From Pine View Farm

2012 archive

The Voter Fraud Fraud: What To Do in Florida 0

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Ryan’s Smoke 0

Oh, my, what is poor Paulie Ryan to do: Confess lying about not requesting stimulus funds or claim ignorance of his subordinates’ actions?

After initially denying he had requested stimulus funds, GOP vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan has acknowledged that his office had sought the money for his Wisconsin congressional district and took responsibility for it.

“After having these letters called to my attention I checked into them, and they were treated as constituent service requests in the same way matters involving Social Security or Veterans Affairs are handled,” Ryan said in a statement late Thursday. “This is why I didn’t recall the letters earlier.”

Betting on ignorance, I see.

Probably a safe bet.

Indeed, some voters seem to think of ignorance as a qualification.

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Facebook Frolics, Take the Money and Run Dept. 0

The voyage to AOL land continues.

Facebook Inc. (FB) fell to a record low, losing almost half its value since an initial public offering in May, after the lifting of restrictions on share sales by its biggest investors.

Shares in the world’s largest social-networking service fell 4.1 percent to $19.05 at the close in New York yesterday. Facebook had dropped to as low as $19, after the number of shares available for trading increased 60 percent two days ago.

I saw in Readers Digest that there’s a new term to describe a stock that opens with great hype and, like Humpty-Dumpty, falls from the hypes:

Zucked.

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A Pox on Both Their Houses 0

At Tampa Bay dot com, Robyn Blumner considers Mike Lofgren’s new book.

Lofgren is a long-time Republican operative who is fed up with both parties. A snippet:

Democrats are no longer a viable opposition party countering the Republicans, who now work exclusively for the benefit of the rich, according to Lofgren. Their willingness to compete with Republicans for deep-pocket fund-raising has transformed Democrats from FDR progressives who would stand for workers and the middle class over corporate interests, to pipsqueak moderates who cleave to a “center” that keeps moving further to the right. Lofgren calls Democrats half a party.

As to Republicans, Lofgren’s book is a foghorn warning, an open-mouthed scream that would scare even Edvard Munch. He says his party has been hijacked by opportunists and true believers who have transformed it from the party of Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt and Eisenhower into one of “crackpots” like Eric Cantor, Steve King, Michele Bachmann and Allen West.

In Lofgren’s experience, the new Republican Party wants to remake the country as “an upside-down utopia in which corporations rule; the Constitution, like science, is faith-based; and war is the first, not the last, resort in foreign policy.”

Frankly, I don’t much disagree. My own Democratic voting record is born as much of “consider the alternative” as of anything else. The Democratic Party hasn’t had much of an identifiable program since LBJ. They haven’t gotten much right, but they sure as hell get a lot less wrong.

And, honest to Pete, do think of the alternative.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Stand in line to pick up your prescription with courtesy.

From my local rag (the survivor disputes the police account and claims the other guy drew first; anecdotes cited in the article, q. v., indicate that the deceased tended to be confrontational):

Benn’s statement is at odds with information released by police, who gave the following account: Benn accused Colorado of cutting in front of him and they began arguing just after 2 p.m. Colorado sprayed Benn with pepper spray. Benn then drew a handgun and approached Colorado, firing at him. Colorado drew a handgun, returned fire and collapsed.

Gun Nut Paradise approacheth apace. Every city, Dodge City; every hill, Boot Hill.

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Rope-a-Dope 0

Elephant and donkey in boxing ring.  Elephant with black eye to ref:  "Tell him about the no hitting back rule!"

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Wo-Wo-Wo-Wo-Wildwood Days 3

When we used to go to Wildwood, the Big Johnson tee-shirts were about as risque as it got.

They seem to be on the tame side these days.

No-no-no-no-nobody does tacky like Wildwood.

Makes me want to go back.

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Do Nothings 0

PoliticalProf:

And by the way: complaining that the current Congress is the “worst Congress ever” because they didn’t pass any laws is like complaining that LeBron James is a bad basketball player because he has a lousy batting average. When you don’t want to pass laws (as the Republicans in the House don’t), you think of not passing laws as success, not failure.

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QOTD 0

Aldous Huxley:

Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards.

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The (Job) Creationism Myth 0

At McClatchy, Scott Klinger takes a look at some of those who have benefited most from Bush’s tax cuts. A nugget.

Then there’s Dave Cote, Honeywell’s CEO. The Bush tax cuts saved him about $2.5 million that he would otherwise have had to pay on his $55 million income last year. Cote is a high-profile crusader for low taxes on corporations and the wealthy. As a member of the Simpson-Bowles deficit reduction commission, he supported cuts to Social Security and Medicare while pushing for reductions to his own taxes.

Cote’s insistence that U.S. corporate taxes are too high is ironic, given his own firm’s ability to dodge them. Over the last three years, Honeywell reported $2.5 billion in U.S. pre-tax income and yet got net tax benefits back from the government worth $377 million. It’s also notable that Honeywell is no U.S. “job creator.” The corporation shrunk its U.S. workforce from 58,000 to 53,000 over the last three years, while offshoring 4,000 jobs.

It’s welfare for the rich.

