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Posts tagged with "Barack Obama's campaign"

The slow trend I wish was actually happening.

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There's.. some ambivalent noise going on around the Nobel's Peace prize that I found interesting. Either people say the prize is not deserved, or they say Obama is great, but still does not deserve it for not doing anything /yet/. The main narratives are all looking inwards, in other words.

Also, Slate recently had this printed. Slate.

"Ignore Fox"

http://www.slate.com/id/2232563/pagenum/all/

That Rupert Murdoch may skew the news rightward more for commercial than ideological reasons is somewhat beside the point. What matters is the way that Fox's successful model has invaded the bloodstream of the American media. By showing that ideologically distorted news can drive ratings, Ailes has provoked his rivals at CNN and MSNBC to experiment with a variety of populist and ideological takes on the news. It's Fox that led CNN's Lou Dobbs to remodel himself into a nativist cartoon. It's Fox that led MSNBC to amp up Keith Olbermann. Fox hasn't just corrupted its own coverage. Though its influence, it has made all of cable news unpleasant and unreliable.



I have missed some conscious analysis on how and why this type of news-coverage - catering to target-groups to the exclusion of everything else - can influence the debate and the political landscape. So actually reading something like this in Slate is a bit of a shock.

But yes. This is about looking inwards, and finding a real reason to be proud of your country. Instead of just telling yourself that everything is fucking fine. And that is something I wish became more common. ..that's the prophecy we seek, to borrow a phrase. :/ So is that really wrong? To cling on to a thought like this until it becomes true?

Then & now

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Digby, after Obama's election victory: quotes Marthin Luther King Jr.

Digby, today: Look to Malaysia.

The Obama Administration should probably take a lesson in humility before making a similar statement. And they should look at how indefinite detention has endured in Malaysia and other countries throughout the world, with painful consequences, before trying to implement it here.


http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2009/08/malaysia-option-by-dday-we-are-several.html

Tea- baggers... what you need to know about tea- baggers.

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http://whiskeyfire.typepad.com/whiskey_fire/2009/04/please-go-to-the-dead-trees-already.html

In this sense the anti-war protests and the teabaggery ought to be seen as photo negatives: most of the anti-war people (if not necessarily the organizers) knew what they were talking about and actually did represent a much larger constituency, at least potentially: Obama reaped that popular windfall. The teabaggers don't understand their ostensible issue and are a demographic dead end.



Why so certain about that? The Bush- administration translated engagement over entirely fictional political issues in order to facilitate entirely practical responses to those very imaginary issues.

Anyway. So what is this about? Another republican ratfucking grass- roots operation designed around the all- american issues: egotism, self- worth, hating weak wusses, taxes, eedukation and foreigners. Now, the "tea" thing is about the Boston Tea- party, which in GOP mythology at the moment (after the regime- change) is a tale about valiant and principled tradesmen opposing against draconic measures of the ruling government installed to stifle honest trade. Which eventually then led to the independence war, and the birth of the United States of A.

Most notable about the Tea- party in Boston, of course, was that it is seen as a spontaneous rebellion against what is instinctively wrong to every American. That it is a statement against oppressive governments. As well as that the measures were progressively more harsh, and spread throughout the nation. ..obviously, some people had to die for their rebellion first, and there was a little bit of confusion about who was what, and what sort of leadership would come out of it in the end, and all of that - but(!) the essence of the myth is indeed true!

In other words, what these joking fuckers are doing is organising a rebirth of the conservative movement over the values that the entire party in it's entirety has been spiting for the last twenty years. And here's the problem - any conservative will disagree furiously that there's any irony in this. That they would turn around on the heels when it comes to pork the second they are in the minority.

And this is actually easy to explain. The reality is that the conservatives have been successfully crafting excuses to continue breaking their principles to pieces, and their voters have gradually stopped buying it, and even turned to the democrats - who have been focusing on the deficit and taxation for a long time.

But now the democrats are in the unenviable position of having to deal with the same mess - and they then clearly put themselves in opposition the the aforementioned totally american principles in a much more direct way than Bush - in the eyes of their party - did. In other words - once again, a masterful tactical political decision by people who represent their constituents in that they too are clinically insane.

