Ups and Downs

The coffee looks like I messed up the math — I mean it is seriously strong coffee. Typing may become a little jittery soon.

Went to Kohl’s last night (it’s a department store chain). All their Christmas decorations and related items were marked down 50-55%. Not only does the Christmas season seem to come earlier every year, now the Day After Christmas sales are coming earlier, too. If stuff is half-price now, what will it be December 26th?

I bought a cool Christmas stocking holder. It’s St. Nick with a long trailing list of naughty and nice kids to serve as the hook for the stocking. Half-price.

There are holiday lights up all over the neighborhood, of course. And, as always, there are some idiots leaving them on all night. Get a timer guys; how hard can it be? We are expected to turn our porch lights off in this neighborhood at 10PM (unless we need them, of course.) We get to see the stars that way.

The chicken club tacos at Chili’s are pretty good.

Last week I saw a young woman I’ve known for several years. She was carrying a small dog. Apparently this Jack Russell went with her everywhere. Inseparable.

I learned last night that she had broken up with the guy who gave her the dog. And he took the dog back! I suppose the only good side to that story is that his taking back the dog confirmed the rightness of the breaking up.

NewMexiKen did spend a lot of time yesterday redoing some of the underlying code for this site. You may notice I’ve added an Astronomy Picture of the Day thumbnail and link, and an Albuquerque weather sticker. (Right sidebar.) I failed at getting either Picasa Web Albums or Flickr to work — that is, to load thumbnails from them to this page. Anyone know the secret?

Don’t forget to send Cat a postcard.

And this, your most important assignment today, go read Bill Moyer’s talk at West Point. Allow time to recover.

Bush fell in love with his program

“Why does Bush love Estonia so? Aren’t the cultural clues fairly obvious? Having read a single book, Laar came to ‘believe, erroneously, that the flat tax had been put into practice throughout the West!’ Now, there was a gut-level governing strategy our own Decider could quickly warm up to! Read one book—then swing into action!”

Daily Howler, which again today should NOT be missed.

“But then, these gentlemen’s cluelessness has long been matched by the people who write about such matters in our own great Gotham Times.”

Peace in Pagosa

Peace Wreath in Pagosa Springs

Peace is fighting back in Pagosa Springs.

Last week, a couple were threatened with fines of $25 a day by their homeowners’ association unless they removed a four-foot wreath shaped like a peace symbol from the front of their house.

The fines have been dropped, and the three-member board of the association has resigned, according to an e-mail message sent to residents on Monday.

Two board members have disconnected their telephones, apparently to escape the waves of callers asking what the board could have been thinking, residents said. The third board member, with a working phone, did not return a call for comment.

In its original letter to the couple, Lisa Jensen and Bill Trimarco, the association said some neighbors had found the peace symbol politically “divisive.”

A board member later told a newspaper that he thought the familiar circle with angled lines was also, perhaps, a sign of the devil.

The New York Times

Pagosa Springs is a resort-retirement community in southern Colorado.

What I’ve Been Thinking All Day

Maureen Dowd puts into words:

“But the reality on the streets of Baghdad suggests Maliki is either ignorant of what is going on, misrepresenting his intentions, or that his capabilities are not yet sufficient to turn his good intentions into action.”

It’s bad enough to say that about the Iraqi puppet. But what about when the same is true of the American president?

Bob Somerby Explains All

NewMexiKen thinks you should be reading the Daily Howler every day because a lot of what Bob Somerby writes about is important and revealing. (Alas, he has no RSS feed.)

Normally I would just provide a teaser and a link. Today I’m including the whole first part of his posting because I think it is that important and that revealing.

YOU OUGHTTA KNOW: After yesterday’s post (see THE DAILY HOWLER, 11/27/06), we briefly revisited the 1994 public discourse about “midnight basketball.” We really thought you ought to consider a bit of what we observed.

In Saturday’s New York Times, Thomas Edsall warned Dems to stop making such proposals, even though they may represent the “pursuit of laudable goals.” After all, Edsall noted, “conservative talk radio” will trash such ideas; the trashing will “spread to the establishment media, and soon became a liability.” As we noted, this is a perfect history of our recent politics—and it’s a perfect history of the way the establishment media has learned to bow low to pseudo-con power. Edsall seems to take it as a given: His colleagues won’t defend the pursuit of laudable goals. Instead, they’ll simply repeat What Rush Says, even when he trashes such efforts.

