There Will Be No Compromise

Why do Obama, Reid and other Democrats keep claiming that they believe they will be able to work with Republicans in Congress after the Midterm elections? Indeed, Obama and Reid have stated that they expect the Republicans to compromise on important issues for the good for the country.

Heh guys, it’s not going to happen. Rachel Maddow last night explained why its nuts to think that a Republican majority filled with faith based Tea Partiers and Republicans scared to go against their base will seek to find common ground to work with the President on anything.

Seems pretty clear to me. The only Republican goal the GOP will be focusing on like a laser is making Obama a one term President. And if that means shutting down the government in the worst economic crisis of our times and endangering any hope for job growth, so be it.

As Paul Krugman explains, this is not 1994-2000 all over again, and Obama is not standing in Bill Clinton’s shoes:

In the late-1990s, Republicans and Democrats were able to work together on some issues. President Obama seems to believe that the same thing can happen again today. In a recent interview with National Journal, he sounded a conciliatory note, saying that Democrats need to have an “appropriate sense of humility,” and that he would “spend more time building consensus.” Good luck with that.

After all, that era of partial cooperation in the 1990s came only after Republicans had tried all-out confrontation, actually shutting down the federal government in an effort to force President Bill Clinton to give in to their demands for big cuts in Medicare.

Now, the government shutdown ended up hurting Republicans politically, and some observers seem to assume that memories of that experience will deter the G.O.P. from being too confrontational this time around. But the lesson current Republicans seem to have drawn from 1995 isn’t that they were too confrontational, it’s that they weren’t confrontational enough.

Another recent interview by National Journal, this one with Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader, has received a lot of attention thanks to a headline-grabbing quote: “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.”

If you read the full interview, what Mr. McConnell was saying was that, in 1995, Republicans erred by focusing too much on their policy agenda and not enough on destroying the president: “We suffered from some degree of hubris and acted as if the president was irrelevant and we would roll over him. By the summer of 1995, he was already on the way to being re-elected, and we were hanging on for our lives.” So this time around, he implied, they’ll stay focused on bringing down Mr. Obama.

Kruigman goes on to list the reasons why this isn’t going to be the Clinton era redux:

1. The Tea Party. Any Republican with an itch to “do the right thing” and work with Democrats on any issue to reach a consensus is going to have his or her Tea Party colleagues and their rabid base breathing down their necks. Establishment Republicans will think twice before making happy talk with President Obama for that reason alone.

2. The Economy. In the mid-90’s the economy was booming thanks to the hi tech sector. Stimulus spending wasn’t needed to provide jobs. Today, however, with the incentives in the Tax Code for corporations to outsource jobs to countries with cheaper, better educated work forces, and no attempt by Republicans to change that benefit for multi-national corporations, job growth in America doesn’t exist.

Couple that with higher personal consumer debt levels, than we had in the 90’s and massively higher rates of unemployment and you have a significantly lower demand for goods and services. And while the original Obama stimulus was partly beneficial it was too small to truly reverse the effects of the black hole eight years of the GOP’s Bush-o-nomics created. Unless the government can jump start demand, companies won’t invest here in the US of A in new facilities and will not hire any new employees.

Supply-side economics has proven it is a failure. Supply follows demand. If there is insufficient demand for goods and services her in the US, the wealthy and large corporations companies will take their investment surpluses to places where their is a growing demand: East Asia and Europe, where many governments are actively involved in stimulating the private sector through government stimulus spending. See, for example, the Chinese government ‘s investment in fostering high speed rail technology and green technologies for just one instance of where this is occurring).

3. Deflation v. Inflation. In the 90’s an overheated economic boom risked inflation, but that was a job the Federal Reserve could handle without much assistance from the government. Today, because of the massive levels of consumer debt and joblessness brought on by the bursting of Wall Street’s artificially created real estate bubble in 2007-2008, deflation is the concern. The Fed isn’t created to deal with deflation all by its lonesome. It needs help from the government to stimulate demand to pull us out of this particular “economic trap” as Krugman calls it.

