Booman Tribune





Find textbooks at Alibris!
THE BOOKS WITH "BUZZ":
______________

The roots of the bubble and the story of Wall Street's collapse can be told no clearer — nor with as much humor — as by Michael Lewis. If you read only one book that explains the current economic crisis, make it The Big Short.
:

"The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine
by Michael Lewis

Check out the new biography of Barack Obama that is getting rave reviews:


The Bridge: The Life and Rise of Barack Obama
David Remnick.
Senator Edward M. Kennedy tells his extraordinary personal story:

True Compass: A Memoir
by Edward M. Kennedy.

Read Barack Obama's vision for America:

The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream
by Barack Obama

Boran2 and maryb2004 recommend:

The Big Over Easy: A Nursery Crime
by Jasper Fforde

Must-have information for all presidents-and citizens-of the twenty-first century?

Physics for Future Presidents: The Science behind the Headlines
Richard A. Muller

rae recommends:

Dark Ages America: The Final Phase of Empire
by Morris Berman.

On BooMan’s shelf:

Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
by Doris Kearns Goodwin

This looks interesting:

Adventure Divas
by Holly Morris

Check out
Powell's new section:
NEW FAVORITES

Selected new arrivals at 30% off

Recommended by Indianadem and ejmw:
The Conscience of a Liberal
by Paul Wellstone

From northcountry’s bookshelf:

The New Golden Age:
The Coming Revolution Against
Political Corruption and Economic Chaos
by Ravi Batra


Great Deals
----- * ^ * -----

Find mystery novels by Nancy Pickard ("Kansas")



Challenging Empire: How People, Governments, and the UN Defy US Power by Phyllis Bennis (interviewed on DN!)


Featured by Keith Olbermann, New (Powell's Sale): Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower by William Blum (whose other books merit serious consideration)


"Explosive" State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration
by James Risen


The book the CIA doesn't want you to read: Jawbreaker: The Attack on Bin Laden and Al Qaeda: A Personal Account by the CIA's Key Field Commander
Larry Johnson's review


BT's all-time best seller:

PERMACULTURE:
A Designers' Manual

$79.95 * Sale: $59.95


Unequal Sisters: A Multicultural Reader in U.S. Women's History (Third Edition)


The Undercover Economist: Exposing Why the Rich Are Rich, the Poor Are Poor And Why You Can Never Buy a Decent Used Car!


The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl
by Timothy Egan


Green Press Initiative
----- * ^ * -----


Journalistas: 100 Years of the Best Writing and Reporting by Women Journalists by Eleanor Mills * NYT review


Bury Me Standing: the Gypsies & Their Journey


1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus



Brokeback Mountain
by Annie Proulx
----- * ^ * -----
Check out Powell's
"At The Movies"


Imperial Ambitions: Conversations on the Post-9/11 World by Noam Chomsky (Power & Terror: Post 9-11 Talks)


The Price of Privilege:

How Parental Pressure and
Material Advantage Are Creating a Generation of
Disconnected and Unhappy Kids

by Madeline Levine


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We listened to PEN American Center's "State of Emergency" and found 1940s books by Curzio Malaparte only at Alibris. (Selection (MP3) excerpted from "The Skin.")

Alibris - Books You Thought You'd Never Find
Banned Books * Are you a fan of Film Noir, Art House, Documentaries or Hong Kong Action? * Searching for a long-lost children's book or a first printing of Miles Davis' Kind of Blue on vinyl? Find it at Alibris!

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Today in Hate

by BooMan
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 09:51:53 PM EST

You can't call a closed-down Burlington Coat Factory building in lower Manhattan "the ruins of the World Trade Center." If it was the ruins of the World Trade Center it would be ruined. It would have been carted off to Staten Island and its steel beams would have been sold off to China. But that's the least of the problems with Michael Savage's screed.

So, it should be clear. It's not about the Muslims. The Jews aren't welcome either.

Comments >> (1 comment)

Chief of Staff Speculation

by BooMan
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 09:31:18 PM EST

Washington is abuzz with speculation on who will replace Rahm Emanuel as White House chief of staff if he, as expected, departs to run for mayor of Chicago. Everyone has advice to offer, and most people have a favored candidate, but it's really a choice only Obama can make. The chief of staff is first and foremost the filter between the president and everyone and everything else. They determine who gets face-time with the president, and they set up the menu of choices the president has to choose from. The most important attribute, therefore, is trust. The president has to trust that his chief of staff won't hide bad news or skew policy options. The ideology of the chief of staff is not the most important factor. However, it would be nice if the president chose someone less prone to alienating people than Rahm Emanuel. It's good to have someone who can knock heads and get things done, but it's not at all clear that Emanuel's tough-guy persona really paid off for the president.

Part of the problem has been simple lack of leverage. To really knock heads, people need to fear you or need you. There aren't very many vulnerable Republicans left in Congress that have anything to fear from a Democratic president. That will probably change (in the House) after the midterm elections. Some new Republican congresspeople will serve in blue districts that will be tough to hold in 2012. New senators won't be up for reelection until 2016, which will be the end of Obama's second-term, so they won't have much to fear.

If the Democrats do better than expected in November, it may be useful to have a chief of staff who can work well with Republicans and craft compromise legislation. But, if the Democrats do poorly, the president is going to need a knife-fighter with brass knuckles. Unfortunately, Obama may have to decide on a replacement before he gets to see the outcome of the elections. He'll be tempted to use the position as a way to fire up the base. But, obviously, the position is too important to be filled based on the political considerations of the moment.

