Saint Jesse Helms

Marc Thiessen deifies Helms in Monday’s WaPo. Oh poor Jesse! How you stood up to such horrible men like Clinton and Castro! The quote that really got me though was this:

What his critics could not appreciate is that, by the time he left office, Jesse Helms had become a mainstream conservative. And it was not because Helms had moved toward the mainstream — it was because the mainstream moved toward him.

The sad thing is, the unabashed racist, who bragged to Sen. Arlen Specter when Carol Moseley-Braun shared an elevator with them, “I’m going to make her cry. I’m going to sing Dixie until she cries.” (Chicago Sun-Times, 8/5/93). This is the man famously responded to a caller to Larry King in 1995 who said, “I want to thank you for everything you’ve done to help keep down the niggers,” responded with a salute and “Well, thank you, I think.” (Wilmington Star-News, 9/16/95) The same man who described gays as “weak, morally sick wretches,”(Newsweek, 12/5/94) and opposed AIDS funding because it was divine retribution, because “There is not one single case of AIDS in this country that cannot be traced in origin to sodomy.”(States News Service, 5/17/88)

Christopher Hitchens has it right when he calls him, “a provincial redneck”. Unfortunately so is Marc Thiessen claim of him being, “a mainstream conservative.” Just as Barry Goldwater famously went from reactionary conservative to liberal, by not changing a position. As it’s been said, “Goldwater didn’t leave the Republican party. The Republican party left him.”

The best comment I have say I heard about the passing of Jesse Helms, comes from Ryan, “I hope that Heaven has some sort of affirmative action, and Helms loses his spot to a minority.”

It would be fitting. Burn Hell you old embarrassing son of a bitch.

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Arrest Them

U.S. Major Gen. Antonio Taguba (Ret.):

There is no longer any doubt that the current administration committed war crimes. The only question is whether those who ordered torture will be held to account.

Sorry Tony. There’s no question of that either. They won’t be.

What should happen is that the International Criminal Court should issue an arrest warrant, and then the principles: George W, Cheney, Rummy, John Yoo, Scooter Libby, and the whole lot, should be arrested as soon as they step off the plane in a foreign country. Hell, Interpol should take a page out of their playbook and perform an “extraordinary rendition” and arrest them here.

Hell! Why the hell isn’t the Berkley city council ordering the Berkeley PD to arrest John Yoo at his office at 890 Simon Hall? I’ll tell you why. Because unlike the fucking Berkeley Nuclear Free Zone, this would actually achieve something, and hippies aren’t about achieving real change. They’re all about “sending messages” and forming drum circles and raging against the war machine and what not. Just not achieving real change.

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Completely Unsurprising

I read Lincoln Chafee’s account of GWB’s first tax cut, and it’s completely unsurprising. I remember the battle. I remember how less than nine months into his presidency, he was already being considered a failure. It was clear that that the tax cuts were irrational and dangerous. Even his foreign policy was suspect as seen in “Time’s” September 10, 2001 issue.

If 9/11 never happened, he would have been a one termer and we wouldn’t be in Iraq. Still in a recession though.

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Hoover Indeed

No matter what King George and the Republicans say, our economy sucks. It sucks hard. It’s been mediocre at best, no matter what Ed Gillespie or anyone else says. Iraq is wasting 15 billion a month, meanwhile our infrastructure is falling apart and our economy is teetering on collapse. Weak dollars is supposed to boost our exports, but that’s not happening. Why? The answer is obvious isn’t it. We’ve spent decades deindustrializing. There’s nothing to export.

Our economy has very real structural problems, and there’s no reason to believe that they’re going to be fixed soon, let alone in time to avoid a depression. Hell, given the flack that Obama has caught for stating the obvious truth that people are “bitter” about the loss of jobs and the state economy, there’s no reason to believe that anyone democrat or republican has the wherewithal to fix the economy. They don’t even want to admit that something is very very wrong here.

Our boat is sinking, and no one in charge even wants to take the time to rearrange the deck chairs.

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Best Economy Evah!

So Bush has finally come around to admitting that the economy sucks. The economy has been stagnant at best for his entire tenure, and now we’re in the midst of a recession, with all signs that the Bush’s lassie-faire policies, especially with regard to regulation, have come home. The amount of debt in this country is serious. Contrary to Bush and his supporters, we do not have a “fundamentally strong” economy.