However, government intervention to stimulate the economy and prevent deflation is not a policy option for Republicans. Such policies would go against what they’ve told their base we must do, and after seeing many of their colleagues lose primaries to the most radical tea party candidates that is unlikely to happen. No, they would rather see the country fail so they can defeat Obama in the 2012 election. That is their only plan. And once they assume control of the presidency again we will see massive corruption in favor of corporations and their lobbyists, the further reduction of civil liberties and the promotion of a radical fundamentalist Christian religious agenda, just as we saw during the Bush era.

So we have great reasons to fear Republican gains in this election. We have no reason to expect them to “compromise” or work with Democrats. None at all.

Daily Kos. Business as usual and the fall of the Obama Empire.

Fairleft recently posted a piece called Daily Kos Abuse/Censorship of Arabs.

In it, he wrote:

Meteor Blades still refuses to say why he banned Tom J, the secret censorship decision that inspired the Arab Writers Strike at Daily Kos. Weird, anti-openness must an important value for him and/or site property owner Markos Moulitsas, definitely more important than free speech. I mean, what is the problem, even the Daily Kos apparatchiks have lined up massively in favor (64% versus 28% against) of making banning an open process.

This sounds somehow…familiar…to one of the early dKos bannees.

Ahhh, good old Meteor Blades.

And good old dKos as well.

Nothing new to see here…keep on walking, folks.

Or is that wanking?

Daily Kos is, has been and always will be a farce masquerading as a force. If y’all want to really understand the coming election results this year, look no further than the methods that dKos has used to centrify (and thus decertify) the so-called left wing of this country. Make any real waves whatsoever on the site and banning is absolutely, positively going to be the result there.

Not only “banning”, but banning with no recourse except total surrender. Banning with a stonewalling mentality that refuses to clearly state why people are being banned.

A digital 1984.

Read on.

I went through the process early on, during The Pie Fight and resultant July 4th Massacre in 2005. I was one of the early victims…I think that I scared Meteor Blades and the rest of the inner circle Kossacks to death by my refusal to buckle to their wishes…and many more followed.

The short term result?

…by August, traffic at the site, as measured by reach and page views, had tripled what it was in June.

Good for business.

And that’s what really matters at dKos.

Business.

Nothing more.

Bet on it.

The longer term result?

Photobucket Photobucket

The witchification of Hillary Clinton (and deification of Obama) on the leftiness blogs, something that has been Dkos’s only real contribution to the political life of this country.

The long long term result?

Obama’s…and the Democratic Party’s…current plunge and the Tea Party’s rise to power.

Why do I say this?

It’s simple, really.

The digital Stalinism of the dominant leftiness blog put the lie to everything that “the left” is supposed to represent. Freedom of speech. Freedom of ideology. Freedom of thought. Instead of those things it produced a clomp-clomp-clomping group of mostly white, mostly middle-class leftiness zombies. Left wing like the NY Times and the Washitclean Post. In word only. And this helped to nominate and then elect a talented amateur politician to the most highly pressurized political tightrope act in the world, the Presidency of the United States of America. Now said amateur status is going to take down that presidency.

He blew it.

Sorry, folks, but there it is. All of the Dem “Oh!!! In the long run this will help us!!!” spin in the world will not affect the truth of the matter.

Obama has blown it.

Big time.

How? Why?

He mistook philosophy for politics, rhetoric for power and image for position.

So it goes.

Down like a motherfucker!!!

Watch.

Hillary Clinton might have made other mistakes, but this one? Not taking enemies off at the knees while they were still relatively powerless? I think not.

The comic philosopher genius Lord Buckley once said in one of his pieces “If you get to it and you can’t do it…there you jolly well are, aren’t you.”

Well…here we jolly well are, aren’t we. Centrified, gentrified and decertified right out of business.

I hate to say it, but I will anyway.

I tol’ ya!!!

All of the Daily Kosian-like palaver about the ins and outs of local races, who is “acceptable” and who is not?

Just so much spittle blowing in the wind.

Booman is worried about the fact that Russ Feingold is going down?

I’m trying to adjust to the idea that maybe Russ Feingold, who is probably the most principled politician in Washington DC, is no longer supported by the people of Wisconsin.