I'd like to see someone fill the position who doesn't piss off progressives. That shouldn't be too hard, although our capacity to gripe in near infinite. Find someone who won't call us names, for starters. I'd shy away from people who have been lobbyists, too. Above all, pick someone you trust and who won't give you a bunch of bad press. And if they don't work out? No big deal. Find someone else.

Comments >> (9 comments)

Why Boehner?

by BooMan
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 05:40:02 PM EST

Mr. Starbursts is confused about why the president chose to attack The Human Suntan today during his speech in Cleveland. Rich Lowry takes this to mean that the president is already resigned to Mr. Boehner being the Speaker of the House next year. But Mr. Lowry isn't very bright. The reason Obama was blasting Boehner is because Boehner is an idiot who refuses to make any coherent arguments, and he's the leader of a Know-Nothing party that cannot articulate any positive vision or use any honest reasoning. The president is providing the missing pieces of logic that show the Republican arguments for what they are. And what they are is terrifyingly similar to Sarah Palin's tweets: rambling nonsense.

The Republicans' gigantic weakness is that the American people hate them even more than the Democrats. The momentum the Republicans think they have is built entirely on the general apathy of the majority of American voters. There is no support for privatizing Social Security or making Bush's tax cuts for the rich permanent. There is no nostalgia for Bush. No one wants more war in more countries. People don't want a government that looks out for big business every single time. The GOP has nothing to be for. They are afraid to even offer a single policy that they think the federal government should pursue, lest their teabagging compatriots burn them in effigy for making the suggestion that the government deserves to live.

The president went after Boehner because he is a paper tiger. He wants to be the leader of the House, but he can't say why.

Comments >> (21 comments)

Scary People Make Video

by Steven D
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 03:45:13 PM EST

Run for your lives! It's the Invasion of the Islamic Public Service Announcement Creators!

Admit it. Some of those kids had really creepy eyes. Like Sci-Fi B-Movie Alien invader eyes (illegal aliens at that since I'm sure their student visas from Acturus-7 have long since expired). Of course, that could just be my personal bigoted reaction.

What do you think?

Why don't you tell me in the comments while I go change my pants because I just wet myself in quivering in fear at all those Muslim "Terrorist" Faces in one video. Unless, you just wet yourself too (or worse) in which case you're excused.

Comments >> (3 comments)

Sticking It To Boehner

by BooMan
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 02:26:10 PM EST

Remarks of President Barack Obama on the Economy – As Prepared for Delivery
Wednesday, September 8th, 2010
Cleveland, Ohio

Good afternoon, Ohio. It’s good to be back.

In the fall of 2008, one of the last rallies of my presidential campaign was here in the Cleveland area. It was a hopeful time, just two days before the election. We knew that if we pulled it off, we’d have the chance to tackle some big and difficult challenges that had been facing this country for a long time.

We also hoped for a chance to get beyond some of the old political divides – between Democrats and Republicans, Red states and Blue states – that had prevented us from making progress. Because although we are proud to be Democrats, we are prouder to be Americans – and we believed that no single party has a monopoly on wisdom.

That’s not to say that the election didn’t expose deep differences between the parties. I ran for President because for much of the last decade, a very specific governing philosophy had reigned about how America should work:

Cut taxes, especially for millionaires and billionaires. Cut regulations for special interests. Cut trade deals even if they didn’t benefit our workers. Cut back on investments in our people and our future – in education and clean energy; in research and technology. The idea was that if we had blind faith in the market; if we let corporations play by their own rules; if we left everyone else to fend for themselves, America would grow and prosper.

For a time, this idea gave us the illusion of prosperity. We saw financial firms and CEOs take in record profits and record bonuses. We saw a housing boom that led to new homeowners and new jobs in construction. Consumers bought more condos and bigger cars and better televisions.

But while all this was happening, the broader economy was becoming weaker. Job growth between 2000 and 2008 was slower than it had been in any economic expansion since World War II – even slower than it’s been over the past year. The wages and incomes of middle-class families kept falling while the cost of everything from tuition to health care kept rising. Folks were forced to put more debt on their credit cards and borrow against homes that many couldn’t afford in the first place. Meanwhile, a failure to pay for two wars and two tax cuts for the wealthy helped turn a record surplus into a record deficit.

I ran for President because I believed that this kind of economy was unsustainable – for the middle-class and for our nation’s future. I ran because I had a different idea about how America was built – an idea rooted in my own family’s story.

You see, Michelle and I are where we are today because even though our families didn’t have much, they worked tirelessly – without complaint – so that we might have a better life. My grandfather marched off to Europe in World War II and my grandmother worked in factories on the home front. I had a single mom who put herself through school, and would wake before dawn to make sure I got a decent education. Michelle can still remember her father heading out to his job as a city worker long after Multiple Sclerosis had made it impossible for him to walk without crutches.

Yes, our families believed in the American values of self-reliance and individual responsibility, and they instilled those values in their children. But they also believed in a country that rewards responsibility. A country that rewards hard work. A country built upon the promise of opportunity and upward mobility.

They believed in an America that gave my grandfather the chance to go to college because of the GI Bill. An America that gave my grandparents the chance to buy a home because of the Federal Housing Authority. An America that gave their children and grandchildren the chance to fulfill our dreams thanks to college loans and college scholarships.

It was an America where you didn’t buy things you couldn’t afford; where we didn’t just think about today – we thought about tomorrow. An America that took pride in the goods it made, not just in the things it consumed. An America where a rising tide really did lift all boats, from the company CEO to the guy on the assembly line.

