7.27.2009

The Primary Effect


This Nate Silver graph is cool (via Yglesias). And as Matt says, it shows why it would be a good thing for health care if Chuck Grassley had an opponent in the general election because it would push him more to the center. Instead, all he has is a wacko right-winger to pull him further to the right (and against healthcare) in the GOP primary.

7.26.2009

Inside Girl


Robert Draper has a piece in the NYT Magazine on Obama's inside adviser Valerie Jarrett.

7.25.2009

Lincoln's Emancipation


Chris Hitchens has a fantastic review in the Atlantic of a new 2 volume biography on Lincoln by Michael Burlingame. Read it all, but here's a choice cut:
Lincoln’s own experience of legal bondage and hard usage is very graphically told: not only did his father’s improvidence deprive him of many necessities, but it resulted in his being hired out as a menial to be a hewer of wood and drawer of water for his father’s rough and miserly neighbors. The law as it then stood made children the property of their father, so young Abraham was “hired out” only in the sense of chattel, since he was obliged to turn over his wages. From this, and from the many groans and sighs that are reported of the boy (who still struggled to keep reading, an activity feared and despised by his father, as it was by the owner of Frederick Douglass), we receive a prefiguration of the politician who declared in 1856, “I used to be a slave.” In Lincoln’s unconcealed resentment toward his male parent, we get an additional glimpse of the man who also declared, in 1858, “As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master.”

Ta-Nehisi Coates is the Best Voice on the Gates Arrest

If you've been following the Gates arrest controversy, then you should be reading Ta-Nehisi Coates. His blog has consistently been the best, most realistic, thoughtful insight into what the implications are. I've been dissapointed with liberals on this, and shocked at the GOP response. Is it not a fact that racial profiling exists? That there are racial undercurrents that should be discussed regardless of this was a product of those undercurrents? I really feel for Crowley, I think he's in a horrible spot and I feel for the guy. But I've been bewildered with how many people are willing to write off race altogether and act like this was just regular police work.

Anyway, read Coates. And this post is good example. But read up on his earlier ones.
It's worth watching Obama's statement. I really can't begrudge him--his priority is health-care. Me, on the other hand, I'm pretty exhausted. What follows is the raw. Not much logic. Just some thoughts on how it feels.

I feel pretty stupid for going hard on this, and stupider for defending what Obama won't really defend himself. I should have left it at one post. Evidently Obama, Crowley and Gates are talking about getting a beer together. I hope they have a grand old time.

The rest of us are left with a country where, by all appearances, officers are well within their rights to arrest you for sassing them. Which is where we started. I can't explain why, but this is the sort of thing that makes you reflect on your own precarious citizenship. I mean, the end of all of this scares the hell out of me.

I was thinking earlier this week about the connection between all of this and the Senate almost passing a bill which would make it legal to carry a concealed weapon in any state, as long as your home state approves. Maybe there is no line between to the two, or maybe I just haven't connected them yet.

In his book Crabgrass Frontier, Kenneth Jackson talks about citizens accepting the responsibility for democracy. He's discussing red-lining, as I recall, and notes that it would be wrong to see government policy toward black neighborhoods as a shadowy conspiracy to destroy black communities. It's much darker than that. The government represents the people, and thus one must see red-lining, housing segregation, and housing covenants not as the machinations of bureaucrats, but as a manifestation of popular will. My reading on Reconstruction has led me the same way. Rutherford B. Hays did not so much fail, as the country made a choice--we'd rather kill Indians and expand, then protect citizens from terrorism.

When we think about the cops, it's scary, on one level, to conclude that a cop can basically arrest you on a whim. It's scarier still to think that this is what Americans want, that this country is as we've made it. And then finally it's even scarier to understand that no president can change that. It's not why he's there. He is there to pass health-reform--not make us post-racist, or post-police power, or post-whatever. Only the people can do that. And they don't seem particularly inclined. Here is what the election of Barack Obama says about race--white people, in general, are willing to hire a black guy for the ultimate job. That's a big step. But it isn't any more than what it says.

I hope Crowley, Gates and Obama get that beer soon. They need to pour out a little something for Shem Walker. We can't all go to Harvard.
I have been talking too much lately. I need to get back to the Civil War...
UPDATE: Also, watch this video from Morning Joe ... it defines the argument well, and just say I put myself squarely with Carlos and Harold Ford. Mike Barnacle looks ridiculous - it's not a crime to be mad at in your home. It's not a crime to be mad at a cop on your curtilige either. Trust me.

7.24.2009

Kudos to Bush


Time has a good article on the last days of the Bush administration concerning the heavy push by Cheney to convince Bush to pardon Scooter Libby. A lot of inside legal discussions, and it makes Bush and his counsel Fred Fielding look good.
And there was a darker possibility. As a former Bush senior aide explains, "I'm sure the President and [chief of staff] Josh [Bolten] and Fred had a concern that somewhere, deep in there, there was a cover-up." It had been an article of faith among Cheney's critics that the Vice President wanted a pardon for Libby because Libby had taken the fall for him in the Fitzgerald probe. In his grand-jury testimony reviewed by TIME, Libby denied three times that Cheney had directed him to leak Plame's CIA identity in mid-2003. Though his recollection of other events in the same time frame was lucid and detailed, on at least 20 occasions, Libby could not recall details of his talks with Cheney about Plame's place of employment or questions the Vice President raised privately about Wilson's credibility. Some Bush officials wondered whether Libby was covering up for Cheney's involvement in the leak of Plame's identity.

