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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Straight talk about Rove's legacy

By bert


Karl Rove is an awful person who damaged our government big time.

That needed to be said, I think. Partly because I believe it, and partly because the professional commentators are not speaking enough plain truth about this guy since Rove announced Monday that he is leaving his White House job.

Smart bloggers like Josh Marshall and Jay Rosen have also noticed something unsatisfying (lazy maybe?) about the Rove discussion so far.

So what did Rove do, now that he’s mostly done doing it?

1. Rove did unforgiveable things to people.
It’s not easy to do things that make politics seem even more repugnant than it already seems. But, remember, Rove was buddies with Lee Atwater. In Rove's case there are too many disgusting acts to list even most of them. Is that why nobody does so?

I'll start the ball rolling with a relatively well-known awful case. During the primary campaign that Rove directed for George W. Bush in 2000 a push-poll phone project called up South Carolina anti-abortion group members and suggested that Bush’s front-running opponent, Sen. John McCain, fathered an illegitimate baby with an African-American prostitute. That's not true of course; McCain and his wife Cindy adopted that girl from a Bangladesh orphanage.

I will gladly admit that Rove has some impressive skills, and that one is to keep his fingerprints off the personal destruction that he perpetrates. Without proof for some of this stuff, most people are convinced they happened because they fit with Rove’s character.
A profile by Matt Bai in the New York Times Sunday Magazine uses an old saying to describe Rove's core belief: there are no rules in a knife fight. In another magazine piece, this one by Ron Suskind in Esquire, Suskind related an anecdote that spells out Rove’s behavior on a day-to-day basis. As Suskind was entering Rove’s White House office for an interview . . .
Rove was talking to an aide about some political stratagem in some state that had gone awry and a political operative who had displeased him. I paid it no mind and reviewed a jotted list of questions I hoped to ask. But after a moment, it was like ignoring a tornado flinging parked cars. "We will fuck him. Do you hear me? We will fuck him. We will ruin him. Like no one has ever fucked him!" As a reporter, you get around—curse words, anger, passionate intensity are not notable events—but the ferocity, the bellicosity, the violent imputations were, well, shocking. This went on without a break for a minute or two. Then the aide slipped out looking a bit ashen, and Rove, his face ruddy from the exertions of the past few moments, looked at me and smiled a gentle, Clarence-the-Angel smile. "Come on in."

Besides his treatment of McCain in South Carolina, Rove also has his gloved hand (no fingerprints) on the sleazy stratagems to ruin other Vietnam veterans who became politicians, such as John Kerry. One of Rove’s legacies is that the term “swift-boating” is now a gerund that has become common usage.

Former Georgia Senator Max Cleland was also a Vietnam veteran, wheelchair-bound now thanks to a grenade in Vietnam. In the 2004 congressional elections, one that Rove openly stated Republican lawmakers could win by exploiting the terror issue, Cleland was attacked in television ads that implied he supported Osama bin Laden. In yet another profile of Rove in the Atlantic Monthly, author Joshua Green states that a Rove trademark is to attack opponents on the parts of their biography, such as military service, that seem unassailable.

Green’s example for Rove’s urge to attack the unassailable draws from Rove's work on an Alabama Supreme Court race in 1994. Rove’s candidate faced an opponent who promoted his volunteer work on behalf of abused children. To counter this endearing attribute, Rove started a whispering campaign originating among students at the University of Alabama Law School that suggested Kennedy was a pedophile. Rove may deny this too, but in this case, a former assistant, anonymous in the article, admitted openly to the reporter that this was Rove’s strategy all along.

But Democrats like Kerry, Kennedy, and Cleland willingly entered politics, and they know campaigns are not tiddlywinks. The one I still can’t get over – and I know it’s old news now – is that Rove also marshaled his skills and influence to successfully mount a project to destroy Cindy Sheehan. Do you folks think that Rove was capable, let’s say in August of 2005 during Camp Casey, of shouting into the phone to some of his staff, saying “we will fuck her like nobody has ever fucked her! We will ruin her!” and be talking about the mother of a Marine killed in Iraq?

Too many of the stories on Rove this week praise him for being an effective campaign manager. You can be that and at the same time be a really bad man. The morality of someone like Bill Clinton or even Richard Nixon seems, by comparison, almost saintly.

2. Rove pimped policy to service politics.

Again, the realists are rolling their eyes at my quaint naiveté. But many seasoned Washington observers who stopped being naïve long ago have stated that there used to a membrane in the White House -- a permeable membrane -- that fuzzily marked a separation between governing and winning elections. These same observers say that there is no separation now. The former White House aide and political science professor John DiIulio, for example, regrets to admit that policy under Bush is just backfill for politics.

Sad to say, but we don’t have to extrapolate out the possible bad effects of a White House that governs solely for the sake of its own power. In our time, the Iraq War is a reality that proves the worst effects imaginable.

