Category Archives: NADA – New American Dark Ages

New American Dark Ages

Beware Dr Dobson

Evangelical Leader Threatens to Use His Political Muscle Against Some Democrats By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

COLORADO SPRINGS – James C. Dobson, the nation’s most influential evangelical leader, is threatening to put six potentially vulnerable Democratic senators “in the ‘bull’s-eye’ ” if they block conservative appointments to the Supreme Court.

In a letter his aides say is being sent to more than one million of his supporters, Dr. Dobson, the child psychologist and founder of the evangelical organization Focus on the Family, promises “a battle of enormous proportions from sea to shining sea” if President Bush fails to appoint “strict constructionist” jurists or if Democrats filibuster to block conservative nominees. …

In an interview in his office in Colorado Springs, Dr. Dobson acknowledged that his plunge into partisan politics had irrevocably changed his public image. “I can’t go back, nor do I want to,” he said. “I will probably endorse more candidates. This is a new day. I just feel a real need to make use of this visibility.” …

Dr. Dobson said he was prepared for some disappointments from Mr. Bush. For example, he said, when the president says the country is not ready to overturn the Supreme Court precedents supporting abortion rights, “it bothers me a lot.” …

He said of Mr. Bush, “He does not take the bully pulpit and use it effectively.”

People For the American Way – Focus on the Family
Founder: Dr. James C. Dobson
President: Don Hodel
Established: 1977
Finances: $128.8 million, 2000 budget
Staff: approximately 1,300 employees
Publications: 2.3 million subscribers to their ten monthly magazines.

KNOW YOUR ENEMIES

Virulent pro-theocracy, pro-censorship group. Promotes censorship of a wide range of media and subjects including rock music, info on birth control and sex ed, and even feminist material.

Falsies Awards

AlterNet: MediaCulture: The 2004 Falsies Awards
By Laura Miller, AlterNet. Posted December 30, 2004.

Remembering the people and players responsible for polluting our information environment.

This year marks the beginning of a new tradition for the Center for Media and Democracy. To remember the people and players responsible for polluting our information environment, we are issuing a new year-end prize that we call the “Falsies Awards.”

On the “Person of the Year” issue.

person of the yearNew York Press
PRAVDA, IZVESTIA, TIME
On the “Person of the Year” issue.
By Matt Taibbi

The “Person of the Year” issue has always been a symphonic tribute to the heroic possibilities of pompous sycophancy, but the pomposity of this year’s issue bests by a factor of at least two or three the pomposity of any previous issue. From the Rushmorean cover portrait of Bush (which over the headline “An American Revolutionary” was such a brazen and transparent effort to recall George Washington that it was embarrassing) to the “Why We Fight” black-and-white portraiture of the aggrieved president sitting somberly at the bedside of the war-wounded, this issue is positively hysterical in its iconolatry. One even senses that this avalanche of overwrought power worship is inspired by the very fact of George Bush’s being such an obviously unworthy receptacle for such attentions. From beginning to end, the magazine behaves like a man who knocks himself out making an extravagant six-course candlelit dinner for a blow-up doll, in an effort to convince himself he’s really in love.

The Social Security Fear Factor

The New York Times Editorial: The Social Security Fear Factor

The only hands-down winner would be Wall Street, as fees to manage millions of accounts poured in. (Those fees, not incidentally, would come out of your return.) Current stockholders would also stand to benefit, as increased demand pushed up stock prices, giving existing owners a gain at the expense of newcomers who would be forced to buy high. The affluent, who could afford professional investing advice, would also be advantaged, even though everyone would be taking the same risks. …

If Mr. Bush were not so serious about privatizing Social Security, his urgency would be silly. Compared with other challenges looming for the government, it’s a non-problem. The shortfall in the Medicare hospital insurance fund is two to three times the size of the Social Security shortfall, and that fund is projected to be insolvent some two to three decades before Social Security. Taken together, the costs of the Medicare prescription benefit and of making the tax cuts permanent – Mr. Bush’s two main domestic initiatives – are 5 to 8.5 times larger. And his hair is on fire over Social Security?