Bush said that he wasn’t going help out homeowners who are going to lose their homes because they can no longer afford their mortgage. Now these people shouldn’t have ever been loaned that money, and I reluctantly agree with that position. Freezing foreclosures is a dumb idea, because all it does is delay the inevitable.

But just today, the Fed protects out JP Morgan’s buyout of Bear Stearns. That is stupid. The government shouldn’t be bailing out these banks. They took leave of their senses, and made very very very bad decisions. They screwed up, and now they’re failing. The Invisible Hand™ works its magic. Of course, those promoting lassie-faire economic policies, aren’t really lassie-faire proponents at all. They just want all regulation help them. “Don’t get in my way to screw over everyone for a but, when I screw up, bail me out.”

This is stupid, and bad economic policy, and completely expected from the Bush and the modern Republican party. Afterall, government bailouts for bad business decisions run in the family.

We are so fucked.

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Corruption Comes Home

Embezzlement hits the NRCC.

Couldn’t have happened to a nicer bunch of folks.

Can’t say I’m surprised. The Republican party in recent years has been nothing but corrupt. Selling legislation. Supporting war crimes. Violating the constitution. Blatant kickbacks and war profiteering for their friends. It’s no wonder that the GOP operatives think the that everything exists for their personal gain.

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Republicans for the War

During the Florida Republican debate, Tim Russert asked the candidates if they were going to still argue for the war even though 60% of the people are against it.

The most cogent statement was from Giuliani when he pointed out that Hillary was for the war right up until a majority of the people turned against it. Of course he was trying to use his steadfastness for this midlife crisis war was a good thing.

McCain actually talked about “winning” versus “surrendering.” What exactly does “winning” mean John? What does “victory” look like? I honestly have no idea what it would look like in Iraq, and even less what a victory over global terrorism would. It’s a canard.

Romney tried to say that Iraq was a threat, and that war was worth it because of 9/11.

Huckabee implied the war was about 9/11 and even said that we still don’t know whether or not Saddam had WMDs. We do Huck.

I hate them all. Except for Ron Paul. He’s the only one that apparently still believes in causality.

No, I hate Ron Paul too, just not about the war.

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Romney in Michigan

So I was watching the repeat of last night’s “A Daily Show,” and Jon Stewart ran a clip of McCain and Romney in the Michigan debate prior to the primary.

McCain Let’s have a little straight talk. There’s some jobs that aren’t coming back to Michigan.
Romney I know that there are some people that think, as Senator McCain did, he said “You know that there are some jobs that have left Michigan that are never coming back.” I disagree.

Watch it:

Romney’s line was very familiar.

Growing up in Southern Illinois and seeing the main industry, coal mining, leave the state, and how that affected the economy, I know what deindustrialization does to people.

The mines started to leave probably 20 years ago, and ever since then, there’s been a parade of politicians of all stripes and locations saying, “I’m going to revitalize the coal industry. I’m going to bring back the jobs.” and for 20 years that’s been a lie.

Running for governor? Fly into Williamson County Airport for an hour, and read from your yellowed copy of the speech your father gave back in 1989 about how you’re going to revitalize the coal industry, then fly back out.

At this point, it’s so pathetic hear. When someone says, “I’m going to bring back the same jobs left,” they mean, “I don’t have a clue to help you.” The economy has changed, and you have to adjust, and adjusting is hard. It’s painful, and there’s no guarantee that happy times will come again. I don’t know what the answer is for Michigan or Southern Illinois, but telling people that you’re going to roll back the clock and make everything like it was isn’t a real solution. It’s a lie. It’s worse than that. Whoever says that, is trying to give false hope.

Romney such a goddamned panderer. There’s got to be a special place in Mormon Hell for guys like him.

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I <3 Huckabee

I want Huckabee to win the Republican nomination.

I want him to win, not because I think he’s the most beatable, or for any nefarious purpose, but because I think he’s genuine. I like him. I wouldn’t vote for him, because my views mesh better with any of the Democratic candidates, but because I want his views heard. I want Huckabee to have a seat at the table when policy is discussed.

