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Monthly Archives: February 2010

I’ve been on tea for a while now. I’m actually starting to like it. Being able to drink a cup at night, even late at night, and still sleep OK is wonderful.

But I was never a tea person and I could use some advice on the best ways of making it and what to drink. I’m limited to green tea as part of my dietary rehabbing so keep that in mind.

I miss coffee in that longing way that makes poets yearn for et and cetera. Nothing else is like coffee, especially not like the wonderfully robust and biting Columbian French Roast I’ve got in my refrigerator. (2 weeks since my last cup) But thanks to the calming effect of dragonwell with a few Jasmine Dragon Phoenix pearls thrown in, I continue to resist coffee.

I know it’s a hard kick but it doesn’t seem like it because I’m not eliminating the drug, just the delivery vehicle. Sort of like giving up whiskey by taking up wine. Or giving up McDonalds for Subway.

Giving up cigarettes was hard. Both times. Harder than giving up crank. Meth is like holding a gun to your head and eventually you either put down the gun or pull the trigger. It’s a very intense quit but once you’re off you’re off and anyone who goes back is choosing death. Life being one of the easier habits to kick — once kicked it stays kicked.

But what’s really hard is giving up caffeine and you will not see me do that until a doctor can prove to me I’m holding a gun to my head.

So anyhow, leave a comment if you got something for me or write 500 words of blank verse if you don’t. I’ve given up on the tea ball and am just pouring hot water on leaves and then straining them after they steep. (A minute first time, five minutes the second time)

Am I close? Don’t be shy about correcting me. Anything that would make the tea better sounds good to me. And I hope it’s OK that I’m drinking it out of a HALPAC cup.

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For those wondering about the diet, I hit 294 today and I’m still not scrimping on eating. Today I had a large potato fried in butter with two eggs and a bit of cheese for breakfast. I eat lots of small meals and that was kind of heavy. A couple of hours later I had a banana. An hour after that a friend gifted me (at my request) with a piece of dog jerky. I’ve never eaten dog (puppy, really) and was curious. I still am. The jerky tasted like it had been burned before it was dried and I spat it out and then ate a cup of chicken fried rice to kill the taste. Mid afternoon I had an orange, and a few hours later I ate a small sirloin steak. For supper some homemade ground beef black bean jalapeño salsa on chips and probably some more of that after I finish this. (I love being told to heap the salsa on the chips but it does fill me up faster and keeps me from getting too many carbs.)

I don’t think “diet” is the right word for what I’m doing but five new holes in my year-old belt says otherwise. Bags of rice are getting lighter every week and I sleep well. I enjoy my remaining vices more, but am feeling less obsessive. I even threw about fifty links out today because I just didn’t feel like sorting them. I feel healthier for feeling that way, btw.

Physically, I’m pretty up and down but the aches and pains I get from working out are easier to deal with than were the aches and pains of inflamed joints and age which are now all but gone thanks to gluten-free living, vitamins and stretching exercises. I own a foam roller. A month ago I did not know that these things existed, or that you could charge so much for styrefoam.

Our government may not be improving very quickly, but I think our nation is on the road to wellness. Time to shed those Bush-Clinton-Bush-Reagan pounds as well. I doubt I’ll ever be as skinny (or as tall) as Obama, but I’d at least like to live long enough to see him replaced with a more progressive leader.

And if you have nothing to rehab from, well, I feel sorry for you. As Mark Twain said to his dying friend who didn’t smoke or drink, I have no advice for you.

I’m way behind on links and pressed for time today, but I really do think the National Journal has a must read article in “It’s George Wallace’s GOP Now.”

Everything I’ve been saying about the Dixiefication of the GOP for years, but summed up in an indelible way:

The history of the modern Republican Party in one sentence: Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller got into an argument and George Wallace won.

Racism is, of course a big part of that even if author Jonathan Rauch discounts that aspect of Wallace’s allure and current GOP practices. This isn’t an article about dog whistles so much as the demagogic hypocrisy of the populism of expediency and whatever works today.

In case you don’t click, here’s Rauch speaking to my POV:

Fast-forward to the present. The hottest ticket in the Republican Party is Sarah Palin, the former governor of Alaska and the party’s 2008 vice presidential nominee. In a recent column, George Will compared her insurgent libertarianism to that of Goldwater’s, which electrified the Right in 1964. Fair enough. But Goldwater served for 30 years as a respected insider in Washington’s most exclusive club, the U.S. Senate; he was never interested in cultural and social issues; resentment and rage were alien to him. Palin’s style and appeal are closer to Wallace’s.

The Party of Lincoln is now more like the Democrats that Al Capp used to mock: full of contradictions and belligerent accusations. Nixon’s Southern Strategy has backfired. The Grand Old Party is now home to Grandstanding Old Pols and Grouchy Ornery Pricks.

Oh, and Gov. BridgeFail earns a graf all his own. He usually does.

Rauch’s conclusion?

[B]y becoming George Wallace’s party, the GOP is abandoning rather than embracing conservatism, and it is thereby mortgaging both its integrity and its political future. Wallaceism was not sufficiently mainstream or coherent to sustain a national party in 1968, and the same is true today.

Conservatism is wary of extremism and rage and anti-intellectualism, of demagoguery and incoherent revolutionary rhetoric. Wallace was a right-wing populist, not a conservative. The rise of his brand of pseudo-conservatism in Republican circles should alarm anyone who cares about the genuine article.

I’m not sure how well this speaks to younger folks, but with the exception of Rauch’s downplaying of the race card in modern Republican politics, he’s dead on.

See also Frank Rich on The Axis of the Obsessed and Deranged, in which he examines the inchoate radicalized right in more detail. John Avlon calls it the Return of the Confederacy.

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I didn’t know the FBI was seriously going through the files and trying to solve the over 100 unsolved civil rights killings still on the books from the ’60s.

“There’s maybe five to seven cases where we don’t know who did it,” said FBI Special Agent Cynthia Deitle, who is heading the bureau’s effort. “Some we know; others we know but can’t prove. For every other case, we got it.”

….Officials now believe, for example, that an Alabama state trooper killed an unarmed civil rights protester in 1965, a case that helped inspire the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to march in the state. In the deaths of two North Carolina men in police custody — one found in 1956 with a crushed skull and the other who refused medical treatment in 1960 after a heart attack — the agency concluded that there was no federal law it could use to pursue the cases.

Justice delayed is still justice. Let’s make sure these findings are widely distributed especially in the communities where racist criminals once ruled.

And maybe an appendix explaining how many of the cases the FBI had doped out in real time but sat on for fear of enabling Dr. King and his marchers? That’s a part of the story as well. Just like the examples this story is littered with of Civil Rights deaths now known to be domestic violence or crime related.

Let’s hear the whole story. It’s been fifty years and we deserve the truth. As one agent is quoted as saying:

“If we don’t correct history, then who’s going to go back through this? Who’s going to fix history to make it accurate?” she asked.

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That nasty local lady who hates Islamic charter schools is back in the Strib today. No link because no one from our side should link to liars. She’ll never grow or evolve and I’m tired of her.

Wave bye bye to the stupid, bigoted lady.

Seriously. Don’t go there. The Strib is protecting her comments so there’s nothing there worth bothering with.

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The PiPress keeps the Koua Fong Lee story going with a flashback to his trial and has an interesting revelation. Immediately after the trial the wife and mother of the victims called Phil Carruthers to say, “You guys still aren’t telling us what happened.”

Even the victims’ survivors understood that Lee was being held responsible for an accident the County could not explain.

Some recent critics in the comments have said that I’m acquitting Lee with no proof. No, I’m saying the poor fuck got convicted by persecutorial prosecutors who had no proof.

In this country you are innocent until proven guilty. Koua Fong Lee was convicted of murdering people despite the fact that the prosecutor couldn’t explain why or how.

Another Minnesotan’s story:

[N]ews of his conviction has led to reports of similar problems by drivers of older-model Camrys.

Judy Poss, of Silver Brook Township in Carlton County, said her 1996 Camry did the same thing to her a year and a half ago.

“I was traveling on Highway 33, going to go to the Cities, and the car accelerated just very fast and was going about 90 mph,” she said. “I pressed on the brakes so hard they were smoking.” It was about 40 or 50 seconds before she thought to shut the car off, and drifted to the side of the road.

