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Ari Fleisher: The Likely Demographics Of 2016 Voting

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 November 5, 2014
The writer, White House press secretary from 2001 to 2003, was a co-chairman of the Republican National Committee’s review of the party’s defeat in the 2012 presidential election.
America is a tale of two electorates. On Tuesday, the GOP won big. The next election is likely to involve a very different group of voters, and Republicans need to realize that what worked in 2014 won’t work in 2016. If Republicans aren’t wise, this victory could be short-lived.
The biggest difference between the electorate of 2014 and the one coming in 2016 is who didn’t vote Tuesday. National turnout data are not available yet, but assuming turnout was similar to the 2010 midterms, roughly 90 million Americans voted Tuesday; two years ago, in the last presidential election, about 129 million people turned out. Who are the missing 39 million voters? They’re mostly from the Democratic base, who typically don’t vote in midterms but reliably show up for presidential contests.
According to exit polls, this year’s electorate was 12 percent African American, 8 percent Hispanic and 13 percent between age 18 and 29. On Tuesday, these groups voted Democratic by 89 percent, 63 percent and 54 percent, respectively.
If the presidential election of 2012 is any guide to 2016, and it’s certainly a good basis for planning, here is what Republicans can look forward to: The African American vote will be 13 percent of the electorate, up one percentage point from 2014. The Hispanic vote is projected to be 11 percent, up three points from 2014. And the youth vote will be about 19 percent, up six points from 2014.
In other words, the Democrats are coming.
Republicans, who have won the popular vote in just one presidential election since 1992, need to do things differently if they want to win the White House again. It’s one thing to win a rejection election against the party in charge; it’s another to prove to the voters that you have ideas and are ready to govern. While U.S. demographic changes are important, nothing attracts voters more than an appealing ideology.
The first thing Republicans need is a specific and positive agenda. Everyone knows the GOP stands against President Obama, and it was rewarded for that Tuesday. But to win in a presidential year, GOP presidential candidates, who will define the image of the party, need to be the candidates with ideas. Growth-oriented reform of the individual tax code, corporate tax reform, a replacement for Obamacare, anti-poverty measures that work, exporting energy, a military buildup — all of these areas can be part of a campaign that gives voters a reason to vote for someone, rather than against someone else.
Alan: If Republicans devise anti-poverty measures that work (simultaneously replacing the effective anti-poverty measure of Obamacare) perhaps a snowball can make it through Hell. Since 2007, 95% of new wealth generated by American industry ended up in the pockets of The 1%. There will be no effective anti-poverty measure without redistributing a big chunk of that 95% - an eventuality less likely for the GOP than Mother Theresa opening a brothel. 
Along the way, Republicans must communicate and act in a more open and inclusive manner. Statements about “self-deportation” for illegal immigrants, for example, alienate voters who would otherwise be open to Republican ideas. It is high time for the GOP to move forward on immigration reform. Immigration isn’t the only issue that Hispanics care about, but a willingness to move forward on reform will be instrumental in letting immigrants know they are important to and welcome in the party. A compromise needs to be found that respects the rule of law while allowing people who came to the United States seeking opportunity to find it.
George W. Bush, who supported immigration reform, won 44 percent of the Hispanic vote in 2004. Mitt Romney received 27 percent. If Republicans don’t win at least roughly 35 percent of the Hispanic vote, it’s hard to imagine them winning the White House again.
Republicans made inroads with young voters Tuesday, losing them by 9 points compared with 23 points in 2012, but not because 18-to-29-year-olds like Republicans. It’s because they turned away from Democrats. These voters are increasingly up for grabs.
One way to win over more young voters is to stop scaring them away. Interestingly, gay rights have become somewhat of a gateway issue for young people. Younger Republicans are increasingly open to gay marriage, presenting the GOP with a generational split. Even if this split remains, the party needs to find points of consensus, such as ending workplace discrimination against gays. People simply won’t vote for you if they think you don’t like them. The GOP needs to modernize its appeal or too many young voters will roll their eyes when they see a Republican presidential candidate coming.
By my count, approximately a dozen Republicans are considering running for president, including six governors, a former governor, three senators, a former senator and one physician. I hope I didn’t leave anyone out.
As the primary proceeds, the candidates need to keep their eyes on the prize. A conservative ideology will be a winning ideology if it’s presented in a manner that unifies and uplifts. Competition is healthy in all things, and that includes presidential politics. There is nothing wrong with a good ideological battle to vet and settle intra-party differences. But if Republicans engage in that fight in a manner that alienates large portions of a general electorate that will be out in full force in 2016, this week’s victory is sure to be fleeting.
It’s good to block Obama. It’s better to lead America in a new direction.

The Greatest Generation: Labor, Capital And Betrayal Of The Social Contract

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It will be a cold day in Hell when contemporary Republicans launch an email chain featuring Lincoln's view of "labor" and "capital."

***

The Greatest Generation believed that economic progress was a shared enterprise between labor and capital and that wealth -- as night follows day -- would be shared as labor built up an economy whose productive mechanisms was increasingly automatic. Instead, Capital jettisoned labor as soon as productive mechanisms became sufficiently automated that labor -- in the traditional blue collar sense -- was no longer necessary. This betrayal of the self-evident Social Contract held by American labor throughout the process of modern industrialization -- and into the beginning of post-industrialism -- constitutes the essential deception, treachery and turncoat vility of The 1%

BBC: ISIS Recruitment Of 13 Year Old Jihadis. Religious Absolutism & Spread Of Evil

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A 13-year-old boy who wishes to be named "Abu Hattab" sits wearing a black balaclava
"Abu Hattab" spends his days online, watching jihadist videos and chatting on Facebook to IS

"Totalitarian Absolutism And The Thinking Housewife"

"Terror And The Other Religions"

Christian fundamentalism and jihadi Islamism 
are mirror images of one another.

