Author: HL

  • Why The Ethan Bronner Case Matters

    Why The Ethan Bronner Case Matters
    The story this far is that the New York Times is seriously on the defensive because the son of its Israel correspondent, Ethan Bronner, joined the Israeli army. In the end, the Bronner story is not that significant. He will…



    New York TimeMiddle EastEthan BronnerIsrael Defense ForcesIsrael

    Squeezing Intel Out of Terrorists
    As a companion piece to Matt Yglesias’ ontology of Miranda rights, I want to look at the underlying first-order basis of the intelligence obtained from terrorists in custody. Very simple: they give it to us. Obviously they don’t do so…


    Miranda warningMirandaLawUnited StatesLaw Enforcement

  • Inhofe?s Grandchildren Build Igloo To Mock Killer Snow Storm: ?Al Gore?s New Home?

    Inhofe?s Grandchildren Build Igloo To Mock Killer Snow Storm: ?Al Gore?s New Home?
    The record-breaking snowstorm that has shut down the mid-Atlantic region for days has become a favored target for mockery by Republicans who deny global warming, seemingly on the supposition that deadly blizzards invalidate the science of climate change. Before the storm hit, the Virginia GOP launched a web ad mocking “12 inches of global warming,” […]

    Inhofe family iglooThe record-breaking snowstorm that has shut down the mid-Atlantic region for days has become a favored target for mockery by Republicans who deny global warming, seemingly on the supposition that deadly blizzards invalidate the science of climate change.

    Before the storm hit, the Virginia GOP launched a web ad mocking “12 inches of global warming,” attacking Democrats who had voted in favor of climate and clean energy legislation. Now, after hundreds of thousands of people lost power, several people have been killed, and states of emergency declared in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware, Sen. Jim Inhofe’s (R-OK) family has joined in the mockery, building an igloo on the National Mall and calling it “Al Gore’s New Home“:

    The Oklahoma Republican’s daughter, Molly Rapert; her husband, Jimmy; and their four children built an igloo — roomy enough to fit several people inside — at Third Street and Independence Avenue Southeast. They officially dedicated the humble abode in honor of global-warming crusader Gore, even posting a cardboard sign on the igloo’s roof reading “AL GORE’S NEW HOME” on one side and “HONK IF YOU [HEART] GLOBAL WARMING” on the other. Inhofe, the ranking member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, is famously one of Congress’ most vocal critics of global warming. And he told HOH that he found his family’s ironic tribute to Gore — which came during one of Washington’s snowiest winters on record — “really humorous.”

    In reality, winter snows do not invalidate the reality that the planet just experienced the hottest decade on record. Scientists have been warning for decades that global warming would increase the severity of winter storms.

    This past January was the warmest January on record for the planet. And as National Wildlife Federation climate scientist Amanda Staudt notes, winter storms are getting fiercer even as the season gets warmer. “The last few years have brought several unusually heavy snowstorms as warmer and moister air over southern states has penetrated further north, colliding with bitter cold air masses,” she explains.

    Insurer Denies Life-Prolonging Treatment To Five-Year-Old Boy With Cancer
    One of the worst abuses of private insurance companies is the practice of using spurious reasons to deny claims for medical treatments, which are often necessary for saving patients’ lives. Kyler Van Nocker’s story shows that even 5-year-old kids are not exempt from this insurance company abuse. Van Nocker has neuroblastoma, which is a […]

    Kyle Van Nocker One of the worst abuses of private insurance companies is the practice of using spurious reasons to deny claims for medical treatments, which are often necessary for saving patients’ lives.

    Kyler Van Nocker’s story shows that even 5-year-old kids are not exempt from this insurance company abuse. Van Nocker has neuroblastoma, which is a very rare form of childhood cancer that targets the nervous system and creates tumors throughout the body.

    Due to successful treatment in 2007, Van Nocker’s cancer went into remission, giving him 12 months of pain-free life. Unfortunately, in Sept. 2008, the cancer returned, and Van Nocker was once again in need of treatment. Unfortunately, his health insurer, HealthAmerica, refused to pay for one form of treatment doctors believe could save his life (MIBG treatment) because they consider it “investigational/experimental” since it has yet to be approved by the FDA.

