Thursday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* Pelosi vs. Bush: “House Democrats handed the White House a stinging defeat Thursday over a free-trade agreement with Colombia, rejecting President Bush’s bid to force a vote on the deal before the end of the year. But even as they did this, the Democrats held out an olive branch of sorts, telling the administration that they were ready to find ways to ease the economic pain caused by free trade and the economic downturn before they took up the agreement.”

* Senate passes housing bill: “The Senate took a first step toward addressing the nation’s housing crisis today, giving overwhelming approval to a bipartisan package of tax breaks for homeowners, homebuyers and businesses hurt by the faltering economy. By an 84-to-12 vote, the Senate agreed to create a temporary $7,000 tax credit for buyers of foreclosed properties and a temporary tax deduction worth up to $1,000 for families who pay property taxes. The measure also would make available more money for foreclosure counseling and for state and local housing agencies to refinance troubled mortgages.”

* Typical: “The release of a report on the FBI’s role in the interrogations of prisoners in Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay and Iraq has been delayed for months because the Pentagon is reviewing how much of it should remain classified, according to the Justice Department’s watchdog. Glenn Fine, the Justice Department’s inspector general, told McClatchy that his office has pressed the Defense Department to finish its review, but officials there haven’t completed the process ‘in a timely fashion.’ ‘Why that happened, I don’t know,’ Fine said in an interview this week.”

* Mr. 28 Percent really is Mr. 28 Percent.

* Regrettably, Randi Rhodes has left Air America. Apparently, she decided she’d rather quit than apologize to Hillary Clinton and Geraldine Ferraro.

* I fully agree with Bill Scher who notes that Air America would be wise to take this opportunity to give a daily show to Sam Seder.

* Joe Lieberman, Bill Bennett, And Bill Kristol believe the lesson of the Petraeus testimony is that we should go after Iran. Of course, since they thought this before the testimony, no one cares.

* Important poll: “For the first time in 50 years of polling, a majority of Americans believe they are stuck or falling behind, according to a new Pew Research poll measuring the attitudes of the middle class…. According to the poll, 25% of respondents said they haven’t moved forward in life in the past five years, while a higher number, 31%, believe they have taken a step back…. [L]ooking at the shorter term, Pew said real median household income peaked in 1999 ‘making this decade one of the longest downturns ever for this widely-accepted measure of the middle-class standard of living.'”

* Brandon Friedman: “When 18 Americans are killed in Iraq during a four-day span, we are experiencing something other than progress. While all eyes have been on General Petraeus in Washington this week, U.S. troops have experienced the deadliest four days in Iraq since last summer.”

* McCain follows Speaker Pelosi’s lead on China and the opening ceremony at the Olympics.

* I’m sorry to see that Scott Horton is giving up on blogging; he’s an immensely talented writer. (Does it make me an awful person to wonder who Harper’s might consider as his replacement?)

* Attorney General Michael Mukasey doesn’t want to say if the Yoo memo on the Fourth Amendment is still applicable. Great.

* McCain gets the boot from Project Vote Smart.

* Some right-wing hoaxes are more humiliating than others.

* MoveOn.org scores with a great new Iraq video.

* Team Lieberman still doesn’t want to apologize for the whole “hack attack” incident from ’06.

* Brad DeLong vs. Sean Wilentz on the Dems’ electability.

* Photo-ops are rarely this amusing: “Barack Obama appeared to have a bit of an awkward moment on the campaign trail in South Bend, Indiana. From the pool report: ‘[Obama] posed for report pictures with the staff when he apparently felt his phone start to vibrate in his pocket on his right thigh – against which one woman was closely pressed. ‘Now that’s my phone buzzing there,’ he said, drawing a laugh. ‘I don’t want you to think I’m getting fresh or anything.'”

Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.

Let me guess, the phone thing gets all the media attention, and the war drums aimed at Iran get nada.

Note that Bush’s speech today definitely conflated Iran and al Qaeda. They are planting the seeds for an attack.

  • Definitely, the phone thing is far more important! Barack Hussein Obama was probably receiving a phone call from a terrorist safe house in Trashcanistan and he deftly covered it up by making a joke. Those Manchurian candidates are sneaky!

  • Good bye Randi Rhodes, your remarks were truly uncalled for, and you got what you deserved.

  • (Does it make me an awful person to wonder who Harper’s might consider as his replacement?)

    Can you possibly take on any new jobs? Don’t you already have 22 or 23?

    Haha, if you mean you’re interested, I hope you get it. Good luck!

