The Ledes

Monday, October 7, 2024

Weather Channel: “H​urricane Milton has rapidly intensified into a Category 3 and hurricane and storm surge watches are now posted along Florida's western Gulf Coast, where the storm poses threats of life-threatening storm surge, destructive winds and flooding rainfall by midweek. 'Milton will be a historic storm for the west coast of Florida,' the National Weather Service in Tampa Bay said in a briefing Monday morning.”

CNN: “This year’s Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine has been awarded to Victor Ambros and Gary Ruvkun for their work on the discovery of microRNA, a fundamental principle governing how gene activity is regulated. Their research revealed how genes give rise to different cells within the human body, a process known as gene regulation. Gene regulation by microRNA – a family of molecules that helps cells control the sort of proteins they make – ... was first revealed by Ambros and Ruvkun. The Nobel Prize committee announced the prestigious honor ... in Sweden on Monday.... Ambros, a professor of natural science at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, conducted the research that earned him the prize at Harvard University. Ruvkun conducted his research at Massachusetts General Hospital, and is a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School.”

The Wires
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The Ledes

Sunday, October 6, 2024

New York Times: “Two boys have been arrested and charged in a street attack on David A. Paterson, a former governor of New York, and his stepson, the police said. One boy, who is 12, was charged with second-degree gang assault, and the other, a 13-year-old, was charged with third-degree gang assault, the police said on Saturday night. Both boys, accompanied by their parents, turned themselves in to the police, according to Sean Darcy, a spokesman for Mr. Paterson. A third person, also a minor, went to the police but was not charged in the Friday night attack in Manhattan, according to an internal police report.... Two other people, both adults, were involved in the attack, according to the police. They fled on foot and have not been caught, the police said. The former governor was not believed to have been targeted in the assault....”

Weather Channel: “Tropical Storm Milton, which formed in the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday, is expected to become a hurricane late Sunday or early Monday. The storm is expected to pose a major hurricane threat to Florida by midweek, just over a week after Helene pushed through the region. The National Hurricane Center says that 'there is an increasing risk of life-threatening storm surge and wind impacts for portions of the west coast of the Florida Peninsula beginning late Tuesday or Wednesday.'”

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Public Service Announcement

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."

Washington Post: “Comedy news outlet the Onion — reinvigorated by new ownership over this year — is bringing back its once-popular video parodies of cable news. But this time, there’s someone with real news anchor experience in the chair. When the first episodes appear online Monday, former WAMU and MSNBC host Joshua Johnson will be the face of the resurrected 'Onion News Network.' Playing an ONN anchor character named Dwight Richmond, Johnson says he’s bringing a real anchor’s sense of clarity — and self-importance — to the job. 'If ONN is anything, it’s a news organization that is so unaware of its own ridiculousness that it has the confidence of a serial killer,' says Johnson, 44.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I'll be darned if I can figured out how to watch ONN. If anybody knows, do tell. Thanks.

Washington Post: “First came the surprising discovery that Earth’s atmosphere is leaking. But for roughly 60 years, the reason remained a mystery. Since the late 1960s, satellites over the poles detected an extremely fast flow of particles escaping into space — at speeds of 20 kilometers per second. Scientists suspected that gravity and the magnetic field alone could not fully explain the stream. There had to be another source creating this leaky faucet. It turns out the mysterious force is a previously undiscovered global electric field, a recent study found. The field is only about the strength of a watch battery — but it’s enough to thrust lighter ions from our atmosphere into space. It’s also generated unlike other electric fields on Earth. This newly discovered aspect of our planet provides clues about the evolution of our atmosphere, perhaps explaining why Earth is habitable. The electric field is 'an agent of chaos,' said Glyn Collinson, a NASA rocket scientist and lead author of the study. 'It undoes gravity.... Without it, Earth would be very different.'”

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.”

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Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Monday
Jul222013

The Commentariat -- July 23, 2013

** CW: This essay, by Kurt Eichenwald of Vanity Fair, is perhaps the best piece I've ever read on conservatives' war on poor women & their families. It is eloquent not in its style -- Eichenwald wrote it while his wife was having surgery for breast cancer -- but for its visceral outrage. Via Charles Pierce.

Mark Landler & Thom Shanker of the New York Times: "The Pentagon has provided Congress with its first detailed list of military options to stem the bloody civil war in Syria, suggesting that a campaign to tilt the balance from President Bashar al-Assad to the opposition would be a vast undertaking, costing billions of dollars, and could backfire on the United States. The list of options -- laid out in a letter from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, to the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Carl Levin of Michigan -- was the first time the military has explicitly described what it sees as the formidable challenge of intervening in the war." ...

