Republican Blowback

Ken AshfordObama Opposition, Sex/Morality/Family Values1 Comment

I (among many) have been noting the extreme rhetoric exhibited by the right wing pundits and Fox News.  Jon Stewart brought his A game last night to address this:

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To give you a sense of just how BAD Fox News has become with its paranoia, even the host of the extreme right wing blog Little Green Footballs is taking notice.  And conservative columnist Michael Cohen warns:

Populist agitators such as Beck are nothing new, particularly in times of economic instability — and they aren’t restricted to the right. During the Bush years, liberal anger over the administration’s policies bred bizarre conspiracy theories of its own, like accusations that the Sept. 11 attacks were an inside job. [NOTE from Ken: I don't think those people were liberal — more likely libertarian — but in any event, none of the them had an hour on television, or radio, every night]

However, Beck’s paranoid style is seeping into the discourse of conservative politics, which should be of concern to Republicans. The charge that President Barack Obama is a socialist, first raised in the 2008 campaign, has become a de rigueur epithet heard not only on talk radio but in the halls of Congress. Calls by China to consider replacing the dollar as the global reserve currency have been met by bizarre warnings from congressional Republicans that the Obama administration wants to scrap the greenback for a new global currency. Thirty-four House Republicans have even signed on to a constitutional amendment that would prevent this from occurring, though no such proposal is being considered.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has joined in, decrying the Obama administration’s proposed changes to charitable tax deductions as a “clear” effort to “replace people’s right to worship together with a government-­dominated system.”

The Republicans find themselves caught between two countervailing forces: the need to craft a policy agenda that appeals to middle-class Americans and the need to maintain the support of an angry base of voters that is alienated from, and suspicious of, the new president. 

***

Over the years, the GOP scored political benefit by playing on the resentments and fears of voters, but after the wreckage of the Bush years, Americans seem more interested in solutions than scapegoats. Conspiracy-laden rhetoric is unlikely to resonate far beyond the party’s core base of supporters. Moreover, it’s hard to imagine many Americans trusting a party so deeply influenced by its most extreme fringe.

If anything, catering to the far right risks becoming a millstone — a cheap way to score political points without having to do the critical spade work necessary to rebuild the party. As the GOP’s much-derided recent budget submission (which continues the party’s mantra of tax cuts, good; government spending, bad) demonstrates, there is still significant work to be done.

Republicans need to make a decision: Are they going to cater to the paranoid fears of self-styled “truth tellers” like Beck, or are they going to present a substantive policy alternative to Democratic rule? For the good of the party, and the country, let’s hope it’s the latter.

[UPDATE:  Kos has a must-read on the bizarreness of the rightwing paranoia]

This paranoia is no more clear than from many GOP politicians.  Take for example, Rep. Steve King (R) of Iowa, one of Congress' most right-wing members, who told conservatives this week that the state should be in a position of "promoting marriage," but if gay people can get married, it will lead to the downfall of civilization.

Speaking at an anti-abortion event in eastern Iowa Monday night, U.S. Rep. Steve King, R-Kiron, warned that legalized same-sex marriage would lead to a complete dissolution of society and religion.

"I will tell you that I first came into this political arena with the belief innocent human life was the most important thing that I could be involved in," said King, a Kiron Republican who represents the 5th Congressional District in western Iowa. "I still believe that is the most important value. But I also recognize that if we don't save marriage, we can't remain pro-life.

"The values we have we pour through marriage into our children and into the next generation. Our religious values. Our values of faith. Our values. Our work ethic. Our entire culture comes through a man and a woman joined in holy matrimony, being blessed with children and pouring those values into the children and then living vicariously through them as they go off and we are blessed with grandchildren."

To hear these people, you sometimes wonder where they are coming from.  It's as if, in their minds, the institution of traditional marriage actually prevents homosexuality.  As if the only thing standing between "our values" and a world full of Richard Simmons and kd langs is the fact that everyone is "supposed" to marry someone of the opposite sex.

The question has been asked countless times in online forums, on TV, and in blogs…. and there has been no answer: "Exactly HOW does even a single gay marriage lead to a breakdown of one, two, or the majority of opposite-sex marriages?"

Family Research Council Responds To Vermont Vote To Recognize Gay Marriages

Ken AshfordGodstuff, Sex/Morality/Family Values1 Comment

Tony Perkins:

Family Research Council (FRC) President Tony Perkins today condemned the vote of the Vermont State Legislature to overturn the Governor’s veto on same-sex “marriage” as well as the vote by the District of Columbia City Council to recognize same-sex marriages performed in the 50 states.

