Archive for November, 2008

The Huffington Times

November 22, 2008

For anyone who still believes that the New York Times has an interest in providing credible, objective political analysis based in truth, I offer this evidence:

http://theboard.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/11/21/a-sarah-palin-thanksgiving/

I challenge anyone to argue that this is anything but abject stupidity. 

The Editors of the Times may or may not be aware of this, but this is, in fact, how turkeys are slaughtered (not “executed,” oh professional wordsmiths).  Yes, those tryptophan-loaded things that the Times editors (or more likely their assistants) purchase at the grocery store to fuel their gargantuan egos, atrophied moral compasses and whithered intellects were, in fact, once living birds.

The Huffington Post ran a similar story, but that is the same publication that called for the death of the civil rights movement a few weeks ago.  Unfortunately, it seems that the Times is no more credible.

Blog Analysis

November 22, 2008

Apperantly, the readability level of this blog is undergraduate:

 

<a href=”http://www.criticsrant.com/bb/reading_level.aspx”><img style=”border: none;” src=”http://www.criticsrant.com/bb/readinglevel/img/undergrad.jpg” alt=”blog readability test” /></a><p><small><a href=”http://www.criticsrant.com”>TV Reviews</a></small></p>

This puts this blog at a higher reading level than Talk Left,  in the same league as “Wake Up America,” and well below the reading level of Maggie’s Notebook. 

BarackObama.com, on the other hand, is written at an elementary school level.  Try it yourself: http://www.criticsrant.com/bb/reading_level.aspx  I guess this explains how that site can claim that raising taxes on 5% of people and lowering taxes on 95% will raise more money- the power of make believe. 

There seems to be a lesson here.  Until one reaches the age of voting, one should read TalkLeft and BarackObama.com.  Then, as their mind matures and critical thinking skills improve, check here and Wake up America.  If one is truly gifted, then they should move up to Maggie’s Notebook.

Thanks to Maggie’s, Wake Up America, and Talk Left for posting links to this site!

In Defense of John Dingell

November 20, 2008

Say what you will about John Dingell, but the man knows his constituency and represents their interests.  John Dingell has been representing his predominantly blue-collar, union constituency for over 50 years.   During my lifetime, he has never encountered a serious challenge to his seat that I can remember.  Everyone knows him, most everyone has met him.  He knows many of his constituents personally, and always represents their interests.  While you might not agree with the man, he clearly takes his role as a representative of his people very seriously. 

 

So why have the Obama Democrats purged this man from his Chairmanship in the House?  Has he changed?  Not really.  He is the same guy he has always been- the House’s great lion of the working class.  Have his voters changed?  Not really.  They are poorer now, sure, victims of the incompetence of the Big Three and the ideological rigidity, arrogance and ineptitude of Jennifer Granholm.  But overall, they are the same hard-working, honest, friendly and family-minded folks they have always been.  So why the change?  Why now?

 

It’s simple.  John Dingell, and more importantly John Dingell’s voters, no longer matter to the Democratic Party in the Age of the Big Zero.  Dingell supported Hillary Clinton.  His voters supported Hillary Clinton.  The Big Zero sees all.  The Big Zero never forgets.  And the Big Zero frankly does not like Dingell’s voters and their ilk.  They ate like those clingy Pennsylvanians.  The Big Zero is much more interested in other voters.  Voters who privilege the environment over employment.  Voters who elect people like Henry Waxman. 

 

It will always be a mystery to me why Michiganders vote the way they do.  Some lucky Michiganders can trace a solid line of criminally incompetent leaders from their mayors (Kwame Kilpatrick, until recently) through the House (too many to list here, Kwame’s mommy or little Levin are good examples) to the Senate (Levin or Stabenow, take your pick) to Granholm (“Our Governor is so crappy, we had to go to Canada to find her!”).  Yet the worse things get, the more willing Michiganders are to give the same folks more power.  In Barack Obama, Michigan might have found a way to inflict Michigan-style government on the rest of the country.  The performance of Michigan’s elected officials is the only thing that makes the Lions look good.  Michiganders have a high tolerance for pain.

 

Naturally, then, the response of Michigan to this latest Obama attack on the state is to sit back and take it.  First, Obama refuses to count Michigan’s vote.  Then, he refuses to campaign there.  Then, he sends his surrogates out to denounce the state and its voters. Then, he shows up for a couple of weeks when McCain starts campaigning there.  As soon as McCain leaves, he never appears again.  No word on the automaker crisis.  Obama’s only interest in Michigan came when it appeared that it would go to McCain, since then he couldn’t care less. 