I certainly would like to see them succeed, though, and run the economy in the US to the ground for real. I'm talking about removing the source of work for 5 out of 7 states, and generate such an obvious gap between the upper and lower classes that the revolution would actually come this time.

But I fear they may just be fooling themselves into believing they have any kind of influence on how Washington is run. For more on this, please refer to the gloating talking heads, as they smile knowingly whenever "serious" commentators attempt to explain what any number of suggested policy- changes will do.

While what really matters, of course, is that the sign says: NO TO OBAMA. Only not that obviously, of course. You don't want to be as shallow as the HATE BUSH crowd, either. Because that would be hypocritical and humourously ironic.

The Magical Mystery Tour

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Many spectators at the theatre were indeed spellbound by the fast- paced and well- conducted first act, which concluded in Barack Obama's victory in the Presidential campaign. Forgotten for a time was the cynicism as well as the paper thin stage props; such was the actors' brilliance in performance that when the curtain fell, an image larger than mere theatre lingered in the minds of all, playing with emotions thought be forgotten forever. Hope! Sweet smiles and infinite understanding radiated between all who could witness, nay, be part of the performance itself.

And so it is that we hustle out in the lobby, content not to shake the euphoria by talking about what we have seen, instead opting for exchanging sweet nothings to each other, enjoying the sense of unity and purpose. One sings: "She's coming - Get on board - There's room for many more", to the accompanyment of quiet, joyful, laughter. Another quotes reverend Martin Luther King's famous speech: "We have come to this hallowed spot to remind America of the fierce urgency of Now" (but falters on the succeeding lines about the sweet drug of gradualism and complacency). One states matter- of- factly that this is how history is written - "to think that I would live to see this", passing by the history- making and going straight for posterity. Cheers! Will the naysayers speak their piece, or forever remain silent.

Yet - the world outside creeps closer, and people remember their places. We're in a theatre, surrounded by pomp and glittery chandeliers. Pieces of cheese on crackers that would not feed even a small and very hungry black kid. Questions arise - unspeakable questions: have our wishes indeed been heard, and we have gotten exactly what we want? And are for that reason finding it easy to nurse our euphoric joy? Because what we truly want is for that alone, and not to accomplish change by ourselves? Doubt! What terrible irony, to discover such truths in this hour of triumphant joy!

Uneasy expectations abound as we wander back to our seats, feeling the weight in our stomachs - fed as they are on crackers and not wholesome meat. Buzzed from the hurriedly drained martinis, but not drunken any longer. Because now we see that the purpose of it all is indeed larger than the stage, the actors, and the final applause given to conjure up one more, just one more, image of Victory.

It is with terrible purpose the light dims for the always darker second act. For such is the magic of the world of theatre - able only to conjure thoughts in the mind of the spectator, not finished deeds and acts.

But for that thought, we are free at last. Free at last!

Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!

Circus in town

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http://www.balloon-juice.com/?p=12509

For the record, I really do not care about Joe the Plumber’s background. All he did was ask a candidate for President a question, something I wish everyone got the chance to do at least once in their life.


Unfortunately, commenters on the former kool- aid divers' blog can't seem to get the point. Because Joe Schmoe appeals to some undocumentable quality in the American Psyche (read: he appeals to stupid idiots who can't think for themselves) - when accusing Obama of ruining small businesses in little America. And that means he's not just someone who receives loads of air- time and plugs from the McCain campaign - oh, no. That makes him a public persona, who is fair game when it comes to entirely legitimate personal character assassination. Which was completely and utterly not all right before when the Frosts (Democratic poster- family for subsidized health- care with predictable benefits for the insurance companies) received that same horrendous treatment from the Right.

In fact - comparing what happened to the Frosts - hiding in their yard and digging through their trash - is completely different from exposing mr. Joe Average as a /possible hypocrite/ and tax- evading scumbag without credibility. Because this time, it's an election, and so much is at stake; there's an election coming, you see. Where the fate of the entire world will be decided(!).. or something.