... Spencer Ackerman of the Guardian: "The top US military officer warned senators on Monday that taking military action to stop the bloodshed in Syria was likely to escalate quickly and result in 'unintended consequences', representing the most explicit uniformed opposition to deeper involvement in another war in the Middle East. Alluding to the costly, bloody occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, said that once the US got involved militarily in the Syrian civil war, which the UN estimates to have killed about 93,000 people, 'deeper involvement is hard to avoid'." ...

... Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post: "The House and Senate intelligence committees have approved CIA weapons shipments to opposition fighters in Syria, allowing the Obama administration to move ahead on the stalled program, senior congressional and administration officials said Monday.... Both the House and Senate panels voted on the administration's plan last week, officials said. The agreement allows money already in the CIA's budget to be reprogrammed for the Syria operation, a covert action that President Obama approved early last month."

OMG. George Zimmerman, Action Hero. Matt Guttman & Alexis Shaw of ABC News: "George Zimmerman, who has been in hiding since he was acquitted of murder in the death of Trayvon Martin, emerged to help rescue a family who was trapped in an overturned vehicle, police said today. Zimmerman was one of two men who came to the aid of Dana and Mark Gerstle and their two children, who were trapped inside a blue Ford Explorer SUV that had rolled over after traveling off the highway in Sanford, Fla. at approximately 5:45 p.m. Thursday, the Seminole County Sheriff's Office said in a statement. The crash occurred at the intersection of I-4 and route Route 46, police said." CW: By coincidence, I was driving on I-4 at Route 46 at about 5:45-6:00 pm Thursday. I didn't see no stinking crash. ...

... Kerry Pickett of Breitbart News embellishes the story, which is sensational enough: "The SUV later caught fire.... According to Sanford Police Zimmerman had a fire extinguisher with him."

... According to John Hawkins of Right Wing Daily, "This is God reaching down in his own way to shame the people attacking George Zimmerman & let him prove he's a good guy." CW: thank God for reminding George to bring his fire extinguisher to the scene. ...

... Erin Ryan of Jezebel: "According to Sanford police (who apparently don't care that everyone now knows where George Zimmerman is), Zimmerman was just, I don't know, moseying along the highway like normal people tend to do ... when he just happened to stumble across an overturned truck, and he pulled the person in the truck to safety like the hero he always imagined he was.... It's a good thing that the person in the cabin wasn't armed and didn't feel threatened by Zimmerman's entry into their vehicle, or, you know, Zimmerman could have gotten himself shot." ...

... Kathy, a commenter on No More Mister Nice Blog, provides a plausible explanation of how Zimmerman happened upon the accident: "I have to wonder if he was listening to the police scanner, waiting for his moment." ...

... CW: I'm pretty sure the Sanford sheriff's department is fixing to make Zimmerman their Good Citizen of the Month. ...

... Carrie Healey of the Grio: "The Buckeye Firearms Foundation started a fund to buy George Zimmermann 'a new gun and fight attacks on the Second Amendment.' ... U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said that the Department of Justice has an open investigation into the case. Sanford Police Capt. James McAuliffe confirmed Thursday that all evidence related to the February 2012 shooting is on hold, which includes Zimmerman's gun." CW: Gosh, I hope they get him a new fire extinguisher, too. ...

... Stanley Fish: "... 'stand your ground' is more than a declaration of a right; it is an injunction -- stand your ground, be a man. Retreating in order to avoid violence is not the commendable act of a prudent man, but the act of a coward, of someone who runs away. It is this aspect of the Stand Your Ground laws -- their implicit affirmation of a code of manliness -- that links them to the novelistic and filmic representations of the old west.... As civilization advances, and the law book replaces the gun, these rationales for violence sound increasingly hollow, and more and more westerns are self-consciously elegiac...." ...

... This piece on ALEC/NRA-promoted laws by Brendan Fischer of PR Watch, republished in Truth-Out, is a week old but still a valuable read: "Justice under Stand Your Ground laws have been anything but equal. The Tampa Bay Times found that people who killed a black person walked free 73 percent of the time, while those who killed a white person went free 59 percent of the time. Other studies have shown that Stand Your Ground is more likely to be applied in cases of white-on-black crime, and in May, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights launched an investigation into racial bias and Stand Your Ground laws."

We have more people in acting positions in Washington than there are in Hollywood. -- Prof. G. Calvin Mackenzie ...

