Thursday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* Oh my: “Sales of new homes in March plummeted to the lowest level since the housing recession of the 1990s, the government said on Thursday, as inventories rose to the highest point in more than a quarter century. Buyers vanished from the housing market last month at a swift rate. Sales of new homes fell 8.5 percent, a far sharper decline than economists had forecast. Sales are running at an annual rate of 526,000 after adjusting for seasonal factors, the lowest point since October 1991. Adding to the gloom, the Commerce Department lowered its initial estimate for February sales as well, to a 5.3 percent decline from 1.8 percent.”

* None dare call it rationing: “The two biggest U.S. warehouse retail chains are limiting how much rice customers can buy because of what Sam’s Club, a division of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., called on Wednesday ‘recent supply and demand trends.’ … The move comes as U.S. rice futures hit a record high amid global food inflation, although one rice expert said the warehouse chains may be reacting less to any shortages than to stockpiling by restaurants and small stores.”

* I didn’t think Hoekstra had it in him: “The senior Republican on the House Select Committee on Intelligence said that lawmakers felt ‘used’ by the White House after finally getting briefed today on alleged North Korean nuclear assistance to Syria. Rep. Pete Hoekstra warned of a ‘damaged’ relationship that could hinder the administration’s ability to get congressional approval for an agreement on the North Korea’s nuclear program.”

* John McCain visited New Orleans today, and most of the media coverage focused on his subtle criticism of the president’s handling of the Hurricane Katrina crisis. Even more interesting, at least to me, was McCain’s comment that he’d consider “tearing down” the Ninth Ward altogether.

* Hey, look! A bill Senate Republicans didn’t filibuster! “A bill seeking to outlaw discrimination based on genetic test results won overwhelming approval from the Senate Thursday, clearing the way for the measure to become law more than a decade after its introduction. The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act would forbid insurance companies from denying coverage to workers due to a person’s genetic makeup. It would also prohibit insurers and employers from forcing employees to undergo genetic tests. The bill passed the Senate 95-0. The House is expected to pass it next week and the White House has said the president will sign the measure.”

* Are prosecutors really going to try that Seas of David cult again? Apparently so.

* For all of the Iraqis’ many problems, generating oil revenue apparently isn’t on the list.

* Where does nuclear waste go? Bradford Plumer has a very good item on the subject.

* McCain’s problem with his base continues — Jenna Bush isn’t sure if she’s going to vote for him.

* A really fascinating “decision tree” on who’s voting for which Democratic presidential candidate in the primaries.

* The Gallup Daily Tracking Poll continues to be all over the place. Obama now leads Clinton by five.

* Speaking of Obama, unfortunately, he’s decided to end his personal boycott and will appear on “Fox News Sunday.”

* Keith Olbermann gave it straight to Letterman last night: “Most of us in news are not smart enough to figure out what’s going on. We may pretend that we’re good enough to do that. But in fact, when we look you in the eye, in the camera, we’re really just making it up.”

* A gameshow called “Deal or No Deal” saw its ratings drop when Bush made a cameo appearance.

* And finally, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) wrote a song for John McCain in the hopes of helping his presidential campaign. Seriously. It’s called, “Together Forever.” The lyrics go like this: “Forever together / America is the land we’re fighting for / There’s a time in history / for a hero’s destiny / together forever more.”

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

Charlie Cook: “The good news for Hillary Rodham Clinton is that she’s winning a lot of battles. The bad news is that the war is pretty much lost…At the end of the day, the popular vote for the Democratic nomination means nothing. I doubt that having won the popular vote in the 2000 general election is of much solace to Al Gore. Many a football team gains more yards than its opponent in a game yet loses on that important technicality called points…But you can’t change how the game is played once it has begun. The Democrats have decided that the nominee will be determined by the number of delegates won, not by the popular vote, and that primaries held in direct violation of party rules (in this case, Florida’s and Michigan’s) don’t count. End of discussion.”

  • “Together Forever”? I thought Hatch was a homophobe… maybe he’s in that Larry Craig category of self-hating assholes.

  • Speaking of Obama, unfortunately, he’s decided to end his personal boycott and will appear on “Fox News Sunday.

    Bad idea!

  • I’d love to see Obama call Fox to the carpet for all their lies. I know it won’t happen but I get giddy at the thought.

