Saturday, November 23, 2013

Senate Dems move the goalposts to distract from Obamacare

In a largely partisan vote, the United States Senate approved changes to its rules concerning future approvals of judicial and executive nominations from the White House. Until today, the Senate rules required approval of such candidates for high office of at least two thirds of the legislative body. The change would now allow nominations to proceed with just a simple majority vote, even while the rules change would still allow the minority in the Senate to use filibusters to block Supreme Court nominees.
 
Suprisingly, three Democrats:  Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, and Sen. Mark Pryor of Arkansas cast their ballots against the change.
 
Following the vote, the Democrats quickly confirmed Patricia Millett to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.   The vote  was 55-43, with two senators voting present.
Several hearings were either cancelled or went into recess before the vote on the rules change. Over the last month, three nominees to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals have been blocked by Republicans, despite President Barack Obama’s appeal. On November 19, the Republicans blocked a vote on the nomination of Robert L. Wilkins to the bench. In his case, Wilkins, who served as a Washington D.C. District Court judge, was confirmed by the Senate on a voice vote in 2010.
 
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said of the vote that it was “not a proud day in the history of the Senate.”  The Republican stalwart, flanked by Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN),  said that “In order to distract attention from Obamacare, the Senate has just broken the rules to change the rules. We’ve had this threat for some time now...” He added that Senate Democrats had not kept to their promises to refrain from such rule changes during this legislative term.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Obama holds off-record meeting with MSNBC hosts, liberal pundits

President Obama held an off-the-record meeting with MSNBC hosts and liberal pundits on Thursday, POLITICO has learned.
Present at the meeting: MSNBC's Ed Schultz and Lawrence O'Donnell, Washington Post economics blogger Ezra Klein, Mother Jones Washington bureau chief David Corn, Talking Points Memo editor and publisher Josh Marshall, ThinkProgress editor-in-chief Judd Legum, Atlantic senior editor Garance Franke-Ruta, Salon political writer Brian Beutler and Fox News contributor Juan Williams.
The participants agreed to an off-the-record classification for the meeting, though sources familiar with President Obama's remarks said that Williams later appeared on Fox News and cited some of the president's remarks, which he attributed to administration officials. 
The White House did not respond to a request for comment regarding the meeting.
As I reported earlier this month, Obama has held several meetings with thought leaders from across the political spectrum during his presidency. The liberal confabs are seen by the White House as an opportunity to shape talking points and shore up support from the base -- something that has grown all the more important for the administration as Obama's approval ratings hit record lows.

EPA power grab? Pols, states claim new water reg could bring feds into your backyard

A river runs through it -- and Uncle Sam isn't far behind. 
That's what several Republican lawmakers and even state farming groups and local governments are warning, after a draft rule from the Environmental Protection Agency proposed expanding which waterways are federally protected under the Clean Water Act. 
The concern is that the move could give the feds authority over virtually any stream or ditch, and hand environmentalists another way to sue property owners. In other words, critics say, the government might soon be able to declare jurisdiction over a seasonal stream in your backyard. 
If so, good luck getting a permit to expand building space on your property, or marketing your land to prospective developers. 
"(The) draft rule sent to the White House for review could expand the EPA's regulatory power to give the agency unprecedented new authority over seasonal streams and ditches on private property," Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, chairman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee, said in a statement to FoxNews.com. 
Via: Fox News Politics
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Obama’s Image Machine: Monopolistic Propaganda Funded by You

New York Times photographer Doug Mills strode into Jay Carney's office Oct. 29 with a pile of pictures taken exclusively by President Obama's official photographer at events the White House press corps was forbidden to cover. "This one," Mills said, sliding one picture after another off his stack and onto the press secretary's desk. "This one, too – and this one and this one and … ."
The red-faced photographer, joined by colleagues on the White House Correspondents' Association board, finished his 10-minute presentation with a flourish that made Carney, a former Moscow correspondent for Time, wince.
"You guys," Mills said, "are just like Tass."
Comparing the White House to the Russian news agency is a hyperbole, of course, but less so with each new administration. Obama's image-makers are taking advantage of new technologies that democratized the media, subverting independent news organizations that hold the president accountable. A generation ago, a few mainstream media organizations held a monopoly on public information about the White House. Today, the White House itself is behaving monopolistic.
The fast-moving trend is hampering reporters and videographers who cover the White House, but Mills' profession has probably been hardest hit. "As surely as if they were placing a hand over a journalist's camera lens, officials in this administration are blocking the public from having an independent view of important functions of the Executive Branch of government," reads a letter delivered today to Carney by the WHCA and several member news organizations including The Associated Press and The New York Times.
The letter includes examples of important news events that were not covered by media photographers, and yet pictures were taken by the White House image team and widely distributed via social media. This happens almost daily.
Unlike media photographers, official White House photographers are paid by taxpayers and report to the president. Their job is to make Obama look good. They are propagandists – in the purest sense of the word.
Via: National Journal
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Former press secretary for George W. Bush and current Co-host of The Five on Fox News, Dana Perino shares a story about forgiveness from her time in the White House.