    Yet in April 2008, the insurer approved cheaper treatment for Van Nocker that was also “experimental,” prompting Philadelphia Daily News columnist Ronnie Polaneczky to ask, “So why, pray tell, is HealthAmerica playing the ‘experimental therapy’ card in the case of the MIBG treatment Kyler now needs? Gee, money couldn’t have anything to do with the decision, could it?”

    Van Nocker’s parents are suing HealthAmerica, citing the fact that the company has apparently been dishonest about its criteria for the types of treatment it will cover and is denying payment for treatment in this case because of the high cost of the procedure — $110,000 pays for only two rounds of MIBG treatment. “These companies have to be brought to the courthouse to get them to do the right thing,” says the VanNockers’s family attorney. “This child needs this treatment, or else.”

    The sad truth is that Van Nocker is certainly not alone in having his claim denied by a major health insurer. The California Nurses Association (CNA), a nurses’ union and health care advocacy group, recently released a comprehensive study of claims denials across California. The study found that the six largest insurers in California rejected 47.7 million claims in the first half of 2009, nearly 22 percent of all claims submitted.

    The United States is the only industrialized nation without cradle-to-the-grave, universal health care. In no other developed country would a child with cancer have to go without care because an insurance company decided it was not profitable enough to cover him.

  • A Difference of Direction on Health Care

    A Difference of Direction on Health Care
    Yuval Levin, National Review
    Monday, February 08, 2010Which Way, Not How Far   [Yuval Levin]The Ezra Klein post that Stephen Spruiell ably critcizes below raises (by failing to see) an important point. The difference between most conservatives and most liberals on health care is not a difference of degree but a difference of direction — a difference on the question of which we way want to move from our existing highly inefficient system of paying for health insurance.Both sides agree there are huge problems with the current system, and they even agree on what some of those problems are: there…

    Education & the Fallacy of “Fairness”
    Thomas Sowell, RealClearPolitics
    A recent flap in a Berkeley high school reveals what a farce “fairness” can be. Because this is ultra-liberal Berkeley, perhaps we should not be surprised that a proposal has been made to eliminate four jobs as science teachers and use the money saved for programs to help low achievers.In Berkeley, as in many other communities across the country, black and Latino students are not performing as well as Asian and white students. In fact, the racial gap in academic achievement at Berkeley High School is the highest in California– no doubt a special source of embarrassment in…

    Eric Holder’s War
    Dayo Olopade, American Prospect
    (White House/Pete Souza)Hours before dawn on one of the last days of October 2009, the deadliest month for American troops in Afghanistan since 2001, Eric Holder, attorney general of the United States, strode out of a C-17 cargo plane parked at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. President Barack Obama, having reversed the ban on media coverage of the arrival of war dead at Dover, trailed just behind. During the official military ceremony, the two friends stood in dark suits, silently saluting 18 servicemen, including three Drug Enforcement Agency officials claimed by the Afghan War days prior….

    Murtha’s Dissent Was Crack in Iraq Consensus
    John Nichols, The Nation

  • Soldier Accused of Waterboarding 4-Year-Old Daughter

    Soldier Accused of Waterboarding 4-Year-Old Daughter
    Police have charged an American soldier with assaulting his young daughter. Specifically, Joshua Tabor of Tacoma, Wash., is reported to have waterboarded his 4-year-old three or four times because she was afraid of water and had trouble with her ABCs. New York Daily News: Tabor, a soldier at the Lewis-McChord base in Tacoma, Wash., told police he held the little girl’s head backward in a sink of water, Yelm Police Chief Todd Stancil told the the local newspaper, the Nisqually Valley News. Stancil said Tabor had admitted to using this means of punishment three to four times. Police found the little girl locked in a bathroom with bruises on her back and scratch marks on her neck and throat. Read more

    Police have charged an American soldier with assaulting his young daughter. Specifically, Joshua Tabor of Tacoma, Wash., is reported to have waterboarded his 4-year-old three or four times because she was afraid of water and had trouble with her ABCs.

    New York Daily News:

    Tabor, a soldier at the Lewis-McChord base in Tacoma, Wash., told police he held the little girl’s head backward in a sink of water, Yelm Police Chief Todd Stancil told the the local newspaper, the Nisqually Valley News.

    Stancil said Tabor had admitted to using this means of punishment three to four times.

    Police found the little girl locked in a bathroom with bruises on her back and scratch marks on her neck and throat.