By ignoring the deadly fallout of the counter-productive, self-destructive Iraq War, it can be argued that jihadi Islamism is more damaging and deadly than Christian fundamentalism. Against this argument, I encourage conservative Christians to consider the utterly new principle proclaimed by Yeshua of Nazareth:

21 “Under the laws of Moses the rule was, ‘If you murder, you must die.’ 22 But I have added to that rule and tell you[c] that if you are only angry, even in your own home,* you are in danger of judgment! If you call your friend an idiot, you are in danger of being brought before the court. And if you curse him, you are in danger of the fires of hell.*
38 “The law of Moses says, ‘If a man gouges out another’s eye, he must pay with his own eye. If a tooth gets knocked out, knock out the tooth[e] of the one who did it.’39 But I say: Don’t resist violence! If you are slapped on one cheek, turn the other too.40 If you are ordered to court, and your shirt is taken from you, give your coat too. 41 If the military demand that you carry their gear for a mile, carry it two. 42 Give to those who ask, and don’t turn away from those who want to borrow.
43 “There is a saying, ‘Love your friends and hate your enemies.’ 44 But I say: Love yourenemies! Pray for those who persecute you! 45 In that way you will be acting as true sons of your Father in heaven. For he gives his sunlight to both the evil and the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust too. 46 If you love only those who love you, what good is that? Even scoundrels do that much. 47 If you are friendly only to your friends, how are you different from anyone else? Even the heathen do that. 48 But you are to be perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.
The fully contextualized version of the above passages can be read at https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew+5%3A+20-48&version=TLB

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-29921816

In a cramped living room in southern Turkey, a 13-year-old boy is training to join Islamic State.
As he welcomes us in, he appears a regular, happy-looking child: his hair is ruffled, his smile beaming, he wears a grey, hooded sweater.
But as we sit down to talk, he heads next door to change, returning in a black balaclava and military-style camouflage top.
He wants to be known as "Abu Hattab".
Born in Syria, he was first radicalised last year, joining the jihadist group Sham al-Islam.
'Behead them'
He had Sharia lessons and learned how to use weapons, proudly showing us pictures in which he takes aim with machine guns.
Now he spends his days online, watching jihadist videos and chatting on Facebook to IS fighters.
A 13-year-old boy who wishes to be named 'Abu Hattab' stands in a forest holding a weapon
Some young jihadists are sent to training camps by their parents
Within weeks, he says, he'll go to the IS stronghold of Raqqa in Syria to become a young jihadi soldier.
"I like Islamic State because they pursue Sharia and kill infidels, non-Sunnis and those who converted from Islam," he says.

Start Quote

I would not be sad if he killed Westerners”
'Fatima'Mother of 'Abu Hattab'
"The people killed by Islamic State are American agents. We must behead them as Allah said in the Koran."
I ask whether he has disclosed his age to those to whom he talks online.
"At the start, I didn't," he says.
"But recently I told them - and now they contact me even more, sending me photos and news."
But why not simply enjoy his childhood, I ask?
"I don't want to go out with friends or have fun. Allah ordered us to work and fight for the next life - for paradise. Before, I went to the park or the seaside.
"But then I realised I was wrong - and I've taken the righteous path."
'Evil powers'
His family now lives in Turkey - so would he launch an attack here, or in Britain for example?
"Britain should be attacked because it's in Nato and is against Islamic State," he says, "but we would kill only those who deserve it. If they ask me to attack Turkey and give me a holy order, I would do it. Soon the West will be finished."
The mother of a 13 year old IS fighter sit in her house wearing a chequered scarf across her face
"Fatima" says she is ashamed that her other sons have not taken up arms
At home, he and his mother, who wants to be known as Fatima, lead a devout life.
She spends much of her time studying the Koran and admits strong sympathies for the militants.
Last year, she sent her son for training with Sham al-Islam - but denies brainwashing him.
"I never encouraged him to join Islamic State," she insists.
"I support some of their beliefs but not others. But I think they came to help the Syrian people - unlike the evil powers around the world."
'Future leader'
If she's not encouraging him, I ask, what is she doing to stop her son losing his childhood to extreme violence?

Start Quote

Their childhood has been taken”
MohamedBrother of young jihadi fighters
"I can't stop him if he wants to fight," she says.
"War makes children grow up fast. I want him to become a future leader - an emir."
Steadily her voice grows in intensity, her eyes narrowing in anger above the scarf she uses to cover her face.
"I would not be sad if he killed Westerners. I'm ashamed that my other sons are working peacefully for civil society groups - they must take up arms."
How would she feel, I ask, if he dies fighting for Islamic State?
She pauses. "I would be so happy," she replies, before bowing her head to cry.
A young jihadist fighter operates heavy artillery in the desert
Some jihadist groups are using child soldiers as suicide bombers and snipers
$100 per month
Islamic State is recruiting widely among children, according to a United Nations report released last month - and often forcibly.
One video posted online, called "cubs of the Islamic State", appears to show a battalion of children dressed in full military garb, holding weapons and standing next to an IS black flag.
Other jihadist groups are also using child soldiers, Human Rights Watch reporting recently that they're deployed as suicide bombers and snipers.
In the southern Turkish city of Gaziantep, we met a Syrian civil society activist who has seen his two younger brothers - 13 and 15 years old - fall victim to a recruitment drive by Jabat al-Nusra, the al-Qaeda offshoot in Syria.
Mohamed, the brother of two young jihadists stands in front of a mosque
Mohamed fears that both his brothers will be killed
Mohamed, 21, shows me a video of his youngest brother firing heavy artillery with a group of fighters.
In other pictures, he poses for the camera gripping a machine gun.
"I tried to stop my brothers from joining al-Nusra but they didn't care what I felt," he says.
"They should be at school. Al-Nusra offers children $100 per month to fight with them. And they give them weapons-training in a camp. Their childhood has been taken."
Mohamed's younger brother points a weapon at the camera
Mohamed's brother was trained to fight by the al-Nusra group in Syria
Both brothers have recently been captured by Islamic State. Mohamed fears they'll soon defect from al-Nusra to fight with IS.
"I used to have fun with my youngest brother at home. But then he changed. When I told him al-Nusra would destroy our country, he said 'shut up, or I'll kill you'.
"I said goodbye to both of them when they went to join al-Nusra and I thought: I'll never see them again. I'm sure I'll get news that they've been killed."
Syria's war is blackening the formative years of a generation.
And militants are preying upon children as tools of that war, their innocence stolen too early.
As I left the house of "Abu Hattab", I asked his mother what her 13-year-old wanted to become when he was even younger.
She smiled: "A pilot."

Blaise Pascal: Doing Evil Cheerfully

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Incinerated Iraqi soldier in Bush-Cheney's trumped up War of Choice.

On 9/11, approximately 3000 Americans died in an abominable series of terror attacks.