“I’ve never been so afraid in my whole life.”

Lee’s accident happened very very quickly. His brakes didn’t have time to overheat so there was precious little physical proof. I’ve read everything but the trial transcript on this case and no one at Ramsey County ever appears to have subjected the car’s computer to any diagnostic tests.

This is also an important article for a name that gets mentioned. One that hasn’t come up in previous articles.

County Attorney Susan Gaertner said she would not oppose the inquiry [a re-examination of Lee's car which is still in a Ramsey County lot].

“We have a history in this office of reviewing past convictions to make sure we got it right,” she said, though there was “no indication (at trial) that sudden acceleration was an issue.

“We are open to listening to information to the contrary,” she said. “But it’s got to be facts and not speculation.”

Koua Fong Lee testified at trial that he thought he was slowing down, not speeding up, prosecutor Carruthers noted. However, experts estimated the car was going as fast as 90 mph when it hit the Oldsmobile that Saturday afternoon.

Bard Borkon, a lawyer from Bowman & Brooke in Minneapolis, notified Padden, Schafer and the county attorney in a letter last week that Toyota requests “that no one undertake any disassembly or other inspection of the vehicle without prior adequate notice to me so that Toyota representatives can be present.”

Gubernatorial candidate Susan Gaertner’s name has finally been attached to this scandal. And we now know that Toyota insists on being present if any auto-forensics are done. It’s hard to believe they want to be there to help given their past footdragging.

Toyota could do themselves an immense public relations favor if only they would embrace their failure and do everything in their power to find out what went wrong with Lee’s car. Now that the media is finally taking a serious look at these problems, the examples are piling up like Lexuses smashing into family station wagons.

Paramedics found Juanita Grossman with both feet still pressing the brake pedal.

Alert but critically injured, she said her 2003 Toyota Camry had inexplicably accelerated March 16, 2004, as she left a drive-through pharmacy, racing across a busy street and slamming into a jewelry store in Evansville, Ind.

“It was like a car on a slingshot. She was slung across the street into that building,” said her son, Bill.

Grossman, 77, died six days after the accident at a local hospital. In the days before her death, she described a car with a mind of its own, racing forward as she sat helpless behind the wheel, her feet jamming the brakes without effect, her son said.

“First thing she said was, ‘My accelerator stuck,’ ” recalled her son. “She kept emphatically saying that the accelerator stuck on her.”

Reality overrides faith in technology. That anyone could be sitting in prison for the crime of having driven a Toyota is unspeakable.

On the day after Christmas 2009, Monty Hardy and three members of his church were proselytizing in a Dallas suburb, spreading their faith door to door. The four Jehovah’s Witnesses were traveling in Hardy’s 2008 Toyota Avalon about 30 mph on a residential street when the car suddenly accelerated, raced through a stop sign and left the road, crashing into a fence and tree and landing upside down in a small lake, according to a police report.

All four drowned.

Hardy, 56, and his wife had recently received a recall notice from Toyota; it said the car’s floor mats could cause the accelerator to stick. So the couple removed those mats and placed them in the trunk, said Randy Roberts, a Tyler, Texas, attorney who’s representing Linda Hardy in a planned lawsuit against the carmaker.

The couple had also taken the car into a dealership to have problems with its acceleration system examined, Roberts said.

Seriously, there isn’t room here for all the stories that are emerging. And in many cases no legal action was taken because Toyota’s no fault self-diagnosis meant taking on an international corporation determined to prevail in court. Reporters have now found evidence that 56 Americans have died in Toyotas/Lexuses that experienced sudden acceleration problems.

OK, one last story just for those who keep talking to me about the fucking brakes.

Noriko Uno left her Upland home on Aug. 28, 2009, to do some grocery shopping and deposit the latest receipts from the family’s sushi restaurant. Her errands were all within a mile of her home.

She was driving south along Euclid Avenue at about the 30 mph speed limit when her 2006 Toyota Camry suddenly sped up to nearly 100 mph. Witnesses reportedly told police that they saw the 66-year-old woman tearing along the eastbound lane of the suburban roadway, gripping the steering wheel, her face frozen in terror, trying to steer out of traffic and away from pedestrians.

The car struck a telephone pole and then careened into some shrubbery. It became airborne and came to rest after crashing into a large tree.

When emergency workers extracted her body from the wrecked vehicle on that Friday afternoon, they noted the hand brake had been pulled up in a last-ditch attempt to halt the speeding car.

Let’s deal with the facts, and not some irrational belief in perfected technology.

UPDATE: Thanks to this ABC video link from Tild, this discussion is now OVER. ABC has recreated the error and demonstrated that a computer malfunction can occur without any error being noted by diagnostic equipment.

Koua Fong Lee’s conviction needs to be vacated ASAP, and Ramsey County needs to begin figuring out how much they’re willing to pay him to avoid going to court where a jury could award tens of millions of dollars in response to the Kafkaesque nightmare Lee’s family has been put through.

No further information is needed. ABC has shown how Toyota’s computer malfunctions, and Ramsey County failed to ever prove Lee’s responsibility for the accident other than to ignore his account of the events so they could score a cheap victory with a jury that saw the bafflement of innocence as a refusal to take responsibility and accepted a mechanic’s clean bill of health as proof that Lee was a witch bad driver.

Koua Fong Lee should have never have gone to trial. This was a legal lynching by Luddite mechanics who refused to believe a computer could commit vehicular homicide.

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Ralph Nader on the underfunded, lax NHTSA and the climate of deregulation that helped Toyota avoid scrutiny.

Somewhat related:  Susie Madrak on how corruption in Cali enabled tainted food to be shipped nationwide. (And you thought it was your fault that your heart suddenly accelerated….)

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Links:

The Strib more or less calls the GOP out for their absurdist participation in the summit, then gets ripped by commenters for being so slow to pick up on the obstructionism

Garrison Keillor on Congress

5 myths about the USPS (I’m still livid over Obama’s backhanded comments about our postal service which is every bit as good as anything America does well, customer service at the counter being the obvious and frequent exception but one now driven by budget cuts and bogus privatization)

Mary Schmich: there are no child prostitutes (just abused children)

Dane Smith responds to Jason Lewis’s no facts “rebuttal”

I guess not paying bonuses to corporations who kill our troops is a start

The Palin you crave

Ridgeway on Bunning

A blistering video on why the media are to blame

I find it hard to mention copyright without using the word amok

Scott Horton on the missing emails (what Patrick Leahy says, and the consequences)

Newsmax dumping Atlas Juggs?

Goldman fucking Sachs

The Japanese see Toyota’s problems as a U.S. plot. And some Americans agree.

I do not and I am finding it hard to excuse people who confuse good engineering with perfection, an unachievable goal.

The cover up was the crime. Design errors happen but how many have died or been maimed because Toyota was slow to acknowledge the persistence of this problem?

Toyota is not the only manufacturer with this problem. On board computers are now being seen as the most likely culprit, with top-down corporate culture being a murderously aggravating factor.

The “secret electronic ‘Books of Knowledge’” aren’t a Protocols of the Elders of Zion. They are real, and they reveal the profound moral bankruptcy of corporate leaders worldwide.

“People injured in crashes involving Toyota vehicles may have been injured a second time when Toyota failed to produce relevant evidence in court,” [NY Rep. Edolphus] Towns wrote, demanding a response from [Toyota's top U.S. official Yoshimi] Inaba by next Friday.

Towns’ letter to Inaba, who also testified before the Oversight committee Wednesday, alleges a willful pattern of hiding electronic records in litigation and questions whether that reflects a companywide attitude to compliance. Towns said he did not yet know whether he would call on Inaba to testify again.

TalkLeft picks up on the controversy (but not much new if you’ve been following the Koua Fong Lee case). The best link on Koua Fong Lee’s story is still Steve Karnowski’s account.

[Lee] wept as he described the impact of his imprisonment on his wife and four children, ages 8, 5, 3 and 2, who are on welfare.

“Right now it is very difficult for them,” Lee said tearfully. “It’s because my children are still very young. My wife is going to school and there aren’t people to help her out. My kids ask about me constantly. They ask me when I’m going to come home. They ask about me. I don’t know what to say to them.”

