From Pine View Farm

2010 archive

Hoisting the Teabag 0

Republican congressional candidate Scott Rigell agreed to sign a seven-part pledge today that was developed by local Tea Party activists and includes promises to vote against any tax or fee increase, to oppose amnesty for illegal immigrants and to work to overturn the recently approved health care overhaul legislation.

I wouldn’t have bought a used car from him anyway, even before he signed up with the forces of living in a past that never was.

Rigell’s running to the right because the incumbent is thunderingly moderate and he has an independent challenger who is resoundingly teabaggish.

The incumbent, Glenn Nye, is certainly more moderate than he would be if I got my druthers.

In fact, the incumbent is so moderate that some of my more leftie acquaintances are threatening not to vote, rather than to vote for him.

I can’t understand their position. Not voting for someone who is okay-not-great while giving someone who is definitely not okay an advantage mystifies me.

This is Virginia, for Pete’s sake, not Vermont.

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QOTD 0

Gene Weingarten:

There is no such thing as middle of the road. By definition. The middle of the road is a line; in physics, a line has only one dimension: Length. It has no width. Ergo, your politics must fall on one side or the other; I am merely compelling you to choose.

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The Dog Days of Summer 0

The dog’s owner has been trying to keep the dog “contained,” but it seems to keep slipping through the cracks.

A Chihuahua named Coco is in quarantine as Animal Control investigates reports she bit a two-year-old.

An Animal Control officer’s report says Coco broke free of a collar/leash and got into Dwain Ware’s backyard on Friday.

(snip)

“(The dog) has been terrorizing the neighborhood,” said Mr. Ware.

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Va. Beach Democratic Committee Fourth Saturday Breakfast 0

Special Guest: State Senator Ralph Northam

Date: Saturday, August 28th Time: 9-10:30 a. m.

Location: Bubba’s Deli & BBQ, 3600 Dam Neck Rd, Virginia Beach (west side of Dam Neck Rd. between Princess Anne Blvd. and Rosemont Rd.; access via service road at Lansdowne Ct. next to the Farmers Market).

Cost: Adults $10.00, Under 12 &6.00 for all-you-can-eat buffet (it’s a pretty good buffet, too–plenty of variety).

More information and suggested items to donate here.

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Fact-Free Zones 0

From the inside of the teapot (emphasis added):

And yet, “Boiling Mad’’ (the book the columnist is discussing–ed.) also reinforced something I’ve experienced in my own exchanges with Tea Party types. Their views often betray a gut-level emotional element or a lack of policy knowledge or inconsistencies or contradictions that would hinder any easy or long-term translation into a governing philosophy. (Unity, as any political tactician can tell you, is far easier in opposition than in support of something.)

Grimes, for example, rebuts the pro-Obama arguments of friends this way: “The problem is, you guys are trying to sell this on facts. You can have all the facts, but if you don’t trust the mind-set or the value system of the people involved, you can’t even look at the facts anymore.’’

Reimer, meanwhile, wants smaller government, but not cuts to Medicare or TRICARE (the military health care program), on which she and her husband rely.

Afterthought:

Scary black man.

Sheesh.

And, ya know, they don’t realize it. It’s camouflaged as “the mind-set or the value system,” even in their own eyes.

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QOTD 0

Mark Twain:

Why shouldn’t truth be stranger than fiction? Fiction, after all, has to make sense.

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Stray Thought 0

I just saw a Windows 7 commercial.

It made me think.

It made me think this:

I so am glad I don’t do Windows.

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It’s the Silly Season 0

But the not a mosque not on the World Trade Center site fuss is anything but silly. Glenn Greenwald explains. A nugget:

As Aziz Poonawalla put it: “if the project does fail, then I think that the message that will be sent is that bigotry and fear of Muslims is not just permitted, it is effective.”

That’s exactly the message that will be sent, and that’s what makes this conflict so significant. Obviously, not all opponents of Park51 are as overtly hateful as those in that video — and not all opponents are themselves bigots — but the position they’ve adopted is inherently bigoted, as it seeks to impose guilt and blame on a large demographic group for the aberrational acts of a small number of individual members. And one thing is certain: if this campaign succeeds, it will proliferate and the sentiments driving it will become even more potent. Hatemongers always become emboldened when they triumph.

The hate does get so tiresome.

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“Evil or Stupid” 0

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
The Parent Company Trap
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party

Via TPM.

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Riding the Hate 0

Republicans cannot let go of the odious Southern startegy.

Dan Kennedy in the Guardian:

And now we come to the full fruition of all this race-baiting. According to the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, 18% of Americans – and 34% of conservative Republicans – believe Obama is a Muslim, proportions that have actually risen since the 2008 campaign. Another poll, by CNN/Opinion Research, finds that 41% of Republicans believe Obama was definitely or probably not born in the United States.

Far worse is the racial, ethnic and religious hatred that has been unleashed, starting with the proposed Islamic centre to be built in New York several blocks from the devastated World Trade Centre site, which Obama endorsed and then (to his discredit) unendorsed (see Footnote), sort of, the next day.

Footnote:

Obama neither endorsed nor “unendorsed” the project. He said that, under the American concept of religious freedom, the project could be built, so long as it complied with existing laws.

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Cyberspacey, Have Cake, Eat It Too Dept. 0

Vivian Paige mentioned this yesterday: Philly is looking to collect the business privilege tax from Philly-based blogs that carry ads or sell products. I suspect that, even though bloggers are making the fuss, the policy probably extends to any website that meets its criteria.

But here’s the kicker, as reported by the Seattle Times (and Vivian Paige referred to this possibility yesterday):

The uproar began after the city Revenue Department recently sent out letters to Philadelphia residents who reported business revenue with the Internal Revenue Service but hadn’t gotten a city business license.