To date, The Iraq War -- launched on fabricated and manipulated "intelligence" -- has resulted in the death of 1,000,000 Iraqis with another 5,000,000 Iraqis physically or psychologically maimed.

"Bush's Toxic Legacy In Iraq"



Jesus' Most Radical Pronouncement On Morality: Judgment According To Intent

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"By this all people will know that you are my disciples, 
if you love one another.”
John 13:35
http://biblehub.com/john/13-35.htm

***
Matthew 5
Aramaic Bible in Plain English
http://biblehub.com/aramaic-plain-english/matthew/5.htm


20 For I say to you, that unless your goodness will exceed that of the Scribes and the Pharisees, you will not enter the Kingdom of Heaven.

21You have heard that it was said to the ancients, 'Do not murder, and whoever murders is condemned to judgment.' 22But I am saying to you, that everyone who will be angry against his brother without cause is condemned before the judge, and everyone who will say to his brother, 'I spit on you', is condemned before the assembly, and whoever will say 'You fool' is condemned to the Gehenna of fire. 23If therefore you bring your offering to the altar, and there you remember that your brother holds any grudge against you, 24Leave your offering there before the altar and go, first be reconciled with your brother, and then come, bring your offering. 25Be allied with your plaintiff quickly, while you are with him in the street, lest the plaintiff delivers you to the judge and the judge delivers you to the Tax Collector and you fall into prison. 26And truly I say to you, you will not come out from there until you give the last quarter cent.

33Again you have heard that it was said to the ancients, "Do not lie in your oath, but you will fulfill to THE LORD JEHOVAH your oath." 34But I say to you, Do not swear at all, not by Heaven, for it is the throne of God 35Neither by the earth, for it is his stool for his feet, nor by Jerusalem, for it is the city of the great King. 36Neither shall you swear by your head, because you cannot make in it a certain hair black or white. 37But your statement shall be, "Yes, yes" and, "No, no"; anything more than these is from The Evil One.

38You have heard that it was said, "An eye in exchange for an eye, and a tooth in exchange for a tooth." 39But I am saying to you, you shall not rise up against an evil person, but whoever strikes you on your right cheek, turn to him also the other. 40And whoever wants to sue you and take your coat, leave for him also your cloak. 41Whoever compels you to go one mile with him, go with him two miles. 42Whoever asks you, give to him, and whoever wants to borrow from you, do not refuse him.

43You have heard that it was said, "Show kindness to your neighbor and hate your enemy." 44But I say to you, love your enemies and bless the one who curses you, and do what is beautiful to the one who hates you, and pray over those who take you by force and persecute you. 45So that you will become the children of your Father who is in Heaven, for his sun rises on the good and upon the evil and his rain descends on the just and on the unjust. 46For if you love those who love you, what benefit is it to you? Behold, do not even the Tax Collectors the same thing? 47And if you pray for the peace of your brethren only, what excellent thing are you doing? Behold, are not even the Tax Collectors doing the same thing? 48Be therefore perfect, just as your Father who is in Heaven is perfect.

"Who Were The Tax Collectors And Shepherds In Jesus' Time"

***

27You have heard that it was spoken, 'You shall not commit adultery.' 28But I am saying to you, everyone who looks at a woman so as to lust for her, immediately commits adultery with her in his heart. 29But if your right eye subverts you, pluck it out and cast it from you, for it is profitable for you that your one member be lost, and not that your whole body should fall into Gehenna. 30And if your right hand causes you to stumble, cut it off, cast it from you, for it is profitable for you that one of your members be lost, and not that your whole body fall into Gehenna. (Alan: "Gehenna" or "hell" was the name of Jerusalem's dump, "the place where the fires never went out.)

31It has been said, 'Whoever divorces his wife, let him give her a writing of divorce.' 32But I am saying to you that everyone who divorces his wife, apart from the report of fornication, he causes her to commit adultery, and whoever takes her who is divorced is committing adultery. (Alan: Separation is not prohibited.)


"Love Your Enemies. Do Good To Those Who Hate You," Luke 6: 27-42



The Everlasting Republican Platform

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The GOP's Southern Strategy Was A Cynical Ploy To Play "The Ignorant" For Suckers

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"You might be a redneck if..."
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2011/11/you-might-be-redneck-if.html

"Bank On It: The South Is Always Wrong"

"Red State Moocher Links"

"Why The Bible Belt Is Its Own Worst Enemy"

"The Reign of Morons Is Here," Charles P. Pierce, The Atlantic

"A Southerner Explains Tea Party Radicalism: The Civil War Is Not Over"

"People Who Watch Only Fox News 
Know Less Than People Who Watch No News"

Soon to be the GOP's "older white guy" Base.
Good for America?
Good for The Republican Party?


Impossibly Pure Principles

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Alan: A common "religious" reflex holds that total submission to Impeccably Pure Principles evokes The Favor of God so dependably - and so providentially - that there is no need to "do" anything but wait for "The Invisible Hand" to trickle blessing upon everyone. 

"Pope Francis Links"

Whether "sacred" or "secular,"The Invisible Hand will take care of "everything" in the best possible way. 

Indeed, the only impediment to universal blessing is "doing something" -- doing anything! -- that might obstruct the free operation of providential Deity.

Not only must we subscribe to "Impossibly Pure Principles," we must do nothing else - make no conscious attempt - to improve the well-being of The Body Politic.

The practical upshot of prostrating ourselves before the sola fide idol of Deity-Providence-Invisible Hand?

The political collapse whose rubble surrounds us.

Notably, "Islam" is the Arabic word for "surrender."


Austerity, Economic Anorexia And The Advisability of Vigorous Infrastructure Spending


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"The terrible thing about our time is precisely the ease with which theories can be put into practice.  The more perfect, the more idealistic the theories, the more dreadful is their realization.  We are at last beginning to rediscover what perhaps men knew better in very ancient times, in primitive times before utopias were thought of: that liberty is bound up with imperfection, and that limitations, imperfections, errors are not only unavoidable but also salutary. The best is not the ideal.  Where what is theoretically best is imposed on everyone as the norm, then there is no longer any room even to be good.  The best, imposed as a norm, becomes evil.”  
"Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander,” by Trappist monk, Father Thomas Merton


More Merton Quotes




2014 Exit Polls Reveal An Economic Populism That Should Have Favored Democrats

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Excerpt: "Democrats who touted the nation’s economic growth did so at their own peril: When 95 percent of the income growth since the recession ended goes to the wealthiest 1 percent, as economist Emmanuel Saez has documented, voters view reports of a recovery as they would news from a distant land. Even though it was the Republicans who blocked Democrats’ efforts to raise the federal minimum wage or authorize job-generating infrastructure projects or diminish student debt, it was Democrats — the party generally perceived as controlling the government — who paid the price for that government’s failure to act. But with the exception of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who has been plenty outspoken about diminishing the power of Wall Street, the Democrats have had precious little to say about how to re-create the kind of widely shared prosperity that emerged from the New Deal. The regulated and more equitable capitalism of the mid-20th century has morphed into a far harsher system."

