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The New York Times lists Emmy winners. The AP has an overview story here.

New York Times: “Hvaldimir, a beluga whale who had captured the public’s imagination since 2019 after he was spotted wearing a harness seemingly designed for a camera, was found dead on Saturday in Norway, according to a nonprofit that worked to protect the whale.... [Hvaldimir] was wearing a harness that identified it as “equipment” from St. Petersburg. There also appeared to be a camera mount. Some wondered if the whale was on a Russian reconnaissance mission. Russia has never claimed ownership of the whale. If Hvaldimir was a spy, he was an exceptionally friendly one. The whale showed signs of domestication, and was comfortable around people. He remained in busier waters than are typical for belugas....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, Lord, do not let Bobby Kennedy, Jr., near that carcass. ~~~

     ~~~ AP Update: “There’s no evidence that a well-known beluga whale that lived off Norway’s coast and whose harness ignited speculation it was a Russian spy was shot to death last month as claimed by animal rights groups, Norwegian police said Monday.... Police said that the Norwegian Veterinary Institute conducted a preliminary autopsy on the animal, which was become known as 'Hvaldimir,' combining the Norwegian word for whale — hval — and the first name of Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'There are no findings from the autopsy that indicate that Hvaldimir has been shot,' police said in a statement.”

New York Times: Botswana's “President Mokgweetsi Masisi grinned as he lifted the diamond, a 2,492-carat stone that is the biggest diamond unearthed in more than a century and the second-largest ever found, according to the Vancouver-based mining operator Lucara, which owns the mine where it was found. This exceptional discovery could bring back the luster of the natural diamond mining industry, mining companies and experts say. The diamond was discovered in the same relatively small mine in northeastern Botswana that has produced several of the largest such stones in living memory. Such gemstones typically surface as a result of volcanic activity.... The diamond will likely sell in the range of tens of millions of dollars....”

Click on photo to enlarge.

~~~ Guardian: "On a distant reef 16,000km from Paris, surfer Gabriel Medina has given Olympic viewers one of the most memorable images of the Games yet, with an airborne celebration so well poised it looked too good to be true. The Brazilian took off a thundering wave at Teahupo’o in Tahiti on Monday, emerging from a barrelling section before soaring into the air and appearing to settle on a Pacific cloud, pointing to the sky with biblical serenity, his movements mirrored precisely by his surfboard. The shot was taken by Agence France-Presse photographer Jérôme Brouillet, who said “the conditions were perfect, the waves were taller than we expected”. He took the photo while aboard a boat nearby, capturing the surreal image with such accuracy that at first some suspected Photoshop or AI." 

Washington Post: “'Mary Cassatt at Work' is a large and mostly satisfying exhibition devoted to the career of the great American artist beloved for her sensitive and often sentimental views of family life. The 'at work' in the title of the Philadelphia Museum of Art show references the curators’ interest in Cassatt’s pioneering effort to establish herself as a professional artist within a male-dominated field. Throughout the show, which includes some 130 paintings, pastels, prints and drawings, the wall text and the art on view stresses Cassatt’s fixation on art as a career rather than a pastime.... Mary Cassatt at Work is on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through Sept. 8. philamuseum.org

New York Times: “Bob Newhart, who died on Thursday at the age of 94, has been such a beloved giant of popular culture for so long that it’s easy to forget how unlikely it was that he became one of the founding fathers of stand-up comedy. Before basically inventing the hit stand-up special, with the 1960 Grammy-winning album 'The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart' — that doesn’t even count his pay-per-view event broadcast on Canadian television that some cite as the first filmed special — he was a soft-spoken accountant who had never done a set in a nightclub. That he made a classic with so little preparation is one of the great miracles in the history of comedy.... Bob Newhart holds up. In fact, it’s hard to think of a stand-up from that era who is a better argument against the commonplace idea that comedy does not age well.”