As my father would put it, you know goddamn good and well that Rove was in that room when Bush decided to invade Iraq. Frank Rich also thinks so. His book, The Greatest Story Ever Sold, rightfully points out the baffling fact that no one really knows to this day why Bush launched that war. Rich’s own reasoned answer is there were two main causes. One cause came from many of Bush’s influential advisors – Cheney, Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld – who wanted a war with Iraq even before the Sept. 11 attacks. They were thinking of geopolitics, payback, and Israel. Another cause was Karl Rove, who also wanted that war because he calculated – “metrics” he likes to call it -- that the war would be necessary in order for Republicans lawmakers to win in the mid-term 2002 elections. This article is a briefer version of Rich's argument.

Let’s not, out of malaise or some sense of decorum or objectivity, give Rove a pass for stunts like this: Starting a war to win elections, and then ruining the mother of a son killed in it.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

State Budget Hearing Wednesday Evening, Serb Hall

by folkbum

I'm still standing by my prediction of a mid-September budget resolution (if that early). However, I'm still eagerly awaiting this:
Public Hearing to Discuss the 2007-09 Wisconsin State Biennial Budget
Wednesday, August 15, 6:00 PM
American Serb Hall, Wisconsin Room, 5101 W. Oklahoma Avenue
I hope to see at least some of you there!

And, as long as we're on a related topic, My State Representative has a post today on the Business Journal Small Business Times blog:
Another component of the new Federalism was less popular over the last 25 years, but the "don't trust government" crowd has tried at every chance they get: eliminate the New Deal-inspired programs of Social Security, Unemployment and Worker's Compensation (all three programs were born in Wisconsin), and starve the living daylights out of Medicaid and Medicare health care programs to avert European or Canadian-style "socialized medicine."

Back in the efficient and all-knowing private sector, we were greeted with another byproduct of the big thinkers of that age: HMOs. If anyone has an old newspaper around, they might remember employers dropping traditional insurance plans for workers and retirees in favor of health maintenance organizations (along the same time pensions were dropped for 401k plans). HMO is a buzzkill, so now we use words like "consumer-empowerment" or "managed care" or my favorite, "health savings accounts." That feels better now doesn't it?

HMOs were set-up to incorporate a fiscal and physical gatekeeper known as your primary care doctor. Charitable hospitals, usually run by religious groups, would shift from "not-for-profits" to business models that actually parallel that of a massive, for-profit corporation. And good old-fashioned insurance firms, like Blue Cross Blue Shield, would need to keep up with the times and join the for-profit movement so they can "invest in life-saving and quality improvements … blah blah blah."

So thanks to these trends, we now have some of the highest health care costs in the world, yet we collectively as a society are getting sicker. Specialized doctors, expensive technology and drugs, hospital systems that keep building and building new and more expensive facilities, and a fragmented primary care system characterize this awful lifestyle choice.

Yes, I said choice. We have already chosen the route that Torinus and his buddies want us to embrace now. It not only has failed, it has (like New Federalism) put states like Wisconsin at a competitive disadvantage with other states and other nations in the world. It is how one explains spending nearly twice per capita on health care services and still having high rates of infant mortality, widespread chronic yet preventable disease, and people who are middle class or working class feeling economic insecurity that rivals the 1930s.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Playing the Blame Game: The Milwaukee County Edition

by capper

On August 4th, Michael Verville, an inmate at the Milwaukee County House of Correction, escaped. Fortunately, he was caught the next day. This wasn't a spur of the moment, opportunistic event. It was thought out and took weeks to implement. Now, Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker has presented a plan to curtail further escape attempts, including more razor wire, more cameras, more lighting and bricking up windows. But he does not address one of the major reasons that this escape was possible, burnt out staff members.

Having had worked at HOC for a number of years, I feel that I have some insight on what happened. Basically the House is understaffed, and the workers are burning out by having to do constant overtime. This was talked about in an article in MSJ back on June 30th.

Many of the officers at the HOC use the job as a stepping stone for a position with the Sheriff's Department (oops, Sheriff's Office now) or with a municipal police department. Many officers don't have what it takes to work there and leave on their own or are fired. This means a high rate of turnover already exists. Adding to the problems is Scott Walker's perennial budget cuts in the disguise of tax freezes, and this lowers the number or positions available, but not necessarily the number needed. Furthermore, in an effort to cut his budget, Sheriff David Clarke changed the staffing at the Milwaukee County Jail from deputies to correction officers, causing a small exodus of people from HOC to the jail.

So now you have officers that are working 12 to 16 hours a day, six to seven days a week, week in and week out. Officers are getting so burnt out that they are purposely disrespecting superior officers, or violating other policies, just so they can get suspended and have a day off. (This also adds to the shortage of officers, and causes even more forced overtime for the others.)

When you have people working these many hours, without a day off or even enough time to do more than catch five hours a sleep before going back to work on a daily basis, mistakes are going to happen. People aren't as alert or as careful as they should be, especially in a prison setting.

