The Ledes

Sunday, September 29, 2024

Washington Post: “Towns throughout western North Carolina ... were transformed overnight by ... [Hurricane Helene]. Muddy floodwaters lifted homes from their foundations. Landslides and overflowing rivers severed the only way in and out of small mountain communities. Rescuers said they were struggling to respond to the high number of emergency calls.... The death toll grew throughout the Southeast as the scope of Helene’s devastation came into clearer view. At least 49 people had been killed in five states — Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. By early counts, South Carolina suffered the greatest loss of life, registering at least 19 deaths.”

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The Ledes

Saturday, September 28, 2024

Washington Post: “Rescue teams raced to submerged homes, scoured collapsed buildings and steered thousands from overflowing dams as Helene carved a destructive path Friday, knocking out power and flooding a vast arc of communities across the southeastern United States. At least 40 people were confirmed killed in five states since the storm made landfall late Thursday as a Category 4 behemoth, unleashing record-breaking storm surge and tree-snapping gusts. 4 million homes and businesses have lost electricity across Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas, prompting concerns that outages could drag on for weeks. Mudslides closed highways. Water swept over roofs and snapped phone lines. Houses vanished from their foundations. Tornadoes added to the chaos. The mayor of hard-hit Canton, N.C., called the scene 'apocalyptic.'” An AP report is here.

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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Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Wednesday
Dec212011

The Commentariat -- December 22

Here's a short post on celebrations of the Winter Solstice.

Robert Scheer on Tom Friedman's Wednesday column: "That Friedman is a skilled obfuscator should no longer come as a revelation. But that his self-serving feints at the truth can still earn him a place of high regard in the world of journalism is a sad commentary on the profession that has rewarded him so lucratively." See also my column (which I also linked yesterday) on the same Friedman piece, which is in sync with Scheer's. The New York Times eXaminer front page is here.

You know, a one-term president with some balls who actually got stuff done would have been, in the long run of the country, much better. -- Actor Matt Damon, who supported Obama in 2008

CW: I cite the editors of the Washington Post about as often as I do the editors of the Wall Street Journal. The WSJ made yesterday's cut. Here's a Post editorial on the Boehner boner: "... the speaker ... refused to allow the Senate measure to come to the floor for an up-or-down vote, in which enough Republicans might have voted with Democrats to approve the measure.... The real harm involves the failure to extend unemployment benefits. State-paid unemployment insurance would be available for the customary 26 weeks, but extended, federally subsidized coverage that has become routine during economic downturns would end. This is cruel and unwarranted at a time when there are about four jobless workers for every available position and two-fifths of the unemployed have been looking for work for more than six months. If the benefits are not extended, about 1.3 million people will lose coverage in January alone." ...

... Senate Democrats produced this video of Senate Republicans getting on the teevee and begging the House to get off the dime:

... Gail Collins summarizes the whole sordid tale in a manner that won't ruin your holidays -- unless you're one of the major victims of this mess. Here's a sample: "The idea that people were demanding that their leaders act like Mel Gibson should give you an idea of how out of control things had gotten." ...

     ... Steve Benen Update: "The timing of McConnell’s announcement [urging the House to pass the two-month extension] was rather remarkable. House Republican leaders, including Speaker Boehner, had just wrapped up a press conference..., telling reporters that the House GOP caucus won’t give in.... McConnell, almost immediately after Boehner wrapped up his remarks, cut the legs out from underneath the House GOP leadership and sided with Harry Reid’s proposed solution." CW: see also today's Ledes.

NEW. Kate Linthicum of the Los Angeles Times: "Many Occupy L.A. protesters arrested during demonstrations in recent months are being offered a unique chance to avoid court trials: pay $355 to a private company for a lesson in free speech. Los Angeles Chief Deputy City Atty. William Carter said the city won't press charges against protesters who complete the educational program offered by American Justice Associates. He said the program, which may include lectures by attorneys and retired judges, is being offered to people with no other criminal history and who were arrested on low-level misdemeanor offenses, such as failure to disperse."

Yesterday, I posted a link to Nate Silver's analysis of President Obama's improved poll numbers in which Silver said he thought the reason was the positive economic signs. I saw that as bad news for Obama. Now, it turns out actual economists agree with my "intuition": Annie Lowrey of the New York Times: "... the good [economic] news also comes with a significant caveat. Many forecasters say the recent uptick probably does not represent the long-awaited start to a strong, sustainable recovery. Much of the current strength is caused by temporary factors. And economists expect growth to slow in the first half of 2012 to an annual pace of about 1.5 to 2 percent. Even that estimate could be optimistic if Washington lawmakers fail to extend aid for the long-term unemployed and a payroll tax cut for the United States’ 160 million wage earners."

Lifting the Fog of War. Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! on what Bradley Manning is accused of exposing. It's stuff the public should know about -- and it isn't good.

Yesterday, via a reader, I linked to a story about the Christian right's opposition to regulation of mercury, because, hey, the unbor might get over the deleterious effects of mercury poisoning by the time they're five or six years old. Today, David Roberts of Grist writes, "Wednesday, at long last, the EPA unveiled its new rule covering mercury and other toxic emissions from coal- and oil-fired power plants.... This one is a Big Deal.... The original Clean Air Act 'grandfathered' in dozens of existing coal plants back in 1977, on the assumption that they were nearing the end of their lives and would be shut soon anyway. Well, funny story ... they never shut down! ... Mercury rules get directly at these plants in a way no other rules have.... This is an historic day and a real step forward for the forces of civilization. It's the beginning of the end of one of the last of the old-school, 20th-century air pollution problems." CW: EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, about whom I initially had doubts, is turning out to be a real hero. I'm glad she didn't quit whe Obama stabbed her (and the world) in the back on ozone regs. ...