I know this post is just a rehash of what I said twice before, but then my thought was, “What am I missing?” Now the ideas are settled. I want Huckabee on the national stage. I want his ideas heard, and him to be part of solutions for this country. I want him help make policy.

Huckabee is a man you can work with, and has people’s best interests at heart, even if on some policies he has naïve views. (Regressive 28% National Sales Tax, I’m looking at you.)

If there was some sort of Obama kumbiya unity government, I’d want Huckabee in it. I don’t know how or where, but I want his opinions heard and taken into account.

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More Detailed Iowa Aftermath: The Republicans

Since Ryan loves his “lib blogistan,” I’ll write up my thoughts that I’ve already put out in a series of emails.

Huckabee is the nominee. It’s a done deal. I already said, Huckabee wins Iowa, loses New Hampshire, wins South Carolina, and the rest of the South and thus the nomination.

So why will this work. Well let’s examine the other candidates.

Fred Thompson’s campaign was DOA. I never understood why anyone thought he would be a serious candidate. He just never cared about running for president, and it showed. I was shocked he finished just above McCain in Iowa.

When he drops out, I can’t imagine him actually making a speech. I figure he’ll just stop showing up to events.

Giuliani’s “national strategy” was dumb and always was. He completely botched the nominating process for the start. Iowa and New Hampshire, and South Carolina are small states that don’t have many delegates, but the whole reason to campaign in them is to get the inordinate and undeserved press coverage they get.

Giuliani forgot that you’re not campaigning for delegates in Iowa, you’re campaigning for the bump. The press coverage, and the aura of inevitability. Staking your campaign on a bunch of retired New Yorkers in Broward County Florida that don’t even vote until four weeks and four lost elections pass, is a losing strategy. You have no buzz, no positive press, and worst of all, you’re a confirmed loser.

Add in his general big city mayor level of corruption, the fact that MSM is based out of NYC and don’t actually like him from his mayoral stint (for whatever reason), and the fact that evangelicals are squimish, he was going to have a rough time no matter what.

Romney is the only one that can knock off Huckabee. He’ll win New Hampshire, with Huckabee finishing a respectable second or perhaps just begin edged out for third. Still the story will be Huckabee because New Hampshire isn’t supposed to go for evangelicals, and New Hampshire likes voting against Iowa to show that they are “important.”

Romney is Huckabee’s main threat because the corporatists candidate. He’s got the money and the machinery. He can outspend Huckabee in every state, but Romney’s biggest problem is Romney. He never got traction in Iowa or anywhere for that matter. His whole appeal was, “I’m the choice if you don’t like Giuliani.” Not a very rousing message. The base doesn’t trust him. They rightfully think he’s an opportunistic flip flopper. He was pro-choice, and now he’s anti-abortion. He was for for gay rights, now he’s not. He is governor of liberal Taxachussets, and they won’t let him forget that.

The idea that Romney will become the nominee hinges on the idea that the corporatists won’t allow Huckabee to become the nominee. The corporatists don’t like Huckabee because he was a baptist minister prior to becoming governor of Arkansas and he has a populist message. However I don’t think they can stop him.

For 20-30 years the corporatists of the Republican party been playing their Southern Strategy of race baiting and stoking the fires of evangelicals. And for all those years, those people has been believing the lie that they can remake America. Well those kids, have grown up, and the corporatists that were running the party are retiring. Do you think it’s an accident that the Justice Department is full of Regent University graduates? The corporatists had to throw bones to the evangelicals to drag them along, and now those people that caught those bones 20 years are moving up in the hierarchy and bringing like minded people with them.

Now I’m not saying that a theocratic state is around the corner, but I am saying that there are true believers in the Christian right that believe that the party is theirs. I don’t think the plan of Wall Street sitting back and saying, “Tell the hicks we’ll protect them from the homosexuals,” is going to work forever, and the Huckabee candidacy is just the most recent crack to show.

The BBC recently reported on the change of the evangelicals from Bible thumping to a more nuanced message. Even the NY Times picked up the “evangelical left.”