It must just be an odd coincidence that Duhbya’s top contributors in 2000 were from the Investment Industry. It can’t be as simple as a payback, can it? As for Medicare, in much more immediate trouble than Social Security, well, hell, he fixed that last year. mjh

The Secrets War

CJR Campaign Desk: Archives
The Secrets War

“A huge door is closing within our government,” Steven Aftergood, a government secrecy expert at the Federation of American Scientists, recently told the Federal Times. “The message is: ‘We don’t want you talking to anybody outside of government.'”

As the Bush administration prepares to begin its second term, much has been written about the president’s intolerance for dissent or even raised eyebrows among those closest to him. Less attention, however, has been paid to efforts by the White House to restrict access to vast amounts of information and to create an atmosphere in which secrecy is rewarded and criticism silenced.

This is the type of story — a gradual erosion instead of a single, headline-grabbing event — that most in the press tend to overlook. Yet in the coverage of government, it may be the most significant event of all. …

Elsewhere in the federal bureaucracy, the cloak of secrecy is spreading rapidly under the guise of enhancing national security. In the aftermath of 9/11, Attorney General John Ashcroft sharply restricted information available under the Freedom of Information Act, an invaluable tool for journalists probing the activities of government and government employees. …

But the secrets guarded by those in Washington don’t only involve Star Wars programs run amok, or abuses of civil rights in a time of war, or poor management of an agency vital to national security. Denial of access to information of all sorts is growing “at an epidemic rate,” according to Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley.

Secrecy — and the conflicts of interest that it promotes — clouds the decision-making process of government in issues as diverse as medical guidance to the nation’s physicians and the acquisition of aircraft. And those are just the instances that have come to light in recent days.

It’s the media’s job to push back on that closing door. The rewards will go far beyond a wealth of great stories.

–Susan Q. Stranahan

Teddy Roosevelt advocated an inheritance tax because he thought that huge inherited fortunes would ruin the character of the republic.

Economist.com | Meritocracy in America

A growing body of evidence suggests that the meritocratic ideal is in trouble in America. Income inequality is growing to levels not seen since the Gilded Age, around the 1880s. But social mobility is not increasing at anything like the same pace: would-be Horatio Algers are finding it no easier to climb from rags to riches, while the children of the privileged have a greater chance of staying at the top of the social heap. The United States risks calcifying into a European-style class-based society.

The past couple of decades have seen a huge increase in inequality in America [mjh: hmmm, starting with Raygun]. The Economic Policy Institute, a Washington think-tank, argues that between 1979 and 2000 the real income of households in the lowest fifth (the bottom 20% of earners) grew by 6.4%, while that of households in the top fifth grew by 70%. The family income of the top 1% grew by 184%—and that of the top 0.1% or 0.01% grew even faster. Back in 1979 the average income of the top 1% was 133 times that of the bottom 20%; by 2000 the income of the top 1% had risen to 189 times that of the bottom fifth.

Thirty years ago the average real annual compensation of the top 100 chief executives was $1.3m: 39 times the pay of the average worker. Today it is $37.5m: over 1,000 times the pay of the average worker. In 2001 the top 1% of households earned 20% of all income and held 33.4% of all net worth. Not since pre-Depression days has the top 1% taken such a big whack. …

The most remarkable feature of the continuing power of America’s elite—and its growing grip on the political system—is how little comment it arouses. Britain would be in high dudgeon if its party leaders all came from Eton and Harrow. Perhaps one reason why the rise of caste politics raises so little comment is that something similar is happening throughout American society. Everywhere you look in modern America—in the Hollywood Hills or the canyons of Wall Street, in the Nashville recording studios or the clapboard houses of Cambridge, Massachusetts—you see elites mastering the art of perpetuating themselves. America is increasingly looking like imperial Britain, with dynastic ties proliferating, social circles interlocking, mechanisms of social exclusion strengthening and a gap widening between the people who make the decisions and shape the culture and the vast majority of ordinary working stiffs. …

Teddy Roosevelt advocated an inheritance tax because he thought that huge inherited fortunes would ruin the character of the republic. … The Republicans, by getting rid of inheritance tax, seem hell-bent on ignoring Teddy Roosevelt’s warnings about the dangers of a hereditary aristocracy.