    Read more

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    Super Saints

    By RJ Matson, The St. Louis Post Dispatch

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  • Daniel Cluchey: Conservatives’ Network Moment

    Daniel Cluchey: Conservatives’ Network Moment
    The sad truth is that the Republican party has been commandeered by those who would rather dumb their fellow citizens down than take part in an honest discussion about what policies best serve the American people.

    Naomi Klein: We Must Stand with Tim DeChristopher
    We cannot let the trial of Tim DeChristopher stand. When he disrupted that auction last year, he did so in the fine tradition of non-violent civil disobedience that changed so many unjust laws in this country’s past.

    Paul Helmke: Guns And Starbucks: Espresso Shots, Not Gunshots
    Welcome to the “open carry” movement, an effort by “gun rights” extremists to foist their interpretation of the Second Amendment on the rest of us by openly carrying handguns in public places.

    Aindriu Colgan: Meg Whitman, California, And The Importance of Image
    The Golden State’s political problems have progressed from bad to worse. It is not just suffering financial and budgetary difficulties, it is also flirting with…

  • Quick Fact: Carlson falsely claimed Republicans were “sidelined” in health care reform debate

    Quick Fact: Carlson falsely claimed Republicans were “sidelined” in health care reform debate

    On the February 9 edition of Fox & Friends, co-host Gretchen Carlson advanced the false claim that Republicans had been “sidelined through the whole” health care “discussion.” In fact, the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee and Senate Finance Committee bills contained nearly 200 Republican amendments.

    From the February 9 broadcast of Fox News’ Fox & Friends:

    CARLSON: I understand that the Republicans want to start over and start from scratch because they were basically sidelined through the whole discussion initially, but it is going to be a huge mistake if the Republicans don’t show up at this thing. It’s going to prove the president’s point that they’ve basically been the party of no.

    FACT: Senate bills included numerous GOP amendments, reflected bipartisan meetings

    Senate bills had numerous GOP amendments and reflected bipartisan meetings.  According to a HELP Committee document detailing the amendments to the Chairman’s Mark considered, at least 13 amendments sponsored by one or more Republican senators were included in the bill.

  • Return Of the Repressed? Birtherism, Homophobia, Racial Paranoia Rise To Surface At Tea Party Confab

    Return Of the Repressed? Birtherism, Homophobia, Racial Paranoia Rise To Surface At Tea Party Confab
    The National Tea Party Convention offered an outlet for some of the ranker strands of modern conservatism that had long been bubbling beneath the surface of the Tea Party movement.

    American Action Network: Who’s Putting Up The Money?
    With the American Action Network launching later this month, it’s a good time to look at a few of the people who are reportedly helping to fund the new conservative think tank.

  • Palin to ‘Lip Sync’ Future Speeches Says Aide

    Palin to ‘Lip Sync’ Future Speeches Says Aide
    Palin to ‘Lip Sync’ Future Speeches Says Aide By E.T. Mandible Nashville Journal-Advertiser February 8, 2010 Exclusive to the Journal-Advertiser NASHVILLE – In the wake of her speech last Saturday to the Tea Party convention held here, an aide to former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin told this reporter that her future speeches would be lip-synched. (Lip-synching is a technique where […]

  • Republicans Threaten Boycott of Health Care Summit

    Republicans Threaten Boycott of Health Care Summit
    House Republican leaders raised the prospect “that they might refuse to participate in President Obama’s proposed health care summit if the White House chooses not to scrap the existing reform bills and start over,” the Washington Post reports.

    On the GOP side: A new Gallup poll finds just 36% of Americans approve of the way the president is handling health care policy.

  • It Takes a Village to Raise a Racist

    It Takes a Village to Raise a Racist
    Researches have found that kids don’t necessarily get their prejudice from their parents — it is the community that fosters tolerance or prejudice.

    Researches have found that kids don't necessarily get their prejudice from their parents — it is the community that fosters tolerance or prejudice.

    A Conspiracy Theory About a Secret Police Force Has Ignited a Firestorm of Right-Wing Paranoia
    An obscure executive order has been misconstrued and now the blowback has reached all the way to Congress.

    An obscure executive order has been misconstrued and now the blowback has reached all the way to Congress.

    Our Democracy No Longer Works and the Problem Is Congress
    At the center of our government lies a bankrupt institution: Congress. The US Congress has become the Fundraising Congress.

