Category Archives: Politics

Daily Kos: CBS/NYT poll: Support for repeal of health care provisions nearly non-existent

I’ve always said the Dem’s lost the messaging battle here and once people knew what Health Care Reform actually entailed, they would support it…

As both Greg Sargent and Kevin Drum write, the recent CBS/NYT poll did a great service to those trying to make sense of the polling of repeal of the Affordable Care Act:

Greg:

The poll first asked people a straight-up question — should we do away with the law completely, or let it stand — and found that 40 percent favor repeal, versus 48 percent who want to leave it as is. That near-split mirrors virtually all other polls that asked the question this way — they all find some solid support for repeal.

But here’s where it gets interesting. The NYT/CBS poll then asked the pro-repeal camp whether they want to “repeal all of the health care law, or only certain parts of it.” Suddenly the number who favor full repeal drops to 20 percent — one-fifth — while 18 percent peel off and say they want to repeal “certain parts.”

When they actually asked about those certain parts, “8% are opposed to everything and 11% are opposed to the individual mandate. And that’s about it. Not a single other provision was opposed by more than 1% of the respondents. Not even higher taxes! Hell, a full 14% were supposedly in favor of repeal but couldn’t name even a single provision they disliked.”

This makes the piece-by-piece strategy the Senate Dems are devising very smart.

via Daily Kos: CBS/NYT poll: Support for repeal of health care provisions nearly non-existent.

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Former Secretary of State backs US military cuts

Just think if we could refocus these funds on infrastructure, health care and education…

Trying to maintain an outdated Military Industrial Complex helped bring down the Soviet Union.  I hope someone remembers that….

The US military’s budget should be considered for cuts as current overseas operations wind down, a former Secretary of State under President George W. Bush said Sunday.

“As we draw down from Iraq and as over the next several years as we draw down from Afghanistan, I see no reason why the military shouldn’t be looked at,” Colin Powell told CNN’s Candy Crowley on “State of the Union.”

He continued, “When the Cold War ended 20 years ago, when I was chairman [of the Joint Chiefs of Staff] and Mr. Cheney was secretary of Defense, we cut the defense budget by 25 percent. And we reduced the force by 500,000 active duty soldiers, so it can be done.”

Powell, a retired four-star general in the United States Army, is among a growing number of voices in Washington advocating cuts to the $700 billion annual defense budget.

via Former Secretary of State backs US military cuts as overseas operations wind down | Raw Story.

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Rights group blasts US justice over racial gap | Raw Story

Something just isn’t right with our Criminal Justice system…

No focus on rehabilitation or drug rehab- unless you are Lindsey Lohan.

A leading rights group slammed the United States on Monday for “overwhelming” racial disparities in its criminal justice system, and shortcomings in its approach to immigration and anti-terrorism measures.

Human Rights Watch said in its annual world report that in the US prison system — which still has the world’s largest population of 2,297,400 inmates, according to the latest figures from June 2009 — black non-Hispanic males are incarcerated at a rate more than six times that of white non-Hispanic males.

The disparity “cannot be accounted for solely by differences in criminal conduct,” said HRW in its 2011 World Report.

In 2009, one in 10 black males aged 25-29 were in prison, and for Hispanic males the figure was one in 25 — for white males the figure was one in 64.

HRW also highlighted a number of positive moves in the United States to address racial disparities, noting including a new law that promises to reduce in the sentencing of cocaine offenders.

 

“US citizens enjoy a broad range of civil liberties and have recourse to a strong system of independent federal and state courts, but continuing failures — notably in the criminal justice and immigration systems and in counterterrorism law and policy — mar its human rights record,” said HRW.

via Rights group blasts US justice over racial gap | Raw Story.

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Q & A: Billy Graham on Aging, Regrets, and Evangelicals | Christianity Today

If only more religious leaders would follow his advice…

I also would have steered clear of politics. I’m grateful for the opportunities God gave me to minister to people in high places; people in power have spiritual and personal needs like everyone else, and often they have no one to talk to. But looking back I know I sometimes crossed the line, and I wouldn’t do that now.

via Q & A: Billy Graham on Aging, Regrets, and Evangelicals | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction.

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“True Grit”, “The Social Network” and The Way We Are

Great article from Frank Rich about “True Grit” and “The Social Network” and how they fit and reflect today’s times….