“Same-sex ‘marriage’ is a movement driven by wealthy homosexual activists and a liberal elite determined to destroy not only the institution of marriage, but democracy as well. Time and again, we see when citizens have the opportunity to vote at the ballot box, they consistently opt to support traditional marriage,” said Perkins.

“The vote today by the D.C. City Council was a direct affront to the federal Defense of Marriage Act. The radical Left wants to destroy the traditional union of one man and one woman across the country and they will not rest until they do so.

For the record, I support gay marriage equality.  That said:

  1. I am not wealthy.
  2. I am not homosexual.
  3. I am not an activist other than I support some things, and don't support other things.  All I have is a blog, and half the time, I don't even know why I bother.
  4. I am not a member of the "liberal elite".  Again, I'm just a guy with a blog.
  5. I have no intention of destroying the institution of marriage, nor would I know how to even if I did.  I think it's a great institution, which is why I favor people of all sexual persuasions to marry (unlike Tony Perkins).
  6. I have no intention of destroying democracy. (Odd comment coming from Perkins, by the way.  Weren't the passage of those laws in Vermont and D.C. democratic?)
  7. I am not aware of any one in my personal sphere, or in the public sphere, who meets all, or even most, of the criteria listed above.  Who is Tony Perkins talking about?
  8. I don't want to destroy the traditional union of one man and one woman.  In fact, I have a personal vested interest in "one man-one woman unions".  (And one man-two woman "unions", depending on my mood).

And the social conservative community can't understand why their popularity is dwindling.

The Curious Copyright Case (of Benjamin Button)

Ken AshfordPopular CultureLeave a Comment

Hmmmm:

Warner Bros. is threatening Bollywood filmmakers with a copyright lawsuit if they develop a remake of "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button."

According to reports last month, Bollywood actors Akshay Kumar and Aishwarya Rai would star in a film titled "Action Replay," wherein a man ages in reverse, just like the title character in the Hollywood film starring Brad Pitt. The Indian version has a possible release date in November.

Warner has placed advertisements in the Times of India and other papers stating that the film studio is the joint author and co-owner of the copyright of the film, Agence France-Presse reports.

Note to Warner Brothers lawyers — your copyright lawsuit threat is meaningless.  You cannot copyright general concepts.  A man who ages backwards is a concept.

Plus, it's not even your concept.  "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" is based on an F. Scott Fitzgerald short story.  And that story is in the public domain (which is why you can read it online for free).

Enough Is Enough

Ken AshfordCongress, Election 2008Leave a Comment

Six months after the November elections, we read this today:

This has to be a bit ironic: In the three-judge trial that Norm Coleman (R) asked for, it turns out that Al Franken's lead has grown, after the addition of some 350 absentee ballots to the count.

Coleman's camp, of course, wanted a larger number of absentee ballots to be considered than just those 350.

Here's the AP's write-up: "Democrat Al Franken's lead in Minnesota's U.S. Senate race has grown to 312 votes after hundreds of absentee ballots were added to the race. Franken led by 225 votes going into Tuesday's count of the absentees. He gained more from the 351 absentees that the judges allowed than Coleman did. Other issues are still pending in Coleman's lawsuit, and he has said he will appeal to the state Supreme Court if he loses."

Crafty lawyers can keep this "disputed" election tied up in courts for years.  But with every court challenge Coleman makes, he loses.  It's time that Minnesotans had representation in the Senate.  This silliness has gone on long enough.  Soon, a court is going to have to step in and put an end to this charade.

Iowa, The Trailblazer

Ken AshfordConstitutionLeave a Comment

Some are astounded that the Iowa courts were so forward-thinking when they recognized, last week, the right of gays to be married.

But I was re-reading the court's opinion, and noticed that the judges would like you all to know that Iowa has always been at the forefront of applying equal protection to minorities.

Iowaopinion 

Good for you, Hawkeyes.

Defense Department Doing The Right Thing

Ken AshfordEconomy & Jobs & Deficit, War on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

These two graphs on United States defense spending are worth 2000 words:

3-7-03bud-f1 

USmilitaryspending 

Yeah, there's a war on terrorism and we're in Iraq and Afghanistan, but do we really need to spend over $400 billion, or 20% of our budget on defense?