    At the center of our government lies a bankrupt institution: Congress. The US Congress has become the Fundraising Congress.

    One Company Thinks They’ve Created Fast Food With a Conscience — Are They Right?
    Chipotle has a great record when it comes to buying more sustainable ingredients, but it has done one thing that has human rights activists howling.

    Chipotle has a great record when it comes to buying more sustainable ingredients, but it has done one thing that has human rights activists howling.

  • Squeezing Intel Out of Terrorists

    Squeezing Intel Out of Terrorists
    As a companion piece to Matt Yglesias’ ontology of Miranda rights, I want to look at the underlying first-order basis of the intelligence obtained from terrorists in custody. Very simple: they give it to us. Obviously they don’t do so…


    Miranda warningMirandaLawUnited StatesLaw Enforcement

    Why The Ethan Bronner Case Matters
    The story this far is that the New York Times is seriously on the defensive because the son of its Israel correspondent, Ethan Bronner, joined the Israeli army. In the end, the Bronner story is not that significant. He will…



    New York TimeMiddle EastEthan BronnerIsrael Defense ForcesIsrael

  • Bachmann?s Plan: To Deal With Debt, We Must ?Wean Everybody? Off Social Security, Medicare

    Bachmann?s Plan: To Deal With Debt, We Must ?Wean Everybody? Off Social Security, Medicare
    This past weekend, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) addressed the right-wing Constitutional Coalition’s annual conference in St. Louis. She had dropped out of the Tea Party Convention occurring on the same day in Nashville to make the appearance. Speaking to a small group of conference attendees and ThinkProgress during lunch on Saturday, Bachmann outlined how the […]

    bachmann.jpgThis past weekend, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) addressed the right-wing Constitutional Coalition’s annual conference in St. Louis. She had dropped out of the Tea Party Convention occurring on the same day in Nashville to make the appearance.

    Speaking to a small group of conference attendees and ThinkProgress during lunch on Saturday, Bachmann outlined how the Republican Party and its 2012 nominee must address the national debt. Bachmann referenced Glenn Beck, who falsely warned about a $107 trillion in supposed “unfunded liabilities” from Social Security and Medicare. She then called for a “reorganization” of entitlements where people “already in the system” would continue to receive benefits, but “everybody else” would be weaned off:

    BACHMANN: Is the country too big to fail? No, the country can fail. We can, we’re not invincible. And we’re so close now to being at that point because the thing is, as Glenn Beck said last night, it is true. The $107 trillion that he put on the board. We’re $14 trillion in debt, but that doesn’t include the unfunded massive liabilities. That’s $107 trillion, and that’s for Social Security and Medicare and all the rest. You add up all those unfunded net liabilities, and all the traps that could go wrong we’re on the hook for, and what it means is what we have to do is a reorganization of all of that, Social Security and all. We have to do it simply because we can’t let the contract remain as they are because the older people are going to lose. So, what you have to do, is keep faith with the people that are already in the system, that don’t have any other options, we have to keep faith with them. But basically what we have to do is wean everybody else off. And wean everybody off because we have to take those unfunded net liabilities off our bank sheet, we can’t do it. So we just have to be straight with people. So basically, whoever our nominee is, is going to have to have a Glenn Beck chalkboard and explain to everybody this is the way it is.

    Bachmann is echoing a growing chorus in the GOP caucus. Recently, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) introduced an alternative budget plan which would privatize both Medicare and Social Security. As the Wonk Room’s Pat Garofalo has noted, the type of private Social Security accounts Ryan proposes would have cost seniors tens of thousands of dollars in the 2008-2009 market plunge. But Bachmann takes Ryan’s effort a step farther and seems to be suggesting a full repeal of the retirement safety net.

    Bachmann, who has gained influence within Republican leadership circles, was a star at the event. At his speech on Friday, Glenn Beck proclaimed that Bachmann was the only person he trusted in Congress. Other accolades for Bachmann were heard throughout the conference. At one point, Heritage Foundation scholar Matt Spalding, who had been whispering in Bachmann’s ear while other panelists spoke, exclaimed, “if there’s one person who everyone at Heritage has a crush on, it’s Michele Bachmann.”