  • anonymensch @2:

    Utah is the land of Mediocrity in Music 101. Have you ever been tortured by Janice Kapp Perry? Or listened to a CD of the LDS church’s Primary hymnal? Guh.

  • libra @4,

    That’s an opinion piece. The DNC credentials committee, largely controlled by Obama since he will have won the most pledged delegates, will split the Michigan delegates 50/50. Michigan is in the news because Hillary wants to create an atmosphere of uncertainty. The end result, however, is no mystery.

    Bottom line, the piece you linked to is crap.

    Sorry.

  • How about a re-do of this song for John McCain: John McCain Rock Around The Clock Lyrics from Bill Haley? Here is my first cut:

    One, two, three o’clock, four o’clock, BOMB,
    Five, six, seven o’clock, eight o’clock, BOMB,
    Nine, ten, eleven o’clock, twelve o’clock, BOMB,
    We’re gonna BOMB around the clock tonight.

    Get in your bomber and give her the gun,
    We’ll have some fun when the clock strikes one,
    We’re gonna BOMB around the clock tonight,
    We’re gonna BOMB, BOMB, BOMB, ’til broad daylight.
    We’re gonna BOMB, gonna BOMB, around the clock tonight.

    When the clock strikes two, three and four,
    If the bombing slows down we’ll yell for more,
    We’re gonna BOMB around the clock tonight,
    We’re gonna BOMB, BOMB, BOMB, ’til broad daylight.
    We’re gonna BOMB, gonna BOMB, around the clock tonight.

    When the chimes ring five, six and seven,
    We’ll bomb them all to high heaven.
    We’re gonna BOMB around the clock tonight,
    We’re gonna BOMB, BOMB, BOMB, ’til broad daylight.
    We’re gonna BOMB, gonna BOMB, around the clock tonight.

    When it’s eight, nine, ten, eleven too,
    I’ll be goin’ strong and so will you.
    We’re gonna BOMB around the clock tonight,
    We’re gonna BOMB, BOMB, BOMB, ’til broad daylight.
    We’re gonna BOMB, gonna BOMB, around the clock tonight.

    When the clock strikes twelve, we’ll refuel then,
    Start a BOMBIN’ round the clock again.
    We’re gonna BOMB around the clock tonight,
    We’re gonna BOMB, BOMB, BOMB, ’til broad daylight.
    We’re gonna BOMB, gonna BOMB, around the clock tonight.

    Ought to be Great on the campain trail!

  • maybe someone can clue me in on this, but i don’t understand why sales of homes and the building of new homes is something we need to fret about with regard to an economic litmus. all the woeful stories take on the tone that since we’re not sprawling evermore into the bush with our shiny new homes, or taking over the old homes of someone who decided to dart for the ‘burbs, somehow this is a bad trend. i know the economy is in the shit, but why are home sales and new-home builds such a crucial indicator?

  • Maybe someday five years from now we’ll turn on our flat-screen hi-def integrated TV/Internet machines and see images of a quartet made up of Orrin Hatch, John McCain, John Ashcroft, and George W. Bush performing in the Baghdad Zoo and Entertainment Experience’s swankiest Vegas-style lounge.

    They’ll perform a variety of hits, including Hatch’s “Together Forever,” McCain’s “Bomb Iran,” Ashcroft’s “Let the Eagle Soar,” and Bush’s “Green, Green Grass of Home.”

    Hatch, McCain, and Ashcroft will stand in a fairly stiff manner while signing, but Bush will simultaneously dance in an uninhibited herky-jerky manner, smirk and mug, and sing.

    A camera will pan the audience, and there we’ll see Dick and Lynne Cheney, Scooter Libby, George H. W. and Bar Bush, Laura Bush, Bill Kristol, and Ahmed Chalabi, all with big smiles on their faces.

  • Recommended campaign hymn for the GOP: None other than a staccato-sounding rendition of the old “Land of Hope and Glory” in the Kiplingesque White Man’s Burden stylee.

    And did any of you hear where The Oxycontin Cow is hoping for rioting and general disorder during the Democratic National Convention, hoping die Amerikanischer Volk “can see what the Extreme Left is all about”? What liability would he have if his remarks were taken literally?

  • theandrewalter @9,

    Much of the credit that has kept the economy growing has come from home equity loans. Lower values mean less equity equals less credit which means less access to money to spend which leads to a slower economy.