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The Voter Fraud Fraud 0

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The Galt and the Lamers 0

Ed Kilgore explores the appeal of Ayn Rand to teenage boys.

Not only that: but the average nerdy adolescent boy hasn’t really had to do much of anything to test his theoretically vast potential in the marketplace of life: you know, things like falling in (non-heroic) love, performing a difficult job, dealing with entirely irrational and unindividuated economic forces like recessions, or for that matter “checking your premises” via debates with intellectual equals or superiors who come up with arguments that Rand and her “Collective” didn’t already savage in the totalitarian atmosphere of her smoky Manhattan salon. I suppose most people whose Objectivism survived high school probably stumbled upon having children–you know, those irrational critters whose almost complete absence in Rand’s novels is one of their most remarkable features. Indeed, it is perhaps the denial of childhood that probably makes Rand’s stuff so totally seductive to adolescents poised between that helpless state and the yet-to-be-achieved independent adulthood.

I suspect he is over-thinking this.

The appeal is simpler: glorifying selfishness as the ultimate value is quite enough to attract this demographic.

Fortunately, most teenage boys grow up and grow out of glorifying selfishness. Unfortunately, too many of the ones that don’t grow out of it do make it onto Republican tickets.

Speaking of objectification, I recall hearing a biographer of Ayn Rand intervideo on the talking box (no, I can’t remember who–it was two years ago). She said that, when she was in college, she learned early that boys who were wrapped up in Ayn Rand’s theories were not good dates.

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Roadmap 0

A bit breathless, but generally on target.

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Romney’s Bain, Captains of Industry Courageous Dept. 0

Via C&L.

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Balancing the Ticket 0

Reg Henry considers the dynamics of Paul Ryan’s being selected for the Republican vice presidential nomination. A snippet:

As general whooping sounds across the nation confirm, he has chosen Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, a darling of the right, as his running mate. He had little choice, due to the unavailability of other candidates who might please red-meat voters, such as Genghis Khan or Vlad the Impaler.

(snip)

As you can see, I think Mitt Romney has boldly answered his critics who were suspicious that he might be secretly reasonable, compassionate and sane despite all his tough talk during the campaign.

Read the rest.

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The Voter Fraud Fraud 0

Honoring the troops, the Republican way. Ronnie Polaneczky reports:

MY FRIEND JOE Varsanyi Sr. died on Monday. He was 91, a decorated patriot who fought in World War II. Had he lived, this simple, honorable man who risked his life for his country would’ve had a very hard time voting in November’s elections.

That’s because Joe didn’t have a driver’s license. He long ago lost track of his birth certificate and his military identification. He didn’t even have utility bills proving his residence, since his last residence was a nursing home where he tried to regain his strength after his cancer spread.

Without any of these documents, there would have been no reasonable way for him to obtain the voter ID that the Commonwealth Court on Wednesday reiterated is needed to cast a ballot on Election Day.

More at the link.

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QOTD 0

Gertrude Stein:

A vegetable garden in the beginning looks so promising and then after all little by little it grows nothing but vegetables, nothing, nothing but vegetables.

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The Voter Fraud Fraud 0

King George III looking at the Declaration of Independence:  How do I know this isn't a fraud.  I want to see the signers' ID.

Via BartCop.

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Romney’s Bain 1

Jacob Weisberg takes an intense look at the leveraged buy-out industry (AKA vulture capitalism), which makes money by gutting companies, and how it differs from industrial capitalism, which makes money by building companies.

A nugget:

Mr. Romney’s Bain career is a story about rising inequality. It’s telling that George Romney, Mitt’s father, made around $200,000 through most of the years he ran American Motors. Doing work that clearly created jobs, the elder Romney paid an effective tax rate that averaged 37 percent. His son made vastly more running a corporate chop shop in an industry that does not appear to create jobs overall. In 2010, Mitt Romney paid an effective tax rate of 13.9 percent on $21.7 million in investment income.

This difference encapsulates the change from corporate titans who lived in the same world as the people who worked for them, in an America with real social mobility, to a financial overclass that makes its own rules and has choked off social mobility. The elder Romney wasn’t embarrassed to explain what he’d done as a businessman or to release his tax returns.

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No End in Sight 2

Dick Polman theorizes why Mitt the Flip gets away with the lies:

It’s a real dilemma for the traveling reporters. If they were to flout the unwritten rules of traditional objectivity by calling out and documenting Romney’s welfare lie each time he uses it, two problems would likely arise: editors wouldn’t like it (they’d fear complaints from readers about “bias”); and the Romney staffers wouldn’t like it (they’d retaliate by freezing out the offending reporters).

So Romney gets away with it – not just the factual inaccuracy, but the not-so-subliminal racial message about a black president who supposedly wants to hand out welfare checks to Those People. And sure enough, racists are hearing the message loud and clear. The other day, a neo-Confederate website approvingly quoted Romney’s welfare lie, and said: “Mitt Romney is speaking to our people, promoting popular issues with subtle and not so subtle racial themes….Mitt Romney is a solid White guy with a large, very beautiful White family.”

They won’t stop until the news stories begin with “Mitt Romney told another lie today . . . .”

Lukovich:  Mitt Romney ads false.

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