"Politics And Economics: The 101 Courses You Wish You Had"

"Plutocracy Triumphant"
Cartoon Compendium

Harold Meyerson: Democrats lost because they didn’t deliver broad prosperity

 Opinion writer November 5, 2014
When a party loses as catastrophically as the Democrats lost Tuesday, something very big has gone very wrong. Democrats can’t blame the blowout simply on the six-year itch, or low midterm turnout, or Republican negativity, or Barack Obama’s too-cool-for-rule presidency. What fundamentally ails the Democrats, rather, is the same ailment that afflicts incumbent parties throughout the advanced economies, and parties of the center-left in particular: their inability to deliver broadly shared prosperity as they used to do.
The Ebola and Islamic State phobias certainly didn’t help, but the overwhelming anxiety that the Democrats failed to address was the economy. In national exit polls45 percent of respondents cited the economy as their chief concern — way ahead of health care, which ranked second at 25 percent, not to mention foreign policy, which clocked in at 13 percent.
Yet Democrats were singularly unable to take advantage of such unarguably populist sentiments. Never mind their failure to win in red states or hold the Senate. They failed to turn out their voters, or persuade the hitherto persuadable, in such blue bastions as Maryland, Massachusetts and Illinois, where they lost governors’ races. Even in the people’s republic of Vermont, the incumbent Democratic governor won so narrowly that the race will be tossed to the legislature (as Vermont law requires when no gubernatorial candidate breaks 50 percent). If current margins hold, there will be just 18 Democratic governors in January, and just eight in the 31 states that don’t border the Atlantic or Pacific. Dig a little deeper into the public’s economic fears, though, and you might conclude that the Democrats should have had a good election night. Sixty-three percent of respondents told pollsters they believed that the U.S. economic system generally favors the wealthy, while just 32 percent said that it is fair to most. And a wave of ballot measures to raise state or city minimum wages carried wherever they were put before voters — from deepest-blue San Francisco and Oakland to solid-red Nebraska, South Dakota, Arkansas and Alaska.
Tuesday’s verdict makes clear that the Democrats cannot win by demographics alone. Republicans failed to improve their dismal performance among Latino and African American voters or among the young, but these groups’ low turnout helped doom Democrats in blue states particularly. Voters ages 18 to 29 constituted just 13 percent of the electorate, down from 19 percent in 2012. Latinos favored Democrats by 62 percent to 36 percent, but they constituted just 8 percent of voters, the same level as in 2010, despite their growing share of the population. Tuesday’s electorate tilted white and old — which is to say, Republican.
Yet the same factors that lowered the turnout of the Democratic base also cost the party votes among whites: the failure of government to remedy, or even address, the downward mobility of most Americans. Democrats who touted the nation’s economic growth did so at their own peril: When 95 percent of the income growth since the recession ended goes to the wealthiest 1 percent, as economist Emmanuel Saez has documented, voters view reports of a recovery as they would news from a distant land. Even though it was the Republicans who blocked Democrats’ efforts to raise the federal minimum wage or authorize job-generating infrastructure projects or diminish student debt, it was Democrats — the party generally perceived as controlling the government — who paid the price for that government’s failure to act.
But with the exception of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who has been plenty outspoken about diminishing the power of Wall Street, the Democrats have had precious little to say about how to re-create the kind of widely shared prosperity that emerged from the New Deal. The regulated and more equitable capitalism of the mid-20th century has morphed into a far harsher system, just as Americans told the exit pollsters, and the Democrats, whose calling card to generations of voters was their ability to foster good economies, are at a loss for how to proceed. Like their counterparts in the center-left parties of Europe, they had crafted national policies that bolstered the power and income of the majority of their citizens. But globalization, technology, financialization and the erosion of workers’ power have undermined those policies and fractured their electorates.
Democrats can’t rely simply on their demographic advantages and their edge on cultural issues to win the White House in 2016, much less retake Congress. They need to go where they haven’t gone before — increasing workers’ power and incomes within corporations, say — if they are to create an economic platform credible enough to win back the country.
Read more on this topic:

Too Many Americans Metaphorically Climax When Ignorance Trumps Knowledge

Pakistani Girl Shames Right Wing America

The Epistle Of James: "Who Are You To Judge Another?"

Ben Franklin On Taxes: The Most Remarkable Comment Ever By An American Politician

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Ben Franklin On The Eagle And The Wild Turkey

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Benjamin Franklin to Robert Morris: On Taxes

25 December, 1783

"The Remissness of our People in Paying Taxes is highly blameable; the Unwillingness to pay them is still more so. I see, in some Resolutions of Town Meetings, a Remonstrance against giving Congress a Power to take, as they call it, the People's Money out of their Pockets, tho' only to pay the Interest and Principal of Debts duly contracted. They seem to mistake the Point. Money, justly due from the People, is their Creditors' Money, and no longer the Money of the People, who, if they withold it, should be compell'd to pay by some Law. All Property, indeed, except the Savage's temporary Cabin, his Bow, his Matchcoat, and other little Acquisitions, absolutely necessary for his Subsistence, seems to me to be the Creature of public Convention. Hence the Public has the Right of Regulating Descents, and all other Conveyances of Property, and even of limiting the Quantity and the Uses of it. All the Property that is necessary to a Man, for the Conservation of the Individual and the Propagation of the Species, is his natural Right, which none can justly deprive him of: But all Property superfluous to such purposes is the Property of the Publick, who, by their Laws, have created it, and who may therefore by other Laws dispose of it, whenever the Welfare of the Publick shall demand such Disposition. He that does not like civil Society on these Terms, let him retire and live among Savages. He can have no right to the benefits of Society, who will not pay his Club towards the Support of it."


