Riling up the haters

August 6, 2009 by rleerlee

It is bad enough that the foes of health care reform use specious arguments but inciting the haters shows they have no conscience whatsoever & will probably stop at nothing. They are playing a very dangerous game stirring them up. I suppose the only upside is that a few of them will be deflected from the birther nonsense:

http://tinyurl.com/kmgtnv

The New Yorker “takes a dive”

August 4, 2009 by rleerlee

How sad that the New Yorker magazine ran a puff piece on Michael Savage:

http://mediamatters.org/columns/200908030038

Questions about Glenn Beck

July 29, 2009 by rleerlee

Is he crazy or calculating? Does he have any redeeming qualities? Does he actually believe any of the nonsense that he spouts? Is he getting nuttier by the day? Is there any limit to his nonsense?

Even O’Reilly & Coulter & Huckabee are distancing from the Birthers!

July 28, 2009 by rleerlee

http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/2009/07/28/conservative_birthers/

Someone please forward this to George Will

July 27, 2009 by rleerlee

The secret evidence of global warming Bush tried to hide

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jul/26/climate-change-obama-administration

Health Care for Dummies

July 22, 2009 by rleerlee

by Dana Milbank
Washington Post

“We need to bring new language to this debate,” Republican message man Alex Castellanos wrote in a memo to fellow GOP strategists this month. “If we paint the house the same color, no one will notice anything has changed: We will still be the same, outdated Republicans who have no new ideas and oppose everything.”

Castellanos, a consultant to the Republican National Committee, offered poll-tested language that the party could use to kill President Obama’s health-care legislation in Congress. “If we slow this sausage-making process down, we can defeat it,” he reasoned.

RNC Chairman Michael Steele must have liked what he read. When he gave a speech at the National Press Club on Monday, he all but read aloud from Castellanos’s memo.

“Slow down, Mr. President: We can’t afford to get health care wrong,” said the memo.

“Slow down, Mr. President: We can’t afford to get health care wrong,” said the chairman.

For the rest:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/20/AR2009072002484.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

Eye of the Beholder?

July 13, 2009 by rleerlee

Maybe it’s just me, since I haven’t seen this specific point raised by anyone else as yet, but would someone please answer the following questions for me:

In some cases that come before the Supreme Court, the justices are being asked to apply laws which seek to place restrictions or conditions on conduct are “reasonable”. How can a person’s life experience not affect their view of what constitutes “reasonableness” under a particular set of circumstances? Or, If the law requires someone to do something within a “reasonable” time period, isn’t there a difference between how a person who has never faced having to do something quickly under those circumstances and the way a single parent who can’t get off work or who can’t afford to hire a baby sitter to free them up to address legal responsibilities might honestly judge a particular case that turns on the “reasonableness” definition? Or, the difference of a reasonableness time frame requirement for someone who can afford to hire investigators and someone who can’t and therefore must discover all the relevant facts that give rise to their claim on their own.

Republican pundits open fire on Sarah Palin

July 13, 2009 by rleerlee

Republican pundits open fire on Sarah Palin
by Mark Barabak
Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/washingtondc/la-na-palin-gop13-2009jul13,0,2642211.story

Since announcing her resignation, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has been pummeled by critics who have called her incoherent, a quitter, a joke and a “political train wreck.”

And those were fellow Republicans talking.

Slagging Sotomayor

July 13, 2009 by rleerlee

Slagging Sotomayor
Slate.com

http://www.salon.com/mwt/broadsheet/2009/07/13/sotomayor_video/index.html

In that great interview in the NYT mag, Emily Bazelon asks Ruth Bader Ginsburg whether the attacks on Sonia Sotomayor as “bullying” and “not as smart” were sexist: “I can’t say that it was just that she was a woman. There are some people in Congress who would criticize severely anyone President Obama nominated. They’ll seize on any handle.” That said, it’s not just any Obama nominee who would be slagged for getting her period by the ever-classy G. Gordon Liddy. Sotomayor’s sex and ethnicity couldn’t help but play a role in her media treatment, and it wasn’t always pretty. Ginsburg continues: “One is that she’s a woman, another is that she made the remark about Latina women. And I thought it was ridiculous for them to make a big deal out of that.”