The chronic fatigue, the inability for officers to see their families, and the increasing risk of injury has caused an all time low in morale. This is exasperated when they have people threatening their job security with talk of privatization.

SIDE NOTE: HOC Superintendent Ronald Malone indicated that they are having a hard time recruiting people (a friend that still works there told me that the last training class had four people, as opposed to the usual 12 to 15). Does this surprise anyone? Who would want to work under these conditions?

To further add insult to injury, Walker is already preparing to point his finger at the dastardly, lazy, incompetent county workers, without acknowledging the simple fact that it was his policy that created the conditions to allow the escape to happen in the first place. He has already made a statement today showing that he plans to blame the officers involved, when he said, "Did those staffers follow the procedures put in place and for those who didn't and we're not pre-judging until the reports are done, but for those individuals the discipline will be swift and direct."

Not to be outdone, Sheriff Clarke wrote a letter to the county board criticizing HOC and its staff. The article reads:


Milwaukee Sheriff David Clarke is criticizing the House of Correction. In a letter to the County Board President, he blames complacency and negligence of the workers. He also criticizes managers who set the tone.
In the same letter, Clarke talks about touring the H.O.C. just two days after the escape. "People will usually recommit and rededicate themselves after an incident like Saturday's escape; one can usually fell the sense of urgency in the air. Unfortunately, I did not experience any sense of urgency in the atmosphere at the H.O.C." he wrote.


The funny thing about Clarke's criticism, is that, as Ken Mobile at Mobile's Take points out, he is actually blaming himself.

On the bright side, at least one county supervisor, Mark Borkowski, gets it. He has repeatedly stepped up and pointed out the overtime crisis at HOC and that unless something is done to get officers some relief, it will probably only get worse.

Doesn't that hurt your brain?

by folkbum

This post by Jessica McBride is a perfect example of what for most people would be mind-splittingly painful cognitive dissonance:
Here's a thought on the "it's the public's airwaves" argument touted by those who want to bring back the so-called Fairness Doctrine.

The public's spoken. They want largely conservative talk.

Since it's "their airwaves", their wishes should be paramount, right? If the public wanted other views on the air, they'd get their news/opinion elsewhere. (McBride's italics and poor comma usage.)
Here's why it's gotta hurt: For 35 years, people of Jessica McBride's political orientation have been telling us that the media (newspapers, wire services, network and cable TV, etc.) are liberal--that liberal voices dominate the media because the media elite control the message and the means of distribution.

I disagree with this assessment (Chris Matthews, for example, is not liberal, but a sexist pig), but I doubt McBride--or most of her readers--would. In fact, some of the most ardent commenters on her site (and on that post) spend time on their own blogs decrying the liberal media.

But when they speak about conservative dominance of talk radio, it's the result of the "market"--the "public" wants conservative hegemony on the AM dial.

Who's to say that if there is liberal bias or dominance in the rest of the media--and, again, I don't think there is--it's not because of the "market" or because the "public" wants it?

Apply a consistent standard, people.

50 Things

by folkbum

By now you've probably seen these posts all over the liberal Cheddarsphere. If you haven't I'll link to Xoff's version of the post, as it was mostly his idea. We all contributed to the list, and I did the "book" cover. Feel free to steal the cover and promote the list on your own blogs, and to add to the list in comments below.

Feds Ridicule Vet Diagnosed with PTSD

by Michael A. Leon

At the US Dept for Federal Veterans Affairs, National Center for PTSD website, a veteran is given information on whom to contact for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) problems:

You can contact your local VA Hospital or Veterans Center located in your telephone book, or call the VA Health Benefits Service Center toll free at 1-877-222-VETS. In addition to its medical centers, VA also has many CBOCs (Community Based Outpatient Clinics) around each state so you can look for one in your community.

But as Vietnam-era Air Force veteran Keith Roberts found out, that doesn't mean you should actually file for PTSD-related benefits.In an appellate brief filed with the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit on July 29, the US Atty's office mocks Roberts for seeking help with his diagnosed mental health and other medical ailments.

Reads the brief filed by Steven Biskupic's office:

A layperson can gather information about PTSD's causes and symptoms from public libraries, the Internet, and the VA's National Center for PTSD ... After Roberts' personality disorder claim failed, he changed course. In February 1994, Roberts notified the VA for the first time that he suffered from PTSD, and that it was connected to his military service. His claim, however, did not say what his in-service stressor was, and he offered no PTSD diagnosis.

So, this veteran did not fill out the complex VA forms properly. But after jumping through hoop after hoop, Roberts was eventually diagnosed with PTSD by several medical professionals and began receiving PTSD-related benefits in 1999.

But he made the mistake of seeking an earlier retroactive date per the advice of his veterans service officer, and called the VA the fraudulent crooks that they are during a period (2004-2005) when the administration was actively seeking to review 72,000 PTSD cases for fraud, per the advice of the American Enterprise Institute, where the administration takes it cues on several public policy areas.

