Politics | President Barack Obama


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To: mindmeld who wrote (112103)4/3/2012 9:41:16 PM
From: tejek of 133980
 
That's not what the data says. The data shows a bifurcated recovery with the 1% gaining everything and the 99% nothing. That's why it's so hard for me to believe this is a real recovery.

Data/smata.......who do you think is buying all those Chevy Cruzes...........the 1%?

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To: mindmeld who wrote (112105)4/3/2012 9:50:49 PM
From: koan of 133980
 
I am ok wth the popular vote.

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To: koan who wrote (112097)4/4/2012 3:27:34 AM
From: Road Walker of 133980
 
Men in Black
By MAUREEN DOWD
WASHINGTON

How dare President Obama brush back the Supreme Court like that?

Has this former constitutional law instructor no respect for our venerable system of checks and balances?

Nah. And why should he?

This court, cosseted behind white marble pillars, out of reach of TV, accountable to no one once they give the last word, is well on its way to becoming one of the most divisive in modern American history.

It has squandered even the semi-illusion that it is the unbiased, honest guardian of the Constitution. It is run by hacks dressed up in black robes.

All the fancy diplomas of the conservative majority cannot disguise the fact that its reasoning on the most important decisions affecting Americans seems shaped more by a political handbook than a legal brief.

President Obama never should have waded into the health care thicket back when the economy was teetering. He should have listened to David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel and not Michelle.

His failure from the start to sell his plan or even explain it is bizarre and self-destructive. And certainly he needs a more persuasive solicitor general.

Still, it was stunning to hear Antonin Scalia talking like a Senate whip during oral arguments last week on the constitutionality of the health care law. He mused on how hard it would be to get 60 votes to repeal parts of the act, explaining why the court may just throw out the whole thing. And, sounding like a campaign’s oppo-research guy, he batted around politically charged terms like “Cornhusker Kickback,” referring to a sweetheart deal that isn’t even in the law.

If he’s so brilliant, why is he drawing a risible parallel between buying health care and buying broccoli?

The justices want to be above it all, beyond reproach or criticism. But why should they be?

In 2000, the Republican majority put aside its professed disdain of judicial activism and helped to purloin the election for W., who went on to heedlessly invade Iraq and callously ignore Katrina.

As Anthony Lewis wrote in The Times back then, “Deciding a case of this magnitude with such disregard for reason invites people to treat the court’s aura of reason as an illusion.”

The 2010 House takeover by Republicans and the G.O.P. presidential primary have shown what a fiasco the Citizens United decision is, with self-interested sugar daddies and wealthy cronies overwhelming the democratic process.

On Monday, the court astoundingly ruled — 5 Republican appointees to 4 Democratic appointees — to give police carte blanche on strip-searches, even for minor offenses such as driving without a license or violating a leash law. Justice Stephen Breyer’s warning that wholesale strip-searches were “a serious affront to human dignity and to individual privacy” fell on deaf ears. So much for the conservatives’ obsession with “liberty.”

The Supreme Court mirrors the setup on Fox News: There are liberals who make arguments, but they are weak foils, relegated to the background and trying to get in a few words before the commercials.

Just as in the Senate’s shameful Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas hearings, the liberals on the court focus on process and the conservatives focus on results. John Roberts Jr.’s benign beige facade is deceiving; he’s a crimson partisan, simply more cloaked than the ideologically rigid and often venomous Scalia.

Just as Scalia voted to bypass that little thing called democracy and crown W. president, so he expressed ennui at the idea that, even if parts of the health care law are struck down, some provisions could be saved: “You really want us to go through these 2,700 pages?” he asked, adding: “Is this not totally unrealistic?”

Inexplicably mute 20 years after he lied his way onto the court, Clarence Thomas didn’t ask a single question during oral arguments for one of the biggest cases in the court’s history.

When the Supreme Court building across from the Capitol opened in 1935, the architect, Cass Gilbert, played up the pomp, wanting to reflect the court’s role as the national ideal of justice.

With conservatives on that court trying to block F.D.R., and with Roosevelt prepared to pack the court, the New Yorker columnist Howard Brubaker noted that the new citadel had “fine big windows to throw the New Deal out of.”

Now conservative justices may throw Obama’s hard-won law out of those fine big windows. They’ve already been playing Twister, turning precedents into pretzels to achieve their political objective. In 2005, Scalia was endorsing a broad interpretation of the commerce clause and the necessary and proper clause, the clauses now coming under scrutiny from the majority, including the swing vote, Justice Anthony Kennedy. (Could the dream of expanded health care die at the hands of a Kennedy?)

Scalia, Roberts, Thomas and the insufferable Samuel Alito were nurtured in the conservative Federalist Society, which asserts that “it is emphatically the province and duty of the judiciary to say what the law is, not what it should be.”

But it isn’t conservative to overturn a major law passed by Congress in the middle of an election. The majority’s political motives are as naked as a strip-search.

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To: mindmeld who wrote (112099)4/4/2012 3:36:40 AM
From: Road Walker of 133980
 
That much is true. It's a great reshuffling of cards. The low interest rates are causing this action. But there are other costs. It's a purposeful re-allocation of capital from one part of the economy to another. I would much prefer to see the free markets do the clearing, not the Fed. It is arrogant to think a handful of people can make better decisions than millions acting in concert to reach economic equilibrium.

Currency, interest rates, the whole economy is a human construct that has always been and always will be manipulated. There are no God given rules, it's all political. Low interest rates lift almost all boats.

There will come a time when we'll all bemoan high interest rates, and hate the Fed for a different reason.

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To: mindmeld who wrote (112104)4/4/2012 3:42:47 AM
From: Road Walker of 133980
 
Well, here's a thought. If real estate is firming and credit scores are firming, then mortgage debt will be more valuable, because there will be fewer defaults.

