From Pine View Farm

Republican Hypocrisy category archive

The Moving Finger Points . . . 0

According to an AP story in the local rag, Rand Paul is blaming the 24-hour news cycle for putting his libertarian foot in his libertarian mouth.

How dare reporters report the news.

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Texas Board of Education Wants To Disappear the Slave Trade 3

Emphasis added.

Tempers are flaring in Texas over controversial proposed changes to the US state’s public school curriculum.

The changes, put forward by the Board of Education’s conservative members, include referring to the slave trade as the “Atlantic triangular trade”.

Jesus.

Words fail me.

No, they do not. But I shan’t use those words here.

Afterthought: They won’t be satisfied until they put them darkies back in their rightful place, goldurnit.

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Republican Family Values 0

The gift that keeps on giving.

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Driving While Brown 1

It’s starting.

Just as predicted. Follow the link.

US-born 70-year-old US citizen of Spanish and Chinese descent ‘already stopped twice’ by law enforcement officers in Arizona and asked to produce his papers.

Tell me he wasn’t stopped because he was brown. If you buy that, I have a nice bridge for sale in Brooklyn.

Buy the Bridge

Act here.

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History Lesson 0

The reason the Founders included a procedure for amending the Constitution is that they believed it could be improved.

The Booman has more.

Afterthought:

Lincoln rotates in his grave. It is truly odd to see the Republican Party taking a stand in favor of the version of the United States Constitution which wrote slavery into the law of the land.

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Republican Family Values 0

(Jeez oh man, you can’t make this stuff up. Hell, Mad Magazine couldn’t make this stuff up.)

Republican Family Values, the gift that keeps on giving.

Like I said, all the rest is camouflage.

Yes, I am disgusted.

It’s been a bad week and my ability to see humor in lies and hypocrisy wanes.

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The Rule of Law Unraveled 0

If the law is not the same for everyone, we do not have rule of law.

Keith Olbermann described the importance of the rule of law last night while criticizing the willingness of John McCain (and others) to throw out the liberties of some.

Here is the key part of the transcript. It’s a good description of the importance of the rule of law:

This man — whatever other reprehensible thing he appears to be — is an American citizen!

And if you can decide that he shouldn’t have the same rights we would give to the man who shot President Reagan, or to serial killers, or to Bernie Madoff, then the precedent that you set can some day end thusly:

Some day, for some reason, somebody will be able to arrest you, Mr. McCain, and declare that you are not entitled to your Miranda rights, and that perhaps you should be tried by a military court.

While you pander to a group that tries to dress up its bitching about paying its fair share of taxes as “the government is taking away freedom,” you propose that the government should take away… freedom.

You shame yourself in the eyes of American Patriots, and in the eyes of your fellow veterans who sacrificed, and the honored dead who gave their lives, to protect the freedoms and the laws you have today suggested should be optional!

For practical purposes, the law is not the same for everyone. Shoplifters with public defenders do not face the same odds as Wall Street banksters with $1500-an-hour defense lawyers.

Nevertheless, a thread in the story of America has been the struggle to make the law the same for everyone; now, at least, that shoplifter does get a public defender.

To rip that thread from the fabric of the story for some would be to do so for all.

The portion quoted above starts about 55 seconds into the video:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

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Have Cake Eat It Too, Spill Here, Spill Now Dept. 0

No More Mister Nice Blog comments on the calls for Mr. Obama to do something about the oil spill gusher. Read the whole thing; it’s delicious. Profane, but delicious:

For the last sixteen months the GOP has been screaming that government is evil, that it is the problem, that we need less regulation in order to be more productive, more profitable, and that rules and oversight aren’t needed because the free market will take care of things.

(snip)

And now the Republicans are demanding that the government “fix the problem”?

Via the Poorman.

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If You’re Brown, You’re Going Down 0

Raw Story:

Correspondence between lawyer Kris Kobach and Arizona state Sen. Russell Pearce (R-Mesa) suggests that Arizona’s new immigration law, conceived in the nation’s capital, was intended to hit poor Latinos the hardest.

Follow the links and read the posts. Then come back and claim that racial and ethic bigotry is not involved. Then try to sell me that big old bridge between Manhattan and Brooklyn.

Remember, I’m a Southern Boy. I know the code.

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Spill Here, Spill Now 0

The BP off shore drilling platform operated by Deepwater Horizons had a history of mistakes, spills, and accidents.

We are not surprised that Halliburton was involved.

Bacon’s Rebellion recounts the myths of off-shore drilling.

Indeed, these could be the myths of privatization of legitimate governmental functions.

Follow the link for a full explication:

  • Myth One: High technology will save us.
  • Myth Two: For-profit companies always operate for the public good.
  • Myth Three: You always know who works for you.
  • Myth Four: If a company says it is green, believe it.

Related: In 1999, U.S. report found failure of offshore rigs’ blowout preventers common.

Blowout prevention costs money. Money cuts into profits. Profits > Public Good. Q. E. D.

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Driving While Brown, Once More (Updated) 1

Rachel Maddow looks at the persons behind Arizona’s “I Know One When I See One” law. Many of them have long histories in the racial and ethnic bigotry and hatred biz.

(Early in the video, the Governor confesses that she does not know what an illegal immigrant looks like. I guess someone is going to sprinkle pixie dust on the Arizona constabulary so they can magically know one when they see one.)

Maddow opens the video by summarizing how Republicans, while caterwauling about immigration for years, have also prevented Congress from taking up the issue, even to the point of turning on George W. Bush when he tried to address it.

Refusing to address a problem festers fosters further demagoguery.

The discussion of the persons behind the bill starts about three minutes in (partial transcript here).

