Category Archives: Dump Duhbya

Stop

the Radical Right!

Not a Progressive Republican

Gov.

Vetoes Same-Sex Marriage Bill – Los Angeles Times
By Nancy Vogel and Jordan Rau, Times Staff Writers

SACRAMENTO — Gov.

Arnold Schwarzenegger refused to legalize same-sex marriage or raise the minimum wage in a flurry of vetoes Thursday that killed a spate

of Democratic-backed labor and consumer protection bills.

On a day when the governor rejected 52 bills, he discarded proposals

that would have helped consumers buy cheaper prescription drugs from Canada. He refused to expand punishments for employers that flout

minimum wage laws, pay women less than men or resist paying workers’ compensation claims.

He declined to protect nurses from

being required to work overtime or having to lift patients on their own. And he vetoed legislation to allow workers locked out by

employees during pay disputes to collect unemployment benefits.

absolute power

Pursuing a Fast Track To Party

Leadership

Some of Blunt’s activities have prompted criticism, for instance an unsuccessful 2002 maneuver to attach a

provision banning tobacco sales on the Internet to the bill creating the Department of Homeland Security.

Blunt did not succeed,

but the effort struck many of his colleagues as an overreach, given that his son was a lobbyist for Philip Morris in Missouri, Blunt

himself was dating a Philip Morris lobbyist whom he later married, and the congressman had received more than $150,000 in contributions

from the company and subsidiaries.

Buying of News

by Bush’s Aides Is Ruled Illegal – New York Times
By ROBERT PEAR
Published: October 1, 2005

WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 –

Federal auditors said on Friday that the Bush administration violated the law by buying favorable news coverage of President Bush’s

education policies, by making payments to the conservative commentator Armstrong Williams and by hiring a public relations company to

analyze media perceptions of the Republican Party.

In a blistering report, the investigators, from the Government Accountability

Office, said the administration had disseminated “covert propaganda” in the United States, in violation of a statutory ban.

Contract Killers – New York Times
It’s quite a

fall, no doubt about it: from agile insurgency to bloated establishment in just over a decade. So what went wrong? The 1994 Republicans

understood that power in Washington was not simply a matter of who controlled the White House and Congress. Passing legislation also

required the support of powerful unelected business interests and their representatives on K Street, the historic home of the lobbying

trade.

Led by Mr. DeLay in the House, Rick Santorum in the Senate and Grover Norquist downtown, Republicans worked not just toward

the partisan realignment of the country, but of the influence industry, too. They tracked which lobbyists were Democrats and which

Republicans, refused to meet with the Democrats and pressured business groups and law firms to hire the conservatives. Their strenuous

efforts to blur the boundaries between corporate America and the Republican Party came to be known as the K Street Project.

It was

an incredible success. By 2002, if you look at numbers from the Center for Responsive Politics, industries that had long made bipartisan

campaign contributions largely abandoned the Democrats, leaving Republicans with an overwhelming edge in corporate donations. By 2004,

the lobbyists themselves gave the Republicans $1 million more than they gave Democrats. The number of Republican lobbyists grew. And so

did the number of lobbyists, period – from about 9,000 when the Republicans took power to more than 34,000 today.

Our National Scold, the Prince of Puritans

The Ugly AmericanYou remember the Honorable Wm. Bennett. In the 80’s and 90’s, Bennett was an icon of the Culture Wars. Starry-eyed fans

carried his book like Mao’s followers used to carry his. Wm knew just what was wrong with America and he had no hesitation to tell

everyone what they were doing wrong — loudly and endlessly.

Wm’s star began to set before it was revealed he is an unrepentant

compulsive gambler. Hey, everyone has a right to piss away all the money they have, right? Sure, but if your hobbies are so off-center,

maybe you should keep your mouth shut about other people’s behavior. Oh, but the Radical, Religious Wrong aren’t perfect — just

forgiven. (How convenient for them.)

Now, Bennett says something almost incomprehensible and complains bitterly that anyone would

complain. It was just an intellectual exercise, like suggesting that gassing Jews isn’t all bad, or that rape has its pleasures. What’s

everyone so upset about? Mind you, he’s not simply defensive, but in Tom Delay-fashion, his pissed anyone would dare question him. The

best defense is to kill your opponents, it seems. So much for lost civility. (This technique ultimately failed Agnew and Nixon, but it

has worked for many pissants since them, so Conservatives aren’t about to change.)

I have a simple explanation for Bennett’s

lunacy: he’s been stealing pills from Lush Limbaugh. mjh

The Seattle Times: Politics: Bennett defends remarks on

blacks, abortion and crime rates

Free to Spy, Spy to Free

Surely,

innocent people can’t object to the government spying on them — what do you have to hide? Lost freedoms mean little if the government

can’t keep us completely safe from those who hate freedom. Double-plus good. mjh

FBI says it sometimes taps wrong

phone lines

The FBI says it sometimes gets the wrong number when it intercepts conversations in terrorism

investigations, an admission critics say underscores a need to revise the Patriot Act’s wiretap provisions.

The FBI would

not say how often these mistakes happen. And, though any incriminating evidence mistakenly collected is not legally admissible

in a criminal case, there is no way of knowing whether it is used to begin an investigation.