... George Condon of the National Journal on "why the confirmation process is completely broken.... It is unprecedented in history for any Cabinet department to be headless for [so] long -- things are even worse below the surface.... Vacancies are scattered broadly across the Washington landscape.... The basic problem remains -- neither branch has sufficient capacity to handle the vetting process." ...

... Sarah Binder in the Monkey Cage: Harry "Reid's strategy tells us a bit about the conditionality of the nuclear option: First, the more narrowly targeted the nuclear gambit, the more credible it seems to be.... Second, the political feasibility of the nuclear option seems conditioned on the behavior of the minority. Strident overreaching by the Republicans ... helped Democrats to paint the GOP as going a step too far in a Senate parliamentary arms race.... Third, keep in mind that the CFPB, NLRB, EPA and Labor department are critical institutions for pursuing core Democratic policy interests...." Binder wonders what will happen now with judicial nominees, particularly the three Obama nominated to the D.C. court, which the GOP claims has too many judges.

** Fernando Espuelas of Univision in the Huffington Post: "We're now almost a decade into the immigration 'debate' and the rising antagonism toward non-white Americans is hitting a fever pitch.... Perhaps emboldened by the acrid assertions of certain Tea Party members of Congress who revel in fostering racial divisions as a way to cement their shrinking power base, the temperature is rising and the rhetoric is crude.... It's time for John Boehner to decide if he is a national leader or merely a party hack raised by fate to the level beyond his true capacity, thereby staying in 'power' by appealing to the lowest-common denominator and ignoring an urgent need for America." Via Jonathan Bernstein.

Steve Benen on seven ways Republicans are trying to sabotage ObamaCare even though "for millions of Americans, very little matters more" than access to affordable health insurance. Perhaps the most shocking: "refusing to help their own constituents navigate the system." Then there's lying about the costs, repeated attempts to repeal the ACA or essential parts of it, denying funds to implement the system, & threatening groups who would help do PR for the ACA. At the state level, there's refusing to allow Medicare expansion & refusing to create health insurance exchanges. CW: I would add refusing to fix aspects of the law -- like the employer mandate, which would improve the ACA in ways that would appeal to GOP constituencies. ...

... Some stars won't be intimidated. Sarah Kliff of the Washington Post: "What do Oprah, Funny or Die and the Grammys have in common? All three, it turns out, have volunteered to promote Obamacare." Others stars who will participate in promoting ObamaCare: Jennifer Hudson, Alicia Keyes, Jon Bon Jovi & Amy Poehler. ...

... Alexander Bolton of the Hill: "ObamaCare is at the center of a rapidly escalating fight that threatens to shut the government down this fall. Senate Republicans, including two members of the leadership, are coalescing around a proposal to block any government funding resolution that includes money for the implementation of the 2010 Affordable Care Act." ...

... David Rogers of Politico: "... the Republican budget strategy in Congress shows almost daily signs of coming apart. The central premise, as sold by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, was that Washington could wipe out deficits in 10 years and protect defense spending, all while embracing the lower appropriations caps dictated by sequestration. Four months later, it's proving to be a bridge too far. Only three of the 12 annual spending bills have even been debated -- by far the worst record since the GOP took over the House. Against their better judgment, Republicans on the House Appropriations Committee have been required to cut important investments in science, community development and foreign aid. Senate Republicans are peeling off in protest -- setting up a crucial procedural vote at noon Tuesday on the transportation and housing budget." ...

... Matt Fuller of Roll Call on House Republicans' summer constituent outreach plan: basically, it's bash Washington & President Obama because they've got nothin'. ...

... Dana Milbank interviews John McCain, who has returned to maverick status. CW: a definite plus in ensuring Sunday show bookings. ...

... Ferinstance. Greg Sargent: "McCain has now said the American people will not put up with another round of GOP debt limit and government shutdown 'shenanigans.' McCain also bluntly warned House Republicans against using the debt limit fight to gain the repeal of Obamacare, which he said 'is not going to happen.'"

Bryon Tau of Politico: "With his ambitious second term agenda stalled, President Barack Obama sought to rally his most faithful activists Monday, calling on them to push back in the face of congressional paralysis. 'I'm going to need your help,' Obama told a crowd of Organizing for Action volunteers at a Washington, D.C. hotel":

Joe Nocera on three court rulings re: treatment of Guantanamo prisoners that won't change much.