Obama Renews Promise To Act On Immigration

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Obama said again that he will take executive action to delay deportations by the year's end. Republicans have warned that executive action could damage the chances for bipartisan legislation to reform the system, but Obama dismissed those concerns at a press conference on Wednesday. David Nakamura and Juliet Eilperin in The Washington Post.

Primary source: The transcript of Wednesday's press conference.


How a new executive order could benefit 5 million undocumented immigrants. This summer, the White House was considering "a range of options that could provide legal protections and work permits to a significant portion of the nation’s more than 11 million undocumented residents... Ideas under consideration could include temporary relief for law-abiding undocumented immigrants who are closely related to U.S. citizens or those who have lived in the country a certain number of years — a population that advocates say could reach as high as 5 million." David Nakamura in The Washington Post. August 1, 2014.

Republicans won over Latino voters in the midterms in several crucial races. Exit polls in several governors' races showed that G.O.P. candidates weakened Democrats' advantage among Hispanics. Though in general, Latinos were twice as likely to support Democrats. Julia Preston in The New York Times.

Delaying the order until after the election apparently backfired for the president. The delay might have damaged Sen. Mark Udall's chances for reelection, and Democrats lost their Senate seats in red states such as North Carolina and Arkansas anyway. Seung Min Kim at Politico.


Republicans Sharpen Their Knives - For One Another

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Republicans are split on their broader strategy. The leadership and their allies want to take a piecemeal approach, focusing on what they're most likely to achieve. Other Republicans want the party to be more ambitious. Heidi Przybyla for Bloomberg.

A victory for what, exactly? "If I could see any constructive policy agenda, I could have a serious opinion about it. But I don’t. I see pure negativity and bile against the president. And it seems to me that that is not a strategy to win over a majority for the presidency in 2016." The Dish.

McConnell says the government will not shut down. What if it does anyway? The only negotiating leverage Republicans have against Obama's veto power is to threaten to shut down the government or to force a default on the national debt. If the new majority leader isn't willing to consider those options seriously, a conservative agenda has no chance. Sahil Kapur at Talking Points Memo.







Warren, Franken And Merkeley: Economic Populism Is A Winning Ticket

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Elizabeth Warren's supporters argue her approach the way forward for the party. Ideological allies like Sens. Al Franken and Jeff Merkeley won easily, which Warren partisans say shows the broad appeal of economic populism. Emily Schultheis in National Journal.

SARGENT: Democrats lost because voters think the economy has failed the working class. "People do not think the recovery has affected them, and this is particularly true of blue-collar white voters," one pollster said. "What is the Democratic economic platform for guaranteeing a chance at prosperity for everyone? Voters can’t articulate it." The Washington Post.

MacGILLIS: In 2012, Democrats won because they talked about the haves and the have-nots. They couldn't tell that story this election cycle, partly because they haven't earnestly pursued an agenda that really helps working people. The New Republic.





Finally! Feds Put A Limit On Bank Size. Still Too Big To Fail?

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The Fed puts a limit on the size of banks. According to a new rule, banks can't merge if the new firm would hold more than 10 percent of all liabilities in the financial system. J.P. Morgan, Bank of America, and Citigroup are already close to that limit, though, and they will be allowed to exceed it as long as they do so through growth, not acquisitions. Scott Patterson and Victoria McGrane in The Wall Street Journal


  • Pax on both houses: Too Pig To Fail: "Banks Need Far More ...

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../too-pig-to-fail-banks-need-far-more.h...
    Jul 22, 2013 - Too Pig To Fail: "Banks Need Far More Structural Reform To Be Safe" (Financial Times). Too Pig To Fail. "Why People Hate Bank Of America".
  • Pax on both houses: Too Pig To Fail

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/07/too-pig-to-fail.html
    Jul 20, 2013 - Too Pig To Fail. Since the financial crisis began in 2008, the U.S. has secured just two convictions against senior bankers. In contrast, more ...
  • Pax on both houses: "Too Big to Fail." Aquinas weighs in.

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../too-big-to-fail-aquinas-weighs-in.htm...
    Jan 21, 2012 - The kind of legislation I support would insure that any corporation exceeding "too big to fail” limits be immediately sub-divided as AT&T was ...

  • Pax on both houses: The Decline Of Too Big To Fail Banks ...

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../the-decline-of-too-big-to-fail-banks.h...
    Oct 3, 2014 - The Decline Of Too Big To Fail Banks And The Mirage Of "Free Markets". Millennials don't like big banks. That could disrupt the financial world.
  • Pax on both houses: "Too Big To Fail" Banks To Obey ...

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../too-big-to-fail-banks-to-obey-painfull...
    Jun 18, 2014 - "Wells Fargo, State Street and JPMorgan Chase & Co are below or almost at minimum capital thresholds expected to be included in a rule still ...
  • Pax on both houses: Too Big To Fail is Too Big To Tolerate ...

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../too-big-to-fail-is-too-big-to-tolerate.h...
    May 23, 2012 - The essence of lasting reform is to designate a specific “size threshold” beyond which “too big to fail” companies are automatically broken up.

  • Pax on both houses: About 100 Million Americans Now Use ...

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../about-100-million-americans-now-us...
    Aug 6, 2014 - Furthermore, the former are never "too big to fail,” while the latter are increasingly so. Recently I asked an executive at my Credit Union (State ...
  • Some US Banks Enjoy "Too Big To Fail" - Pax on both houses

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../some-us-banks-enjoy-too-big-to-fail.ht...
    Mar 26, 2014 - Some U.S. banks enjoy 'too-big-to-fail' status, Fed study says. Emily Stephenson and Jonathan Spicer in Reuters. *** Fed: Big banks do get all ...
  • Pax on both houses: Jon Stewart Interviews Bryan ...

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../jon-stewart-interviews-bryan-stevenso...
    Oct 17, 2014 - Jon Stewart Interviews Bryan Stevenson On "Black Failure" ... These "conservative""Christians" would be much more at home in The Old ..... Control Decreases Abortion · The Decline Of Too Big To Fail Banks And The Mirag.
  • Pax on both houses: May 2014

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014_05_01_archive.html
    May 31, 2014 - Corporatist Fascism: $100 Billion Bailout Consolidated The Too-Big-To-Fail Banks. too-big-to-fail-cartoon. The Job Creators and The Takers
  • Pax on both houses: Loss of Smell Linked to Increase Risk ...