So what does this mean? It means the corporatists of the Republican party are losing control of the evangelicals. They used to be able to say, “Here is your candidate. You show up to the polls and you vote for him, and he’ll end gay abortions,” while the candidate winked and nodded, and took up serpents and “spoke in tongues” and then passed a capital gains tax cut and a free trade agreement to move more jobs offshore.

Now, over twenty years later the evangelicals outnumber the corporatists and their grip is slipping. Sure you have some evangelicals like Joel Olsteen and rest of the absurdly materialistic “prosperity gospel” preachers, that say that Jesus wants you to be rich, and so it’s a sin to tax captial gains and what not. (Actually, I’m giving Joel Olsteen too much credit here. He doesn’t have any political agenda. He’s just running a standard confidence game and lining his pockets with old ladies’ social security checks like all the televangelists before him, but the corporatist evangelicals with the whole divine right undercurrent are a very real phenomenon, and the ones the Wall Street corporatists enjoy the most.

Then you have the social only evangelicals that want to keep the sodomites down, but want to keep their jobs as well. In times of economic uncertainty, this is a pretty big group, and this is who Huckabee talks to.

Then finally, you have evangelical left, that for some reason feels compelled to be born again, but is no longer buying into the Republican platform at any level. A small group, yes, but a growing group.

So why won’t the corporatists simply abandon Romney and back McCain and give him the nomination? Because even if the corporatists move to McCain, it won’t matter, because the base isn’t going to vote for McCain, even with, as Ryan put it, “[the media] publicly felating him every step of the way.”

McCain is regarded as a RINO. He’s the Joe Lieberman of the Republican party. Yes he’s backed Iraq. Yes, he backed the surge. And yes, we’re supposed to believe that the surge is “working,” but none of that matters. He’s “John McCain: the Democrats favorite Republican.” This is John McCain, who said called Robertson and Falwell in 2000, ”agents of intolerance.”

In 2000, John McCain ran as John McCain, the “Goldwater conservative” as he described himself, and he learned that there was no place in the 2000 Republican party for that kind of Republican. So starting in 2006, when he decided he’d run for president again, he started courting the religious right.

The christian right may be stupid, but they’re not that stupid. McCain is a poser, and no amount of adoration by the press is going to convince them otherwise. The MSM loves McCain because of the real John McCain. But whenever the Liberal Media Elite™ lavishes praise on him, it just confirms that McCain is not a real Republican. Or as I graphically put it, “[W]henever the Tim Russert et. al try to suck the cum from McCain’s balls, they’re sucking the life from his campaign.”

For Huckabee not to win the nomination, Huckabee has to screw it up. Huckabee has gotten the reputation of being a lightweight when it comes to international events, but frankly that’s not going to matter. It didn’t matter in 2000. It didn’t matter in 2004. And it’s not going to matter in 2008. The conventional wisdom (i.e. what a bunch of New York City news editors sitting around a water cooler think) is that Huckabee’s unpreparedness is a result of not having a staff to keep him up to date. That’s a pretty good insulator. Also, immediately after Iowa Chris Matthews was interviewing Huckabee and mentioned an article in the Jerusalem Post, and Huckabee mentioned that it was actually an AP story that the Jerusalem Post picked up. Matthews was visibly surprised (and said so) that Huckabee knew that. A few more moments like that, and Huckabee is in the clear on being out of touch.

Huckabee is probably already raking in the dough after his win in Iowa. This means he will be better financed to take on Romney and the rest. Huckabee is in this until the end. Huckabee’s biggest problem now is going to be hiring people to help him spend that money. A few bad moves and it can move away from him, but I don’t think Huckabee is going to do that. He’s comfortable with himself and his campaign. He’s got a winning formula and he’s going to stick with it.

Huckabee is going to lose New Hampshire, but place a second, perhaps just be eked out for a close third. This loss won’t matter because he already has the buzz from Iowa, and is expected to do well in South Carolina. Also the press has already laughed about New Hampshire having a habit of choosing someone different from Iowa. New Hampshire doesn’t have nearly as many evangelicals as the south and the midwest, but they might buy into Huckabee’s populist message, and that’s unique twist that differentiates himself from the rest of the pack, and put people that are wary of his evangelical background at ease.

Huckabee can appeal to everyone, and that’s why he’s going to get the nomination.

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