For the Democrats
Tom Cole opened with four points that need be recognized, and all of them had to do with Iraq...so the resoultion should be rejected because it's about the "global war on terror."
Democrats need to restrain themselves and not dog Republicans qua Republicans...but count the number of Republicans that try to jack Democrats in their statements. You get to close with something like "160 Republicans spoke and 125 of them made the specific point of attacking Democrats. They've advanced a political point without advancing a military or diplomatic one. Our friends being intelligent men, I think we can easily deduce their intent from the results." (No, I'm not live-blogging the thing)
This is a Republican speechification opportunity. I think you may want to let them have their day. I would pick one really tolerant and patient Representative to speak for the Democratic side. Your opening statement will let folks know he has no speakers other than himself and reserve your time entirely for your closing statement. Send everyone else home. They really don't need to be there because a resolution has no force. You DO need staff taking notes on the various Republican speechifications. You may want to add responses to a couple of points to the closing statement. And since I enjoy rhetorically poking people in the eye once in a while, I suggest a little sympathy for the Prez:
Farmers know you're not supposed to eat the corn you need to plant next year's crop. We need more farmers in Congress.
"We've got to keep our priorities straight," said Representative Ralph Regula , an Ohio Republican who is chairman of the appropriations panel that approved the cut. "You're going to choose between giving a little more money to handicapped children versus providing appropriations for public broadcasting."
Priorities my ass. You're the same guys that want to cancel the estate tax. PBS is the one universally beneficial thing to come out of television technology in this country. Trust me, you don't want to lose the Sesame Street Effect. Seriously, how many folks have the time and skill to teach their kids all Sesame Street taught them? How many of those left have the money to hire a tutor? GOP takes aim at PBS funding House panel backs budget reductions By Rick Klein, Globe Staff | June 8, 2006
One of the sillier statements to come out of the last election cycle was the idea of Black folks voting Republican to teach Democrats a lesson about ignoring us. Mr Jacoby demonstrates why it's silly. Though the conservatives' exasperation isn't new, it was muted after Sept. 11 to preserve a common front in the war on terrorism. But now the pot is boiling over. Conservatives are shifting into Howard Beale mode: They're mad as hell and not going to take it anymore. Many may simply sit out the election this November, even if that means letting Democrats take over Congress.
Notice: he is NOT talking about Conservatives voting Democratic. Abstaining is enough to punish the party while still refusing to validate the other party. But it has to be willful abstanance, vocal abstanance. Your party must know what will make you abstain. You have to be heard.
The crumbling GOP base By Jeff Jacoby, Globe Columnist | May 31, 2006 LIKE A LOT of conservatives, I won't be voting Republican in the congressional elections this fall. Admittedly, I won't have a choice -- in Massachusetts, Republican candidates for Congress generally spare voters the trouble of defeating them by not bothering to run in the first place.
One of the reasons for the disconnect between statistics and most people's quality of life is where prices rise and fall . Most everybody these days can point to their own list of rising expenses. Electricity, air travel, medical care and even staples such as diapers cost more. Rents are jumping as the housing boom cools, just as property taxes are soaring to reflect the price appreciation of the hotter days. Plus, interest charges are rising on credit card balances, home-equity lines of credit and adjustable-rate mortgages. This is how it feels when the days of cheap energy and easy money give way to $70 barrels of oil and ascending interest rates. The economy may be strong, but many people are feeling pinched.
I wasn't going to comment on White Guilt and the Western Past because you weren't messing with Black folks' head for a change.
But I must say, I am impressed.
You started like a true fan of Prometheus 6.
It began, I believe, in a late-20th-century event that transformed the world more profoundly than the collapse of communism: the world-wide collapse of white supremacy as a source of moral authority, political legitimacy and even sovereignty. This idea had organized the entire world, divided up its resources, imposed the nation-state system across the globe, and delivered the majority of the world's population into servitude and oppression. After World War II, revolutions across the globe, from India to Algeria and from Indonesia to the American civil rights revolution, defeated the authority inherent in white supremacy, if not the idea itself. And this defeat exacted a price: the West was left stigmatized by its sins. Today, the white West--like Germany after the Nazi defeat--lives in a kind of secular penitence in which the slightest echo of past sins brings down withering condemnation. There is now a cloud over white skin where there once was unquestioned authority.
...like any blogger in the world has a leg to stand on in that regard...but I got notice of this in the email just now.