That’s the America I believe in. That’s what led me to work in the shadow of a shuttered steel plant on the South Side of Chicago when I was a community organizer. It’s what led me to fight for factory workers at manufacturing plants that were closing across Illinois when I was a Senator. It’s what led me to run for President – because I don’t believe we can have a strong and growing economy without a strong and growing middle-class.

Now, much has happened since that election. The flawed policies and economic weaknesses of the previous decade culminated in the worst recession of our lifetimes. My hope was that the crisis would cause everyone, Democrats and Republicans, to pull together and tackle our problems in a practical way. But as we all know, things didn’t work out that way.

Some Republican leaders figured it was smart politics to sit on the sidelines and let Democrats solve the mess. Others believed on principle that government shouldn’t meddle in the markets, even when the markets were broken. But with the nation losing nearly 800,000 jobs the month I was sworn in, my most urgent task was to stop a financial meltdown and prevent this recession from becoming a second depression.

We’ve done that. The economy is growing again. The financial markets have stabilized. The private sector has created jobs for the last eight months in a row. And there are roughly three million Americans who are working today because of the economic plan we put in place.

But the truth is, progress has been painfully slow. Millions of jobs were lost before our policies even had a chance to take effect – a hole so deep that even though we’ve added jobs again, millions of Americans remain unemployed. Hundreds of thousands of families have lost their homes; millions more can barely pay the bills or make the mortgage. The middle-class is still treading water, while those aspiring to reach the middle class are doing everything they can to keep from drowning.

Meanwhile, some of the very steps that were necessary to save the economy – like temporarily supporting the banks and the auto industry – fed the perception that Washington is still ignoring the middle class in favor of special interests.

And so people are frustrated and angry and anxious about the future. I understand that. I also understand that in a political campaign, the easiest thing for the other side to do is ride this fear and anger all the way to Election Day.

That’s what’s happening right now. A few weeks ago, the Republican leader of the House came here to Cleveland and offered his party’s answer to our economic challenges. Now, it would be one thing if he admitted his party’s mistakes during the eight years they were in power, and was offering a credible new approach to solving our country’s problems.

But that’s not what happened. There were no new policies from Mr. Boehner. There were no new ideas. There was just the same philosophy we already tried for the last decade – the same philosophy that led to this mess in the first place: cut more taxes for millionaires and cut more rules for corporations. Instead of coming together like past generations did to build a better country for our children and grandchildren, their argument is that we should let insurance companies go back to denying care to folks who are sick, and let credit card companies go back to raising rates without any reason. Instead of setting our sights higher, they’re asking us to settle for a status quo of stagnant growth, eroding competitiveness, and a shrinking middle class.

Cleveland – that is not the America I know. That is not the America we believe in. A lot has changed since I came here in those final days of the last election, but what hasn’t is the choice facing this country. It’s still fear versus hope; the past versus the future. It’s still a choice between sliding backward and moving forward. That’s what this election is about. That’s the choice you’ll face in November.

I have a different vision for the future. I’ve never believed that government has all the answers to our problems. I’ve never believed that government’s role is to create jobs or prosperity. I believe it’s the drive and ingenuity of our entrepreneurs, the skill and dedication of our workers, that has made us the wealthiest nation on Earth. I believe it’s the private sector that must be the main engine of our recovery.

I believe government should be lean, it should be efficient, and it should leave people free to make the choices they think are best for themselves and their families, so long as those choices don’t hurt others.

But in the words of the first Republican President, Abraham Lincoln, I also believe that government should do for the people what they cannot do better for themselves.

That means making long-term investments in this country’s future that individuals and corporations cannot make on their own: investments in education and clean energy; in basic research, technology, and infrastructure.

That means making sure corporations live up to their responsibilities to treat consumers fairly and play by the same rules as everyone else; to look out for their workers and create jobs here at home.

And that means providing a hand up for middle-class families – so that if they work hard and meet their responsibilities, they can afford to raise their children, send them to college, see a doctor when they get sick, and retire with dignity and respect.

That’s what we Democrats believe in – a vibrant free market, but one that works for everybody. That’s our vision for a stronger economy and a growing middle-class. And that’s the difference between what we and the Republicans in Congress are offering the American people right now.

Let me give you a few specific examples of our different approaches. This week, I proposed some additional steps to grow the economy and help businesses spur hiring. One of the keys to job creation is to encourage companies to invest more in the United States. But for years, our tax code has actually given billions of dollars in tax breaks that encourage companies to create jobs and profits in other countries.

I want to change that. Instead of tax loopholes that incentivize investment in overseas jobs, I’m proposing a more generous, permanent extension of the tax credit that goes to companies for all the research and innovation they do right here in America. And I’m proposing that all American businesses should be allowed to write off all the investment they do in 2011. This will help small businesses upgrade their plants and equipment, and will encourage large corporations to get off the sidelines and start putting their profits to work in places like Cleveland and Toledo and Dayton.

To most of you, this is just common sense. But not to Mr. Boehner and his allies. For years, Republicans have fought to keep these corporate loopholes open. In fact, when Mr. Boehner was here in Cleveland he attacked us for closing a few of these loopholes – and using the money to help states like Ohio keep hundreds of thousands of teachers and cops and firefighters on the job. He dismissed these jobs – teaching our kids, patrolling our streets, rushing into burning buildings – as quote “government jobs” – jobs that I guess he thought just weren’t worth saving.

