44 Percent of Republicans Think Armed Revolution May be Necessary
From AlterNet:
Forty-four percent of Republicans agree that armed revolution may be necessary to protect American liberties, according to a gun control poll conducted by Farleigh Dickinson University.
Eighteen percent of Democrats and 27 percent of independents agree that Americans may need to take up arms against their government, the study’s authors found.
And
Right-wing rocker Ted Nugent made headlines in January when he suggested that the newly re-elected Obama is “attempting to re-implement the tyranny of King George that we escaped from in 1776 … And if you want another Concord Bridge, I got some buddies.” Farleigh Dickinson’s poll suggests that Nugent isn’t the only one hysterically paranoid over the Obama administration.
More here.
Okay, I'll admit to at least one time that I wondered aloud about when it would be the right time for revolution. I mean, I did it here, on this blog, at some point during the darkest days of the Bush administration's full court press on civil rights in the post 9/11 period. Some of that stuff was pretty creepy, torture, warrantless wiretapping, unending war. But we certainly never got to the point that I thought it might be time to get our violent revolution on. Ultimately, Bush became discredited, and a Democrat took the Oval Office. Actually, Obama's record on civil rights isn't what I'd call stellar, but he's not filling me with visions of Gestapo and sugar plums, either, the way that Bush did. In the end, however, I don't think I would ever be able to support a violent revolution: a violent revolution necessarily means a violent new regime. It's much better to engage in massive passive resistance--unless, of course, your passive resistance is met with machine guns and torture; then it's time to rethink things.
But none of that seems to be on the horizon.
So what is it these Republicans fear so much that makes them dream of a right-wing people's revolution? This study is very much in the context of the gun regulation debate, and revolution is a topic that comes up again and again when conservatives defend their right to own any and all weapons, no matter what. To be honest, I don't really know what's got them so freaked out. I used to be a conservative, and for years thought I knew what made them tick. But I don't know that I can really say that anymore. This all reminds me of the conspiracy theory I heard about the song "We Are the World" that I heard at Southern Baptist youth camp back in 1985. I was pretty conservative in those days, but asserting that the charity song aimed at fighting hunger in Ethiopia was really about persecuting Christians sounded totally nutty to me. So the notion that Obama wants to turn us into a Muslim nation, or that he wants to confiscate all guns, or that he's a socialist who wants to force us all to work on collective farms, or that the UN is going to take over, and that they use black helicopters to monitor our movements, all this is even nuttier to me in my current liberal incarnation than the "We Are the World" plot was back in the day. That is, it makes sense to me that Republicans want to overthrow the government some day if it crosses some undetermined line in the sand, but only because I think these people are crazy, not because they have a point.
On the other hand, when "government is the problem," I suppose that means you want to destroy the government. Would someone remind me of what the difference is between an anarchist and a Republican? I'm starting to lose the sense of it.
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Thursday, May 02, 2013
Posted by Ron at 2:13 AM |
Wednesday, May 01, 2013
HAPPY MAY DAY, COMRADES!
Here's a word from the Communist Party USA:
The main factor explaining the grim circumstances in which the
working class finds itself, Webb declared, "is the one-sided
intensification of the class struggle by the capitalist class In fact,"
Webb said, "the owners of the commanding heights of the economy are
exploiting the current economic crisis to double down on their efforts
to further shift wealth into their hands - not to mention further
weaken, if not destroy, the labor movement as well as other
organizational citadels of people's power."
He identified the battle over so-called "entitlements," Social
Security, Medicare and Medicaid, as the "epicenter" of this offensive,
essentially aimed at eliminating the entire New Deal.
Webb did not leave his audience with just a tough analysis to chew
on. He went on to explain how, "in the loosely organized movement of the
present are early signs of an emerging political force that could well
pack the wallop to give the country a new burst of freedom, economic
security and peace.