    MSNBC?s Andrea Mitchell Mocks Sarah Palin By Writing ?Cheat Sheet? On Her Hand
    On MSNBC’s Daily Rundown this morning, Andrea Mitchell reported that “one of the most interesting things” from Sarah Palin’s appearance at the Tea Party Convention this past weekend was the notes written on her hand. “Very clearly,” Mitchell observed, “were some cheat sheets.” Mitchell then mocked Palin by displaying her own hand, which had some […]

    On MSNBC’s Daily Rundown this morning, Andrea Mitchell reported that “one of the most interesting things” from Sarah Palin’s appearance at the Tea Party Convention this past weekend was the notes written on her hand. “Very clearly,” Mitchell observed, “were some cheat sheets.”

    Mitchell then mocked Palin by displaying her own hand, which had some handwriting on it. Holding up her hand for the camera, Mitchell joked that she wrote some things down “just in case I didn’t remember” what she wanted to say:

    Picture 2

    Mitchell’s joke then segued into an interesting conversation about the press corps’ treatment of Palin. Host Chuck Todd — seemingly wary of taking a jab at Palin — attempted to defend her by arguing, “We’ve all done notes.” Mitchell responded by astutely noting Palin’s hypocrisy in attacking Obama for using a Teleprompter. “So she takes all these snarky shots at Barack Obama,” Mitchell said, leaving Todd to complete the sentence, “she undermined it a little bit.”

    “If Mitt Romney had notes on his hand, wouldn’t we take it pretty seriously?” Mitchell asked. Todd responded, “She has different rules.” Watch the segment:

  • McDonnell directing more education money to N.Va.

    McDonnell directing more education money to N.Va.
    RICHMOND — In one of his first decisions on the state’s two-year budget, Virginia Gov. Robert F. McDonnell sided with Northern Virginia, the vote-rich region that helped him secure his landslide victory in November, by sending it more school dollars.

    The Fix: White House moves to make the filibuster a campaign issue
    Over the past week, President Obama and his senior aides have repeatedly cited Republicans’ filibuster threats as the primary reason for the lack of progress on big ticket legislative items, an early sign that Democrats will seek to use this bit of legislative arcana against the GOP in the coming…

    Va. Senate passes anti-discrimination bill for state workers
    RICHMOND The Virginia Senate passed a bill Monday that would make it illegal to discriminate in the state workforce, including on the basis of sexual orientation, marking the first time such legislation has passed either chamber of the Virginia General Assembly.


  • New Orleans Will Forever Be Brees’ Town

    New Orleans Will Forever Be Brees’ Town
    Jeff Duncan, Times-Picayune

    Bad Dog Food for the Democrats
    J.C. Watts, Las Vegas Review-Journal
    Just as we saw in the last 21/2 years of the Bush administration, the Obama administration obviously has listened to respond, rather than listening to hear. The president dismisses his lack of success by claiming he has not communicated his message enough. Really? I don't care how many news conferences you have, how many speeches you give, or how much money you spend on public relations, if the dog food is bad, the dogs won't eat it.The American people are unhappy with the direction of the country. They have a deep antipathy toward the federal government's activism, and they…

    Obama’s Retreat From the Global Stage
    Jackson Diehl, Washington Post
    Is a wounded Barack Obama withdrawing from the world? Europeans could be excused for speculating as much. The White House announced last week that the president would not attend a U.S.-European Union summit planned for Madrid in May, forcing its cancellation. The spurned host, Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, also failed to get a meeting with either Obama or Vice President Biden during a two-day visit to Washington. Zapatero claimed he had "no problem" with the rebuff. But that was not the reaction back home. "Obama Turns His Back on…

  • The Terror-Industrial Complex

    The Terror-Industrial Complex
    The conviction of the Pakistani neuroscientist Aafia Siddiqui in New York last week of trying to kill American military officers and FBI agents illustrates that the greatest danger to our security does not come from al-Qaida but the thousands of shadowy mercenaries, kidnappers, killers and torturers our government employs around the globe.

    By Chris Hedges

    The conviction of the Pakistani neuroscientist Aafia Siddiqui in New York last week of trying to kill American military officers and FBI agents illustrates that the greatest danger to our security does not come from al-Qaida but the thousands of shadowy mercenaries, kidnappers, killers and torturers our government employs around the globe.

