"You're not making an impact if you're not pissing someone off"

Tag Archives: Rush Limbaugh

Hey, look a-yonder comin’

Comin’ down that railroad track

It’s the Turd Blossom Special
Bringin’ my trickle down back

Well, I’m going down to Florida
And get some sand in my shoes

I’ll ride that Turd Blossom Special
And lose these George Bush blues

(a paraphrase from Johnny Cash’s Orange Blossom Special)

Though there wasn’t much substance coming out of the Republic Convention in Tampa this last week, there was a clear signal that the Karl Rove style of politics was back in play for the Republican Party.  Rove, who was the architect of George Bush’s presidential wins, has become the poster boy for deception and deviousness in contemporary politics.

 

Their message for themselves is that they are pro-business and that Democrats are anti-business.  While positing the notion that the wealthy pay the greater share of taxes they portray Democrats as supporting freeloaders who pay no taxes.  Romney asserted in his speech that rather than address global warming issues he promised to help “you and your family” even though the Tax Policy Center said Romney’s tax plan would increase the tax burden on middle- and low-income Americans.   VP nominee Ryan promised that they would “protect the weak” and “make the safety net safe again” while implying that it was Obamacare that was threatening the soundness of Medicare.  Yet data from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has demonstrated that Ryan’s voucher plan for Medicare will increase costs for the elderly poor.  

It was a White Hat vs Black Hat comparison that Leni Riefenstahl and Joseph Goebbels would be envious of.  This theme becomes enhanced by the pundits who serve as a megaphone for the GOP.

Bill O’Reilly attempts to portray the Republicans as thinking pragmatists and Democrats are still bleeding heart liberals.

Speakers at the Republican convention have largely been selected to negate Democratic propaganda, while the speakers at the Democratic convention next week in Charlotte are largely on stage to inflame the liberal base.

The strategy for the Republicans is persuade the mind, right here. The strategy for the Democrats seems to be to persuade the hearts. Hearts versus mind is the theme this year.   SOURCE   

In character as usual, O’Reilly says all of this after he has informed his viewing audience how truly objective he and those at the FOX network really are.

“As you may know, we cover politics a bit differently here. We are not much on party propaganda or political bloviating,” the guy who looks just like Bill O’Reilly explained.

[Our convention coverage] will not be the Republicans are good and Democrats are bad or vice versa. We are not in the business of promoting any political party.”

And though Rush Limbaugh is technically correct when he says, “I never once said that I want anybody at this convention to go out there and say Obama’s a bad guy” he has done nothing but portray the President as a bad guy since he was inaugurated.  In terms of good and bad, what do you consider a person who has been characterized as one who “hates this country” and has been “indoctrinated as a child” by his “communist” father and his “leftist” mother.  Does this imagery conjure up the word “good” for the majority of Americans?

When people like conservative columnist Walter Williams rehashes over and over again how “the top 10 percent of income earners pay 71 percent of the federal income tax burden while 47 percent of Americans pay absolutely nothing” they are implying that all incomes have risen equally.  They haven’t.  Like him or not, Paul Krugman is accurate when he says, “The Rich Are Paying More Taxes Because They’re Much Richer Than They Used To Be.

CBO: “The Share Of Income Going To Higher-Income Households Rose, While the Share Going To Lower-Income Fell.” An October 25, 2011, Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report found that the top fifth of all earners saw their share of after-tax income increased by 10 percentage points – with almost the entire gain going to the top 1 percent – while the other four-fifths of earners saw their share of after-tax income fall. The report included this chart which depicts the gains made by the top fifth and the losses by the rest.


What ultimately evolves by design here is how the GOP turns victimization on its head.  Casting the very wealthy and entrepreneurs as victims strikes at a perception that any ambitious American would find repugnant.  And perhaps rightfully so.  We all openly or secretly aspire to be financially secure and envision ourselves as masters of our fate by owning our own business.  But what is getting downplayed and even omitted here is how the American Dream is being lost not through government spending aimed at easing economic hardships and providing federal jobs, but rather through economic globalization that takes jobs to cheaper labor markets abroad and policies that reduce taxes which deprives revenue for vital social services.

The long-held Libertarian notion that any form of wealth distribution is evil has risen its ugly head again and gained a foothold in the American conscience following the collapse of the financial markets and the government bailouts of those who played fast and loose with investments and savings of Americans aspiring to claim some of that ownership held almost exclusively by the top 1%.   Free markets failed to live up to expectations but Libertarians were quick to redirect the focus on government actions aimed at offsetting the great recession of 2008.  Poorly informed and frightened workers were captivated by the mantra of the Tea Party who voiced this discontent and who became quickly supported by Bush-era neo-conservatives in a thinly veiled attempt to regain the power they thought would never end prior to 2006 when they lost their House majority.