Washington Post: “An early Titian masterpiece — once looted by Napolean’s troops and a part of royal collections for centuries — caused a stir when it was stolen from the home of a British marquess in 1995. Seven years later, it was found inside an unassuming white and blue plastic bag at a bus stop in southwest London by an art detective, and returned. This week, the oil painting 'The Rest on the Flight into Egypt' sold for more than $22 million at Christie’s. It was a record for the Renaissance artist, whom museums describe as the greatest painter of 16th-century Venice. Ahead of the sale in April, the auction house billed it as 'the most important work by Titian to come to the auction market in more than a generation.'”

Washington Post: The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., which houses the world's largest collection of Shakespeare material, has undergone a major renovation. "The change to the building is pervasive, both subtle and transformational."

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Constant Comments

A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. -- Edward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Friday
Jun102011

The Commentariat -- June 11

I have an Open Thread up on Off Times Square.

The President's Weekly Address:

Joe Nocera writes his first useful column in months -- a full-throated defense of Elizabeth Warren.

Charles Blow covers the report of the Global Commission on Drug Policy, which concluded that: “The global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world." Blow adds, "As the A.C.L.U. pointed out last week, 'The racial disparities are staggering: despite the fact that whites engage in drug offenses at a higher rate than African-Americans, African-Americans are incarcerated for drug offenses at a rate that is 10 times greater than that of whites.'” The White House's response? -- Really, we're doing a great job. ...

... Here's a related Democracy Now story from March 2010 -- an interview of legal scholar Michelle Alexander, whose book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, documents the way the war on drugs has been used to create a black underclass. "... today there are more African Americans under correctional control, whether in prison or jail, on probation or on parole, than there were enslaved in 1850. And more African American men are disenfranchised now because of felon disenfranchisement laws than in 1870." The transcript is here.

Thom Shanker & Steve Erlanger of the New York Times: "In his final policy speech before he steps down, [Defense Secretary Robert] Gates issued a dire and unusually direct warning that the United States, the traditional leader and patron of [NATO], was exhausted by a decade of war and its own mounting budget deficits and simply might not see NATO as worth supporting any longer.... The White House made clear on Friday that in the tough tone of his remarks, Mr. Gates was speaking for the Pentagon, not necessarily for the administration.... But a White House official did say that Mr. Gates’s speech raised 'legitimate concerns' about whether NATO was providing enough resources for the war and that the Obama administration fully expected the alliance to meet its challenges."

David Sirota covers the ten top stories you missed while you were reading wall-to-wall coverage of Weinergate.

Paul Krugman posts a graph illustrating "Why I Don't Believe in the American People." The title is satirical. The graph illuminates one reason Tim Pawlenty "has turned out to be a much bigger fool than I or, I think, anyone imagined." ...

... AND Krugman does the math & finds that "there’s a very good case to be made that austerity now isn’t just a bad idea because of its impact on the economy and the unemployed; it may well fail even at the task of helping the budget balance." CW: That the jokers in the White House can't get this, or more accurately, refuse to get this, is a scandal.

Dana Milbank: "With [Council of Economic Adviser chief Austan] Goolsbee returning to Chicago, it will be that much more difficult for Obama to resist the political pressure to be rash."

Natalie Wolchover of Live Science: "La Niña and global warming are both partly responsible for some of the episodes of wild weather, experts say. However, natural atmospheric variability has also come into play this year; to some extent, the pile-on of wild weather is random chance."

A Feel-Good Story with Bipartisanship, too. James Cullum of the Huntington-Belle Haven (Virginia) Patch: "Academy Award winner Jeff Bridges, Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell and U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack kicked off the 'Virginia No Kid Hungry Campaign' to an audience of hundreds on Tuesday at Barcroft Elementary School in Arlington. Their goal: to end childhood hunger in Virginia by 2015."

The Epistolary Palin

Jim Rutenberg & William Yardley had the unenviable task of writing the New York Times story on the release of e-mails written to & from Sarah Palin for the brief time she was governor of Alaska. ...

