A Day In The Life Of The GOP

From HuffPo, we can see things are looking up for Democrats:

I’ve Got Good News And Bad News

The Bad News:

  • Public polling suggests Republicans will gain a net of 5 to 9 governorships today, which matters because of 2010 Census redistricting.  Nate Silver’s forecast: 30 Republican governors on Wednesday.
  • More important in terms of redistricting, there are 99 state legislative chambers in the United States (Nebraska has only one chamber).  Currently, Democrats control 60 of those chambers, Republicans 36, and two are tied. Democrats control both legislative chambers in 27 states, Republicans control both in 14 states (Missouri is, unfortunately, one of those), and 8 states are split between the two.  Some pollsters suggest that Republicans could pick up control of 15 legislative chambers, for a total of 51 out of 99.
  • Phony 7th District Democratic primary candidate, Tim Davis, has endorsed Billy Long for Congress.
  • According to HuffPo, there is a 77% chance Republicans will take control of the House of Representatives.  Nate Silver has this forecast for next year’s House makeup: 233 Republicans, 202 Democrats.  Senate: 52 Democrats, 48 Republicans.

 The Good News:

  • According to HuffPo there is only a 17% chance Republicans will take control of the United States Senate.  Nate Silver puts the chances of Democrats retaining control of Senate at 93%.
  • Barack Obama is more popular in Alaska than Sarah Palin.
  • Sarah Palin—who I still contend will never—ever—run for president—has taken to using the word “bastard” lately, a sign that some of her candidates (Joe Miller and Christine O’Donnell, particularly) are in trouble, and a sign that she has a more attractive, seedier side.
  • Some Democrats who have blatantly run against Obama and Pelosi—can you believe it?—will lose their asses.
  • If Republicans take control of both houses of congress, they will have to become responsible for governing, and it will at least be fun to watch teapartiers kick against the pricks* in the coming months, as they try to turn their 20-month ranting into real legislation.

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*To borrow a biblical phrase.

Christine O’Donnell, Entertaining But Not Funny

If there were a Mount Rushmore of Tea Party Ignorance, surely we would find the likeness of Delaware’s Christine O’Donnell carved there, fashioned by Christian conservative chiselers, who not only defend her know-nothingness, but celebrate it.

Her performance during a debate with Chris Coons this morning at Delaware’s Widener School of Law (where she got some laughs) is just the latest example of why O’Donnell is so wildly popular among a disturbingly large slice of the electorate, among those who put more faith in Iron Age narratives than in 21st century science.

According to CBS News:

In a discussion over the whether or not public schools should be allowed to integrate religion-based ideas into science curricula, O’Donnell argued that local school districts should have the choice to teach intelligent design if they choose.

When asked point blank by Coons if she believed in evolution, however, O’Donnell reiterated that her personal beliefs were not germane.  “What I think about the theory of evolution is irrelevant,” she emphasized, adding later that the school of thought was “not a fact but a theory.”

Everyone knows by now that O’Donnell confessed years ago on Bill Maher’s show that she really does believe, “Evolution is a myth.”  When she was ridiculed for that comment, she blurted out:

Why aren’t monkeys still evolving into humans?

Now, this is all very funny in a funny sort of way.  But when you think about it, it isn’t so funny.

There are millions upon millions of Americans who believe evolution is “only” a “theory” or, worse, a “myth.

And some may say, so what?  If these folks want to believe such nonsense, it’s a free country.  Nobody’s hurt by it.

But these folks don’t just confine their beliefs to themselves.  They often want to make them public policy, as the ongoing fight over textbooks in Texas make clear. As David Waters commented about the Texas board of education on washingtonpost.com:

Remember, this is the government body that opened its May session with a Christian prayer on behalf of “a Christian land governed by Christian principles,” a prayer made “in the name of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.”

When earnest evangelical Christians like O’Donnell say, “local school districts should have the choice to teach intelligent design if they choose,” they are really saying that religious views should be taught as scientific ones.  And their basis for such statements is not a misplaced faith in the Constitution’s alleged preference for local governance, but a misplaced faith in the Bible as a guide to all human thought, especially ideas about how we came to be.

In our times, such thoughts are not just part of harmlessly quaint and curious belief systems. If allowed to proliferate without challenge, they wouldn’t just lead to a paralysis in understanding our true origins, but they would lead to a larger cultural paralysis that could jeopardize advances in medicine and technology and other fruits of scientific inquiry.

That’s why Christine O’Donnell’s doomed campaign to become 1/100th of 1/2 of 1/3 of the federal government, although entertaining, isn’t all that funny.  There are still many more Christine O’Donnells out there who need to be defeated.