Here is an excerpt and a link to the full, highly recommended article:

At its core, the new “True Grit” is often surprisingly similar to the first, despite the clashing sensibilities of their directors (Henry Hathaway, a studio utility man, did the original) and the casting of an age-appropriate Mattie (Hailee Steinfeld) in lieu of the 21-year-old Kim Darby of 1969. But what leaps out this time, to the point of seeming fresh, is the fierce loyalty of the principal characters to each other (the third being a vain Texas Ranger, played by Matt Damon) and their clear-cut sense of morality and justice, even when the justice is rough. More than the first “True Grit,” the new one emphasizes Mattie’s precocious, almost obsessive preoccupation with the law. She is forever citing law-book principles, invoking lawyers and affidavits, and threatening to go to court. “You must pay for everything in this world one way or another,” says Mattie. “There is nothing free except the grace of God.”

That kind of legal and moral cost-accounting seems as distant as a tintype now. The new “True Grit” lands in an America that’s still not recovered from a crash where many of the reckless perpetrators of economic mayhem deflected any accountability and merely moved on to the next bubble, gamble or ethically dubious backroom deal. When Americans think of the law these days, they often think of a system that can easily be gamed by the rich and the powerful, starting with those who pillaged Lehman Brothers, A.I.G. and Citigroup and left taxpayers, shareholders and pensioners in the dust. A virtuous soul like Mattie would be crushed in a contemporary gold rush even if (or especially if) she fought back with the kind of civil action so prized by the 19th-century Mattie.

Talk about Two Americas. Look at “The Social Network” again after seeing “True Grit,” and you’ll see two different civilizations, as far removed from each other in ethos as Silicon Valley and Monument Valley. While “Social Network” fictionalizes Mark Zuckerberg, it mines the truth of an era — from the ability of the powerful and privileged to manipulate the system to the collapse of loyalty as a prized American virtue at the top of that economic pyramid.

In contrast to Mattie’s dictum, no one has to pay for any transgression in the world it depicts. Zuckerberg’s antagonists, Harvard classmates who accuse him of intellectual theft, and his allies, exemplified by a predatory venture capitalist, sometimes seem more entitled and ruthless than he is. The blackest joke in Aaron Sorkin’s priceless script is that Lawrence Summers, a Harvard president who would later moonlight as a hedge fund consultant, might intervene to arbitrate any ethical conflicts. You almost wish Rooster were around to get the job done.

“The Social Network” is nothing if not the true sequel to “Wall Street.” The director, David Fincher (no less brilliant than the Coens), makes the atmosphere almost as murky and poisonous as that of his serial killer movies, “Seven” and “Zodiac.” In “Social Network,” the landscape is Cambridge, Mass., but we might as well be in the pre-civilized Wild West. Instead of thieves bearing guns, we have thieves bearing depositions. Instead of actual assassinations, we have character assassinations by blog post. In place of an honorable social code, we have a social network presided over by a post-adolescent billionaire whose business card reads “I’m CEO … Bitch!”

This hits too close to home. No one should have been surprised that those looking for another America once again have been finding it in “True Grit.”

More:  http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/23/opinion/23rich.html?_r=1&ref=frankrich

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Twelve Concrete Ways To Live A ‘Compassionate Life’ : NPR

Interesting article about a new book from NPR…

From Confucius to Oprah, people have preached compassion for centuries. But how often is it put into practice? Karen Armstrong believes religion, which should advocate for compassionate living, is often part of the problem. In Twelve Steps To A Compassionate Life, she describes ways to add kindness to daily routines.

AND

“The religions,” she says, “which should be making a major contribution to one of the chief tasks of our generation — which is to build a global community, where people of all opinions and all ethnicities can live together in harmony — are seen as part of the problem, not as part of the solution.”

Despair is a dangerous thing, because once people lose hope, they can resort to extreme measures.

The golden rule, a commonality throughout religion and guiding force for compassion, “asks you to look into your own heart, discover what gives you pain, and then refuse under any circumstance whatsoever to inflict that pain on anyone else.” It’s tricky, because each situation and individual must be evaluated differently.

But making space for the other “in our minds and our hearts and our policies” is essential to Armstrong. “We are always talking about the importance of democracy. But I think in our perilously divided world, we need global democracy, where all people’s voices are heard, not just those of the rich and the powerful.”

And Armstrong willingly answers the charge that her prescription is naive. Think of Martin Luther King Jr., of Gandhi, of Nelson Mandela, she says. “One sees what one person can do,” the tremendous impact a decision to seek reconciliation, not revenge, as Mandela chose. “You have to be optimistic,” Armstrong says. “Because when optimism fails and despair takes over … then you’ve got a problem.”

