First, they came for the books on homosexuality

Guest Post by Morbo Everyone has the right to speak to the government. Elected officials should always listen politely — but should reject ideas that offend our constitutional values put forth by silly and not very bright people. Case in point: In Palm Beach County, Fla., a mom with kids in the public schools wants […]

The faith of a skeptic

Guest Post by Morbo I’ve taken a lot of shots at fundamentalists on this blog. I don’t mean to offend all people of faith, and if I’ve done so I apologize. In many ways, I admire people whose religion motivates them to help others and work for social justice. (Right-wing fundamentalists whose faith only motivates […]

Friday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits. * How does John Edwards get some airtime in the midst of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama attacking each other? By attacking them for attacking each other. * Bill O’Reilly thought he’d flex his muscles a bit by berating JetBlue into canceling its sponsorship of YearlyKos. He probably didn’t think […]

A Do-Something Congress

The conventional wisdom, which I’ve regrettably internalized, is that the 110th Congress, which is getting close to its summer break, has been a let-down. Thanks to presidential vetoes and unprecedented Republican filibusters in the Senate, a Congress which had high expectations in January is ending July on a disappointing note. Now is probably a good […]

The kids are still alright

Kevin notes the latest Democracy Corps poll that suggests Bush has helped drive a generation of young people into the Democratic Party’s open arms. This is about what you’d expect, but Democracy Corps has released yet another survey demonstrating that the Republican Party is losing young people in droves. Among 18-29 year olds, 50% have […]

Helen Thomas to Tony Snow: You’re not speaking English

Today’s White House press briefing was a hoot. A few pesky reporters continued to push Tony Snow to rationalize what appears to be a fairly obvious lie from Alberto Gonzales. Q: Are you saying it was not about the wire-tapping that had already been acknowledged? Snow: I’m saying that acknowledged program, the program the president […]

Bush fatigue

I’ve been wondering about this myself for quite a while, but Atrios went ahead and checked Nexis to get the answer. Number of times the term “Clinton fatigue” appeared, according to a Nexis search, in major papers during July of 1999: 27. Clinton Gallup poll approval rating in July of 1999: 64 Number of times […]

‘Progressive’ beats ‘conservative’

In Monday’s debate, Hillary Clinton was asked whether she’d describe herself as a “liberal.” I expected the usual Democratic line — “I don’t believe in labels” — but her answer was much, much stronger than the usual talking point. “You know, Rob — (laughter) — you know, it is a word that originally meant that […]

Hiding, rather than addressing, the bad news out of Iraq

For some inexplicable reason, Republicans have been preoccupied for quite some time with Baghdad’s electrical supply, pointing to it as one of the good-news stories that Americans allegedly don’t hear about. The White House urged the media to cover it more a year ago; Tony Snow bragged about Iraq’s electricity-generating facilities; and then-House Speaker Dennis […]

Friday’s political round-up

Today’s installment of campaign-related news items that wouldn’t generate a post of their own, but may be of interest to political observers: * Former Sen. Fred Thompson’s staffing trouble got worse yesterday when his lead political advance operative resigned unexpectedly. The staffer, Sam LeBlond, who is George W. Bush’s nephew, joined Thompson’s campaign committee less […]