Thursday, August 30, 2012

BLOGGING THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION PRE 1


 
BLOGGING THE DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION 2012 PRE 1

Can it really be, this once in a lifetime event, attending the Democratic National Convention? At the West Virginia State Convention in June I teased a young woman, Hannah, age 18, from Jefferson County, who was soliciting my vote for her nomination as delegate to the National, “What?  Why should a young whipper-snapper like you get to go when I have never been?” I, being one whose age is the reverse of Hannah’s, that is, just reverse the digits.  Of course, I did vote for Hannah and she was a winner.  But for myself?  It was a few weeks later that my baby daughter, Valerie, who as Vice President of the Washington State Democratic Executive Committee, is a super-delegate to the convention, invited me to be her guest.   I still can hardly imagine it, but, Hannah, I hope to see you there.
Now it is just five days before I leave by train from Martinsburg for Charlotte NC, and after three days there, travel by train with Valerie to Maryland to visit with family.  A total of seven days.  And so much to do.  Like catching up on all the gardening I haven’t been able to keep caught up on all summer.  Weeding the main garden, with its prolific invasion of jimson weed and that stickery-weed-that-resembles-redroot pigweed-but-isn’t from a liberal truckload of manure that was spread in the spring, and harvesting the silver queen corn, the tomatoes, the peppers, digging the last of the potatoes.  And weeding the back gardens—the kitchen and arbor gardens—with their profusion of self-sown summer phlox mingled with queen anne’s lace and goldenrod and that awful grasslike weed-whose-name-I-also- do-not-know-but-may-be-smartweed, which is superior as a ground-cover to any other weed I know, but at least has the virtue, if virtue it is, of easily coming out by the handsful.  Oh, and did I mention mowing the lawn?

And then there is the barn work, clean out the hen coops and clean up the barnyard, make sure there is an adequate supply of feed and that the caretaker (another daughter) knows how to care for them all.  As well, replenish supply of dog and cat food and post their schedules.  And don’t forget the birdfeed.  Dispose of trash and compost and organize recycling.
Not to mention preparing for the trip, checking out the luggage and planning the wardrobe.  And how come the railroad tickets haven’t come yet?  And how many pieces can I carry on board and how many books can I manage?  And don’t forget the camera.  And oh yes,  personal business, such as a trip to the courthouse to pay property taxes.

And, not least of all, responsibilities for our local Democrats.  I know, I know, of course they can get along without me, but years ago when a friend cautioned me that, after all, no one is indispensable, I responded that if we all really believed that, we would never undertake to do anything.    And now there is the list of pollworkers to be completed, trying to recruit members for the executive committee and volunteers for campaign work, setting up headquarters, planning for candidates’ events, helping to prepare agendas for the meetings I will miss.
And trying, in the midst of all this, to keep up with what is going on at the Republican National Convention.  Did I hear aright?  Rick Santorum refers to “the assault on America and the family?”  As in, “assault on women’s rights, assault on the poor, assault on the middle class, assault on voters’ rights, assault on entitlements, assault on social safety net?”  I dvr all of this, and catch it in bits and pieces.  Don’t know if I can stand to listen to that wonderboy Paul Ryan, but I guess I must.  I prefer to listen, or read, for myself, and not just take someone else’s word for what was said.

But what really got me up at 3 a.m. is worry about Sukey, my young cat who scrambled through a torn porch screen yesterday evening, as she is wont to do (she, after all, having torn the screen herself), and failed to return at dark. 

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Musings late August 2012


Musings Aug 22 to Aug 29

A writer for Salon says that “…sea levels are rising due to global warming God loving the Earth so much that he’s hugging it real close and accidentally melting the ice caps.   From http://www.salon.com/2012/08/21/hurricane_might_hit_tampa/?source=newsletter

So much for States’ Rights.  GOP Platform addressing Immigration would deny state colleges the right to charge in-state tuition to illegal immigrants, and would ban sanctuary cities.

Remember the Dixie Chicks?  When performing in England on the eve of the invasion of Iraq, with millions protesting in the streets against the impending invasion, and having just watched the President broadcasting his threats against Iraq, one of the Dixie Chicks said to the audience, “We’re ashamed the President is from Texas.”    Starting a firestorm of controversy, songs banned by corporate radio, public trashing of their cd’s, vilification of them as traitors.  Watch the DVD’s , “Protesting the Dixie Chicks,” and “Shut Up and Sing.”  Now Hank Williams Jr says, in front of a crowd of 8,500 at Iowa State Fair:  “Obama is a Muslim, Obama hates farming, hates the military, and we hate him.”  To loud, raucous cheers from the crowd of 8,500.  So?  Any repercussions?