Via: Fox Nation

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PLANNED PARENTHOOD OPENS ABORTION CLINIC NEXT TO ADOPTION CENTER


Planned Parenthood held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Sunday to open a new abortion clinic in Fort Worth, Texas located next to the Gladney Adoption Center.

According to the Star-Telegram, Planned Parenthood president Cecile Richards attended the ribbon-cutting ceremony and reception at the new abortion clinic, titled The Planned Parenthood Southwest Fort Worth Health Center, which opened earlier in the year. The $6.5 million facility was privately funded by North Texans.

LifeNews reported in November of 2011 that Planned Parenthood had a capital campaign goal of $21.5 million for its new abortion mega-center. In addition, the location of the new center, at 6400 John Ryan Drive, was originally kept quiet, likely due to its proximity to the Gladney Center for Adoption.
The abortion center has since been described as a “state-of-the-art” abortion facility that “will include a larger family planning center, an ambulatory surgical care center and offices.”

The Kennedy Assassination: A Guide to Must-Reads About November 22, 1963

The assassination of John F Kennedy was a cataclysmic event the scope of which almost defies human comprehension. As the collection of links below shows, in drastically altering the course of American history it touched nearly every life in the nation, from Polish tailors on the Lower East Side to Fort Worth art vendors to the strangers recruited to serve as pallbearers for Lee Harvey Oswald.
As a result, it has promoted ordinary objects into historical significance, turning hotel paintings and doctors’ wristwatches into witnesses to history, and it has even made itself felt in absences, in the places Kennedy should have gone, the speeches he would have made, the people he could have addressed.
Here is a panaroma of the days in the United States before, during, and after the assassination.
JFK’s America (Andrew Kohut, PEW Research)
PEW looks at Kennedy’s standing in 1963, finding an optimistic internationalist populace giving him a 70% approval rate early in the year. This approval rating slipped to 59% after his civil rights speech in June, which much of the erosion happening in the south. A majority thought race was the preeminent challenge facing the country, and were not assuaged by the March on Washington, with which Kennedy had ambiguous relationship.
The Day Before JFK Was Assassinated (Timothy Noah, MSNBC)
Noah recreates the world of November 21, 1963, when Mary McCarthy’s The Group was a national bestseller, It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World was in theaters, Ronald Reagan was still an actor (and only recently a Republican), England was just reporting, condescendingly, about this “Beatles” band, and a 17-year-old Diane Sawyer had recently been crowned Junior Miss. Most ominously, the best-selling non-fiction book of the week? JFK: The Man and the Myth, a takedown of the president.
In Austin, The “Welcome, JFK!” Banquet That Never Happened (Rebecca Onion, Slate)
“I’m extremely proud to see so many Texas Democrats,” the President was supposed to say to a banquet crowd in Austin, TX that evening. “From what people are trying to say, you’d think there weren’t this many Democrats left in the whole state!” Kennedy’s prepared remarks were also peppered with local color, courtesy Governor John Connally, about Darrell K. Royal and the UT Longhorns.
Speaking of Connally, here’s a profile of his wife, Nellie, from Texas Monthly.
Here’s The Artwork That JFK Saw The Night Before He Died (Christina Sterbenz, Business Insider)
The Dallas Museum has collected all the pieces of local Fort Worth pieces picked specifically for JFK’s hotel room the night before the shooting—which Fort Worth saw as a coup over its prominent neighboring polis.
Lyndon Johnson Was Scheduled To Visit My Austin Shul the Day After Kennedy Died (Cathy Schechter, Tablet)
The Vice President was on his home turf on the trip, and was supposed to visit a synagogue in his former congressional district. LBJ ended up keeping his promise, arriving a month later—as President.
The Last Beautiful Picture Of JFK And Jackie (David Luban, Business Insider)