I couldn’t disagree more. I think teachers and police officers and firefighters are part of what keep America strong. And I think if we’re going to give tax breaks to companies, they should go to companies that create jobs in America – not those that create jobs overseas. That’s one difference between the Republican vision and the Democratic vision. And that’s what this election is all about.

Let me give you another example. We want to put more Americans back to work rebuilding America – our roads, railways, and runways. When the housing sector collapsed and the recession hit, one in every four jobs lost were in the construction industry. That’s partly why our economic plan has invested in badly needed infrastructure projects over the last nineteen months – not just roads and bridges, but high-speed railroads and expanded broadband access. Altogether, these are projects that have led to thousands of good, private sector jobs, especially for those in the trades.

Mr. Boehner and the Republicans in Congress said no to these projects. Fought them tooth and nail. Though I should say that didn’t stop a lot of them from showing up at the ribbon-cutting ceremonies and trying to take credit. That’s always a sight to see.

Now, there are still thousands of miles of roads, railways, and runways left to repair and improve. And engineers, economists, governors and mayors of every political stripe believe that if we want to compete, we need to rebuild this vital infrastructure. There’s no reason Europe or China should have the fastest trains or the most modern airports – we want to put people to work building them right here in America. So this week, I’ve proposed a six year infrastructure plan that would start putting Americans to work right away. But despite the fact that this has traditionally been an issue with bipartisan support, Mr. Boehner has so far said no to infrastructure. That’s bad for America – and that too is what this election is about.

I’ll give you one final example of the differences between us and the Republicans, and that’s on the issue of tax cuts. Under the tax plan passed by the last administration, taxes are scheduled to go up substantially next year. Now, I believe we ought to make the tax cuts for the middle class permanent. These families are the ones who saw their wages and incomes flatline over the last decade – and they deserve a break. And because they are more likely to spend on basic necessities, this will strengthen the economy as a whole.

But the Republican leader of the House doesn’t want to stop there. Make no mistake: he and his party believe we should also give a permanent tax cut to the wealthiest two percent of Americans. With all the other budgetary pressures we have – with all the Republicans’ talk about wanting to shrink the deficit – they would have us borrow $700 billion over the next ten years to give a tax cut of about $100,000 to folks who are already millionaires. These are among the only folks who saw their incomes rise when Republicans were in charge. And these are folks who are less likely to spend the money, which is why economists don’t think tax breaks for the wealthy would do much to boost the economy.

So let me be clear to Mr. Boehner and everyone else: we should not hold middle class tax cuts hostage any longer. We are ready, this week, to give tax cuts to every American making $250,000 or less. For any income over this amount, the tax rates would go back to what they were under President Clinton. This isn’t to punish folks who are better off – it’s because we can’t afford the $700 billion price tag. And for those who claim that this is bad for growth and bad for small businesses, let me remind you that with those tax rates in place, this country created 22 million jobs, raised incomes, and had the largest surplus in history.

In fact, if the Republican leadership in Congress really wants to help small businesses, they’ll stop using legislative maneuvers to block an up-or-down vote on a small business jobs bill that’s before the Senate right now. This is a bill that would do two things: cut taxes for small businesses and make loans more available for small businesses. It is fully paid for, and it was written by Democrats and Republicans. And yet, the other party continues to block this jobs bill – a delay that small business owners have said is actually leading them to put off hiring.

Look, I recognize that most of the Republicans in Congress have said no to just about every policy I’ve proposed since taking office. And on some issues, I realize it’s because there are genuine philosophical differences. But on issues like this one, the only reason they’re holding this up is politics, pure and simple. They’re making the same calculation they made just before the inauguration: if I fail, they win. Well, they might think this will get them where they need to go in November, but it won’t get our country where it needs to go in the long run.

So that’s the choice, Ohio. Do we return to the same failed policies that ran our economy into a ditch, or do we keep moving forward with policies that are slowly pulling us out? Do we settle for a slow decline, or do we reach for an America with a growing economy and a thriving middle-class?

That’s the America we see. We may not be there yet, but we know where this country needs to go.

We see a future where we invest in American innovation and American ingenuity; where we export more goods so we create more jobs here at home; where we make it easier to start a business or patent an invention; where we build a homegrown, clean energy industry – because I don’t want to see new solar panels or electric cars or advanced batteries manufactured in Europe or Asia. I want to see them made right here in America, by American workers.

We see an America where every citizen has the skills and training to compete with any worker in the world. That’s why we’ve set a goal to once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world by 2020. That’s why we’re revitalizing our community colleges, and reforming our education system based on what works for our children – not what perpetuates the status quo.

We see an America where a growing middle-class is the beating heart of a growing economy. That’s why I kept my campaign promise and gave a middle-class tax cut to 95% of working Americans. That’s why we passed health insurance reform that stops insurance companies from jacking up your premiums at will or denying you coverage just because you get sick. That’s why we passed financial reform that will end taxpayer-funded bailouts; reform that will stop credit card companies and mortgage lenders and Wall Street banks from taking advantage of taxpayers and consumers.

That’s why we’re trying to make it easier for workers to save for retirement, and fighting the efforts of some in the other party to privatize Social Security – because as long as I’m President, no one is going to take the retirement savings of a generation of Americans and hand it over to Wall Street.

That’s why we’re fighting to extend the child tax credit, and make permanent our new college tax credit. Because if we do, it will mean $10,000 in tuition relief for each child going to four years of college.

And finally, we see an America where we refuse to pass on the debt we inherited to the next generation.