Booman still frequents dKos, I believe. He also opposes much of what the only effective truly leftist politician in the US has done in terms of publicly fighting the right. (Alan Grayson) Grayson’s going to lose, too, brought down by the same movement that is going to take Feingold out.

Faux leftinessism is as destructive as faux newsinessism, and the ongoing popularization and trivialization of real left-wing work by people like the Kossacks and the whole MSNBC/Comedy Channel crew…ably abetted by president Obama, I might add…has only weakened the movement over the long haul. An increasing number of voting Americans are beginning to equate the word “Democrat” with the word “lightweight.” With disastrous results, I might add. But “lightweight” is precisely what dKos really represents. Lightweight leftinessism.

Kos himself is a lightweight.

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Bet on that as well.

The only thing heavy about him?

His bankroll.

So do not decry dKos banning procedures as something that is somehow new.

It’s what’s for dinner there, and it has been so for over 5 years now.

Deal wid it.

How?

Just walk away.

I often talk about  a NEWSTRIKE!!! idea on the web?

Here’s another one.

DKOSTRIKE!!!

Now there’s an idea whose time has come!!!

AG

Keeping Sane

I’m trying to adjust to the idea that maybe Russ Feingold, who is probably the most principled politician in Washington DC, is no longer supported by the people of Wisconsin. I’m trying to hold onto some hope for the guy, but I can’t deny that I’m worried.

So, I think I will focus on the fact that little Finn has finally decided that he needs to be mobile. He isn’t crawling exactly, but he’s figured out how to get to where he wants to be. All it took was a trip to the library to hang out with other kids his age who were moving around. That was Tuesday. On Tuesday night and Wednesday, he practiced his moves. Today he managed to start scooting around. He’s got a bit of an unorthodox style. He gets into a kind of pre-crawling position and then sits up. This moves him three of four inches forward. Then he sits straight up and uses one leg to scoot another few inches. Then he repeats the cycle. In combination, he’s able to move up to eight feet in a fairly short period of time in pursuit of a toy or a bowl of macaroni and cheese.

I’m trying to stay focused on the important stuff.

Bill Clinton Throws Meek Under Bus

Jesus, what a mess. I can’t remember seeing anyone getting thrown under the bus with such force. Kendrick Meek has tire-tracks running all across his back. This isn’t going to be too well-received in the black community. Meek should probably drop out of the race if it looks like it would pretty definitely throw the race to Crist, but leaking that he agreed to drop out and then changed his mind? That’s harsh.

The former president’s top aide, Doug Band, initially served as the intermediary between Meek and Crist, and Clinton became involved only when Meek signaled that he would seriously consider the option, Clinton spokesman Matt McKenna confirmed to POLITICO.

I mean, that’s an on-the-record source from Bill Clinton’s operation. Clinton just got pissed and leaked the whole deal. And that’s after Meek endorsed Hillary and the former president went and campaigned for him.

Will Meek’s support now collapse sufficiently to put Rubio’s win in doubt? With all the early voting in Florida, I kind of doubt it. This seems gratuitous.

Casual Observation

Oh, good, only 111 Republican incumbents and candidates want to eliminate the Department of Education. That’s not too bad. I mean it’s good enough to create a significant Numbskullery Caucus, but nowhere near enough to actually eliminate the department.

Daily Kos Abuse/Censorship of Arabs

Meteor Blades still refuses to say why he banned Tom J, the secret censorship decision that inspired the Arab Writers Strike at Daily Kos. Weird, anti-openness must an important value for him and/or site property owner Markos Moulitsas, definitely more important than free speech. I mean, what is the problem, even the Daily Kos apparatchiks have lined up massively in favor (64% versus 28% against) of making banning an open process:

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Well, otoh, there was this obscure exchange:

Meteor Blades, with respect, why was TomJ banned?

Sorry, I came here from FDL, I don’t know.

Also Jane Stillwater?

by thatvisionthing on Wed Oct 27, 2010 at 08:57:50 PM PDT

Multiple warnings, each previously suspended… (8+ / 0-)

… for a month and, after being reinstated, still either ignoring those warnings or violating the rules.