Did you know that 13 states allow visitation rights for the rapist fathers of the rape victims’ babies? [Actually, I just saw an update, it seems there are 30 some states that allow this.]

[President of Catholics for Choice Jon] O’Brien added, “what is more worrying is the backroom lobbying the Bishops engage in to try and pressure the body politic in this an election year to give them a free pass and endorse their bogus claims of imagined infringements on their religious liberty when they are really seeking politicians to bestow on them religious privilege.”

Chyron on Martin Bashir says that Romney adviser is leading lawsuit against work permits for young undocumented immigrants. 

Jan Brewer, the governor of Arizona, apparently found this compassion and progress [of Obama’s Dream Act] unacceptable. Last Wednesday, Brewer issued an executive order denying driver’s licenses to young people in Arizona who qualify for the benefits of the new federal policy.   This will prevent these young people from finding work and attending school.

Why should anyone be surprised by U S Census report that shows wages have fallen more since 2009 than during the recession?  When unemployment is high employers can hire people cheaper.  In fact, corporations prefer high unemployment to low unemployment.  When unemployment gets down to 4 to 5% there is more competition for labor, it is a ‘seller’s’ market, and workers can demand and get more pay and benefits. 

Sheriff Arpaio is speaking at the Republican National Convention?  Dear God in Heaven.

Rush Limbaugh recognizes that Obama is God.  He holds Obama responsible for the hurricane bearing down on Florida.   I wonder if he will praise him if the hurricane is diverted?

Rush Limbaugh had added his voice to those who were suggesting that Todd Akin should withdraw from the Senate race.  Now that Gov Romney has added his voice to the chorus, and Todd Akin has defied him and all others and refused to step down, Rush Limbaugh claims that if he had demanded Todd Akin withdraw, he would have done so.  Ego, anyone?  But I guess we can believe that.  When Limbaugh ordered candidates to refuse to answer questions about rape exceptions, Romney let it be known that he would answer media questions, but that questions regarding rape or Todd Akin were not allowed.

“We’re not going to let our campaign be distracted [dictated to?] by fact checkers,” says a Romney spokesperson.

Who are the working class supposed to envy?  According to the Democratic party, they should envy the richest 1%, who own 42% of the nation’s wealth, get 93% of the nation’s income, owe just 5% of the nation’s debt, pay a lower rate of income tax than the working class, therefore, it isn’t fair, they should be paying more taxes.  According to the Republican party, they should envy the poor, homeless, hungry, unemployed, because they get too many foodstamps and unemployment checks, and pay hardly any income taxes.  Therefore, unemployment checks should be cut off, and foodstamps reduced.  And taxes raised.  So then, Democratic middle class envies the rich, Republican middle class envies the poor.  Makes sense.

 

 

 

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Exploiting Your Mother


Exploiting your mother?  No, not you.  But Republican legislators and candidates, who are trotting out their moms in campaign ads, to support their sons in claiming that they would never, never, never do anything to hurt Social Security or Medicare.  At least, not for their mothers.  And other seniors.  And maybe other people over 55.  If their mothers trust their sons, then the voters sure can.  So now Paul Ryan is taking his mother with him on his tour around Florida today.   I guess that is insurance against anyone hurling brickbats at him, as they have been doing.  Presumably attendees will be too respectful of his mother to dissent.  But I truly feel sorry for her if they do.
Note 1:  Of course if Social Security and Medicare are for current seniors was short-changed, these wealthy Republican legislators’ mothers would be taken care of.  Imagine the pensions that some of them probably already receive in addition to their entitlements.  I am not even in their class.

Note 2:  Of course, in fact, Conservative plans would affect SS and Medicare of current seniors.
·         They are trying to change the COLA structure so that annual increases would be less.  That would take effect sooner rather than later.

·         If they repeal ACA, seniors would lose some benefits they have started receiving under ACA the last few years, such as free preventative health care, annual screenings, no annual or lifetime caps, no pre-existing conditions (in the case of their private supplemental plans), savings on donut hole of Medicare Part D, and others.