"Hasn't the thinking of substantial sections of the people changed in
a democratic, progressive and radical direction?" he asked. "In public
opinion polls capitalism's star is sinking downward, while socialism's
star is on the rise." Webb then pointed to transformation taking place
in the labor movement, environmentalists and unions working together,
people entering the electoral arena en masse to elect an African
American president twice, and victories against racism, sexism and
homophobia to make his case about the potential for fightback.
Read the rest here.
Yes, it's once again International Workers' Day, or more simply, May Day, which commemorates the Haymarket riot in Chicago back in 1886, when thugs and goons working for business and government killed four protesters who were demonstrating in favor of the eight hour work day. Strangely, the US does not observe the holiday, even though the event that gave birth to it happened here. Indeed, Congress specifically created our Labor Day so as to keep American workers from having a sense of connection with other workers around the world. Because, you know, the wealth dominated establishment is downright terrified of American workers organizing and agitating to get their fair share. And they should be.
Organized labor has the potential to be the most powerful political force in the United States.
That's why I've linked to this statement from the leader of CPUSA: while it outlines the grim circumstances facing American workers today, it is also optimistic and hopeful. The times they ARE a-changing. Five years ago, there was no talk at all of wealth inequality in Washington and the corporate press. Now, it's part of the discussion. Regular ordinary Americans are starting to see through the infinitude of pro-capitalist propaganda to which we are subjected 24/7. People are starting to doubt the conventional wisdom about taxes and "job creators." There is, indeed, something in the air. Massive social change may very well be just over the horizon. In five more years we may see the dawn of a brand new labor movement, one that is racially inclusive, one that is flexible with the ability to adapt to the ever changing tactics of big business and the politicians they control, one that fights for all workers, instead of simply for those who are lucky enough to work in one of the rapidly vanishing unionized industries. Very soon, the United States might well be living up to its promise of democracy.
Happy May Day, comrades! The best is yet to come.
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Posted by Ron at 2:22 AM |
Monday, April 29, 2013
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor: Maybe Bush v. Gore Wasn't the Best Decision
From AlterNet:
“Obviously the court did reach a decision and thought it had to reach a decision,” she said. “It turned out the election authorities in Florida hadn’t done a real good job there and kind of messed it up. And probably the Supreme Court added to the problem at the end of the day.“
If nothing else, Bush v. Gore demonstrates how justices who are determined to reach a certain result are capable of bending both the law and their own prior jurisprudence in order to achieve it. In Bush, the five conservative justices held, in the words of Harvard’s Larry Tribe, that “equal protection of the laws required giving no protection of the laws to the thousands of still uncounted ballots.”
The Court’s decision to hand the presidency to Bush stunned many legal observers, some of whom were O’Connor’s fellow justices. Retired Justice John Paul Stevens once recounted a story where he ran into fellow Justice Stephen Breyer at a party while a relatively early phase of the case was pending before the Court. According to Stevens, “ [w]e agreed that the application was frivolous.”
More here.
I don't even know what to say about this. I mean, okay, it's very cool that O'Connor is acknowledging what any and all honest observers have known since December of 2000: Supreme Court justices, like all lawyers, are not legal calculating machines, and are prone to all the same human failings in judgment that afflict all human beings. That is, Bush v Gore was an incomprehensible mess, clearly a highly partisan move misusing judicial power to install the majority's preferred candidate, without any legal justification of which to speak. Nice to see she's joined the twenty first century.
But this is way too little, way too late. I don't know what would have happened to this country with a President Gore instead of what we got, but Bush's presidency was never legitimate. We went through years of chaos and hell, and we haven't even really started to recover from it all. I wonder how she sleeps at night.
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Posted by Ron at 11:13 PM |
Hear Guantanamo Horror Stories as Mass Hunger Strike Continues
From AlterNet:
Some are waiting to stand trial for war crimes. Others - more than half - have been cleared by the US government to be returned to their homelands or other countries. All watch the days, weeks, months and years slip by without resolution, regardless of status.
Al-Hela, who has been detained without charge or trial for nearly a decade, and has been stamped and unstamped with the label of al-Qaeda operative over the years, has not eaten since February 6.
