2010 archive
The Great Lie 0
Remember, my ancestors wore the gray.
Follow the link.
There was nothing nice, no kindness, no benevolence, to chattel slavery.
George Fitzhugh said, Cannibals All.
I say to George Fitzhugh and his contemporary apologists, Liars All.
The President’s Weekly Address 0
Excerpt (emphasis added):
But some Republican leaders in Congress don’t seem to have learned any lessons from the past few years. They’re pushing to make privatizing Social Security a key part of their legislative agenda if they win a majority in Congress this fall. It’s right up there on their to-do list with repealing some of the Medicare benefits and reforms that are adding at least a dozen years to the fiscal health of Medicare – the single longest extension in history.
Republicans never learn. It’s part of their credo:
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If it doesn’t work, do the same thing harder.
Little Necks 0
10 minutes on the grill at 425 Fahrenheits:

Add lemon butter, jalapeno corn bread, and Hungarian cucumber salad.
International yums.
I got them at Taste at their summer fresh food stand.
“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0
I guess she just as easily could have shot up the truck with a knife.
Oh.
Wait.
Her husband wasn’t in the truck and nobody was hit.
Freedom of Religion 0
If you can take a liberty away from one simply because you don’t like him, you can take it away from everyone.
From the The Virginia Act For Establishing Religious Freedom, authored by Thomas Jefferson:
Excerpt:
Monsters under the Bed 0
Hofstadter was correct (if you’ve not read the article, do so now).
The common thread of rightwingnuttery is fear.
Witness this (indirect) quotation from an organizer of the “Agenda 21” (see Note Below) conference in Valley Forge, which reveals far more than the speaker intended (emphasis added):
In other words, everything a local, state, or federal government might do becomes evidence of conspiracy.
The right wing never fails to find fear, for, if it can’t find it, it makes it up. It seems to find gratification in quavering with fright.
Fearfulness is a self-fulfilling prophecy, the philosophy of cowardice. As I write this, it occurs to me that this explains conservative war mongering: those who are always looking for enemies, well, they always find them.
It is the politics of three-year-olds, the politics of monsters under the bed.
Note Below:
Agenda 21 is a fairly innocuous UN program, meaning that the members of the UN agreed to create it, signatories to which promise to promote a sustainable environment.
Braver Men than I 0
The Booman reads Charles Krauthammer so I don’t have to.
Watch him take apart the lies and misrepresentations.
Bob Cesca has more.
Mythbusting the CSA 0
At Balloon Juice, Dennis G. takes aim at the “Myth of Southern Honor.”
I think he could have worded his thesis with more felicity, so I’ll deconstruct it as a preface. He’s referring to the idea that the Civil War was a struggle of honor for some sort of ideal on the part of the secessionists.
He is not arguing that individuals on either side may or may not have conducted themselves with personal honor (and in some case, as always in war, dishonor) in battle.
The myth of which he speaks is one of those used by the monied classes to sell secession to the mass of voters (the other two were “States’ rights” and inherent racial superiority as cloaks for defining a class of persons as property in perpetuity).
I am not sure that I agree with the part I’ve emphasized in the excerpt below, but, for all practical purposes, he’s so correct as to nevermind:
Republicans used the odious Southern strategy to capture the bigot vote.
Now the bigot vote has captured the Republican Party.

Image via Kiko’s House.
Vial Behavior 0
I don’t think that even Krafft-Ebbing had a word for this.
QOTD 0
H. L. Mencken, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):
The theory seems to be that so long as a man is a failure he is one of God’s chillun, but that as soon as he has any luck he owes it to the Devil.
No One Will Call It What It Is 0
Domestic terrorism.
Twits on Twitter 0
More here.
About that Obama Record 0
Annette John-Hall delivers a does of reality:
Death to Obamacare! they shout.
Tell that to the parents who can keep their kids on their health-insurance policies until they’re 27 – a relief for me and my twentysomething daughter, who’s working but doesn’t have insurance. Or the millions of people who’ve stood in line for hours to get medical care at traveling clinics throughout the country, most of whom work but can’t afford insurance.
He’s antibusiness! the white collars whine.
Tell that to GM and Chrysler and their workers, rescued by government intervention.
He’s anti-middle class. Can’t identify with regular folk.
Tell that to the credit-card companies and overdraft sharks whose game of gouging people like you and me has been quashed. Or tell it to the already cash-strapped parents and their college-student children who see a president who pushed through school-loan reform.
And for his effort?
He’s “the worst president in history,” says Republican congressional candidate Ben Quayle, spawn of former stellar VP Dan Quayle. You know, most remembered for adding the letter e to the end of potato.
The sad fact is that for all the good Obama’s done, he’s been lambasted for everything and not given credit for anything.
An endless cycle of negativity on the hamster wheel.
John Cole adds some perspective.
Responsible Fiscals 0
I am not arguing that government spending must be cut.*
That is the argument of Republican Responsible Fiscals, who are against feeding at the government trough, except when are for it.
The Richmonder has a neat little post about this.
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*It sorely needs to rearranged, but, as I look at the roads and schools and the air traffic control system and other such stuff, it probably needs to be increased.
I also think that projects properly undertaken by the government, such as roads and schools and the air traffic control system and other such stuff, should be undertaken by the government and not serve as pretexts for shoveling money to cost-overrunning consultants and profiteers when government employees could do them as well and for fair salaries.
“Weapon of Mass Construction” 0
| The Colbert Report | Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
| The Word – Weapon of Mass Construction | ||||
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Via TPM.
We Need Single Payer 0
From the Philadephia Inquirer:
But a local hospital group says the fastest-growing part of what hospitals call “bad debt” – basically, uncollectible bills – is money owed by patients who have insurance.
As employers dump costs onto workers, so now are workers dumping costs onto hospitals.
Because of rising deductibles and cost-sharing rules, patients are increasingly faced with bills that would have been unusual for someone with insurance a few years ago.
Read the whole thing. It goes on to point out that
- Hospitals are increasing asking for payment, if not up front, then very quickly. If you are admitted, you might be visited by a “financial counselor” before you get your first lab work back.
- Persons who have been released sometimes pay their cable bills before they pay the hospital bills. (Aside: This is not surprising. They probably have enough money to pay the cable bill. Hospital bills can be more than they will make in a decade or a lifetime.)
- Hospitals don’t much like the current system either.
The larger story is that hospitalization is getting so expensive that only the very very rich can afford it. The whole damn system is not just broke, it’s broken.
Insurance that doesn’t insure, but you can bet your bippy it stills pays the country club memberships of insurance execs.