Roberts' was convicted of wire fraud and has been serving a 48-month sentence since March.

His case is under appeal in the Seventh Circuit and his administrative case is under appeal at the D.C.-based Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims.
###

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Midwest Yanked from the Clutches of Airtran

by Keith Schmitz

The best care in the air lives on.

Just announced Midwest Airlines has entered into an agreement with mega private equity group TPG Capital out of Texas. Airtran has withdrawn their offer.

Here is the story from the Milwaukee Journal and PRWire.

As far as the future, who knows? My guess is that Tim Hoeksema is not going to sell the company or its employees out to be dismantled.

Losing Midwest would have been a major blow to Milwaukee's image. Safe for now.

Tommy! says good-bye

by folkbum

And it is mercifully over.

The best guesses on the previous thread were Dean and grumps--Dean called the day, and grumps offered a time, though wrong.

I guess now Tommy can focus on his high-paying consulting and board-of-director work, instead of that pesky campaigning.

UPDATE: Apparently, Katherine Skiba was crying too hard about Thompson's pulling out that Meg Jones had to write the story.

Also, I keep forgetting to mention it, but The Right's Field is the best place to keep up with everything having to do with the Dark Side.

More hate from those hate-filled DailyKos haters (Wisconsin edition)

by folkbum

Just in case Bill O'Reilly hasn't yet convinced you that the Daily Kos is bevy of foul, putrid, Bush-hating filth, the New York Times brings you the story of one prominent hatemonger in Campbellsport, Wisconsin:
The brick church, more than a century old, stands at the junction of two county roads tracing the glacial hills of southeastern Wisconsin. In the field across the way, the summer corn stretches eight feet from root to tassel. This being a Sunday morning, the Rev. Daniel Schultz greets the faithful on the front steps as they arrive for 9 a.m. worship at the Salem United Church of Christ. Pastor Dan, as he prefers to be known, is the only man in the congregation wearing a coat and tie.

Over the next hour, he leads the 70 worshipers in a round of "Happy Birthday" for Jim Maul, a longtime member. He invites a half-dozen children to the pulpit, where he crouches among them to teach them to recite "The Lord's Prayer." In the part of the service designated for "sharing joys and concerns," he listens as people rise in the pews to tell of a relative's surgery, a brother's recovery from a liver transplant.

Here is ministry at its most venerable, ministry at its most tender and intimate and finely grained. And it comes from a minister with a strikingly unlikely double-life, one part as the small-town preacher in a socially conservative spot of the Midwest, the other as an abrasive and confrontational voice of the religious left in the blogosphere.

Exactly one week after Mr. Schultz presided over Sunday worship at his home church here, he gave a sermon in the vast arena of the McCormick Convention Center in Chicago. Instead of the farmers, factory workers and tradesmen who typify his regular congregation, the audience for his denunciation of the Iraq war consisted of the self-proclaimed "netroots" attending Yearly Kos, the annual political and media convention organized by the Daily Kos Web site. [. . .]

"Over all, we're a fairly conservative congregation, but everybody loves him," said Denise Goetsch, a member of the church's governing board. "Whatever people's personal politics are, they're here because they believe in God. And Dan's been good at making friends with pretty much anybody."

Mr. Schultz's sermon here the week before Yearly Kos offered a prime example of how. Drawing on a passage from I Corinthians, Mr. Schultz preached for social justice while speaking directly to his humble church and its obscure home.
It's so horrible, isn't it? When will someone finally shut that site down?

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Rage Against the Machine

By Keith Schmitz

Why do they lie? Because it works.

For those of you who didn't receive the issue, Newsweek has a very important article on the manufactured dissent on the global warming issue by the doubt machine of the climate change deniers.

From the article:
Just last year, polls found that 64 percent of Americans thought there was "a lot" of scientific disagreement on climate change; only one third thought planetary warming was "mainly caused by things people do." In contrast, majorities in Europe and Japan recognize a broad consensus among climate experts that greenhouse gases—mostly from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas to power the world's economies—are altering climate. A new NEWSWEEK Poll finds that the influence of the denial machine remains strong. Although the figure is less than in earlier polls, 39 percent of those asked say there is "a lot of disagreement among climate scientists" on the basic question of whether the planet is warming; 42 percent say there is a lot of disagreement that human activities are a major cause of global warming. Only 46 percent say the greenhouse effect is being felt today.

The article goes on to dig deep into the manipulation of the American public by vested interests.

We see it all the time. We know that the facts are not kind to conservative "truths."

This is the 21st century. We can't run a country on myth and ever hope to be competitive.

Tommy!'s Long, Hard Slog Is (maybe?) Over

by folkbum


Well, it seems Tommy! didn't finish first at the Ames Straw Poll, as he had thought he might. He didn't even finish second or third, as his expectation-lowering statements of late have indicated.

He finished sixth, behind, among others, a racist nativist and a nutcase.

Willard Romney and Mike Huckabee took first and second, which is what Romney expected and a better-than-expected showing for Huckabee.