He is gaunt and weak like dozens of other Guantanamo detainees who are participating in a protracted hunger strike that is approaching three months. Al-Hela, who walks with the aid of an aluminum cane, has lost more than 30 pounds in the past 10 weeks.
This is not the first time prisoners have refused sustenance to protest conditions at Gitmo, but it is the longest and most pervasive, according to human rights lawyers like Remes, who have sounded the alarm as their clients visibly deteriorated - mentally and physically - with each visit.
And
While the inspection of the Korans may have been the catalyst behind this most recent hunger strike, the driving force that sustains it is despair over more than a decade of indefinite detention and no hope of ever being released.
More here.
You know, even if every word spoken by these prisoners is a total lie, this hunger strike is extraordinarily shameful for the United States. Only the desperate, only the totally oppressed, only those who have given up on life resort to this tactic. These men have been incarcerated for over a decade now. Many of them without even being charged with a crime. Many who have been charged but have waited forever to stand trial. And there are even some who have already been cleared, but aren't being allowed to go home, for reasons unknown. They wait, and they wait, and they wait, and they wait, with no end in sight. This makes me sick to my stomach. It makes me ashamed to be an American.
Needless to say, those who have been cleared of any wrongdoing must be sent home immediately. Those who have been charged with a crime need to be given a trial immediately. And those who have not been charged, but have not been cleared, either, need to be charged or released. Immediately. Ten years is more than enough time. This is a sick horrific joke. It is not the American way. It taints our nation with the stench of evil. And, liberals, guess what? We can no longer blame this on Bush. Liberal savior Obama has been presiding over this atrocity for four years. It's his now. Which means it's ours, too.
We are all terrible people to allow this to continue.
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Posted by Ron at 1:22 AM |
Sunday, April 28, 2013
50 Reasons You Despised George W. Bush's Presidency
From AlterNet:
The ex-president’s defenders are betting that the public will reconsider their judgments after a hefty dose of historical amnesia. Bush has been absent from political debates in recent years, instead making millions in private speeches. Today, his popularity is even with Obama's; both have 47 percent approval rating.
Let’s look at 50 reasons, some large and some small, why W. inspired so much anger.
Click here for the list.
Yes, the Bush presidential library is now open, and, with it, a propaganda push to restore his reputation as much as possible. I guess we'll see how that works out. But reputations aside, W's eight years in office were a total nightmare for the country, whether you think so or not. We're still in a hole because of him, and will continue to be for the foreseeable future, maybe for the rest of my life. He was easily the worst president this nation has ever had, and we've had some pretty bad ones over the decades. Incompetence, arrogance, ill informed decision making, psychopathic advisers, all these things working synergistically together to create an enormous mess of the nation's business.
The founding fathers never in their wildest dreams imagined that the Oval Office would ever be inhabited by his ilk. I fear the governing structure they created may not be up to the task of reversing the damage he wrought.
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Posted by Ron at 12:39 AM |
Friday, April 26, 2013
FRIDAY CAT BLOGGING
Sammy
Be sure to check out Modulator's Friday Ark for more cat blogging pics!
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Posted by Ron at 1:26 PM |
Frank Luntz Calls Rush Limbaugh 'Problematic' In Secret Tape
From the Huffington Post:
Frank Luntz, a top Republican strategist and pollster, called conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh "problematic" in a talk with college students this week that was secretly taped.
And
"If you take—Marco Rubio's getting his ass kicked. Who's my Rubio fan here?" Luntz said. "We talked about it. He's getting destroyed! By Mark Levin, by Rush Limbaugh, and a few others. He's trying to find a legitimate, long-term effective solution to immigration that isn't the traditional Republican approach, and talk radio is killing him."
More here, with video.
Problematic, indeed. More like apocalyptic.