    Related Entries


  • Stephen Kaus: Sunday Morning TV Gripes: Surprise, Peggy Noonan and Hugh Hewitt are Hypocritesr

    Stephen Kaus: Sunday Morning TV Gripes: Surprise, Peggy Noonan and Hugh Hewitt are Hypocritesr
    Random thoughts while zipping through the Sunday morning shows: – Peggy Noonan says on This Week that the Administration does not speak seriously about economics,…

    Andy Ostroy: “New York and Cali and Jersey, Oh My!” Punch-Drunk Republicans Predict a Revolution in November
    Whether it’s GOP head Michael Steele, pols, or right wing media spinheads, conservatives have been giddily regurgitating ad nauseum about how the “country is undergoing a massive shift to the right,” as Sean Hannity disingenuously boasts.

    Paterson Meets With Democrats Amid Scandal Rumors
    ALBANY, N.Y. — Gov. David Paterson met privately with key Democratic leaders about his re-election plans as questions swirl around the state capitol about a…

    Paterson To Resign? Governor David Paterson Will Step Down After Scandal Says Business Insider
    UPDATE: Business Insider now reports that a Paterson official denies that the governor will resign. The same source also says that while a “New York…

  • Palin latest to walk back criticism of GOP leader Limbaugh

    Palin latest to walk back criticism of GOP leader Limbaugh

    On Fox News Sunday, Sarah Palin became the latest Republican leader to walk back criticism of Rush Limbaugh’s incendiary rhetoric, saying that he had been “satirical” in using the word “retards.” In a prior statement about Limbaugh’s comments, a Palin spokesperson had criticized the ”crude and demeaning name-calling” of using the word, before later claiming that the statement was “not specifically aimed at Limbaugh” and, according to Limbaugh, calling his staffer “sort of in a panic” to explain it.

    Palin says Limbaugh meant to be “satirical” in using word “retards”

    From the February 7 edition of Fox Broadcsting Co.’s Fox News Sunday:

    CHRIS WALLACE (host): OK, but, Rush Limbaugh weighed in this week, and he said this: “Our politically correct society is acting like some giant insult’s taken place by calling a bunch of people who are retards, retards.”

    PALIN: He was satirical in that –

    WALLACE: Wait, let me finish. “I mean, these people, these liberal activists are kooks.” Should Rush Limbaugh apologize?

    PALIN: They are kooks, so I agree with Rush Limbaugh. Rush Limbaugh was using satire to bring attention to what this politically correct –

    WALLACE: But he used the “R” word.

    PALIN: Using satire. Name-calling by anyone — I teach this to my children. You teach this to your children and your grandchildren, too. Name-calling by anyone, it’s just unnecessary. It just wastes time. Let’s speak to the issues and again, let’s move on.

    WALLACE: But you know what some people are going to say, Governor, and have said. They say, look, when it’s their political adversary, Rahm Emanuel, she’s going to call him out — he’s indecent, apologize. But when it’s a political friend like Rush Limbaugh, oh, it’s satire.

    PALIN: I didn’t hear Rush Limbaugh call a group of people whom he did not agree with “f-ing retards,” and we did know that Rahm Emanuel, it’s been reported, did say that. There’s a big difference there.

    Palin spox originally criticized Limbaugh, calling his comments “crude and demeaning”

    Responding to Palin-Emanuel controversy, Limbaugh says liberals who complained about health care reform “are retards.” On the February 3 edition of his nationally syndicated radio show, Limbaugh said: “There’s Rahm Emanuel out there, who is in big trouble for calling liberals — for calling liberal activists ‘f-ing retards.’ Sarah Palin demanded that he be fired. Instead he has apologized to liberal activists. He was getting mad at them about health care. … So now, I think the big news is, the crack-up going on — but our political correct society is acting like some giant insult has taken place by calling a bunch of people who are retards “retards.” I mean, these people, these liberal activists are kooks. They are loony-toons. I’m not going to apologize for it, I’m just quoting Emanuel. It’s in the news.”  [The Rush Limbaugh Show02/03/10]

    Limbaugh also assured listeners Palin would not denounce his comments. On his February 4 show, Limbaugh addressed his use of the word “retard,” saying Palin “knows that I do this kind of — Sarah Palin is a lifelong listener of this program. … [T]hey’re trying to goad her into denouncing me like they did Emanuel, but she knows that all I’m doing is quoting Emanuel and highlighting that it’s these people who say this kind of stuff.” [The Rush Limbaugh Show02/04/10]

    Palin spokesperson responded to Limbaugh, saying his words amount to “crude and demeaning name calling.” After Limbaugh’s February 4 comments, the Washington Post Co.’s Greg Sargent posted a comment he received from Palin spokesperson Meghan Stapleton in response to Limbaugh’s words. Stapleton said: “Governor Palin believes crude and demeaning name calling at the expense of others is disrespectful.”