UPDATE: I don’t think I’ve ever clicked on one of WordPress’s automatically generated “related” links that appear at the end of my posts, but I did today and learned this from the Filterpret blog:

Anyone who studies this situation can see the irony that Toyota, known for perfection in auto making, has essentially ignored what appear to be serious design or implementation flaws. I would agree with many who have said Japanese culture, and Toyota’s specific corporate version of Japanese culture, have created an environment where once flaws get past the production floor they “cannot” exist.

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I have no clue why right to lifers think they can recruit African Americans to their cause. Abortion laws victimize women, and oppressed populations are generally more sensitive to the reality of victimization than they are to the hypotheses of ideology.

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It’s almost funny how brave some governments become once the U.S. has a regime change and our corruption enablers have again been (temporarily) retired.

Otoh, how devastating is the loss of $1.4 billion when you still have $2.3 billion to play with?

Don’t cry for Thaksin Shinawatra, he is not ordinary or unimportant, and deserves such attention. Bush-Cheney should share his glory, etc.

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It’s taken me most of my life, but I no longer think of depression as a curse, just another place to be coming from.

Good article on depression in the NYTimes Magazine. A sample:

The alternative, of course, is that depression has a secret purpose and our medical interventions are making a bad situation even worse. Like a fever that helps the immune system fight off infection — increased body temperature sends white blood cells into overdrive — depression might be an unpleasant yet adaptive response to affliction. Maybe Darwin was right. We suffer — we suffer terribly — but we don’t suffer in vain.

I now believe future generations will mock us for our antidepressants, much as we ridicule those who used leeches. If we approached depression as a potentially beneficial (and temporary) affliction, I suspect most depressed people would “get over it” and move on. And why do we think that help always has to come in the form of medication?

Yes, there is a large camp in the psychiatric community that disagrees with the notion that depression can be beneficial, but their arguments speak to establishmentarian thought processes and not the real life of the mind.

Ed Hagen, an anthropologist at Washington State University who is working on a book with Andrews, says that while the analytic-rumination hypothesis has persuaded him that some depressive symptoms might improve problem-solving skills, he remains unconvinced that it is a sufficient explanation for depression. “Individuals with major depression often don’t groom, bathe and sometimes don’t even use the toilet,” Hagen says. They also significantly “reduce investment in child care,” which could have detrimental effects on the survival of offspring. The steep fitness costs of these behaviors, Hagen says, would not be offset by “more uninterrupted time to think.”

I would suggest that not using the toilet is an extreme example, and that ignoring your children isn’t always a bad thing — assuming there are other caregivers in your extended family and if not, well, that’s an even bigger problem than depression. Not bathing or combing your hair? Dude, get over yourself and your bourgeois American provincialism.

After over thirty years of issues with depression, it’s clear to me that medication invariably obstructed recovery, and that working through my problems without meds has invariably strengthened my character and resolve. Mostly, depression has taught me that what’s important rarely has much to do with money once you get past the basic necessities which are all too often a needless source of extreme distress thanks to our absent safety net.

We are an all too depressed society because we are altogether too obsessed with money and nonstop happiness. It’s time to get real and focus on counseling (cognitive talk therapy), which has been proven to be three times more effective than drugs. Especially not drugs from Big Pharma, drugs that cure you by killing off parts of your personality.

In recent years, [Dr. Andy] Thompson has cut back on antidepressant prescriptions, because, he says, he now believes that the drugs can sometimes interfere with genuine recovery, making it harder for people to resolve their social dilemmas. “I remember one patient who came in and said she needed to reduce her dosage,” he says. “I asked her if the antidepressants were working, and she said something I’ll never forget. ‘Yes, they’re working great,’ she told me. ‘I feel so much better. But I’m still married to the same alcoholic son of a bitch. It’s just now he’s tolerable.’ ”

We’re not depressed, we’re just living in a fucked up country. Taking pills so you don’t care doesn’t fix the country, but if you wash your pills down with booze, you can forget. It’s good to forget sometimes but there’s no on-off switch that comes with Prozac or Paxil, and that’s what’s wrong with them.

“The high relapse rate suggests that the drugs aren’t really solving anything,” Thomson says. “In fact, they seem to be interfering with the solution, so that patients are discouraged from dealing with their problems. We end up having to keep people on the drugs forever. It was as if these people have a bodily infection, and modern psychiatry is just treating their fever.”

If you’re still reading this item, I’ve obviously got your attention. Here’s the part that kicked me in the ass:

Thomson was determined to help the student solve his problem. “What you’re trying to do is speed along the rumination process,” Thomson says. “Once you show people the dilemma they need to solve, they almost always start feeling better.” He cites as evidence a recent study that found “expressive writing” — asking depressed subjects to write essays about their feelings — led to significantly shorter depressive episodes. The reason, Thomson suggests, is that writing is a form of thinking, which enhances our natural problem-solving abilities. “This doesn’t mean there’s some miracle cure,” he says. “In most cases, the recovery period is going to be long and difficult. And that’s what I told this young student. I said: ‘I know you’re hurting. I know these problems seem impossible. But they’re not. And I can help you solve them.’ ”

How many alternative non-med approaches to our woes rely on journaling of some sort? Read the article, but read it for yourself. Inflicting my insights on others isn’t necessarily helpful and what works for me isn’t necessarily right for others, yourself included. (But if you give up all wheat products your joints will stop hurting and if your joints don’t hurt, that’s not my problem.)

Oh, and the political takeaway? Liberal depression solves problems, self-indulgent conservative wrath doesn’t.

Joe Forgas, a social psychologist at the University of South Wales in Australia, has repeatedly demonstrated in experiments that negative moods lead to better decisions in complex situations. The reason, Forgas suggests, is rooted in the intertwined nature of mood and cognition: sadness promotes “information-processing strategies best suited to dealing with more-demanding situations.” This helps explain why test subjects who are melancholy — Forgas induces the mood with a short film about death and cancer — are better at judging the accuracy of rumors and recalling past events; they’re also much less likely to stereotype strangers.

Author Jonah Lehrer’s conclusion?

This is the paradox of evolution: even if our pain is useful, the urge to escape from the pain remains the most powerful instinct of all.

I’ll drink to that.

Not uncoincidentally, today George Will writes about creating a malady to account for every problem. His perspective is, of course, to cease treatment and funding for these maladies. Lehrer’s article doesn’t suggest there’s nothing wrong with us, just that expensive “talk” therapy beats meds. Cue the jackals like Will who will leverage those thoughts into making deeper cuts in our safety net.

Smart conservatives recognize our problems, but suborn them to their ideology. Ideology is the worst affliction we suffer from. Objectivity is the cure, but one unknown to the American right.

Just thinking about those insensitive bastards depresses me. I guess it’s a good thing I deal with that by writing.

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Susan Jacoby on suffering and atheism.

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Today is the 77th anniversary of the Reichstag Fire.

Six years later the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that sit-down strikes were illegal. On this day in 1991, George Bush announced that Kuwait had been liberated (a lie as he left Kuwait in the hands of the same anti-democratic scum who’d been running the country since before Ambassador April Glaspie told Saddam it was OK to invade).

Today’s birthdays include Ralph Nader, Howard Hesseman, Gidon Kremer, Lee Atwater, and Chelsea Clinton.

This is also the 108th anniversary of Henry “Breaker” Morant’s execution. William F. Buckley Jr. died two years ago today.

And if you’re extremely rich, today (or any day before January 1, 2011) is a good day to die. [second table]

Paul Krugman on the healthcare Summit:

[T]he debate [has] ended as it began: with Democrats offering moderate plans that draw heavily on past Republican ideas, and Republicans responding with slander and misdirection.

Not what you read in your newspaper this morning? Depends on which paper you read but even the WaPost couldn’t help but notice Eric Cantor’s strong resemblance to Scrooge. Krugman’s conclusion:

So what did we learn from the summit? What I took away was the arrogance that the success of things like the death-panel smear has obviously engendered in Republican politicians. At this point they obviously believe that they can blandly make utterly misleading assertions, saying things that can be easily refuted, and pay no price.

Don’t cooperate with the media. If someone sticks a mic in your face at the mall or the state fair, tell them to fuck off and then tell them why.

So long as the media refuses to call out Republican lies, they’ll just keep lying and people will remain disillusioned and confused. Confronted with a hostile and non-cooperative (i.e., shut your fucking boob tube off!) audience, they might reconsider.

Americans actually agree on what our problems are, but too many of us still believe in pie-in-the-sky solutions proposed by lying liars supported by radio and TV propagandizing propagandizers.

