The Commentariat -- October 13
This Could Be Entertaining. Or Not. C-SPAN is carrying the debate between Delaware Senate candidates Chris Coons & Christine O'Donnell this evening. Update: and so they debated. New York Times story here. You can watch the debate here.
We probably spent much more time trying to get the policy right than trying to get the politics right. -- Barack Obama
Peter Baker interviews President Obama & his aides for the upcoming Sunday New York Times Magazine. Here's an edited transcript of Baker's interview of the President. Here's a slideshow of A Day in the Life.
And now for a few words from Meg Whitman's hometown newspaper:
Michael Leahy & Juliet Eilperin of the Washington Post on how the Obama Administration fucked up off-shore drilling policy: "This article, based on dozens of interviews with people directly involved, reveals that fundamental questions weren't pursued because top administration officials generally accepted the conventional view of the industry's safety record. They were focused on the environmental issues - how drilling and a possible spill would affect sensitive habitats - and not on the engineering risks of exploration." This is a fascinating read which opens a window on the delusional hubris of the ruling class, a story made even more relevant by yesterday's news that the Administration has lifted its moratorium on deepwater drilling.
Michael Powell & Motoko Rich of the New York Times: "This is not what recovery is supposed to look like.... Call it there’s little difference."
or recovery, for tens of millions of Americans,Showing Banksters the Love -- Again. Binyamin Appelbaum of the New York Times: "The swelling outcry over fast-and-loose foreclosures has thrust the Obama administration back into the uncomfortable position of sheltering the banking industry from the demands of an angry public." ...
... Andrew Leonard of Salon: "White House advisor David Axelrod's attempt over the weekend to minimize the foreclosure mess as mere paperwork 'mistakes' was a massive misrepresentation of what's really going on. With Democratic politicians across the country calling for a nationwide foreclosure moratorium, Obama's reluctance to get out in front of the issue, so far, is yet another public relations disaster." ...
... Coming to a Neighborhood Near You. Robert Lewis in the Sacramento Bee: "The same industry whose lax lending standards led to the economic downturn is now being blamed by local officials for letting neighborhoods rot.... Many banks and other lenders are either unable or unwilling to handle the mass of houses left vacant by the foreclosure crisis. Many derelict houses are owned by lenders. Others are sitting in limbo."
The New York Times Editorial Board uses the Wisconsin senatorial race as Exhibit A to make the case that the American electorate has gone stupid. Wisconsin voters are about to reject the principled, independent-minded Russ Feingold for a know-nothing plastics manufacturer spewing "misinformation and simplistic solutions."
Boston Globe Editorial Board: "If there were a Nobel prize for governmental dysfunction, US Senator Richard Shelby would be in contention — but then so would the US Senate as a whole." BTW, Shelby claims he is not the senator who put a hold on a vote to confirm Peter Diamond's nomination to the Fed.
"Law and Order: SCOTUS Unit." Dana Milbank: the Supreme hear a habeas corpus case in which they show a remarkable fascination with CSI-style forensic evidence -- "the word 'blood' was uttered 60 times in the hour." CW: I thought questions like Scalia's, "Why wouldn't he wipe up the blood?" were more of the Agatha Christie genre.
Weird Story of the Day. Ray Rivera of the New York Times: "The mysterious military-grade explosives that were found in an East Village cemetery over the weekend are more than a dozen years old and were most likely stolen from a military base, the police said Tuesday." The cemetery, BTW, is located on East 2nd Street between First & Second Avenues.