  • Not missing Randi Rhodes. I couldn’t believe anyone was giving her three hours on the air in the first place. She never came off as a remotely reasonable person, and she made liberals look bad.

  • Nice way to give our back to a reliable Latin American ally. Chavez will sent Pelosi a love letter tonight. It’s even bad to manufacturing jobs in the US, like the CAT trucks that now have to pay 35% import duties to Colombia and they will pay 0 as a result of the trade deal. Pandering to the unions is more important that American political and economic interests.

  • Regrettably, Randi Rhodes has left Air America. Apparently, she decided she’d rather quit than apologize to Hillary Clinton and Geraldine Ferraro.

    Fantastic. Who says lefties don’t have a mean streak and are unwilling to go to the mat?
    “Honor thy Clintons?” Hell no! Some of us feel we don’t own the Clintons an apology, or a job… or in the case of Chelsea’s uppity attitude:

    She bristled the first time she was questioned about Lewinsky, telling a college student last month, “I do not think that is any of your business.” But since then she has learned to handle even that subject, refining her answer every time it has come up. “If that’s what you want to vote on, that’s what you should vote on,” she said when asked about the impeachment during an appearance at Purdue University on Monday.

    BS.

    1) When the President of the USA buggers a young woman with a cigar up in the Oval Office….IT IS MY BUSINESS.

    2) If Chelsea-snot doesn’t believe Americans have a right to demand that First Husband won’t be a source of ongoing derision as First Fornicator… then she’s got a serious family-makes-you-morally-blind-and-dumb problem.

    3) Lastly, here is an open letter to all three Clinton stooges: I’m in it to the mat on all three of you. I will fund any 527 and support any opposing candidate for as long as I am alive… And maybe if I can get it written into my will…. into the future when I am gone to dust.

    I am so sick of the Clintons… I’d almost rather listen to Bush on NPR these days…
    At least Dumbya isn’t trying to pretend he isn’t a professional arse.

  • Somehow, I have a feeling that “raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens,” would make Joe Lieberman, Bill Bennett, And Bill Kristol believe we have to attack Iran.

  • By an 84-to-12 vote, the Senate agreed to create a temporary $7,000 tax credit for buyers of foreclosed properties and a temporary tax deduction worth up to $1,000 for families who pay property taxes.

    And exactly who does this help? A tax credit if you’re losing your house? Yeah, that’s going to help. Paying property taxes? Helps the cities (which need it, granted). I pay property taxes on my house…my taxes haven’t gone down even though the value has- significantly. So, who does this help?

    The people who are going to steal the property from people paying $100 a week to travel to and from a job? Who are paying, what, 10% more for food to survive? And many of these people are people who have been in their houses longer than simply those who were hit by the whole subprime mess. It might help someone who is in the market for a house for personal use, but the greater number of people who it will help is those who can invest in the houses that are being lost left and right by average people who are losing their jobs and then their houses.

    Can you say more of taking from average people and giving to those who already have?

    Sorry, this is but a bone.

    BTW, what tax year will this take effect? Doubt it will be NOW which is when many of these people need help!

  • Team Lieberman still doesn’t want to apologize for the whole “hack attack” incident from ‘06.

    Goopers never apologize. Goopers in Independent clothes don’t either.

  • I’m dumbfounded that 28% of Americans still think that Bush is doing a good job.

    What on earth would they recognize as a bad job?

  • Democrats held out an olive branch of sorts, telling the administration that they were ready to find ways to ease the economic pain caused by free trade and the economic downturn before they took up the agreement.

    So how the heck does anyone see this as an “olive branch” – the criminal cabal behind dur chimpfurher has done everything it can to decimate the middle class and crush the poor. They are looting and bankrupting the federal treasury so that they can then proclaim we need to “privatize” basic services – selling government assets to well-connected business interests for pennies on a dollar.

    Clearly, the current administrations policies are all about CAUSING economic pain for the masses while allowing the military-industrial complex (which includes oil) and the wealthiest Americans to prosper beyond avarice.

    So where do you get this crap about an “olive branch”?

  • 501(c)(4)s appear to be this year’s 527s. Remember Swift Boat Vets?

    I’ve been doing some research on American Future Fund which I posted at the TPM Cafe. Speaking of SBVS, Ben Ginsberg of Patton Boggs is one of the many heavyweight Republican operatives involved in American Future Fund. Ginsberg was the one who had to resign from the Bush campaign when his role in SBV was revealed.