Revolving Door. Ben Protess & Peter Lattman of the New York Times: "Robert Khuzami, a former a terrorism prosecutor and recent enforcement chief at the Securities and Exchange Commission, has taken a $5MM/year job at white shoe law firm Kirkland & Ellis. "In doing so, he is following the quintessential Washington script: an influential government insider becoming a paid advocate for industries he once policed."

Your Tax Dollars, Misplaced. Sarah Lynch of Reuters: "The U.S. Marshals Service has lost track of about 2,000 encrypted two-way radios worth millions of dollars, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday, citing internal records it had obtained through a public records request. The paper reported that the problems date back to at least 2011, when the Marshals were deploying new versions of the radios to communicate in the field."

I could never lend myself to any transaction, however respectable, that would commercialize on the prestige and dignity of the office of the Presidency. -- Former President Harry Truman, who lived on an Army pension of $112.56 per month after leaving office

Last year, Bill Clinton earned seventeen million dollars giving speeches, including one before a company in Lagos that paid him seven hundred thousand dollars. -- George Packer of the New Yorker

Frank Bruni: "... some of the same dynamics that fed the crisis in Catholicism -- an aloof patriarchy, an insularity verging on superiority, a disinclination to get secular officials involved -- exist elsewhere. And the way they've played out in Orthodox Judaism illustrates anew that religion ... can ... be a self-preserving haven for wrongdoing."

New York Times public editor Margaret Sullivan offers some insights into why Nate Silver left the Times for ESPN, despite the Times' reported efforts to retain him. ...

... Mike Allen of Politico has more.

Presidential Race

CW: I missed this last week, but I thought you'd want to know how the 2016 GOP race for the presidency is getting started. Tom Hamburger of the Washington Post: "Sens. Ted Cruz (Tex.) and Rand Paul (Ky.) ... were the key speakers at a meeting of 400 Iowa ministers and their spouses. The senators also attended an Iowa Republican Party fundraiser." ...

... AND this from Leonardo Blair in yesterday's Christian Post: "Hundreds of pastors in Iowa anointed U.S. Senators Ted Cruz and Rand Paul with a shower of prayers after they collectively promoted an agenda to abolish the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), get rid of Obamacare, champion religious freedom, defend marriage and fight abortion on Friday." ...

... MEANWHILE. Matea Gold of the Washington Post: "Long before any candidates announce their presidential bids, the next race for the White House is unofficially underway. Political operatives for two independent groups -- American Bridge 21st Century on the left and America Rising on the right -- are already tracking potential contenders, aiming to build robust research files that can be used against the opposition. The organizations are part of a wave of super PACs, advocacy groups and even for-profit corporations that are poised to play their biggest role yet in national politics."

Right Wing World *

Hucksters. Alex Seitz-Wald of Salon: conservative bloggers & media stars aren't selling only their phony political philosophy; they're also selling lots of worthless -- but expensive -- products to their ignorant fans. Seitz-Wald cites some egregious examples.

* Where the answer to "Have you no shame?" is always "No."

Local News

Bernie Woodall of Reuters: "Labor unions trying to stop Detroit from cutting pensions filed a new challenge to the city in bankruptcy court as the federal judge overseeing the case said he would hear arguments on Wednesday. U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Steven Rhodes agreed on Monday to a request by Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr to fast track a hearing on whether other courts can hear lawsuits against Detroit, while it seeks federal bankruptcy court protection."

News Ledes

William & Kate leave the hospital & show off the new baby:

Reuters: " Al Qaeda claimed responsibility for simultaneous raids on two Iraqi prisons and said more than 500 inmates had been set free, in a statement posted on militant forums on Tuesday. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which was formed earlier this year through a merger between al Qaeda's affiliates in Syria and Iraq, said it had carried out the attacks on Abu Ghraib and Taji jails after months of preparation."

Washington Post: "Dennis Farina, a Chicago policeman who initially moonlighted as a movie actor for the comparatively easy money but quickly became an acclaimed staple of crime dramas and comedies, playing characters on both sides of the law, died July 22 in Scottsdale, Ariz. He was 69. The cause was a blood clot in a lung, said a spokeswoman...."

Sunday
Jul212013

The Commentariat -- July 22, 2013

Igor Volsky of Think Progress: "Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) called on lawmakers across the country, including in his home state of Arizona, to review the Stand Your Ground law that allowed George Zimmerman to walk free in the days after he killed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin and conceded that the country still has 'a long way to go' towards achieving full equality for African Americans.... The senator also praised the remarks Obama delivered about the Zimmerman case on Friday...":

John Whitesides of Reuters: "House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner refused on Sunday to say whether a comprehensive immigration overhaul should include a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, declaring that the House debate is 'not about me.' Boehner, appearing on CBS's "Face the Nation," dodged repeated attempts to get him to spell out his personal views on a path to citizenship for up to 11 million illegal immigrants now in the United States...."