Now, let me spend a minute on this issue, because we’ve heard a lot of moralizing on the other side about it. Along with tax cuts for the wealthy, the other party’s main economic proposal is that they’ll stop government spending.

Of course, they are right to be concerned about the long-term deficit – if we don’t get a handle on it soon, it can endanger our future. And at a time when folks are tightening their belts at home, I understand why a lot of Americans feel it’s time for government to show some discipline too.

But let’s look at the facts. When these same Republicans – including Mr. Boehner – were in charge, the number of earmarks and pet projects went up, not down. These same Republicans turned a record surplus that Bill Clinton left into a record deficit. Just this year, these same Republicans voted against a bipartisan fiscal commission that they themselves proposed. And when you ask them what programs they’d actually cut, they usually don’t have an answer.

That’s not fiscal responsibility. That’s not a serious plan to govern.

I’ll be honest – I refuse to cut back on those investments that will grow our economy in the future – investments in areas like education and clean energy and technology. That’s because economic growth is the single best way to bring down the deficit – and we need these investments to grow. But I am absolutely committed to fiscal responsibility, which is why I’ve already proposed freezing all discretionary spending unrelated to national security for the next three years. And once the bipartisan fiscal commission finishes its work, I will spend the next year making the tough choices necessary to further reduce our deficit and lower our debt.

Of course, reducing the deficit won’t be easy. Making up for the 8 million lost jobs caused by this recession won’t happen overnight. Not everything we’ve done over the last two years has worked as quickly as we had hoped, and I am keenly aware that not all our policies have been popular.

So no, our job is not easy. But you didn’t elect me to do what’s easy. You didn’t elect me to just read the polls and figure out how to keep myself in office. You didn’t elect me to avoid big problems. You elected me to do what’s right. And as long as I’m President, that’s exactly what I’ll do.

This country is emerging from an incredibly difficult period in its history – an era of irresponsibility that stretched from Wall Street to Washington and had a devastating effect on a lot of people. We have started turning the corner on that era, but part of moving forward is returning to the time-honored values that built this country: hard work and self-reliance; responsibility for ourselves, but also responsibility for one another. It’s about moving from an attitude that said “What’s in it for me” to one that asks, “What’s best for America? What’s best for all our workers? What’s best for all our businesses? What’s best for our children?”

These values aren’t Democratic or Republican. They aren’t conservative or liberal values. They’re American values. As Democrats, we take pride in what our party has accomplished over the last century: Social Security and the minimum wage; the GI Bill and Medicare; Civil Rights and worker’s rights and women’s rights. But we also recognize that throughout history, there has been a noble Republican vision as well, of what this country can be. It was the vision of Abraham Lincoln, who set up the first land grant colleges and launched the transcontinental railroad; the vision of Teddy Roosevelt, who used the power of government to break up monopolies; the vision of Dwight Eisenhower, who helped build the Interstate Highway System. And yes, the vision of Ronald Reagan, who despite his aversion to government, was willing to help save Social Security for future generations.

These were serious leaders for serious times. They were great politicians, but they didn’t spend all their time playing games or scoring points. They didn’t always prey on people’s fears and anxieties. They made mistakes, but they did what they thought was in the best interest of their country and its people.

That’s what the American people expect of us today – Democrats, Independents, and Republicans. That’s the debate they deserve. That’s the leadership we owe them.

I know that folks are worried about the future. I know there’s still a lot of hurt out here. And when times are tough, I know it can be tempting to give in to cynicism and fear; to doubt and division – to set our sights lower and settle for something less.

But that is not who we are, Ohio. Those are not the values that built this country. We are here today because in the worst of times, the people who came before us brought out the best in America. Because our parents and grandparents and great-grandparents were willing to work and sacrifice for us. They were willing to take great risks, and face great hardship, and reach for a future that would give us the chance at a better life. They knew that this country is greater than the sum of its parts – that America is not about the ambitions of any one individual, but the aspirations of an entire people and an entire nation.

That’s who we are. That is our legacy. And I’m convinced that if we’re willing to summon those values today; if we’re willing again to choose hope over fear; to choose the future over the past; to come together once more around the great project of national renewal, then we will restore our economy; rebuild our middle-class; and reclaim the American Dream for the next generation.

Thank you, God Bless you, and may God Bless the United States of America.

Comments >> (15 comments)

Serious Question

by BooMan
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 01:00:31 PM EST

What will the blogosphere do without Rahm Emanuel to kick around anymore?

I mean, there's only so much Summers and Geithner can carry.

Comments >> (28 comments)

At What Point Does Peretz Become a Pariah?

by BooMan
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 12:40:57 PM EST

It's not that Marty Peretz doesn't raise some issues worthy of discussing. He does. But his conclusion has to be condemned.

Why do not Muslims raise their voices against these at once planned and random killings all over the Islamic world? This world went into hysteria some months ago when the Mossad took out the Hamas head of its own Murder Inc.

But, frankly, Muslim life is cheap, most notably to Muslims. And among those Muslims led by the Imam Rauf there is hardly one who has raised a fuss about the routine and random bloodshed that defines their brotherhood. So, yes, I wonder whether I need honor these people and pretend that they are worthy of the privileges of the First Amendment which I have in my gut the sense that they will abuse.