... Update: ... this shows that it matters who holds the White House. You can complain about Obama’s lack of a strong progressive agenda, which I sometimes do, or wonder what good it is to hold the White House when the other side blocks every attempt to do good through legislation. But mercury regulation would not have happened if John McCain were president. Elections have consequences, and this is one delayed consequence of 2008 that will make a big difference. -- Paul Krugman

Scott Keyes of Think Progress: "Late last week, Sen. Ben Cardin (D-MD) introduced a bill to restore voting rights for citizens convicted of a felony after they complete their sentence. Currently, four states — Florida, Iowa, Kentucky, and Virginia — permanently disenfranchise any resident convicted of a felony, even after he or she has been released from prison. Another seven states — Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Mississippi, Nevada, Tennessee, and Wyoming — permanently disenfranchise people convicted of certain felonies. If passed, the Democracy Restoration Act would restore voting rights to felons who have finished serving their sentence." CW: good luck getting this through. Since the number of ex-felons are disproportionately black, and since blacks historically more often vote Democratic, Congressional Republicans will never go for this. If they could have their way, voting "rights" would be limited to the same group that had voting rights in the late 18th century: white, propertied men over the age of 21. 

Sarah Kliff of the Washington Post: the public doesn't understand the implications of the individual mandate to obtain health insurance. A Kaiser study found that both sides -- pro and con -- have opportunities to change that dynamic. The cons can increase the negative view, but "the majority would flip to a positive opinion when they were told that Americans with employer-sponsored insurance really wouldn’t have to deal with the mandate. A handful of other messages also moved the dial." CW: of course if the Supremes strike down the individual mandate, "moving the dial" is moot.

Right Wing World

Art via Esquire.

Any President? Really? The DNC answers Romney (Bob Gates, BTW, is a Republican):

Profile in Cowardice. Ashley Parker of the New York Times: "At a morning campaign stop at a restaurant [in Keene, New Hampshire], Mitt Romney said that while he supported an extension of the payroll tax cut, he ... refused to criticize the speaker of the House, John A. Boehner, for siding with Republican members in blocking the Senate’s proposed two-month extension of the tax break." With video. ...

... BUT. Jonathan Weisman of the Wall Street Journal: "Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who famously lost budget battles to President Bill Clinton amid two government shutdowns, had some advice to House Republicans at loggerheads with another Democratic president: Give in." ...

... Here's Karl Rove's plan, a/k/a Another Demonstration of Why Dubya Nicknamed Rove "Turdblossom." You would be forgiven for dropping the "blossom" part:

Dan Balz of the Washington Post: "Newt Gingrich fired back at Mitt Romney’s assertion that he can’t take the heat of a vigorous campaign, saying here Wednesday that he can 'take the heat plenty well,' accusing his rival of hiding and challenging his rival to a one-on-one debate in Iowa next week to settle their differences." CW: don't hold your breath waiting for Willard to call you, Newt. Not gonna happen.

CW: If Gingrich sounds like a rational guy in the exchange above, don't worry -- he's still crazy. Scott Shane of the New York Times: Long before he announced his presidential run this year, Newt Gingrich had become the most prominent American politician to embrace an alarming premise: that Shariah, or Islamic law, poses a threat to the United States as grave as or graver than terrorism."  ...

AND there's this: Gingrich says people for whom gay rights are important should vote for Obama. He means it, too:

Mitt Romney, Welfare King in a Pink Cadillac. Lee Fang in Salon: "During the presidential campaign, Mitt Romney has lashed out at the Obama administration’s taxpayer subsidized grants to clean energy start-up companies. 'The U.S. government shouldn’t be playing venture capitalist,' wrote Romney in October. 'The very process invites cronyism and outright corruption.' But public records show that Romney’s private equity firm, Bain Capital, repeatedly persuaded the government to play venture capitalist when it came its own portfolio of companies.... Whether through hiring insider lobbyists or funneling taxpayer subsidies to his companies, government assistance has been part and parcel to the rise of Romney."

Gloria Borger of CNN irritates Ron Paul -- so he walks out:

... Conor Friedersdorf of The Atlantic has a pretty good analysis of the racist newsletters and who wrote 'em. CW P.S. to Dr. Paul: when you become a viable candidate for POTUS, journalists are supposed to look into your sordid past. ...

... Ta-Nehisi Coates of The Atlantic on using racism "as a potent political force" even when the candidate "is not really a racist" himself. ...

... AND "Outreach to the Rednecks." Alex Pareene of Salon highlights this 2008 Reason article by Julian Sanchez & Dave Weigel that explains the "paleo-libertarian" move to the right: a strategic means to get Southern white racists on board the libertarian movement. This "paleo" movement directly links to Ron Paul & his racist newsletters. This is cynicism with consequences.