... You can "explore" the Palin e-mails on this New York Times interactive page. Here's the lede: "A collection of e-mails between Sarah and Todd Palin and Alaska public officials during Ms. Palin's first 22 months as governor. The messages were originally requested under state public records laws in 2008. The documents were released on Friday, June 10, at 9 a.m. Alaska time. E-mails are organized by the date of each conversation. The New York Times has redacted some documents to remove offensive language." The page also provides the facility for you to alert the Times of any e-mails "of interest."

Here's the Washington Post lead story, by Dan Eggen & Robert O'Harrow, on the Palin e-mails. ...

... You can also read the e-mails beginning on this Washington Post page, which doesn't look quite as user-friendly as the Times format. There are also links on the page to related stories, some of which might be interesting & probably none of which I'll read.

Sean Cockerham & Erika Bolstad of the Anchorage Daily News: "A massive trove of emails released Friday from Sarah Palin's time as governor show a chief executive who was engrossed with countering her critics and increasingly upset at news coverage as she vaulted into international celebrity." Page includes links to related stories.

Becky Bohrer of the AP: "Much of the country was taken by surprise when Sarah Palin became the Republican vice presidential candidate in August 2008, but newly released emails make it clear that the little-known Alaska governor was angling for the slot months before Sen. John McCain asked her to join him on the GOP ticket. Earlier that summer, Palin and her staff began pushing to find a larger audience for the governor, wedging her into national conversations and nudging the McCain campaign to notice her."

Dave Weigel provides a short list of e-mail troves he wants to read more than Palin's.

Right Wing World *

Matt Browner of AmericaBlog:"Media Matters reports 'Thursday night on Fox Business, John Stossel used about seven minutes of his show to host a "debate" between former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson and an actor who impersonates President Obama.' It's a fairly embarrassing video to watch, both in terms of how insignificant it makes Gary Johnson look and how absurd Stossel's program is." CW: this could not have been more ridiculous if Fred Armisen of SNL had appeaed as Obama:

The Man of (Absurd) Ideas. Washington Post political reporters provide a play-by-play of how the Gingrich campaign disintegrated. CW: My favorite sentence: "Gingrich became convinced that one of the keys to his winning in Iowa was in targeting the Chinese community living in the state."

* Is batshit crazy.

News Ledes

New York Times: "The House Democratic leader, Nancy Pelosi, on Saturday called on Representative Anthony D. Weiner to resign, underscoring the growing concern among Democrats that his online exchanges with women had become a distraction for the party." ...

     ... Story has been updated with new lede: "Defying forceful demands for his resignation, Representative Anthony D. Weiner of New York said on Saturday that he was entering a psychological treatment center and seeking a leave of absence from the House to deal with a pattern of reckless online behavior with women."

New York Times: "The International Monetary Fund, still struggling to find a new leader after the arrest of its managing director last month in New York, was hit recently by what computer experts describe as a large and sophisticated cyberattack whose dimensions are still unknown."

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: "A coalition of union groups active in state Senate recalls now advocates that Democrats field fake Republican candidates to run in primary elections against GOP state senators -- just as Republicans are fielding fake Democrats to run against those who challenging GOP incumbents. Friday evening, the Democratic Party of Wisconsin issued a statement that neither endorsed nor ruled out the idea, saying the party will 'review the options available.'"

New York Times: "The government issued warnings on Friday about two materials used daily by millions of Americans, saying that one causes cancer and the other might. Government scientists listed formaldehyde as a carcinogen, and said it is found in worrisome quantities in plywood, particle board, mortuaries and hair salons. They also said that styrene, which is used in boats, bathtubs and in disposable foam plastic cups and plates, may cause cancer but is generally found in such low levels in consumer products that risks are low."

Thursday
Jun092011

The Commentariat -- June 10

Paul Krugman blames "rentiers" -- creditors, and specifically bondholders -- for Washington's failure to help the unemployed. ...

... Our Mister Brooks pulls out his tattered copies of Edmund Burke & of Anthony Trollope novels to explain that the ideal politician does not behave like -- Anthony Weiner. ...