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../loss-of-smell-linked-to-increase-risk.h...
    Oct 2, 2014 - Five years later, 430 of the participants have died, and those who failedthe test were six times more likely to die. Losing your sense of smell ...
  • Pax on both houses: The Corporate 'Predator State ...

    paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/.../the-corporate-predator-state-cowboy....
    Mar 27, 2013 - Furthermore, the former are never "too big to fail,” while the latter are increasingly so. Recently I asked an executive at my Credit Union (State ...

  • Texas Nurse Who Got Ebola Would Treat Ebola Patients Again

    "Theologian's Change Of Heart On Same Sex Marriage," The State Of Things

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    Book by Mark Achteimeier. WJK Press/2014

    Theologian's Change Of Heart On Same Sex Marriage

    Theologian and pastor Mark Achtemeier led the movement to prohibit gays and lesbians from becoming ordained in the Presbyterian church in the 1990s. His opposition to homosexuality was firmly rooted in his Christian faith and his interpretation of Biblical teachings. He succeeded and the Church banned the gay ordination in 1997. Just a few years later, he developed a friendship with a gay man in a committed relationship and Achtemeier began to question his beliefs. After reexamining the scriptures, he concluded there is a Biblical basis for supporting same sex couples. Now he leads the movement for inclusion in the Presbyterian Church. Host Frank Stasio talks with Mark Achtemeier, theologian, pastor and author of The Bible’s Yes to Same-Sex Marriage (WJK Press/2014).
    He speaks at two events this weekend  at the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant at 501 S. Mendenhall Street, Greensboro, NC: On Friday at 7pm, the conversation will focus on “The Bible and Same Sex Marriage.” Saturday 's event at 10am will focus on “Marriage and the Church’s Witness to Society.”  Both sessions are free of charge.

    "Thirty Years Of Conservative Nonsense: An Explainer." Are Conservatives Ever Right?

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    Truth be told... Republicans do love the flag
    ...and the other paraphernalia that goes with Patriotism.

    http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/2014/11/conservative-nonsense-political-history

    Are conservatives ever right?
    The question isn’t meant to suggest that liberals are never wrong. But reviewing the last few decades of conservative policy initiatives—or their objections over that timespan to policies they hate—shows a consistent pattern of failure: predictions never pan out, and intended results turn to catastrophic flops.
    Given the G.O.P.’s midterm victories this week, the question is of particular import. Come January, conservatives will have control of both houses of Congress, and hold a considerable legislative advantage in the last two years of the Obama presidency. Yet not a week ago, conservative politicians and commentators were screaming out batty ideas as they demanded that President Obama close the borders over Ebola, ignoring the advice of infectious disease specialists who know that shutting borders against a disease leads people to make travel by means that aren’t easily tracked, escalates danger, and harms the ability to stop the infection at its source. Conservative know-nothings dismiss the professionals as know-nothings themselves, despite their training and expertise.
    And that could be the problem. Too often, it seems, conservatives have scorned experts as incompetent, biased, or otherwise worth ignoring because they came up with answers that didn’t fit their politically desired answer. Often, they proclaim experts have a liberal bias. Of course, plenty of Democrats have voted for conservative ideas, but that is beside the point. The question is whether policies proposed by conservatives failed, not whether they were passed into law. And this question is all the more important now, with the Republicans having re-captured control of the Senate. Will they govern based on a knowledge of history and the analysis of experts? Or will they resort to faith-based, sure-we’re-right policies—like trying to impose a border ban to stop Ebola—that may lead the ignorant to cheer but will leave turn the experts’ hair white with fear.
    "Ebola Represents A Trivial Threat To Americans' Health"