Charles Pierce of Esquire writes a funny post on Michele Bachmann's busy morning on the teevee yesterday: "Today, between 7 and 8 a.m, she managed live shots on the Today show (NBC) and The Early Show (CBS), as well as chatting with Ali Velshi on CNN and with the assembled graduates of the Muppets special-class on Fox and Friends. She did best with Velshi, who really seems to like her, and worse on Today with Ann Curry, who pinned her rather convincingly on an op-ed Bachmann had arranged to be published under her name in the Des Moines Register.... Bachmann really has to consult more closely with her ghostwriter next time to make sure she knows what she's saying in the newspapers that day." The Curry-Bachmann interview is here.

Via Gawker.Max Read of Gawker: "Wisconsin Republican Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner hates how Michelle Obama is constantly forcing sickening Muslim traditions like 'vegetables' and 'exercise' on the youth of America — especially when she herself is so disgustingly corpulent, in the butt area. He hates it so much he can't even keep quiet about it!" CW: I'd love to see that fat-assed Sensenbrenner try to wriggle into a pair of Michelle Obama's workout pants.

"Sen. Tom Coburn Debunks His Own Report." Jamison Foser of Media Matters: "Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) has produced yet another list of government spending that he considers wasteful largely because it sounds funny.... Coburn's typical approach is to catalogue government spending that he can caricature with silly-sounding headlines, much of it constituting a trivial amount of money, and lambaste the 'wasteful' spending without bothering to assess the actual merits.... Less than two months ago, Coburn was caught denouncing a laundry list of non-existent spending.... Coburn writes that the report details 'unnecessary, duplicative, or just plain stupid projects.' But on the very same page, in an adjacent paragraph, Coburn admits: 'Some of the projects listed within this report may indeed serve useful purposes or have merit.'"

Local News

Daniel Luzer of the Washington Monthly: Florida Gov. Rick Scott (America's Worst Governor) has been trying to "reform college. It’s not going so well. First there was Scott’s much-derided comment that the state should stop supporting the humanities and social sciences because the state didn’t need more anthropologists. This was followed by an incident where Scott angered virtually all state university professors by publishing their salaries online." Then his call to suspend Florida A&M President James Ammons because of a hazing death at the school led to a student & alum backlash.

Dick Hogan of my local newspaper, the News-Press, has written a terrific investigative report on a real-estate swindle that rips off both banks & foreclosed homeowners. Hogan sticks to data in Lee County, Florida, but you can bet this is happening in your community, too: "A wave of suspicious deals by real estate agents selling bank-owned or distressed homes at ultra-low prices is sweeping Southwest Florida, a News-Press investigation shows. The practice is called 'flopping.' In it, the banker, on the advice of its own real estate agent, sells a property for less than it’s worth. Then the agent arranges for the property to be sold to an associate — who quickly resells it at a much higher price, sometimes the same day." There's a related article here and more material, including a good graphic here.

News Ledes

** New York Times: "Bowing under intense pressure from members of their own party, House Republican leaders agreed Thursday to accept a temporary extension of the payroll tax cut, beating a hasty retreat from a showdown that Republicans increasingly saw as a threat to their election opportunities next year. Under a deal reached between House and Senate leaders, the House will now approve as early as Friday the two-month extension of a payroll tax holiday and unemployment benefits approved by the Senate last Saturday, and the Senate will appoint members of a House-Senate conference committee to negotiate legislation to extend both benefits through 2012."

President Obama speaks on the importance of the tax cut:

AP: Mitch McConnell, "the Senate's top Republican, on Thursday urged the GOP-led House to pass a short-term renewal of payroll tax cuts and break an impasse that threatens 160 million workers with a 2 percentage point tax increase on Jan. 1... while calling on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., to appoint negotiators on the separate House measure that would bring a year-long renewal of the payroll tax and jobless benefits. Separately, in a Thursday morning phone call, House Speaker John Boehner urged President Barack Obama to send administration officials to the Capitol to negotiate an agreement on a long-term measure demanded by Republicans. Obama declined the offer." ...

     ... Washington Post Update: Boehner says fuggedaboudit.

The Concord (New Hampshire) Monitor endorses Jon Huntsman, Jr., in the GOP presidential primary.

New York Times: "Mistakes by both American and Pakistani forces led to airstrikes against Pakistani posts on the Afghanistan border that killed 26 Pakistani Army soldiers last month, according to a Pentagon investigation that for the first time acknowledged some American responsibility for the clash, which plunged the already frayed relationship between the United States and Pakistan to a new low. But a crucial finding — that the Pakistanis fired first — was likely to further anger Pakistan."

Reuters: "Bank of America Corp's Countrywide Financial unit agreed on Wednesday to pay a record $335 million to settle civil charges that it discriminated against minority homebuyers, an historic settlement for the Obama administration in the wake of the subprime mortgage morass."

Reuters: "Anti-Wall Street activists who have camped out since October in the college town of Berkeley, across the bay from San Francisco, braced for an eviction that city officials warned would be enforced late Wednesday night. The city distributed flyers announcing plans to shut down the Occupy Berkeley encampment at Civic Center Park starting at 10 p.m. local time, citing an escalating rash of violence and other criminal behavior in recent weeks, capped by an attempted rape on Tuesday."

Reuters: "A rash of bombings hit Baghdad on Thursday, killing at least 57 people in the first big attack on Iraq's capital since a crisis between its Shi'ite Muslim-led government and Sunni rivals erupted days after the U.S. troop withdrawal. The apparently coordinated bombings were the first sign of rising violence after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki moved to sideline two Sunni Muslim leaders, just a few years after sectarian bloodletting drove Iraq to the edge of civil war."

