The Ledes

Friday, April 4, 2025

CNBC: “Job growth was stronger than expected in March, providing at least temporary reassurance that the labor market is stable, the Labor Department reported Friday. Nonfarm payrolls increased 228,000 for the month, up from the revised 117,000 in February and better than the Dow Jones estimate for 140,000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. However, the unemployment rate moved up to 4.2%, higher than the 4.1% forecast as the labor force participation rate also increased.”

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To keep the Conversation going, please help me by linking news articles, opinion pieces and other political content in today's Comments section.

Link Code:   <a href="URL">text</a>

OR here's a link generator. The one I had posted died, then Akhilleus found one, but it too bit the dust. He found yet another, which I've linked here, and as of September 23, 2024, it's working.

OR you can always just block, copy and paste to your comment the URL (Web address) of the page you want to link.

Note for Readers. It is not possible for commenters to "throw" their highlighted links to another window. But you can do that yourself. Right-click on the link and a drop-down box will give you choices as to where you want to open the link: in a new tab, new window or new private window.

Thank you to everyone who has been contributing links to articles & other content in the Comments section of each day's "Conversation." If you're missing the comments, you're missing some vital links.

Marie: Sorry, my countdown clock was unreliable; then it became completely unreliable. I can't keep up with it. Maybe I'll try another one later.

 

Public Service Announcement

Zoë Schlanger in the Atlantic: "Throw out your black plastic spatula. In a world of plastic consumer goods, avoiding the material entirely requires the fervor of a religious conversion. But getting rid of black plastic kitchen utensils is a low-stakes move, and worth it. Cooking with any plastic is a dubious enterprise, because heat encourages potentially harmful plastic compounds to migrate out of the polymers and potentially into the food. But, as Andrew Turner, a biochemist at the University of Plymouth recently told me, black plastic is particularly crucial to avoid." This is a gift link from laura h.

Mashable: "Following the 2024 presidential election results and [Elon] Musk's support for ... Donald Trump, users have been deactivating en masse. And this time, it appears most everyone has settled on one particular X alternative: Bluesky.... Bluesky has gained more than 100,000 new sign ups per day since the U.S. election on Nov. 5. It now has over 15 million users. It's enjoyed a prolonged stay on the very top of Apple's App Store charts as well. Ready to join? Here's how to get started on Bluesky[.]"

Washington Post: "Americans can again order free rapid coronavirus tests by mail, the Biden administration announced Thursday. People can request four free at-home tests per household through covidtests.gov. They will begin shipping Monday. The move comes ahead of an expected winter wave of coronavirus cases. The September revival of the free testing program is in line with the Biden administration’s strategy to respond to the coronavirus as part of a broader public health campaign to protect Americans from respiratory viruses, including influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), that surge every fall and winter. But free tests were not mailed during the summer wave, which wastewater surveillance data shows is now receding."

Wherein Michael McIntyre explains how Americans adapted English to their needs. With examples:

Beat the Buzzer. Some amazing young athletes:

     ~~~ Here's the WashPo story (March 23).

Back when the Washington Post had an owner/publisher who dared to stand up to a president:

Prime video is carrying the documentary. If you watch it, I suggest watching the Spielberg film "The Post" afterwards. There is currently a free copy (type "the post full movie" in the YouTube search box) on YouTube (or you can rent it on YouTube, on Prime & [I think] on Hulu). Near the end, Daniel Ellsberg (played by Matthew Rhys), says "I was struck in fact by the way President Johnson's reaction to these revelations was [that they were] 'close to treason,' because it reflected to me the sense that what was damaging to the reputation of a particular administration or a particular individual was in itself treason, which is very close to saying, 'I am the state.'" Sound familiar?