The Republican War on Science by Chris Mooney — and how the Media plays into the Radical Wrong’s hands

I know of Chris Mooney (and others) thanks to links from John Fleck. The title of Mooney’s new book seems apt (mjh to jfleck — a review?).

mjh

An interview

with Chris Mooney, author of The Republican War on Science | By David Roberts | Grist Magazine | Books Unbound | 27 Sep 2005

My thesis is that this is a political phenomenon that is unique to Republican rule in the United States, and which is epitomized by the

Bush administration. This administration is constantly doing favors for its big-business and religious-right constituents. That prejudice

drives distortions of science on issues ranging from global warming to sex education. …

Poor science education doesn’t help

matters, but I wouldn’t link it directly to the kinds of abuses we’re seeing. The role of fundamentalist religiosity — and

particularly, politically conservative Christianity — is, I think, more significant.

On evolution, on embryonic stem cell

research, on alleged health risks from abortion, and much else, religious conservatives have their own spin on the science, and even

their own “experts.” For instance, they deny evolution and have come up with a scientific-sounding alternative, “intelligent design.”

Because of this phenomenon of science appropriation, Republican politicians sympathetic to the religious right can easily cite their own

favored experts, in the process distorting mainstream scientific understanding. This sets in motion a wide array of abuses. …

Through their instinctive tendency to create a “balance” between two sides, journalists repeatedly allow science abusers to

create phony “controversies,” even though the scientific merits of the issue may exclusively be with one side.

Here’s my

real fear when it comes to the press. Suppose there’s some mainstream scientific view that you want to set up a think tank to challenge

— to undermine, to controversialize. Suppose further that you have a lot of money, as well as an interested and politically influential

constituency on board with your agenda. In this situation, it seems to me that as long as you are clever enough, you should be able to

set your political machine in motion and then sit back and watch the national media do the rest of your work for you. The press will help

you create precisely the controversy that lies at the heart of your political and public relations strategy — and not only that.

It will do a far better job than the best PR firm, and its services will be entirely free of charge.

I think we

have actually seen this happen repeatedly. A good example is the issue of evolution. …

We have to drive a wedge between moderate

Republicans and conservative ones on matters of science, because only the moderates can rescue their party from its current, destructive

addiction to abusing and distorting scientific information.

The Republican War on Science by Chris Mooney [mjh: numerous copies on order at the

Albuquerque Public Library but not yet received.]

CJR September/October 2005 – Undoing Darwin

The [evolution trial … in

Pennsylvania over intelligent design] is likely to be a media circus. And, unfortunately, there’s ample reason to expect that the

spectacle will lend an entirely undeserved p.r. boost to the carefully honed issue-framing techniques employed by today’s anti-

evolutionists. …

As evolution, driven by such events, shifts out of scientific realms and into political and legal

ones, it ceases to be covered by context-oriented science reporters and is instead bounced to political pages, opinion pages, and

television news. And all these venues, in their various ways, tend to deemphasize the strong scientific case in favor of evolution and

instead lend credence to the notion that a growing “controversy� exists over evolutionary science. This notion may be

politically convenient, but it is false. …

Without a doubt, then, political reporting, television news, and opinion pages are

all generally fanning the flames of a “controversy” over evolution. Not surprisingly, in light of this coverage, we simultaneously find

that the public is deeply confused about evolution.

In a November 2004 Gallup poll, respondents were asked: “Just your opinion, do

you think that Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution is: a scientific theory that has been well supported by evidence, or just one of many

theories and one that has not been well-supported by evidence, or don’t you know enough to say?” Only 35 percent of Americans answered a

scientific theory supported by evidence, whereas another 35 percent indicated that evolution was just one among many theories, and 29

percent answered that they didn’t know. Meanwhile a national survey this spring (conducted by Matthew Nisbet, one of the authors of this

article, in collaboration with the Survey Research Institute at Cornell University), found similar public confusion about the scientific

basis for intelligent design. A bare majority of adult Americans (56.3 percent) agreed that evolution is supported by an overwhelming

body of scientific evidence; a sizeable proportion (44.2 percent) thought precisely the same thing of intelligent design. …

One

thing, above all, is clear: a full-fledged national debate has been reawakened over an issue that once seemed settled. This new fight may

not simmer down again until the U.S. Supreme Court is forced (for the third time) to weigh in. In these circumstances, the media

have a profound responsibility — to the public, and to knowledge itself.

Chris C Mooney

DefCon — The Campaign to Defend the Constitution

DefCon Blog
DefCon celebrates all of our First Amendment freedoms, and this blog is an open

invitation to speak your mind on the topics we cover. Join DefCon’s Blogger-in-Chief Clark and a rotating host of provocative guest

bloggers for discussion, debate, and news.

The Campaign to Defend the Constitution encourages all visitors to post to our blog. We

hope for a lively discussion and debate. …

DefCon is a new organization dedicated to confronting the power of the religious

right. We are a diverse group of individuals from an array of backgrounds united by the belief that the religious right is a threat to

America.

We are dealing with a powerful group driven by a specific agenda, who seek to control many different facets of our

culture. As their power has grown, the religious right has alienated, frightened, or infuriated millions of Americans along the way.

DefCon is here to unite these Americans. Regardless of what drove you to fight the religious right, it is imperative we realize that

advancements of their agenda anywhere increase their power everywhere.

The Storm King

Thus begins the

rewriting of history.

ABQjournal:

Letters to the Editor
President Bush is to be commended. Not since Harry S. Truman has any president had to make such crucial

decisions in history, from the tragic events of 9/11 to the war in Iraq, and now this most current tragedy.
RITA ZACCARDI

Albuquerque

All hail our benevolent great and glorious leader. The Storm King doth battle the very

elements. mjh