    Stapleton told Politico she was not singling out Limbaugh. A February 5 Politico article reported that Stapleton ”told POLITICO that the comment given to The Plum Line was not specifically aimed at Limbaugh.” The article quoted her as saying, “The Washington Post is trying hard to take the pressure off the White House by creating a side controversy, but it is missing the point. … As the governor has said, it doesn’t matter who says the ‘r’ word. It should no longer be part of our lexicon.”

    Limbaugh says Stapleton called ”sort of in a panic” to explain. On his February 5 show, Limbaugh said Stapleton called his chief of staff “sort of in a panic” over the Politico article saying, “I didn’t mention Rush in particular. They kept asking me about Rush, and I kept answering generically. But they kept asking me about Rush, and I just wanted you to know.”  Limbaugh said he believed Stapleton over Politico, “no question about it.” [The Rush Limbaugh Show02/05/10]

    Sargent posts email showing he received Stapleton remark in response to question about Limbaugh. Following the publication of the Politico article, Sargent posted on his blog the “email I sent to Palin spokesperson Meghan Stapleton,” which reads, “[Former Palin spokesperson] Jason Recher said…you’d be reaching out to me about Rush’s use of the term ‘retarded.’” Sargent added: “I subsequently emailed her to be absolutely certain that it applied to Rush. She didn’t dispute this, answering that it applies to “anyone” who uses the term.”

    Palin’s comment echoes Limbaugh’s own explanation of his remark

    Limbaugh: Remark was “satire, S-A-T-I-R-E.” On the February 5 edition of his show — after saying Stapleton had called “sort of in a panic” — Limbaugh stated that he used the word “retards” as “satire,” and that he used it “to wash their mouths [Harry Reid’s and Emanuel’s] out with soap and made an uncomfortable point.” From the show:

    Are you comfortable with the words, or with Harry Reid and Rahm Emanuel? I’m uncomfortable with the men and the manner in which they use these words. Words don’t generally offend me. I try not to give people the power to offend me, but Harry Reid and Rahm Emanuel — they do offend me, and they scare me, and they worry me. These men have cold hearts. They are statists. They have power over all of us. They are trying desperately to exercise that power.

    In fact, my friends, I am so uncomfortable with these men I purposely chose to use a rhetorical tool — satire, S-A-T-I-R-E — to ridicule and humiliate them. That tool is an effective blunt object in breaking through walls put up by state controlled media to protect Democrats. Satire. For those of you in Rio Linda, here’s the definition: the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule or the like in exposing, denouncing or deriding vice, folly, etcetera.

    I used Harry Reid’s words and Rahm Emanuel’s words — not mine — to expose and punish their behavior. I used satire to wash their mouths out with soap and made an uncomfortable point because the state controlled media would have run any Republican out of office, as in George Allen and macaca, if they had been caught saying what Reid and Emanuel said. Just as they’re trying to run me off the radio for repeating what they said.

    Many other Republicans have walked back their criticism of Limbaugh

    Michael Steele walked back comment that Limbaugh is an “entertainer” and his show is “incendiary” and “ugly.” On the February 28, 2009 edition of CNN’s D.L.Hughley Breaks the News, Republican National Committee chair Michael Steele responded to Limbaugh’s comment that he wanted Obama to “fail,” by saying: ”Rush Limbaugh is an entertainer. Rush Limbaugh, his whole thing is entertainment. Yes, he has this incendiary–yes, it’s ugly.” He later reportedly apologized to Limbaugh, telling Politico: “My intent was not to go after Rush — I have enormous respect for Rush Limbaugh. … I was maybe a little bit inarticulate. … There was no attempt on my part to diminish his voice or his leadership.”  