So just meeting the Joe Plumber reasoning with - you know, facts and stuff. Explaining that increasing the tax- burden on the big businesses and higher earners will first of all not affect the smaller businesses (like, sub a small African country budget smaller). And that increasing the tax burden, as well as creating a progressive tax- system - is Obama's clever trick for magically financing a more broadly available health- service (read: a subsidized insurance plan. And thus releasing small businesses from part of the cost of employing people).

I mean, can't be having with that either. Because... people are too stupid to get it. Ha.. ha. *sigh*

Uncharacteristically many positive things piling up lately.

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So, here's how it goes - Greenwald at Salon.com, Digby, etc., are finally starting to adopt compatible views after formulating their own opinions. Result - a million mindless americans find they should do so themselves, and set out to be independent and clever. Success.

And apparently Obama X chose Joe Biden as his pick for Vice President (or as the media says - "Obama chose Biden for VP".. before the election, and all). Which is helping the righties go off the rails. Because Biden has been their secret man- love affair who could always be trusted to be "tough" and scary, which is good for the image (he grinds his teeth while speaking empathically about important and controversial things - like whether Mitt "is the steel wire stuck in my cheeks, or do I look natural like this?" Romney, would be a skilled and qualified president). While he would also being sure to embarass the Clinton wing of the democratic party by saying things like: "but does that even work?[throws hands] I'm speaking rhetorically, you know". Or, "no, we're not happy about the republicans getting everything they wanted on this bill, Dana. (...) Oh, does she, Dana. (...)No, I didn't know she had declared we were all happy with it, Dana. I'm /sorry/".

And this is meanwhile the republicans have tried to smear Obama as a slick- back elitist scumbag, who is not Down to Earth(tm) like they are. Which they'll prove by trying to make McCain seem like an old guy who stands around talking about how much better things used to be. Preferably in a Wall- mart, with peas as a backdrop. Also, McCain doesn't know how many houses he owns (or whether his second wife owns all of them, or he owns just a couple). The republicans were also wondering who they could pick for Veep, who isn't millionaire, property speculant, corrupt, unbelievable, a spineless whitling, discredited, and so on.

And Obama X actually struck back, and hammered McCain for all of this - forcefully and successfully. Which gives the Obama campaign the vicious touch that americans love so much. Which it was - relatively speaking.

With the net result that not only does Obama brand himself as the natural choice, the thinker and the fighter. Daring on his own, and wiling to use that in others and Hollywood and shit. But they also allow the Republicans to brand themselves as frauds and hypocrites - by merely answering the noise- attacks on substance. Even though those answers may be less than polite, and perhaps embarassing to a certain part of your own party. Obama thus cleverly disguising his america- hating effete elitist ways in a thin shroud of consistency and integrity, while also engaging in debates that were put on hold in 2000. Success again.

Of course, it's a very risky game. Soon they're going to find out that Republicans start trying to have principles as well, just to show'em. But it's not like this is going to stop the flood of money to the military industry, so yeah - go for it, Obama!

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On a related note, Bill Moyers had a good segment on his Journal about China and the economy. Please note the parallels he's drawing between the US and China.

http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/08222008/watch3.html

Democratic strategy for winning in November

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http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2008/07/29/blue_dogs_lie/

DINOs. Vichy Democrats. Bush Dogs.



Anyone who listens to the regular talk among progressive activists on- and offline is familiar with such terms of opprobrium for Democratic politicians, particularly in Congress, who are alleged to be ideologically unreliable, insufficiently partisan, too cozy with corporations, or subversive of efforts to fight the Bush administration.



It actually was a pretty decent debate. Kilgore tries to avoid saying that the A-merican people are so stupid and fucked up, and understanding and pious, that they will consistently elect people who they know will screw them over - as long as they are not Republicans. In name. For the purpose of perpetuating unpopular policies - the Bush- administration's suspension of habeus corpus, the fourth amendment, indefinite war - under the "guise" of new and legitimate ownership. That is, the same policies (with small changes the little people would approve of, like talking about gas- prices and the price of margarine in a speech), but with a democratic leadership.

