From Pine View Farm

2011 archive

Unreality Politics 0

Steven M. thinks he has figured out why the Republican Party persists in promoting policies and theories, such as voodoo economics, that are demonstrably false:

I think Republicans see themselves the way Wall Streeters see themselves — as people to whom nothing really bad could possibly happen, no matter how dire America’s problems are. If they get in, push more tax cuts that increase debt, and make spending cuts that worsen unemployment and leave more infrastructure to crumble, they’ll just find some scapegoat, sexting or illegal immigrants or Dodd-Frank, to blame everything bad in America on. If that doesn’t work, they’ll start a war, and make it just controversial enough that Democrats will hesitate to support it, then treason-bait those Democrats for their hesitancy.

Follow the link for the rest of his reasoning.

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Everybody Must Get Fracked 0

Facing South reports on the frackers P. R. efforts. A nugget:

But just as opponents of fracking are making political gains, the gas industry is turning to harsh tactics for dealing with them — including the admitted use of counterinsurgency strategies and psychological operations borrowed from the U.S. military.

The disturbing revelations came during an oil industry conference held last month in Houston, in remarks recorded by attendee Sharon Wilson, director of the Oil and Gas Accountability Project at Earthworks.

(snip)

During a session titled “Understanding How Unconventional Oil and Gas Operators Are Developing a Comprehensive Media Relations Strategy to Engage Stakeholders and Educate the Public,” Matt Carmichael, manager of external affairs for Texas-based Anadarko Petroleum, said:

    If you’re a P.R. representative in this industry in this room today, I recommend you do three things. … Download the U.S. Army/Marine Corps counterinsurgency manual. Because we are dealing with an insurgency. There’s a lot of good lessons in there, and coming from a military background I’ve found the insight in that extremely remarkable.

In other fracked up news,

The provision in a proposed Colorado rule for public disclosure of the ingredient of fracking fluids that allows oil and gas companies to unilaterally declare some chemicals “trade secrets” drew fire from the public at a hearing today.

“Disclosure isn’t for the industry, they know what they are using,” Gwen Lachelt, of Durango, told the Colorado Oil and Gas Commission. “Disclosure is for the public.”

What you don’t know can’t hurt them.

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Twits on Twitter 0

I’ve found that persons who resort to name-calling are the persons shortest on reasoning power.

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Hermain Cain’t Control 0

Herman Cain is off the stage, but the circumstances of his exit, stage rightwing, raises larger questions.

This weekend, Bob Cesca observed

By the way, it’s revealing that an affair is cause for Republicans dumping this guy, and repeated instances of sexual harassment where there are legitimate female victims isn’t a cause for dumping him.

Thom Hartmann explores this question with a caller, without reaching a conclusion:

I have my own theory.

It has to do with beliefs about who should be in control of the wombs of the world.

Buried deep in the Republican “family values” psyche is a belief that it should not be women.

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Mitt the Flip, Reuse and Recycle 0

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Republican Candidate Search 0

At Comically Vintage.

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“Here’s Comes the Donald” 0

If you listen to nothing else, catch the bit about six minutes in where Mike Papantonio describles how Newt the Gingrinch is the perfect Republican candidate:

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QOTD 0

Albert Einstein, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius – and a lot of courage – to move in the opposite direction.

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Social Contracts 0

Robert Reich recalls Henry Ford’s decision to pay his employees enough to buy his cars, then remuninates on refusing to learn from the past. A snippet:

In the years leading up to the Great Crash (1929–ed.), most employers forgot Henry Ford’s example. The wages of most American workers remained stagnant. The gains of economic growth went mainly into corporate profits and into the pockets of the very rich. American families maintained their standard of living by going deeper into debt. In 1929, the debt bubble popped.

Sound familiar? It should. The same thing happened in the years leading up to the crash of 2008.

The latest data on corporate profits and wages show we haven’t learned the essential lesson of the two big economic crashes of the last 75 years: When the economy becomes too lopsided – disproportionately benefiting corporate owners and top executives rather than average workers – it tips over.