There is so much wrong with this. There's the assertion that Muslims never condemn violence, even when it is Muslim-on-Muslim violence. That's a false assertion. There's the assertion that Muslim life is cheap. There is the assertion that no one associated with Imam Rauf has ever said a word against random acts of terrorism carried out by Muslims against Muslims. That's a false assertion. There's the use of the word "brotherhood," not to denote the Muslim Brootherhood, but to equate all Muslims with terrorists. There's the telling use of the term "these people" to refer to all Muslims everywhere. There's the idea that people have to be worthy of their constitutional rights and that people like Peretz 'honor" people by acknowledging and respecting their constitutional rights. And, finally, there's the conclusion that we ought not respect Muslims' right to freely exercise their religious rights and right to free speech and assembly because they can't be trusted.

I just to have ask the folks who are working at The New Republic (some of whom are doing some good work) whether or not you really want to compromise yourself this much to get that paycheck. At what point do you have to resign in disgust and seek less befouling employment?

If I didn't think Peretz just hated Arabs I'd criticize him for lacking faith in the power of our institutions and ideals to make people embrace liberal principles. But I don't give Peretz that much credit. He's just filled with hate.

Comments >> (27 comments)

Fires in Detroit and Boulder, Colorado

by Steven D
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 07:41:09 AM EST

I used to live in Boulder and so the danger from wildfires like those occurring in Fourmile canyon since Labor Day were always a potential threat.

Firefighters intensified their battle Tuesday against a 7,000-acre blaze that destroyed at least 92 structures and damaged another eight, driving residents out of densely populated canyons in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains just outside this outdoors-crazed town. [...]

Even with calmer winds, the fire doubled in size overnight and officials cautioned that residents still could not return to see whether their homes were saved. "This is a very volatile situation," Gov. Bill Ritter Jr. told reporters after touring the fire scene.

But the fires that are out of control in Detroit, MI today, possibly due to downed power lines caused by high winds and falling trees, are not something one would normally expect.

Detroit firefighters had to battle strong winds, hot and dry conditions, downed power lines and a lack of equipment and manpower at the same time they fought about 85 fires that erupted in four hours Tuesday afternoon.

Fire officials blamed most of the fires on downed electrical wires, though the cause of some fires remained under investigation. DTE Energy, which reported as many as 50,000 people without power due to the winds, said Tuesday night it had launched its own investigation.

The National Weather Service said wind gusts up to 40-50 m.p.h. had combined with a lack of rain and other factors to create "explosive fire growth potential."

Lack of enough firefighters in Detroit has hindered the Detroit FD's response to the fires and required them to call for assistance from other departments, apparently a rare occurrence in the past.

Some video:

Comments >> (5 comments)

Teachers Running Schools? Yes!

by Steven D
Wed Sep 8th, 2010 at 12:29:50 AM EST

I'm a fan of teachers and I approve of the idea that they know far more regarding what their students need to increase learning than all the administrators and School Boards and the people who publish textbooks to make the Texas Board of Education happy. And for once teachers are being given their shot to run a school they way they believe it should be run. For at Brick Avon Academy in Newark, NJ that is dream is about to become a reality.

Shortly after landing at Malcolm X Shabazz High School as a Teach for America recruit, Dominique D. Lee grew disgusted with a system that produced ninth graders who could not name the seven continents or the governor of their state. He started wondering: What if I were in charge?

... Today, Mr. Lee and five other teachers — all veterans of Teach for America, a corps of college graduates who undergo five weeks of training and make a two-year commitment to teaching — are running a public school here with 650 children from kindergarten through eighth grade. As the doors opened on Thursday at Brick Avon Academy, they welcomed students not as novice teachers following orders from the central office, but as “teacher-leaders.” “This is a fantasy,” Mr. Lee said. “It’s six passionate people who came together and said, ‘Enough is enough.’ We’re just tired of seeing failure.” [...]

At Brick Avon, the principal, Charity Haygood, who calls herself the “principal teacher,” teaches every day, as do the two vice principals; Ms. Haygood started her career in Teach for America and eventually became vice principal for five years at another school.

While they are in charge of disciplining and evaluating staff members, they plan to defer all decisions about curriculum, policies, hiring and the budget to a governance committee made up largely of teachers elected by colleagues.

As the NYT article points out, this is not an isolated situation but a growing phenomenon. Other school districts are doing the same thing. In Los Angeles, 29 schools are turning over the keys to the educational car to the teachers, rather than relying on an outmoded hierarchical structure in which teachers are told what to teach, how to teach and when to teach by administrators who do not teach. Detroit is also experimenting with a school without a Principal in which the teachers will make all the decisions. Will it be easy for these teacher-leaders to take this step? Probably not. School adminsitrators, entrenched in their positions and their own ideological beliefs about how schools should be run often oppose the idea that teachers should be granted such authority. However, I for one am rooting for the teachers to succeed.

Every class my son and daughter has ever taken in which they truly excelled, and in which they not only learned a subject well but also learned how to learn, was because of an outstanding teacher. A teacher who, more often than not, went beyond the stated curriculum and the standards set by state administrators and local school board members and his or her own principal. That is, the most successful teachers in my experience have been the ones who bucked the system. Teachers, who because they cared about my children, went above and beyond the call of duty to encourage them, help them and raise the bar for what they thought was capable. In second grade my daughter was unable to complete her school work in class and had difficulty focusing and concentrating on her lessons. It was her second grade teacher, a young woman who hadn't yet learned that children who were having trouble in school weren't worth the trouble who helped fashion a special learning program to help her.

Through her efforts we were able to identify obtain the medical and psychological assistance to identify our daughter as a child with ADHD. More importantly, that young woman instilled in my daughter that she wasn't stupid, she wasn't "slow" and that she could learn as well, if not better than her classmates.