While Greenwald tries to avoid calling Kilgore and the rest of the brownshirts unintelligent but consciously committed fascists - who know they are legitimised and welcome in the american "public debate" as long as they drop intelligent sounding words into a litany about po- li- tics and shiit, motherfucker. Oppobrium, dammit, who yo talking to, braniac, haha!

Also, don't forget to read the comments - not too bad, but they closed the comments after my last post. So I couldn't see all the pissed off democrats who would berate me for suggesting it should be possible for /people/ to affect the policies their government conducts, instead of having wise men govern without interference.

And no, I'm not exaggerating. And it's not funny. Next - Obama X saves the nation from bad self- esteem by standing up to Chinese money- lenders while proclaiming they are an ally of Israel and on the side of God (according to well- placed democratic strategists who swears that's what their lord and master would've, on reflection, have liked it to come out).

Even more well- placed strategists say God approves, but was granted anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter with the allmighty.

A curious week.

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(Soundtrack - Entombed: Left Hand Path.
"I am my own God
Master slave and I will be beyond the grave
No one will take my soul away
I carry my own will and make my day")


Like I mentioned in the previous post - looking at the surveillance state issues from a little distance makes the context for the debate into a natural victory for the ones advocating unlimited executive power.

But in a shorter perspective, there are different considerations and mechanisms that do not necessarily take understandable shortcuts because of how ruined the debate is - in fact, the support for destroying the constitution could not be more explicit.

After Obama's endorsement of the FISA amendment bill (that would delegate the legal definitions of a court, and the issuing of a legislative framework, up to the president's office), there was a stream of Obama- supporters suddenly coming out in favour of the bill.

There were different reasons for this. John Cole of Balloon Juice would at first take it on face value and accept what Obama's campaign said (the standard: "I'm not a lawyer, so I'll trust the political insider who sounds like he knows what he's talking about"- excuse) - that the bill restored FISA under the law (which is the old trite point that since what the president does now cannot be illegal, it's under the law, and therefore it's fine). And that only the "immunity" provision (for the telecoms who did the surveillance illegally) was "onerous", which Obama would wov to oppose, even if it was ensured passage (which even Obama admitted).

Strangely, many supported this "practical" explanation, and came out forcefully to defend it in the usually friendly tone on the left. By as usual calling everyone who would disagree with Obama as nay- saying morons.

Besides, they would argue, this is the democratic leadership's fault - not Obama (Obama isn't a leader.. yet, so he can't be blamed for cravenly selling out the constitution, unless he did so when he's dictator, or something). Bollocks.

Skip forward one day, after the reactions come in, and the argument morphs - now it's not a problem that Obama wants dictatorial powers with the executive branch - the argument is that it's necessary to appease the republicans and vote against the fourth amendment now - so that they will be unable to hurt the democrats by saying they are weak on terrorism in November. And as Glenn Greenwald documents through careful search of perfectly available news- articles - this thinking originates from the democratic leadership - Reid and Pelosi - as well as Obama's campaign. Obama- supporters once again jump on the train.

Skip forward another day, and Keith Olbermann - who earlier would rail against "lawless dictatorial powers" and granting "criminal immunity for lawbreaking" if your wallet is deep enough - for the privileged and connected - when talking about the many attempts earlier by the democratic leadership to front and pass this bill. Keith suddenly changes tune, and finds that this is part of a secret plan of Obama's to be able to "get" the telecoms back in the end. (Comeuppance in the States - not just for Christians!).

The plan would be divined like this - John Dean (from the Nixon administration) would suggest that the new FISA would maybe, perhaps, be unconstitutional in itself, or that there were provisions in the law that might, on closer reading, allow civil liability if not criminal liability. (I'm assuming he's thinking about how the pending lawsuits are based on seeking damages for exposing customer records in violation of federal law (which gives standing), which wouldn't be removed by immunising the telecoms from criminal proceedings regarding FISA, and so open the question of whether the amendment would be legal - but don't quote me on that. Besides, we've heard this before - when the democrats was in minority - just give us time, and we'll reverse all the horrible laws. What are they waiting for this time?)