Every industrialized nation in the world does healthcare better, cheaper, and more efficiently than we do. Every. Fucking. One. Even the stupid ones. Even the ones who smell bad and mock our culture. They all get it.

Why don’t we? And what the fuck ever happened to the public option, the sop created to pacify the single-payer, both-feet-on-the-ground left?

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Because Democrats put in long hours trying to fix the mess Bush-Cheney left behind, Jim Bunning [Senile-KY] missed part of the Kentucky-South Carolina basketball game. He’s claiming that’s why he put a hold on the unemployment bill (I thought Jon Kyl had a hold on it already but maybe that was different legislation to help desperate Americans — we need so much help it’s easy to get confused).

“I’m trying to make a point to the people of the United States,” said Mr. Bunning, who is not seeking re-election in November.

The extension of jobless benefits was included in a bill that the House passed earlier Thursday by a voice vote. The bill would also extend federal subsidies to help pay health premiums for people who have lost health insurance along with their jobs.

In addition, the bill would extend current Medicare payment rates for doctors through March 31, sparing them from a 21 percent cut. The cut is scheduled to take effect on Monday.

The bill also extends programs providing flood insurance, small business loans and the copyright license used by satellite television providers – – all through March 28.

For the rest of my life everytime I see a book on baseball stats I’m going to look up Jim Bunning and put an asterisk* next to his name.

* for asshole.

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One of the reasons why Republicans keep sabotaging the confirmation process is that once a president has his team in place, he’s actually a pretty powerful dude. Overseeing an administration still running on Bush-Cheney appointees and with key vacancies, not so much.

But enough of Obama’s folks are now on board to allow him to begin rewriting the rules on how the federal government does business. Rewriting? Really, just changing the rules back to what they always used to be until Republicans gutted fairness and reinstated cronyism.

Corrupt politicians are wailing like banshees, but it’s hard to see how that will work for them in an election year when just about every worker in the country could use a pay raise.

Republicans jack up pay for CEOs, then point to overall wages going up as progress even as workers take cuts and pink slips. Nothing upsets Republicans more than seeing blue and pink collar folks driving new cars, eating in nice restaurants or going out on the town once in a while.

You know, the way things used to be. And yes, that would be before Reagan.

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The only good thing I can say about Glenn Beck is that he’s driving the Bush-Cheney alums fucking nuts.

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AIG lost $8.87 billion last quarter, but the AP article doesn’t say how much of that was executive bonuses.

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Another Toyota defender.

It’s not the #%$! car, it’s the cover up stupids!

Seriously, search the internet. Show me where I defended the Mac notebooks that burst into flames due to bad design. It never happened because sane product users don’t worship manufacturers. The more Apple products I buy, the more I scrutinize the company to make sure I’m not getting Jobbed.

Your Toyota being a good car doesn’t mean there isn’t a serious problem with other Toyotas. Grow up.

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As expected, the Minnesota primary is being moved up to August. This will help deflate DFL Chicken Littles who know for certain that the sky will fall if their anointed one is still being opposed in September.

Republicans, however, must sense some advantage to an earlier primary because Gov. BridgeFail is OK with signing off on the date change.

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Charlieq gets spanked by Jason Lewis. Yes, that would be like sitting in the lap of that creepy Santa down at the strip mall.

It’s in the Strib if you’re interested. I don’t link to trash unless there’s nudity or at least a few laughs. Watching someone roll around in their own feces just doesn’t entertain me anymore, especially when they keep stopping to give themselves a tongue bath.

You may think your local wingnut radio jerk is the worst, but you haven’t listened to Jason Lewis.

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Minnesota teen decides to scapegoat salvia divinorum for his check forging ways. That’s like blaming a pint of gin for your deciding to wallpaper the living room.

I’m sure this will be taken by the lege as a sign from God to illegalize this tool for exploring inner space.

Salvia never told anyone to write a bad check, and unlike what the PiPress says, salvia’s not a euphoric. Not unless you consider total unconsciousness to be a swell time.

Reuben Rosario reviews a new study from The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, Behind Bars II: Substance Abuse and America’s Prison Population. The findings aren’t surprising.

Begin by acknowledging that we lock up more of our citizens than any other country on earth, the former Soviet Union included. Of those 2.3 million inmates, 1.9 million have been tagged as substance abusers. That is (by my guesstimate) maybe 1 % of the substance users in this country (not counting alcohol).

Did I mention that half those 1.9 million inmates were alcoholics? And lets not talk about how many are alcoholics of color.

In 2005 we spent $74 billion on our courts-to-prison industry while spending only $632 million on treatment. Yes, that’s a formula for keeping our prisons full and our bank accounts empty.

You don’t want to know how many inmates were sexually abused as children, just like you don’t want to know how starving social services helps keep sexual predators at large (not to worry — after they’ve raped their stepchildren enough to fuck up their lives, Gov. BridgeFail will unilaterally subvert our legal system to keep them locked up at great expense because it would be foolish to spend half as much on social services because then many children would be deprived the joy of sucking on stepdad’s dick).

Investing in social services and treatment programs literally pay for themselves but that’s not going to happen so long as Republicans profit politically by keeping the dis in dysfunctionality.

Society is going to hell because social conservatives are penny wise, Benjamins foolish. Not to mention addicted to the bullying rhetoric that drives our talk radio solutions to complex problems.

Until they agree to drug test Rush Limbaugh each time he steps up to a mic, conservatives should just shut the fuck up about social services spending.

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The IOC isn’t just a renegade criminal organization devoted to disrespecting women and piss testing world class athletes.

They’re also party prudes who think hockey players (fucking hockey players!) should celebrate major victories with lemonade and cookies.

I wish I could think of a single sports body I respect, but from your local Little League to the NCAA to the Olympics, they’re all fucking whoores.

The more organized the sport, the less sporting it is.

Before I cut loose with the links, I feel compelled to say:

Fuck Jon Kyl

(and the horse he’s been having sex with)

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Econo-etc.:

Great graphs that spell out why I keep saying we need to plan for a post-jobs society

Pay day usury confronted in Montana

Mick on banking and healthcare so-called reform

Priorities

Stiglitz

Via Real Economics, Junk economics and the rape of the middle class

Banker says investment banker pay too high

How Obama shafted Volcker

U of Chi prof rips Paulson

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Wingnetc.:

I can’t imagine how BridgeFail’s record numbers of vetoes are going to appeal to a nation fed up with gridlock (and weasely bullshit)

Remind me again how the Republicans are going to kick our ass this fall

Former Strib editor tells Palin where to get off (Romeneskoed) (Curmudgeoned)

Colorado Springs melts down over puppet cleavage

Bob Marshall lies about his remarks about women who’ve had abortions having more developmentally disabled babies, PZ has video

PW on Joe Stack

Stormfront endorses Joe Stack (posthumously, of course)

More on how the hippies dunnit (teabaggers still mad about the doing it part)

Merkin Malkin

Dave Johnson on the ACORN pimp sting lies (new details)(crickets)

Boehlert castigates Hoyt further over Times’ ACORN untruths

How pitiful is Andrew Breitbart? (Way more than you would think an adult could be)

Timing

Hobos traveled a lot, people on unemployment can’t travel without having their benefits suspended in most states (apparently it is impossible for wingnuts to formulate logical scare stories)

Still remarkably free of the hobgoblins of consistency

TBogg on Debbie Schlussel’s fantasy life

Um

One more time: white guys aren’t terrorists unless they’re Weathermen

If only Republicans had a way of getting their message out….

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Health etc.:

Wellpoint CEO blames docs for their big rate hike, but emails show hikes were to help pay for more bonuses

My only link about the summit

Jello Jay’s day to stand up (tomorrow he’ll sit down again)  (OK, technically another summit link)

NFL, like boxing, needs to be banned or radically changed

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Koua Fong Lee etc.:

In defense of Toyota (I’m pretty sure I’ve said the coverup was the gravest of Toyota’s sins).