In precisely that manner, the crackpot forces in American politics seized control of the public discourse during the early Clinton-Gore years. Yesterday, our brief research showed that “midnight basketball”—Edsall’s chosen topic—was an especially good example of the way this process has worked.

What did we think you ought to consider? We were struck by a short, unsigned report in the 8/17/94 New York Times. The Times report noted an interesting fact—the previous Republican president had also approved of midnight basketball:

NEW YORK TIMES (8/17/94): The Republicans who maintain that President Clinton’s stalled crime bill is loaded with excessive social spending often point to a provision for midnight basketball as a prime example of waste.

What they may not know is that the idea of midnight basketball was promoted by George Bush when he was President. In fact, Mr. Bush, a Republican, was so impressed with a midnight basketball program in Maryland that he named it as one of his Thousand Points of Light.

“The last thing midnight basketball is about is basketball,” Mr. Bush said when he visited the program in 1991 in Glenarden, Md., home of the first midnight basketball program in the nation.

Representative Steny H. Hoyer, a Democrat who represents that district, quoted the former President’s remarks on the House floor today.

“Mr. Bush named the program his 124th point of light,” the Times noted. And the paper quoted more of Bush’s 1991 statement: “Here, everybody wins. Everybody gets a better shot at life.”

Fascinating, isn’t it? Before Bill Clinton showed up at the White House, the sitting Republican president applauded this program. But when Clinton proposed modest funding in its support, “conservative talk radio” began to trash it, in ways that were often racially coded; according to Edsall, these attacks “spread to the establishment media,” making the proposal a liability for Clinton. But Edsall doesn’t criticize his establishment colleagues for adopting these pseudo-conservative values; instead, he implores the Democrats to never-again pursue such laudable goals. As such, Edsall’s column becomes a perfect portrait of the way our discourse was lost in this era—of the way a new wave of pseudo-conservatives seized control of the public discourse, with the willing acquiescence of Edsall’s weak-willed cohort. By 1999, Edsall’s establishment colleagues were happily conducting their War Against Gore, taking their talking-points from Jim Nicholson, the endlessly dissembling RNC chairman. After twenty months of such crackpot behavior, they’d sent another Bush to the White House—and he sent us to a new Vietnam.

In short, before the “conservative revolution” of the early Clinton years, everyone thought well of midnight basketball. But soon, a group of loudmouth kooks weighed in—and the Edsels of the establishment media began to suffer the endless breakdowns which have shaped our politics right to this day. Even today, Edsall can’t see the peculiar shape of the history he relates. Even today, he begs the Democrats: Please don’t incite those talk-radio hosts! In the name of all that’s convenient, don’t pursue “laudable goals!”

Any Second Thoughts?

“If they weren’t blowing them up in Amman, they would be blowing them up in America. We are much better off hunting them down there, and I have no problem at all articulating that whether it’s an election year or not. … I think we’ve made quite a bit of progress in the past eight months.”

Representative Heather Wilson, R-NM, a year ago.

More on the UCLA Taser Incident

The UCLA police officer videotaped last week using a Taser gun on a student also shot a homeless man at a campus study hall room three years ago and was earlier recommended for dismissal in connection with an alleged assault on fraternity row, authorities said. …

In an interview with The Times on Monday night, Duren, 43, defended his record as a campus police officer and urged people to withhold judgment until the review of his Taser use is completed.

Los Angeles Times

Duren has been with the UCLA Police Department for 18 years and was officer of the year in 2001.

Those Founders Were a Bunch of Wise Guys

It is too true, however disgraceful it may be to human nature, that nations in general will make war whenever they have a prospect of getting anything by it; nay, absolute monarchs [and presidents with control of both houses of congress] will often make war when their nations are to get nothing by it, but for the purposes and objects merely personal, such as thirst for military glory, revenge for personal affronts, ambition, or private compacts to aggrandize or support their particular families or partisans. These and a variety of other motives, which affect only the mind of the sovereign, often lead him to engage in wars not sanctified by justice or the voice and interests of his people.

The Federalist Papers: No. 4, John Jay (November 7, 1787)

Found as part of an essay on the draft by Glenn Greenwald.

Meanwhile

Pentagon officials are considering a substantial but temporary increase in troops in Iraq, known by some as a “surge option.”

When the Germans tried a substantial but temporary increase in troops in December 1944, it was known by some as the Battle of the Bulge.