... While we're at it, Tim Egan thinks Jon Huntsman's presidential candidacy is doomed because the Republican base is prejudiced against Mormons, especially slightly apostate Mormons. ...

I have a comments page up on Krugman & Brooks on Off Times Square, but take it where you will. There's plenty of fodder for comments today. Update: Karen Garcia, Kate Madison & I have posted comments. Update 2: AND Akhilleus explains Brooks:

Mr. Brooks, for all of his pretensions to precious knowledge from received literary wisdom merely demonstrates once again the paucity and parochialism of his parched and penurious intellectual dishonesty. Read all of Akhilleus' comment.

Karen Garcia has a powerful post on Michelle Obama's trip to Hollywood, where she will meet with suits & screenwriters to pitch her script ideas for heartwarming movies about military families -- feel-good ways to promote our numbing, endless wars.

I want to have as few people touching our products as possible.
-- Dan Mishek of Vista Technologies in Minnesota ...

... Catherine Rampell of the New York Times: "Workers are getting more expensive while equipment is getting cheaper, and the combination is encouraging companies to spend on machines rather than people."

Republicans Are Still Not Getting It. Lori Montgomery of the Washington Post: In yesterday's deficit reduction talks, led by Vice President Biden, "Republicans have rejected any move to raise taxes, and [House Majority Leader Eric] Cantor restated that position, arguing that a package that includes tax increases cannot pass the Republican-dominated House." ...

... The White House Is Still Not Getting It. Same story by Montgomery: "So far, the Biden group has not discussed new forms of stimulus. Instead, the White House is focused on cutting a deal that permits spending cuts and tax increases to start slowly and ramp up over time." ...

... BUT. Alexander Bolton of The Hill: "Senior Senate Democrats are growing frustrated by what they see as President Obama’s passivity on the economy, and are beginning to discuss a large infrastructure package funded by tax increases. Some Democrats ... think such a package could lower the unemployment rate by as much as two percentage points":

I am concerned about the Obama administration’s approach on this. It always has been about jobs. I think the administration kind of got snookered talking about the deficit and the debt after the last election. The last election was about jobs and the economy, and now we’re in a position where we really do need some economic pump-priming by the federal government. -- Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa)

... AND Annie Lowrey of Slate: "Happy 10th Birthday, Bush Tax Cuts. You've been a failure in every conceivable way.... The Bush tax cuts were followed by low GDP growth, negative median wage growth, and little job growth. Even before the Great Recession, growth in the Bush business cycle was the weakest since World War II. And the cuts cost about $2.6 trillion between 2001 and 2010, according to the Economic Policy Institute—adding to a debt future generations of taxpayers will pay for, plus interest."

William Yardley & Jim Rutenberg of the New York Times: "On Friday, more than 24,000 pages of e-mails [Sarah] Palin sent as governor, mostly using private accounts, are to be released in response to public records requests first made in 2008." ...

... Reader Participation. Derek Willis of the New York Times: "We’re asking readers to help us identify interesting and newsworthy e-mails, people and events that we may want to highlight." Willis says the Times will provide a form to readers, but his post does not include the form. Some of the reader comments are pretty funny. ...

... Meanwhile, Ryan Kellett of the Washington Post tells readers how to cull & comment for the Post. ...

Jonathan Cohn of The New Republic: "Rationing is already a fixture of our health care system. It happens every time an insurer says no to a treatment..., a doctor or hospital recommends against a procedure because it doesn't seem worth the cost..., and ... somebody forgoes care because it's too expensive.... The Affordable Care Act ... directs Medicare to cut payments more judiciously.... Democrats countenance rationing for all through some collective mechanism. Republicans favor rationing by price and ability to pay, that is, by income class, through the market place." [emphasis mine]

Adam Serwer of American Prospect cites a Pew poll that describes how Americans want to reduce the deficit, and notes, "For all the conventional wisdom about the U.S. being a center right country, public opinion seems to be mostly on the Democrats' side when it comes to the specifics, which makes one wonder why they so consistently seem to be negotiating with a weak hand -- or at least why they feel so compelled to adopt Republican frames on policy matters."