Out with the Black. In with the White. New York Times: “Lester Holt, the veteran NBC newscaster and anchor of the 'NBC Nightly News' over the last decade, announced on Monday that he will step down from the flagship evening newscast in the coming months. Mr. Holt told colleagues that he would remain at NBC, expanding his duties at 'Dateline,' where he serves as the show’s anchor.... He said that he would continue anchoring the evening news until 'the start of summer.' The network did not immediately name a successor.” ~~~

~~~ New York Times: “MSNBC said on Monday that Jen Psaki, the former White House press secretary who has become one of the most prominent hosts at the network, would anchor a nightly weekday show in prime time. Ms. Psaki, 46, will host a show at 9 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, replacing Alex Wagner, a longtime political journalist who has anchored that hour since 2022, according to a memo to staff from Rebecca Kutler, MSNBC’s president. Ms. Wagner will remain at MSNBC as an on-air correspondent. Rachel Maddow, MSNBC’s biggest star, has been anchoring the 9 p.m. hour on weeknights for the early days of ... [Donald] Trump’s administration but will return to hosting one night a week at the end of April.”

New York Times: “Joy Reid’s evening news show on MSNBC is being canceled, part of a far-reaching programming overhaul orchestrated by Rebecca Kutler, the network’s new president, two people familiar with the changes said. The final episode of Ms. Reid’s 7 p.m. show, 'The ReidOut,' is planned for sometime this week, according to the people, who were not authorized to speak publicly. The show, which features in-depth interviews with politicians and other newsmakers, has been a fixture of MSNBC’s lineup for the past five years. MSNBC is planning to replace Ms. Reid’s program with a show led by a trio of anchors: Symone Sanders Townsend, a political commentator and former Democratic strategist; Michael Steele, a former chairman of the Republican National Committee; and Alicia Menendez, the TV journalist, the people said. They currently co-host 'The Weekend,' which airs Saturday and Sunday mornings.” MB: In case you've never seen “The Weekend,” let me assure you it's pretty awful. ~~~

     ~~~ AP Update: "Joy Reid is leaving MSNBC, the network’s new president announced in a memo to staff on Monday, marking an end to the political analyst and anchor’s prime time news show."

Y! Entertainment: "Meanwhile, [Alex] Wagner will also be removed from her 9 pm weeknight slot. Wagner has already been working as a correspondent after Rachel Maddow took over hosting duties during ... Trump’s first 100 days in office. It’s now expected that Wagner will not return as host, but is expected to stay on as a contributor. Jen Psaki, President Biden’s former White House press secretary, is a likely replacement for Wagner, though a decision has not been finalized." MB: In fairness to Psaki, she is really too boring to watch. On the other hand, she is White. ~~~

     ~~~ RAS: "So MSNBC is getting rid of both of their minority evening hosts. Both women of color who are not afraid to call out the truth. Outspoken minorities don't have a long shelf life in the world of our corporate news media."

 

Contact Marie

Email Marie at constantweader@gmail.com

Constant Comments

Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.

Success is not final, failure is not fatal; it is the courage to continue that counts. — Anonymous

A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolvesEdward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns

I have a Bluesky account now. The URL is https://bsky.app/profile/marie-burns.bsky.social . When Reality Chex goes down, check my Bluesky page for whatever info I am able to report on the status of Reality Chex. If you can't access the URL, I found that I could Google Bluesky and ask for Marie Burns. Google will include links to accounts for people whose names are, at least in part, Maria Burns, so you'll have to tell Google you looking only for Marie.

Friday
Oct012010

Of Politics and Economics, etc.

The New York Times comments moderators have been up to their old tricks all week. Last night, for instance, a couple of friends & I submitted our comments to Paul Krugman's & David Brooks' column at the same time. One of the three of us made it. The moderators have not read the other comments. My comments on Krugman's & Brooks' are below. After the comments, see also a letter I received from a Times staffer.


Paul Krugman writes about a House bill authored by Democratic Rep. Sander Levin & passed by a huge bipartisan majority. Here's the backstory. Though the bill is weak -- it doesn't force the Administration to impose sanctions on China for refusing to devalue its currency -- Krugman notes that the bill is "a signal at best — and it’s at least as much a shot across the bow of U.S. officials as it is a signal to the Chinese." 

The Constant Weader comments:

Squishy as the bill is, it has only passed one house, & Serious People say it may not leap the Senate filibuster.

Weak as the bill is, if it passes the Upper Chamber, it also has to get past the President. That, too, is a big "if." The purpose of the bill is to smack down the Administration, specifically Tim Geithner, who up until a few weeks ago was the chief "negotiator" with the Chinese. I'm not at all sure President Obama would sign a bill designed to humiliate Geithner. The President shows a distressing loyalty to his economic team, & to Geithner in particular.

Plus, the new face on economic negotiations with China is President Obama himself. Would he sign a bill that says, "Mr. President, you've done a lousy job here"? Gosh, maybe not, although it is possible the President would wrap the bill in a smile & call it another tool in his negotiating kit, another arrow in his quiver.

It seems to me the Levin bill is not aimed at China, as many news outlets characterized it. Its real targets are Tim Geithner & his boss.