Keith then seized on that and suggested there was, with Dean as weight behind it, a secret plan in motion by Obama to get the telecoms in the end, and that therefore we should now give up the fourth amendment the democratic leadership needed a majority before they could pull off.

Therefore further exploration of this argument expectedly leaves us back where we started - it's simply good for winning in November. Since that's all that matters - and the democratic leadership has done the following analysis: the left will vote for them anyway, the right are nuts, but the vast majority of America actually hates the fourth amendment, so therefore it's most beneficial for the democrats to please that "center". Not unlike the strategy that lost them the last election, they are simply aiming for the path of least resistance, in the belief that keeling over to every republican demand will strike a balance between being strong on terror, and being balanced and measured in comparison to the "right", and therefore place them in the center (which is why Obama must absolve himself in front of the AIPAC as well, and what makes John Lieberman a centrist - and probably what makes Bush a "man of the people", and not a privileged frat boy with an adopted texan accent).

While in truth, the democratic candidates running against the repbulican party (or their own candidates who could just as well have changed their party without anyone noticing even the change in label) on a substantive (relatively speaking) platform of clear opposition to lawbreaking - with an appeal to conform with the legal framework that the west in general has been based on for several hundred years - are winning easily over otherwise safe candidates, even in republican territory.

Which means that the perception of the "center" that exists in the beltway is, for one, completely faulty. But that also - and get this - the rule of law and opposition to mafia politics is a universal and uniting policy among both republicans and democrats. Who would've guessed?

Skip forward to the day before yesterday, and John Cole at Balloon Juice turned about, and slammed Obama as a craven weakling with a populistic streak of the most contemptible sort. And I throughly endorse that.

Because - the analysis that suggests it's beneficial to trade the constitution for a democratic win in November - that rests on the assumption that the american electorate - and the democratic voters and supporters who are flogging that message - are as weak and useless that they would agree when a politician decides to kill the fourth amendment for political gain. Gain that these same voters would be, obviously,, instrumental in providing.

For once, since they're dealing with calculating politicians and not politics based on cult- worship (mostly), as well as politicians dependent on their followers adopting their narratives - this can therefore be challenged and changed. In other words, it's not inevitable that the democratic leadership should cave on this (although they of course already have, and it will take more than tentative changes of opinion on the web to make an impact).

Meanwhile, Russ Feingold and Chris Dodd filibuster the final vote on the FISA amendment, and a final vote comes down after the fourth of July recess.

Which is kind of epic.

Thirty years of progress in the United States

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The Surveillance State was, depending your point of view, inevitable. The technology available would make it possible. While the fear of the threats to the homeland would make it desirable. And for the last fifteen years, the course has been more or less expressive - from Clinton's executive orders and "Gorelick's Wall", and on to the Patriot Act and Bush's extralegal wiretapping - towards surveillance at the pleasure of the government, with no oversight needed.

The thinking was not exclusive to surveillance, naturally - just as Nixon would claim vast executive powers and declare that if the president does it, it is not illegal, the government this time (represented by the executive branch, the Telecom lobby, and selected congressmen) had already made it clear that they believed strongly in limitless executive power, and that breaking the law is not a problem when you get the order from the president.

You may laugh, but some Congressmen were quoted as suggesting they needed a Jack Bauer in the intelligence agencies.

Yesterday, the US Congress solidified this into law by voting in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act "compromise" with 293 yays and 129 nays. The Bush followers needed exactly two minutes until after the declaration that a compromise had taken place, to boast that they got everything they wanted, and much more than they had hoped for.

Som time later, Kit Bond, vice chair of the select Intelligence committee, and member of the TSP surveillance committee, stated, when asked to justify this atrocity:

"I'm not here to say that the government is always right, but when the government tells you to do something, I'm sure you would all agree that I think you all recognize that is something you need to do," Bond said.



Later, the democratic nominee for the presidency and missionary of hope, Barack Obama, was quoted as explaining he supported the bill because it was better than the Protect America Act (that just expired after giving the president full latitude for determining personally what a "threat" was, and who would be put in Guantanamo without hearing their charge), and therefore should easily be allowed to last until 2012 this time before it "sunsets". He furthermore suggested he would "oppose" the telecom amnesty provision in this bill, although it's evident that there is neither will or votes enough to pass such an amendment in the senate later on.