How long before Tommy! calls it quits? Leave your guess for Tommy!'s pull-out date in the comments below, and the winner will, um, be announced.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Most Republican candidates losing . . . to Obama . . . among Republicans

by folkbum

I picked this up via Steve Benen, who points out a University of Iowa poll released just ahead of the olympian Ames Straw Poll. Just watch:
Statewide Registered Republican Voters

The changes among Republican voters since March are dramatic. Romney is now the preferred candidate at 21.8 percent--double his March support.

Giuliani's support, 10 percent, decreased by almost 8.5 percent. McCain's support has collapsed in Iowa. His support among registered Republicans dropped from 14.4 percent in March to 1.8 percent in July-August. UI political scientists note that McCain has been passed in popularity not only by former Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., who earned 5.2 percent support, but also by a Democratic challenger, Obama, who is supported by 6.7 percent of Republicans. No other candidate received more than 3 percent support.
Iowa Republicans prefer, in order, Romney, Giuliani, Obama. All the other Republicans--including both Thompsons, Tommy! and ImWIthFred--are losing to Barack Obama. Add in the results for Clinton and Richardson (.pdf) in that poll, and you've got more than 10% of Iowa Republicans supporting Democrats.

I'm still not making up my mind--I still believe all the Democrats are good, and I still believe my February 19th vote will be pointless--so I probably shouldn't point out the poll's "undecided" number, which is at 35% among Iowa Republicans. That means, if you're counting, nearly half of Iowa Republicans either can't commit to a Republican candidate or prefer a Democrat instead.

(On the flipside, not a single Republican gets more than 1% support from the Democratic sample in the poll. Only 23% of Dems are undecided.)

(UPDATE: The same good people who bring you WisPolitics.com bring you IowaPolitics.com, including a poll watch feature, so you can keep up on all the fun news like this.)

Friday Random Ten

The dog days of August Edition

1. "Sad Eyes" Josh Rouse from Nashville

2. "Art of the Gun" The Nields from Play

3. "My Bride and I" Dan Frechette from Lucky Day

4. "Starkville" Indigo Girls from Become You

5. "Greenville" Lucinda Williams from Car Wheels on a Gravel Road

6. "Lay Me Down" John Gorka from Old Futures Gone

7. "Easy Pearls" Girlyman from Joyful Sign

8. "Bird in a Cage" Old 97s from Satellite Rides

9. "The Princess and the Frog" Michael Smith from Such Things are Finely Done

10. "Monty Got a Raw Deal" REM from Automatic for the People

Thursday, August 09, 2007

What do Charlie Sykes and William Hammesfahr have in common?

by folkbum

It's not just that both Sykes* and Hammesfahr went dipping into the private affairs of the Schiavo family a couple of years ago, though that was a good guess.

No, it's more like this:
Hammesfahr testified during an October 2002 court hearing on the Schiavo case that his claim to be a Nobel nominee is based on a letter written by Rep. Mike Bilirakis (R-FL) recommending him for the prize. But Bilirakis is not qualified to make a valid nomination under the Nobel rules.

According to the process posted on the Nobel Prize website, the Nobel Assembly sends out invitations to approximately 3,000 people who are allowed to propose candidates. The 3,000 are "mainly members of the Nobel Assembly, previous prize winners, and a selection of professors at universities around the world." [. . .]

But the fact that Bilirakis is not qualified to nominate Nobel Prize winners did not stop Scarborough or Hannity from referring to Hammesfahr as a Nobel Prize nominee. Hannity did so a total of eight times during a single hour-long program; Scarborough made the reference four times. Additionally, Scarborough erroneously claimed that Hammesfahr has "treated" Schiavo; in fact, Hammesfahr has merely examined her as one of five doctors approved by a Florida court in 2001 to do so. He was one of two doctors selected by Schiavo's parents; two others were selected by Schiavo's husband, Michael Schiavo, and the fifth was chosen by the court.
That was the first thing that came to mind when the Illusory Tenant wrote this morning:
Conservative talker Charlie Sykes has maintained for him the following tidbits of alleged information at his NewsRadio 620 WTMJ website:
Did You Know: Charlie was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. [. . .] A Pulitzer Prize nominee, Charlie has [blah blah blah] ...

Sounds impressive, don't it? It might be, I suppose, if there really was such as thing as a “Pulitzer Prize nominee.” But there isn't. What there are -- aside from winners, of course -- are “nominated finalists,” and Sykes has never been one of those. [. . .] So if you're not a Pulitzer Prize “winner” or a Pulitzer Prize “nominated finalist,” you're either an “entry” or a “submission.” And anybody with 50 bucks and a postage stamp can qualify for those.
At least Pat Robertson never went on FOX News to claim the Sykes had actually won the Pulitzer, unlike he did for Hammesfahr and the Nobel. We'll see how long TMJ leaves the Pulitzer thing in its bios of Sykes. I bet, oh, forever.