Don’t tell me what you believe. Tell me what you do and I’ll tell you what you believe.

by Meteor Blades on Wed Oct 27, 2010 at 09:08:55 PM PDT

What rule?

Was it Tom J’s comment with 2 HRs?

People here may know I/P rules but I don’t, sorry. Scanned the FAQs and still don’t get it. Thanks.

by thatvisionthing on Wed Oct 27, 2010 at 09:21:16 PM PDT

No answer.

But MB did take time in the Arab Strike Diary to tell three non-specified myfiredoglake users that they are lying about having been banned at Daily Kos. Since the Dkos banning process and who is banned is a complete secret, there is of course no way to know who’s lying and who isn’t (trust MB; asking to verify his statements is a bannable offense). Here’s Meteor Blades’ accusation (pro-censorship and anti-Palestinian recommenders noted):

For the record, at least three of.. (10+ / 0-)

Recommended by: Paul in Berkeley, LeftHandedMan, arielle, kalmoth, leftynyc, Corwin Weber, Its the Supreme Court Stupid, thebluecrayon, Mets102, angry marmot

…the “bannees” making “insightful contributions” on the myfdl comment thread of this diary are lying. They are NOT banned at all and have never been.

Don’t tell me what you believe. Tell me what you do and I’ll tell you what you believe.

by Meteor Blades on Wed Oct 27, 2010 at 08:21:54 PM PDT

P.S. Is it unintended irony, or does Meteor Blades’ tag line mean he wants to be known as a censor of political speech?

P.S.2. Arab Writers Strike at Daily Kos was yesterday’s 7th most commented on (294 comments) and 12th most viewed (553 viewers) diary at Daily Kos.

P.S.3. Here’s simone daud‘s original call for an Arab Writers Strike (non-Arabs welcome to join), and a reminder of what it is about:

We are definitely (5+ / 0-)

being personally abused in every essay.

I’m not feeling very welcome here.

The people that show up on every essay speaking to, and showing video of the crisis in Palestine get verbally abused and have their essays derailed by a vocal few who are trying to eliminate any Free Speech on the subject.

It is horrific when humanitarians and Peace Activists get shouted down by name calling and vile comments.

Tom J was a brilliant writer and a man concerned with our relatives there.

I had my ratings taken away months ago for uprating something by sheer accident, after removing it and apologizing for the scroll over. They were never returned.

I feel it is because I am an openly Arab man of Palestinian descent who speaks against the atrocities in Palestine.

But I am loathe to be silenced by those who throw “anti-semite” around to defend a Government that has run as far right amok as the Bush administration and beyond.

Let me sleep on this Simone.

by Peacenick on Sat Oct 23, 2010 at 04:23:28 PM PDT

P.S.4. For me, it is also about the big political blogs, and the obvious fact that they are the ‘public squares’ of the 21st century, where free speech rights have to be given priority over private property rights:

Herding sheep into bipartisan political positions (1+ / 4-)

is what censorship of the actual diversity of opinion among Democrats ends up being. And many of us are tired of the bipartisan and right-wing crap we get from the national Democratic Party and this Democratic Party subservient blog.

Free speech rights supersede Kos’s property rights. The correct analogy is claiming the right to free speech at a privately owned shopping mall. A shopping mall, like a big political [blog], is one of the only available ‘town squares’ of the 21st century.

by fairandleft on Wed Oct 27, 2010 at 03:16:12 PM PDT

Bucks County Republicans Are Cheating

It really disturbs me that one of the Republicans’ core election strategies is to cheat. What we’re seeing locally here in the Philly suburbs is exceptionally blatant. Rep. Patrick Murphy (D-PA) represents part of Philadelphia and Montgomery County, but most of his district is in Bucks County. The Bucks County Board of Elections is dominated by Republicans. And they’re cheating.

Congressman Patrick Murphy blasted Bucks County Republicans for using “Florida-style” tactics to deny voters the right to participate in Tuesday’s election, which includes the hotly contested race between Murphy and his Republican challenger Mike Fitzpatrick.

Murphy’s statement in a brief news conference Wednesday afternoon came shortly before Democratic Party lawyers filed a response to Republican claims that Murphy’s campaign is behind an effort to mislead voters into applying for unneeded absentee ballots and flood the voter registration office with fraudulent applications.