Republican Assignment Editors. Steve Benen takes on NBC's excuse that the only reason the media are covering the Weiner scandal more heavily than the Ensign & Vitter sex-and-money stories -- where the Republican Senators likely committed actual crimes -- is that Republicans were all over the Weiner story.

Right Wing World *

... Driftglass has a terrific post on Ayn Rand v. Bible thumpers & how the right manages to simultaneously embrace both: "The fundamental incompatibility of these two ideologies is so shotgunning-fish-in-a-teacup obvious, how is it that no one in our Elite Media ever asks these clowns to climb off the giant pile of Bibles atop which they have spent their political careers screaming at 120 decibels and explain the contradiction? (Hell, I'd like to know why Paul Ryan gets a free pass on any inquiries about whether or not he either urges or requiring his staff to read the works of a radical pro-abortionist like Ayn Rand....)"

CW: I can't believe I'm linking to a Facebook page, much less Newt Gingrich's Facebook page. But he looks so happy to be screwed by his own staff -- who dumped him while/because he was cavorting in the Aegean. The running commentary by "fans" is fun anyway. ...

... The Sun Sets on a Man of Ideas. Greg Sargent: "... Newt believed that he could run for President on the force of his ideas alone — amplified and disseminated through new technology. After all, not long ago, Newt stated this explicitly.... Newt’s Iowa staff has now also resigned en masse, precisely because he seemed unwilling to do the work necessary to keep a presidential campaign running. All these lemmings, clearly, were unable to grasp that his candidacy was something historic; something profoundly transformative; even something Messianic." ...

... Jonathan Bernstein has a nice collection of Newtimplosion tweets. Here's my favorite:

To understand why Newt Gingrich's staff quit 'en masse,' you have to understand Kenyan anti-colonial behavior. -- Luke Johnson

... AND as reader P.D. Pepe points out, Jonathan Chait offers this appropriate tribute to Gingrich, a/k/a the Black Knight, in his post titled "Gingrich approval rating down to 0% among Gingrich staffers":

     It's just a flesh wound!

Jed Lewison of Daily Kos: Rick Santorum says all government-regulated healthcare plans -- including RomneyCare -- are socialized medicine "which lead to lines, which leads to rationing." Santorum endorses RyanCareLess, which -- as Lewison points out -- also preserves what Santorum calls "rationing," at least till Medicare is completely dismantled. So, looks like Santorum is a socialist, too.

CW's Ethical Question of the Day: if you just tell lies without bothering to find out that they're lies, will St. Peter let you past the pearly gates?

* Where facts never intrude.

News Ledes

A Thank-You Note from Qadaffi. New York Times: "Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi has written to members of Congress thanking them for criticizing President Obama last week over his involvement in the NATO-led military campaign in Libya.

New York Times: "Investors anxious about the outlook for global economic growth sent stocks sharply downward on Friday as the Dow closed below 12,000 for the first time since March. The drag on stocks is especially troubling because it suggests that one of the few bright spots for the United States economy may be starting to fade."

New York Times: "Representative Anthony D. Weiner said on Friday that he exchanged at least five private messages on Twitter this spring with a 17-year-old Delaware girl who became an admirer of his after hearing him speak during a high school trip to Washington."

No Way Ioway. Boston Globe: "Mitt Romney is planning to forgo the Iowa straw poll ... as he continues to downplay his chances in a state that was seen as vital to his campaign four years ago." CW: why this item is accompanied by a picture of Anthony Weiner (no, not that picture), I cannot imagine, but Romney might not be happy about it.

New York Times: "Security forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria began military operations in the country’s restive northwest on Friday, Syrian state television reported, heightening fears of a widening crackdown on dissent." Reuters story here.

New York Times: "Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates bluntly criticized NATO nations on Friday for what he said were shortages in military spending and political will, warning of “a dim if not dismal future” for an alliance at risk of becoming irrelevant in a dangerous and uncertain world." AP story here.