Remarks And Asides

Howard Fineman reports that Christine O’Donnell, Delaware’s answer to a very strange question, is irked at Republican bigwigs for not sending her more moolah to continue her crusade against reality.  Neither the National Republican Senatorial Committee nor the Rove-ish undercover funders want to waste resources financing a campaign that even Don Quixote would abandon.

But the real interesting thing about her pleas for more dough is that we found out that Sean Hannity is her pocket-sized bitch:

Specifically, according to two top GOP insiders, she said at a strategy meeting with DC types last week: “I’ve got Sean Hannity in my back pocket, and I can go on his show and raise money by attacking you guys.”

Finally, Ms. O’Donnell has said something with which we can all agree.

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Tea Party candidate for governor of New York, Carl Paladino, said this week,

We must stop pandering to the pornographers and the perverts, who seek to target our children and destroy their lives.

Unfortunately for him, he said this after he had scattered a number of e-mails around that are not suitable for review via a blog connected to a family newspaper.  However, WNYMedia can direct you to them, if you want to see examples of how pornographers and perverts and Republican gubernatorial candidates are targeting our children and destroying their lives:

If you are just being introduced to Carl Paladino through various TV or radio stories or the 1,000 published stories on his love for hot, hardcore, barely legal pornography, we’d like to welcome you.  You’ve got a lot of catching up to do! 

If you’re here to learn more about the salacious and offensive emails he admitted to sending out to his friends, follow this link.  Or, this new one with new and improved Carl approved images from sites like FistFlush.com and TeachMyAss.com

If you want to see more coverage from WNYMedia writers about the Paladino campaign, then follow this link.  This post is particularly interesting.  So is this one.

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Someone in Jerry Brown’s campaign for governor referred to his opponent, Meg Whitman, as a “whore.” Then the California president of the National Organization for Women qualified the term a bit by saying that Whitman was a “political whore.”  Okay, then. That’s better.  Now I understand. But Democrats really should stop calling Republicans names.  I mean, after all, Republicans never call the anti-colonialist Kenyan Marxist Muslim racist Barack Hussein Obama names do they?

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Kudos to Whoopi Goldberg and Joy Behar, who walked off The View in protest of The Flatulator, Bill O’Reilly, passing gas on the set.  The man has no manners.  It’s one thing to let a little poop smoke slip out while you’re at home, but when you’re someone’s guest you really should try to hold it in.

Most people didn’t notice that pretty little Republican Elisabeth Hasselbeck didn’t mind the stink.  In fact, she joined in with a butt bomb of her own, something nice girls don’t do on television. Here is Lawrence O’Donnell giving her a little advice on broadcast etiquette:

Vodpod videos no longer available.

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Dueling Globe Columnists

Okay.  So, a contributing writer to the Joplin Globe editorial board, Anson Burlingame, got pissed about a piece written by a guest columnist, Elliott Denniston, so he shot back with a column of his own:

Elliott Denniston really crossed the line in negative “campaigning” in his guest column (Globe, Oct. 3) and must be rebutted, strongly. I vigorously challenge his shallow research and obvious partisan conclusions in trying to paint all Republican candidates nationally with only the colors of the few.

Denniston’s apparent sin was daring to point out that some of the candidates running as Republicans this fall were, well, let’s just say, extremists of one sort or another.

Here is a summary of what Denniston noted:

Christine O’Donnell: Believes that there are mice with fully functioning human brains.  Believes that witchcraft is a sin but once dabbled in masturbation.  No, wait. I got that wrong. She believes masturbation is a sin and once dabbled in witchcraft.  Whew!  And finally, O’Donnell owes back taxes and “has lived off her campaign contributions for many years and has no other apparent income.”

Although Burlingame challenged Denniston’s “shallow research,” the things he said about O’Donnell have the virtue of being factual. So, let’s move on:

Abortion: “Five Republicans nominated for the Senate want the government to ensure that women who are raped are required to have their rapists’ babies,” Denniston wrote.  He then went on:

Yes, Sharron Angle of Nevada, Jim [sic] Miller of Alaska, Rand Paul of Kentucky, Ken Buck of Colorado, and O’Donnell, although they hate government intrusion into our lives, believe that the federal government should force women to give birth to babies forced on them by rapists or created through incest.

Although Burlingame challenged Denniston’s “shallow research,” the things he said about these five Republicans and their extremist views on abortion have the virtue of being factual. So, let’s move on:

Sharron Angle: “Implied that armed insurrection against the federal government might be a plausible course of action if the government does not change course,” what she called “Second Amendment remedies.”  Denniston also wrote that Angle once spoke against fluoride as “a Communist plot to undermine Western democracy,” and he said, “Ms. Angle also believes that autism is a phony condition that people use to get extra health benefits.”