    Home sales historically resulted in gains to the homeowners that often go almost immediately back into the economy in the form of higher value replacement home purchases. Fewer sales means fewer gains leads to fewer higher value replacement homes which leads to a slower economy.

    Home sales usually lead to appliance sales, furniture sales, home supply sales, landscaping sales, … Fewer home sales means lower home related sales which means a slower economy.

    Getting folks to buy a house is one of the best things we can do to grow the economy (hence mortgage interest deductions) and when people stop buying and selling it’s one of the strongest indicators that the economy is struggling.

  • Quit bashing Orrin Hatch’s touching ode to McCain — it sounds like a real toe-tapper!

  • “The senior Republican on the House Select Committee on Intelligence said that lawmakers felt ‘used’ by the White House after finally getting briefed today on alleged North Korean nuclear assistance to Syria.

    Judging from the news reports I’ve seen, the press doesn’t feel used at all. They just know the Bushies are telling them the truth this time. Kick the football, Charlie Brown

  • A really fascinating “decision tree” on who’s voting for which Democratic presidential candidate in the primaries.

    Recap: The whiter, the poorer, the less educated, the more Republican their county is, the more likely they are to vote for Hillary. I would have guessed that to be a formula for who would be most likely to vote for McCain.

  • Together Forever?

    Have you no semblance of self-respect, sir? No respect for this Congress, this Senate? I hereby rescind my opposition to extraordinary rendition and yield back the balance of my time.

  • gemini, @7,

    I sure hope you’re right in your assessment of the value of the piece (if I weren’t an atheist, I might have even said “from your keybord to God’s ear”). But since I do not trust Hillary *one little bit* anymore, it has me worried. The second part of it sounded like an opinion piece; true. But the first sounded more like reportage of what’s actually happened/been happening.

  • You don’t need to trust Hillary. It’s just a part of the “fog of nonsense” as JMM put it.

    It may be true that “the Clinton camp is working overtime to ensure the elected slate is sent.” But that doesn’t mean that they will be. It’s clear that the DNC won’t seat the delegation as-is. There’s just no way.

    Then, after June, the decision goes to the Credentials Committee, which will be controlled by Obama. Which will be happy to seat the Michigan delegation — once it’s completely obvious that they won’t have any impact on the outcome.

    The linked article is a puff piece by a Hillary shill. Wishful thinking and nothing more.

  • The decision tree leaves out some other important factors, such as age and sex which are spread across counties more evenly but certainly influenced outcomes. Older voters for Clinton, younger ones for Obama. Female voters for Clinton, unless black. Male voters for Clinton unless educated and wealthier. Religion is not mapped onto the decision tree either and Hispanics are ignored — Catholics for Clinton, Hispanics for Clinton, WASPs for Obama. Don’t know who other groups are for (e.g., Asian or Jewish voters) but they won’t show up in a tree like this. New voters versus experienced voters aren’t charted, nor are union members vs non-members or churchgoers vs non-churchgoers or immigrant vs non-immigrant, or cross-over and independents vs democrats.

    Did they produce this tree by performing a discriminant analysis with various demographic variables as predictors and the county outcomes as the classification? If so, cross-cutting demographics would not show up because they do not determine the outcomes for specific counties, even though they clearly determine the overall outcome for a state and perhaps the election. That is a problem with the tree — the variable needs to make a difference at the county level. For example, women are found in all counties and always vote more for Clinton, making other factors the discriminators between outcomes for specific counties, but that is nevertheless an important strength of Clinton in this election, if not in the model. You’d think sex would have been at the top of the tree. Similarly, Hispanic ethnicity may be a very important factor for some counties but if Hispanics do not exist in all counties, it won’t emerge in the tree because it does not predict outcomes well for counties without many Hispanics.

    When a model doesn’t include important variables, it loses validity and becomes more propaganda than information. I see it as furthering the meme that Clinton voters are hicks and bigots, although it also says that Obama voters are elitists (higher educated, better paid) and members of this own ethnic group.

  • What’s the number one pressing issue in Indiana?

    Indiana is one of only three states, along with Arizona and Hawaii, that do not push all clocks ahead one hour for daylight-saving time on the first Sunday in April. (That’s not counting, of course, the 15 Indiana counties that do spring forward: 10 to Central Daylight Time and five to Eastern Daylight Time.)