    Ginsberg is also a lobbyist who represents Sheldon Adelson’s Venetian Casino & Resort. Adelson is the one sinking a lot of money into Freedoms’s Watch.

    Laura Rozen of War and Piece has an excellent article in Mother Jones about Adelson and Freedom’s Watch.

  • “Good bye Randi Rhodes, your remarks were truly uncalled for, and you got what you deserved.” (#4, similar to several others above)

    Randi, your remarks were apparently very much appreciated by the PRIVATE group you made them to. As with any PRIVATE club, one assumes ones remarks won’t be taped, but then this is increasingly cruddy modern America where no one respects the rights we used to repsect. I wasn’t aware that FCC “standards” applied in PRIVATE presentations like yours. From the clip I heard, you did get what you deserved: lots of laughs and many rounds of happy applause.

    Randi, I appreciated your military service to our nation, your grasp of legal matters and the clarity with which you present them on air, and your adult sense of humor. Thanks for refusing, in the spirit of E.E. Cummings’ “I sing of Olaf“, to kiss her majesty’s ass. Bon voyage and I hope to hear you again sometime, perhaps through a more enlightened medium.

  • So now I won’t listen to Randi Rhodes unhinged rantings on Clear Channel. I have lost all patience for Democrats who attack other Democrats – direct it at McShameless, please and thank you.

  • I’m pretty much neutral on Randi Rhodes, but I’m pretty sick of people apologizing for things no one would no about if it weren’t for camera phones.

    I just hope Sam Seder is her full time replacement.

  • # 17, I call bullsh*t. Randi Rhodes speaks at an event organized and coordinated via the Obama campaign’s own web site and you want to call it “private?” BULLSH*T!

    Imagine that a Clinton supporter went to an event coordinated and and organized via the Clinton web site and then called Barack Obama and Reverend Jeremiah Wright “fu*king ni**ers.” Would you say it was a private event, and so the remarks were acceptable? Would you allow Clinton’s supporters to say “we don’t like Obama, so anything anyone says about him is acceptable?

    I’m pretty sure that’s NOT what you’d say — the hypocrisy is thick enough to cut with a knife.

  • Blue Girl: I have lost all patience for Democrats who attack other Democrats – direct it at McShameless, please and thank you.

    Ah… getting your party dander up because someone attacks a Clintoncrat…
    How manly and cutesy of you…

    Looky:
    The second best thing I read today (after Ed @ 17) was this comment over at TPM:

    In any event, maybe Dick and Lanny could get together and pen an Op-Ed for the Wall Street Journal expressing their mutual disappointment with how Obama handled the Wright affair.

    That is a seriously hot cool comment.

    The connection between Cheney’s comments on Rev. Wright:
    http://tpmelectioncentral.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/04/cheney_plays_the_wright_card.php

    And Clintonocrat Lanny Davis’s comments: http://thepage.time.com/2008/04/09/clinton-ally-plays-the-wright-card-again/

    …is a one-to-one function. [i.e. perfect coincidence when superimposed.]

    If you don’t like what comes out of Dick dog’s mouth…
    Then you better not slurp up the rabid spit coming out of out Lanny Davis’s sideways slit hole.
    They are one and the same shame.

    The Clintons have declared war on my values just as Dick Cheney has declared war on my values. I can’t distinguish between the he-Dick-prick and she-Jane-prick.
    They are both pricks.
    Ergo I will do whatever it takes… legally and monetarily… to reduce all three Clintons to grease spots on the pavement. Forever. That’s my pledge… to the democratic party to my country and to my own sense of propriety.

  • OT — housekeeping

    Dear CB,
    Could we have the list or “recent entries” back on top, before any ads? It’s that much harder to find which ones I’ve read and the new ones which might have come in while I was reading the old ones, if the list is in the middle of the page… Yours, developing carpal tunnel syndrome from all that scrolling up and down,

  • Regrettably, Randi Rhodes has left Air America.

    I think that Obama is the better candidate, I voted for him, and I gave him a lot of money, but I like the Clintons and I don’t understand why the leftwing has been playing by the Clinton Rules. I sure am glad to be getting my lefty radio back. Randi Rhodes and Stephanie Miller have been so vile for months that I haven’t been able to listen. Even though Thom Hartman is reasonable, I’ve been listening to the ever so boring NPR for weeks and weeks now. Today I managed to make it through Stephanie’s show and I never cared much for Randi anyway, so I would say that things are looking up.

    It may just be me, but I sure think that Stephanie was less funny and just plain vulgar when talking about the Clintons. To me, anyway, she seems to have a much lighter touch when making fun of the righties. I reminded me unpleasantly of high school and the treatment of the smart girls by the popular girls.