Profits are first and foremost at the heart of any business and if it requires evading taxes and sending jobs overseas, then so be it.  Yet profits have never been higher for many businesses or taxes lower than they are today.  And still we are led to believe that the free markets and the wealthy class are under siege.  The Democrats are portrayed as those who support “people with miserable, meaningless lives” and “people who don’t count,” according to Rush Limbaugh, even though Paul Ryan wants everyone to see Republicans as champions trying to “protect the weak”.

If it all seems so confusing that’s because it is intended to be.  The architect of this approach to circumvent fact and disorient voters is the person George Bush affectionately called “Turd Blossom” – Karl Rove.  From the time “he founded a political consulting firm, Karl Rove & Company, in Austin, Texas in 1981 … Rove “earned a reputation for being a savage political strategist, willing to engage in dirty tricks.”    The idiom of Rove can be seen in the brief Tweet from Romney pollster Neil Newhouse responding to the media’s objections to its welfare ad when Newhouse stated ”we’re not going to let our campaign be dictated by fact ckecckers”(sic)

Rove’s back


Newt Gingrich has also contributed to a view that capitalizes on misinformation and deception through some of his earliest efforts in political office aimed at destroying the credibility of Congress in the hopes to achieve a majority of Republicans to further extreme right-wing goals.

“What was Gingrich’s strategy? He was both passionate about his goals and coldly analytical in his means. The core strategy was to destroy the institution to save it, to so intensify public hatred of Congress that voters would buy into the notion of the need for sweeping change and throw the majority bums out. His method? To unite his Republicans in refusing to cooperate with Democrats in committee and on the floor, while publicly attacking them as a permanent majority presiding over and benefitting from a thoroughly corrupt institution. (p.33)

It had taken Gingrich sixteen years to realize his objective of a House Republican majority (1994), but his original strategy to gain power by attacking the Congress left a lasting mark on American politics.”(p.40)   – Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein’s, “It’s Even Worse Than it Looks: How the American Constitutional System Collided With The New Politics of Extremism 

It’s true that you can’t fool everybody all of the time but it is also clear that the goal of the GOP has been a costly and passionate attempt to do as much “fooling” as they possibly can.   It has after all been their “top political priority … to deny President Obama a second term.”    To do that you have to distort the facts to make people forget what the policies were prior to Obama’s election that have resulted in one of the highest misery index ratings since Ronald Reagan. 

 

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”We’re not sexists, we’re chauvinists — we’re male chauvinist pigs, and we’re happy to be because we think that’s what men were destined to be. We think that’s what women want.” Rush Limbaugh

 

The inclusive “we” in Limbaugh’s comments above doesn’t reflect someone who has actually had open-ended conversations with people other than his drinking buddies at the all men’s club.  I think it’s safe to say that he didn’t come to this conclusion by sitting in on a select panel of objective individuals on the subject.  Limbaugh knows deep down this is not a real truth (though he may disguise it as a joke) but a perception he harbors with other like-minded men to justify their inability to have long meaningful relationships with women.  He has after all been married 4 times.

When public figures who connect with millions of Americans each day make comments that have no basis in reality, there are bound to be those listeners who will assimilate them into their world view that they have already been partially or wholly programmed to.  Whether he’s truly serious, attempting to be humorous or engaging in “theatrics designed to rev up his audience”, Limbaugh’s comments can be scoffed at by people like me while at the same time registering with those males who have been raised by domineering fathers, doting mothers or both.

 

Images of male superiority have long been entrenched in our culture, from the patriarchal writings of our religious scriptures to the absence of equal citizenship status when our Constitution was framed.  The male dominance perception has survived in today’s culture by people like Limbaugh who sees women only as he does his pet female cat;  a subservient, docile creature wanting only her basic material needs met.

By definition a male chauvinist pig is a male who patronizes, disparages, or otherwise denigrates females in the belief that they are inferior to males and thus deserving of less than equal treatment or benefit.   When men start incorporating such a demeaning view of women deep within their psyche then traditional relationships embodying a mutual, self affirming  connection with each other begins to disappear.

When this happens then it’s not that much of a leap to explain why 55% of men reported in a less-than-scientific-survey from Glamour Magazine that they would falsely tell a woman they cared about them just to get them in bed.  By the standards set by people like Limbaugh, women are objects to be used by men, thinking that this is how they really want to be treated.