Tuesday
Dec202011

The Commentariat -- December 21

Happy Hannukah!

AND, yes, I know how tasteful this is:

My column in today's New York Times eXaminer is on Tom Friedman's latest turn on the Iraq War. Of course I caught him in an itty-bitty fib about -- Tom Friedman. The NYTX front page is here. Also, be sure to read the excerpt from Belén Fernández’s book The Imperial Messenger: Thomas Friedman at Work. The excerpt is hilarious, in a creepy sort of way.

Robert Pear of the New York Times: "More than three million people stand to lose unemployment insurance benefits in the near future because of an impasse in Congress over how to extend the aid and how to offset the cost. Jobless benefits have been overshadowed by debate on a payroll tax cut, but have become a huge sticking point in negotiations on a bill that deals with both issues. Republicans would continue aid for some of the unemployed, but would sharply reduce the maximum duration of benefits and impose strict new requirements on people seeking or receiving aid."

The Obama Campaign Doesn't Seem All That Sad about the House Move. Marc Ambinder of the National Journal: "In several hours Tuesday, 10,000 Obama supporters had responded to an e-mail from senior adviser David Plouffe asking what $40 per week, about what the payroll tax cut is worth, would mean to them.... The White House also asked the question on Twitter, creating a hashtag, #40dollars, that was trending worldwide just hours later. The official cited data from hashtracking.com, which showed that the hash tag had generated more than 5.7 million impressions, equivalent to roughly 3 million people."

Nate Silver: "President Obama has seen improved approval ratings in the past few weeks.... The improvement in Mr. Obama’s numbers, while fairly modest, is potentially meaningful.... One popular theory is that Mr. Obama is benefiting from the confrontation with Congress over the payroll tax cut.... I would suggest that another explanation is much more plausible: Mr. Obama’s improved approval ratings reflect rising economic expectations." CW: And I would suggest that's something for Obama to worry about: we haven't much actual reason to expect the economy to improve.

Katrina vanden Heuvel in the Washington Post: "President Obama likes to quote Martin Luther King Jr., who said that 'the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.' But it doesn’t bend by itself. Faced with the roadblocks of the right, perhaps the pragmatic thing to do and the idealistic thing to do are one and the same: We have to build a movement that will push our politics and our current president — and the next one, and the next one, and the next one.... 2012 must be about more than just his reelection. It needs to be about what comes next, not just who."

In a post titled, "PolitiFact, R.I.P.," Paul Krugman writes: "This is really awful. Politifact, which is supposed to police false claims in politics, has announced its Lie of the Year — and it’s a statement that happens to be true, the claim that Republicans have voted to end Medicare.... The people at Politifact are terrified of being considered partisan if they acknowledge the clear fact that there’s a lot more lying on one side of the political divide than on the other. So they’ve bent over backwards to appear 'balanced' — and in the process made themselves useless and irrelevant." CW: I sent this link along to PolitiFact, which never responded to the explanation I sent them some weeks back that jibed with Krugman's analysis here. Dopes. ...

... Ezra Klein: "The meta-point here is that we’re seeing, in real time, why the 'fact checker' model is probably unsustainable.... [Paul] Ryan actually campaigned to get PolitiFact to name 'end Medicare' their Lie of the Year. And yet Ryan is one of the prime offenders behind the 2010 Lie of the Year — that the Affordable Care Act was a 'government takeover' of the health-care system. But Ryan hasn’t apologized for those comments or even, as far as I can tell, stopped making that argument. He wants PolitiFact on his side when it’s useful for him, and he’ll ignore the outlet when it isn’t. ...

By their logic if Republicans had voted to replace the FBI with a voucher program giving citizens subsidies to pay for private investigators, it would have been inaccurate to say they had 'ended the FBI.' -- Jed Lewison, Daily Kos

... Dave Weigel of Slate: "Getting somewhat lost in this discussion is where the 'ends Medicare' line came from. It was not birthed like Athena from the skull of Nancy Pelosi. It came from an April 4, 2011 preview of the Ryan plan by Naftali Bendavid, writing in the Wall Street Journal -- that simmering pot of liberal bias. Here is how Bendavid described it.

The plan would essentially end Medicare, which now pays most of the health-care bills for 48 million elderly and disabled Americans, as a program that directly pays those bills. Mr. Ryan and other conservatives say this is necessary because of the program's soaring costs.

      "In subsequent Democratic spin and ads, this was the citation for the claim that the Ryan plan 'would essentially end Medicare.' Strangely, PolitiFact never mentions this original, reported analysis. The fact-checkers claim that 'Democrats pounced' on Ryan, that 'the Democrats were turning the tables' on the spin, and that the lie is 'the Democrats’ claim.' No mention of how a non-partisan analysis of the bill, by a congressional reporter, first made the 'ending' claim." CW: I sent this to PolitiFact, too.

Jack Ewing of the New York Times: big banks really want to risk other people's money, including yours, the better to increase the bonuses of their top dogs. "The debate centers on an international accord..., the so-called Basel III rules. The core issue and main point of dispute is capital — the money that banks accumulate through issuing stock and holding onto profits, money that they do not have to repay. The regulators want banks to finance their operations with more capital and less borrowed money. Advocates argue that the bigger the capital buffer, the greater the stability of the financial system. But financing operations from capital, rather than borrowing money, is less profitable, and that means lower bonuses."