Brendan Sasso of the Hill: "The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee is pushing to fast-track legislation that would require police to obtain a warrant before accessing emails and other private online messages. Sen. Patrick Leahy's (D-Vt.) goal is for the Senate to unanimously approve his bill before the August recess, according to one of his committee aides. Any opposition could delay a vote until after Congress returns in the fall." ...

... David Lightman, et al., of McClatchy News: "Congress is growing increasingly wary of controversial National Security Agency domestic surveillance programs, a concern likely to erupt during legislative debate _ and perhaps prod legislative action _ as early as next week." ...

... "Underwear 2." Michael Crowley of Time: "... in remarks at a national security forum on Friday, Transportation Security Administration chief John Pistole illustrated why the federal government is still on high alert. Speaking in unusual detail, Pistole offered specifics about an underwear bomb devised by a master al Qaeda bomb-maker in Yemen meant to be exploded in an airliner over the United States last year. The plot was foiled thanks to a double-agent inside al Qaeda's Yemen branch, in a case that has also become the subject of a controversial Justice Department leak investigation."

David Kocieniewski of the New York Times: "The maneuvering in markets for oil, wheat, cotton, coffee, [aluminum] and more have brought billions in profits to investment banks like Goldman, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, while forcing consumers to pay more every time they fill up a gas tank, flick on a light switch, open a beer or buy a cellphone. In the last year, federal authorities have accused three banks, including JPMorgan, of rigging electricity prices.... Using special exemptions granted by the Federal Reserve Bank and relaxed regulations approved by Congress, the banks have bought huge swaths of infrastructure used to store commodities and deliver them to consumers -- from pipelines and refineries in Oklahoma, Louisiana and Texas; to fleets of more than 100 double-hulled oil tankers at sea around the globe; to companies that control operations at major ports like Oakland, Calif., and Seattle.... All of this could come to an end if the Federal Reserve Board declines to extend the exemptions that allowed Goldman and Morgan Stanley to make major investments in nonfinancial businesses — although there are indications in Washington that the Fed will let the arrangement stand."

David Leonhardt of the New York Times: "... researchers identified four broad factors that appeared to affect income mobility, including the size and dispersion of the local middle class. All else being equal, upward mobility tended to be higher in metropolitan areas where poor families were more dispersed among mixed-income neighborhoods. Income mobility was also higher in areas with more two-parent households, better elementary schools and high schools, and more civic engagement, including membership in religious and community groups.... In Atlanta, the most common lament seems to be precisely that concentrated poverty, extensive traffic and a weak public-transit system make it difficult to get to the job opportunities."

We should not be judged on how many new laws we create. We ought to be judged on how many laws we repeal. -- John Boehner ...

... ** "Anarchists of the House." Jonathan Chait: "... a regular feature of life in the Republican House: the party leadership draws up a bill that's far too right-wing to ever become law, but it fails in the House because it isn't right-wing enough.... Chaos and dysfunction have set in so deeply that Washington now lurches from crisis to crisis, and once-dull, keep-the-lights-on rituals of government procedure are transformed into white-knuckle dramas that threaten national or even global catastrophe.... The Republican fringe has evolved from being politically shrewd proponents of radical policy changes to a gang of saboteurs who would rather stop government from functioning at all." ...

... Mark Landler of the New York Times: "With major battles looming in the fall over the federal budget and the debt ceiling, President Obama is trying to regain the initiative, embarking on a campaign-style tour of the Midwest this week to lay out his agenda for reinvigorating the nation's economy, administration officials said Sunday."

The Wrong Guy Retired

** John Paul Stevens, in the New York Review of Books, lays out the many ways the Supreme Court's Shelby County decision is in error. Here's one biggie: "Not only is Congress better able to evaluate the issue than the Court, but it is also the branch of government designated by the Fifteenth Amendment to make decisions of this kind." Stevens' conclusion is a powerful rebuke:

This case is about power in several respects. It is about the power of our people to govern themselves, and the power of this Court to pronounce the law. Today's opinion aggrandizes the latter, with the predictable consequence of diminishing the former. We have no power to decide this case. And even if we did, we have no power under the Constitution to invalidate this democratically adopted legislation. The Court's errors on both points spring forth from the same diseased root: an exalted conception of the role of this institution in America.*

* Ironically, the justice who actually wrote Stevens' powerful conclusion was none other than Antonin Scalia. Only he wrote it in his dissent in the DOMA case, which overturned the odious Defense of Marriage Act. ...

