December 7, 2009, 12:13PM
I would really like to know what much smarter political thinkers believe is the best way to channel our money and time to help pass health care reform. It seems we need the following:
1. Show that there is lots of indpendent support for a public option, to convince Olympia Snowe, Susan Collins, and the other moderate Republican in the Senate that supporting a bill with a future public option is safe, and vetoing debate is not.
2. Make very clear to Joe Lieberman that his career is completely over if he prevents health care reform from coming to a vote over his objections to a public option.
I want to write a check to the right cause, and I want to call the right people. I am a liberal Democrat, so I am not the best person to persuade peers and moderates (I want single-payer, and all of my friends know this); someone out there must be way to my right and still prepared to fire any senator that derails this reform for a stupid reason.
November 29, 2009, 8:27PM
I wanted to comment on "Why do you believe what you do?" , but I couldn't find a way to do it.
I
hope that my most vociferous beliefs are well-considered and supported
by evidence, but I think there is a process by which I form my initial
beliefs that is often repeated.
My basic belief is that
children, women, working people, minorities, and people with unpopular
ideas and expression are treated poorly by our market and our active
suburban social norms that celebrate independence, wealth, leisure,the
achievements of white people, and conformity. When a political dispute
pits minorities against the majority, women against men, poor workers
against wealthy owners, children against investors, or artists against
stingy taxpayers, I first take the position that favors the first group
against the second. Consciously, I think that politics should take
care of everyone; subconsciously, I think that some people are overdue
for their share of equal protection, and I want to make sure they get
their share.
Although many beliefs that are formed in this
way fade in the face of evidence, this process is where my beliefs
comes from. For example, I do not support a $15.00/hour minimum wage,
which I once did, because the fact that such a minimum wage is fair
doesn't keep it from wreaking economic havoc and driving up
unemployment; on the other hand, I would support a nationwide 75%
increase in K-12 teacher salaries and a dramatic increase in the
standards for the teachers who earn these salaries, even if this
required a doubling of my taxes.
I believe that most Rightists
arrive at beliefs by a similar process -- they believe that attention
to some sectors of society are long overdue. These people believe that
black folks, feminists, gays and lesbians, and unions have more
influence than they are due, and they favor any political position that
restores these groups to what they perceive as their rightful place in
society.
November 6, 2008, 11:48AM
Suppose that, in a gesture of compromise and bipartisanship, Barack Obama appoints John McCain secretary of the Interior (to use his genuine expertise in Native American affairs and his enthusiasm for drilling), and Olympia Snowe the secretary of Health and Human services.
That would leave two Republican senators replaced by Democratic governors, bringing the Democrats to 60.
Not likely, and not advisable, but an interesting twist...
September 9, 2008, 3:27PM
I just saw this link. Palin isn't named, but her tenure as mayor of Wasilla covers this time.
Sarah Palin--who is famous for taking an active interest in small personnel issues as Mayor and Governor--allowed her police chief, without comment, to charge Rape Victims for their own DNA tests until a state law made this practice illegal, and then said nothing when the same police chief testified against the law.
http://bitchphd.blogspot.com/2008/09/while-mayor-palin-charged-rape-victims.html
September 9, 2008, 3:27PM
I just saw this link. Palin isn't named, but her tenure as mayor of Wasilla covers this time.
Sarah Palin--who is famous for taking an active interest in small personnel issues as Mayor and Governor--allowed her police chief, without comment, to charge Rape Victims for their own DNA tests until a state law made this practice illegal, and then said nothing when the same police chief testified against the law.
http://bitchphd.blogspot.com/2008/09/while-mayor-palin-charged-rape-victims.html
July 1, 2008, 7:30AM
Why, oh why, didn't Wes Clark say this when he was interviewed about his remarks on meet the press.
"I don't believe that being injured or captured in war makes you automatically more qualified to be president than an opponent who hasn't served in wartime. For that matter, neither does John McCain.
If John McCain believed that serving your country in uniform in wartime made you a better president, he would have endorsed John Kerry against George W. Bush."
May 2, 2008, 12:19AM
Recently, John McCain has been
harping
about the fact that Hamas leadership has expressed a preference for
Barack Obama as president. Skipping for the moment the fact that John
McCain supported a war that pissed away universal goodwill for the US
after 9/11 and created the most effective recruiting and training
environment for terrorists in several lifetimes, I find there are
several problems with his logic.
McCain seems to (deliberately, perhaps) misunderstand three things.
- Terrorists
sometimes want a specific political goal, or at least claim to want it,
but they usually want different things in private and public. A public
announcement that terrorists will rejoice in a particular outcome in
the presidential election has, at best, no correlation with what they actually want.
- Terrorism
is completely ineffective at achieving any end except fostering
conflict. Well organized terrorists like Hamas want conflict above all
other things. Israel and United States are not up to the task of wiping
out organizations like Hamas with violence--if they were, Hamas would
have been history long ago, given the superior firepower and training
of Israeli forces. A violent religious extremist doesn't blow himself
up in a public square hoping there won't be a retribution--he is counting
on a retribution, and he is counting on that retribution to be severe
and generalized; this radicalizes moderates, undermines his enemy's
political position, and forces other co-religionists to choose sides,
with his side at an advantage. A belligerent mad bomber such as McCain
and Clinton at least portray themselves to be is ideal from their point
of view.
- Historically, the least belligerent party to a
given terrorist group has been the most effective at countering that
group. Among the major party candidates, Jose Luis Zapatero of Spain,
Tony Blair of Britain, and Yitzhak Rabin of Israel were the least
belligerent to their terrorist opponents. In all three cases, they were
the far more effective against ETA, the IRA, and Palestinian terrorists
than their more belligerent opponents. None of these candidates were
prepared to make concessions directly to their terrorists opponents,
but all of them drove wedges between the terrorist organizations and
the moderate members of their constituencies.
In
general, I seriously doubt that Hamas will benefit from the election of
Barack Obama or suffer from the election of John McCain in the least.
There may be rational reasons to vote for John McCain over his three
likely general election opponents (though I can't think of any at the
moment), but a perceived endorsement by the leader of Hamas for his
likely Democratic opponent is one of the dumbest reasons to do so that
I can imagine.