The Rev. Jim Rigby on empire: "Christmas is not a fact of history, but Christianity’s particular symbol of every human being’s hope for world peace and universal happiness. When the angels sang, 'peace on earth good will to all,' they were expressing the song written in every heart. But, that song calls us out of empire and into our entire human family. Maybe stopping the frenzy of Christmas long enough to really hear the song the angels sang to the wretched of the earth, would give us the humanity to stop hanging our Christmas lights until we no longer kill our brothers and sisters for the fuel to illumine them."

Dean Baker in Nation of Change: Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon), evidently realizing that "just because something has failed repeatedly is no reason not to do it again; especially if it protects the interests of the 1 percent," did so for the accolades from the usual suspects. If he weren't such a coward, he would suggest a plan that would actually work to reduce costs & improve healthcare.

 

Right Wing World *

Dana Milbank mocks House Republicans for their weird embrace of the Mel Gibson film "Braveheart." Of course, it isn't very funny if you're one of the millions of victims of the House GOP caucus. ...

... They've Even Lost the Wall Street Journal Editorial Board, which is an Amazing Turn: "The GOP's Payroll Tax Fiasco.... Given how [GOP Senate leader Mitch McConnell] and House Speaker John Boehner have handled the payroll tax debate, we wonder if they might end up re-electing the President before the 2012 campaign even begins in earnest. The GOP leaders have somehow managed the remarkable feat of being blamed for opposing a one-year extension of a tax holiday that they are surely going to pass. This is no easy double play." ...

... Laurie Kellman of the AP: "John Boehner vowed early on that as speaker, he would let the House 'work its will.' At the end of his first year in charge of the fractious Republican-controlled chamber, it's clear he has little choice. An uncompromising band of conservatives, led by GOP freshmen to whom Boehner owes his speakership, has repeatedly forced him to back away from deals with President, Democrats and, this week, even one struck by Senate Republicans. Gridlock, again and again, has defined Congress in the Boehner era even as Americans fume and the economy continues to wobble."

David Lynch of Bloomberg News (in a straight news article): Mitt Romney & Newt Gingrich "have embraced an explanation of the financial crisis that has been rejected by the chairman of the Federal Reserve, many economists and even three of the four Republicans on the government commission that investigated the meltdown. Both ... lay much of the blame on U.S. government housing policies, saying they led to the real estate crash that almost brought down the banking system and has cost homeowners $6.6 trillion since 2006. 'We are aware of such claims but have not seen any empirical evidence presented to support them,' Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke wrote...."

Actual Audio: Newt's New Campaign Ad from scottbateman on Vimeo.

... Dahlia Lithwick in Slate, on the increasingly irrelevant Mr. Gingrich: "With his escalating attacks on the federal judiciary, he has confirmed that, if elected, he would place himself atop a government that simultaneously manages to be both a dictatorship and a theocracy. In recent weeks — and just as his presidential star was improbably rising — he doubled down on his initial claims that the federal courts 'have become grotesquely dictatorial and far too powerful,' to offer up new promises that, as president, he would abolish federal judgeships, occasionally ignore the Supreme Court, and — in the manner of a tiny tyrant in khaki shirts and mirrored sunglasses — have federal marshals arrest errant federal judges and force them to testify before Congress about their unpopular decisions."

Peter Wallsten of the Washington Post: "Rep. Ron Paul has become a serious force with the potential to upend the nomination fight and remain a factor throughout next year’s general-election campaign.... He has built a strong enough base of support that he could be a spoiler — or a kingmaker. In a muddled field, Paul could win the Iowa caucuses. Over the past week, he has spent more than $600,000 on attack ads that are cutting into support for a fellow front-runner, former House speaker Newt Gingrich (Ga.). And Paul has built an organization that will allow him to remain in the race well beyond the early-voting states and amass convention delegates. Perhaps most fearsome to Republican leaders is Paul’s refusal to rule out a third-party presidential bid that would steal votes from the Republican nominee and make President Obama’s path to reelection considerably easier."

Brian Tashman of Right Wing Watch: "Calvin Beinser of the Cornwall Alliance has no scientific credentials but has become the go-to person for right-wing activists on questions of science, particularly climate change.... What Beisner does have is close ties to organizations financed by the energy industry and a history of attacking scientists, spreading misinformation, and fueling fears that the environmental movement is a pagan plot to destroy Christianity and kill 'about 95% of the human race.' ... He joined Focus on the Family’s political arm CitizenLink ... to disparage the [Evangelical Environmental Network] for thanking both Republican and Democratic politicians who supported efforts to reduce mercury emissions.... The Center for Disease control did in fact find that one in six newborns ... annually, are 'at risk for developmental disorders because of mercury exposure in the mother's womb.' ... Apparently for Focus on the Family, being 'pro-life' does not entail protecting newborns from mercury poisoning."

* Where all is not right.

News Ledes

AP: "Careening toward a politically toxic tax hike, President Barack Obama implored House Speaker John Boehner on Wednesday to get behind a two-month stopgap until a longer deal could be struck early next year, calling it the only real way out of a mess that is threatening the paychecks of 160 million workers and isolating House Republicans." ...

... New York Times: "The holiday brinkmanship over the issue recalled the December budget showdown 16 years ago between another first-term Democratic president, Bill Clinton, and a new Republican Congressional majority — a fight that capped their year of confrontation over the nation’s fiscal priorities by reviving Mr. Clinton politically as he began his re-election race."