... BUT. Still Crazy, Scalia Blames Activist Judges for the Holocaust. Bob Ward of the Aspen Times: "U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia used the twin terrors of Nazi Germany and radical Islam to warn a Snowmass Village audience Saturday about the dangers of judicial activism....Scalia received a standing ovation." CW: you have to jump through some hoops to gain access to the story.

Andrew Puzder, CEO of CKE (Carl Jr.'s & Hardee's), in a Wall Street Journal op-ed: "I am concerned that the ACA could actually cause the number of our covered employees to decrease, particularly in the first year. The penalty for declining coverage will be low compared with the cost of coverage; and employees will know that if they happen to get sick, they can get insurance after that. So the economically rational decision for young people, like our crew employees, is to pay the penalty and forego the insurance." CW: Hmm, this sounds right. If I find out differently, I'll let you know. ...

... I'm skeptical because it's usually a mistake to believe anything published in a right-wing opinion forum. To wit, David Weigel of Slate: "The [conservative] Illinois Review makes a find that's been bouncing around conservative social media all day. 'Nine years ago,' argue the authors, 'then-State Sen. Barack Obama actually co-sponsored a bill that strengthened Illinois' 1961 "stand your ground" law.' If true, this would render hypocritical or null so much of the presidential palaver about the NRA-supported gun law. Wouldn't it? ... No: 'Stand your ground' is substantively different than what Obama backed in Illinois. He backed a tweak to the 'castle doctrine,'" which applies only to home or property invasion.

Sticking by Their Four-Pinocchio Whopper. Despite the fact that both Dean Baker & Paul Krugman have pointed out that the Washington Post's lede editorial claims that unfunded state & local pension plans are nearly quadruple what they actually are, the Post has not appended a correction. Krugman writes, "I'll be curious to see how the paper's correction policy works here." Apparently, not at all. Glenn Kessler, the WashPo fact-checker, should check his paper's opinion editors. ...

... The WashPo's War on Public Pensions? Doug Milhous of Balloon Juice points out that a couple of weeks ago WashPo editorial writer Charles Lane exaggerated Detroit's unpaid pension indebtedness by a factor of (nearly) two in assessing why the city went bankrupt. CW: So far the Post editors are exaggerating unfunded pension liabilities exponentially with each new editorial. Shall we look for a factor of 16 next time? ...

... Steven Yaccino & Michael Cooper of the New York Times: "Kevyn D. Orr, [Detroit's] emergency manager, has called for 'significant cuts' to the pensions of current retirees. His plan is being fought vigorously by unions that point out that pensions are protected by Michigan's Constitution, which calls them a contractual obligation that 'shall not be diminished or impaired.'"

... Paul Krugman: "... the deficit scolds have a new case to misinterpret" -- Detroit. ...

... Enter right, Bill Keller, warning that New York City could become the next Detroit -- "The issue [for NYC] is the same one that helped send Detroit toward bankruptcy last week and has put other American cities on the disabled list: the immense pile of promises made over the decades to the city's employees -- the teachers and cops and firefighters and bus drivers and sanitation workers and maintenance crews who labor to keep the city, physically and socially, in working order."

Li'l Randy's Top White Supremacist Aide Quits. Justin Sink of the Hill: "An aide to Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) who has come under fire for statements about the Civil War has resigned. Jack Hunter, who previously worked as a shock jock known as the 'Southern Avenger' and said Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth's heart was 'in the right place,' said he did not want to be a distraction for the senator, who is openly considering a White House run in 2016." ...

... Maybe because Hunter's attempts to get his "former self" deleted from the record wasn't working out. Lorraine Wilke of Addicting Information: "According to Chris Haire, his former editor at the Charleston City Paper, Hunter recently got in touch to ask (beg?) that Haire remove columns he'd written which 'no longer reflected his current worldview.' Haire didn't take kindly to the request: 'While I told him that I would have removed one or two posts -- it's not uncommon for writers to hastily pen a column they later regret -- I found the breadth of the request to be excessive, and to be honest, quite cowardly.'"