 Note 3:  I do not understand how they can talk of raising the eligible age to receive Social Security and Medicare.  In this time when unemployment rate is high, and particularly devastating to older citizens who will either never find work again, or find work only at much lower wages than they received before.  Many are already filing for Social Security early, and consequently reducing their lifetime payments.  But still are not eligible for Medicare, cannot afford private insurance, and may not qualify for Medicaid.  They ought to, rather, LOWER the age to apply for Social Security and Medicare benefits, without a reduction in payments.  To age 62 or even 60, in order to free up the job market for younger people.  It probably won’t cost that much more than for someone to be on unemployment insurance, food stamps, and Medicaid.
What do you think?

[Note:  I may be mistaken on some of these details, but I have tried to keep up with the politics and economics of Social Security and Medicare.  Please feel free to question, correct or modify this item.]
Gramma Windy



Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Musings Fri Aug 20 to Wed Aug 15

I'd better get these musings posted before they get to be too many to read at a sitting:

Bob Shrum remarked, in response to item about the mega farmer that Romney visited with in Iowa, that next thing you know he will visit a 5-star restaurant with $300 meals and say that it is a food bank.  Gramma Windy says:  I guess now, if you ask Romney, he will say:  “I like farms.  Some of my best friends own 54 of them.”
Says Gramma Windy:  The most important amendment:  #9.  “The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”  This very clearly states that (1) the government cannot deny a man and a woman the right to enter into heterosexual marriage, if they so choose.  Or force either one of them to marry a same sex partner, against their will, and (2) the government cannot force a woman to have an abortion, or to use contraception, against her will.  Or deny her the right to have as many children as she chooses.

Overheard:  Just remember this: If the right wing can't count on your vote, they don't want your vote to count.
If pharmacists can decline to fill women’s prescriptions for contraceptives, according to their conscience, can grocery store checkout clerks who are teetotalers decline to run up purchases of liquors, according to their conscience, and can waitresses who are vegans decline to serve meat to their customers, according to their conscience?

During his 14 years in office, Paul Ryan only had two bills passed:  (1) to name a postoffice, and (2) to get tax breaks for archers.  Because he is into archery. 
So Dick Gregory suggests that the conservative mantra is that:  Look, we’re going to do something really, really hard on Medicare, and we’re going to do something really, really hard on Social Security…Yeah, but how about something really, really hard on the rich?

Rachel Maddow says that Ryan is not a fiscal conservative, he is a supply-sider, which is that you cut taxes on the rich as deeply and as often as you can then sit back and watch the magic happen.  Used to be called voodoo economics. 
How dare they pontificate about the undeserving poor?  Those right-wing pundits of Fox News and conservative talk radio who are paid millions of dollars a year to bloviate, to spew brown stuff out of their mouths, are the least productive members of society.   What have they ever done for you or me?  They do not inform or educate us, make not even a pretense of elevating the discourse, foster hate and stir up resentment, distort and distract and destroy civility, foster conspiracy theories, demonize members of any demographic, civil, or political group outside of themselves, make a mockery out of journalism.  How can they sleep nights?  How can they live with themselves?  How do they justify their existence?  How do they fool their followers?  How do they justify those millions?  They are unproductive parasites on society. 

Lawrence O’Donnell says we know how Paul Ryan’s career will end.  He’s 85 days away from becoming the next losing vice-presidential candidate who will never become president.  See http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45755883/ns/msnbc-the_last_word/#48654868  Ezra Klein, whom I consider  to be one of the most knowledgeable and articulate about budget and monetary policy, says here that  the Medicare discussion so far has made him want to slam his head into the wall a thousand times. 
Did you see where Ryan was heckled at the Iowa State Fair—questions shouted about war on the middle class and cuts to Medicare—and the protesting women were hauled away by security, he remarked that they couldn’t be Iowans, because Iowans are respectful.  But, according to Ed Schultz, they are members of a group called the Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement.  Hmmm, sounds like community organizers to me.  Meanwhile, President Obama was also at the fair, over in the beer tent buying beers for customers.  When he plunked down money enough for ten beers, the crowd started chanting:  “Four more beers, four more beers.”

BTW, here is a video clip of a Ryan “Pay to play” last fall, in which he jeers at a 71-year-old man being taken down for heckling him.  http://www.salon.com/2012/08/13/paul_ryan_thinks_losing_entitlements_is_funny/?source=newsletter
Problem with hecklers at Ryan and Romney appearances, it will give the Romney team and supporters the excuse to arrange for busloads of protesters to show up at Obama and Biden appearances to try to shout them down.  They’ve got the money to do it.