If the demeaning comments about women were a one time sentiment expressed by the ultra-conservative radio commentator, there would be little to support the premise that what he said affects some male attitudes in his audience who’ve been conditioned to think like this all of their life.  But it’s not.  Limbaugh has a history of such warped images. 

 

How serious can you take someone who has claimed that he’s “a huge supporter of women. … [and loves] the women’s movement — especially when walking behind it.”   Image, not content, is the measure by which men like Limbaugh assess the female gender.  During the Clinton administration he told his audience that the President has a pet cat but he also has a dog, as he held up a picture of the Clinton’s daughter, Chelsea

Women have more value solely for their beauty and as someone who wants to pleasure a man based on comments made by Limbaugh over the course of his broadcast career.   The talk show host once stated that some women who are offended by sexual harassment in the work place are “out there protesting what they actually wish would happen to them sometimes.”.

He expanded on this shallow view when he claimed that “Feminism was established so as to allow unattractive women access to the mainstream of society.”  Were the same criteria about good looks applied to men however, Limbaugh would most likely be an unknown quantity.  He might even find himself being repeatedly rejected by those self-absorbed women who he thinks personify the ideal woman, unless they were true gold diggers attracted only to his celebrity-based wealth.  This of course would only further feed into his cat analogy about women.

Limbaugh’s further ignorance of women and thus his devaluation of them as human beings is expressed in his fallacious comment that “women still live longer than men because their lives are easier.”  Woman do indeed live longer than men but not because they live the pampered lives like Limbaugh’s cat.  Research has shown that women live longer because they’re more cautious and health conscious.

To think  as Limbaugh does that women have it easier than men is typical of the gender who has never had to deal with a 9-month pregnancy and then at birth pass something the size of a football through an orifice in their body.  He should try giving birth to 19 children like Michelle Duggar before he presumes how much easier women have it.  Having and raising children is something he is unfamiliar with considering the man is childless after 3 marriages.

 

My wife and I have a daughter and a son and we have tried to view them as equally capable of accomplishing whatever they put their minds to.  If I were to limit my daughter’s chances by subscribing to Limbaugh’s demeaning view of women I would be bordering on the repressive treatment many women receive in rigid fundamentalist Jewish, Christian and Muslim cultures.  Despite Limbaugh’s ignorance of history, women were NOT “doing quite well in this country before feminism came along.” (Radio show, quoted in FRQ, Summer/93)

Some may feel that Limbaugh has been genuinely contrite about his comments regarding Susan Fluke, like his liberal-bashing pal, Cal Thomas.  But a cursory reading of his latest “apology” is nothing more than a Flip Wilson style of evading personal responsibility while blaming it all on the “liberal devil”.  His frequent misogynistic references are out of date and destructive.

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The only thing that was clear about Clear Channel Radio in their defense of Rush Limbaugh’s “slut” slur was their effort to sustain their profits

Rush Limbaugh’s lame apology to Susan Fluke came only after his program lost revenue from seven commercial accounts that either abandoned his program entirely or suspended further advertising until … whenever.   Since then, five more accounts have joined the exodus from Limbaugh’s radio program.  It remains to be seen if this will  be the beginning of the end for the ultra-conservative talk show host.  Limbaugh’s claim to being a funny man rather than a news item critic is about as legitimate as Robin Williams claiming to be a Psychologist using humor therapy to treat his patients.

Little attention however has been given to the comments from Limbaugh’s bosses, Clear Channel’s Premiere Radio Networks Inc., as expressed through their spokeswoman Rachel Nelson

“The contraception debate is one that sparks strong emotion and opinions on both sides of the issue.  We respect the right of Mr. Limbaugh, as well as the rights of those who disagree with him, to express those opinions.”  SOURCE 

This is a confusing comment though since Limbaugh is the only one allowed to express an opinion in a one-way transmission.  Should anyone who has an opposing opinion get an open line to his show, the man would simply cut them off or shout them down.  I suspect too that Clear Channel used a woman as their spokesperson for this like they would have used a black person to address any racial slur that Limbaugh or any other shock jock they pay to broadcast on their network.  Somehow this is supposed to mollify the derogatory character assassination they refer to as “opinion”?

Does anyone with the mental capability of a rock really think Limbaigh’s slur was an emotional opinion concerning the subject of contraception?  Even Limbaugh’s faithful listeners would have to spit their juice up upon hearing this response.  They took it for what it was and liked it – a mean and hurtful verbal bludgeon.