Check and balance

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God Dem etc.:

It may be the meds (recent shoulder surgery), but John Cole has finally despaired of Democrats ever getting anything done

Harold Ford gets signaged (sounds like NYC Stonewall is a bit more focused on their community’s needs than are the DFL variety and no, I will never forgive Stonewall DFL for endorsing gay marriage averse Amy Klobuchar over the gay marriage espousing Ford Bell)

Phoenix Woman is upset about the new rightwing Kennedy flick (how could it be worse than this “complimentary” tripe?), but like yin to the wingnut yangbaggers, news is Matt Damon will play RFK in a new biopic

Weiner slings a little back

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International etc.:

Italy sentences Google execs in absentia (this, of course, is the same Italy that convicted  Amanda Knox)

¡Viva America! Reagan-Bush-Bush-Cheney still paying dividends

I was wrong. Israel isn’t turning to fascism, they’re becoming Scientologists

Scientologists with their e-meters set on record

We’re number one! USA! USA!

The price Nicaraguan women paid to be “freed”

Very long article on Canadian hockey that’s really more about hard scrabble Western Canada

Juan Cole on Martin Kramer’s serious proposal

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Tech etc.:

Again, I do not understand why people like Facebook

Via Mercury Rising, a fascinating video on how making TV shows has radically changed

Future Tense dude promoted

Early buzz is that iPad’s already a sales winner

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Get over etc.:

Another big legal win for zombies

PZ calls out atheists for bogus study claiming A kids are smarter than C kids (A standing for Atheist, of course, and C for Christian)

Best Blackwater quote ever

Chuck Grassley, the soon to be former Senator from Iowa, a state that prides itself on being well educated

Hating on science

Let’s not get over this now that something’s finally getting done about our lawless post-Katrina law enforcement

Post gets over Sally Quinn

Argggghhhhh!!!

NCAA classier than most sports orgs (surprised me too)

More on latest Colorado school gunman

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Sex etc.:

Effing Typeface (not a goatsie but yeah, kinda)

When Republicans leak on one another

Sexecutions

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Et cetera:

Magic baby ears, cont.

Only 20% of National Society of Newspaper Columnists have newspaper jobs

Colorado Rep calls out Holder over DEA raids

Colorado also has really good beer!

The Cult of O (no, the original O)

I’m curious how this would have played out had an evangelical’s kid converted to Islam

The Haig obit I wish I had written

Koua Fong Lee makes the Washington Post this morning.

Ever since his 1996 Toyota Camry shot up an interstate ramp, plowing into the back of an Oldsmobile in a horrific crash that killed three people, Koua Fong Lee insisted he had done everything he could to stop the car.

A jury didn’t believe him, and a judge sentenced him to eight years in prison. But now, new revelations of safety problems with Toyotas have Lee pressing to get his case reopened and his freedom restored. Relatives of the victims – who condemned Lee at his sentencing three years ago – now believe he is innocent and are planning to sue Toyota. The prosecutor who sent Lee to prison said he thinks the case merits another look.

….If Lee’s car was defective, “We don’t want an innocent man sitting in prison,” said Phil Carruthers, who prosecuted the case for Ramsey County.

From a February 11 PiPress story:

Retired Twin Cities attorney Erich Russell said he went to Ramsey County assistant prosecutor Phil Carruthers shortly after Koua Fong Lee’s conviction with data on sudden accelerations.

He urged Carruthers to look at it, saying, “You guys have a moral obligation here — especially for someone (Koua Fong Lee) who’s not skilled in the American justice system — to make sure you got this damn thing right. And I think you got it wrong,” Russell said.

Carruthers, one of two prosecutors on the case, said last week that he didn’t think the sudden acceleration problem fit Koua Fong Lee’s situation.

What’s changed over the last couple of weeks? Public awareness of the case and of the Toyota brake-acceleration problems. No facts have changed, just the awareness level which has changed enough that assistant prosecutor Carruthers apparently felt the need to reverse course.

Carruthers is, of course, wholly responsible for building a damning case from what doesn’t even amount to circumstantial evidence. Carruthers is a career politician who’s served in the legislature as House majority leader and before that he was on the Metropolitan Council. Since convicting Lee, Carruthers has been the director of the Criminal Division of the Ramsey County Attorney’s office. [Wikipedia]

Lee was convicted based solely on the opinion of a Ramsey County employee, a garage mechanic. Not on facts, not on proof, but on the basis of a willful opinion at a time of peak resentment of the local Hmong community due to racist rightwing agitation over the Chai Vang case in Wisconsin. [There's a more objective account in the MPR archives.]

A prosecutor who changes his mind in the space of two weeks due solely to publicity is exactly the kind of prosecutor who would stick it to an ethnic defendant because of racist sentiments in the community. Lee is damned fucking lucky Minnesota doesn’t have the death penalty or he might have been sitting on death row these past few years.

The Louisville Mojo blog has picked up the story and has more pictures than I’ve seen in the local media.

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Links to distract you before my next rant:

The NYTimes finally reveals its case against Gov. Paterson, and it appears to have some serious merit

Washington Post writes article on incivility in Congress and in no way acknowledges the unprecedented obstructionism of Senate Republicans or the incendiary rhetoric of House Republicans (quite the contrary, they work overtime to blame both sides through very soft, subjective quotes from average Americans without any actual insights into the problems cause by Republican intransigence)

Today’s Post also claims Obama’s dropping the notion of a stand-alone consumer protection agency (sorry, I no longer believe the Post in these matters as they’ve lied about Obama’s positions far too often)

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I have no clue if local gossip columnist Cheryl “C.J.” Johnson is an animal lover, but she sure went out of her way to take their side in a dispute with Al Franken.

“I met with him because he is one of the ones holding up [passage of the bill],” said [TV actor Kelly] Carlson, who was so upset with Franken that she came close to saying, “Listen, buddy, I’m from Minnesota!” Ultimately, she didn’t play the state card.

Carlson told me that the abuse level experienced by horses on their way to slaughter is “really bad — not something you ever want to see.” She recalled Franken saying Minnesota farmers are going to disagree with this bill. Carlson was stunned. “I was like, ‘Wait a minute, is he from Minnesota?’ This has nothing to do with farmers,” she said.

“First of all, Minnesotans are dignified people. None of them would be pro-horse abuse and slaughter. They are not those kinds of people. I guess I said that to his staffer. I know so many farmers and horse people in Minnesota, and they are just not people without a conscience.”

No, I didn’t grow up in Minnesota. I grew up on a farm thirty miles south of Minnesota in Iowa. Culturally north central Iowa is indistinguishable from southern Minnesota. Farmers aren’t horse people. Horses are old school farming, a way of life that vanished with the end of the Great Depression.

The horses you find on some farms today are nothing like farm horses. Farm horses were routinely slaughtered for consumption back in the day, so eating horses is nothing new. It’s become controversial for the usual PETA reasons.

No farm group is standing up for those horses. No fucking way. Who does Carlson think has been pushing this legislation? The principle groups lobbying to trim the size of Western mustang herds have been 1) farm groups, and 2) Native American groups in Idaho, Oregon and Washington seeking to protect tribal lands from rampaging wild horses.

I understand the case for protecting horses. It’s difficult to look a horse in the eye and not see intelligence and awareness. But let me tell you a dirty little secret most meat eaters don’t care to dwell on. All large animals are intelligent and self-aware. Cows are. Pigs are. Having grown up raising both I can tell you with great certainty that livestock have personalities just like people.

Deal with that or don’t deal with that, but don’t tell me horses are special. Not if you have meat on your breath. And never tell me that C.J. is a serious reporter because serious reporters report both sides and not just an outsider’s accusation directed at a third party only tangentially involved in the issue. This isn’t Franken’s bill and his office’s initial response was politically correct. Farmers are not horse sympathizers, and farm groups are pushing this bill to help Western ranchers.

I will say, however, that farmers are fairly reserved people who often bite their tongue in the presence of people with strongly held feelings. Few farmers would tell a horse lover they don’t like horses. Farmers like animals, and not just how they taste. But farmers aren’t sentimental, and they understand how the food chain works. I don’t doubt that Kelly Clark has talked to farmers that were sympathetic to her. But those farmers also belong to groups that have endorsed the sale of horse flesh, and those groups have done so without any noticeable internal dissent.

Well, OK, veterinarians are split on this issue. But after some digging I found a resource that says the groups opposed to prohibiting the slaughter of horses for human consumption include “livestock, horse breeders, veterinarians (split), Farm Bureaus, meat processing products, and legal services.” Specifically?