    ***

    "Self-Terrorization Is The National Pastime"
    Before venturing through the rogues’ gallery of past disasters, an exception that proves the rule: the 1983 decision by the Reagan Administration to deploy missiles in Europe to counter Russian SS-20s was a success, ultimately contributing to the Soviet collapse. But otherwise, there is not a lot in the last three decades to give conservatives bragging rights, and with almost every fiasco, they blame someone else. So let’s look at the record of the last 30-some years:
    Tax cuts pay for themselves.
    The fantasy: In 1981, as he championed massive tax cuts, President Ronald Reagan promised there would be no growth in the federal budget deficit because the economic boom that would follow would lead to higher revenues.
    Reality: Budgeted federal revenues dropped, leading to a huge fiscal hole. Deficits rose to 6 percent of G.D.P. by 1983, then the highest in peacetime history. Reagan tacitly admitted failure by reversing directions and raising taxes multiple times, starting in 1982.
    Blame: Conservatives claimed Democrats in Congress ran up spending so much that the growth of revenues could not keep up with the growth in outlays.
    The excuse is false: According to a 2002 report prepared by the House and Senate Appropriations Committees, when all appropriations bills during the Reagan administration are taken into account, the big spender was Reagan himself. All told, the report shows, Reagan requested about $4.7 trillion in his budgets submitted to Congress—including the regular annual budget, the supplementals and deficiency appropriations. In the final action, Congress spent a bit less than that amount. (I know, Republicans’ heads just exploded. Read the official report.)
    The Aftermath: History is ignored. Conservatives still insist, on no evidence, that cuts pay for themselves. Trillions of dollars in debt have been run up over 30 years because of tax cuts. Republicans in Congress have introduced legislation that would force the Congressional Budget Office to change how it calculates projected losses from tax cuts to make future results align more closely to conservative predictions.
    Deregulating the Thrift Industry Will Save It
    The Fantasy: In the early 1980s, Republicans championed the idea that deregulating the savings and loan industry–which historically focused on taking in savings and making mortgage loans–would increase their profits and ability to compete. In 1982, Reagan signed a law throwing off plenty of regulations and expanding the types of investments thrifts could make. On signing the law, Reagan proclaimed, “I think we hit the jackpot,” and dubbed the law the “Emancipation Proclamation for America’s savings institutions.”
    Reality: Within seven years, the thrift industry was in ruins, destroyed by hundreds of billions of dollars in losses. The federal government ultimately lost about $125 billion in payouts it made to cover for insured savings. Some economists have said that the collapse contributed to bank failures and helped drive the recession from 1990 to 1991. Two factors wrecked the industry: thrift executives, whose experience was in issuing mortgages, were ill-equipped to handle their sudden reliance on more complex investment choices, and plenty of criminals—seeing the opportunity to loot or abuse the less-regulated thrifts—drained them of cash through self-dealing and speculation.
    Blame: Some conservatives attempted to lay responsibility on regulators for shutting down thrifts before they had the chance to recover.
    The excuse is false: Regulators acted as required under the law. The idea of allowing the thrifts to double down on investments in hopes of recovery may appeal to gamblers at the casino, but is not appropriate public policy.
    Iraq I: The Tilt
    The Fantasy: Aiding the government of Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s—launched by Hussein—was in the national interest of the United States. At the beginning of this policy in 1982, Reagan issued National Security Study Directive 4-82 to create a strategic opening with Iraq. That same year, the White House decided to remove Iraq from the list of state sponsors of terrorism. American military at Fort Bragg trained Iraqi soldiers in guerrilla warfare, skills that were then taught by those troops to forces in Baghdad for decades. According to declassified documents and affidavits, the administration also sent arms and high-tech components to Saddam through third countries and sent spare parts to keep Iraq’s Soviet-made weapons operational (the Soviets cut off Iraq when it invaded Iran). Finally, when Saddam gassed his own people in Halabja in 1988, American officials knew he did it but blamed Iran anyway.
    Reality: Saddam was a larger threat than Iran. His invasion signaled his desire for territorial expansion, and by providing his forces with weapons and training, the conservative tilt resulted in United States troops during the Persian Gulf War facing arms procured for the Iraqis by the American government. That war began after Saddam turned his expansion desires to Kuwait and invaded, a bit more than two years after Halabja.
    The Aftermath: Reversing the “Iran did it” story, President George W. Bush cited the Halabja attack by Saddam as a reason for America’s 2003 invasion of Iraq. After the administration disbanded the Iraqi military following Saddam’s overthrow, the soldiers launched a guerrilla war, incorporating tactics from American training passed down over the years.
    Giving Iranian Moderates Weapons Will Help America
    The Fantasy: By selling weaponry to Iranian moderates, the Reagan administration thought it would help gain influence in the Tehran government and obtain the release of American hostages held in Lebanon.
    Reality: The sales went directly to the government of Iran (and the profits diverted to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua). The purported “moderates” had orchestrated a scam. While Reagan at first denied this scheme was also intended to gain the release of hostages, he later stated the effort devolved into this. Subsequently declassified documents showed that releasing the hostages through the arms sales was one of the driving points all along.
    The Aftermath: The dealings with Iran took place at the same time as the policy of tilting with Iraq. According to declassified records, the revelation of the administration’s double-dealing with Tehran and Baghdad created chaos for American-Iraq relations, leading Reagan to step up financial and military support for Saddam.
    Raising Taxes Will Cause a Recession
    The Fantasy: This is the corollary of the “taxes pay for themselves” canard. When President Bill Clinton championed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, it included significant tax increases on wealthy Americans. For that reason, it was often called the Deficit Reduction Act. No Republicans voted for the measure, with many publicly saying it would cause a recession. For example, Newt Gingrich, then a Republican Congressman from Georgia, stated, “I believe this will lead to a recession next year. This is the Democrat machine’s recession.’’ Then-senator Phil Gramm said, “The Clinton Plan is a one-way ticket to recession. This plan does not reduce the deficit.”
    Reality: While Clinton subsequently decided the tax increases were too large and pared them back a bit, one of the largest economic booms in history followed the adoption of the law. The deficit shrank to nothing, and policy makers at the Federal Reserve began publicly fretting about how to handle a projected surplus.
    The Excuse: While refusing to acknowledge that they were wrong about a recession, conservatives have attributed the economic performance afterwards to an assortment of factors other than taxes. They have denied that it was the tax increases that closed the deficit.
    The Lesson: Conservatives were partially right—a lot of factors beyond just tax policy played into the economic boom. Which goes to prove that their belief in taxes as the driving force of all economic performance is wrong however you look at it.
    Abolishing Some Bank Regulations Will Help the Economy
    The Fantasy: Many Democrats supported this proposal, which had been a conservative idea for years, passed in 1999 by a Republican Congress, and signed by Clinton. Legislators believed that by repealing the Glass–Steagall Act from 1933 and allowing commercial banks to purchase more securities and affiliate with Wall Street firms, the economy would benefit. Plenty of liberal Democrats voted against the idea, including Senators Byron Dorgan, Tom Harkin, Barbara Boxer, Russ Feingold and others. In a floor speech, Dorgan warned, “We will look back in 10 years’ time and say we should not have done this, but we did because we forgot the lessons of the past.” He cautioned that banks would become “too big to fail” and that the impact on government and the economy would be disastrous.
    Reality: Dorgan was wrong—it didn’t take ten years for the repeal to bear poison fruit. It took nine. In the economic collapse of 2008, giant banks and insurance companies that launched into securities trading following the trashing of Glass–Steagall, particularly Citigroup and American International Group, ran into huge problems that would not have occurred had the law still been in place. The financial repercussions pushed banks all over the country out of business and led not only to the Great Recession, but also to the government being forced to pay hundreds of billions of dollars to minimize the disaster.