Characterizing Limbaugh’s ugly epithet and any from “those who disagree with him” as part of an emotional debate is ludicrous and disingenuous.  This is gutter talk pure and simple and would be designated as such by any parent who heard such words spew from their child’s mouth.

Limbaugh didn’t call the notion of contraception sluttish or whorish.  He aimed these degenerative comments at another human being who he didn’t know and he sure as hell didn’t didn’t do it in a fashion that would evoke a type of laughter from people with healthy mental pathologies.  If I was Susan’s father, I wouldn’t be laughing but would be waiting for this clown outside his studio at the end of the day to kick his butt up one end of the street and down the other.  Would any parent feel less inclined to preserve the honor of their daughter that had made such a success of her life only to be demeaned by a former(?) drug user who has been married four times and has no children himself.

 

 

For Clear Channel to view this as some SNL skit where Dan Aykroyd’s character called Jane Curtain’s character an “ignorant slut” is to pretend that those who don’t faithfully listen to Limbaugh’s show are as equally shallow-minded as those who do.  Limbaugh has made millions for Clear Channel and until they see this goldmine start to dry up they will care less about what they perceive as a momentary public outcry that will soon subside and allow things to return to some normal state – as if Limbaugh’s rants could be perceived as someone who was normal.

 

Manure is a commodity that makes a small profit for those who sell it to organic gardeners.  The manure that comes out of the mouths of some who use the public air waves to promote their agenda is also treated as a commodity in the eyes of companies like Clear Channel.  Concerns about dignity and civility have no place in their corporate thinking where they prostitute themselves for profits.  It appears some of their sponsors however are beginning to have second thoughts in their support for this clown.

“Trash talk by any other name is still trash talk”


Everyone knows that in a hostage situation, the reckless and amoral actor has the negotiating upper hand over the cautious and responsible actor because the latter is actually concerned about the life of the hostage, while the former does not care”.  – Mike Lofgren, former GOP Congressional staff member and his analogy of Tea Party members of congress who literally want to hold the US and global economies as hostages unless they get everything they want while they compromise with no one.

It has become clear to me as I’m sure it has to many of you that much of what we haggle over in the social and political debates of our time evolves way too often from extreme views that are often unrealistic.  In times past extremist views would have been repudiated by their Party, but for the sake of a common alliance with those fringe elements, many now either do one of two things; 1 – remain silent and hope it dies a quick natural death or 2 – get on board with it to strike a blow, any blow, at their adversaries, even if they know it could well have adverse affects down the road.

The battle tends to be centered around how much we can hurt the other guy rather than trying to convince thoughtful people that solutions abound and can be found in open-ended dialogues with practical and experienced people.  The silly notions that get carried too far, which only an unstable person would latch on to, get more attention than they deserve.  To push the absurdity even further some of these extremists invoke God in ways that question whether there is indeed a compassionate deity almost all of us have been raised to believe in.  Advanced media technology has aided this freak show tremendously, making people who have little critical thinking skills vulnerable and exploitable to the protestations and postulations of charismatic mad men and women.

The harm that this effects on our ability to make smart choices in the short and long-term ought to be apparent.  It is human nature that once we have locked in to something, changing our minds about it is much more difficult, especially if some rational alternative is not presented quickly and with equal or greater force.

The campaign that can get out the timeliest, shortest message to a public looking for answers will be able to plant a seed that can be nurtured over time as an issue grows naturally or is force-fed by those who planted the seed.  The messages’ credibility is often less important to the message managers than getting some people to think in ways that defy logic.  Too many spectators are already susceptible to wild conspiracy theories and ghost stories.  Some of the nonsense will prevail just enough to make the difference in close votes for candidates and issues, which is the goal these message managers work towards.

Take for example the attitude people have about government regulations.  Those on the extreme right think they are always bad in a capitalist economy and those on the extreme left think they are always necessary to constrain man’s natural greed or what is often referred to in free-market vernacular as “self-interests”.

In a conversation about tough economic times and religious faith, Rebecca Blank, a labor economist and the Robert S. Kerr Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution shows us how you can bridge such gaps in terms that speak honestly to the issues while not reneging on your own set of values.  Here she addresses the need for government regulations on the private sector.