  • Randi Rhodes is gone; no loss there. But PLEASE no Sam Seder–the worst talkshow host in America, right or left.

  • The $7,000 per home tax credit is just a transfer to the banks who now own those foreclosed properties. All things equal, the price of those foreclosed homes with the tax subsidy just got higher by the seven grand compared to homes sold by homeowners who kept making their payments.

    Which means the bank gets $7,000 per unit more for the house it just sold, which is a nice transfer from taxpayers to the banks who got us into this mess, and the bigger mess they made, the more foreclosed homes they have on their books, the more money taxpayers give them.

    It’s great to be a “free market” capitalist with influence in Washington, D.C. – you keep the gains, taxpayers subsidize your losses.

  • I’m not missing Randi Rhodes one bit. It was hard to tell her apart from the right-wing radio hosts at times: petty, self-absorbed, and increasingly irrelevant. We have many better alternatives for intelligent radio talk.

  • Regrettably, Randi Rhodes has left Air America. Apparently, she decided she’d rather quit than apologize to Hillary Clinton and Geraldine Ferraro.

    As much as I am the “Tasmanian Hillary-Hater” on this site, I am glad to see this has happened. Randi Rhodes overstepped herself waaaaay hard here. Quite frankly, I stopped listening to this Overleft Bimbo two years ago. Teh fact she wouldn’t apologize here for going not only over the top but over the cliff proves that my opinion of her as a moron back then was right.

    The lady needs to learn the concept “engage brain before opening mouth.”

    Hopefully we won’t have Randi to apologize for between now and November.

  • 1st Republic 14th Star —
    # 17, I call bullsh*t. Randi Rhodes speaks at an event organized and coordinated via the Obama campaign’s own web site and you want to call it “private?” BULLSH*T!

    You are aware that “my.barackobama.com” (which you linked to) is where Obama supporters can post whatever user-generated content they want, right? Claiming that link is evidence that it was “organized and coordinated via the Obama campaign’s own web site” is in the same league as the wingnuts’ phony umbrage at MoveOn for a video submitted to a contest they held, or O’Reilly’s regular claims of Kos being responsible for trolls’ comments on Daily Kos.

    Weak.

  • go after Iran, what the hell will we send to fight them with the Cub Scouts and Brownies.

  • If children did not want to go fight in Iraq under extended tours of duties, they should not have signed up and taken the pledge:

    On my honor I will do my best
    To do my duty to God and my country…

    They volunteered, now let’s send them off to hell (at least the poor ones).

    Oh, but any from bush families or the wealthy elite can choose to go AWOL and drink/snort cocaine instead.

    After all, that’s what dur chimpfurher did, right? And look where it got him – he’s now a war pResident.

  • I always felt like I needed a shower after listening to her.

    Such is the price of trench warfare against the “inevitable one;” the politically titanic evil that is Clintonianism.

    Randi Rhodes (unlike the producer of the above italicized quote) demonstrated the audacious courage to go into the trench and grapple with the hideous foe that is Clintonianism.

    As has Randi Rhodes, so shall I reject the demands to stay above the fray, for if you wish to hunt sewer rats, you must oft-times enter the sewer, in order to find them in their abodes of filth and disease.

    To Clintonianism, I have but three words: Sic Semper Tyrannis.

  • Everyone in the world is against Clinton. Why does it take courage to join that mob?

    Given the bandwagon effect, it is amazing that Clinton has the support she does. I think that is a measure of her strength — that the race is still close even though so many folks have declared it over and tried to write an obituary for her campaign. (Witness TPM last week and their analysis of what went wrong for her, all written in past tense.)

    I am disappointed in Air America, except for Rachel Maddow who is always interesting and has resisted using her show to attack any candidate.

  • Hillary Clinton has proven beyond a doubt that she is the strongest candidate for the presidency. The superdelegates should omit any consideration of how Americans have voted and choose Hillary simply for her ability to weather the abuse she has taken from everyone in the entire universe in this vast solar system conspiracy against her.

    The fewer people who like her, the better a candidate she will be, as is obvious to anyone who hasn’t been taken in by Mr. Soft Shoe. Any smooth-talking huckster can get record numbers of people to support him with votes and dollars, but it takes a genuine and genuinely unbreakable person to run for president against the wishes of the entire world. That’s the kind of strength we need now.