I apologize for the google-cache link, but the recent redesign of the WTMJ website made a muddle of the Sykes archive.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Wasserman for the 8th

Sheldon Wassermanby folkbum

It's nice having Democratic control of the State Senate. (A budget, too, would be helpful. But a boy can't have everything he wants.) But it is not enough to rest on that small majority; instead, we ought to be building bigger margins in the safe districts, expanding Democratic ideals and representation to the close districts, and fighting tooth and nail regardless in the hopeless districts.

One of the close districts is the 8th, which comprises the northern tip of Milwaukee's East Side, much of the North Shore, and chunks of that GOP trifecta--Washington, Ozaukee, and Washington Counties. The current office-holder is Alberta Darling, a supposed "moderate" who nonetheless walks the Republican line, even when it comes to her supposed signature moderate issue, abortion. (Planned Parenthood rates her below 50%.) She had a challenge from relatively fresh-faced Jennifer Morales in 2004, a contest that was closer than many people expected.

Sheldon Wasserman is not so fresh-faced, not so inexperienced as Morales, and not so unknown to the district. He's been ably representing the 22nd Assembly district for some time now, quietly building a name for himself as a solid, compassionate, and thoughtful Democratic legislator. And it's time for a change:
When Alberta first ran she pretended to be something she is not, a socially moderate and fiscally responsible leader. Her record over the years has drifted further and further from that ideal. She now follows a hard right wing Republican agenda. This is the same agenda that ignores real issues while making gay marriage extra illegal and banning stem cell research and the life saving hope it may offer. Despite their rhetoric, Senator Darling and her colleagues did nothing to hold the line on taxes. We can do better.

This race is about all of us joining together to send a message that we want pragmatic leadership, not the rigid right wing social agenda. It's about promoting a fiscal responsibility that gets the most bang for the buck for taxpayers. It's about fighting for better schools in our neighborhoods and keeping concealed guns out. It's about a belief that government can do a better job for the people of this district and this state. I hope you will join me and support my campaign.

As a member of the State Assembly I am proud to have....
- Fought hard to defend women's reproductive rights.
- Pushed new standards for renewable energy sources. I put my money where my mouth is and ride the bus back and forth to Madison.
- Stood up for patients' rights, guaranteeing independent review of insurance company denials.
- Helped pass the popular SeniorCare prescription drug program.
- Been recognized for my work for sexual assault victims.

As a State Senator I can do more. I have a bold vision for the future. I will fight to...
- Increase safety on our roads by requiring more frequent testing of drivers over 75.
- Cut the number of counties in Wisconsin, thereby saving taxpayers millions of dollars by eliminating redundant bureacracy.
- Ban discrimination against breastfeeding women.

There is a stark difference between my opponent and [me]. There is too much at stake here to sit on the sidelines. I will need your support to counter the vast sums of special interest money Senator Darling will raise. When she was sitting on the budget-writing committee and raising money from some of the very groups that lobbied her I was out knocking on doors and talking to the people of the district. Unlike Alberta, I refused to raise money until after I voted on the budget. She is already spending that money by hiring surrogates to knock on doors. I will rely on people just like you to volunteer. She thinks she can buy the election with $1000 checks from lobbyists. I know I can win with contributions from people like you. Your contribution of $500, $150, $75, $35 or whatever you can afford will go a long way.

This race is winnable. The numbers show that a candidate with my background and record can win here. I will not take one vote for granted though. I have already knocked on over 3,000 doors and I've worn out two pairs of shoes. I plan on needing many more before this over. I have won tough races before. When I first ran for the Assembly, no one thought I could defeat a Republican incumbent legislator. Don't bet against me this time! Together we can unseat another out-of-touch incumbent legislator.
You can give to Wasserman through my ActBlue page or through ActBlue on Wasserman's site. You can attend a kick-off event for his campaign on Tuesday September 25, 2007, 5-7pm, at the beautiful lakefront home of Bonnie and Leon Joseph, 8130 N Beach Drive, Fox Point. This is a winnable seat; let's make it happen!

What I did on my Summer Vacation

by folkbum

Just kidding, of course; I haven't had a summer off since I was 15.

But I did spend five weeks again this summer with Marquette University's Upward Bound, teaching students from the class of 2008 and advising students on a separate poetry project. It's far more rewarding--and a lot more work--than summer school, and I hope to keep doing it as long as I'm able.

I post this now because yesterday the Journal Sentinel posted video shot of the program this summer. I'm not in the video (the videographer only spent time with two of the groups of kids), but you can start to get a feel for the kinds of things the program offers.

The Poem of the Week, on the other hand, is one part of what I did. You can see my glaring typo at that introductory page, and read some excellent student poems, as well, deeper into the "magazine," as they're calling this collection. For more information on the program, check here.

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Resistance is Futile

by folkbum

Well, apparently a small piece of Fred Thompson's dismal fundraising dollars was enough to lure Cheddarspeherean Sean Hackbarth to D.C., assimilating him into the Thompson Web Borg.