In other words, we’re in trouble because the basic bargain has been broken.

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I Wouldn’t Want To Disclose It Either 2

This is enough to make your nose twitch:

The Des Moines Register reports that our own beloved three time failure Christine O’Donnell is so full of herself, and so freaking paranoid, that before she deigns to allow the common folk meet with her to discuss who the very important and significant Christine O’Donnell should endorse in the 2012 GOP Presidential Primary, they must sign a …. wait for it…. non-disclosure agreement.

There’s a reason one Delawarean I know refers to her as “Christine O’Dodo.”

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We Need Single Payer 0

At the Guardian, an English reporter forced to visit the ER tells of his experience with U. S. health care. A nugget:

This is the difference that social medicine makes to the fabric and quality of life in a civilised country. When I finally wobbled out of the shiny lobby of the Beth Israel, clutching a bag of drugs, follow-up advice and complimentary hospital toiletries, I understood what it really means to be without means in America. Those who are wealthy enough to afford decent healthcare have their needs met in relative luxury, while those who are poor live in fear of getting ill, worrying that one misadventure might leave you with yet more debts to pay off.

No amount of fresh towels and edible breakfasts can make up for the feeling that your health is less important than the capacity of your chequebook.

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The Scandal 0

Republicans discussing Herman Cain's  claiming to have given money to a woman because she needed help, scandalized at his
Click for a larger image.

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

Eric Alterman on the shibboleth of “some people say” and the cult of balance:

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Why I’ve Lost Interest in College Sports, Reprise 0

Katha Pollitt comments in the Nation. A snippet:

Back to Penn State. Next to the molesting and the inaction, was anything more disturbing than the student riot in defense of it? If those thousands of kids had been Occupiers, don’t tell me they could have overturned a news van and knocked down lampposts with relative impunity. But sports is different. Impunity is its middle name—for players, coaches and apparently fans as well.

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QOTD 0

Alfred Hitchcock:

I’m not against the police; I’m just afraid of them.

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Nowhere To Hide 0

I wonder what sort of data these will collect:

British company Captive Media thinks it has developed a product that fills a gap in the market – a urinal mounted, urine-controlled games console for men.

It calls it the first “hands-free” video gaming console of its kind.

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Herman Cain’t, Just as I’ve Been Saying 0

Herman Cain has “suspended” his campaign, while continuing to say, “Look, I’m the victim here.

Josh Marshall explains that “suspending” a campaign has a legal meaning: the money train can keep chugging.

You’ll note that Herman Cain didn’t drop out of the presidential campaign. He “suspended” his campaign. And that’s not just a spinny weasel word. It has significant campaign finance implications. For one, it means he can continue to raise money.

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Always Just under the Surface 0

DougJ at Balloon Juice cuts to the quick on the current and altogether fabricated kerfuffle about whether or not the Democratic Party is “abandoning the white working class,” pointing out the difference between “effect” and “cause” (emphasis added):

I don’t know if people vote lived experience or what they see on their teevees, but he’s (David Brookes, quoted earlier in the post–ed.) actually right that the working class votes against incumbent presidents when the economy is bad. And it’s bad right now, especially for the middle-to-lower-middle-class. One of the reasons black and brown working class people will vote Democrat anyway is that the Republican party openly hates black and brown people. Also too one of the reasons the white working class votes Republican, no matter the economy, is that the Republican party openly hates black and brown people.

The Republican Party’s odious Southern Strategy continues apace.

Follow the link for DougJ’s take-down of David Brooks’s contribution to the discourse.

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Facebook Frolics 0

El Reg reports:

An Irishwoman from the picturesque village of Effin is a bit put out that Facebook has unkindly dubbed her place of birth “offensive”.

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Headline of the Day 0

Naked man a concern for cops

Surprisingly enough, it appears to be neither a politician nor a coach of something-or-other.

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