Speaking of economic matters, David Brooks is impressed with fiscally conservative "New Republicans." 

First, here's a bit of the backstory:

Michael Crowley of Time: "Meg Whitman says she's running for governor of California to bring a sense of fiscal responsibility to Sacramento. But Whitman's own campaign ... has already pumped about $120 million of her estimated $1.3 billion personal fortune into the race. Yet ... she hasn't purchased much of anything yet."

AP: "California gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman employed an illegal immigrant Mexican housekeeper for years even though the federal government alerted her in 2003 to the maid's dubious legal status, the worker and her attorney claimed Wednesday....

Brooks writes,

[Meg] Whitman has the personality type that you’re seeing more and more of these days.  The quintessential New Republican is detail-oriented, managerial, tough-minded, effective but a little dry. If Whitman wins her race, she’ll fit right in.

The Constant Weader thinks that's pretty funny:

Is that the personality type that hires an illegal immigrant to clean up its modest Colonial home, keeps her on for nine years, then fires her when it decides it would like to spend $120 million (& counting) to purchase the governorship of the nation's most powerful state? Is that the personality type that then rails against illegal immigrants once it has got rid of its own?

Is that the personality type that when called out for harboring an illegal immigrant blames her opponent -- without presenting a whiff of proof -- for "alerting the media" to its embarrassing indiscretion? "This is just classic smear politics," Meg Whitman said yesterday. "Jerry Brown is a career politician; it’s what they do."

"They," Ms. Whitman? Oh, Pot, they name is Kettle.

Sounds more like a personality disorder than a personality type -- maybe Republicanitis hypocritus.

It doesn't matter how many fingers Meg Whitman can flick in your face -- if she can't run her own little household, as the saying goes, how can she run the famously dysfunctional State of California?


Here's the letter, reproduced in full, which I received from the New York Times regarding their quixotic posting of comments:

Dear Ms. Burns:

Thank you for writing us and bringing your concern to our attention.  Mr. Brisbane [the Times' new Public Editor] is considering doing a column on The Times comment system at some point due to the high volume of complaints this office receives on a daily basis.

Your point regarding the arbitrary nature in which comments are allowed and what time they are approved has been a source of consternation for many and we will be looking into it in the near future. To our knowledge, The Times does not deliberately scramble the comments it approves, but we will be looking into the comment system as a whole.

We will keep your e-mail on file in the event that Mr. Brisbane decides to use it as a part of his upcoming column.  We will ask your permission before he does.

Once again, thanks for writing to us and expressing your concern.  It is much appreciated.

Best,
Joseph Burgess
Office of the Public Editor
The New York Times

Wednesday
Sep292010

The Commentariat -- September 30

Classy! As your governor, you're going to be seeing a lot of me on the front page, saying 'Governor LePage tells Obama to go to hell.'
-- Paul LePage, Maine's Republican gubernatorial nominee

E. J. Dionne of the Washington Post: President Obama "returned to his community-organizer roots to try to salvage an election" at his campaign rally in Wisconsin after disdaining "a mobilizing strategy for his first year and a half in office.... If Obama succeeds, will he continue to keep his supporters engaged and 'fired up' ...? Or will he go back to an insider strategy that helped bring him to the brink of this precipice?" ...

... Meanwhile, ConservaDems help Republicans, pretend to be Republicans, & Arianna Huffington says President Obama isn't much better:

     ... Jonathan Weisman of the Wall Street Journal writes that if ConservaDems running against their own party win, even if Democrats maintain a House majority, they "almost certainly won't have a functioning liberal majority."

New York Times Editorial Board: "Despite President Obama’s promises of reform [the overuse of the state secrets doctrine], the public still cannot reliably distinguish between legitimate and self-serving uses of the national security claims. Worse, some of the administration’s claims clearly have fallen on the darker side of that line."

In the absence of a draft, for a growing number of Americans, service in the military, no matter how laudable, has become something for other people to do. -- Robert Gates

Elisabeth Bumiller of the New York Times: "The United States is at risk of developing a cadre of military leaders who are cut off politically, culturally and geographically from the population they are sworn to protect, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates told an audience at Duke University on Wednesday night." CW: no kidding. ...

... Mark Thompson of Time: Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, predicts that the number of military suicides will keep rising.

Dana Milbank: NOW President Terry O'Neill confronts Alan Simpson in the Catfood Commission meeting room, urging him to resign. Simpson changes the subject to trashing former labor leader Andy Stern. Let's go to the videotape:

Unhinged. Maggie Haberman of Politic, September 29: "New York Republican gubernatorial nominee Carl Paladino alleged Tuesday that Democrat Andrew Cuomo was unfaithful to his ex-wife years ago.... Paladino offered no proof of his claim, despite requests for substantiation, and he made it minutes after angrily declaring his 10-year-old daughter—a child from his own affair 10 years ago—off limits to the press." ...