Now, defense secretary Robert Gates' proposed defense budget hasn't actually cut defense spending, but he seems to have his focus in perspective.  Gone are wasteful Cold War defense programs.  Gone are huge expenditures for, say, revamping the Navy (I mean, think about it — to what extent is the next generation of submarines going to keep this country save against terrorists?  Not much).  Huge missile defense "shields" are scaled back to more realistic missile defense programs.  

The Reality-Based Community's Mark Kleiman gives some specifics:

"New DoD budget in brief: Less F-22's, gold-plated Presidential helicopters, cruisers, amphibians, aircraft carriers, missile defense. More Predator drones, intelligence/ surveillance/ reconnaissance, special forces, Army choppers, F-35s, F-18s. You'd almost think that this budget was planned in the interests of national security rather than either defense contractor and lobbyist satisfaction or providing new toys for the boys. So far, Obama's decision to keep Gates is looking pretty good."  

Gates' emphasis seems to be on counterinsurgency programs — i.e., programs specifically tailored to the present threat to the United States which aren't in the form of great nations like the "Soviet Menace":

Gates shifted the budget request to allow for institutionalized support for irregular warfare — a key goal of the generation of counterinsurgency theorist-practitioners who have emerged from Iraq and Afghanistan. Support for programs desired by counterinsurgents, such as training and mentoring partner militaries in counterinsurgency, have been funded through ad-hoc budgeting during the two wars, but Gates heralded an end to that practice. “Our contemporary wartime needs must receive steady long-term funding and a bureaucratic constituency similar to conventional modernization programs,” he said. Training partner militaries, for instance, will be part of a $500 million effort to “boost global partnership capacity efforts.”

Seems like a win-win.  Better defense for (one hopes in the future) less money.

UPDATEAmericaBlog correctly sees this as a "Nixon going to China" moment.

Pssst… We’re NOT A “Christian Nation”

Ken AshfordConstitution, GodstuffLeave a Comment

We never were.  Read the Constitution.

But Obama is ruffling some feathers on the right, because he actually said that at a press conference.

At a press conference in Turkey, President Obama casually rebuked the old chestnut that the United States is a Judeo-Christian nation.

"One of the great strengths of the United States," the President said, "is … we have a very large Christian population — we do not consider ourselves a Christian nation or a Jewish nation or a Muslim nation. We consider ourselves a nation of citizens who are bound by ideals and a set of values."

He's right, but it quickly led to a rightwing freakout.  John Hawkins of the Right Wing News:

Maybe it's understandable Obama feels that way since he spent twenty years' worth of Sundays at an anti-white, pseudo-Christian hate group instead of going to a real Christian church, but the majority of Americans, myself included, do consider this to be a Christian nation.

This country was founded by Christians seeking religious freedom and Christian principles shaped our founding documents and our culture.

This nation would not be a great nation without Christianity and it will not remain a great or moral country without the majority of its citizens remaining Christian.

That's not to say that there aren't great or moral people of other religions or even great or moral people who have no religion at all, but what's true of individuals, isn't true of nations. We've seen that played out in Western Europe, which is in a rapidly increasing state of decay and we're seeing it here in the U.S. as the number of Christians decreases.

The supposed "majority of Americans…. [who] consider this to be a Christian nation" notwithstanding, it is clearly not.

Of course, Obama isn't the first to acknowledge this truism. 

In 1796, and the Treaty of Tripoli was read into the Senate record by John Adams, and it was ratified without dissent.  The treaty read in part:

Article 11. As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion; as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquillity, of Mussulmen; and, as the said States never entered into any war, or act of hostility against any Mahometan nation, it is declared by the parties, that no pretext arising from religious opinions, shall ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries.

 Why did our founding fathers hate America? </snark>

I'll give Steve Benen the last word as a fitting response to Hawkins above:

We have a secular constitution that established a secular government. Our laws separate church from state. No religious tradition enjoys official sanction over any other. Of course we're not a Christian nation or a Jewish nation or a Muslim nation.

The usual argument is that most of the U.S. population is Christian. That's true, but irrelevant. Most of the U.S. population is white — does that make the United States a "white nation"? We also hear arguments that most of the Founding Fathers were Christians. That's also true, but also irrelevant. Most of the framers were also men — does that make our country a "man's nation"?

Vermont Joins Iowa, Massachusetts and Connecticut

Ken AshfordSex/Morality/Family ValuesLeave a Comment

Gay marriage is now legal in Vermont.

But Vermont's new law is a first — it came about because elected officials chose to allow all of the consenting adults in the state to get married, not because of a court ruling or lawsuit.