THE CASE FOR LOSING. Long-term Investment by James Forsyth Only at TNR Online Post date: 05.02.06
Even the most cautious Democrats must be beginning to believe that they might win back the House or Senate this year. Gas prices are rising almost as fast as George W. Bush's ratings are falling, GOP corruption scandals turn more lurid by the day, and Democrats have a double-digit polling lead while Congress's approval rating is a mere 22 percent. The nagging fear of blue America, though, is that its bête noire and the architect of Bush's reelection, Karl Rove--whom the recent White House shuffle placed firmly in charge of 2006 strategy--will somehow engineer another Republican victory, or at least deny the Democrats a clear-cut win. Then again, maybe that's exactly what Democrats should be hoping for.
Yeah, you have to write something to get paid, I suppose.
Of course, the Democratic Party isn't the only collective where folks take issue with Black folks' issues.
Blac(k)ademic:
i am guest blogging over at alas, a blog, which is a VERY different space than my own blog. i have encountered a few white feminists who disagree with my postings and who view patriarchy as the root of all oppression, which shows in my "this is not tawana brawley" posting with the comment by a reader who claimed that "gender trumps race."
hmm...now, why does this statement bother me so?
because it is ridiculous to lay claim to the idea that all women are oppressed on equal terms, simply because they are women. obviously, oppression is more complicated than that and i personally think that gender does not trump anything. instead, there are interlocking systems of oppression that women face based on gender, race, class, sexuality, religious background, nationality, citizenship status and so forth. it is very naive and very, very 2nd wave-ish to say, "well, gender trumps race." i can't even understand how one can come to such a conclusion.
I need a tag...this might become a series.
When I wrote up an actual consideration of Party in Search of a Notion last night, I was "inspired" by E.J. Dionne's editorial, The Left's Big Ideas.
What has become clear in recent months is that the impatience on the center-left with the hopeless endeavor of waiting for workaday politicians to come up with ideas -- Godot would deliver faster -- has spilled over the barriers of conventional politics. The brooding, musing and, yes, thinking since President Bush's victory in 2004 is starting to show results.
The biggest change is that moderates and liberals have begun to accept the fact that they cannot simply adjust to conservative dominance of the political debate and alter their ideas to fit the current consensus.
I finally got around to reading Party in Search of a Notion...that article in The American Prospect that I got a bad taste in my mouth over based on a extract.
Michael Tomasky reminds me too much of Joe Taylor...Open Source Politics is void now or I'd link you directly to his ignorance...the text of the OSP post is also here; I think I saved the original OSP post with comments. I suspect Joe was a college freshman at the time...I suspect (assuming he's still politically active and actually trying to learn something) he would reach the point where he was capable of writing something like Party in Search of a Notion.
Courtesy of Liberal Oasis.
Here’s the list of Dem and Independent Senators who backed censure for Clinton (S. Res. 44 in the 106th Congress) and have yet to back censure for Bush:
Daniel Akaka Max Baucus Byron Dorgan Dick Durbin Dianne Feinstein Daniel Inouye Jim Jeffords Ted Kennedy John Kerry* Herb Kohl Mary Landrieu Carl Levin Joe Lieberman Blanche Lincoln Barbara Mikulski Patty Murray Jack Reed Harry Reid Jay Rockefeller Chuck Schumer Ron Wyden
The four GOPers who backed censure for Clinton are:
Pete Domenici Mitch Mcconnell Gordon Smith Olympia Snowe
*LiberalOasis was told by a Kerry staffer that Kerry supported the Feingold resolution, yet Kerry has not made any formal statements and he ducked reporters’ questions about it yesterday.
For the record, it's here. But that's not what this post is about.
Everything you ever wanted to know about how our government and media work
This Feingold Censure Resolution is unmaking the hideous underbelly of almost every Washington institution as vividly as anything that can be recalled. Each of the rotted Beltway branches is playing so true to form that the distinct forms of corruption and dishonesty which characterize each of them are standing nakedly revealed. As ugly of a sight as it is, it is highly instructive to watch it all unfold.
...So, to summarize what our survey reveals: We have Democrats running and hiding, afraid to stand up to the President even when he gets caught breaking the law. We have the media mindlessly reporting GOP talking points even when they are factually false and when the falsehood could be easily verified with about 60 seconds of research. And we have Republicans accusing those few Democrats who are willing to criticize the Leader of being on the side of Terrorists, while the media passes along those false accusations without comment and Democrats run away and hide some more, never showing any offense or anger at all from watching Republicans accuse them of treason.