Your probably right.

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From: koan4/4/2012 7:34:07 AM
of 133980
 
Rachel Maddow: How America's Security-Industrial Complex Went Insane
If no one knows if our security-industrial complex is making us safer, why have we built it? Why are we still building it, at breakneck speed?


April 3, 2012 |






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The following is an excerpt from Rachel Maddow's new book, " Drift: The Unmooring of American Military Power," published by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.

In the little town where I live in Hampshire County, Massachusetts, we now have a “Public Safety Complex” around the corner from what used to be our hokey Andy Griffith–esque fire station. In the cascade of post-9/11 Homeland Security money in the first term of the George W. Bush administration, our town’s share of the loot bought us a new fire truck—one that turned out to be a few feet longer than the garage where the town kept our old fire truck. So then we got some more Homeland money to build something big enough to house the new truck. In homage to the origin of the funding, the local auto detailer airbrushed on the side of the new truck a patriotic tableau of a billowing flaglike banner, a really big bald eagle, and the burning World Trade Center towers.

The American taxpayers’ investment in my town’s security didn’t stop at the new safety complex. I can see further fruit of those Homeland dollars just beyond my neighbor’s back fence. While most of us in town depend on well water, there are a few houses that for the past decade or so have been hooked up to a municipal water supply. And when I say “a few,” I mean a few: I think there are seven houses on municipal water. Around the time we got our awesome giant new fire truck, we also got a serious security upgrade to that town water system. Its tiny pump house is about the size of two phone booths and accessible by a dirt driveway behind my neighbor’s back lot. Or at least it used to be. The entire half-acre parcel of land around that pump house is now ringed by an eight-foot-tall chain-link fence topped with barbed wire, and fronted with a motion-sensitive electronically controlled motorized gate. On our side of town we call it “Little Guantánamo.” Mostly it’s funny, but there is some neighborly consternation over how frowsy Little Guantánamo gets every summer. Even though it’s town-owned land, access to Little Guantánamo is apparently above the security clearance of the guy paid to mow and brush-hog. Right up to the fence, it’s my neighbors’ land and they keep everything trim and tidy. But inside that fence, the grass gets eye-high. It’s going feral in there.

###

It’s not just the small-potatoes post-9/11 Homeland spending that feels a little off mission. It’s the big-ticket stuff too. Nobody ever made an argument to the American people, for instance, that the thing we ought to do in Afghanistan, the way we ought to stick it to Osama bin Laden, the way to dispense American tax dollars to maximize American aims in that faraway country, would be to build a brand-new neighborhood in that country’s capital city full of rococo narco-chic McMansions and apartment/office buildings with giant sculptures of eagles on their roofs and stoned guards lounging on the sidewalks, wearing bandoliers and plastic boots. No one ever made the case that this is what America ought to build in response to 9/11. But that is what we built. An average outlay of almost $5 billion a month over ten years (and counting) has created a twisted war economy in Kabul. Afghanistan is still one of the four poorest countries on earth; but now it’s one of the four poorest countries on earth with a neighborhood in its capital city that looks like New Jersey in the 1930s and ’40s, when Newark mobsters built garish mansions and dotted the grounds with lawn jockeys and hand-painted neo-neoclassic marble statues.




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From: Road Walker4/4/2012 7:54:15 AM
of 133980
 
Obamacare repeal would explode national debt by Joan McCarter Follow


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The Government Accountability Office, the federal government's auditor, has another in a long series of inconvenient truths for conservative "deficit hawks" trying to justify their efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act because of its costs. Repealing the ACA would mean "[s]pending on health care grows much more rapidly" and the debt would increase. It also provides added pressure for the Republicans to come up with that thus-far nonexistent replacement plan.

Here's the basic idea, in a graph form.




The blue line is the baseline scenario, assuming current law, including last year's Budget Control Act, is implemented and Bush tax cuts expire, as they're slated to. The alternative scenario is the other line, that starts shooting up precipitously at about 2025.
As our 2011 simulations showed, if the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) is implemented as intended it would have a major effect on the gap but would not eliminate it. [...] The pace at which deficits grow and the resulting debt buildup vary depending on the assumptions used: deficits and debt grow less rapidly in the Baseline Extended simulation than under the Alternative simulation, which has both lower revenues and higher spending levels than the Baseline Extended simulation. Under the Baseline Extended simulation, debt held by the public would exceed its post–World War II historical high of 109 percent of GDP by 2048; under the Alternative simulation it would cross this threshold by 2026.

The report makes clear that ACA would help control the growth of health care costs, while repealing it and replacing it with something else would mean the public debt reaches historic highs two decades sooner. (Once more, with feeling: Republicans don't care about the debt.) Obviously, to really bring that cost curve down, more reform will be necessary, but tossing what's already been done—whether done by the Supreme Court or the Republican Congress—would be disastrous. So, shouldn't there be some pressure on the Republicans to come up with a real plan?




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To: Road Walker who wrote (112109)4/4/2012 8:06:26 AM
From: manalagi of 133980
 
So sad that we have Clarence Thomas as USSC Justice, and the crazy Scalia who likes to be wined and dined by some lobbyists.

Is this the make up of the highest court of the nation which decided that corporation is a person and thus can pour unlimited amount of money to get its candidate elected? Even if the corporation is foreign owned like Unilever?

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To: Road Walker who wrote (112109)4/4/2012 8:06:46 AM
From: koan of 133980
 
Yep! Thugs, not wise men.

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To: koan who wrote (112115)4/4/2012 9:26:13 AM
From: Road Walker of 133980
 
Usually don't like Dowd a lot.... but she nailed this one.

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