AP: "Lawyers for the Army intelligence analyst blamed for the biggest national security leak in American history rested their case Wednesday, with closing arguments ahead before Pfc. Bradley Manning learns whether he will face a court-martial."

AP: "More than two dozen members of Congress are calling for investigation into the CIA's relationship with the New York Police Department."

AP: "The European Central Bank loaned a massive euro489 billion ($639 billion) to hundreds of banks for an exceptionally long period of three years to shore up a financial system that is under pressure from the eurozone's government debt crisis. It was the biggest ECB infusion of credit into the banking system in the 13-year history of the shared euro currency." This Guardian liveblog has details & reactions.

New York Times: "For the first time ever, a government advisory board is asking scientific journals not to publish details of certain biomedical experiments, for fear that the information could be used by terrorists to create deadly viruses and touch off epidemics. In the experiments, conducted in the United States and the Netherlands, scientists created a highly transmissible form of a deadly flu virus that does not normally spread from person to person. It was an ominous step, because easy transmission can lead the virus to spread all over the world."

Washington Post: "Eight American soldiers deployed in Afghanistan have been charged in connection with the Oct. 3 death of a comrade who apparently committed suicide in a guard tower, U.S. military officials said Wednesday. Pvt. Danny Chen, 19, an infantryman, died from an 'apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound' at a small combat outpost in Kandahar Province.... A military official told Chen's parents that fellow soldiers had been physically abusive toward Chen, and taunted him with ethnic slurs, The New York Times reported in October."

ABC News: "While blizzard conditions may have ended over the U.S. for now, a Nor'easter is now a possibility for December 24 - 25, which might mean a white Christmas for major cities along the East Coast from Washington, D.C. to Boston and hectic travel conditions for millions. Over the last 24 hours some 24 inches of snow fell in New Mexico, with winds gusting over 70 mph in the mountains. Up to a foot of snow from was seen from Colorado to Kansas and Oklahoma, and 10-foot drifts were reported in Colorado."

AP: "Iraq's prime minister urged the Kurdish authorities in the north of the country to hand over the Sunni vice president accused of running hit squads that targeted government officials, saying he must face justice. The comments by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki during a news conference Wednesday sharpened the divisions in what is shaping up to be one of the most serious political confrontations in Iraq in years."

AP: "The parliament chosen in a fraud-tainted election that set off protests throughout Russia opened its first session Wednesday with the new speaker promising more genuine debate to win back the voters' trust. Under Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, the parliament has become little more than a rubber stamp for government initiatives. The previous speaker once famously said it was 'not a place for political discussion.' Sergei Naryshkin said this would change with him as the new speaker."

Guardian: "The Metropolitan police have arrested a 52-year-old female serving police officer over payments from journalists, Scotland Yard has said.... She is the first police officer arrested under Operation Elveden, an inquiry into alleged illegal payments to officers which is running alongside the Operation Weeting phone-hacking inquiry."

Monday
Dec192011

The Commentariat -- December 20

My column in today's New York Times eXaminer: "You might think the Sidney Awards are prestigious accolades for literary and journalistic excellence. You might think that, until you find out that David Brooks single-handedly chooses the recipients of the Sidney Awards.... As far as I can tell, the only prize money is the mention in Brooks’ column." The front page of the NYTX is here. ...

... REMINDER for those in the NYC area: the NYT eXaminer is holding a public discussion at 7:30 pm ET this evening at the Brecht Forum at 451 West Street, NYC, on how mainstream media coverage developed from the first days of OWS. More info here.

Steve Benen: "After days of meetings and delays, a broken promise to hold an up-or-down vote on the Senate bill, and a surprising number of pot shots at their Senate Republican colleagues, the House GOP came up with a convoluted scheme.... The way House Republicans have set this up, those who vote 'yes' are actually voting 'no' on the bipartisan Senate compromise. In fact, under this scheme, the House will hardly be voting on the Senate version at all... The new House Republican scheme is intended to raise middle-class taxes without making it look like House Republicans are raising middle-class taxes. In two weeks, Americans will discover in early January that their paychecks have shrunk, and because political journalism is largely broken, they’ll be told it’s the result of 'both sides' being unwilling to compromise. Those reports will be wrong." See also today's Ledes. Also see Right Wing World below for more on the "philosophy" behind the GOP moves.

Zeke Emanuel in the New York Times: "Premium support [plans, like the Wyden-Ryan plan] will not reduce the government’s costs without shifting those costs to older people who can’t afford them. Only a plan that transforms how we pay doctors and other health care providers can do that.... To address the root of the cost problem, we must change how we pay doctors and hospitals. We must move away from fee-for-service payments to bundled payments that include all the costs of caring for a patient, thereby encouraging providers to keep patients healthy and avoid unnecessary services. Medicare should announce that it will make this change by Jan. 1, 2022, and that it will begin by switching to bundled payments for cardiac and orthopedic surgery within one year and for cancer patients within five." ...

... Here's Paul Krugman from a few days ago, describing Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) as a "useful idiot" -- and explaining why that is. Krugman's POV is consistent with Emanuel's. CW: personally, I've thought for some time that Wyden was either stupid or corrupt. I'm not it matters which, if he's going to keep giving cover to anti-middle-class GOP tricks.

