Category Archives: Politics

Fmr. Shell president ‘predicting’ $5-a-gallon gas in 2012 | Raw Story

I’m not surprised and fully expect this to happen.

Too bad the Government is taking more pr0-active steps to encourage alternative energy, better mass transit, higher gas mileage cars and tax incentives to purchase  hybrid auto’s.

All these steps would also help grow the economy and create jobs…

Epic failure of leadership in Washington…

The former president of Shell Oil said he believes Americans could be paying $5 for a gallon a gas by 2012.

“I’m predicting actually the worst outcome over the next two years which takes us to 2012 with higher gasoline prices,” John Hofmeister said in a recent interview with Platts Energy Week television.

Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst with Oil Price Information Service, agreed that Americans would see $5 a gallon gas but told CNN that he did not believe it would happen in 2012. “That wolf is out there and it’s going to be at the door…I agree with him that we’ll see those numbers at some point this decade but not yet.”

“The demand is still sluggish enough in some of the mature economies,” he said.

Hofmeister also predicted that demand would outstrip supply before the end of the decade.

via Fmr. Shell president ‘predicting’ $5-a-gallon gas in 2012 | Raw Story.

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Optimism for Obama Should Come With Caution – NYTimes.com

The chatter is already starting about 2012….

For as poorly as President Obama’s Democrats performed on Nov. 2, you can find several assessments of his re-election chances that seem doggone optimistic.

The Washington Examiner’s Michael Barone, in a careful analysis, suggests that Mr. Obama won’t be easy to defeat. Karl Rove, meanwhile, recently made comments to Fox News about Hillary Rodham Clinton’s electoral future, which seemed to imply that he expected Mr. Obama would still be president in 2016.

There are a lot of things that casual attempts at political science tend to get wrong, but one thing that observers seem to understand relatively well is that a poor performance by the president’s party at his first midterm election hardly dooms him. That is no doubt because of the recent experience with Bill Clinton as well as Ronald Reagan, both of whom witnessed their parties lose badly at the midterms and both of whom eventually won re-election by wide margins. Mr. Obama’s Democrats lost a few more seats in Congress than Mr. Clinton’s Democrats did — and more than twice as many as Mr. Reagan’s Republicans. On the other hand, Mr. Obama’s approval ratings are slightly better than Mr. Clinton’s or Mr. Reagan’s were at a comparable point in time, being in the mid-to-high 40s rather than in the low 40s.

MORE:   Optimism for Obama Should Come With Caution – NYTimes.com.

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Christmas Video of the Day: From Paris Holiday Kiss-In Against Homophobia

I ran this last year and liked it so much I wanted to run it again….

It’s a Christmas Video from the Kiss In Against Homophobia shot in Paris last December…

They seem to do these Kiss-Ins about every six months in Paris, but this is the best video.

They also seem to do these Kiss-Ins in various other cities and countries.  But the Paris one has the prettiest people…

Not that I’m shallow or anything….

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Shock: Christian Coalition Founder Pat Robertson Favors Marijuana Legalization | Raw Story

This is shocking…

Of course, buried in here is the opportunity for Pat and Company to make money off the Government running these programs as “faith based initiatives”…

Somehow, I think that may have been what made him “see the light”.

Count this among the 10 things nobody ever expected to see in their lifetimes: 700 Club founder Pat Robertson, one of the cornerstone figures of America’s Christian right movement, has come out in favor of legalizing marijuana.

Calling it getting “smart” on crime, Robertson aired a clip on a recent episode of his 700 Club television show that advocated the viewpoint of drug law reformers who run prison outreach ministries.

A narrator even claimed that religious prison outreach has “saved” millions in public funds by helping to reduce the number of prisoners who return shortly after being released.

“It got to be a big deal in campaigns: ‘He’s tough on crime,’ and ‘lock ’em up!'” the Christian Coalition founder said. “That’s the way these guys ran and, uh, they got elected. But, that wasn’t the answer.”

His co-host added that the success of religious-run dormitories for drug and alcohol cessation therapy present an “opportunity” for faith-based communities to lead the way on drug law reforms.