 

John Dingell was one of the few Michigan politicians who could point to an actual record of achievement in government.  John Dingell was one of the few American politician who a majority of his constituents have probably seen or even met.  John Dingell has the humility to understand his constituents, and the courage to stand up for them. 

 

In the Age of the Big Zero, that means one thing.  John Dingell had to go. 

Obama Should Respect Law Enforcement and Stop Gutierrez Appointment

November 18, 2008

One of the people being rumored to replace Barack Obama in the Senate is Illinois Representative and former Obama surrogate Luis Gutierrez.  Gutierrez is the same Democratic Representative who said called federal law enforcement agents the “Gestapo” in an interview with the Politico.  Here is a cut from my posting at the time: 

“Decrying the Bush administration’s unwillingness to suspend the enforcement of immigration laws, Gutierrez blames the influence of the law enforcement community.  “You know who is in charge now? Gutierrez declared, “The Gestapo agents at …Homeland Security. They are in charge.”

 

Who is Gutierrez? He is a Chicago Democrat closely aligned with Barack Obama.  How close?  Gutierrez has “direct access” to Obama.  Obama and Gutierrez have co-sponsored legislation.  Gutierrez has been touted as a potential successor to Obama’s Senate seat.  He has even appeared as a surrogate for Obama in a campaign commercial.

To my knowledge, neither Gutierrez nor Obama has apologized for the comment, nor recognized the profound risks and challenges of the members of the law enforcement community who put their survival on the line every hour of every day of their working lives to enforce the laws that Congress has passed.  If Obama were to allow the appointment of Luis Gutierrez to his former seat, it would be a grave and unforgivable insult to every individual in the Department of Homeland Security and the law enforcement profession of the United States.  

The election is over, President-elect Obama.  Luis Gutierrez is your ally, your surrogate, and your party member. It is time to show some backbone and professional decensy to America’s law enforcement professionals by calling Representative Gutierrez to account for his abusive attitude toward your hard-working and dedicated employees.     

 

Great Article

November 13, 2008

There are two general ways in which one invents their political identity.  The first way is reflexive, it is either created in reflection or reaction to others.  Some people adopt the ideals of their parents or community whole cloth, others reject them likewise in toto, but in both cases the adoption is unthinking and uncritical.  The second way, the productive way, are those who think deeply about political issues and draw their own conclusions, challenging the ideas of their allies and themselves.  Camille Paglia is certainly one of the latter, and while I don’t agree with most of her conclusions, I always appreciate her perspective.  Paglia’s articles are always intellectually rigorous, challenging, and powerful.  Here is her take on Sarah Palin’s left-wing lynch mob.

“Reporters have been too busy playing mini-badminton with every random spitball about Sarah Palin, who has been subjected to an atrocious and at times delusional level of defamation merely because she has the temerity to hold pro-life views.”

“How dare Palin not embrace abortion as the ultimate civilized ideal of modern culture? How tacky that she speaks in a vivacious regional accent indistinguishable from that of Western Canada! How risible that she graduated from the University of Idaho and not one of those plush, pampered commodes of received opinion whose graduates, in their rush to believe the worst about her, have demonstrated that, when it comes to sifting evidence, they don’t know their asses from their elbows.”

“Liberal Democrats are going to wake up from their sadomasochistic, anti-Palin orgy with a very big hangover. The evil genie released during this sorry episode will not so easily go back into its bottle. A shocking level of irrational emotionalism and at times infantile rage was exposed at the heart of current Democratic ideology — contradicting Democratic core principles of compassion, tolerance and independent thought. One would have to look back to the Eisenhower 1950s for parallels to this grotesque lock-step parade of bourgeois provincialism, shallow groupthink and blind prejudice.”

“I like Sarah Palin, and I’ve heartily enjoyed her arrival on the national stage. As a career classroom teacher, I can see how smart she is — and quite frankly, I think the people who don’t see it are the stupid ones, wrapped in the fuzzy mummy-gauze of their own worn-out partisan dogma. So she doesn’t speak the King’s English — big whoop! There is a powerful clarity of consciousness in her eyes. She uses language with the jumps, breaks and rippling momentum of a be-bop saxophonist. I stand on what I said (as a staunch pro-choice advocate) in my last two columns — that Palin as a pro-life wife, mother and ambitious professional represents the next big shift in feminism. Pro-life women will save feminism by expanding it, particularly into the more traditional Third World.”