John Hooper of the Guardian: "On 15 June, the pope appointed Monsignor Battista Ricca, an Italian cleric and former Vatican diplomat, to be 'prelate' of the [Vatican] bank.... As such, Ricca is entitled to attend meetings of both the bodies that oversee the scandal-ridden IOR's operations -- its board and a five-strong commission of cardinals.... According to the latest edition of the weekly news magazine L'Espresso, Ricca has a past punctuated with scandal. Its report, which the pope's spokesman branded as 'not trustworthy', claimed Ricca lived more or less openly with a Swiss army officer while at the Holy See's nunciature (embassy) in Uruguay. It said he arrived with his lover and, while running the post between nuncios, provided him with both accommodation and a job."

Local News

Stephanie Condon of CBS News: "Gov. Rick Snyder, R-Mich., said Sunday on 'Face the Nation' that granting Detroit a government bailout would be the wrong way to help the bankrupt city."

David Chen of the New York Times: "Fed up with what he views as a pattern of obstructionist behavior, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has taken the rare step of filing a lawsuit against the city comptroller, John C. Liu, for rejecting two municipal contracts.... The lawsuit ... is the latest and perhaps most pronounced skirmish between Mr. Bloomberg and Mr. Liu, a Democrat who is now running for mayor."

News Ledes

AP: "A federal judge has temporarily blocked a new North Dakota law that bans abortion when a fetal heartbeat is detected -- as early as six weeks into pregnancy. U.S. District Judge Daniel Hovland in Bismarck granted a temporary injunction Monday that blocks the law from taking effect on Aug. 1."

Washington Post: "Seventy-one detainees at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay will get parole-board-style hearings at the Navy base in Cuba, the Pentagon said Sunday, though it did not say when the panels will meet, whether the media can watch and which of the long-held inmates will go first. The disclosure followed a flurry of e-mails after 10 p.m. Friday from Pentagon bureaucrats notifying attorneys for some of the 71 inmates that the government was preparing to hold the hearings, which were ordered by President Obama two years ago."

Guardian: "The Duchess of Cambridge has been admitted to the private Lindo wing at St Mary's hospital in London in preparation for the birth of her first child. In a brief statement released at 7.30am, Kensington Palace said: 'Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cambridge has been admitted this morning to St Mary's hospital, Paddington, London, in the early stages of labour.'" ...

     Update: It's a Boy! Full Kensington Palace statement, via the Guardian:

Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge was safely delivered of a son at 4.24pm.

The baby weighs 8lbs 6oz.

The Duke of Cambridge was present for the birth.

The Queen, The Duke of Edinburgh, The Prince of Wales, The Duchess of Cornwall, Prince Harry and members of both families have been informed and are delighted with the news.

Saturday
Jul202013

The Commentariat -- July 21, 2013

** Rick Hertzberg of the New Yorker on what Alexander Hamilton would have thought of the filibuster. In this short post, Hertzberg dissects & discards every single speech & remark about the "wisdom of the Founders" in creating a Constitution in which a minority compromises majority rule....

... CW: Our government would be functioning in a much different -- and more liberal -- way if we had true representative government. (And before you say, "Oh, yeah; look at the House," let me remind you that more Americans voted for Democrats than Republicans in the last Congressional election AND the Constitution does not contemplate the "Hastert Rule," in which a majority of the majority party must favor a bill before the speaker will bring it to the floor for a vote, an invention which gives a small minority of the House veto power over majority preferences. So, ferinstance, the Senate's immigration bill would likely pass the House today, but Speaker Boehner is bowing to the Tea Party nativist racist bloc & refusing to move on it.)

The Half-Life of the Religious Right. Steve Benen: a new Brookings Institution study "document[s] an important trend: religious social conservatives represent about 28% of the population, but they're slowly being eclipsed by a younger, diverse group of religious progressives.... It's a similar demographic issue that's facing the Republican Party: among Americans 66 and older, 47% self-identify as religious conservatives and only 12% consider themselves religious progressives. Among Americans 33 and younger, religious conservatives not only trail religious progressives, the right also finds itself outnumbered by secularists."

Sharon LaFraniere of the New York Times has the backstory on the Obama administration's aggressive prosecution of whistleblowers & leakers.

CW: Driftglass has a fine post on the hypocrisy of Glenn Greenwald & the Outrage Caucus. "even the slightest, actual debate style-pushback against anything that flows from the keyboard of Mr. Greenwald is instantly shredded and dismissed by the Outrage Caucus as a 'vicious and vehement' attack by the obedient slaves of imperial power." Read the whole post. For some while, I thought I was alone in being sick of Glenn, but Greenwald's recent celebrity has brought attention to "his stampeding ego and petty grudges," which many liberals -- including those he attacked -- have ignored in the past. Thanks to James S. for the link. ...