The GOP Fightsong

Can be found here.

7.23.2009

Obama Addresses Adults

Jon Cohn describes how Obama talked to the American people like adults last night (and with a fantastic breadth of knowledge - which, by the way, is a great change of pace after the last 8 years). Now, will it open him to attacks? Or will citizens engage in the discussion and analysis like adults.

Also - the Blue Dog Dems are finally getting a BUNCH of money pumped into their PAC from Phrma and ex-GOP big oil man Billy Tauzin.

7.22.2009

"What's in it for me?"

David Leonardt over at the NYT has a MUST READ piece on how hard it is to explain what's wrong w/ the health care system to the public. And the difficulty shows in the recent poll numbers showing the public less excited about changes to the system. Read it all, but here's a good part:

Our health care system is engineered, deliberately or not, to resist change. The people who pay for it — you and I — often don’t realize that they’re paying for it. Money comes out of our paychecks, in withheld taxes and insurance premiums, before we ever see it. It then flows to doctors, hospitals and drug makers without our realizing that it was our money to begin with.

The doctors, hospitals and drug makers use the money to treat us, and we of course do see those treatments. If anything, we want more of them. They are supposed to make us healthy, and they appear to be free. What’s not to like?

The immediate task facing Mr. Obama — in his news conference on Wednesday night and beyond — is to explain that the health care system doesn’t really work the way it seems to. He won’t be able to put it in such blunt terms. But he will need to explain how a typical household, one that has insurance and thinks it always will, is being harmed.

The United States now devotes one-sixth of its economy to medicine. Divvy that up, and health care will cost the typical household roughly $15,000 this year, including the often-invisible contributions by employers. That is almost twice as much as two decades ago (adjusting for inflation). It’s about $6,500 more than in other rich countries, on average.

We may not be aware of this stealth $6,500 health care tax, but if you take a moment to think, it makes sense. Over the last 20 years, health costs have soared, and incomes have grown painfully slowly. The two trends are directly connected: employers had to spend more money on benefits, leaving less for raises.

In exchange for the $6,500 tax, we receive many things. We get cutting-edge research and heroic surgeries. But we also get fabulous amounts of waste — bureaucratic and medical.

Jay-Z vs. North Korea


Marc Lynch over at Foreign Policy (and GW) has been analyzing the feud between Jay-Z and The Game through the lens of international relations hegemony ... and it's pretty cool. NPR picked up on it and interviewed him this morning.

7.17.2009

Card Check Dies in the Senate

...quietly....

RNC Porn and Anti-Semetic Merchandise

(via Magic Shell) This is just weird. The RNC has a parody website set up where you can spend "obama bucks" (obviously trying to drive home how Obama is squandering all your - and your kids' - money) ... but the weirdest part is what the RNC will let you buy!

7.16.2009

The Case for Rationing Health Care


Philosopher Peter Singer has a good piece in the NYT Mag on rationing health care. It's typical Singer - challenges your assumptions and makes a good case against them.

7.14.2009

White Male Exceptionalism

Gene Robinson explains why I get so upset with Sessions, etc. and the GOP on this Sotomayor thing! And he's got critical race theory correct as well.

Republicans' outrage, both real and feigned, at Sotomayor's musings about how her identity as a "wise Latina" might affect her judicial decisions is based on a flawed assumption: that whiteness and maleness are not themselves facets of a distinct identity. Being white and male is seen instead as a neutral condition, the natural order of things. Any "identity" -- black, brown, female, gay, whatever -- has to be judged against this supposedly "objective" standard.Thus it is irrelevant if Justice Samuel Alito talks about the impact of his background as the son of Italian immigrants on his rulings -- as he did at his confirmation hearings -- but unforgivable for Sotomayor to mention that her Puerto Rican family history might be relevant to her work. Thus it is possible for Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., to say with a straight face that heritage and experience can have no bearing on a judge's work, as he posited in his opening remarks on Monday, apparently believing that the white male justices he has voted to confirm were somehow devoid of heritage and bereft of experience.

7.12.2009

Urban Gardening Done Right


(via Syd O) This is a great NYT article on Will Allen of Growing Power farms up in Milwaukee. A great encouragement and something I endorse wholeheartedly.

7.10.2009

Palin's Reason for Resigning?

Matt Continetti has the interview with her at Weekly Standard. Here's the funny part.
The fierce reaction surprised Palin. She is acutely aware of what the media and her opponents say about her. She heard some people say that the timing of her speech was odd. Not so. "Independence Day is so significant to me--it's sort of a way for me to illustrate that I want freedom for Alaskans to progress, and for me personally," she told me during a telephone interview on July 9. Others said the motivation for her resignation was not clear. "I'm like, 'Holy Jeez, I spoke for 20 minutes' " giving reasons, she said.
Then she pretty much goes on to say that she can't fight for what she believes in with all the hassle of the Governor's office and opposition she's gotten since the election (so she's rather fight as a private citizen than from the throne?) - and she believes she's accomplished more in 2 years than most Governors do in a full term (true - I can't think of another Alaskan Gov. to run for Prez).

MUST READ: if you want to get real, non-Kool Aid, assessment of Palin - read Peggy Noonan in the WSJ today.

7.08.2009

Toons




sorry.... toons are all I have time for right now.