And the fact that Luntz is so under-emphasizing the problem bodes ill for the Republican Party. That is, the GOP has courted the American lunatic fringe for a very long time, depending on them to be shock troops on election day. Meanwhile, conservative talk radio and Fox News have become serious self-perpetuating institutions that make their bread and butter by pandering to these conservative psychos. But now, a decade into the twenty first century, the ranks of the shock troops have thinned, and Americans are no longer swayed so much by their fear-mongering, xenophobia, and down home fantasy folk economics. These people are now a detriment to the party's survival.
So how do you get rid of Rush Limbaugh and the like? The GOP cannot adapt when massive for-profit ideology sales firms take the lead in telling Republicans what they are to believe about the way the world works. There will be no Republican renaissance until they get this figured out. It's pretty clear that the party's intelligentsia are not yet aware of how big of a problem they're facing.
Personally, I'm loving it.
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Posted by Ron at 1:16 AM |
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
WHEN IT RAINS, IT POURS
Auditions for the next two days. So no posting til Thursday night. Tell me to break a leg!
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Posted by Ron at 12:12 AM |
Monday, April 22, 2013
AMERICAN DEMOCRACY'S DEMISE IS NOW OBVIOUS
From the Washington Post:
Gun-control overhaul is defeated in Senate
But the biggest setback for the White House was the defeat of a measure to expand background checks to most gun sales. The Senate defied polls showing that nine in 10 Americans support the idea, which was designed to keep guns out of the hands of criminals and the mentally ill.
More here.
Okay, this one's easy. Ninety percent of the US population wants background checks for gun sales. But it didn't pass Congress. A total failure of the assumption that in our democratic republic elected representatives carry out the will of the people. An obvious failure because the difference between what the people want and what our representatives actually did is like day and night. So it's easy to see, in this instance, a complete and utter systemic failure of our way of government.
What we don't see, unfortunately, is that this isn't a one-off. This is, in fact, how American government now works. It's how American government has been working for some years now. Our representatives no longer represent us. Sure, we vote for them, but that's just theater. It doesn't really matter who wins. Either candidate will do for the people the winner will actually represent. People with money. Lots and lots of money.
Why are we seeing increasing numbers of tainted food scares? Because the people with money don't want to be bothered by troublesome regulators. Why are fraudulent bankers rewarded with massive bonuses instead of rotting away in prison where they ought to be? Because the people with money think defrauding the American people is a grand idea. Why do we have Obamacare, which rewards the parasites collectively known as the health insurance industry with captive customers, instead of single-payer universal health care? Because the people with money want it that way. Why are we increasing oil production instead of fighting global warming? Because people with money want even more money.
We live now in a de facto plutocracy--you know, rule by the wealthy. Sure, we continue to go through the motions of democracy. We vote. We watch debates. We get all riled up about our pet issues. But none of it matters. It's all just for show. When you get down to the nitty gritty of policy, we don't count. In fact, people's opinions, people's sense that they ought to be a part of the decision making process when those decisions affect how they live, really, it's all just a problem for the plutocracy to manage. And they manage it pretty well. Most Americans have no idea how pointless their participation in politics actually is.
Friday's near-comical defeat of background checks isn't an exception. It's the rule. Expect more in-your-face defiance of the people's will in the decades to come. It's all over, folks. The democratic experiment has ended.
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Posted by Ron at 1:20 AM |
Sunday, April 21, 2013
West Fertilizer Co. Failed To Disclose It Had Unsafe Stores Of Explosive Substance
From Reuters via the Huffington Post:
The fertilizer plant that exploded on Wednesday, obliterating part of a small Texas town and killing at least 14 people, had last year been storing 1,350 times the amount of ammonium nitrate that would normally trigger safety oversight by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Yet a person familiar with DHS operations said the company that owns the plant, West Fertilizer, did not tell the agency about the potentially explosive fertilizer as it is required to do, leaving one of the principal regulators of ammonium nitrate - which can also be used in bomb making - unaware of any danger there.
And
The West Fertilizer facility was subject to other reporting, permitting and safety programs, spread across at least seven state and federal agencies, a patchwork of regulation that critics say makes it difficult to ensure thorough oversight.