     ... P.S. It should go without saying (but unfortunately I have to write special messages to Glennbots) that left-leaning critics of Greenwald's particular sociopathy still appreciate the useful facts & issues he brings to light.

The Corporate Person Prevails Again. Elise Viebeck of the Hill: "A key plaintiff against the Obama administration's birth control mandate won a temporary court injunction Friday allowing it not to provide birth control as part of its employee health plan. Hobby Lobby, a national, for-profit chain of arts and crafts stores, was granted the preliminary injunction by U.S. District Judge Joe Heaton." Via Steve Benen.

Lauren French of Politico: "For J. Russell George, Thursday was about damage control. Testifying before the deeply divided House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, the Treasury inspector general responsible for penning the report that fueled the IRS scandal went to great lengths to defend his findings -- and his credibility." ...

... One great way for George to regain credibility is to investigate whether or not Tea Partier Christine I-Am-Not-a-Witch O'Donnell was the victim of an IRS campaign of "political intimidation."

Maureen Dowd is covering the Whitey Bulger trial.

Adam Gopnik of the New Yorker on the history of "stand your ground" a/k/a "no duty to retreat," a peculiarly-American, pro-violence cultural tradition. ...

... President Polyanna Experiences a Moment of Clarity. Charles Pierce on the President's "breaking the redemptive covenant." CW: Pierce hits the right notes here, & he writes them into a riff that explains pretty much every Obama failure. ...

... Biographer David Maraniss of the Washington Post on Barry Obama & his experiences as a young black man. ...

... Scott Keyes of Think Progress: "Conservatives didn't even wait for President Obama to finish his deeply personal remarks on Trayvon Martin's killing and the role of race in America to go ballistic, accusing the president of being a 'Racist in Chief' who is 'trying to tear our country apart.'"

Missed this one. Spencer Hsu of the Washington Post (July 17): "An unprecedented federal review of old criminal cases has uncovered as many as 27 death penalty convictions in which FBI forensic experts may have mistakenly linked defendants to crimes with exaggerated scientific testimony, U.S. officials said. The review led to an 11th-hour stay of execution in Mississippi in May. It is not known how many of the cases involve errors, how many led to wrongful convictions or how many mistakes may now jeopardize valid convictions."

Gubernatorial Race

Katie Glueck of Politico: "Virginia's gubernatorial hopefuls bashed each other for 90 minutes Saturday over jobs, the ethics scandal that has consumed Gov. Bob McDonnell and social issues as they faced off in their first debate of the most closely-watched election of 2013. Republican state Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli depicted Terry McAuliffe, the former chairman of the Democratic National Committee, as a Washington insider with a business record that's much less impressive than the Democrat has claimed. McAuliffe painted Cuccinelli as an ideologue on social issues who should not be believed when he says his priority is jobs. ...

... Robert McCartney of the Washington Post writes that McAuliffe -- who's never held elective office -- managed to look "mostly gubernatorial" in the debate.

Presidential Race

Jonathan Bernstein argues in Salon that Ted Cruz could beat Hillary Clinton. CW: Bernstein doesn't say so, but I think the major reason Cruz would be a viable candidate is that -- unlike Michele Bachmann & Herman Cain, fer instance (both of whom Bernstein compares unfavorably with Cruz), Cruz is not stupid. So far he hasn't seen any reason to pretend to be a mainstream politician, but I'll bet he knows how.

News Ledes

AP: "Searchers rummaging through vacant houses in a neighborhood where three female bodies were found wrapped in plastic bags should be prepared to find one or two more victims, a police chief said Sunday.... A 35-year-old registered sex offender in custody is a suspect in the deaths...."

Guardian: "Two American fighter jets dropped four unarmed bombs into Australia's Great Barrier Reef Marine Park last week, when a training exercise went wrong, the US Navy said, angering environmentalists."

New York Times: "Chris Froome, the lanky Kenya-born Briton who has dominated professional stage-race cycling all year, rode to victory in the 100th Tour de France on Sunday, cheered by thousands who gathered near the Arc de Triomphe in the race's first-ever twilight finish."

New York Times: "Japanese voters appeared to hand a decisive victory on Sunday to the governing Liberal Democratic Party in upper house elections, restoring the once-discredited party to a virtual monopoly on political power for the first time in six years."

Guardian: "King Philippe I has become Belgium's seventh monarch after the abdication of his father, Albert II, amid uncertainty about the power of the monarchy to heal the fractured country."