That's our system of government, in a nutshell. These events over the last 24 hour news cycle, by themselves, would be sufficient to teach a Civics class how our national political institutions work right now.
In Time Magazine, Michael Duffy asks the musical questionCan Hillary Join the Club? The Senator is laying the groundwork for a possible presidential run in 2008, but is she too polarizing to win it?
No. I much prefer she follow in Ted Kennedy's footsteps as the person everyone assumed would run but got smart at the end.
Good.
The ideal response would be to ignore that crap, don't run...and use that fat bank account to support a candidate. I don't want to vote for Mrs. Clinton.
But this is a particularly nasty show ol' Chris has orchestrated.
Something has been gnawing at me since Senators Spector and DeWine submitted their bills intended to excuse the president's domestic wire tapping programs.
First, the relevant part of Article 1, Section 9 of the Constitution:
No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.
There's a bunch more, but they are cleanly severable.
Next, the definition of ex post facto
Formulated, enacted, or operating retroactively. Used especially of a law.
For a textualist or strict constructionist, that should be enough to make the case. For you pesky folks need an explanation, a bit of discussion about the meaning of "ex post facto law" in Constitutional law.
Justice Scalia gave a talk this past Tuesday about using foreign law as precedent in Constitutional cases at the American Enterprise Institute. He's a kinda boring speaker, entirely apart from the subject matter. The audience is full of students trying to catch Scalia on current political issues.
This was not a good idea, people. Not like I like Scalia-the-judicial-philosophy at all But good lord, you can't bridge the gap between topics as widely sepearted as "foreign law as precedent in Constitutional cases" and "what do you think of Bush's reason to invade Iraq?" Frankly, even questions about the unitary executive excuse, though a Constitutional topic, is off topic enough for you to look silly as hell as he blows you off.
You're not goin
He tries to be "even handed"Gonzales, in his testimony, made an effective rhetorical point by citing examples going back to Washington, Lincoln, Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt of presidents ordering interception of wartime communications -- on their own authority.
...and he actually succeeds
Sleight of Hand Bush buried detailed Social Security privatization proposals in his budget. Can the surprise move jump-start bipartisan reform? By Allan Sloan Updated: 12:09 p.m. ET Feb. 8, 2006
Feb. 8, 2006 - If you read enough numbers, you never know what you'll find. Take President Bush and private Social Security accounts.
Last year, even though Bush talked endlessly about the supposed joys of private accounts, he never proposed a specific plan to Congress and never put privatization costs in the budget. But this year, with no fanfare whatsoever, Bush stuck a big Social Security privatization plan in the federal budget proposal, which he sent to Congress on Monday.
Quote of note: the cuts they want to extend the most — special low tax rates for investment income — overwhelmingly enrich the rich and will be even harder to justify in the years to come, when, by all reasonable estimates, the country's financial outlook will have deteriorated further.
President Bush had it exactly backwards in his speech Tuesday night when he exhorted lawmakers to keep cutting taxes. He noted that when the going gets tough, leaders are tempted to take stands that are crowd pleasing yet counterproductive, like championing protectionism in the face of global competition. Fair enough.
Corzine pick could signal commitment to black voters
Last year, as chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Jon Corzine headed his party's effort to elect Democrats to the U.S. Senate. Next week, in his new role as New Jersey's governor-elect, he'll name which Democrat will replace him when he takes office in January.
In choosing someone to fill the vacancy created by his move from Washington to Trenton, Corzine will disappoint many of the hopefuls who are unabashedly pursuing the job. He also could make history — and at the same time keep his party from repeating it.
Why the Murtha Gambit Will Backfire By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor, AlterNet Posted on November 30, 2005, Printed on November 30, 2005
On the surface, it seemed like a brilliant political strategy for the Democrats. Send out a decorated war veteran (Bronze Star, two Purple Hearts), a former Marine with an impeccable pro-military record -- the first Vietnam veteran to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives, in fact -- to be the point man for the bring-the-troops-home-now assault.
And it seems to have worked brilliantly.
...The Murtha gambit sets a dangerous precedent for what kind of person can take the lead in criticizing the nation on matters of war and security. It concedes that the only moral voice who can oppose a war is someone who supported and/or participated in a past war. The flaw in the argument is that the Bush Administration and much of the national Republican leadership couldn't care less about distinguished past service; their strategy is to kneecap the opposition, using whatever methods, fair or foul, that come to mind.