An expert in chemical safety standards said the two major federal government programs that are supposed to ensure chemical safety in industry - led by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) - do not regulate the handling or storage of ammonium nitrate. That task falls largely to the DHS and the local and state agencies that oversee emergency planning and response.
More here.
So, while the rich have been leveraging their economic power into political power and putting it to work these last thirty or thirty five years rigging the tax code, destroying labor unions, squeezing both workers and consumers like blood from a stone, they've also been manipulating the federal regulatory structure to their benefit. If it's not regulatory capture, where the plutocrats manage to get their own people into key positions at regulatory agencies, it's intense lobbying to kill regulatory bills. If it's not suspending funding for enforcement, it's stacking the courts with judges who routinely rule against regulation. Yes, we continue to have something we call a regulatory structure, but it is increasingly superfluous and meaningless.
The result, needless to say, is events like the one last week in West, Texas. Like the numerous and now routine food poisoning scares. Like sky high cable and pharmaceutical bills. Like the manipulation of California's energy markets that caused rolling blackouts back in the early 2000s. Like the multiple mining disasters in recent years. Like the saturation of our nation with guns. Like the toxic mortgage scandal that brought down the financial sector creating the Great Recession from which we haven't even really started to recover. And on and on.
There will always be unethical businessmen who will cheat, lie, steal, and murder in order to make a profit. If there are no consequences for their behavior, if there is no enforcement of laws, indeed, if there are no laws, then it's an invitation to rape and pillage while pretending it's all capitalism.
I don't understand how we can call what we have "civilization."
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Posted by Ron at 1:56 AM |
Friday, April 19, 2013
Thursday, April 18, 2013
AUDITION TOMORROW
Which means I'm focusing on that tonight, so no post today. But there will be Friday Cat Blogging tomorrow, and a resumption of regular blogging late Saturday night. Tell me to "break a leg."
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Posted by Ron at 11:57 PM |
High Schooler Protests ‘Slut-Shaming’ Abstinence
Assembly Despite Alleged Threats From Her Principal
From Think Progress:
A West Virginia high school student is filing an injunction against her principal, who she claims is threatening to punish her for speaking out against an factually inaccurate abstinence assembly at her school. Katelyn Campbell, who is the student body vice president at George Washington High School, alleges her principal threatened to call the college where she’s been accepted to report that she has “bad character.”
More here.
I do love the facebook era. That's how I first learned about this story. Apparently, community members who are defending the principal in question have set up a page to disseminate information. The student posted a lengthy missive there defending her own actions against what appear to be attacks from a bunch of local conservatives who don't believe teenagers have opinions or brains or the freedom of speech or ought to have concern for their communities or the nation at large. A buddy sent me the link, and I just had to weigh in:
Katelyn: You have no need to explain yourself. As a former high school teacher in Texas, I can correctly inform you that high school is by its very nature a political institution. You are necessarily, every day, from 9th through 12th grade, thrust into a situation that is automatically political, from compulsory attendance, to mandatory dress codes, to severe restrictions on creativity and thought, to informal, but no less authoritarian, mandates to conform to whatever passes for conventional wisdom. You are not only well within your rights to question this assembly, but also behaving more like a citizen ought to behave than anyone else who's involved with the controversy. Stick to your guns. You are apparently the only grownup associated with your school.$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Beyond that, you ought to stop granting that abstinence is the only sure fire way to avoid pregnancy and STDs. Nobody is abstinent. Some 90% of all high school students have had sex by the time they graduate. Abstinence based sex "education" has never been anything but a fraud, Puritanical morality of The Scarlett Letter variety disguised as responsibility, an excuse to use government money and institutional power to force religious ideas on young captive citizens. That is, abstinence has nothing to do with sex education, and pretending that it does is a cultural sickness from which we must all recover after we have had it inflicted upon us. If we're lucky, that is.
The reason you're encountering so much resistance is because the power structure you are opposing is only geared to deal with fart jokes, short skirts, and cigarette smoking in the bathroom. They have no idea what to do when somebody is truly calling them out on their psychotic totalitarian BS. Personally, I'm thrilled by your struggle.