Brendan is boycotting companies based in Arizona. Follow the link for a list of big outfits headquartered there (Warning: He’s upset. Language).

Shaun Mullen (where I found the link to the video) isn’t sure whether a boycott will do any good:

The UFW (United Farm Workers’ California lettuce–ed.) boycott worked, while I have little doubt that a boycott of anything having to do with Arizona will be ineffectual even if big players like Mexico, the state’s largest trading partner, get on board. The neo-Nazis, supremacists and nativists have gotten their way, and there will be no turning back.

But that is not the point, so I will not be flying into Phoenix to see an old friend this summer and making damned sure that I don’t buy anything made in Arizona at the stupormarket.

It comes as no surprise that the movers and shakers behind the law are as vile as they come. Nor that the state government has the chutzpah to ask Washington to help fund the 15,000 officers tasked with hunting down people simply because they have brown skins.

But he’s in, because symbolism matters.

So am I.

(Ahhhh, they want Washington to supply the pixie dust. Frankly, I think that producing pixie dust would be a horrible overreach of federal power under the terms of good witch/bad witch clause of the United States Constitution.)

Addendum:

Anonymous Liberal, who is a lawyer, analyzes the pixie dust.

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Driving While Brown, Reprise 0

Dick Polman considers statements by Marco Rubio and Jeb Bush questioning Arizona’s “See Your Papers, Mach Snell” law:

The tea-party people who scream that health care reform is a threat to their personal freedom have been conspicuously silent about the new Arizona law that poses a threat to personal freedom. Gee, I wonder why. Perhaps it’s because the virtually all-white tea-party people can’t seem to muster outrage about governmental overreach that potentially imperils the freedom of brown people. Apparently not all government “tyranny” is created equal.

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Imagine 0

Imagine that the teabaggers were black.

After I wrote this, but before it autoposted, Terrance DC published a long musing on just this topic.

Via JK at Balloon Juice.

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Driving While Brown 0

Tony Norman, writing at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, discusses Arizona’s xenophobia. A nugget:

Right-wingers complain about creeping fascism all the time, yet there has been no bigger example of a drift toward tyranny and the police state than this stupid, race-coded legislation. We should all be outraged.

By the way, injustice rarely stops at well-defined borders of race or class once it gets rolling. One day, someone is going to ask us all for our respective papers. Consider this a down payment.

Clarence Page draws on his experiences to anticipate life in Arizona:

I had a taste of what that was like in the 1970s as a black American reporter during South Africa’s apartheid regime. The white-minority government’s “influx control” policy required all black South Africans to carry a photo-ID “passbook” in urban areas to prevent a deluge of black Africans from flooding in to areas where the jobs were. Sound familiar?

My American passport came in handy on a Johannesburg street when an Afrikaner police officer said “Wys my jou paspoort.” (Show me your passport.) I was strolling-while-black. He didn’t need any more reasonable suspicion than that.

My views haven’t changed.

This is an evil law that reveals the worst aspects of the American character: bigotry, prejudice, xenophobia, hatred, and racism, just to mention a few.

This is a must watch:

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

John Stewart via TPM.

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Breaking Old News 0

Republicans formally declare their allegiance to their corporate masters.

Move along now. Nothing new to see here . . . .

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Tea Party Jesus 0

This is strong stuff and not for the faint of heart.

Follow the link to see how deeply hypocritical and bereft of values the Party of Family Values truly is.

Link below the fold.

Read more »

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Deficit Thinking Deficit 0

Jamelle points out that it’s not a deficit when Republicans do it, at least not insofar as the press is concerned:

Rhetoric notwithstanding, there is little in the last thirty years of political history to suggest that Republicans are actually concerned with deficits. From Reagan onwards, the GOP has been the party of deficits; cutting taxes and raising spending with little regards to the nation’s long-term fiscal health. Insofar that “fiscal conservatism” means anything, it has little to do with deficit reduction and everything to do with turning the federal government into a generous benefactor for the wealthy and privileged.

As for the second point, our current deficits are not the product of entitlement spending. This isn’t a hard fact to grasp, but it seems to elude most of the professional commentariat (or at least those that can’t be bothered to use Google).

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Constituent Service 0

Dan Wasserman

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Down Is Up 0

Dick Polman analyzes the Republican Wall Street spin cycle:

In his ’07 book, entitled Words That Work, Luntz warns Republicans that Wall Street “is seen as global and cold, with sterile glass structures and office cubicles filled with numbers crunchers concerned more with profits than people.” The problem, of course, is that Republicans have traditionally been close to Wall Street, vacuuming up more of its donations than the other party. (According to a massive ’08 study by the nonpartisan wallstreetwatch.org, the GOP collected 55 percent of the financial sector’s political donations in the 10 years between 1998 and 2008.) But (Frank–ed.) Luntz had a solution: Republicans, in their messaging, should take care to identify themselves with Main Street. In Luntz’s words, “Wall Street is about profit. Main Street is about people…Wall Street is about buyouts and takeovers. Main Street is about family.”

Which brings us to the current efforts on Capitol Hill – led by Democrats, with a few participating Republicans – to crack down on Wall Street abuses. Earlier this year, when Republican leaders realized that they would have to serve their Wall Street friends by opposing reform, without somehow appearing to side with Wall Street against the little guy, Luntz went to work on the thorny problem. He came up with a solution. He suggested some talking points that made it sound as if the Republicans, by opposing reform, were actually sticking up for the little guy – and that the Democrats, by pushing reform, were sticking up for Wall Street and screwing the little guy.

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Horse Gone. Leave Barn Door Open. 0

John Cole dissects Republican opposition to banking reform so I don’t have to.

The Republican Party: Now and ever the Party of Privilege.

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