AP (via the NYT): "A French court has postponed a decision on whether to open an investigation into Christine Lagarde, the country's finance minister and front-runner to take the helm at the International Monetary Fund, a judicial official said Friday.... Questions have been raised about Lagarde's role in getting arbitration in 2008 for French businessman Bernard Tapie, who won euro285 million ($449 million) as compensation for the mishandling of the sale of sportswear maker Adidas."

Reuters: "The head of the U.S. nuclear safety regulator did not break the law when he stopped a review of a proposed Nevada burial site for radioactive waste, but he 'strategically' kept information from his fellow commissioners, the Wall Street Journal said, citing a report from the agency's internal watchdog. The confidential report is being studied by Republican lawmakers who are already fiercely critical of Gregory Jaczko, chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). They have accused him of helping end work on the Yucca Mountain waste site for political reasons."

Washington Post: Secretary Clinton denies she is considering a job as president of the World Bank.

San Mateo County Times: "In the most extensive independent analysis of PG&E [Pacific Gas & Electric] since the Sept. 9 San Bruno catastrophe, an expert panel's report Thursday scathingly criticized the utility, finding 'multiple weaknesses' in its natural gas-line operations and accusing the company of putting profits ahead of public safety."

New York Times: "A former spy agency employee agreed late Thursday to plead guilty to a minor charge in a highly publicized leak prosecution, undercutting the Obama administration’s unusual campaign to prosecute government officials who disclose classified information to the press. The National Security Agency official, Thomas A. Drake, had faced a possible 35 years in prison if convicted on felony charges under the Espionage Act. Instead, he agreed to admit to a misdemeanor of misusing the agency’s computer system by providing 'official N.S.A. information' to an unauthorized person, a reporter for The Baltimore Sun."

Wednesday
Jun082011

The Commentariat -- June 9

CLICK ON IMAGE TO READ THE FINAL EDITION.I've posted an Open Thread on Off Times Square today.

John Cassidy of the New Yorker: "Far from embracing Republican calls for immediate cuts in federal spending, the White House should be looking at crafting another stimulus package." ...

... CW: If you want to know why the economy is stalled, blame voters. Yes, Republicans have wooed them with lies, and Democrats have not effectively fought back with truths, but we voters are ultimately responsible for our own bad lot. As Michael Scherer writes in Time, "

Exit polls in 2010 found that voters said reducing deficits was a higher priority than spending money to create jobs — a clear rejection of Keynesian theories, which hold that in hard times, government should increase spending and decrease taxes. The concern was not only among Republicans: 32% of voters who favored deficit reduction voted for Democrats last fall.... The people have spoken. And now, they are on their own.

... The End of the Affair. He’s a politician who no longer corresponds to the grand ideas that many students had in their heads about him. And that’s deflating and disheartening for them. -- Oberlin College Prof. Michael Parkin on Oberlin students' falling out of love with Barack Obama, a bad -- and scarcely unexpected -- sign for Obama's 2012 campaign

"Swipe Fees." As Karen Garcia lays out in this post, there were a lot of Senators crossing traditional party lines in yesterday's vote on an amendment to delay the Fed's new Dodd-Frank mandate to cap the amount banks can charge retailers for customer debit card sales. Needless to say, both banks & retailers made huge lobbying investments (one lobbyist called it the lobbyists "full employment amendment") to influence senators. Biggest surprise for me: North Carolina Republican Johnny Isakson voted against the banks; North Carolina is a big bank mecca, second only to New York, whose two Democratic Senators Schumer & Gillibrand sided with their Wall Street BFFs. ...

... BUT as Ann Carnns of the New York Times points out, "What remains to be seen, however, is whether the savings will be passed on to shoppers." The majority of consumers/voters don't think so. ...