“We’re locking up people that have taken a couple puffs of marijuana and next thing you know they’ve got 10 years with mandatory sentences,” Robertson continued. “These judges just say, they throw up their hands and say nothing we can do with these mandatory sentences. We’ve got to take a look at what we’re considering crimes and that’s one of ’em.

“I’m … I’m not exactly for the use of drugs, don’t get me wrong, but I just believe that criminalizing marijuana, criminalizing the possession of a few ounces of pot, that kinda thing it’s just, it’s costing us a fortune and it’s ruining young people. Young people go into prisons, they go in as youths and come out as hardened criminals. That’s not a good thing.”

MORE:  Shock: Christian Coalition founder Pat Robertson favors marijuana legalization | Raw Story.

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Senate Dems Unanimous: Time for Filibuster Reform | Raw Story

Now, if they’ll just stick to their guns…

Not something Dems are known for….

All Senate Democrats returning to Congress next year have signed a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid asking him to take up filibuster reform first thing in the new year.

It’s a sign that the Republicans’ use of the filibuster at historically high rates to block Democratic legislation may have backfired, and coalesced the political capital needed to change Senate rules.

The letter, delivered this week, “expresses general frustration with what Democrats consider unprecedented obstruction and asks Reid to take steps to end those abuses,” the National Journal reports.

Among the chief revisions that Democrats say will likely be offered: Senators could not initiate a filibuster of a bill before it reaches the floor unless they first muster 40 votes for it, and they would have to remain on the floor to sustain it. That is a change from current rules, which require the majority leader to file a cloture motion to overcome an anonymous objection to a motion to proceed, and then wait 30 hours for a vote on it.

“There have been more filibusters since 2006 than the total between 1920 and 1980,” Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM) says.

via Senate Dems unanimous: Time for filibuster reform | Raw Story.

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Twenty-Something Turmoil: A Tale of Unemployment From a Would-be Young Professional

Great blog post from a Millennial.  Hat tip to Dailykos …

I encourage you to click-through on the link to read the entire post….

Twenty-somethings with a sense of entitlement, high expectations, and a stalled economy have to learn to become entrepreneurial. But how?

Being jobless in the Great Recession is about much more than making ends meet. While we struggle to pay every bill, we — the freshly minted unemployed — carry around psyches that have come undone in ways that we never expected. I should know. I am in my twenties. Educated. Hard-working. Intellectually proactive. And unable to find a job.

I often find solace playing the blame game: If it weren’t for those baby boomers and their Great Society, I never would have been convinced that if I did everything I was supposed to do in life and played by (most of) the rules, one day I would be successful — or at least employed. In high school, I woke up early, did my homework, studied for exams and participated in extracurriculars I wasn’t always very good at, following a grueling schedule that was exhausting and not always rewarding. I remember justifying my heavy schedule because I wanted to get into a good college. I enjoyed college, but I still worked hard and did plenty of things I didn’t want to because in the back of my mind lingered the self-righteous idea that someone like me would naturally be rewarded with a good job.

But here I am, three years after graduation, and it seems that I was wrong.

MORE:   Twenty-Something Turmoil: A Tale of Unemployment From a Would-be Young Professional » New Deal 2.0.

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A Sarah Palin Christmas Song and Video

This video to the tune of “Santa Baby” is really witty, cute and fun…

Hat tip to Joe.My.God. where I first saw it…

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John McCain & Lindsey Graham: The Mean Girls of the U.S. Senate

This is a great satirical article with a lot of facts thrown in about how McCain and Lindsey Graham tried to stop Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell repeal.

I encourage you to click-through and read the entire article.

But McCain and Graham have not merely been grumpy old men. They have been behaving like mean girls — hatching plots, acting spoiled, wallowing in self-absorption and melodrama, and having cows when they don’t win. It’s a sorry spectacle, especially because both men in the past have tried to be reasonable adults within the Senate. Now they’re embarrassing themselves, as they flail about in a puddle of pique. The best news for them is that within days, school will be out.

via John McCain & Lindsey Graham: The Mean Girls of the U.S. Senate.