Although Burlingame challenged Denniston’s “shallow research,” the things he said about Sharron Angle have the virtue of being factual. So, let’s move on:

Social Security: Denniston says there are Republicans running who want to “eliminate” Social Security “as it now stands and replace it with a system of privatized funds.” He names them: Mike Lee, Sharron Angle, Joe Miller, and he lists Ken Buck as an opponent of any federal involvement in health care and retirement and Marco Rubio as an advocate for raising the retirement age to 70 and who wants “to cut benefits to younger workers.”

Although Burlingame challenged Denniston’s “shallow research,” the things he said about some Republicans relative to Social Security have the virtue of being factual. So, let’s move on:

Various: Denniston offers that Mike Lee of Utah “wishes to eliminate the income tax“;

that Joe Miller of Alaska “believes that unemployment benefits are unconstitutional“;

that Rand Paul of Kentucky “would scrap the Americans with Disabilities Act and believes that the Civil Rights Act went too far in requiring restaurant owners to admit black Americans“;

that Rick Scott of Florida ran “a health care company that systematically defrauded the government on Medicare charges, earning the company the largest Medicare fine in history — $1.7 billion“;

that Carl Paladino distributed “racist jokes and very explicit pornographic photographs to a large group of supporters; one of these was a photo-shopped image of Barack and Michelle Obama as a pimp and a prostitute.” (Apparently, Denniston wrote his column before Paladino threatened to “take out” a New York Post journalist.)

Although Burlingame challenged Denniston’s “shallow research,” the things he said about the Republicans above have the virtue of being factual. So, let’s finish up:

You see, it really wasn’t the “shallow research” that spiked Anson’s piss meter.  It was Denniston’s “obvious partisan conclusions,” and his “trying to paint all Republican candidates nationally with only the colors of the few.”  As if the editorial page isn’t a place for partisanship and advocacy; as if Republicans aren’t themselves trying to nationalize the election and tie every Democratic candidate to Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and Barack Obama.

But I will say Anson has a point about one thing:

If you want to understand, in principle, where many Republicans are “coming from” or “headed,” go read and think carefully about the Pledge to America.  There is more than enough in that broad, even sweeping, statement of principles to scare any Democrat.

Yes, it’s true.  The really, really scary thing about Republicans and their non-specific Pledge, is that it represents a sycophantic salute to the Tea Party and that movement’s extremist generalities about government.

And I think Denniston was just using a few Tea Party extremists, who happen to be Republican candidates for high office, to point that out.

Glenn Beck: The Fred Phelps Of Politics

I listened to Glenn Beck for two minutes this morning, which was long enough to hear him call Chris Coons a Marxist.

Chris Coons is the Democrat in Delaware running against masturbating-hating Christine O’Donnell for the U.S. Senate. 

While it’s not that unusual for people like Beck and Limbaugh and Hannity, when describing Democrats, to toss around words like Marxist, socialist, or the epithet du jour, anti-colonialist, it does not fail to shock me that such rhetoric is tolerated by Republicans, particularly Republican politicians.

Some people worry about Islamic extremists and complain that moderate Muslims aren’t speaking loudly enough to condemn the excesses of people who claim to believe in Allah and his Quran. But I confess I’m more worried about the lack of “moderate” opposition to the kind of absurd and grotesque and profitable acts, performed all day, every day, by Beck and other conservatives on radio and television.

When Fred Phelps and his Westboro Baptist Church family protest at the funerals of dead soldiers, it’s easy for nearly all to see that such behavior is ugly and revolting and deserving of condemnation, if not prohibition.

But all day long and into the night, the Fred Phelps’ of political conservatism, through their outrageous and deceitful rhetoric about President Obama and the Democrats, do the equivalent of what Phelps does.  Instead of “God Hates Fags” placards, their rhetorical equivalent is “God Hates Democrats.”  Instead of signs that say,”The Jews Killed Jesus,” they say, “Liberals Are Killing America.”

Thus, when Glenn Beck labels Chris Coons a Marxist, he is channeling the same spirit that animates Fred Phelps.  But instead of seeing a homosexual or Jewish conspiracy behind every political disagreement, Beck sees a socialist or Marxist one.

And rather than the near-universal condemnation that Fred Phelps receives, Beck and his fellow talkers enjoy considerable financial and cultural rewards, and suffer almost no criticism from the very people who have the power to delegitimize them: Republican politicians, especially Republican political leaders.

There is a stunning silence among the Republican leadership, even as the cacophony crescendos.

And someday, if Republicans successfully ride the wave of hysteria, much of it generated by the relentless dissemination of paranoid fantasies about President Obama, and find themselves in power again, what then?

Do they think that those of us out here who have watched this coup d’état of reason take place, this assault against the dignity of our black president and against the patriotism of those of us who call ourselves Democrats, do they think we will simply slink away into our hovels and let them have their way?

Do they think we won’t invade Congressman Billy Long’s town halls and ask him why he hates our children, after he and his party dismantle the Department of Education? 