The assassination of John F Kennedy was a cataclysmic event the scope of which almost defies human comprehension. As the collection of links below shows, in drastically altering the course of American history it touched nearly every life in the nation, from Polish tailors on the Lower East Side to Fort Worth art vendors to the strangers recruited to serve as pallbearers for Lee Harvey Oswald.
As a result, it has promoted ordinary objects into historical significance, turning hotel paintings and doctors’ wristwatches into witnesses to history, and it has even made itself felt in absences, in the places Kennedy should have gone, the speeches he would have made, the people he could have addressed.
Here is a panaroma of the days in the United States before, during, and after the assassination.
JFK’s America (Andrew Kohut, PEW Research)
PEW looks at Kennedy’s standing in 1963, finding an optimistic internationalist populace giving him a 70% approval rate early in the year. This approval rating slipped to 59% after his civil rights speech in June, which much of the erosion happening in the south. A majority thought race was the preeminent challenge facing the country, and were not assuaged by the March on Washington, with which Kennedy had ambiguous relationship.
The Day Before JFK Was Assassinated (Timothy Noah, MSNBC)
Noah recreates the world of November 21, 1963, when Mary McCarthy’s The Group was a national bestseller, It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World was in theaters, Ronald Reagan was still an actor (and only recently a Republican), England was just reporting, condescendingly, about this “Beatles” band, and a 17-year-old Diane Sawyer had recently been crowned Junior Miss. Most ominously, the best-selling non-fiction book of the week? JFK: The Man and the Myth, a takedown of the president.
In Austin, The “Welcome, JFK!” Banquet That Never Happened (Rebecca Onion, Slate)
“I’m extremely proud to see so many Texas Democrats,” the President was supposed to say to a banquet crowd in Austin, TX that evening. “From what people are trying to say, you’d think there weren’t this many Democrats left in the whole state!” Kennedy’s prepared remarks were also peppered with local color, courtesy Governor John Connally, about Darrell K. Royal and the UT Longhorns.
Speaking of Connally, here’s a profile of his wife, Nellie, from Texas Monthly.
Here’s The Artwork That JFK Saw The Night Before He Died (Christina Sterbenz, Business Insider)
The Dallas Museum has collected all the pieces of local Fort Worth pieces picked specifically for JFK’s hotel room the night before the shooting—which Fort Worth saw as a coup over its prominent neighboring polis.
Lyndon Johnson Was Scheduled To Visit My Austin Shul the Day After Kennedy Died (Cathy Schechter, Tablet)
The Vice President was on his home turf on the trip, and was supposed to visit a synagogue in his former congressional district. LBJ ended up keeping his promise, arriving a month later—as President.
The Last Beautiful Picture Of JFK And Jackie (David Luban, Business Insider)
The assassination of John F Kennedy was a cataclysmic event the scope of which almost defies human comprehension. As the collection of links below shows, in drastically altering the course of American history it touched nearly every life in the nation, from Polish tailors on the Lower East Side to Fort Worth art vendors to the strangers recruited to serve as pallbearers for Lee Harvey Oswald.
As a result, it has promoted ordinary objects into historical significance, turning hotel paintings and doctors’ wristwatches into witnesses to history, and it has even made itself felt in absences, in the places Kennedy should have gone, the speeches he would have made, the people he could have addressed.
Here is a panaroma of the days in the United States before, during, and after the assassination.
JFK’s America (Andrew Kohut, PEW Research)
PEW looks at Kennedy’s standing in 1963, finding an optimistic internationalist populace giving him a 70% approval rate early in the year. This approval rating slipped to 59% after his civil rights speech in June, which much of the erosion happening in the south. A majority thought race was the preeminent challenge facing the country, and were not assuaged by the March on Washington, with which Kennedy had ambiguous relationship.
The Day Before JFK Was Assassinated (Timothy Noah, MSNBC)