D J Dione says that Romney has done a rare thing, brought Republicans and Democrats together, because how often do you hear them cheering for the same thing, The Ryan Pick for VP.
The majority of white men vote Republican.  What?  Are they not related to, or in relationship with, women?    Aren’t they affected by issues that affect women—pay scale, reproductive rights, health care, child care?

Andy Borowitz places Sarah Palin above Paul Ryan as a VP candidate, because, although Palin didn’t read, Ryan read Ayn Rand.
The most common reaction to Ryan’s pick as VP by Republican strategists and campaign operatives ranges from gnawing apprehension to hair-on-fire anger [according to Politico].

FOX NEWS a cult?  Someone pointed out that a characteristic of a cult is that members are warned not to listen to anyone else, not to read anything not approved by them, that everything else is a LIE, LIE, LIE.  And that is what Fox News purveyors such as O’Reilly, Hannity, also radio spewers such as Beck and Limbaugh, tell their viewers, listeners, all the time.  “Don’t listen to those liberal commentators, don’t turn on msnbc or pbs, don’t turn on Air America, don’t read mediamatters.  They will poison your mind and destroy your faith.”   When I read something posted by a conservative vilifying Ed Shultz, Al Sharpton, Rachel Maddow, Lawrence O’Donnell, and others, I know that they haven’t even turned them in.    They are only repeating what they have been told to believe. 






Monday, August 13, 2012

The Ryan Pick--Don't be Complacent

I don't usually post a whole item from the web, but this one bears reading in its entirety, in the light of Democrats gloating over Romney's choice of VP.



AlterNet [1] / By Don Hazen [2]


9 Reasons Romney's Choice of Paul Ryan for Veep Is Smarter Than You Think

Continued from previous page

August 12, 2012 |

When Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney tapped Paul Ryan, the 42-year-old Wisconsin congressman, to be his running mate, progressives went on a happy-thon. That Romney chose the House Budget Committee chairman known as the architect of draconian budgets that would make huge cuts in every aspect of the safety net -- not to mention his quest to turn Medicare into a voucher program -- just seemed like major blunder. My colleague, Joshua Holland, called it Romney's biggest mistake. Many were gleeful and shocked that Romney would seemingly play right into the Obama message on how the Romney agenda harms the middle class.

But I wasn't so happy. The Romney decision signals several things about the future, and none of them good -- rather scary and ugly, as a matter of fact. My gut told me that, for the Republican vice presidential candidate, I would much rather have a non-entity like Portman or Pawlenty as the Republican than a right-wing rock star. Any day.

Progressives are right when they say Ryan represents everything that shows how out of touch the Republicans are with the needs of the country. But they are not looking at Romney's Ryan decision for what it is -- a hugely dangerous step toward getting the Koch brothers' hand-picked star right to the verge of the presidency, which, if it should it come to pass, could dramatically transform the nature of American politics for our lifetimes. Whether Romney wins or loses, the Ryan pick poses a threat to the well-being of the nation.

If Romney wins, then Ryan occupies the Number Two spot with a money base and huge constituency of his own, far more than any vice president has ever enjoyed. With his own leadership PAC and a close relationship to the Koch-funded Americans For Prosperity astroturf group, it is hard to imagine how Ryan doesn't immediately become a co-president or, at least, the most powerful VP in history. And, and this is a win-win for Charles and David Koch, the right-wing billionaire brothers: If Romney loses, then Paul Ryan is sitting pretty to be the nominee in 2016, when there is no incumbent....a far easier race to win after eight years of President Barack Obama, the Democrat, presiding over a difficult economy whose recovery Republicans have done everything they can to obstruct. I have always felt that many conservatives intent on taking over this country, known for their long vision and patience, have this strategy.

And on the ugly side, the choice of Ryan says this Romney campaign, in contrast to even the McCain campaign, will be a no-holds-barred, vicious personal attack on Obama and everything associated with the Democrats -- scapegoating unions, public employees, poor people, immigrants, people characterized by Ryan as the "takers, not the makers [3]." This is the way the conservatives know how to win campaigns, and they are going all out to rip the Dems to shreds. If it doesn't quite work in in this year's presidential race, they could very well control of both houses of Congress come January.