Joe Nocera: "On Friday, the Securities and Exchange Commission waded into the Fannie/Freddie wars by filing a lawsuit against three executives from each company. The complaint charges them with making 'materially false' disclosures about the size of the companies’ subprime portfolios.... What it shows is how desperate the S.E.C. has become to bring a crowd-pleasing case. The complaint is extraordinarily weak." CW: I'm no expert, but I think Nocera is probably right. (If I read something credible to the contrary, I'll share it.) Then again, these guys paid Newt $1.6 million to shill on the Hill. Shouldn't they go to jail for that?....

... Update: here's a rebuttal (or pre-buttal) by Wall Street investigative reporter Gary Weiss, writing in Salon, re: one of the defendants -- Richard Syron, Freddie Mac's former CEO. Weiss reports that Syron has made a career of (and millions from) looking the other way.

James Goodale, who served as counsel to the New York Times in the Pentagon Papers case, in a letter to the Wall Street Journal editors (republished in the NYTX): "It is important for the First Amendment community to support [Julian] Assange. If Mr. Assange can be successfully prosecuted, other publishers can be too." Pinch Sulzberger, are you listening? ...

... Graham Nash & James Raymond (son of David Crosby) composed this song & released the video (Nash vocals) in support of Bradley Manning:

"Twitter Terrorism." Glenn Greenwald: "The Obama administration and The New York Times are teaming up to expose and combat the grave threat posed by a Twitter account, purportedly operated by the Somali group Shabab, and in doing so, are highlighting the simultaneous absurdity and perniciousness of the War on Terror.... At this point, there is an almost perfect inverse relationship between the seriousness of the Terrorist threat and the severity of the powers the U.S. Government claims in its name.... The War on Terror is not a means to an end; it is the end in itself." ...

... Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post: "Since September, at least 60 people have died in 14 reported CIA drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal regions. The Obama administration has named only one of the dead, hailing the elimination of Janbaz Zadran, a top official in the Haqqani insurgent network, as a counterterrorism victory. The identities of the rest remain classified, as does the existence of the drone program itself. Because the names of the dead and the threat they were believed to pose are secret, it is impossible for anyone without access to U.S. intelligence to assess whether the deaths were justified.... 'They’ve based it on the personal legitimacy of [President] Obama — the "trust me" concept,' law Prof. Kenneth Anderson said. 'That’s not a viable concept for a president going forward.'”

A reader links us to this site, Win with Women 2012, which promotes female Democratic candidates for the U.S. Senate.

Right Wing World

I find some of those articles about divergence or control of the generals to be kind of offensive to me. And here's why. One of the things that makes us as a military profession in a democracy is civilian rule. Our civilian leaders are under no obligation to accept our advice; and that's what it is. Its advice. It's military judgments, it's alternatives, it's options. And at the end of the day, our system is built on the fact that it will be our civilian leaders who make that decision and I don't find that in any way to challenge my manhood, nor my position. In fact, if it were the opposite, I think we should all be concerned. -- Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on GOP presidential candidates' pledges to "listen to the generals"

CW: Jonathan Chait has this exactly right: "Republicans have grown increasingly concerned about the low tax burden on the middle and lower tiers of the income spectrum. The middle-class tax cuts were the price of admission [in earlier tax-cut deals] in order to get the good stuff for the rich folks. It’s become a price of admission fewer Republicans are willing to pay." Read the whole post. ...

... I'd add: throughout our history, we've held to a Platonic ideal that those who govern should do so for love of country; they should not be overly-compensated for the privilege of governing. But in the past two decades, people have gone into government precisely to get rich. Today, holding elective office is the dues they pay to get to K Street, Wall Street, a teevee show, or -- if they're high enough up the food chain -- the lecture circuit and big book deals. It isn't just that they're in the pockets of the rich today. If they have not already made themselves multi-millionaires thanks to insider-trading and sweet lobbying jobs for their spouses, they have big bucks in their sights. Tax cuts for the rich are part of the Congressional pension plan. ...

... CW: Greg Sargent implies there's some question here, but I don't think so: John Boehner cannot control his caucus of know-nothings, even on issues that should be no-brainers like raising the debt ceiling & extending the payroll tax. This isn't horrible; Harry Reid can't control ConservaDems in the Senate, either. What is ridiculous is Boehner's pretense that he never backed the Senate version of the payroll tax extension. "CNN quoted a source over the weekend saying that Boehner had called the Senate compromise a “good deal” on a conference call. Meanwhile, Roll Call reports that Boehner was in touch with Mitch McConnell while the Senate deal was negotiated, suggesting the possibility that he may have been supportive before his caucus rebelled."

Driftglass explains the Republican nominating process: "... once again the party's leading hustlers and lunatics scramble up another, dangerously-teetering mountain of lies and pious claptrap to compete for the right to lead an army of bitter morons into another round of Conservative failure and catastrophe."des

NEW. Peter Finocchiaro of Salon describes this as Mitt Romney's "charm offensive." Finocchiaro's assessment: "Emotionless political robot or not, Mitt did alright." CW: I'm glad if someone is going to rate a Romney performance as "alright," he misspells "all right":

$167 Is Not Zero. The DNC just put out this fine video that nails Romney's hypocrisy on middle-class tax cuts. What it does not show is what big tax cuts he has, my dear, planned for himself:

Ron Paul's Turn. Jim Rutenberg & Richard Oppel of the New York Times: "Emerging as a real Republican contender in Iowa, Representative Ron Paul of Texas is receiving new focus for decades-old unbylined columns in his political newsletters that included racist, anti-gay and anti-Israel passages that he has since disavowed. The latest issue of The Weekly Standard, a leading conservative publication, reprised reports of incendiary language in Mr. Paul’s newsletters that were published about 20 years ago.... On Monday, his deputy campaign manager, Dimitri Kesari, reiterated that Mr. Paul 'did not write, edit or authorize' the language."