Noah recreates the world of November 21, 1963, when Mary McCarthy’s The Group was a national bestseller, It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World was in theaters, Ronald Reagan was still an actor (and only recently a Republican), England was just reporting, condescendingly, about this “Beatles” band, and a 17-year-old Diane Sawyer had recently been crowned Junior Miss. Most ominously, the best-selling non-fiction book of the week? JFK: The Man and the Myth, a takedown of the president.
In Austin, The “Welcome, JFK!” Banquet That Never Happened (Rebecca Onion, Slate)
“I’m extremely proud to see so many Texas Democrats,” the President was supposed to say to a banquet crowd in Austin, TX that evening. “From what people are trying to say, you’d think there weren’t this many Democrats left in the whole state!” Kennedy’s prepared remarks were also peppered with local color, courtesy Governor John Connally, about Darrell K. Royal and the UT Longhorns.
Speaking of Connally, here’s a profile of his wife, Nellie, from Texas Monthly.
Here’s The Artwork That JFK Saw The Night Before He Died (Christina Sterbenz, Business Insider)
The Dallas Museum has collected all the pieces of local Fort Worth pieces picked specifically for JFK’s hotel room the night before the shooting—which Fort Worth saw as a coup over its prominent neighboring polis.
Lyndon Johnson Was Scheduled To Visit My Austin Shul the Day After Kennedy Died (Cathy Schechter, Tablet)
The Vice President was on his home turf on the trip, and was supposed to visit a synagogue in his former congressional district. LBJ ended up keeping his promise, arriving a month later—as President.
The Last Beautiful Picture Of JFK And Jackie (David Luban, Business Insider)
The story behind the last photo of the famous couple:
The Umbrella Man (Errol Morris, New York Times)
From two years ago, an Errol Morris short about “the only man in Dallas under an umbrella,” who just happened to be standing by the limousine when the shots rang out. Conspiracy theorists have speculated that the umbrella was some sort pneumatic assassination device. That is, until Umbrella Man came forward with the real story…
Up For Auction: Watch Believed To Be Used To Declare JFK’s Time Of Death (Ula Ilnytzky,Talking Points Memo)
Dr. Kemp Clark, who declared the time of death, was wearing a watch purchased for him by his mother for $750 in 1949. The watch could fetch up to $150,000 at Christie’s.
My Father Made Jackie’s Pink Suit (Michael Horowicz, Daily Beast)
Jackie’s famous dress wasn’t actually from Chanel, but from a tailor’s shop in the Lower East Side. Here’s the story of the Jewish Polish immigrant who made it.
The World Changes as President John F. Kennedy is Assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald (New York Daily News)
And, of course, the cover:
Historical Trivia of the Day, Poorly-Timed Magazine Cover Edition (Evan McMurry, A Flea in the Fur of the Beast)
Yeah, I’m linking to myself. But this anecdote—about a young Republican intellectual magazine that printed 70,000 copies of their make-or-break issue featuring a cover mercilessly mocking Kennedy on November 22, 1963—is worth it.
Bronx Tale of a BB Gun and Infamy in the Making (Dan Barry, New York Times)
About a New York City landlord who caught one of his teenage tenants practicing with a BB gun. The boy’s name? Lee Harvey Oswald. The New York Times recalls the assassin’s teenage years through his NYC neighbors.
A Killer’s Last Steps (James Reston Jr., Slate)
A walking tour of Oswald’s final path.
Ex-AP Writer Recalls Serving as Oswald Pallbearer (Mike Cochran, Associated Press)
A remembrance of what had to be one of the saddest funerals of all time. Not even the minister showed up. Cochran writes:
Shaking his head ever so slightly, Jerry Flemmons of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram turned to me and said, “Cochran, if we’re gonna write a story about the burial of Lee Harvey Oswald, we’re gonna have to bury the son of a bitch ourselves.”
Cochran ended up helping for the real reason reporters do anything: the scoop.
“May God Be With You, My Dear Mrs. Kennedy” (Pamela Coloff, Texas Monthly)
The letters from Texans to Jackie Kennedy, expressing guilt, grief and remorse over their state’s role in the assassination.
Window Displays of Affection (Julie Bosman, New York Times)
The spontaneous displays of grief from New Yorkers following the assassination.
Most Believe Kennedy Assassinated in Conspiracy Plot (Washington Post)
62-29%, appropriate for the event that mainstreamed conspiracy theories.
Via: Mediaite.com
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Thursday, November 21, 2013