[T]here are regular business cycles. And business cycles are in many ways embedded in the way in which the economy functions.  …  Moral failure strikes me as probably the wrong term here. It is a failure of appropriate business analysis inside a lot of these firms, but it’s also clearly a failure of appropriate regulation by the public sector. …  But anyone who knows the history of economics knows that we have a serious(sic) of price bubbles and enthusiasms and that people get caught up in the promise of something that is just going to work wonderfully and make them a lot of money. It’s part of human greed and enthusiasm.

One of the big questions of economics is how do you mitigate business cycles? How do you try to prevent bubbles and crashes? I think we have learned quite a bit in the economics profession. Some of that is being put to use right now in the Federal Reserve Bank, the Treasury, and Congress—and hopefully it will be effective. It is clearly a moral challenge, but also an economics and political challenge as to how you put together the regulatory system that protects people. 

Extreme views always eliminate those possibilities that don’t prop up their own agitated views.  Everything is either black or white. There are no gray areas, no middle ground, no room to negotiate and compromise.  While those on the right believe this is their sworn obligation to their ideological supporters those of us on the left are concerned that a centrist view has been moving more toward the right where a new center is constantly changing.

I make no bones about it, I hold liberal views.  It is who I am after many years of first being raised as a conservative christian and slowly evolving over time to come to the point where I’m now the progressive, non-religious individual some of you have come to know me as.  But the conservatism I was raised under was not the harsh and mean-spirited style we see today and my conservative Catholicism exposed the hypocrisy of those who treated blacks inferiorly in Texas during the 1950;s and 60’s.

When the radical McCarthyites became an embarrassment to the GOP back in the 1950’s, Party leaders stood up and denounced their lack of decency.  Today if anyone dare challenges the fanatics in their Party they are brow-beaten to recant or make public apologies after being publicly flawed by their corporate disciplinarians like Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and Grover Norquist.

I’m not unaware that there are some extreme views in my own political and social sphere that cross the line too often.  Such efforts often entrench a non-compromising attitude that ultimately hurts more than helps.  But I can see without bias that the right has taken the lead lately on views that have isolated us from each other to a degree not seen in quite some time.

[B]oth parties are not rotten in quite the same way. The Democrats have their share of machine politicians, careerists, corporate bagmen, egomaniacs and kooks. Nothing, however, quite matches the modern GOP.

To those millions of Americans who have finally begun paying attention to politics and watched with exasperation the tragicomedy of the debt ceiling extension, it may have come as a shock that the Republican Party is so full of lunatics. To be sure, the party, like any political party on earth, has always had its share of crackpots, like Robert K. Dornan or William E. Dannemeyer. But the crackpotoutliers of two decades ago have become the vital center today: Steve King, Michele Bachman (now a leading presidential candidate as well), Paul Broun, Patrick McHenry, Virginia Foxx, Louie Gohmert, Allen West. The Congressional directory now reads like a casebook of lunacy. SOURCE 

The extreme fringes on the social and political right have accosted the public viewer, reader and listener with an intensity that resembles the Church’s dominance in western culture in its medieval heydays.  With growing control of the sources of information today, pro-corporate messaging with its fundamentalist christian alliances are likely to exceed the Roman Catholic Church’s complete authority they once had over most of the European continent 500-600 years ago.

One might argue that the left once had the edge in areas that influence people greatly, specifically the national media.  If that were true it no longer is.  Many a wealthy tycoon who seeks to attain greater wealth by opposing regulations that impact their businesses’ bottom line have invested heavily over the years into media sources to a point where they now dominate.  They control the message delivery system and they use it to their advantage.   An entire new network, FOX, has arisen that claims to be “fair and balanced” but whose owner and president have openly stated that they lean to the pro-corporate right to balance what they feel has been a liberal bias in the media.  Meanwhile the traditional networks and many new cable stations also give time to a false equivalence of important issues.

The problem is when you assume everything other than what you produce is the opposite of that, you lose sight of objectivity and soon begin to manufacture things from the barest of real time data and reality.  Such powerful voices are able to persuade what Mike Lofgren calls the “low-information voters”.  These are the people who most of their waking hours deal with the daily grind of life and follow very little of what goes on in Washington or real science.  They are easily manipulated when they become vulnerable from what’s going on in the larger, complex social and economic world they reside in.

They have been researched by special interest groups like conservative pollster and political consultant Frank Luntz to learn what their hot-button issues and socio-political leanings are so those special interests’ views can be presented in ways to accommodate low-information voter bias and preferences for manipulative purposes. Luntz himself is credited with creating the misleading image of the “death tax” to replace the vague notion of an estate tax; a tax that only the very wealthy are affected by.  But to these low-information voters it is intended to be seen as a tax that negatively impacts all tax payers. And now we have Rick Perry muddying the waters about the Social Security Trust fund, conveying a false image of this reliable self-financing pension system as a ponzi-scheme.