  • American Association of Equine Practitioners
  • American Farm Bureau Federation
  • American Quarter Horse Association
  • American Veterinary Medical Association
  • Beltex Corporation [Texas meat processors]
  • Horsemen’s Council of Illinois
  • National Cattlemen
  • Olsson Frank and Weeda, P.C. [Native American related practice]
  • Tennessee Walking Horse Breeders’ and Exhibitors’ Association

People who make their living from horses support the consumption of horse flesh. Those opposed? Some veterinarians, casinos, racetracks and gambling interests, and animal rights groups. I suspect the racetracks are just opposing this bill because animal lovers also bet on horse races.

I am in favor of strong laws protecting animals from cruelty and neglect. Animals that have been neglected or abused do not, quite frankly, taste as good as animals that have been well cared for. And people who abuse animals are assholes.

I don’t think of animal rights people as assholes. They’re sincere. They’re entitled to their opinions but so long as the majority of Americans are meat eaters, they need to deal with animal rights in a constructive way (many farmers support opposition to factory farming, for example). Given free rein, animal rights folks would prohibit the destruction of injured animals. That might sound nice, but in practice it’s barbaric and cruel. Animals aren’t people, and have no mechanisms to help them cope with major pain and injury. That’s why they shoot horses with broken legs. To not do so would be unspeakable.

Covering all bases, primates deserve more protection than livestock, but are still not human. If you want to make a case that primates not be destroyed, I’ll listen to you but I won’t agree that primates have more rights than Amadou Diallo. Fix the laws that let cops shoot unarmed civilians first, then talk to me about monkey rights. And if you think monkeys should come first, I can refer you to some excellent psychiatrists.

[Note: chickens are not sentient and are some of the stupidest critters on this planet. Don't feel guilty about eating chicken (or turkey). A million years ago they were dinosaurs, you know.]

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Ranted out now. Continue on without me.

But under no circumstances think that lobbying me for more rants resulted in these two specimens. In fact, if a certain party doesn’t get the fuck out of my face about what I choose to write, I may pledge to go rant-free from now until the 4th of July.

I’m in an absolutely vile mood today. I had to complete an I-765 application for employment authorization. It’s a one-page form with TWELVE FUCKING PAGES OF INSTRUCTIONS.

A one-page form typically used by immigrants. When I did federal forms I charged $65 an hour and people thanked me for taking their money. Those were SF-171s and native speakers of English found them difficult. The I-765 is significantly more complex, virtually opaque thanks to ridiculously detailed instructions that confuse more than they enlighten and, again, they’re typically filled out by people who learned English as a second language.

And this is why I so loathe the anti-immigration crowd. Being here legally is nearly fucking impossible for college grads. The woman cleaning your hotel room or or the guy loading your van at the warehouse could never complete one of these forms.

It’s all a sick joke. The INS is the most profoundly inhuman face our national government has, and the first lesson immigrants get in how this country works is that you’re fucked before you start.

And yes, I screwed this form up the first time I completed it. I’ve been studying their instructions for an hour now and I still can’t figure out how to finish this form. Form I-765 says to go to Part 2 of the instructions to fill out some data I’m missing. The problem? The 12-page instructions do not come in parts. It’s just one long document that confuses more than it helps.

The government should just put up a big sign at the border saying TOURISTS OK, EVERYONE ELSE FUCK OFF.

But that’s OK. In my own very non-tea party way, I’m coming to hate our government just as much as any wingnut. Not by inclination or wont, but because those are the terms of engagement as set by the feds.

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It’s not politics when the corruption exceeds 98.9% and idiocy comes in higher than that — these are tales from the Moronosphere:

Crucifying honest civil servants who won’t cover up corruption

Joe “you lie” Wilson: bought and paid for by the health insurance industry (one whore among many)

A quick summary of all the other times reconciliation has been used (or you can check out Brendan Nyhan’s handy chart)

Chris Matthews just keeps getting worse

A little bank that did everything right not to mention reinvesting in their community: shut down by the FDIC for incomprehensible reasons

The folks too nutty for CPAC (not so nutty CPAC didn’t take their money, but nutty enough that CPAC branded their meeting “unofficial”)

Hannity: corporate wrongdoing the fault of hippies

Embedding DEA agents in Mexico (because hillbillies and militia members aren’t shooting them fast enough)

Michael Medved, still outdouching the Fox News pros

It’s not just California, WellPoint is hiking premiums by double digits in at least eleven states (I assume there are laws slowing them down in the other 39)

Credit card companies respond to being reined in by inventing new ways of screwing consumers

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On Tim Pawlenty and cheese (oddly enough, not the stinky kind).

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The hell that is etc:

12-year-old NYC school girl cuffed and arrested for doodling in her textbook

NBA says cheating OK so long as you’re not the Minnesota Timberwolves

Olympics coach costs skater his gold medal

Another school shooting (and Bob Collins wonders why big media no longer highlights these horrifying events)

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Still bogged down in the comments at the PiPress with heavy haul trucker, one of the most belligerent know-nothing comment trolls I’ve ever seen. Click quick and you might catch his latest but since he’ll probably be deleted by the admin again, here’s what passes for clever on the right:

Your ignorance is exceeded only by our stupidity!! You are just another liberal nutcase!! And a Fraud!!

Another commenter asked if I was stoned. Several referenced Al Gore because it was obvious to them that all liberals take their marching orders from Al, even those of us who voted for Ralph Nader in ‘02 ’00. [Yes, stupidest typo ever.]

In my life I’ve never seen a group of Americans who worked harder at not understanding what others think.

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To me, the most insanely macho thing Minnesotans do is to wear shorts in the winter. I’ve worn my as late as November, but once the snow falls it’s time for long pants.

#1 client just sent her assistant over with some stuff just now and his attire blows away Minnesota macho altogether. Not only was he wearing shorts (25°F outside with a bitter damp wind) but the dude was wearing sandals with no socks.

John Beargrease wasn’t half as tough as this kid from Bangkok.

Wow. I didn’t post last night because all the stories seemed to add up to little more than we don’t know but here’s what he said, and here’s what she said.

Then I got up this morning and saw that the PiPress, not having a new Toyota stuck accelerator story, ran a wire story about the Lexus accident that set off the stuck accelerator recall. Good job of keeping local interest in this story alive.

Production and design errors happen. What’s unacceptable is footdragging from the manufacturer once they realize there’s a problem.

Letting Koua Fong Lee rot in prison because you won’t acknowledge design error? Unforgivable. Sticking it to a driver who was sober and had a good record? Unspeakable. From Reason:

Cultural bias may have also had something to do with it, too. Lee is Hmong. As a commenter at the ABC News site notes, Lee’s trial came months after the highly-publicized trial of a Hmong man who massacred three Wisconsin hunters in 2004. Now one state over, you have a Hmong man who took out three people while driving well in excess of the speed limit. Lee also testified through a translator, and according to the ABC article his trial judge expressed doubt about Lee’s remorse. Maybe Lee really was unremorseful, though it also seems possible that an emotion like remorse could be expressed differently in different cultures or be lost in translation.

Whatever their reasons, the prosecutors seemed set on making Lee pay a heavy price for the three deaths, and paid too little consideration to his actual level of criminal culpability.

I think it’s official now: Ramsey County prosecutors have gained a national reputation for keeping Asian Americans in their place. Just like Mississippi, Alabama or Texas, being innocent won’t keep you out of prison if prosecutors set their sites on you.

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Revealed:

Officials at the Department of Homeland Security have told lawmakers in recent weeks that it employs more private contractors than government employees, a revelation that shouldn’t surprise close observers of the department’s seven-year history.

The department estimates it employs 200,000 contractors and roughly 188,000 federal employees, a total that does not include uniformed members of the Coast Guard.

Private contractors cost more, leading to greater profits for the Dick Cheney cronies who got all the contracts. Bush-Cheney didn’t just commit war crimes, they looted from within like there was no bottom line for Uncle Sugar.

Thanks to Obama, like Bill Clinton before him, a Republican administration is being gifted with the statute of limitations.

Which is why a truth and reconciliation commission will be the only recourse. If you can’t punish them for their crimes, punish them for perjury if they refuse to — at the very least — acknowledge their criminal behavior and explain how they gamed the Constitution. If accurate testimony were compelled, we’d be able to remove scores of corrupt judges from the bench while shaming our most pwned politicians into early retirement.