“As for the Democrats who sneered and howled that Palin was unprepared to be a vice-presidential nominee — what navel-gazing hypocrisy! What protests were raised in the party or mainstream media when John Edwards, with vastly less political experience than Palin, got John Kerry’s nod for veep four years ago? And Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas, for whom I lobbied to be Obama’s pick and who was on everyone’s short list for months, has a record indistinguishable from Palin’s. Whatever knowledge deficit Palin has about the federal bureaucracy or international affairs (outside the normal purview of governors) will hopefully be remedied during the next eight years of the Obama presidencies.”

You can (and really should) read the full article here at: http://www.salon.com/opinion/paglia/2008/11/12/palin/index1.html

Regardless of whether one agrees with Camille Paglia or not, she is a thinking liberal, and one of the few bright spots on an extremely lifeless intellectual media landscape.

A Free and Independent Press…

November 9, 2008

Barack Obama’s America- Freedom of the Press. 

 

I might be forgetting something here, so correct me if I’m wrong.  I don’t remember any media figures saying this when George W. Bush was elected.  Hard to picture Tim Russert making this statement, but this is nothing we did not already know.

Thanks to Lonely Conservative for this post.

Additional thought

November 8, 2008

Why is it that when the Big Zero says something stupid (no short list, that), he never apologizes publicly?  It’s always some press release or surrogate that goes out to be accountable.

The Compassion of Barack Obama

November 8, 2008

The Big Zero in power: picking on an old woman with a broken hip:

“I didn’t want to get into a Nancy Reagan thing about, you know, doing any seances.”

http://www.startribune.com/politics/national/president/34079994.html?elr=KArksD:aDyaEP:kD:aU2EkP7K_t:aDyaEP:kD:aUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUU

Very classy.  Very statesmenlike.  Very compassionate.

Very New Left.

Appreciating John McCain

November 8, 2008

While a number of folks are casting about, assigning blame for the election of Barack Obama, I think that we should step back for a moment and give our thanks to John McCain.  No candidate for the Presidency campaigned harder, few have done so well in such a difficult political environment, and very few can point to a similar record of public service. 

 

John McCain began this Presidential campaign with no money, mired in single-digit poll numbers.  He rallied to win the Republican nomination against a former Time Man of the Year (Rudy Giuliani), a moderate Governor with a limitless war chest (Mitt Romney), and a charismatic and likable former Southern governor (Mike Huckabee).  The Republican Party faced the general election carrying the weight of an unpopular administration, a corrupt and disgraced Congressional delegation, an unpopular war that a Republican administration had mishandled, a poorly-administered response to a natural disaster that had destroyed a major American city, the passage of a gigantic and overwhelmingly unpopular corporate rescue package in a time of economic crisis, and an economic environment that serious economists are comparing to the Great Depression.  Somehow, McCain managed to retain 46% of American voters, and lost the election by only 6% of the vote. 

 

To put this in perspective, in spite of all of these woes, fairly or unfairly credited to the Republican account, John McCain somehow managed to hold losses from the Republican coalition to a mere 3% of the proportion of votes won by President Bush in 2000. 

 

For rock bottom, this is a decent place for us to build from.  And we owe it to John McCain. 

 

In addition, the legacy of McCain’s campaign may be a positive one for the Republican Party.  While the conventional wisdom holds that the significance of the Palin pick was to energize social conservatives (which did in fact happen, I might add), I would argue that the broader impact will be to lay the groundwork for a new coalition of Republican voters.  Palin swept onto the scene not because of a long record of public-policy initiatives of social conservative causes (in fact, her record is overwhelmingly tolerant and secular on social issues), but because she represents a set of governing principles that balances the interests of business and voters in government.  As Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam argue in Grand New Party, the future of the Party is with the working class and the upwardly mobile.  Palin marked the first step in the direction of a Party focused on “Wall-Mart Republicans.”  Whether the eventual breakthrough is won by Sarah Palin, Bobby Jindal, Tim Pawlenty, or Eric Cantor, we can credit John McCain with starting the party in this new direction. 

 

           And that will represent the last, and greatest, service of this American hero to our people.    

Hilarious

November 7, 2008