Today, my daughter is in the most advanced mathematics class for her grade level, as well as Honors English, Honors Chemistry and AP World History. She learned that her condition, while it can be frustrating at times, is not a reason to limit her expectations and goals for her education. Without her second grade teacher who took the extra time to intervene on her behalf and give a young child who was struggling with her ADHD a chance to succeed, I don;t know if that would have happened.

Of course, along the way, my daughter has come across other committed, dedicated teachers whose love of teaching has inspired her and lit the fires of her own ambitions. She, who once dreamed of being a "pop star" now has her sights set on being a scientist. We consider ourselves blessed to have had teachers who worked with her to help her succeed and thrive, even if that meant going the extra mile, or teaching outside the prescribed box. But we also know that in far too many schools limit their teachers by wearing down their spirits and insisting ion a rigid, formulaic approach to how kids should be taught, what they should be taught and the order in which subjects should be presented to children. This very rigidity, imposed by people who themselves often have never been teachers, or who have no idea of the difficulties current teachers face, deny our current teachers the opportunity to use their own talents and creativity and ingenuity to make their classrooms a better learning environment for their students.

The best businesses, the ones that have the greatest success are often the ones that are the most flexible and allow their employees to have a say in how their jobs are done. The corporations that are the most hidebound and hierarchical are often the ones that fail to adapt well to a changing business environment.

They see their workers as liabilities, and not as assets. As a result, as we have seen countless times over the last three decades, many of our major corporations that once dominated thioer field have failed to keep pace with the rest of the world. By treating their employees as disposable they have lost sight of what made them successful in the first place.

In my humble opinion, the more control you give any employee over how they go about accomplishing their job, the more you allow them to exercise their creativity and intelligence in executing the tasks given to them, the better off your business will be. The same is true in the field of education. I believe that the more we allow teachers to control their classrooms and how they teach the better learning environments those classrooms will become, and, in the end the better our children -- all our children -- will learn.

And isn't that the point? To give every child the best opportunity to learn the knowledge and skills they need to succeed in life? I believe letting teachers make the critical decisions on how schools are run is the best way to go about that task. Let's face it, they can't do any worse than our current system where teachers are often mere automatons restricted by a curriculum, textbooks and teaching methods not of their choosing. It's time to give them the reins and the chance to show us all what they can do. My guess is that, like the teachers who helped my daughter, the results will astound us.

Comments >> (8 comments)

A Message from Plouffe

by BooMan
Tue Sep 7th, 2010 at 06:32:04 PM EST

In case you need to see a plan for yourself.

Are you going to be one of those organizers?

Comments >> (15 comments)

Two Sets of Lies

by BooMan
Tue Sep 7th, 2010 at 03:21:57 PM EST

The super-awesome 9/11 Commission's (PDF) version of events:

About this time Card, the lead Secret Service agent, the President's military aide, and the pilot were conferring on a possible destination for Air Force One. The Secret Service agent felt strongly that the situation in Washington was too unstable to return. Card agreed. The President, however, needed convincing. All witnesses agreed that the President strongly wanted to return to Washington and only grudgingly agreed to go elsewhere. The issue was still undecided when the President conferred with the Vice President at about the time Air Force One was taking off. The Vice President recalled urging the President not to come back to Washington. Air Force One departed at approximately 9:55, with no destination at take-off. The objective was to get up in the air—as fast and as high as possible—and then decide where to go.

Condi Rice's super-awesome version of events:

"The president got on the phone and he said: 'I'm coming back,'" Rice recounted to the documentary. "I said: 'You cannot come back here. The United States of America is under attack. You have to go to safety. We don't know what is going on here.'"

"He said, 'I'm coming back.' I said, 'You can't.'"

"I said to him in a raised voice -- and I had never raised my voice to the president before -- 'You cannot come back here.' I hung up."

Rice said Bush was "quite annoyed with me to say the least."

"I've known the president a long time and I knew that he wanted nothing more than to be there at the helm of the ship," she said.

Who knows what the truth is? All I know is that Cheney was commander-in-chief that morning...

Cheney, who told the commission he was operating on instructions from Bush given in a phone call, issued authority for aircraft threatening Washington to be shot down. But the commission noted that "among the sources that reflect other important events that morning there is no documentary evidence for this call, although the relevant sources are incomplete." Those sources include people nearby taking notes, such as Cheney's chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, and Cheney's wife, Lynne.

...and that only afterwords did Bush exert control over our national security decisions. And, even then, he deferred to Cheney far too much and didn't stop listening to him until after the Democrats retook Congress in 2006. When Robert Gates came in to replace Rumsfeld, Cheney no longer had the credibility or clout to win every argument. And things started to gradually improve.

Comments >> (16 comments)

Playtime is Over

by BooMan
Tue Sep 7th, 2010 at 11:39:48 AM EST

Okay. It's the day after Labor Day. It's the official start of the midterm campaign. I asked people to get serious about the midterms in early July, but no one can deny that it is campaign season now. If you've been reading this site you don't need me to tell you what kind of hell this country is going to face if the Republicans do as well as currently predicted in the midterm elections. If you haven't already, go to Organizing for America and register with them. They will link you up with all the other motivated organizers in your community. They will put you to work where you can make a difference. If you're not motivated, get motivated. The worst thing that can happen is that you make a lot of good friends. This isn't pattycake. The right-wing in this country is incredibly aggressive, well-funded, and malevolent. If you are reading this, you were alive and conscious from 2001-2009, and you saw what happened to our country. Well, the new breed of Republican is more conservative that the old. If we don't beat back a slew of whack-a-doodle Senate candidates, we can forget about confirming another judge. I am not kidding about that. That is not hyperbole.