It is surely only a matter of time before your humble folkbum is snapped up by one of the smarter Democratic campaigns, right? Hello? Is this thing on? My email address is over there on the right. . .

Good luck to you Sean. I mean personally, not on the whole Fred thing.

(And, seriously, when is Mike Gravel finally finally going to call the Brawler?)

Why Not Here?

By Keith Schmitz

Ripping off a post from the DailyKos (enjoy Charlie), here is a media observation that applies to Milwaukee as well:

Conservatives tend to say the media is liberal, but Olbermann heads the only lefty show on broadcast or cable news. (Olbermann once described himself not as a liberal, but as an American.)

"I'm surprised that nobody has tried to come in and snake my turf," he says, especially since "Countdown" earns "a good deal of money."

This is the bottom-line idiocy of the corporate media. They keep ratings-starved conservative shows like Glenn Beck and Tucker Carlson on the air, while the fastest growing show on all of cable news-land is still the only liberal show on the schedule.

For an industry that thrives on ripping off each other's successes, this is curious indeed.

Among our oligarchical media and our local media critics, the mantra is "progressive media is a dud in Milwaukee. Ommm, Ommm, Ommm."

No, it doesn't work because you all in the local media biz don't want it to work. We have a county that is 60% Democratic and the argument goes "we have no market for Air America or whatever."

Many of those who would tune into progressive radio according to national studies have higher average incomes. But no matter. If this issue proves anything it is that the economic bottom line doesn't matter in Milwaukee, it is the political bottom line.

There is evidence that right wing rant radio has topped out, even here. A few weeks ago Mark Belling couldn't get his Sunday chat show back on the air. The comeback will be 58 couldn't meet Belling's price. But if the show was worth it they would have.

He's been replaced by NASCAR. Meanwhile the age demographic for rant radio creeps upward, and every time a hearse goes by TMJ there is cause for concern. Inside the industry experts say the radio venom has run its course.

No wonder Sykes dissembles about the return of the fairness doctrine. He knows what has been going on in local media is not fair, and he likes it that way.

Wouldn't it be great to have someone calling out the pompousness of Sykes the way Olbermann does with O'Reilley? That would be great local buzz. We have a bushel of conservatives twits to tweak, providing endless chatter and attraction for a host who would know how to do it.

The charge to local media is if you want to make some money, find someone with the punch of Keith Oblermann, even sandwich the program between the usual wingnut fare and watch it kick behind. If not, the right and the local media experts can stop lecturing us about economics.

Monday, August 06, 2007

Waiting for the riots

by folkbum

Jessica McBride doesn't like it when Democrats talk about foreign policy. That's why she is willing to rewrite the Constitution to say, for example, that Senators like Russ Feingold can't complain about the conduct of the Iraq war. And, presumably, why she would blame Democrats for "inflaming the Muslim world" when introducing and article mostly about a Republican. And, I guess, why she is willing to risk Godwin's Law just to diss Barack Obama.

Today's abomination is hand-wringing over flag-burning protests (organized, as best as I can tell, by unnamed "tribal leaders" somewhere in Pakistan) last week over Obama's positing that he wouldn't be afraid to go into Pakistan to capture Real Terrorists if the opportunity were right, even without permission from the government. This is further proof, you see, that Obama's an idiot when it comes to foreign policy. Obama can't talk foreign policy "the right way, it's a stance filled with peril," she says. In comments below that post, she adds, "I don't think he has the foreign policy experience (or judgment, based on many of his recent statements) to be elected president in a time of war."

So now I'm waiting for the riots in Pakistan over this:
George W Bush said [Monday] he was confident that with the right intelligence, the US and Pakistan governments could take out al Qaeda leaders, and declined to rule out consulting Pakistan first before ordering US forces to act.

"With real actionable intelligence, we will get the job done," said the US president.

He was asked whether he would wait for permission from General Pervez Musharraf, the Pakistani president, before committing the US military to move on "actionable intelligence" as to the whereabouts of terrorist leaders in Pakistan. He did not answer directly.
And I'm wondering where the riots were a year ago, when there was this:
President Bush said [one day in September 2006] he would order U.S. forces to go after Osama bin Laden inside Pakistan if he received good intelligence on the fugitive al Qaeda leader's location.

"Absolutely," Bush said. [. . .]

Although Pakistan has said it won't allow U.S. troops to operate within its territory, "we would take the action necessary to bring him to justice."

But Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, told reporters Wednesday at the United Nations that his government would oppose any U.S. action in its territory.