In the Battle of the Bulge there were an estimated 85,000-90,000 casualties on each side in six weeks.

Just sayin’.

Moderate, my ass

STEPHANOPOULOS: Let me ask one question about abortion. Then I want to turn to Iraq. You’re for a constitutional amendment banning abortion, with some exceptions for life and rape and incest.

MCCAIN: Rape, incest and the life of the mother. Yes.

Border Views

According to a report in The Albuquerque Journal, there’s a difference in attitudes among the four border states, albeit a small one.

“About 63 percent of New Mexicans who voted in the general election supported giving illegal immigrants working in the United States a chance at becoming legal residents, according to an Associated Press exit poll.”

In California it’s 65%, in Texas it’s 59%, and in Arizona just 55%. Nationwide the figure is 57%.

Proper Preparation Prevents Poor Performance

Much of the negative mail directed to NewMexiKen during the late campaign used Nancy Pelosi as a punching bag. Digby has a real interesting take on the Speaker-to-be, who has risen to the highest level ever for a woman in American politics. (Scroll about half way down for the section on Pelosi.)

Here’s much of the conclusion:

They are going to continue to demonize her as some sort of deranged succubus, but they’d better be careful. Lot’s of women are watching and they aren’t going to like her character being assassinated with thinly veiled attacks on female inadequacy or gay insinuations or any of the other usual rightwing tricks. Criticism is fine but this woman has achieved something substantial and I doubt women are going to be happy to see her demeaned by some lowlife fratboy punk with nasty, cheap shots.

Don’t play the sexism card, fellas (and Ann Coulter.) At least half of the electorate sees these tired put-downs as an unpleasant reminder of the ex-boyfriend, boss or husband they’d still like to slap upside the head and there are plenty of men who cringe with embarrassment when they hear them.

How many can you name?

The link for this no longer works, but I thought this NewMexiKen posting from three years ago today was worth bringing back around.


“Most Americans are unable to identify even a single department in the United States Cabinet, according to a recent national poll of 800 adults. Specifically, the survey found that a majority (58%) could not provide any department names whatsoever; 41% could. Only 4% of those surveyed specified at least five of the 19 executive-level departments…”

Currently, the Federal Government includes executive level departments that advise the President. The heads of these departments are collectively known as the Cabinet. Could you please name as many departments as you can that are part of the current United States Cabinet? (Note: This question was open-ended and multiple responses were accepted, meaning, all respondents were invited to name as few or as many departments as they could. If a respondent provided the specific name of a cabinet secretary or administrator, e.g., “Colin Powell,” they were credited with a correct response.)


The same source had this:

“The first Shocking Poll found more than twice the number of Americans could cite the number and names of the Rice Krispies Characters than the United States Supreme Court Justices.”

As I wrote in 2003, Snap, Crackle and Scalia.

Einstein labels Cheney insane

Four days before the election, as Republican candidates battle to save their seats in Congress amid a backlash over the war in Iraq, Vice President Dick Cheney told ABC News the administration is going “full speed ahead” with its policy.

“We’ve got the basic strategy right,” Cheney told George Stephanopoulos in an interview to be broadcast Sunday on “This Week.”

ABC News

“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” Albert Einstein

There’s a reason they call it a ‘briefing’

Iraq Slide

The thing about this Defense Department slide that amazes me isn’t that it shows that conditions are deteriorating in Iraq — hello, that’s obvious. No, it’s the total lack of understanding of human cognition it displays. How many words and terms and symbols can we cram into one visual presentation?

No wonder Bush doesn’t get it if this is the kind of briefing slide he sees.

Slide via The New York Times.

Best line of the day, so far

Everything Rush Limbaugh says means the same thing.

The actual words he uses are irrelevent. He might as well be talking gibberish (Yeah, I know.) or in code. Whatever he says needs to be translated and is as easy to translate as pig-latin.

No matter what he says this is what he means: “Rich white guys like me should run the country and be allowed to do whatever we want, and anybody or anything that gets in the way of that needs to be steamrollered in a hurry.”

Lance Mannion at the beginning of an excellent essay on the Fox-Limbaugh brouhaha.

I Have an Idea

If we’re going to build a wall along the border, let’s at least be smart about it like the Chinese and make it a tourist attraction.

The Wall

(BTW, the wall is approved, but the funding is not. Ah, politicians, gotta love ’em. It is all smoke and mirrors.)

NewMexiKen photo, 1992.