... AND Aaron Couch of the Christian Science Monitor, who has a longer piece on the expected effects of the swipe fee limitations (worth a read), notes that "It’s a win for retailers, who say the fee cap will allow them to pass savings onto consumers, but experts say shoppers are unlikely to see lowered prices at the checkout line." Besides, banks will probably make up for their losses here by increasing customer fees elsewhere. ...

... Bottom Line: As the old adage goes, 'The customer is always the loser.' Or something like that. -- Constant Weader

CW: The Atlantic dubs its blog, The Atlantic Wire, "What Matters Now." Oh, maybe not. Here's a post by Uri Friedman titled "Osama bin Laden Hogged the Air Conditioner." "... bin Laden's room had the only air conditioner in the house -- in a region where summer temperatures can rise above 100 degrees Fahrenheit." ...

... Friedman cites this AP story by Kimberly Dozier, which actually is "what matters now": "Surveillance has been stepped up on possible terrorist targets around the world, as intelligence experts near the end of decrypting and translating material seized from the bin Laden compound. The trove of material has helped fill in the blanks on how known al-Qaida operatives work and think, and where they fit in the organization."

Click to link to feature.More on the Very Serious Media: while reading Michael Scherer's actually serious article on why Washington won't do anything to improve the economy, I glanced at the sidebar featured at left. The only serious thing about this little feature is that Time is famous for its Top Tens. What does that tell you the future holds for Playboy bunnies? BTW, that particular bunny, her pouty painted lips notwithstanding, looks neither happy about her "success" nor anxious to fuck you.

Steve Kornacki of Salon on "The Dirty Trick that Launched Anthony Weiner's Campaign": Weiner anonymously sent out race-baiting literature that undemined a top competitor in his first campaign for public office. Kornacki concludes, "Is it unfair if he loses his political future because of a scandal as dumb as this one? Sure. But it's also not exactly fair that he ever made it this far." ...

... Oh, nice. Michael Barbaro & Ashley Parker of the New York Times: Anthony Weiner's wife, Huma Abedin, is pregnant. ...

... Joan Walsh of Salon: If Abedin is pregnant, Weiner should resign. ...

... Adrian Chen of Gawker has the cock-shot here. As Chen "It is the Osama bin Laden Death Picture of our time." Do you really want your Congressman sending photos of his penis erectus to young women? ...

... Finally, and this really is an antidote to the last bit, "Fragments from "Weiner! The Musical."

Right Wing World *

** Michael Grunwald of Time explains the dynamics of the Republican presidential primary to shut-ins: "These days being a real Republican means defying reality — not just on global warming, but on the tax code, the deficit, health care, and just about everything else.... Unfortunately for [Mitt] Romney, he’s not quite as comfortable defying reality as Tim Pawlenty, who’s running on a platform that magical tax cuts will cure all our problems by producing forty-twelve percent growth for the next eleventy thousand years. And he’s not as comfortable in his own skin as Jon Huntsman, who’s also reality-based, and therefore probably doomed in the primary, but seems less likely to sacrifice his dignity running away from his public record; if the primary electorate somehow decides that it’s more desperate for electability than purity, Huntsman seems much more plausible than Romney, even if he did serve in the Kenyan Socialist Administration."

"A Tale of Two Mitts." Steven Pearlstein of the Washington Post: "The Good Mitt had so much potential: the distinguished political pedigree, the successful career, the beautiful family. The latest Washington Post poll has him beating Obama. The Bad Mitt jeopardizes it all by pandering so shamelessly and so inartfully to the Republican right wing. Instead of demonstrating the honesty and character to boldly lead the country beyond the partisan feud and the ideological holy war, the Bad Mitt reveals himself to be just another ambitious, poll-tested pol that no one can trust."

Steve Benen: to conservatives, ideology always trumps facts: case in point -- even though the evidence demonstrates that tax cuts for the rich reduce rather than increase revenues, Republicans ignore the empirical evidence & continue to promote this disastrous policy on the theory, evidently, that the left only opposes it because lefties hate rich people. ...