Quote of note:
There are profound moral reasons for giving children the best resources. But taxpayers and legislators need only focus on sheer economics: Helping children succeed the first time around is cost-effective. Good public programs enrich children and lessen the need for adult remediation.
What's good for children November 28, 2005
'MOTHERHOOD AND childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection." These are the words in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the United Nations in 1948. A 2005 update might seek to protect all children whether rich or poor. For the last several years, children have been riding a roller coaster of state and federal budget cuts. For many it has been a downhill plunge into scarce resources.
Understatement of note:
White House counselor Dan Bartlett acknowledged the concern. "I do think that it demonstrates that if you spend enough money and repeat the charge enough, the old political axiom in Washington can come true: that charges left unanswered can stick," he said.
Dude, that's the entire Repoublican political strategy. Bush has a different problem, though...the "charges" can't be responded to honestly.
Since this is about public relations instead of honest debate, and since Republicans can only repeat their previously exhausted rhetoric, I suggest dated film clips of major Republican spokesmen (Cheney is a particularly good target) saying the same things over and over. Like, show a clip of the first time Cheney said "stay the course" followed by the death toll at the time, followed by as many examples presented the same way as deemed appropriate.
Bush is vulnerable to similar framing. And you can also string together clips of major Republican spokesmen repeating the same language for the same talking points to frame them as unthinking obedient clones.
Anyway...
Bush Faces Dual Challenges on Iraq By Dan Balz Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, November 25, 2005; A01
Democrats should abstain on the basis the bill is not a serious offering. Not even vote against it...just abstain.
Scooter Libby's lawyers are going to get SOMEbody screwed.
Woodward Was Told of Plame More Than Two Years Ago By Jim VandeHei and Carol D. Leonnig Washington Post Staff Writers Wednesday, November 16, 2005; Page A01
Washington Post Assistant Managing Editor Bob Woodward testified under oath Monday in the CIA leak case that a senior administration official told him about CIA operative Valerie Plame and her position at the agency nearly a month before her identity was disclosed.
In a more than two-hour deposition, Woodward told Special Counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald that the official casually told him in mid-June 2003 that Plame worked as a CIA analyst on weapons of mass destruction, and that he did not believe the information to be classified or sensitive, according to a statement Woodward released yesterday.
A Tent Divided
...What Republicans desperately needed after Mr. Clinton was an international enemy threatening enough to replace the Soviets, and by a remarkable turn of events, they soon had one. The terrorist attacks of 2001 not only unified the country for a brief time; they also gave the Bush administration a grace period of more than three years in which anti-terrorist rallying cries were sufficiently compelling to paper over factional and ideological differences that the party ultimately would have to confront.
The grace period has ended. The results in Virginia, California and Colorado are the first serious warning to Republicans that they now must deal with political life largely as it existed on Sept. 10, 2001, and for nearly a decade before that. They are a hyper-extended family whose members are starting to realize that they have very little to say to each other. The internecine arguments over the year's Supreme Court nominees and last week's House budget bickering only serve to underscore the discomfort.
Quote of note:
Conservative evangelical churches were able to deliver voters for Bush in much the same way, and for much the same reasons, that labor unions and political machines like New York's Tammany Hall were once able to deliver votes for the Democrats: They offer material benefits to people with nowhere else to turn, and that is easily parlayed into votes at election time.
'Faith talk' and Tammany Hall Rosa Brooks November 12, 2005
DEMOCRATS SHOULD be wary of jumping to conclusions in the wake of Democrat Timothy Kaine's Virginia gubernatorial victory. Kaine didn't shy away from discussing his religious beliefs during his campaign, and this seems to be leading party strategists to conclude that Democrats can win in culturally conservative states if they talk about deeply held religious beliefs.
They remembered that each Senator has powers inherant to the position. They remembered they don't have to be ignored.
Now if they remember it takes a two-thirds majority to change the Senate rules, they can't be bluffed.
Mad About You By Dana Milbank Wednesday, November 2, 2005; Page A05
In the genteel club that is the United States Senate, Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) had a screaming temper tantrum yesterday.
...The Senate follows a strict script, written by the majority leader himself, who decides what legislation will be debated and who will speak when. But yesterday, using the arcane provisions of Standing Rule 21 for the first time in 25 years, the minority party seized the agenda and forced the chamber to close its doors until Republicans agreed to a probe of how the administration handled prewar Iraq intelligence.
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