    Rep. Gingrey apologized after saying it’s “easy” for Limbaugh to stand back and throw bricks.” After Limbaugh said on his show that Obama is “more frightened of me,” than other Republican leaders, and that it “doesn’t say much about our party,” Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA) reportedly said that ”it’s easy if you’re Sean Hannity or Rush Limbaugh or even sometimes Newt Gingrich to stand back and throw bricks. You don’t have to try to do what’s best for your people and your party. You know you’re just on these talk shows and you’re living well and plus you stir up a bit of controversy and gin the base and that sort of thing.” Gingrey later apologized, saying he sees “eye to eye” with Limbaugh, that he and other conservative radio hosts “are the voices of the conservative movement’s conscience,” and that “we are inspired by their words and by their determination.”

    Gov. Sanford backpedaled comment that “anyone who wants Obama to fail is an idiot.” In a February 25, 2009 interview with Real Clear Politics, South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford said of Obama: “I don’t want him to fail. Anybody who wants him to fail is an idiot, because it means we’re all in trouble.” According to a Think Progress post, Sanford’s spokesperson later said “the governor was not referring to anyone” and was speaking “generically.”

    Rep. Tiahrt hedges after saying Limbaugh is “just an entertainer.” During an April 2009 interview with the Kansas City Star, Rep. Todd Tiahrt (R-KS) reportedly said Limbaugh is “just an entertainer,” after being asked “by a Kansas City Star Editorial Board member whether Limbaugh was now the de facto leader of the GOP.”  The Wichita Eagle later reported: ”Tiahrt spokesman Sam Sackett said Tiahrt was not speaking negatively about Limbaugh but was trying to defend him against the suggestion that Limbaugh could be blamed for the GOP’s woes. ‘The congressman believes Rush is a great leader of the conservative movement in America — not a party leader responsible for election losses,’ Sackett told The Eagle editorial board. ‘Nothing the congressman said diminished the role Rush has played and continues to play in the conservative movement.’ “

  • Internal Emails Show Robust Role For ‘Shadow Governor’ Todd Palin

    Internal Emails Show Robust Role For ‘Shadow Governor’ Todd Palin
    a huge batch of internal e-mails released in response to an Alaska open records request show that Todd Palin played a big role in his wife’s administration, often corresponding directly with the governor’s staff on matters ranging from appointments to contract negotiations.

    False ‘Recidivism’ Meme Lives On In Obama Admin Letter, ABC Report
    The Obama Administration is now adopting the flawed rhetoric of “recidivism” to discuss former Guantanamo detainees who are now said to be engaged in violence, according to a new ABC report, which uses the same problematic language.


  • Scribe Responds to Random Quotes

    Scribe Responds to Random Quotes
    Over at Scribe’s internet home: LT Saloon, Scribe has noticed there’s this neat little feature offering, mostly, anonymous quotes: anonymous if you’re too lazy to click like like Scribe. But Scribe isn’t too lazy to respond. “Learn Spanish! Jesus is coming.” Scribe… “That’s what the lonely housewife said who lived in a hispanic slum.” _______________________________________ “A Freudian slip is when […]

  • Landslide Harry

    Landslide Harry
    Mark Warren, co-author of Sen. Harry Reid’s The Good Fight, talks to the Las Vegas Sun about the Nevada senator’s low poll numbers and prospects for re-election.

    “They don’t call him Landslide Harry for nothing. It’s pretty simple, actually. Graced with the retail political skills of your average monk, Harry Reid has always had to work twice as hard for everything he’s ever achieved. Ever. You don’t climb out of a hole in the ground in Searchlight, Nevada, to become one of the most powerful men in the world by being outworked…”

    “In most ways, he is the least likely politician I’ve ever met. He is not gregarious. Small talk doesn’t come easy for him. He’d rather be alone than in groups… He and the camera maintain an uneasy relationship. Sometimes in pictures, he looks pissed off, or like he’s focused on some distant landscape of the mind. He is impervious to drama, not given to acting out or gaudy shows of emotion. Or, you know, any emotion.”

    Jenny Sanford Not Running for Office
    In an interview with the Columbia State, Jenny Sanford insists her new book, Staying True, “is not a setup for her own run for political office as some have speculated.”

    Said Sanford: “You’ve read the book. Does that sound like someone who wants to run for office? I’ve wanted for us (Mark Sanford and me) to get out of politics for years. I was always hopeful that once we got out of the political world he would settle into a better routine with respect to me and with respect to the marriage.”