Adam Serwer of Mother Jones on Maricopa County, Arizona, Sheriff Joe Arpaio's warped concept of civil rights. "If they call me names, my civil rights have been violated." Serwer asks, "Has a statement more symbolic of runaway right-wing victimhood ever been uttered? It's all there, the lack of empathy, the narrative of persecution, the ludicrous sense of self-pity, even the comically distorted understanding of the law. Naturally, the statement also actually helps confirm what Arpaio's critics are accusing him of—any sheriff thin skinned-enough to think it's illegal to call him a name is probably also enough of a megalomaniac to arrest people for criticizing him." ...

Still, Arpaio Is Not as Bad as This Guy: Robert Mackey of the New York Times re: "... a retired general who now serves as an adviser to the [Egyptian] military government’s public relations department. In comments published by the Egyptian newspaper Al Shorouk on Monday, the adviser, Gen. Abdel Moneim Kato, said that the protesters who came under attack by soldiers were delinquents 'who deserve to be thrown into Hitler’s ovens.'”

Justin Berrier with "Fox & Friends"' Stupidest Moments off 2011.

News Ledes

President Obama makes a surprise appearance in the White House briefing room on the House GOP's refusal to cooperate on the payroll tax & unemployment compensation extensions:

New York Times: "The Federal Reserve on Tuesday proposed rules that would require the largest American banks to hold more capital — and to keep it more easily accessible — to protect against another financial crisis. But the Fed, the nation’s chief banking regulator, added that the final capital rules were unlikely to be more stringent than international limits that were still under development. That is a small victory for banks who warned that they would be severely disadvantaged if capital requirements here were stricter than those governing overseas banks."

Wired: "Accused WikiLeaker Bradley Manning sat in the same room with the man who undid his life on Tuesday, when former hacker Adrian Lamo took the stand on the fifth day of Manning’s pretrial hearing. Lamo, who turned Bradley Manning into the FBI and Army for allegedly leaking hundreds of thousands of sensitive government documents to WikiLeaks, denied in his testimony that he’d violated a journalistic or ministerial promise of confidentiality when he turned over the chat logs that led to Manning’s arrest." New York Times story here.

Women protest in Cairo against military violations of women. Reuters picture.New York Times: "Thousands of woman marched through downtown Cairo on Tuesday evening to call for the end of military rule in an extraordinary expression of anger over images of soldiers beating, stripping and kicking a female demonstrator on the pavement of Tahrir Square."

AP: "Encouraging signs out of Europe and a surprisingly strong report on the U.S. housing market drove the Dow Jones industrial average up more than 300 points Tuesday. It was the best day for stocks this month."

Reuters: "The Republican-led House of Representatives will set the stage on Tuesday for a showdown with Senate Democrats over a payroll tax cut extension that is becoming a proxy for 2012 election year battles." ...

... ABC News: "The House of Representatives is poised to reject a Senate-passed two-month extension of a year-end economic package, preferring instead to hold out for a year-long extension and to challenge Congressional Democrats in yet another political showdown over a popular tax break for the middle class." See also today's Commentariat. ...

     ... AP Update: "The House Tuesday rejected legislation to extend a payroll tax cut and jobless benefits for two months, drawing a swift rebuke from President Barack Obama that Republicans were threatening higher taxes on 160 million workers on Jan. 1." See video above. ...

     ... Think Progress Update: "This afternoon, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) appointed eight Republican lawmakers to serve on a bicameral conference committee meant to resolve the impasse over the soon-to-expire payroll tax cut, after the House rejected the Senate’s version of an extension today.... Many of the members Boehner appointed to the conference committee have voiced opposition to the concept of a payroll tax cut in the past." CW: sounds like a great plan.

AP: "Fierce winds and snow that caused fatal road accidents and shuttered highways in five states, crawled deeper into the Great Plains early Tuesday, with forecasters warning that pre-holiday travel would be difficult if not impossible across the region."

AP: "Iraq's Sunni vice president wanted by the Shiite-led government for allegedly ordering hit squads against government officials says he's innocent of any charges. Tariq al-Hashemi told a press conference in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil on Tuesday that he has not committed any 'sin' against Iraq. He described the charges against him as 'fabricated.'" ...

... Guardian: "Tariq al-Hashemi, had left Baghdad on Sunday for the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan, presumably hoping the authorities there will not turn him in; earlier in the day, investigative judges in the capital had banned him from travelling abroad."

AP: "The [Philippine] government shipped more than 400 coffins to two flood-stricken cities in the southern Philippines on Tuesday as the death toll neared 1,000 and President Benigno Aquino III declared a state of national calamity."

Here's video from the Guardian on Piers Morgan's testimony before the Leveson inquiry panel in the British phone-hacking scandal:

The Guardian has a liveblog on Piers Morgan's testimony in the British phone-hacking scandal. Includes related content. ...

     ... Update: "Piers Morgan, the former News of the World and Daily Mirror editor, has repeatedly denied to the Leveson inquiry that he had any personal knowledge of or involvement in phone hacking or any other illegal practices at either paper."