    Indiana is a patchwork of counties observing Central or Eastern Time and Daylight or Standard Time. At the moment, Indiana operates under three times —— Central Daylight, Eastern Standard and Eastern Daylight. How the clocks are set depends on local custom, location and the season. Even then, people don’t always agree.

    “This is the hot button of all hot-button issues in Indiana. It is abortion, guns and gay marriage all rolled together,” says state Rep. Dave Crooks, a Democrat leading the opposition to Eastern Daylight Time. Last week, Crooks was booted off a committee working on the issue because of his Central Time Zone sympathies.

    I wonder how the election will play into their one critical issue? Hils for Eastern Time, Obama for Central Time?

    GO HOOSIERS!

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-04-25-indiana-time_x.htm

  • Gee and I thought that Katrina tore the Ninth Ward down.
    Seriously – A rich white guy wants to tear down one of the poorest black neighborhoods in America? Could the residents of the Ninth Ward, move into his neighborhood in any rich white people’s homes that are lost in the current housing loan scandal?
    Can you spell “R-A-C-I-S-T?”

    Say it more and louder Mac, you help the Democrats almost everytime you open your mouth.

  • MsJoanne, @20,

    Who needs the tricks of “In 80 Days Around the World”, if you can live in Indiana, eh? All the same, it must make trying to set the campaign calendar a real murder.

  • From the Krazy Konservative Kaukus file:

    On Sunday, Tony Zirkle — who is seeking the Republican nomination in Indiana’s 2nd Congressional district — delivered a speech to the American National Socialist Workers Party (ANSWP) on the 119th anniversary of Adolf Hitler’s birth. At the event, Zirkle “stood in front of a painting of Hitler, next to people wearing swastika armbands and with a swastika flag in the background.”

    Asked by reporters why he spoke to a group like ANSWP, which refers to itself as “the largest and most active pro-white organization in America,” Zirkle said he’ll “speak before any group that invites me,” adding that he’s even “spoken on an African-American radio station in Atlanta.”

    2008 is not the first time Zirkle has sought the 2nd district seat. In both 2004 and 2006, he challenged then-incumbent Chris Chocola. In 2006, Zirkle pulled in 30% of the Republican primary vote, despite calling for a return of the guillotine.

    Be sure to catch the video of the initial news report here. It’s priceless.

    Those krazy Hoosiers…30%? Yeow!

    And this guy is an attorney (a previous State’s Attorney, no less! OY!

    And this is from his personal website:

    In this blog, I will outline a few of the arguments in support of a poorn tax cut. Poorn is spelled with two “o”s in order to emphasize that fact that few factors promote poverty more efficiently than having an undisciplined intimate life. Additionally, the pro-poorners must believe that misspelled adult words have greater success in avoiding spam and adult filters becuase of the poorn spam I’ve seen coming through e-mails.

    Poorn derives from the Greek and is translated proostitution or foornication. The word encompasses a wide spectrum of abberant, deviant behavior.

    I wonder if abberant (sic) sex, to him, is missionary. 😉

  • Read it and weep.

    Nine low-income families in Baltimore row houses agreed to let researchers till the sewage sludge into their yards and plant new grass. In exchange, they were given food coupons as well as the free lawns as part of a study published in 2005 and funded by the Housing and Urban Development Department….The idea that sludge — the leftover semisolid wastes filtered from water pollution at 16,500 treatment plants — can be turned into something harmless, even if swallowed, has been a tenet of federal policy for three decades.

  • Hermit Crab @ 10

    I pasted your post into a text editor just to see.
    It is 134 words.
    You win the prize for describing Hell in less than150 words.

    The prize: a DVD containing all Dubya’s State Of The Union speeches.
    Enjoy.

  • I’m inordinately proud of myself for writing an Autohotkey script to put stuff into italics, blockquotes and strikethrough formats in comments. 🙂

    * And finally, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) wrote a song for John McCain

    Well let’s hope the old boys’ forever isn’t very long.

    Very touching. I sing John’s praises too:

    Did I tell you, you’re my hero.
    You’re the wind beneath my tail.

    13.
    On April 24th, 2008 at 6:15 pm, petorado said:
    Quit bashing Orrin Hatch’s touching ode to McCain — it sounds like a real toe-tapper!

    Good one petorado.

    * Speaking of Obama, unfortunately, he’s decided to end his personal boycott and will appear on “Fox News Sunday.”

    If this were Hillary we’d be calling it desperation and despicable. I hope it’s not.

