’s embrace of veterans on campus.” The Harvard Law Record later reported on the veterans’ letter, quoting Iraq veteran Geoff Orazem as saying, “Kagan has great respect for the military.”

    Conservative legal blog: No reason to believe Kagan is hostile to the military. At Volokh Conspiracy, a group blog run by mostly conservative law professors, George Mason University law professor Ilya Somin wrote: “I don’t see any reason to believe that [Kagan’s decision on military recruiters] reflects a general hostility towards the armed forces.”

    Republican Sen. Brown: Kagan is “very supportive of the military as a whole.” The Hill speech at the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, Kagan stated: “I am in awe of your courage and your dedication, especially in these times of great uncertainty and danger. I know how much my security and freedom and indeed everything else I value depend on all of you.” Kagan further stated that she has been “grieved” by “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” because she “wish[es]” that gays and lesbians “could join this noblest of all professions and serve their country in this most important of all ways.” Kagan added:

    But I would regret very much if anyone thought that the disagreement between American law schools and the US military extended beyond this single issue. It does not. And I would regret still more if that disagreement created any broader chasm between law schools and the military. It must not. It must not because of what we, like all Americans, owe to you. And it must not because of what I am going to talk with you about tonight — because of the deep, the fundamental, the necessary connection between military leadership and law. That connection makes it imperative that we — military leaders and legal educators — join hands and be partners.

    Kagan: It’s “just wrong” that gays and lesbians “cannot perform what I truly believe to be the greatest service a person can give for their country.” In an October 6, 2003, email announcing that Harvard Law School would allow military recruiters on campus, Kagan wrote that “[t]he importance of the military to our society — and the extraordinary service that members of the military provide to all the rest of us — makes this discrimination [against gay troops] more, not less, repugnant,” a sentiment she reiterated in a 2005 letter offering “background” on the school’s position on military recruiting on campus. In October 2004, Kagan reportedly said in protest of the ban on openly gay troops: “These men and women, notwithstanding their talents, their conviction, their courage, cannot perform what I truly believe to be the greatest service a person can give for their country. And that’s just wrong, that’s just flat out wrong.” In a 2008 statement on the military recruiting issue, Kagan wrote, “The military is a noble profession, which provides extraordinary service to each of us every day.”

  • Staffer Who Had Affair With Souder Resigns

    Staffer Who Had Affair With Souder Resigns
    Tracy Jackson, the part-time staffer who had an affair with Rep. Mark Souder (R-IN), on Tuesday resigned her position, which at least partly consisted of interviewing Souder for a Web video series, the AP reports….


    Stanford ‘A Wreck Of A Man’ As Defense Team Turns To Dershowitz
    Allen Stanford has been reduced to “a wreck of a man” and fears he is “losing his mind” as he awaits trial in a Texas prison, according to his attorneys. They’ve brought in celebrity lawyer Alan Dershowitz to argue that the conditions in which Stanford is being held are hindering his ability to prepare a defense, and to request his immediate release.


    Alan DershowitzAllen StanfordLawyerStanford Financial GroupLaw

    At Same ‘08 Speech, Blumenthal More Correctly Describes Military Record (VIDEO)
    In the same speech where Richard Blumenthal claimed he had “served in Vietnam,” he also described his service more accurately, saying he served “during the Vietnam era.”

  • Poizner Closes In on Whitman

    Poizner Closes In on Whitman
    A new Public Policy Institute of California poll shows a “dramatic reshaping” in the Republican race for governor as the 50-point lead Meg Whitman held over Steve Poizner two months ago has now closed to single digits.

    Whitman now leads Poizner, 38% to 29%, among likely voters with 30% undecided.

    The Next Majority Leader
    The Washington Post looks beyond the fall election to the possible race for Senate majority leader — assuming Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) loses his re-election bid.

    The main contenders are Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL). “Each can boast a strength: Durbin has the pleasant demeanor of a consensus builder; Schumer is the diehard fighter who has never lost an election. The prospect of a Chicago vs. New York majority leader race with echoes of Obama vs. Clinton is tantalizing, but also distracting.”

    Interesting fact: Schumer and Durbin have shared a Washington townhouse for years.

    Fiorina Grabs Lead in California Primary
    A new Public Policy Institute of California poll finds that Carly Fiorina (R) has a narrow lead over Tom Campbell (R) in the Republican Senate race, 25% to 23%, with Chuck DeVore (R) gaining ground at 16%. There are 36% still undecided.

    “Although Fiorina’s lead is within the 5-percentage-point margin of error, the poll highlights Campbell’s vulnerabilities as Election Day approaches: He is underfunded compared with Fiorina and under attack by conservatives unhappy with his moderate record on taxes and social issues.”

  • Six Myths About Immigration That Just Won’t Die

    Six Myths About Immigration That Just Won’t Die
    We need to straighten out our thinking about some of the basic issues in order to have a useful and serious policy argument.

    We need to straighten out our thinking about some of the basic issues in order to have a useful and serious policy argument.

    Root Cause of Voters? Revolt: Congress, Obama, GOP Ignore 11 Million Jobless

    The revolt across the political landscape on Tuesday against incumbents wasn’t just an attack against the Washington establishment, but an outpouring of rage against political elites of all stripes who haven’t realized the economic crisis still gripping American workers. As Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of The Nation, asks sensibly enough, “Why isn’t our […]

    Buyer Beware: Over the Counter DNA Tests Can Cause More Harm Than Good
    There’s a huge push to market over-the-counter genetic tests. But the faulty tests can cause more harm than good.

    There's a huge push to market over-the-counter genetic tests. But the faulty tests can cause more harm than good.

    Rethinking Stripping: So Why Are So Many Men Paying Women to Take off Their Clothes?
    We need to talk about gender, sexuality, safety, pleasure, earning power, and choice when we discuss sex work.

    We need to talk about gender, sexuality, safety, pleasure, earning power, and choice when we discuss sex work.

    Coming to Terms with Climate Change and the Economy
    Where does the concept of "climate debt" fit into a New Economy framework?

    Where does the concept of "climate debt" fit into a New Economy framework?