And yes, I’m looking down the road to a post-Obama administration because it’s obvious that Obama’s not about justice, that being a backward-looking thing, especially when you’re trying to lock in a permanent private insurance company monopoly that will keep Americans permanently under the domestic healthcare/insurance cartel’s thumb.

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Links I wish I hadn’t read:

Thomas Ricks on why we need to stay in Iraq (the truth sucks most of the time, especially when you have to be the grown up and clean up the mess you made unlike what the U.S. and Europe did after WWI, giving us WWII as a direct result)

New study says bigoted American foreign policy shaped by “narrow, ill-informed and uncompromising Western secularism . . . feeds religious extremism” etc. (i.e., when you bigfoot like an asshole, people respond in kind)

Robert Wright on Tea Party terrorists

Garrison Keillor on the current unreality

Robert Reich on insurance company monopolies

Harold Meyerson asks of health care reformers, if not now, when? (when? when progressives recapture the Democratic party, that’s when)

James Ridgeway on just how much Obama’s plan sucks

James Ridgeway on how the FDA props up Big Pharma’s high prices

Anthem Blue Cross smiles, testifies that fuck yes they’re sticking with those rate hikes (students of the industry will tell you that pimps never run twofer-Tuesday specials)(more from Taibbi)

Tim Rutten with some Reaganesque numbers on how utterly fucked the underclasses are (underclasses being everyone who’s not in the top 1% of our brave new economy)

Add to the unemployment numbers the 20% of Americans who are underemployed (technology is erasing jobs faster than Wall Street can cut your pay)

290 House-passed bills languish in the obstructionist Senate

Does bailing out the states mean that we’re going to subsidize regressive tax policies that drive local economic collapse?

This is what some call synergy

Subverting democracy doesn’t come cheap

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Because hating is easy:

Washington’s Top 20 Saboteurs

Disability rights folks critical of Palin

More pix of Trig’s magic ear

Blackwater and gunrunning

Issa goes after Fox News’ Saudi owner

Right to Life has always been about other things

After thorough factchecking it’s discovered that Global Warming denier Bjorn Lomborg misrepresented 100% of the studies he referenced in his error-ridden writings (lying is so much easier when you start from bullshit and spin from there)

Clark Hoyt admits Times wrong about ACORN scandal, refuses to retract (leading Jamison Foser to note that it’s easier to publish falsehoods in the Times than to get them retracted)

Justice, Texas style

New euphemisms for Zionist final solutions

Arizona exempts churches and schools from new pedophilia laws (leaving only Boy Scout leaders to pay the price for stereotyped pederasty)

Sara Robinson on the Tea Party

Criminalizing miscarriages in Utah (but new strategies emerge for fighting back)

Angry Mouse on ski jumping

Religious predators infiltrating tea movement

Another Leadership Institute grad doing wingnuttery proud

Newt’s oily subsidies

Wolcott on all of the above

Wingnut who wrote about attempted skyjacking proven to be a liar on all counts

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Minnecetera:

Matt Bai on Citizen Norm’s new gig

Sparber on the Yellow Pages

47 governors sign letter begging Congress to extend Medicare but Gov. BridgeFail not one of them despite using Medicare funds to “balance” his budget

Matt Taibbi on the Miracle on Ice

Lambert & The Daily Glean

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The Daily Etc.

Rall you need to know

When snitches do cross-training

The Strib explains their malware problem and has some links for those of you who might have gotten tagged.

How Microsoft has evaded legal responsibility for their virus-prone operating systems is, as usual, beyond me.

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The NY Times likes Obama’s new health care proposal.

Fuck the NY Times. Their new paywall’s going up soon and no one will ever read them after that anyway so who cares what they think. (Krugman’s already hinting that he’s ready to move on….)

But to the Times credit, they also published Richard Cohen’s column today:

Now, as I understand it, the Tea Party movement is angry about waste, bail-outs for the rich and spiraling debt. They detest big government. But if waste and debt are really what’s bothering them, how about the waste in the more than 1,800 daily health-care related personal bankruptcies, the 25 to 30 percent of some corporate insurers’ costs going on administration (versus 6 percent for Medicare), the sky-rocketing health premiums that are undermining U.S. corporations (and so taking jobs), the endless paperwork of private reimbursement procedures, and the needless deaths?

Americans don’t want a European nanny state — fine! But, as a lawyer friend, Manuel Wally, put it to me, “When it comes to health it makes sense to involve government, which is accountable to the people, rather than corporations, which are accountable to shareholders.”

All the fear-mongering talk of “nationalizing” 17 percent of the economy is nonsense. Government, through Medicare and Medicaid, is already administering almost half of American health care and doing so with less waste than the private sector. Per capita Medicare costs for common benefits grew 4.9 percent between 1998 and 2008, against 7.1 percent for private insurers. Why not offer Medicare as a choice — a choice — to everyone? Aren’t Republicans about choice?

The public option, not dead, would amount to recognition of shared interest in each other’s health and of the need to use America’s energies and resources better. It would involve 300 million people linking arms.

Or we can turn away from each other and, like Narcissus, perish in the contemplation of our own reflections.

America could embrace this essay and champion Cohen’s cause, but all that would change would be that the assholes would switch to his rhetoric while changing none of their corporation-favoring rules changes.

More and more I fear that whatever passes will be harder to live with than the gut-wracking uncertainty of being uninsured in a country run by total fucking assholes on behalf of unrelenting greedheads.

[David Waldman explains reconciliation and the filibuster process now in place.]

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The best thing about the Times is that they’re not the Washington Post.

Still, the Post has its days.

And, of course, they still have Tom Toles.

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Toyota is insisting their electronics aren’t to blame for their car problems.

Note to investigators: check out the electrical system from top to bottom.

Other bad things corporations are doing:

Banks lobbying their asses off to keep overdraft fees and penalties (so their poorest customers can pay the biggest fees)

Wall Street bonuses up 17% in ’09 (how much would they have stolen had not the entire nation started brandishing pitchforks and torches?)

Congress is powerless to reform our corrupt student loan process

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Charlie Cook says the Dems will lose the House.

Why? The House has very little to apologize for, at least not when you compare them to the insufferable Senate.

And let’s not even talk about the racist fucks driving the teasurrection.

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Chicago should pay up something like a billion zillion dollars for this one, but they won’t. Money never fixes miscarriages of justice anyway. Prison time for the offending technocrats is the only remedy, and that’s something we’ve never tried.

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By next December, marijuana will be legal in California thanks to a new statewide initiative that will be on the ballot, and thanks to thuggish law enforcement that hits “legal” distributors with 24 felony charges just because they fucking still can.

Prosecutors are the worst people in the world. Why do people keep voting for them? Elections for prosecutors should be dominated by obscene write-ins and the recognition that party labels shouldn’t apply to our legal dregs and Torquemada wannabees.

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It’s the most common headline you’ll see from a Minnesota newspaper.

Pawlenty promises veto.

The asshole threatens to veto everything, and he usually does.

I cannot imagine living in a nation run by such a petulant little weasel.

Never trust someone who switches churches. Anyone can get suckered into staying religious when they’re raised that way, but how do you trust someone who switch hits? Gov. BridgeFail has made it clear that he trusts fundie Jesus over Catholic Jesus. Money to punish but no money for the poor Pawlenty.

Why do Catholics still vote for this asshole?

Why does anyone vote for these assholes?

Ask Jon Talton. Like me, he used to be a Republican. It took him quite a bit longer, but he finally figured out he couldn’t stay in the party and retain his conservative values. Republicans are the radical party now, and they’d rather burn this country down than let Democrats run it. And none dare call it treason.

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Speaking of assholes, robbers stole a specially equipped notebook computer from a blind student at a bus stop Sunday night.

Police are checking with the governor’s staff to see where he was about 4:50 pm.

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Cheney hospitalized with chest pains.

We can only hope, justice not being available by any other means.

And no, I don’t know why that is. Someone really should ask Obama why this asshole’s never even been questioned.

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The transcript of what Steve King actually said, and no, I really don’t see how the context makes him any less of an asshole.

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Pat Robertson denies having OKed the destruction of CIA torture videotapes. He just failed to speak up when they talked about destroying them.

Not the same thing. Not the same thing at all.

If you’re a torture-endorsing asshole, that is.

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Renewed my main client’s Yellow Pages advertising yesterday. Bold listing, no display. It is worth $45 a month, but just barely.