I've been frustrated with a lack of focus on the main threat to our country. I've been writing about my frustrations for a long time. But it's indisputably election season now. There are no more excuses. It's admirable and necessary to lobby the Democrats and the White House for progressive policies, but lobbying season is over. It's time to pick up the banner and fight against this wave of insanity that is building up and threatening to swamp us all.

Let me make this clear. In the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal: poll:

Among all registered voters...both parties are tied on the generic ballot, 43 percent to 43 percent, suggesting that Democrats could potentially blunt GOP gains in November with high turnout at the polls.

Got that?

But...

With the Labor Day holiday marking the traditional starting point of the campaign season, Republicans have a nine-point edge among those considered likely voters, plus a near 20-point lead among those expressing the highest amount of interest in the midterms.

You have to stop assigning blame and take your responsibilities seriously. Get in touch with OFA and get to work. The network is in place to get our vote out. It just needs people to help execute the plan. You can do something, or you can sit around moping while Rand Paul, Sharron Angle, Ken Buck, Pat Toomey, and a bunch of other radicals get elected to the Senate and put an end to the process of legislating in our country. House members need help, too, unless you want to sit back passively while John Boehner becomes Speaker and a bunch of aggressively stupid and venal people take over the lower chamber's committee chairs.

Comments >> (14 comments)

GOP Dirty Tricks

by BooMan
Tue Sep 7th, 2010 at 10:20:59 AM EST

I guess they were never able to prove definitively that South Carolina Democratic senate nominee Alvin Greene was recruited by the GOP. But there isn't any question about the phony candidates the GOP is supporting in Arizona:

TEMPE, Ariz. — Benjamin Pearcy, a candidate for statewide office in Arizona, lists his campaign office as a Starbucks. The small business he refers to in his campaign statement is him strumming his guitar on the street. The internal debate he is having in advance of his coming televised debate is whether he ought to gel his hair into his trademark faux Mohawk.

Mr. Pearcy, 20, is running for a seat on the Arizona Corporation Commission, which oversees public utilities, railroad safety and securities regulation. Although Mr. Pearcy says he is taking his first run for public office seriously, the political establishment here views him as nothing more than a political dirty trick.

Mr. Pearcy and other drifters and homeless people were recruited onto the Green Party ballot by a Republican political operative who freely admits that their candidacies may siphon some support from the Democrats.

There is also the guy who is homeless and penniless but who nevertheless wants to be Arizona's Treasurer. He reads Tarot cards to feed himself and he's known for his trademark purple and green jester's hat. There's the white-bearded dean of the streets who goes by 'Grandpa.' He's a state senate candidate.

The Democratic Party is fuming over Mr. May’s tactics and those of at least two other Republicans who helped recruit candidates to the Green Party, which does not have the resources to put candidates on ballots around the state and thus creates the opportunity for write-in contenders like the Mill Rats to easily win primaries and get their names on the ballot for November. Complaints about spurious candidates have cropped up often before, though never involving an entire roster of candidates drawn from a group of street people.

But, you know, this isn't cheating. This is just playing hardball, right? It doesn't demonstrate any contempt for the process or for the intelligence of the people. Nooooo.

I thought the people loved the Republicans. Aren't they all supposed to be frothing at the mouth to go vote for them? So, why is cheating necessary?

On another note, this is a side effect of making ballot access too easy. We normally complain about access being too hard (either too costly, or requiring a ridiculous number of signatures), but if you make it too easy, the other side can just put up a slate of homeless people to drain away some potentially decisive votes.

But Republicans love our country soooo much.

Comments >> (14 comments)

Tired of Defeatism

by BooMan
Mon Sep 6th, 2010 at 10:07:29 PM EST

The president made a proposal. That's great. Except David Sirota says the proposal is just another example of Obama looking out for the Big Guy, and John Cole says it won't even merit a debate. You want to know what the problem is? No one on the left is fighting for the president's agenda. Half the progressives are spending all their time bitching and the other half are spending all their time in utter despondency.

"Some powerful interests who had been dominating the agenda in Washington for a very long time and they're not always happy with me. They talk about me like a dog. That's not in my prepared remarks, but it's true," [President Obama] told a crowd largely consisting of union members.

Hell, everyone is talking about him like a dog. All told, the president today proposed $150 billion in new stimulus money (although, sssh, don't call it stimulus). That's almost 20% as big as the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009's $787 billion price tag. Taken together, the Recovery Act and the new proposals would be approaching a "paltry" trillion dollars in spending. But Sirota is upset because the proposal would be two-thirds tax cuts for research and development, and Cole is upset because:

Mitch McConnell just needs to go on David Gregory, purse his lips delicately, dismiss it, and the debate will essentially be over. There will be no discussion of the benefits of the added rail miles. No discussion of the ease of air travel with these improvements. The idea will simply be dismissed, and Republicans will pay no price whatsoever for killing yet another jobs bill.

To which I respond, "Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor? Hell no!" Or something. We really need a pep talk. Above all, we need some realism. Put yourself in the president's shoes for two seconds before you mouth off. He's not a dictator and Cole's right about McConnell's inclinations, as well as his power, as well as the vacuous, unhelpful media. You want the president to create some jobs? You have to support his efforts and stop nitpicking. As it is, Congress is unlikely to pass anything beneficial. But when no one has the president's back and everyone wants to treat him like a dog?

It's far past time for people to wake up.

Comments >> (66 comments)

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