Posted by Ron at 12:55 AM |
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
New Hampshire Republican refers to women as ‘vaginas’
From the Raw Story courtesy of a facebook friend:
Responding to debate over the state’s Stand Your Ground law, Hansen wrote on April 1 that “children and vagina’s” were missing from “the illustrious stories purporting to demonstrate the practical side of retreat.” The law allows deadly force when someone believes their life is in danger, without the obligation to first retreat.
And
But Hansen was less than apologetic.
“Having a fairly well educated mind I do not need self appointed wardens to A: try to put words in my mouth for political gain and B: Turn a well founded strategy in communication into an insulting accusation, and finally if you find the noun vagina insulting or in some way offensive then perhaps a better exercise might be for you to re-examine your psyche,” he responded.
More here.
I commented this on my friend's post for the article:
I'm starting to think that, instead of embracing ideas about women's rights that we have long taken for granted, lots of conservative men have simply been gritting their teeth and tolerating it all. For decades, apparently. And now they're tired of doing it. I guess. This continues to be really weird.Indeed, I've long since lost track of all these conservative beyond-the-pale remarks and legislation blatantly aimed at oppressing women. This kind of crap has long been on the wane, almost gone entirely, excluding random abortion restrictions here and there. But in the last three or four years, it's been open season on women, and the conservatives doing it are doing it without shame, proudly, as though the women's rights movement had never happened, never been successful. It's like 1955 all over again, but right now. I just don't get it.
It's frustrating enough to have to hear about this shit, but what's worse is that it forces citizens who value women's rights to be ever vigilant. Sometimes they get these bills passed through, and the rhetoric itself has the potential to make people forget that women, are, in fact, human beings. You know, just like men. That is, these Cro-Magnons are trying to fight a battle that they lost decades ago. They are few in numbers, but they have more power in the political sphere than such numbers might suggest. We're all in the twenty first century, but these alpha male assholes have a decent chance of pulling us back in time if nobody opposes them.
That's the thing about winning. You forget that your opponent might not understand that he's already lost. Fuckers.
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Posted by Ron at 12:55 AM |
Monday, April 15, 2013
THE BOSTON BOMBINGS
I posted this on facebook a couple of hours after the attacks.
First off, all sympathies to the victims and their families. Also, many thanks to the many brave and capable first responders.Select comments on the post:
Having said that, remember how after 9/11 both houses of Congress, including the Democratic majority in the Senate, united in expressing their support for President Bush? No way that's going to happen with a Republican Congress and a Democratic President. Not these days. If Fast and Furious and Benghazi were a preview, this is going to be the main event. Expect the GOP to freak out in ways we never saw for 9/11.
Of course, they could surprise me. I sure hope so.
Liz I'm afraid you will be disappointed. Sadly.
Ron Believe me. I totally hope so. It's just that recent history doesn't fill me with hope.More:
Alan Kinda like how the dems freak out over Newtown?
Ron Mmmm. No. Not like that at all. No Republican scapegoat. No massive hearings calling government figures as witnesses. No impeachment attempts. That's the kind of thing I'm expecting. You know, the stuff we saw for Fast and Furious and Beghazi.
Alan Well - let's wait until they pull out all the dead bodies before republicans are blamed for something today.
Ron You have no idea how much I want to be proven wrong about this.
Ron Although, speaking of Tea Partiers, it is ironic to note that Boston is where the original Tea Party took place, as well of lots of other key events in American history. No doubt, this was intended if it turns out to be the Saudi national that I'm hearing rumors about.Still More:
Stefanie It's Patriot's Day, Ron.
Ron I've never heard of "Patriot's Day." Is that a Boston thing?
Stefanie Boston and Maine - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriots%27_Day
Rick Kinda sad that you jump straight to the political rhetoric.Still More:
Ron @Rick: No, Rick, I'm saying exactly the opposite, to the people who need to hear it. It is highly unlikely that liberals and Democrats are going to politicize this. No, it's Republicans and conservatives who are most likely to turn this into a political circus. I really hope they don't, hence the status update.