"We wouldn't like to allow that at all. We will do it ourselves," he said.
And what about the riots about all of this:
But in no case did these reports [about a weekend Republican debate] note, as debate moderator George Stephanopoulos did, that when Giuliani was asked about Obama's comments [on invading Pakistan] on the day of the speech, he did not criticize Obama, but rather echoed his position: "[W]ould that be an option that's on the table, which is we have a chance to catch bin Laden and we have got to do it ourselves because we're not sure if somebody is going to do it correctly -- yeah, I think I would take that option." And, in several cases, the media outlets did not report that even amid their criticism, both Romney and Giuliani affirmed during the debate that they would retain the option of acting against Osama bin Laden over Pakistan's objections, if necessary.
Actually, I don't think there will be riots, unless some different unnamed "tribal leaders" somewhere in Pakistan decide to stage something for the cameras and do some speechifying to puff themselves up some more.

What's kind of funny for our purposes here, though, is this pointed barb McBride throws at Democrats in her post about the flag-burning: "[T]he Democratic hypocrisy over [Obama's] comments is glaring." She explains this perceived hypocrisy: "Will the Democrats who criticize Bush for straining relations with allies now criticize Obama?" You see, we Democrats are upset--and I think rightly so--that Bush and his actions on the foreign stage have diminished U.S. credibility abroad. I think we can all agree that Democrats believe this. However, what I have not heard (and I did a quick googling; if someone can prove me wrong on this, I'll take it) is Democrats criticizing Bush for saying that he would take necessary steps to (finally!) get bin Laden. I think Democrats would, in fact, be quite pleased if US Special Forces were to pop up one day with the Bearded One in tow. That's what we've been begging for Bush to do for six friggin' years!

Instead, I think we should look to McBride: Bush has repeatedly said he would go in even without Pakistan's permission. The two leading (declared) Republican candidates have said exactly the same thing. In other words, what Obama said last week is exactly what Bush has been saying for a while now, and what her Republicans said just yesterday, and the one she targets is, of course, Obama.

Who, I ask you, my fair and loyal readers, is the hypocrite now?

Charlie Sykes Supports Gay Porn











by bert

Sorry about that headline, but Sykes started it.

He started it on his radio show this morning because he supposedly established that all the folks involved with the DailyKos website/movement hate the troops and are extreme left-wing radicals.

Now pay attention to the supposed logic here. Sykes confirmed this premise by featuring one diarist for Daily Kos, A. Whitney Brown, who is a former Saturday Night Live cast member. Here is one of Brown’s sentences that are now pinging around among right-wing bloggers:

“Do I still support the individual men and women who have given so much to serve their country? No. I think they’re a bunch of idiots. I also think they’re morally retarded.”

(I'll leave aside the point that Folkbum already made in a comment to the preceding DailyKos post: That this Brown fellow is a professional comedian with his tongue in his cheek. I'll also decline to mention that the DailyKos founder, Markos Moulitsas ZĂșniga, is a U.S. Army veteran.)

What I want to focus on is the fact that A. Whitney Brown is just one diarist among a multitude for the DailyKos site, and is not even among the 15 contributing writers. Others such as Keith Schmitz no doubt know the DailyKos site better than me, but Brown's peripheral role seems to resemble the status of folks who leave comments on Folkbum. Brown is one of many and there is very little control exerted on what he says.

Nevertheless, Sykes is hoping his listeners are stupid enough to hear some sentences from one dude’s DailyKos writings and think that everyone connected to DailyKos embraces those ideas.

But, if he wants to take that approach, let's look at Charlie Sykes’s own operation on the internet for a sec. Now, unlike the more open format of DailyKos that fosters a widely shared conversation, the website of Sykes restricts input a lot – no guest bloggers, no comments allowed, a small blogroll. But Charlie Sykes does allow website visitors to access some select few right-wing sites. Those sites that Sykes blesses with access include The Weekly Standard.

You might be liberal and not know much about that publication, so I'll tell you everything you need to know about it.

The Weekly Standard’s Michael Goldfarb – who as online editor is more responsible for the site than a diarist is for DailyKos -- has been attacking a U.S. soldier in Iraq, Scott Thomas Beauchamp. Beauchamp became Goldfarb’s target when he described for The New Republic reprehensible conduct of fellow soldiers. The Weekly Standard attempted to discredit the story by attacking sources such as Beauchamp. But The Weekly Standard’s own sources for the counterattack, as Max Blumenthal shows here, are revealing:

Among all the active duty soldiers used by Goldfarb to undermine Beauchamp, only one is cited by name: Matt Sanchez, a corporal in the Marine reserves. "Frankly, I don't believe ANY of this story," Sanchez proclaimed in the Standard about Beauchamp's diary. Who is Sanchez? According to Goldfarb, he is simply a soldier "who stands behind his work."

But Sanchez is more than a mere man in uniform. As I reported for Media Matters today, Sanchez is also a conservative pro-war activist whose bio includes a stint as he gay porn actor Rod Majors, (star of such filmic classics as "Beat Off Frenzy") and an illustrious part-time job as a male prostitute -- facts he has acknowledged "leaving ... off my curriculum vitae."

There you have it. A homosexual male, who is a porn movie actor and prostitute to boot, is connected to Charlie Sykes’s website. According to Charlie's logic, that should tell us all we need to know about Sykes himself.