     ... Nicholas Confessore of the New York Times: "Hours after the phone interview [with Politico] was conducted, Mr. Paladino nearly came to blows with a New York Post reporter who confronted him about the comments." Here's the videotape:

      ... Update: Oh, goody! The Atlantic has made the corniest possible animated version of the confrontation between Paladino & reporter Dicker. Where is Taiwan when we need them? ...

      ... See more about Paladino on the Campaign 2010 New York page.

Constantly Creepy. CNN: Andrew Breitbart protege James O'Keefe, "a conservative activist known for making undercover videos, plotted to embarrass ... CNN correspondent [Abbie Boudreau] by recording a meeting on hidden cameras aboard a floating 'palace of pleasure' and making sexually suggestive comments, e-mails and a planning document show."

     ... Here is part of the outline O'Keefe prepared. Take a look at page 3, which details his props for the "seduction." They include, "a condom jar, dildos..., lube, ceiling mirror...." It goes on. Breitbart & O'Keefe -- the Woodward & Bernstein of the right.

Barton Gellman writes the cover story for Time on the "twisted patriotism" of right-wing militias.

Jonathan Martin & Keach Hagey of Politico: "With the exception of Mitt Romney, Fox now has deals with every major potential Republican presidential candidate not currently in elected office.... The matter is of no small consequence, since it’s uncertain how other news organizations can cover the early stages of the presidential race when some of the main GOP contenders are contractually forbidden to appear on any TV network besides Fox."

Ryan Reilly & Rachel Slajda of Talking Points Memo describe a right-wing conspiracy theory gone mainstream Republican that non-whites are lolling around welfare offices cooking up voter fraud schemes. These allegations are so offensive in content & tone I can't bring myself to type them. Oh, and they're untrue.

Tim Egan of the New York Times talks to his old friend Jeff Dowd, the model for the Dude in the film "The Big Lebowski," about California's Prop 19, a ballot initiative that would legalize marijuana.

CW: something I missed in the Pew religious knowledge survey: 41 percent of Americans can't name the Vice President of the United States.

Michelle Singletary of the Washington Post: the Federal Trade Commission has instituted new rules to rein in scams & shady practices of many debt settlement companies, companies that claim to help consumers manager & reduce their outstanding debts.

Tuesday
Sep282010

The Commentariat -- September 29

Here's the third of three articles based on Bob Woodward's Obama's Wars.

Fred Kaplan of Slate gets something out of Obama's Wars that Woodward may not have fully understood -- how the Afghanistan war may end.

Steven Pearlstein of the Washington Post warns businesspeople who are hoping for Republican victories to be careful what they wish for. He singles out Sen. Jim DeMint as an example of a Republican legislator who is bad for business, but he says that all Republican obstructionism is a net loss for the economy. Here the backstory from Politico: "South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint warned Monday evening that he would block [i.e., place a hold on] all legislation that has not been cleared by his office in the final days of the pre-election session.

"Power without Responsibility." Dana Milbank writes a serioius column: as top Administration officials leave the White House, Valerie Jarrett gains even more influence over the President. Jarrett, however, has been his advisor on areas where he has made the biggest blunders: his relationships with Wall Street & with liberals. Oh, & Desiree Rogers was her idea.

Ticket to Ride. Arianna Huffington promises to provide "Sanity Buses" to take people from New York City to Washington, D.C., October 30, for Jon Stewart's "Rally to Restore Sanity":

     ... Politico Update: In Richmond, Virginia, President Obama "endorses" the Stewart rally (& bores the kid seen on the right of the shot):

Michael Barbaro of the New York Times: "As he mounts an outrage-filled campaign for governor of New York, Carl P. Paladino has vowed to forcibly rid Albany of the wayward officials and misbehaving bureaucrats..., promising to 'take out the trash.' But some of the people whom Mr. Paladino has recruited to run his campaign are plagued by checkered pasts.... [His] driver was jailed over his driving record; his campaign manager has tax troubles; and a strategist is charged with stealing $1.1 million." See more stories on the New York gubernatorial race on the New York page of Campaign 2010.

"Ya Can't Drive." You've probably heard President Obama use this metaphor a number of times. He used it again yesterday in Madison. Here he was speaking in May:

     ... It turns out "ya can't drive" is more than a metaphor. Republicans really can't drive:

     ... Although Sen. John McCain blamed illegal immigrants for purposely causing accidents on Arizona highways, it appears that it's his own voters who don't know how to drive. According to a Daily Beast analysis, "Nine of the 10 worst-performing states [i.e., had the most accidents per capita] went for McCain, while nine of the 10 best performers voted for Obama." The states with the worst drivers were North Dakota (the worst), Montana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Alaska, Missouri, Delaware, Idaho & Texas. The best were Illinois, Maryland, Oregon, Ohio, Mississippi, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Virginia, & -- best of all -- Connecticut.

Glenn Beck. New York Times photo.Mark Leibovich has a profile of Glenn Beck to be published in this Sunday's New York Times Magazine. CW: it's unlikely I'll read it.

CW: this New York Times story by Damien Cave peaked my interest because Al Capone reputedly used to stay in the house I live in now. But the real thrust of the Cave's article, about a re-enactment of a Capone trial, is that things haven't changed much in South Florida in the eight decades since the real trial.