Ron I posted this elsewhere:
"It's been twelve years, but I still remember the horrible silence imposed on liberals in the wake of 9/11. It was frightening, demoralizing, terrifying, more so than the terrorist attack itself. I do not think it is an attack to caution conservatives against attempting the same kind of oppression again. Frankly, I'm in fear of it, and now is exactly the right time to insist that the Boston attack does not become an excuse to attack liberals."
Jennifer D I've already started seeing it happen. I've also seen 2 comments on my own news feed of people trying to turn it into a pro-gun agenda. Obviously, those comments were completely ridiculous.
Ron I'm pretty sure this will be irresistible to the usual suspects. I do hope I'm completely wrong about this. What's Rush Limbaugh saying?
Rick regardless of party, we should not discuss this during a time of mourning. There's plenty of time for that. It's poor taste and there's nothing you can say to convince me otherwise
Ron It's poor taste to tell conservatives not to politicize the bombings? I don't get it, Rick. You appear to be telling me exactly the same thing.
Rick yes exactly. You politicized it the moment you posted orginally. Why discuss partisan crap while people are literally still bleeding? Really really poor taste. No more responses from me. Take care.
Jennifer D half the people on the news, the president of the US and numerous people on FB said what this post says long before this was posted. The reason for it is that past experience tells us exactly how people will react to this, and there have been ugly political comments flying around on every news site and on Facebook all day about it. This post is mild and fair compared to the rest of what I've seen.
Rick it was posted less than 1 hour after the bombing seriously come on
Jennifer D well, for one thing, I was seeing comments almost immediately, and people arguing about it. SEcond of all, the bombing happened before 3pm EST. That is 2pm CST where Ron is. So it was actually more than 2 hours later. The whole world was lit up with comments by then.
Ron Rick, thank you, as always, for your participation in the discussion. I truly don't understand your point. I am calling for exactly what you are calling for: avoidance of politicizing the bombings. That I named conservatives as being very likely the ones to do the politicizing seems to be your real problem with what I said.
But seriously, are you telling me that Democrats are as likely to blame Obama for this as Republicans? I kept my mouth shut for months after 9/11. I was afraid of losing my job. I was afraid of getting the crap kicked out me by hyper-patriots. I was afraid of disappointing family and friends for dubious reasons. Never again. I will not subject myself to that sort of cultural mania and hysteria ever again. My civic responsibility as an American is tell the truth. If there is any politicizing that's going to be happening, it will be conservatives blaming President Obama. This cannot be allowed to happen without protest. And no, I'm not going to wait to insist that we unite as a nation on this. Without oppressing dissenters.
Which is why I say: I respectfully disagree with your characterization of my statements. I'm not saying what you think I'm saying. You and I are far more in agreement than you realize. It's just that I don't think you really know what it's like to be on the other side of politicizing terrorist attacks in the way that I do.
Jennifer L How about odds on it being a foreign entity? And then what does that have the political entities say?$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Ron I'm assuming it's foreign, if only because of those reports of a Saudi citizen in custody, and the style of the attacks reflecting the London and Spain bombings. I mean, it could be some domestic terrorist, a definite possibility, but I think it's only an outside chance. If it is, in fact, Islamic extremists, there will almost certainly be a reigniting of the massive discussion on Al Qaeda and whatnot. And, to be fair, as President, Obama's got the responsibility for protecting us. But I want facts, not House show trials.
Rod Eric Rudolph used this style of terrorism too...
Ron Are you sure it wasn't security guard Richard Jewell? Of course, I'm just joking. You have a good point. But the reality is that, at this point, we really have no idea.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Rudolph
Rod Just pointing out America has its own share of home grown lunatics. Especially the week of April 15th to 20th...
Wayne I always think domestic first.
Jay Yep, I'd gamble it was a Tea Bagging lunatic.
Posted by Ron at 11:37 PM |
Whatever Happened to Left-Wing Domestic Terrorism?