Here are nine reasons that Romney pulled the trigger on Ryan, and why they make a lot of sense:

1. Romney was in danger of losing badly, so a gamble was worth the risk.

The polls and trends were going in the wrong direction as Obama was ahead by 9 percent among all voters and 11 percent among independents. As Michael Goodwin writes in the New York Post [4]:

Romney was on course to lose the election...perhaps by a landslide...Independents, despite being unhappy with Obama, were even more unhappy with Romney. And too many Republicans remain unenthusiastic about their party's nominee.

So Romney had to do something to energize the campaign, or he was dead in the water. Pick Ryan.

2. Romney is now seen as bold. By picking a controversial choice, a young, mediagenic, so-called brainy numbers guy, and one loved by the conservative base, Romney passed up the gaggle of more boring white guys who populated the pundits' predictions, to pick the radical one. But here, in fact, Romney has it both ways. Ryan is not a Palin or a Rubio -- a wild card -- but rather a well-positioned Republican with major mainstream and corporate credibility, whom the media often has gone ga-ga over. And Ryan is an insider -- Erskine Bowles (the co-chair of the Bowles-Simpson Deficit Commission, and rumored to be the next Secretary of the Treasury), has lavished lots of praise on to Ryan, who served on the commission, as have many others.

3. Did I mention Ryan is Catholic? We hear how the conservative Catholic bishops are trying to push Catholic voters to Romney, who has obviously come late to his anti-abortion stance. And among Catholic voters, Romney's Mormonism isn't exactly a plus. Still any anti-abortion politician is better than Obama in the bishops' minds. For the bishops, their task became easier with Ryan (even if they have a problem or two with his budget proposal), who is as conservative as they come, being against abortion even in cases of rape and incest. Those Catholics who are inclined to vote conservative are now very excited. And, in fact, it's not just far-right Catholics to whom Ryan appeals. A lot of voters in this country, for some reason, really like candidates who stick to rigid principles, even if those principles contradict their own. Ryan will get some of those voters.

4. Romney now has even more money. Romney has been doing fine, raising hundreds of millions from investment bankers and other pots of big wealth from the 1/10th of the top 1 percent. Still the Ryan choice is a huge motivator to the group of rabid right-wing billionaires around Charles and David Koch, the billionaire brothers who fund and raise money for right-wing candidates, and an array of right-wing groups. Ryan has been a Koch favorite for years, supported and featured in myriad ways. The Kochs have promised, with Karl Rove, to raise $400 million for the so-called "independent superPACs". Now, with all those billionaires jazzed over Ryan, the sky may be the limit. There is talk of the superPACs and the Romney campaign raising and spending $1.2 billion -- and now maybe even more.

5. Romney gets the full Koch election infrastructure. Solidifying the alliance with the Kochs is even more about infrastructure than campaign dollars, which will be plentiful. As my colleague Adele Stan, who covers the Kochs and conservative election field operations, explains:

The Kochs, via Americans for Prosperity and Faith and Freedom Coalition, own the infrastructure for the ground game in the swing states. They've been building it for years. That's not something any amount of money can build in the three months leading up to the election. Romney really, really needs Koch buy-in.

5. Ryan seals the deal for a base-motivating campaign in the worst tradition of the Republicans. Republicans win when they run to their base, and play the "us versus them" card for their anxious constituencies. Voter suppression tactics of all sorts are in play, especially in Florida and Pennsylvania. Taken together, Ryan's earnest demeanor and brutal budgets act as an a elixir for grassroots conservatives; the base will now be super-motivated.

Bush won two terms without winning the majority of the popular vote because the GOP wanted the win more than the Democrats -- and Republicans cheat more. As Thomas Schaller writes at Salon [5]:

By picking [Ryan], Romney provides a powerful signal that he is willing to counter Obama's failed attempt to unite America with an unapologetic attempt to win via econo-demographic divide and conquer politics.

6. The Romney campaign will now be the most brutal, race-tinged, fact-absent, expensive, technologically sophisticated campaign ever run. This presidential race is increasingly polarized. Polling shows that Obama has lost most of the non-college-educated white male voters he was able to capture in 2008. As Charles Blow points out [6] in the New York Times:

A staggering 90 percent of Romney supporters are white. Only 4 percent are Hispanic, less than 1 percent are black and another 4 percent are another race.

And of uncommitted "swing" voters, Blow writes:

Nearly three out of four are white. The rest are roughly 8 percent blacks Hispanics and another race.