In documents filed with the Bucks County Board of Elections, the state Democratic committee said the Republican Party machine that controls county government is working to disenfranchise voters.

“What makes their current scheme so egregious is that the Republicans are trying to prevent people, many of whom are ill or bedridden and incapable of going to the polls on Election Day, from legally casting absentee ballots,” wrote Philadelphia attorney Keith Smith, of Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, in the response for state Democrats.

The response asked the board of elections to dismiss the Republican complaint in its entirety.

A letter to the board of elections penned for the state committee by Doylestown attorney Jordan Yeager noted that among more than 600 absentee ballot applications rejected by board of elections staff for defects including signatures and birthdates that don’t match voter registration records, 82 percent were from Democratic voters.

This is even more appalling when you consider that Murphy’s opponent sent out mailer that openly asked people to commit forgery and voter fraud. Pennsylvania doesn’t have early voting. We have a system for absentee voting. If you look at the form it requires you to sign under oath that you either will be absent from your municipality on election day or that you have some physical condition that doesn’t allow you to make it to the polling place. But inside Fitzpatrick’s envelope was a letter from Robert Ciervo, the candidate for state Representative from the 31st District. Ciervo said that an absentee ballot application was included in the package and that people should fill them out for their children and include their college address to “ensure they receive the ballot in a timely manner.” To do that, a parent would have to forge their child’s name. The letter is nothing short of an implicit invitation to commit forgery and voter fraud. And the Republicans are doing this at the same time that they are falsely accusing the Democrats of fraud and rejecting their valid absentee applications.

“It’s sickening that the Republican-controlled board of elections would abuse its power to deny hundreds of Democrats their right to vote. But because their candidate is down in the polls, Republican Party operatives are using Florida-style Bush tactics to stop registered, eligible voters from voting,” Murphy said Wednesday.

“Six Democratic applications have been rejected for every Republican application. Well, they’re messing with the wrong paratrooper, and they’re not going to get away with it,” he added, in reference to his Army service in Iraq.

I don’t know if Fitzpatrick is down in the polls. But the way the Republicans are behaving, that might not matter.

Attorney General Strengthens Commitment to Equal Opportunity in Recovery Spending

Equal opportunity is one of our nation’s most valuable national assets.

On September 27, 2010, the Office of the Attorney General reinvigorated our nation’s commitment to opportunity for all people by releasing a memorandum adopting The Opportunity Agenda’s ongoing policy recommendations for the economic recovery.

To comply with civil rights requirements prohibiting discrimination based on race, color, national origin, disability, and gender in federally funded programs, the Attorney General stated that federal agencies should consider:

•Posting prominent notices on their websites concerning the applicability of these civil rights laws to projects receiving stimulus funding.

•Requiring adherence to all civil rights assurances and agreements, including those pertaining to the collection and analysis of racial and ethnic data.

•Utilizing existing and readily available data to “identify situations in which racially or ethnically identifiable communities may be harmed by, or excluded from the benefits of” a project funded under the Recovery Act.

The Attorney General also asserted that the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division is under instruction to “utilize its oversight authority fully” to assist agencies in achieving these goals through methods including information sharing, training, targeted partnerships, and the provision of technical assistance on data collection.

Now, at a moment when our economic stability has not yet been assured, this memorandum gives advocates, public officials, and recipients of federal funding an important tool in our efforts to ensure that all groups can participate in the building of our economic future.

Read more at The Opportunity Agenda website.

We Are So Screwed

Niall Stanage, in the Guardian:

Tea is the Republican party’s cocaine: thrilling for a moment, but ruinous over time.

But, it’s really not just the Tea Party. For me, it’s the Party of No strategy. The Republicans did not heed the president’s advice. Back in January the president paid a visit to the House Republicans’ retreat in Baltimore. In responding to a question from Rep. Martha Blackburn of Tennessee, the president made the following observations:

“So all I’m saying is, we’ve got to close the gap a little bit between the rhetoric and the reality. I’m not suggesting that we’re going to agree on everything, whether it’s on health care or energy or what have you, but if the way these issues are being presented by the Republicans is that this is some wild-eyed plot to impose huge government in every aspect of our lives, what happens is you guys then don’t have a lot of room to negotiate with me.