  • # 31, Answer the question. Would any person who’s defending Randi Rhodes defend Clinton supporters who hosted an event at which the featured guest called Barack Obama and Jeremiah Wright “fu*king ni**ers?” They shouldn’t and they wouldn’t. Then why defend Obama supporters whose guest referred to Hillary Clinton and one of her supporters as “fu*king whores?” The issue is the language and the negative fallout it engenders, not the person who said it or the candidate she supports.

  • Bush’s 28% support level is becoming pretty solid. According to pollingreport.com, the last three polls taken by outfits you’ve actually heard of (AP-Ipsos, CBS/NYT, and Pew – excluding Diageo-Hotline, whose pollster is Financial Dynamics, whoever they are), all have had only 28% of respondents saying Bush is doing a good job.

    And the two before that (Fox and CBS again) had him at 30 and 29, respectively.

    Mr. 28% really IS Mr. 28%.

    Upthread, N. Wells says: “I’m dumbfounded that 28% of Americans still think that Bush is doing a good job.”

    Life’s like that. 26% thought Nixon was doing a good job, until maybe his last few weeks in office.

  • Randi could’ve always kept her job by issuing a standard Clintonian non-apology:

    I’m sorry if I offended anyone…

  • This is absolutely cool that this Randy Rhodes stuff is not even taking space in MSM. Hey you folks I’m a rookie at stuff but it is sweet to read all about this stuff from other than Mainstream Media.

    What is interesting is the lingering comment about Chelsea from David Shuster about “Pimping” Chelsea out. Sheesh. With a loud and hearty laugh, MSNBC just endorses that they are Pimping out news at any scale by letting this guy continue. Of course Chris Mathews is the general Pimp Meister for slant and bias to the highest degree of excellence that surpasses the Limbaugh’s high bar with the number one, Big Number, up man-ship to the FOX news big story. Also appears to be pulling pole number every ten miniutes out of his butt.

    Here, like most of the blog readers have become “Contextual Smear Conscious” and clearly perceive when the reporting slices through that creepy form of reporting and those like Randy and David find themselves on the deep end with those sneaky news staffers so biased and vulgar. It shows the basic integrity and fools many first line Journalist can be. Where they screw up so much and just don’t admit it and blow by any and everything screw up in open interviews every day.

    The funny stuff is when in those windowed analysis interviews happen with any were from three to six political analyst gather in a group, or round table discussion, tear the hell out of a candidate, all the dancing around the hypocrisy, and twisted lies of the political analysis they present is extraordinary.

    That’s what makes Jon Snow popular and the Colbert Report so laughable when they just mock the system. Cleverly Colbert shows the “The Word”.

  • Leadership and taxes

    “It’s important to have core principles and values, but if you’re going to be active in policy and politics, you have to be a realist.” —Hillary Clinton

    “We’re saying that for America to get back on track, we’re going to cut short and not give it to you. We’re going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good.” —Hillary Clinton, in a 2004 fundraising speech to wealthy liberals in San Francisco

    Bipartisanship and reaching across the isle

    “I believe in evil, and I think that there are evil people in the world.” —Hillary Clinton, in 1993, stating her opinion not of the terrorists who had just bombed the World Trade Center for the first time in 1993, but of those who opposed her health care reform plan

    “You have got to hand it to them, these people are ruthless and they are relentless.” —Sen. Hillary Clinton, just a few months after 9/11, giving her opinion of Republicans

    Health care

    “We just can’t trust the American people to make these types of decisions. …Government has to make these choices for people.” —Hillary Clinton circa 1993, speaking to Rep. Dennis Hastert on the issue of who should control the allocation of money in her health care reform plan

    “We can’t afford to have that money go to the private sector. The money has to go to the federal government because the federal government will spend that money better than the private sector will spend it.” —First Lady Hillary Clinton, in 1993, regarding health care reform

    Free speech

    “We’re all going to have to rethink how we deal with the Internet. As exciting as these new developments are, there are a number of serious issues without any kind of editing function or gate-keeping function.” —First Lady Hillary Clinton, in 1998, days after the Monica Lewinsky story was reported

    Blaming America

    “I pledge allegiance to the America that can be.” —Hillary Clinton, reluctant to say the Pledge of Allegiance, according to Chris Matthews

    “The unfettered free market has been the most radically disruptive force in American life in the last generation.” —Hillary Clinton

    Imagination

    “The fact of the matter is, I’ve always been a Yankees fan.” —Senate candidate Hillary Clinton, soon after launching her campaign in 1999, and ignoring prior public statements about growing up as a Cubs fan in Chicago

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