    The U.S.–led Bombing of Yugoslavia Would Be a Disaster
    The Fantasy: Following years of massacres and state oppression, an attempted negotiation of a peace treaty to end the Kosovo War collapsed. The Clinton administration assembled a NATO bombing campaign to drive the forces of Slobodan Milošević, president of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, out of Kosovo and impose a peace agreement. A large majority of House Republicans voted against a non-binding resolution supporting the American involvement in the NATO mission, and—engaging in the very behavior they would later say during the Bush Administration was un-American and demoralizing for troops—began to criticize the president and the operation as doomed to failure. “This is President Clinton’s war, and when he falls flat on his face, that’s his problem,’’ said Senator Richard Lugar, Republican of Indiana. And that hypocritical blowhard, Sean Hannity, joined in to blow hard: “They haven’t prepared for anything in this. And they’re running out of weapons to do it. And frankly, I don’t think Clinton has the moral authority or ability to fight this war correctly.”
    Reality: The two-and-a-half-month bombing campaign of Yugoslavia was an unparalleled success. NATO suffered not a single casualty from the operation, although two Americans died when their AH-64 Apache experienced a technical malfunction. Milošević accepted an international peace plan and the Yugoslav government withdrew its forces from Kosovo. A NATO-led peacekeeping force came into Kosovo. Albanians greeted American soldiers with delight and threw flowers at their feet. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia later charged Milošević with war crimes, including genocide. He died before he could his trial ended.
    Bin Laden Was a Front for Iraq
    The Fantasy: Up until 9/11, conservatives tended to dismiss Clinton as having spent too much time worrying about Osama bin Laden. As Robert Oakley, a top counterterrorism official under Reagan, said just before George W. Bush took office, “The only major criticism I have is (Clinton’s) obsession with Osama.” Beginning in the earliest days of Bush 2, counterterrorism officials left over from the Clinton administration pleaded for a planning meeting on dealing with al-Qaeda, but were put off until days before the attack. The F.B.I. and the C.I.A. provided briefings to the White House beginning in the spring of 2001 that they were obtaining intelligence showing al-Qaeda would soon launch a massive attack on the United States. However, still-classified records I have seen reveal that, in June, senior Bush officials dismissed the intelligence agencies’ concerns. Bin Laden, these officials said, was running a “false flag” operation on behalf of Saddam to distract the administration from the threat posed by Iraq. Intelligence officials prepared multiple briefings trying to prove this argument wrong. But members of the Bush administration continued to advance the theory even after the Iraq war began in 2003.
    Reality: Bin Laden had no connection to Saddam, whom he considered to be a secular infidel. Some of the intelligence that the Bush administration relied on for its argument was false, but officials continued to advance it despite being warned of its inaccuracy.
    Blame: Some conservatives who had once criticized Clinton for spending too much time on bin Laden reversed course and said he didn’t make enough effort. When, years earlier, Clinton launched missiles at an al-Qaeda camp following attacks on two American embassies, conservatives had criticized the action as a “wag the dog” moment. They argued he was trying to create a false crisis to take the public’s mind off of scandal involving his affair with intern Monica Lewinsky.
    The Aftermath: After 9/11, Bush officials refused to release the documents showing how strongly they had pushed the idea that bin Laden was a stooge for Saddam.
    Iraq 2: W.M.D.s and a Short, Inexpensive War
    Fantasy: As part of the imaginary connection between bin Laden and Saddam, the Bush administration proclaimed that Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction could be delivered to terrorists. Saddam allowed United Nations’ weapons inspectors into Iraq, who searched fruitlessly for W.M.D.s; Bush officials dismissed those results—the best intelligence available at the time—as the result of the weapons inspectors’ incompetence. Before the invasion, officials promised the war would last months and cost America next to nothing.
    Reality: Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction other than decayed, unusable scrap leftover from the late 1980s. The war lasted almost a decade and, with the instability still in place after American troops pulled out, led directly to the growth of the terrorist group ISIS. As of 2013, the war cost America two trillion dollars.
    Blame: Conservatives hold the American intelligence agencies responsible for the war. They also blame President Barack Obama for the creation of ISIS.
    The Excuse is False: Declassified documents and statements by intelligence officials have revealed that the Bush White House disregarded all warnings that much of the classified information they were relying on to justify war was shaky at best. Moreover, even assuming the information was correct, top administration officials were warned that containment through weapons inspections would keep Saddam under control while a war could set off a conflagration of almost unimaginable ferocity. Obama does bear some blame for ISIS because he was unable to persuade Iraq to extend the timetable established by Bush for withdrawal. However, there is no doubt Obama, like Bush, wanted American forces out and did not see it as a high priority to push for keeping them there.
    Obamacare
    The Fantasy: The government was taking over health care. No one would sign up for the insurance. If they did sign up, no one would pay. If they did pay, premiums would fly sky-high, and beyond the ability of most Americans’ to afford it. It would increase the number of uninsured, not decrease it.
    Reality: As a system that operates through private insurance companies, Obamacare does not give the government control of the health care system, although certain policies on coverage and quality of insurance are in place. Eight million people signed up for policies during the first open enrollment period; 7.3 million people paid their premiums, far more than had been anticipated by the insurance companies. In addition, more than 7 million people obtained coverage through expanded Medicaid and millions of others below the age of 26 stayed on their parents’ policies. According to Gallup, the uninsured rate has dropped from 18 percent in the third quarter of 2013 to 13.4 percent in the quarter just ended. The Kaiser Family Foundation has found that the rate of increase in premiums has slowed since Obamacare began to be introduced, and that the average premium for benchmark policies will drop next year.
    Response: People whose health insurance did not provide minimum levels of coverage lost their policies, leading conservatives to falsely imply many people were being harmed.
    These are just the highlights—the parade of failure goes on and on. What matters here, though, is not that conservatives have been reckless in the past. It is that ignoring expert opinion is a fatal flaw, one that has proven to do immense damage to this country—financial catastrophes, arming enemies, bloody wars, and the like.
    This is not the consequence of ignorance. Many conservative leaders are brilliant. There is, however, a confidence that borders on arrogance that has repeatedly led to disaster. Add to that the constant refrain of “liberal bias,” which has proven to be a crutch conservatives use as a substitute for putting fingers in their ears and singing, “La-la-la.” (Watch what happens in the comment section below; I doubt ragers will bother to read this whole thing. If you want to criticize, prove you read it by writing the words “I disagree” in your comment.) Basically, whenever someone says they’re wrong, conservatives too often fall back on claims that those who disagree with them are biased and thus worthy of being ignored, a convenient position that allows them to avoid debating uncomfortable criticisms.
    Neither side of a political debate holds a monopoly on the truth. Liberals are often wrong. However, somewhere along the line, conservatives stopped being careful and grew too dismissive of what they do not want to hear. They need to take a step back, question their own ideas—and, when the policies fail, admit it and re-think.
    America needs reality-based policy. Bluster and fantasy have cost us too much.
    ***
    Alan: Anyone with an internet connection and a folded cortex 
    could have seen through 90% of the nonsense and bafflegab.
    Every one of my friends could have told Uncle Sam that 5 million deaths and 5 trillion dollars would have been saved by not going to war in Vietnam and Iraq - two wars that degraded America and out position in the world, without resulting in any advantage.
    It is now baked in the cake of the national character to participate in counterproductive, self-destructive, bank-breaking adventurism.
    It is correspondingly hard to believe that such stupidity, ignorance and moral degradation could occur without the direct counsels of Satan.
    "Bush's Toxic Legacy In Iraq"

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