Do they think we won’t follow Senator Roy Blunt around with signs that say “Blunt Hates Old People, ” after he and his party privatize Social Security?

Do they think we won’t write crazy editorials accusing President Mitt Romney and Glenn Beck of instituting a Mormon theocracy in America?

Do they think our politicians, then in the minority, won’t do everything they can to stop the onslaught of “deadly” conservative legislation, confronting it at every turn, thwarting conservative efforts to “restore” America all the way back to the dark times of Herbert Hoover?

Do they think we won’t call them fascists and Nazis and Inquisitors and a thousand different names?

But I can hear conservatives saying, why would Democrats want to do that?  Why would we want to see America divided so?  Don’t we love America?

Why wouldn’t we just accept the judgment of the American people and express our disagreements with conservative governance in civilized ways, without the demonization of differences?  Without saying that the other side hates America and without expressing a thunderous hope that they fail in their attempt to make this a better place to live?

That’s a good question.

Remarks And Asides

I simply refuse to pick on Arizona Governor Jan Brewer for the Blue Screen of Death she suffered during her opening statement at Wednesday’s debate with her opponents.  She can’t help it if God installed Windows Vista as her operating system.  

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Speaking of crashes, Billy Long refused to answer a question about Social Security while in Joplin on Wednesday.  After speaking to Missouri Southern Republicans, Long pretended to make himself available for questioning, but what happened reveals the Long strategy for the rest of the campaign–only answer the questions he wants to answer.

According to The Fuse Joplin:

Afterwords in the media availability, Long took questions from a reporter asking general questions on why he was speaking to the group and youth involvement, but when asked about social security reform, something incredibly relevant to college age students, Long ended the interview, and proceeded to leave the building.

The question about Social Security was: “Would you be interested in raising the retirement age?

Of course, Billy couldn’t answer that question because he doesn’t know what the retirement age is now, much less have an opinion as to how high it should be.

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The Republican establishment in Delaware is not waiting around to see if the Tea Party Express and other reactionary elements on the right can muster enough support to elect the strange Christine O’Donnell as the Republican nominee for U. S. Senate.  Her opponent is the comparatively moderate Mike Castle, currently serving in the U.S. House of Representatives.

The Republican primary is September 14, and the establishment hasn’t been exactly neutral:

“She’s not a viable candidate for any office in the state of Delaware,” state party chairman Tom Ross, who is backing Castle, said in a telephone interview. “She could not be elected dog catcher.”

Ouch. 

While O’Donnell has had some problems managing her personal finances—like her political views, they are a mess—she had no trouble several years ago managing to tell all of us about the Lord’s view of autoerotic pleasure:

The Bible says that lust in your heart is committing adultery. So you can’t masturbate without lust.

And who would want to?

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Speaking of lust and masturbation, Sean Hannity managed to get Sarah Palin to say that reporters are “impotent and limp.”  

I like it when she talks that way.

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Speaking of impotent and limp reporters, no doubt the lusty lady from ‘laska was referring to Michael Gross, who wrote in Vanity Fair that Sarah was a bad tipper behind closed doors, preferring to flash cash to those who didn’t win John McCain’s lottery in view of her adoring followers.  Now, I agree with Palin, that’s pretty limp.

But this isn’t:

Warm and effusive in public, indifferent or angry in private: this is the pattern of Palin’s behavior toward the people who make her life possible. A onetime gubernatorial aide to Palin says, “The people who have worked for her—they’re broken, used, stepped on, down in the dust.” On the 2008 campaign trail, one close aide recalls, it was practically impossible to persuade Palin to take a moment to thank the kitchen workers at fund-raising dinners. During the campaign, Palin lashed out at the slightest provocation, sometimes screaming at staff members and throwing objects. Witnessing such behavior, one aide asked Todd Palin if it was typical of his wife. He answered, “You just got to let her go through it… Half the stuff that comes out of her mouth she doesn’t even mean.”

I don’t know how the former fractional governor could argue with Todd’s quantitative analysis of the stuff that comes out of her mouth.  She said she wanted to be Governor of Alaska, remember?

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Finally, since Sarah indirectly called into question Michael Gross’ manly abilities in sexual terms, I will include one more tale in his Vanity Fair story that proves at least he thinks his reporting is cocksure.

The tale is told by a “friend” of Palin:

“As soon as she enters her property and the door closes, even the insects in that house cringe. She has a horrible temper, but she has gotten away with it because she is a pretty woman.” (The friend elaborated on this last point: “Once, while Sarah was preparing for a city-council meeting, she said, ‘I’m gonna put on one of my push-up bras so I can get what I want tonight.’ That’s how she rolls.”)

There’s a County & Western song in there somewhere.  Cue the steel guitar.

[Palin caricature from Vanity Fair]