  • MsJoanne said: I wonder if abberant (sic) sex, to him, is missionary. 😉

    Probably just if its Mormon or Jehovah’s Witness.

  • 24:

    2008 is not the first time Zirkle has sought the 2nd district seat. In both 2004 and 2006, he challenged then-incumbent Chris Chocola. In 2006, Zirkle pulled in 30% of the Republican primary vote, despite calling for a return of the guillotine.

    At first I thought death penalty advocates might argue for the guillotine on a purely cost effective basis. But after reading all of MsJoanne poost [sic] @ 24, I concluded this repressed nut simply harbors a latent need to give head.

  • NOLA shouldn’t have been built in the first place. It’s sub-sea-level to begin with, and it’s slowly sinking lower. The levees now aren’t anywhere near adequate to hold back a Cat-5 storm, and that’s with sea-levels as they are now—not 50 or 60 years from now when Antarctic and Greenland ice has melted, bringing those levels up quite a bit. The question that should be getting asked; the question no one wants to be the first to ask, is this:

    Do we move NOLA further inland now, or wait until it’s been demolished several more times first?

    The issue isn’t just the lower 9th—it’s the whole damned metro region. It’s north having more people die over….

  • Dale, probably if it’s male/female sex, ’cause you know that THAT grosses an (R) out!

    I concluded this repressed nut simply harbors a latent need to give head.

    ROTFLMAO!!!

  • And finally, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) wrote a song for John McCain in the hopes of helping his presidential campaign. Seriously. It’s called, “Together Forever.”

    No, that was Rick Astley. (Did Orrin Hatch just rickroll John McCain?)

  • Steve said:
    NOLA shouldn’t have been built in the first place. It’s sub-sea-level to begin with, and it’s slowly sinking lower. (snip) The question that should be getting asked; the question no one wants to be the first to ask, is this:

    Do we move NOLA further inland now, or wait until it’s been demolished several more times first?

    And yet the Netherlands, with 27 percent of its land below sea level, manages to thrive.

    Sometimes I truly despair over the future of my country.

  • Speaking of Obama, unfortunately, he’s decided to end his personal boycott and will appear on “Fox News Sunday.”

    If Obama goes in there ready to kick some ass — to call them on it when they cite false stories, quotes and numbers, to refer to them as “you Republicans” when they repeat Repub talking points as facts, and asking for an apology for the libelous madrassah story — then his appearance will be beneficial.

    Otherwise, he’s going to be ambushed.

    I expect Chris Wallace’s first question to be, “Why did you decide to come on Fox News Sunday today, after boycotting the network for so long?”

    I hope Obama answers, “Because I wanted to show the superdelegates how well I can stand up to attacks from Republicans like you guys.”

  • Rush Limbaugh calls for riots at the Denver Democratic National Convention. Operation Chaos, he calls it.

    During today’s show (4/23) Rush made the statement that he is dreaming/hoping for riots after the Dems convention if they choose Hillary over Obama. He even sang his statment to the “I’m Dreaming of a “WHITE” Christmas” tune. It appears to me that he is hoping African-Americans will revolt if Obama doesn’t win and in his dreams we would riot and wipe each other out so that he can indeed have a “white” Christmas/country.

    “Riots in Denver, the Democrat Convention would see to it that we don’t elect Democrats,” Limbaugh said during Wednesday’s radio broadcast. He then went on to say that’s the best thing that could happen to the country.

    He gets called to the carpet by a caller who he winds up calling a “mush mind.”

    Someone tell me why he’s not considered a terrorist?

    Clip and written transcript here.

  • Two points:

    First, re: GINDA. What irony! They pass a bill that is (at present) almost completely symbolic (it is nearly impossible to prove “gene discrimination”), but a bill with real teeth to a very real and systemic problem – wage discrimation, dies. Is there any question about where women’s equality falls?

    Second, re: Obama’s boycott. I dearly wish that progressive media would be as harsh on Obama about his hair-splitting and finagling of rules and boycotts and politics as they are and have been on Sen. Clinton.

    Clinton got bashed around for appearing on FOX News because it proved that she was just a Republican, or sucking up to Republicans. What the H is this by Obama? If anybody has bothered to look beyond the dazzling smile, winning charm, soaring rhetoric, they would see a politician who isn’t quite the savior in private that his public persona pushes.

    No bias here. None at all.

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