Chris Matthews: 'Vulture' Conservatives Commit 'Verbal Terror' on 'Great' Obama

Chris Matthews appears to have a Mad Libs-style list of the worst insults he hurls at conservative. On Wednesday, he chose "verbal terror" to smear everyone on the right who disagrees with all of the "great things" Barack Obama wants to do. The Hardball anchor opened his show by hyperbolically warning, "Political armageddon!" According to Matthews, the fight between the President and conservatives is not a conflict of ideas.
Rather, "it's a battle between a President who wants to do great things -- extend health care to the tens of millions of working people, many of them poor, ending two wars in Afghanistan" and an "almost totally negative force arrayed and barking against him, a campaign of verbal terror and negativity aimed at denying tens of millions decent health care." [See video below. MP3 audio here.]
In the simplistic world of an MSNBC host, "it's a strange, unbalanced battle between a man who wants to do great things and an enemy aimed at ensuring he does not."
Matthews has no problem with using extremist language to demonize his enemies. On July 31, 2013, he labeled Ted Cruz, Rand Paul and Mike Lee "terrorists."
On March 2, 2009, the host wondered if then-Health and Human Services nominee Kathleen Sebelius would survive the "terrorism of the anti-abortion people" who opposed her.
Via: Newsbusters

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GOP Sen. Lamar Alexander: Nuclear Option ‘Should Be Called Obamacare II’

The Senate triggered the long-awaited “nuclear option” on Thursday, and as far as know, no actual bombs went off. But plenty of Republicans seem ready to explode, especially considering past thoughts by President Obama about such a move. Senator Lamar Alexander took to the floor after the vote to make a comparison between the Senate majority’s power grab and… Obamacare.
Alexander went off on how this is the “most dangerous restructuring” of Senate rules and procedure in its history, warning that this will have long-standing effects, despite the rules only being changed concerning non-Supreme Court nominees.
“This action today creates a perpetual opportunity for a tyranny of the majority because it permits a majority in this body to do whatever it wants to do any time it wants to do it. This should be called Obamacare II, because it is another example of the raw, partisan, political power for the majority to do whatever it wants to do any time it wants to do it.”
Alexander elaborated that the reason the GOP’s picking a fight with Obama’s court nominees is to stop them from being pawns to “implement the president’s radical regulatory agenda” through the courts.
Watch the video below, via C-SPAN 2:

Americans mark 50th anniversary of JFK’s appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show

Americans mark 50th anniversary of JFK’s appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show
Americans of all nations today are remembering a tragic moment in Sixties consciousness: the day in 1963 that President John F. Kennedy, standing in the door of the University of Alabama’s Foster Auditorium, was gunned down by Manson cult member Sirhan Sirhan on the balcony of a hotel in Memphis.
But for those Americans who remember the Sixties, the sting of that horrible day is partly salved by memories of JFK’s too-brief administration: how he read the Port Huron statement to an ecstatic crowd near Checkpoint Charlie in divided Prague; how Pete Seeger had to be restrained from cutting Kennedy’s loudspeakers when he “plugged in” at the Newport Folk Festival.
Also undimmed by countless reruns are our memories of how the tousle-haired young man from Hyannis created AmeriCorps, whose “diggers” rescued strung-out Haight-Ashbury runaways as the Summer of Love turned into a year of burn-baby-burn.
Via Daily Caller

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Obamacare Delays May Create Election Bomb for Democrats

Some of Obamacare’s most damaging political narratives will be getting a fresh look right before next year’s midterms, thanks to delays in the law’s implementation.
Canceled insurance plans are the most obvious example. President Obama said last week that insurers can un-cancel certain policies for another year, a move largely designed to appease nervous Democrats. But a one-year delay simply means that cancellation notices will resume next October—just weeks before many of those same Democrats will face voters for the first time since voting to pass the Affordable Care Act.
And that’s not the only political threat lurking just ahead of the 2014 midterms. The White House also delayed the law’s employer mandate until 2015. That means employers will be deciding in mid- to late 2014 whether they’re going to offer health benefits under the mandate—and whether to cut employees’ hours to avoid providing them with health care.

“They’re concentrating everything in the fall of next year, and that’s a very dangerous time to be doing it,” said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a conservative economist who leads the American Action Forum.

There’s No Fixing ObamaCare

Those who thought President Obama had “fixed” the inequities in his signature health-care legislation with an announcement last week should have been paying attention on Monday to the results of a meeting held in the White House with insurance industry CEOs. If the companies thought the administration was planning on helping them deal with the fallout from the president’s edict that those who had lost their coverage as a result of ObamaCare could get their old policies back, they were in for a rude awakening. Shifting gears to allow the president to claim that he is making good on his oft-repeated promise after following the law and cancelling those policies is going to create chaos for the industry as well as cost them a fortune. But though the whole mess is his fault, the president made it clear they will get no subsidies or help. Since the president’s solution will rely on companies to take a bath on this as well as the permission of state insurance commissioners, its highly doubtful that those negatively affected by the legislation will get much relief.
This is significant not just because it shows that the president’s hour-long press conference last week during which he apologized for his false promises–even as he made it obvious that he knew all along that his blanket proclamations that no one would lose their coverage or their doctor was false. Nor is it only important because it is one more of a series of problems about ObamaCare that began but certainly did not end with a dysfunctional website. The real issue here is that the problem that has been dumped on the insurance companies and the states with little hope that they can sort it out to the satisfaction of consumers is a foreshadowing of problems to come that we haven’t even imagined.

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