Schaller adds: "Don't be surprised in the Romney-Ryan ticket engages in the sort of racially tinged, generationally loaded entitlement politics practiced by the Tea Party..."

7. While the VP pick isn't going to change the mind of many independent or hard-core party voters, it is a move to bring all elements of the party in sync. Progressive pundits, just a few days ago, were saying: Oh, the VP pick doesn't make much difference...maybe, at best, a 2 percent swing. Today is apparently a new day, and progressives are pouncing on this choice as being a huge plus for Obama. Well, ya can't have it both ways. Republican wins are always about turning out the base to the polls. Ryan probably won't make that much difference on the large scale, but he becomes the thunderbolt to rouse the base, which appears to love him, even if he is a media-created fraud. In fact, Ryan may be the most effective political phony in America.

8. Repeat: Paul Ryan is the most effective phony in American politics today. When Romney picked Ryan, he was grabbing one of the great teflon politicians of all time. Ryan has a tremendous ability to appear earnest while lying through his teeth, as he did recently when he repeated Romney's lie about Obama and welfare work requirements. Ryan represents what Salon's Joan Walsh calls [7]the "fakery at the heart of the Republican project today." She adds:

[Ryan,] the man who who wants to make the world safe for swashbuckling, risk-taking capitalists hasn't spent a day at economic risk in his life.

Guys like Ryan "somehow become the political face of the white working class when they never spent a day in that class in their life," writes Walsh. He has, she says, a "remarkable ability to tap into the economic anxiety of working class whites and steer it toward paranoia that their troubles are the fault of other people -- the slackers and the moochers, Ayn Rand;'s famous 'parasites' ..."

9. The Conservative tribe is now ready to fight all of its enemies. The conservatives and Republicans know what team they are on -- and that tribal identity is more important to them than any idea of hegemonic cultural identity could possibly be to liberals. For one, the conservative team is almost totally white, and far more homogenous, while more than 43 percent of Obama's supporters are people of color. Add in that conservative brand of resentment -- the "makers versus the takers" -- and it becomes clear who represents the conservative notion of a "maker." With Ryan as the standard-bearer for the self-described "makers," the team has its galvanizer.

The social psychologist Jonathan Haight and his researchers have compiled a catalog [8] of "six fundamental ideas that commonly undergird moral systems: care, fairness, liberty, loyalty, authority and sanctity."

Among them, he finds that group loyalty and identification is important among conservatives, but not among liberals. As William Saletan describes Haidt's thesis [8] in the New York Times Book Review:

Social conservatives see welfare and feminism as threats to responsibility and family stability. The Tea Party [9] hates redistribution because it interferes with letting people reap what they earn. Faith, patriotism, valor, chastity, law and order — these Republican themes touch all six moral foundations, whereas Democrats, in Haidt’s analysis, focus almost entirely on care and fighting oppression.

Come election time, that array of values makes the Republican project more formidable. It is why, when conservative ideas are not popular, when significant majorities of Americans disagree with conservatives, they still have enormous capacity to exercise outsized influence, controlling much of the public debate -- and are on the doorstep of winning control of all three branches of government. Despite their minority status, the tribal thing still leverages far more power than is fair or many thought possible.

In the end, it doesn't really matter whether Romney picked Ryan out of desperation, or may have had to take Ryan as a deal for support from the Kochs, or may have felt Ryan was actually the best man for the job. Whatever the reason, the Ryan pick does a whole lot for the Romney campaign --conferring money, authority, media attention, change of tone, and more. Probably the most overarching plus, though, is that by adding Ryan, Romney has brought the whole Republican-conservative tribal deal together, which, from my vantage point only increases -- not decreases -- the chance of the Republicans defeating Obama in November.






Friday, August 10, 2012

Musings week of August 5 2012


Musings Week of August 5
Republicans are all over Harry Reid for questioning whether Romney may not have paid taxes for ten years, and they expect the Obama campaign to repudiate Reid’s assertion.  Yet when Bachmann  accuses the administration of harboring Muslim Brotherhood members in its ranks, naming one person in particular, Romney says that it is not his responsibility what other people say.  

Ann Coulter says Obama wants to keep the focus on Romney’s past instead of the present economy, but the Republicans want to keep bringing up Obama’s drug use as a teenager, his college records, his associations with Ayers, Wright, and Alinsky.  Even now, when Obama’s past includes 3-1/2 years as president.
Romney says that Bachmann’s accusations about Muslims are not part of his campaign.  He had better be careful.  She is going to take on Mormons next.