MORE:   Twelve Concrete Ways To Live A ‘Compassionate Life’ : NPR.

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Did Keith Olbermann Bolt MSNBC to Create Media Empire? | TheWrap.com

Interesting…

There has to be more here than we know so far.  Could this be it?

It was Keith Olbermann’s decision to leave his high-profile perch at MSNBC, TheWrap has learned. The outspoken host abruptly announced his departure on Friday evening, sending shock waves through the cable news world.

But the sudden departure has a history, and the timing does not rule out a preemptive MSNBC move. The gadfly commentator first told the network last April that he wanted to leave and began negotiating his exit then, according to an individual with knowledge of the situation.

Olbermann abandoned the notion of leaving at that time but revived his plans in recent weeks with new representation from the talent agency ICM.

With two years left on his $7 million a year contract, Olbermann was seeking a full exit package but he really has his eye on creating his own media empire in the style of Huffington Post, according to the individual. That way, Olbermann would control his own brand and, in his view, potentially earn far more as an owner.

via Did Keith Olbermann Bolt MSNBC to Create Media Empire? | TheWrap.com.

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DavidMixner.com – Is America Becoming The Ugly Step Child Of High Speed Rail?

Since I’ve been on six flights in 48 hours, this seems appropriate to me.  I truly wish we had a rail system that was a reasonable alternative to flying.

I still can’t believe the Government is not willing to invest in infrastructure improvements.  We are so far behind the rest of the world in so many areas- especially high speed rail.

And much of our existing infrastructure is crumbling.

Infrastructure investment is not only good for the future, it’s good for the present.  Infrastructure investment=Jobs= Personal Spending= Increased Tax Revenues

Seems a no-brainer to me…

From DavidMixner.com:

Excellent advanced infrastructure is a sign of a nation’s ability to compete in the world. President Dwight D. Eisenhower saw the German Autobahns and insisted that for America to be strong we had to build the interstate highway system. Within years, Americans were able to abandon unreliable two lane highways (Route 66) traveling across country for sleek fast roadways.

Many now believe that high speed rail lines are the key to success for the future. If that is the case, then America is really hurting. We have one of the worst high speed rail plans in the world and almost none of them have been implemented. We have the best opportunity in California which seems to be moving rapidly ahead with its system. Then there is the Northeast Corridor with a modified high speed system in its Acela.

More:   DavidMixner.com – Live From Hell’s Kitchen.

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Jefferson supported government-run health care

Interesting…

This could make some heads explode…

From DailyKos.com

As I notedhere yesterday, the comparison between this 1798 measure and the individual mandate is imperfect. The 1798 act was a tax — mandatory for all merchant marine sailors to pay if they wanted to work — that was used to support the marine hospital system they used if they got sick or injured. But as Ezra Klein notes, this was in many ways similar to the system underlying the idea of Medicare-for-all — they paid taxes in exchange for government run insurance.

And it had the support of the Tea Party demi-God himself, Thomas Jefferson.

via Daily Kos: Jefferson supported government-run health care.

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Trust in Fox News plummets: poll | Raw Story

Could people actually be getting wise to this?

In the space of one year, Fox News has lost its perch as the most trusted TV news network in the US and is now average at best, a new survey has found.

A poll gauging public trust in TV news has found that PBS is the most trusted name in news, while trust in Fox News has dropped significantly.

According to a survey from Public Policy Polling, “a year ago a plurality of Americans said they trusted Fox News. Now a plurality of them don’t.”

In a survey taken a year ago, PPP found that Fox was the most trusted news network, with 49 percent saying they trusted the network, and 37 percent saying they did not. In the new poll, 42 percent said they trusted the network while 46 percent disagreed.

The new reigning champion is PBS, which was not included in last year’s inaugural poll. The public broadcaster was found to be trusted by 50 percent of respondents, and distrusted by 30 percent — the closest any news network has come to gaining the trust of a majority of Americans.

 

Fox News has found itself in roughly the same place, trust-wise, as NBC and CNN, but still above ABC and CBS, who were trusted by 35 and 36 percent, respectively, in the latest poll.

PPP notes that trust in the network declined only marginally among conservatives, from 75 percent to 72 percent. “But moderates and liberals have both had a strong increase in their level of distrust for the network — a 12-point gain from 48 percent to 60 percent for moderates and a 16-point gain from 66 percent to 82 percent for liberals,” the institute reported.

via Trust in Fox News plummets: poll | Raw Story.

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