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The American Civil War Still Being Fought

The secession of South Carolina on December 20, 1860 began the path to the Civil War.  We are approaching an important anniversary here in the US and people need to be prepared to talk about it.

It seems this was covered much more in the British Press than in the American Press.  That, alone, says something.

It just blows my mind that some white people in the South still insist Slavery was not the cause of the Civil War.  Admittedly, this is a complex, layered issue which is why so many people want to avoid talking about it or thinking about it too deeply…It makes them uncomfortable.

But white people in the South need to finally, once and for all, 150 years after the start of the Civil War, accept the fact that Slavery was the primary cause of the War and not “States Rights”.

We can’t begin to have an honest dialogue about Race in the South until this fundamental fact is accepted by all people.

The first step is to stop all the “Moonlight and Magnolias” foolishness, like the Secession Ball in Charleston and the Confederate History Month glorification in Virginia.

Even Scarlett O’Hara finally put all that stuff  behind her and moved on….

It’s time we did, too.

Good points from Eric Foner in The Guardian (UK).

 

What does it mean to say that slavery caused secession and the war? Not that the South was evil and the North moral. In his second inaugural, Lincoln spoke of “American”, not southern, slavery – his point being the complicity of the entire nation in the sin of slavery. Few northerners demanded immediate abolition. Abolitionists were a small and beleaguered minority. Sectional differences certainly existed over economic policy, political power and other matters. But in the absence of slavery, it is inconceivable that these differences would have led to war.

Rather, it means that by 1860, two distinct societies had emerged within the United States, one resting on slave labour, the other on free. This development led inexorably to divergent conceptions of the role of slavery in the nation’s future. Northern Republicans did not call for direct action against slavery where it already existed – the constitution, in any event, made such action impossible. But Lincoln spoke of putting slavery on the road to “ultimate extinction”, and he and other Republicans saw his election and a halt to the institution’s expansion as a first step in this direction. Secessionists saw it this way as well.

A century and a half after the civil war, many white Americans, especially in the South, seem to take the idea that slavery caused the war as a personal accusation. The point, however, is not to condemn individuals or an entire region of the country, but to face candidly the central role of slavery in our national history. Only in this way can Americans arrive at a deeper, more nuanced understanding of our past.

via The American civil war still being fought | Eric Foner | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk.

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Filed under History, Politics, Race, Social Commentary, The South

Gov. Barbour’s Dream World – NYTimes.com

Good editorial today in the New York Times about Haley Barbour’s comments that the Civil Rights struggles were no big deal in Mississippi.

The man is an idiot and a racist.  There is a big streak of both of these characteristics, not just in the Tea Party, but in the Republican Party as a whole.

In Gov. Haley Barbour’s hazy, dream-coated South, the civil-rights era was an easy transition for his Mississippi hometown of Yazoo City. As he told the Weekly Standard recently, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was an unmemorable speaker, and notorious White Citizens Councils protected the world from violent racists.

Perhaps Mr. Barbour, one of the most powerful men in the Republican Party and a potential presidential candidate, suffers from the faulty memory all too common among those who stood on the sidelines during one of the greatest social upheavals in history. It is more likely, though, that his recent remarks on the period fit a well-established pattern of racial insensitivity that raises increasing doubts about his fitness for national office.

In the magazine’s profile of the second-term governor, Mr. Barbour suggests that the 1960s — when people lost life and limb battling for equal rights for black citizens — were not a terribly big deal in Yazoo City. “I just don’t remember it as being that bad,” he said. He heard Dr. King speak at the county fairgrounds in 1962 but can’t remember the speech. “We just sat on our cars, watching the girls, talking, doing what boys do,” he said. “We paid more attention to the girls than to King.”

And the Citizens Councils were simply right-minded business leaders trying to achieve integration without violence. Thanks to the councils, he said, “we didn’t have a problem with the Klan in Yazoo City.”

The councils, of course, arose in the South for a single and sinister purpose: to fight federal attempts at integration and to maintain the supremacy of white leaders in cities and states.

More:   Gov. Barbour’s Dream World – NYTimes.com.

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