Vermont governor Jim Douglas vetoed the bill yesterday, but support for it was strong.

Today, the Vermont legislature voted to override the veto. Under Vermont law, two-thirds of each chamber had to vote for override.  The veto override passed easily in the Senate — the vote was 23-5.  But only one vote made the difference in the House — it was and 100-49 to override in the House. (Yes, the vote of a person made the difference).

Vermont was the first state in the nation to legalize "civil unions" among gays.  That was nine years ago.  Today, they scrapped that to call gay marriage what it rightfully is – marriage.
 

How Are We Doing?

Ken AshfordObama & AdministrationLeave a Comment

Poll after poll after poll after poll, we see the same thing. This time, it's CBS/NY Times (MoE +/- 3): Obama's job approval is 66% and

By contrast, Republican fortunes have dropped in the first weeks of the Obama presidency; just 31 percent of respondents said they had a favorable view of the Republican Party, the lowest in the 25 years the question has been asked in New York Times/CBS News polls.

Here's a look at an aggregate of all polls asking the right direction/wrong direction question:

Pollster_406d 

That's not bad at all, especially when you consider that most of the news — economically, at least — is almost always bad.

Two key questions in the poll show that whatever Republicans think they are doing in Congress by voting against the stimulus and other things, the American people ain't happy with it:

Regardless of how you usually vote, who do you think is more likely to make the right decisions about the nation's economy — Barack Obama or the Republicans in Congress?

President Obama 63
Republicans in Congress 20

Regardless of how you usually vote, who do you think is more likely to make the right decisions about keeping the nation safe — Barack Obama or the Republicans in Congress?

President Obama 61
Republicans in Congress 27

Perhaps the GOP should climb aboard the bandwagon.

Facts That Will Make You Feel Old

Ken AshfordRandom Musings2 Comments

Ready?

  1. The film Back to the Future 2 is set five and a half years from now. (Where are the hoverboards?)
  2. The actors in The Breakfast Club are old:
    • Judd Nelson – 49
    • Molly Ringwald – 41 
    • Emilio Estevez – 46 
    • Anthony Michael Hall – 40
    • Ally Sheedy – 46 
    • … and if Paul Gleason, the teacher in charge, was still alive, he’d be 70 years old (he died in 2006)
  3. Kids who were born in 1992 can legally drive.
  4. Quantum Leap's first episode aired twenty years ago, and it was set in 1999.
  5. Ten years ago, we were all worried about Y2K.
  6. Lena Horne is 91; Ernest Borgnine (who recently appeared on the final episode of ER) is 92.  

UPDATE: These and much more like these at http://wannafeelold.tumblr.com/

Now This Calls For Some Serious Schadenfreude

Ken AshfordGodstuff, Sex ScandalsLeave a Comment

The James Dobson-led conservative religious group, Focus on The Family, has fallen on hard times.  First, their once-significant political inflluence has dwindled to almost nil, as shown by the last elections.  Secondly, they have had to undergo serious layoffs recently. 

So this can't be welcomed with much pleasure:

A Colorado Springs man who narrates the Bible in Spanish on CDs and works in the Spanish broadcasting department of Focus on the Family appeared in court Monday in Golden on two felony counts of using the Internet to lure a 15-year-old girl for sex, The Denver Post reports.

Juan Alberto Ovalle, 42, was arrested Friday when he drove to Lakewood to meet the girl — who turned out to be an undercover officer — after discussing various sexual acts he wanted to perform with her, the Jefferson County District Attorney’s Office said.

He's not just some rent-for-hire actor doing translations.  He's an actual preacher.  According to another website, Ovalle was born in the Dominican Republic, and "came to know the Lord at the age of 14". He has served as pastor and preacher in his country, the USA and other countries in Latin-America since he was 19. He also served Trans World Radio ministry and the Spanish broadcasting department of Focus on the Family.

Focus on the Family has been quick to purge audio recordings of Ovalle from its website:

Nofocusfile-580x249

Those of you who speak Spanish might enjoy this recording (mp3) of Ovalle, reading from 1 Corinthians, on the subject of unlawful fornication ("We should not commit sexual immorality, as some of them did—and in one day twenty-three thousand of them died")

The arrest was part of an underage sex sting operation.  The affidavit for his arrest, which I'll post below the fold, is… well…. NSFW.  And not very WWJD.

By the way, Ovalle was from Colorado Springs, the same community as Ted Haggard.  What is it with the evangelical community in that town?

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