I think it’s safe to say that opponents of gays serving in the military are officially out of arguments. A new poll from Harris Interactive found that 55% of Americans think gays and lesbians should be allowed to serve openly in the military. By comparison, 19% of the 2,337 Americans polled said gays and lesbians […]
Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi, a terrific writer with a biting sense of humor, wrote a piece this week that probably hasn’t generated the attention it deserves. Taibbi watched with some horror this month when right-wing news outlets launched their “madrassa” smear against Barack Obama. It caused him to realize that “even the most outrageous media […]
While positioning on the compromise resolution on the war in Iraq works itself out in the Senate, the Bush/McCain/Lieberman side of the debate is moving forward with a resolution of their own. The White House has reportedly given word that the Bush gang expects some kind of resolution to pass, so they hope to minimize […]
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: * Florida Gov. Charlie Crist (R) announced yesterday that his administration was moving forward with a plan to abandon touch-screen electronic voting machines altogether. The controversial machines, installed after the 2000 debacle, proved […]
So, what are we going to call the new compromise resolution in the Senate criticizing the president’s strategy in Iraq? The far-right Washington Times has a suggestion. A bipartisan majority in the Senate yesterday united behind a firm “stay the course” resolution on the war in Iraq, despite searing public criticism from both sides in […]
Back in September, it appeared that ExxonMobil was beginning to turn a corner. The “Competitive Enterprise Institute,” a propaganda machine for Big Oil that created some unintentionally hilarious ad campaigns, would no longer be funded by the energy behemoth. What’s more, ExxonMobil told the Royal Society, Britain’s premier scientific academy, that the company would “not […]
The good news is the Senate, after moving past a recent Republican filibuster, finally passed a long-overdue increase in the minimum wage with minimal opposition. The bad news is it wasn’t even close to a “clean” bill, like the one that passed the House. The Senate voted overwhelmingly yesterday to increase the federal minimum wage […]
The National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq was such a thorough undertaking, it couldn’t even be completed in time for the president to launch a new escalation policy (which, presumably, would be based in part on the NIE). Given the six months of painstaking work from the entire intelligence community, this would finally be a complete […]
Today’s edition of quick hits. * Many of you spoke about Molly Ivins’ death in yesterday’s Mini-Report, but I wanted to add what a loss this is to the American discourse. Ivins was nothing short of a national treasure. Her combination of wit, strength, and intelligence was unrivaled in the national media. To say that […]
After weeks of fairly intense wrangling, it looked as if the Senate was ready to approve a bi-partisan, non-binding resolution in opposition to the president’s escalation strategy in Iraq. Dems wanted a more assertive resolution with stronger language; Republican war skeptics preferred a watered down measure; and a compromise measure landed somewhere in between. As […]