... Jonathan Chait of The New Republic on Tim Pawlenty's bold economic plan: "... this is just your basic supply-side pixie dust plan, sprinkling massive windfall gains on the rich, not bothering to make the numbers add up and assuming implausibly high economic benefits will result. The interesting thing is that Pawlenty's version of voodoo economics is more radical than George Bush's 2000 version of voodoo economics, which was in turn more radical than Bob Dole's 1996 version of voodoo economics, which was itself totally nuts." ...

... Jonathan Cohn of TNR contrasts Republican pixie dust (packaged, ironically, by Pawlenty as "hard truths") with 2008 Democratic pesidential candidates' actual plans.

"Decimating Medicare." After WashPo fact-checker Glenn Kessler asserts that Democrat Kathy Hochul won her New York 26th special election seat partly because of misleading Mediscare ads, he reviews this NRCC ad against Jerry Costello (D-Ill.) The ad is being or will be used against nine targeted House Democrats. Kessler says, "... the new NRCC campaign is one of those misleading ads that cites biased editorials and pretends that the quotes are from objective news sources, i.e., 'the media.' ... The claim ... that the 'Democrat plan' would 'bankrupt' Medicare or cut benefits by '17 percent'" is not true. What Republicans are calling the "Democrat plan" is today's Medicare, as modified by the Affordable Care Act, which reputable analysts say improves Medicare cost efficiency and quality of health care. Here's the NRCC's four-Pinocchio ad:

Wishing It Could Make It So. Ali Gharib of Think Progress: despite the right-wing meme that "Obama is losing Jewish donors," there is no evidence of that.

*Where facts never intrude.

News Ledes

ABC News: "A new poll by New York 1 and Marist College found 56 percent of registered voters in New York’s 9th congressional district think [Anthony] Weiner should stay, despite bold public lies about his online behavior and the embarrassing details that have since come to light. Thirty-three percent said Weiner should immediately resign, while 12 percent were undecided, according to the poll." CW: bet his backers didn't see the penis pic.

Common Dreams: "President Barack Obama is considering nominating Treasury aide and former banker Raj Date as head of the new consumer financial watchdog agency, a source familiar with the decision-making said Wednesday. Date is a close associate of Elizabeth Warren...."

The Hill: "A group of House Democrats is calling for any deal to raise the debt ceiling to bring about the end of the Bush tax rates for the wealthy. The lawmakers, led by Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), also say that, following last week’s weak job report, they are concerned that certain decreases in federal spending could hurt the economy’s recovery."

Chicago Tribune: "The fate of former Gov. Rod Blagojevich is in the hands of a federal jury at his corruption retrial. U. S. District Court Judge James Zagel instructed jurors on the law following closing arguments by the lawyers and then sent them from the courtroom at about 5:30 p.m."

While Gingrich Cruises, Campaign Staff Jumps Ship. Time: "While Newt Gingrich and his wife are off on a two-week Greek cruise to recuperate from three exhausting weeks of campaigning, his political operation is imploding. The AP and Politico are currently reporting that six senior campaign staffers–including campaign manager Rob Johnson and spokesman Rick Tylerare quitting en masse."

Washington Post: "Federal prosecutors will withdraw key documents from their case against a former National Security Agency manager charged with mishandling classified material, a move that experts say could signal the unraveling of one of the Obama administration’s most prominent efforts to punish accused leakers. Prosecutors informed U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett this week that they would withhold documents they had planned to introduce as evidence to keep from disclosing sensitive technology. Former NSA executive Thomas A. Drake is charged with unlawfully retaining classified information at a time when he was in touch with a Baltimore Sun reporter who later chronicled mismanagement at the agency."

New York Times: "Citigroup acknowledged on Thursday that unidentified hackers had breached its security and gained access to the data of hundreds of thousands of its bank card customers. 'During routine monitoring, we recently discovered unauthorized access to Citi’s account online,' the bank said in an e-mailed statement. 'We are contacting customers whose information was impacted.' The giant bank said about 1 percent of its bank card holders had been affected, putting the total count of customers exposed in the hundreds of thousands...."