A bill has been written to make the phone book companies put contact information on their covers to let you opt out of future deliveries, but the phonebook companies are pretty much scofflaws at this late point in their existence.

Five years tops. After that you’ll have to order and pay for your phone books. That’s my prediction and I’m probably too generous with my timeline.

Sadly, there is no chance of junk mail, unsolicited phone calls, junk faxes or spam ever going away, our corporate-owned Congress just not seeing any problems on those fronts.

Some day, after all the life/death stuff is out of the way, the netroots need to have a spam the fucking shit out of Congress day. Melting their email down and jamming their fax lines would give our leaders a taste of what’s it’s like to follow their bought and paid for asses in real time.

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Israelis admit that while they can stop Palestinian “terrorists,” they’re powerless to stop criminal activities from their own extreme right.

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Wanting the truth does not make you a Truther.

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Another review of American VI: Ain’t No Grave. Sadly the page refreshed while I was reading it, so I guess the Strib is back to their page refreshing ways, ensuring that you get your maximum exposure to third-party server malware.

It’s a conundrum. The Strib could host all those ads on their own servers which would speed page loads. But that would require the advertisers to trust the Strib, and the Strib’s page reloads pretty much establish that they’re not to be trusted, numbers wise.

I think the countdown has begun. Every other story I looked at today had a different font size. That’s not a good sign.

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It’s W.E.B. Dubois’s 142nd birthday. In a sane country, he would have been cherished as one of our greatest leaders and thinkers. He “got” Nazi German long before Lindbergh did, but he was wrong about the Japanese and Stalin.

Then again, why wouldn’t an African-American scholar embrace the enemies of a white America that was oppressing its black citizenry? Black Americans still could not reliably vote (or even attempt to vote) in this country when Dubois died in 1961.

I can’t imagine not having the right to vote, and I still can’t imagine why ruthlessly politicized Republicans continue to Dixiefy our elections with their baseless and racist poll challengers.

The United States: still as fucked up as it ever was. Still a racist country, no matter how dark-skinned our President is.

New Clusterfuck Nation!

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90%.

Just sayin.

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Sam Pizzigati’s take on the Oligarchy 400. Yes you’ve read the story but Sam piles on the background like no one I’ve read.

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I guess Obama making his bill all the more repugnant is one good way to encourage reconciliation and the back room process invented by the Bush-Cheney administration.

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More about how the system works and the ways in which it forces everyone to be a bad guy just to compete.

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The Afghanistan War will take years and incur high casualties.

Yeah, I can see why Obama was so quick to jump on this opportunity left to him by DICK Cheney.

Also from Juan Cole, a Russian general warns that any US attack on Iran could lead to our collapse while not doing Russian any favors. And Supreme Leader Ali Khameini again reminds Iranians that nukes are frowned upon by Allah.

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As the torture memos unravel, we discover that much of Yoo’s legwork was done by a just out of college staffer with Federalist Society credentials.

When you make your decisions based on ideology, you don’t go looking for actual legal scholars to help because they sometimes get stuck on points of law.

Never before has a political movement been so reliant on the incompetence of others.

And yes, shaming is in order.

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Cultists, Republicans and other evil doers:

Trig was God’s punishment for Sarah Palin having had an abortion (no, seriously!)

Speaking of which, did you know that Trig grew new ears between birth and the RNC [more from Bree]

Steve King sets new low for radical right wing hate speech, justifies suicide planing of Austin IRS building

The Grifter & the Coward

Lindsay Beyerstein follows up on Howie the Whore’s Scientology story [Full Disclosure: I have never been a Scientologist or a member of any other mind-deadening cult, especially not ones started by aged pedophiles looking to make a quick buck]

Politico discovers standards just in time to insult their new staffer

How Reagan broke the jobs machine

More on J.D. Hayworth’s chyron sex change

Andrew Breitbart, every bit as racist as you think he is

Rapemaster O’Reilly

Fred Hiatt’s new columnist just as sloppy first time around as Bill Kristol was

Blue Texan on Beck’s CPACkery and Terrance Heath’s take

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This just in from a reader. WARNING:

I just spent several hours disinfecting my puter of malware picked up at the Strib. The last three or four times I visited the Strib site, I got warnings from one or both of my anti-virus programs. Today, I got attacked by a fake virus scanner as soon as I opened their page. My virus detector identified it as Rogue.Antivirussoft.exe. Every time I tried to access my AVG antivirus program, I would instead be sent to the Viagra website or porno.com or porn.org. If I left the room for a few minutes, one or more of these pages would be loaded on my screen when I got back. I finally disconnected my cable connection, which allowed AVG to function.

I was a bit skeptical which led to this additional email:

[A]fter doing some research online, I found out that AntivirusSoft is a new thing. My SuperAntiSpyware program detected it and told me I needed to reboot in order to complete the removal. After rebooting, things seemed okay for awhile, then AntivirusSoft would reappear. AVG didn’t detect it at all, and usually that program is more thorough. AdAware didn’t detect it either. Usually between those three programs, I can detect and remove/quarantine anything. Microsoft’s online tool didn’t help either. A couple forum commenters recommended Malwarebytes so I downloaded that and it worked right away. So if you know anyone suffering from Rogue.antivirussoft, send them to Malwarbytes.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. But then of course there’s always this:

Star Tribune site hit by Sunday malware infection

MUST CREDIT DBRAUER!

There’s all kinds of nasty things happening in the interwebs right now and the only thing I can say with any certainty is that Homeland Security is worthless, if not worse than clueless.

This explains why the Strib’s pages are suddenly loading normally and not with the usual constipated stalls and time outs. Seriously. I mean lightning fast. The slowest site I visit just became the fastest.

Remote ad servers are evil, evil, evil.

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TechDirt:

Lame, the DVD edition (when you look at in black and white terms, pirates like me suffer much less than honest citizens like you)

Talking points, the subsidize-the-publishing-industry edition (btw, that author who ripped on readers for not being thrilled at paying $9.99 for digital data has retreated from his original position, tail tucked between his legs)

Mike Masnick describes how journalism works but sadly, in real life, reporters don’t do the things he attributes to them

Social networkers are proving to be surprisingly honest (which surprises the owners of the networks because type A assholes are never honest about themselves)

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Sad. Yet another experiment showing the potential for the brain dead to become zombies proves to be a Uri Geller style hoax.

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MinnEtc:

Max Sparber is on a tear (today it’s Franken and reconciliation)

Charlieq and Dane Smith make the case for raising Minnesota taxes on the rich

Ed disembowels Luke Hellier yet again (is the notion of working from ALL the data truly that repugnant to Republicans?)

PW on Hindu-bashing and other sick shit espoused by MN Republican candidates

Remember that comment I left at Soucheray’s column on potholes? You wouldn’t believe how many anonymous cowards (Jimmy Bikeshorts, Smith St Guy, Jean, Bob H, Hah, Zymie, heavy haul trucker) think only morons believe in global warming (and a special shout out to Labratt for explaining what I’d said to the slower members of Joe’s audience and a very special shout out to heavy haul trucker for commenting, “F In most idiotic post i’ve ever seen!! Are you really the dou che bag Zen birdbrain or what ever its name is!!??”) UPDATE: Crap, it’s down now, leaving my reply hanging there looking pretty belligerent….

Gov. BridgeFail (last line in post)

U.S. Representative grabs a mic to correct BridgeFail’s phony facts?

Rep. Thought Police

Religious predators to descend upon Rochester April 9

Joe Repya, the last of the honest conservatives, has dropped out of the gubernator’s race

There’s no ass biting like Power Line’s ass biting

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General Etc:

Jamison Foser on Jay Rosen and he said/she said’ism

Every good thing on the web is needs to have a price tag because content should never be free (and yes, I just lost an enormous amount of respect for Dan Kennedy)

When you help out your friends it’s probably best if you’re not an office holder, own property, or in any way have shit that can be taken away from you by a vengeful pack of rightwing pricks who use the law to enforce their quasi-religious beliefs

Shouldn’t the UK be thinking about booting the Israeli ambassador out of the country? Something? Anything?

Sting sucks but you probably already knew that

L.A. Convention Center hosts HempCon 2010

Oddly enough, building highways and bridges creates jobs (who knew?)

Bob fucking Shrum

Ode to a Grecian Turnip

Spaghetti dinner chemo

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