In other words, not only does this grant the executive branch the unlimited power they have sought for the last eight years (and which Nixon would only dream of). But it also ends, definitively, the several pending lawsuits against the telecoms who by all accounts were completely aware that they were breaking the law at the time (as one Bush- appointed judge confirmed when saying it was "not possible" to think this could've been legal, as most of the telecoms claimed (with some exceptions), and have been insisting on through their lobbying proxies and contributions to Congress lately.

Which means that everyone sat down, and weighed the pros and cons of shredding the constitution - and decided that, what with the juicy government contracts, the hefty campaign contributions, and in the name of Washington civility and protecting the homeland from imaginary threats - on balance it was probably best to throw out the constitution and take the money.

So - China allegedly is drilling oil sixty miles off the US coastline, democracy is on the march in Iraq, the IAEA's nine year running "outstanding issues" with Iran that "certain members" refuse to remove is hailed as "GRAVE CONCERN" in the media (while ignoring that the IAEA declares all other issues have been concluded properly).

And by 293 to 129 votes, the US yesterday was transformed into a surveillance state.

And there's no going back - the last avenues available to find out what actually went on have been closed for good with this bill: it is now legal to ignore the law on the president's say- so. And Congress approves.

The question to me is, what will happen in Britain now that Brown is pulling his weight behind their surveillance state proposals, and where a broad coalition of conservatives and to leftists are ready to riot if the scheme is continued.

I've been told I should try to be more positive, so I will hope for that this will ruin any pretense of a transatlantic union for decades. As well as render the US prisoner program operating through shady, but open transport air- strips across the continents - as opposed to being protected by our own governments as they have for a large extent up till now. Not in the least because such a thing also prevents us from passing a unified law in Strasbourg, to ensure that such a thing is not possible. And which ensures that we understand that rendering prisoners like this is ILLEGAL.

Lastly - fuck the moral cowards, fuck the small- minded arrogance, and fuck the United States.

addendum, 22nd of June:
http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2008/06/22/calabresi/index.html

It's hardly news that Time Magazine's principal function is uncritically to amplify false claims from government officials, but this article by Massimo Calabresi -- entitled "Behind the Compromise on Spying" -- is such a masterpiece in spouting simplistic government propaganda and rank falsehoods that it is revealing on numerous levels. The article has only one purpose -- to depict the spying "compromise" as a brilliant and heroic centrist masterstroke by Nancy Pelosi to protect us from Terrorists while simultaneously preserving our liberties -- and it employs one factually false claim after the next to achieve this. Let's just take it piece by piece,(...)


This is how it's done. It's not happening one time, or once in a while - it is what is done on every major decision like this. Just as Arlen Specter after proclaiming of the Military Commissions act that it was an atrocity like no other bill in the history of the United States, then proceeded to vote for the bill - it is understood here that not going along with the message is the same as being doomed and frozen out of politics for good.

Specter's office responded in January, when the Military Commissions bill was made into law - that they just didn't dare to go against the Bush- administration on it. They instead claimed, cowardly, that the compromise was a good one, and that it delivered some power back to the judges - that was better than what Bush was claiming already. Now - then as now, this turns up - expertly written and carefully parsed to explain that judges are involved, that everything's taken care of, and that this does, contrary to any reading of the bill, keep civil liberties intact (apparently by those who themselves conduct the spying).

Whether this is because they are ignorant, stupid, scared out of their minds, or simply insane - the consequence is the same. But I have to admit - defending something like this in this fashion. With this many falsehoods - without getting as much as a goddamn comment from the larger papers, who all pat themselves on each others backs every time they manage to deliver - not a regurgitated piece - but a well- written piece that not simply writes down what the politicians say, but also invents the facts and circumstances to support it.

You can say what you'd like - but how this is possible to perpetuate this far is beyond me. I know of course, that there is much money in public outrage - it's basically a more potent strategy to inflame and piss off people than make them content some politician is doing their job - that's where the genius of the perpetual campaign comes in. You only need to say something stupid, or be attacked for something stupid you just said - and the money pours in. Either because now you have a good cause to seek donors with, or because you have donors who wish to defend you, genuinely, from the evil other ones, and so forth.