Russia is sending warships to Syria?  For whose side?  I thought they support the Syrian government.  Now USA is supporting the rebels.  Now what?
Ohio Republicans passed a law eliminating the last three days of early voting—for everyone except the active military.  So DNC, Ohio Democratic Party, and Obama campaign are suing, asking the court to reinstate those days for everyone in order to have a level playing field, citing equal protection laws as justification.  So FOX news portrays this as the Democrats trying to stop the military from voting.  And Romney picks up on this as well.   The new law also does not allow military families or veterans to vote those last three days.  Question:  What does Romney and the far right have against veterans?

[Later]  Just learned that Ohio has passed laws reducing early voting to weekdays, hours of 8 to 5, in Democratic districts, but expandingearly voting to weekends and night hours in Republican districts.   Okay, I’m speechless, my jaw just hit the floor.
 I have commented several times on Romney’s rigidity and on his robotic walk, short stiff strides.  Here is an essay about Romney’s body language.  The video clip is revealing, I had noticed this when I saw it on the news.   The robot is programmed to move just its head when speaking. 

The Romney’s paid cash for their $12 million house in California, but then filed for reduction of property taxes on the grounds that the house had lost value—they saved $109,000 in property taxes over four years. 

Right wing pundits having a lot of fun with DNC speakers Elizabeth Warren and Jimmy Carter.  But apparently wholeheartedly pleased with RNC speakers Gov Rick Scott, Martinez, Kasich, Haley, Walker, two other governors.  Also Condeleeza Rice, Santorum.  Trump claims he has a role, and Gingrich claims he will be conducting seminars.
Sen Harkin, concerning  Rep Mike Kelly (R-PA) saying that  August 1st, the day women’s benefits of ACA took effect,  is a “day of infamy,” like Dec 7 and 9/11, says he cannot explain it other than to say “that because of their adherence to this rigid ideology has made their hearts rigid, has made their hearts hard.  That’s not befitting a just society like America.”

30.5% of gun deaths are children, as shown by 2009 figures.  Of 9,146 deaths, 2,791 were children.  An additional 13,000 children were injured.  Every year, a 9/11 just for children.
As real estate billionaire Leona Helmsley once said, “Only the little people pay taxes.”  [not quoted by Romney, as far as I know.]

Although Southern Poverty Law Center and other groups had been monitoring Wade Paul for a decade, the FBI had not.  They were too busy monitoring peace groups, occupiers, students, PETA, mosques, environmentalists, and the Brady Bunch.
Did you see where ReiNCe PRieBuS RNC PR BS) called Sen Harry Reid a ‘dirty liar?’ When I was a child and called a brother a liar my daddy washed my mouth out with soap.  But of course, RNC PR BS feels perfectly secure—the precedent was set when Rep Joe Wilson yelled “You lie,” to the President.

If Sen Reid is lying, it is not about whether Romney paid zero taxes some years, but only if he is lying that a Bain invester told him this.  If his source is lying, so be it, it does not make Reid a liar.
How do we now this whole thing isn’t a diversion created by Romney himself?  He puts up a Bain invester to call Reid and tell him this lie, and after a few weeks he will release his records, and prove Reid wrong, thereby embarrassing him and his fellow Democrats.

Republicans spent the last three years doing everything possible to keep President Obama from helping the country, and will spend the next three months telling you he hasn’t done anything to help the country.
When nothing goes right, go left.

So quick, quick, whose your pick for Romney’s VP?  Or who’s his pick?  Cenk Uygur and Michael Schuer did a ‘fantasy football’ pick for likely candidates, and their teams came out as follows:

                                    Cenk                                                     Michael

                                Paul Ryan                                            Rob Portman

                                Tim Pawlenty                                     Chris Christie

                                Marco Rubio                                      John Thune

                                Bobby Jindal                                       Kelly Ayotte

                                Condoleeza Rice                               Susannah Martinez

                                Nikki Haley                                                                                                                                                                                        

Dark Horses:      Jim DeMint                                         Terry Branstad

I wonder why Michael’s list is one short.  And why no one picked McDonnell.  Michael may be including a previous dark horse, John Cornyn. 

My dark horse:  Gen Petraus.











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