As a self-(un)employed type person, I know a little bit about business taxes.

You really can’t be a business, even a part-time sideline type business, for federal taxes and a hobby for state and local taxes. End of story.

I think that “based in Philly” could be made an issue if someone cares to make it and has money to burn.

For example, I’m in Virginia Beach, Virginia. My hosting company is based in Phoenix, Arizona (yes, I considered boycotting them but I was already paid through next year a). Where the server is physically located I have no idea.

So, where is this website based? Virginia or Arizona or on some server farm in east someplace or other? The mailing address on the check would probably be the determinant.

Aside:

The story also contains this statement:

Some bloggers are complaining that the fee would impinge on their free speech and would discourage dissent.

“Freedom of speech” is just as irrelevant here as it is to Call-Me-a-Dr. Laura. Freedom of speech is not freedom to be guaranteed an audience.

Full Disclosure:

I decided a long time ago not to get involved with ads for this site, not least because I couldn’t see much income potential from my two or three regular readers. The game could not possibly be worth the candle. I also find most sidebar ads unappealing; I think I’ve only clicked on one in five years of reading blogs and that was for Will Bunch’s new book because I wanted the link.

I don’t live in Philly, but I know a number of Philly-area bloggers, but only two or three of them actually live in the city. I have no idea of their positions on this issue and none of them were mentioned in the article linked above.

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Life Insurance, Have Cake, Eat It Too Dept. 0

Bloomberg reports on another reason to take your the life insurance benefits in a lump sum, rather than to use those vouchers the insurance company wants to send you. This lady took the vouchers and got taken:

The next year, Williams, then 19, told New York-based MetLife that a cousin had taken $48,900 by forging her name on 12 checks. Williams, of Rougemont, North Carolina, sought reimbursement. The insurance company and Pittsburgh-based PNC Bank NA, which processed MetLife checks, refused to cover Williams’s losses — each denying responsibility — federal civil court records show.

Had Williams’s money been in a bank, instead of an account managed by an insurer, federal and state law would have required the bank to verify signatures on checks and cover losses. Williams’s predicament spotlights the uncertainties people face by accepting so-called retained-asset account checkbooks from insurers.

The entire article, which is detailed and thoroughly researched, is worth a read.

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Cat Lady 0

Watch the video.

One must admit, one doesn’t see this every day.

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Mean Streets 0

Unstable Isotope finds a Beckian guide to Washington, D. C.

It’s–oh, never mind. Just take a gander. It panders to the xenophobes and the haters speaks for itself.

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QOTD 0

John Kenneth Galbraigth:

Economics is extremely useful as a form of employment for economists.

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Terror on Two Wheels 0

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Wingnut Science 0

Science Facts

Via Bartblog.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Who needs the full armor of God when he has the full armament of Smith and Wesson:

A federal judge on Monday declined to block enforcement of a new Georgia law that bans guns in places of worship, but he also rejected a request to dismiss the suit brought last month by a group seeking to make the law less restrictive.

(snip)

GeorgiaCarry.org; the Baptist Tabernacle of Thomaston; GeorgiaCarry.org former president Ed Stone and the Rev. Jonathan Wilkins filed suit against Georgia’s exemption for churches, saying church employees and worshipers should be allowed to arm themselves for safety.

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All Your Eggs in One Casket 0

In a story which looks into the background of the egg saladmonella story (follow the link to read it–it finds a common ingredient in all the different salads), appears this line:

“You have to wonder where the USDA and FDA inspectors were.”

Paul Waldman answers the question, citing this article from 2007–they fell victim to the Republican campaign against “the dead hand of regulation.”

Between 2003 and 2006, FDA food safety inspections dropped 47 percent, according to a database analysis of federal records by The Associated Press.That’s not all that’s dropping at the FDA in terms of food safety. The analysis also shows:

  • There are 12 percent fewer FDA employees in field offices who concentrate on food issues.
  • Safety tests for U.S.-produced food have dropped nearly 75 percent, from 9,748 in 2003 to 2,455 last year, according to the agency’s own statistics.
  • After the Sept. 11 attacks, the FDA, at the urging of Congress, increased the number of food inspectors and inspections amid fears that the nation’s food system was vulnerable to terrorists. Inspectors and inspections spiked in 2003, but now both have fallen enough to erase the gains. “The only difference is now it’s worse, because there are more inspections to do — more facilities — and more food coming into America, which requires more inspections,” said Tommy Thompson, who as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services pushed to increase the numbers.

Because, as Republicans tell us, regulations are unnecessary overhead because no business person would ever do anything improper.

I have to go now. Pigasus, my flying pig, is ready to take off for his daily flight to Washington via Richmond.

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Laffable Curves 0

Will Bunch considers the legacy of Republican Economic Theory. A nugget:

But earning power for middle-class Americans has barely budged since the dawn of the Reagan era. So in order to take part in the great festival of materialism that Ronald Reagan called “Americanism,” people borrowed. The 40th president tried to make that easier by deregulating the savings-and-loan industry — which proved to be a massive boondoggle that cost taxpayers $160 billion even as policy makers failed to learn the lessons of the S&L debacle. Still, people found many ways to borrow and buy, mainly on credit cards. In 1980, the typical American saved 10 percent of what he or she earned, but by 2004 that plunged to zero. Household and consumer debt went from 100 percent of the U.S. GDP in 1980 to 177 percent today. If you’ve been around for the last 25 years, you saw how this was accomplished through the chasing of bubbles, first on Wall Street and then in the housing mania of the mid-2000s. Now, with falling home prices and record foreclosures, there are no more bubbles to inflate, which is why the Reaganist chickens of our unsupported spending binge are finally coming home to roost.

Read the whole thing.

And buy Will’s new book.

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