But this is just too much. I could understand the war to some extent. I really can. It makes sense, in an insipid four year old's mind, it does make sense. But what the fuck is this? Propaganda like this, to convince the punters that the surveillance state is not, in fact, already happening? That it has not been kept runnning for the past seven years, and now has been solidified into law, while vesting the executive branch the power to define the law, and so ignore the courts at will?

Does the democrats fear the logical conclusion to acknowledging what they're doing? I.e., that they'd be put between a rock and a hard place before the November elections if they started impeachment hearings, rather than eviscerate what's left of the constitution, and then making their excesses permanently into law? Because it's just too "shrill" to come up with a good reason for not vesting dictatorial powers with the president's office?

I really can't say - I've seen examples of bad policies been carried on for years before. But never have I seen the political opposition as well as the position dig out the foundation for their right and ability to represent their constituents as eagerly as this. There's not even a protest in the parliament.

Of course - if you have seen how much of a retarded bunch the American electorate really is, then you could be forgiven for believing that they would react more readily and with more effort to a made up story about some hooker, or some other smear - than to someone protesting that their country is being turned into a surveillance state.

I suppose maybe that's it - that the people on the Capitol are this shallow, or cowardly. That they're willing to allow the Bush- administration and the NSA to run surveillance at will for just a period, in return for being more well- placed to win the presidency in November.

And I guess then they'll have to avoid repealing the laws again, because that would make it worse to win the next election? Just like Pelosi did when they took over the House over new year - declaring that they were going to stop the undermining of civil liberties, as well as the TSP (the terrorist surveillance program) along with Bush's extralegal powers.

Now how did that one turn out? Won them the election - because of the outrage and support for repealing the lawlessness, I suppose.

editerer:
heh. Yes, indeedy:

Stonewalling the Administration and letting the surveillance powers expire could have cost the Democrats swing seats they won in 2006 as well as new ones they have a chance to steal from Republicans this November. "For any Republican-leaning district this would have been a huge issue," says a top Pelosi aide, who estimates that as many as 10 competitive races could have been affected by it. . . .

Pelosi's centrist compromise doesn't just help House Democrats in the fall. It also gives the party's presumptive nominee for President, Barack Obama, a chance to move to the center on national security. "Given the legitimate threats we face, providing effective intelligence collection tools with appropriate safeguards is too important to delay," Obama said in a statement Friday. "So I support the compromise."

The nomination goes to Obama.

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And everyone is pissed at Clinton for poisoning the last few weeks with another bout of personality- based trash, and so driving on the Obama campaign's "we're not like them" narcissists, and removing any and all debate from the public sphere.

Oh, wait. Not everyone.

http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2008/06/coda-by-digby-apologies-for-dearth-of.html

The election of the first African American president will signal the end of the era of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. And nothing could be more fitting.

Also, congratulations to Senator Clinton, who in my view showed Democrats what a fighter looks like. This is the closest primary in history and despite what the bloviators and the gasbags have been saying for months, she had not only a right, but a duty, to fight on until the end for the half of the Democratic party that supported her. Clinton too was an historic candidate who inspired millions of people and she has my admiration.

If I might digress a bit and say one word about the Clintons, who to many are personas non grata in the Democratic Party now. Whatever happens, Bill Clinton will still be the 42nd president of the United States and the first two term Democrat since Roosevelt. That's never going to change.
(...)
Clinton will officially end suspend the campaign on Friday, (which is perfectly in keeping with the usual timing of these things contrary to the gasbags' ahistorical and overwrought blathering of last night.) We will see what the Republicans have in store for us. And maybe we can start behaving like ourselves again.



You mean, and vote for Bush twice because you're scared to death and want big brother to take away your rights, kill the brownies, save the world, and make it all better?

Family fights are always painful, but they are usually easily healed as well. Here's to the end of the Long March of 2008. It's been real.


Oh, for fuck's sake.