From AlterNet:
More here.
I don't have too terribly much to say about this other than to bring attention to the article's assertion: there is really no such thing as left-wing terrorism in the United States. If you want the reasons as to why this is the case, which have more to do with what motivated it in the first place no longer existing, then, by all means, click through. But really, I just wanted to get a little something out there countering a popular conservative response when people bring up the very real threat of homegrown far right extremist terrorism. You know, "well, they do it, too" or "the real threat comes from the eco-terrorists" or whatever.
No, the far left does not kill abortion doctors, or bomb abortion clinics, or burn down black churches, or murder government officials, or blow up government buildings, or create arsenals, or build bombs, or create stockpiles of poison. This is a right-wing problem, and ONLY a right-wing problem. There is simply no existing counterpart to violent far right extremists on the left. Domestic non-jihadi terrorists are exclusively conservative--indeed, American right-wing extremists these days are actually a much bigger threat to the country than Islamic extremists are.
Conservatives really ought to do something about the traitors in their midst.
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Posted by Ron at 3:17 AM |
Saturday, April 13, 2013
THE RED ALBUM
From Wikipedia:
1962–1966 (widely known as "The Red Album") is a compilation of songs by the English rock band The Beatles, spanning the years indicated in the title. It was released with its counterpart 1967–1970 ("The Blue Album") in 1973. 1962–1966 reached number 3 in the United Kingdom and managed to reach number 1 in the United States Cashbox albums chart. However, in the US, the official chart was administered by Billboard, where 1962–1966 peaked at number 3, while 1967–1970 reached the top spot. This album was re-released in September 1993 on compact disc, charting at number 3 in the UK.
The album was compiled by Beatles manager Allen Klein. Even though the group had had success with cover versions of songs, most notably with "Twist and Shout", which made number 2 on the Billboard charts, only songs composed by the Beatles themselves were included.
As with 1967–1970, this compilation was produced by Apple/EMI at least partially in response to a bootleg collection titled Alpha Omega,
which had been sold on television the previous year. Print advertising
for the two records made a point of declaring them "the only authorized
collection of the Beatles."
More here.
I posted 1967-1970 a couple of days ago, so I figured I ought to post this one, too. Unlike the Blue Album, which was my brothers, the Red Album was one of my first music purchases. So I owned it. It's not quite as influential to me as the other one--I bought it a couple of years after I had heard the Blue Album. But it's definitely in there in terms of establishing the template in my head for what the Beatles were and are. That is, it's also great.
Listen:
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Posted by Ron at 11:12 PM |
Friday, April 12, 2013
FRIDAY CAT BLOGGING
Sammy
Be sure to check out Modulator's Friday Ark for more cat blogging pics!
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Posted by Ron at 12:59 PM |
GOLDBUG FUCKTARDS
New Krugman:
Posted by Ron at 12:57 AM |
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Bobby Jindal: Stupid, Party of One
From the New Yorker courtesy of a facebook friend:
More here.
Longtime Real Art readers know that I've been calling Jindal a stupid fucking moron for years now. This is important because, among the political and media establishment, the Louisiana governor has a reputation for being a smart guy, which is puzzling. My guess is that people think this because he seems to be wonky and has a willingness to wade into policy details when others won't. But whatever. Any old idiot can spout jargon.
The reality is that that my former Congressional representative embraces impossible conservative positions and tries to implement them from his roost in the governor's mansion. And this is traditionally a no-no for Republican governors. Indeed, when you get down from Washington into the states, governors, all governors, regardless of party affiliation, tend to be rather pragmatic with their rule, rather than ideological, because, you know, governors have to get shit done. And Jindal, who is obviously trying to appeal to Republicans nationally in hopes of winning the GOP presidential nomination some day, doesn't appear to understand this.
You know, because he's fucking stupid.
But with this tax thing, he appears to be in the process of jumping the shark here among the bayous and swamps. In some small way, this reaffirms my faith in humanity.
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Posted by Ron at 12:45 AM |