“I mean, the fact of the matter is, is that many of you, if you voted with the administration on something, are politically vulnerable in your own base, in your own party. You’ve given yourselves very little room to work in a bipartisan fashion because what you’ve been telling your constituents is, this guy is doing all kinds of crazy stuff that’s going to destroy America.

“And I would just say that we have to think about tone. It’s not just on your side, by the way — it’s on our side, as well. This is part of what’s happened in our politics, where we demonize the other side so much that when it comes to actually getting things done, it becomes tough to do.”

The key is that the Republicans did in fact become vulnerable in their own base. Republicans who showed any degree of reasonableness starting losing primaries. And the people winning those primaries, and the voters who fueled those victories, show every sign of believing the rhetoric rather than the reality. What started off as a stunt, turned into a monster that the Republicans could no longer control. So far, the damage has been electoral. While overall the juice from the Tea Party has ramped up enthusiasm in the base, there’s no question that the Republicans have damaged their prospects of winning a half dozen Senate seats. But really radical candidates are going to win a lot of House seats and at least a couple of Senate seats, and then they are going to expect the Republican Party to continue with their Party of No strategy. Anyone who stands in the way of total-obstruction-all-the-time is going to face a challenge from the loony right. They created a caricature of the president and they can’t very well compromise with the devil without infuriating their supporters.

This is why we can’t afford any losses on Tuesday. Let me focus your mind on the consequences of increased Republican power. Yesterday, the president sat down with a bunch of bloggers in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. He was asked if he supported filibuster reform, and this is part of what he said in response:

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I’ve got to be careful about not looking like I’m big-footing Congress. We’ve got separate branches of government. The House and the Senate have their own rules. And they are very protective of those prerogatives.

I will say that as just an observer of our political process that if we do not fix how the filibuster is used in the Senate, then it is going to be very difficult for us over the long term to compete in a very fast moving global environment.

What keeps me up at night is China, Germany, India, Brazil — they’re moving. They make decisions, we’re going to pursue clean energy, and the next thing you know they’ve cornered half the clean energy market; we’re going to develop high-speed rail in the span of five years — suddenly they’ve got high-speed rail lines going; we’re going to promote exports, here’s what we’re going to do — boom, they get going.

And if we can’t sort of execute on key issues that will determine our competitiveness over the long term, we’re going to fall behind — we are going to fall behind.

How can this country execute anything if there are a bunch of crazy Republican senators filibustering everything? A Republican House will just add to the pain.

Our country is effectively screwed if these elections go off as predicted. And, if you need any more proof, just look at this.

Things Are Looking Interesting in Alaska

It looks like crazy Joe Miller up in Alaska isn’t going to be able to seal the deal. His polling numbers have collapsed in the face of evidence that he’s basically a scoundrel.

“If the election for U.S. Senate were held today, and the candidates were Joe Miller, Scott McAdams, Frederick Haase, Tim Carter, Ted Gianoutsos, or another candidate you have to write in, for whom would you vote, or are you undecided?

The result? Scott McAdams surging ahead of Joe Miller with 29%, Joe Miller with 23%, and the write-in candidate (most of which are presumably Lisa Murkowski) with a small gain bringing her to 34%, and undecided voters still at 13%. This is the first time that McAdams has polled better than Miller, and he did it by six points, comfortably outside the margin of error of 4.8% – a watershed moment for the McAdams campaign.

Considering that Murkowski isn’t the only potential write-in candidate, and the inherent hassle and difficulty of correctly voting for a write-in candidate, and considering the margin of error, this race is now a toss-up between Murkowski and the Democrat, Scott McAdams. It would be a very fine thing indeed to pick up this seat for a full six-year term. It would offset the loss of Evan Bayh’s seat, or Lincoln’s, or Dorgan’s. It’s very painful to lose Senate seats because of their long terms, and that is why I believe they should always be challenged vigorously. You never know when a seemingly safe seat will become vulnerable, either through scandal, death or illness, or a simple shift in the mood of the electorate.