We slowly erode our democratic-republic, what there’s left of it, when misinformation takes precedent over the facts.  We hurt only ourselves when people who we once considered friends are no longer considered such because they hold “radical” political views we oppose.  Those who claim to support the Constitution, which was hammered out in only about four months back in 1787 with multiple compromises being made, are unwilling to give the same consideration to their perceived political adversaries today.

Examples of this could be found on the blogosphere following President Obama’s “job speech” to the nation last Thursday.  Here are but two examples from the MSNBC blog.

This one from someone who uses the screen name Independent Republic of Texas -“Sounded like he was just elected and this was a repeat of bad ideas. The federal government needs to get out the way”

Or this even more incoherent one from Radical 1 “Blah, Blah, Spend, Spend, Blah Vote for me, Blah Spend, Spend, Blah Blah, Spend Spend”.

These are expressions of closed minds that heard only what they wanted to hear and painted them in terms of what they have always thought.  How can you have dialogue with people like this?  Does this reflect the state of mind of GOP/TeaParty congress people ?

Such people would rather help no one at all who truly need it if it means they have to make a sacrifice involving federal assistance.  They form such opinions on the erroneous notion that all government is bad at worst or government intervention of any kind is simply not constitutional.  Both are flawed concepts but both are fed by the self-interests of a wealthy powerful few who know how to use the means of disseminating information to their advantage without it being so conspicuous.

Some of the evidence that indicts the right for misleading the low-information public can be found in fact-finding web sites like Politifact where right-wing ideologues have dominated the “pants-on-fire” rulings for most of this year.   The same can be found on theFactCheck.org website that has been scrutinizing talking points for both sides.  Again the right tends to occupy most of the corrections here also.

This isn’t a fight we should be losing.  We’re not talking about doing irrational ruinous things.  We are talking about contributing to an effort that is well-founded in the constitution and the decades of Supreme Court interpretation that justify programs that enable the “general welfare” of Americans.  Through tax incentives for industry that creates new start-up jobs to the financial assistance to the most vulnerable in this country,  government enables people and the economy when used appropriately to benefit us as a nation, not as a tool to enrich those who already own a lion’s share of the wealth.

These efforts are embedded in a christian ethic too that says those that help the least of us do it for a higher purpose rather than our own material well-being.  We can’t save everyone but we should try to help those that we can and at some sacrifice to ourselves with our aim being to improve the quality of life for as many people as possible.  The precepts of good government can aid in this along with a system of entrepreneurs that ethically work with those who make their products and provide their services to the public.

The worst thing people can do today is hide in their own “self-interest” caves hoping that free-markets will make it all go away.  Perhaps it would if the principles of capitalism were honestly and faithfully followed.  But we know that is not nor has it ever been the case.  And until it does too may people will suffer needlessly from the “hands off” approach that the lunatic fringe on the right insists must occur.


Should the kumbaya efforts of many liberals toward people who constantly vote against their own self-interest die a rapid death?

A piece I recently discovered from The Runaway Lawyers blog by Mark Ames called We, The Spiteful, got my juices flowing.  It addressed the question I have commented on more than once in my articles that asked the questionwhy do many Americans, especially white males, vote against their best interests?  Mr. Ames hits on something that Liberals like myself tend to be unwilling to concede -  how assholes like Bush, Boehner and the extremist just installed as Wisconsin’s governor, Scott Walker, get elected by seemingly smart but spiteful people; people who appear to be well-adjusted but may for the most part be discontented with themselves and their lives.

What Ames is suggesting is that people who perceive themselves subconsciously, maybe even consciously, as losers, vote against their own self-interests because they are “a bunch of mean, miserable hicks … hostile to enlightened thinking”.   You might want to write off Ames too quickly as cynical with comments like “malice and spite are as American as baseball and apple pie”.   But he makes a good defense for himself.

The point can definitely be made that anti-intellectual comments are common amongst many on the right like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, two of the biggest losers in terms of moral turpitude and callousness.  And the Tea Party demonstrators at town hall meetings were definitely exemplary of spiteful people who wanted nothing to do with government “socialist” programs but wanted you to leave their Medicare and Social Security alone.

To further illustrate this class of people we need to focus our attention on the patriarch in white families.  Many white males envision themselves as dapper Don Draper on “Mad Men”.  Not the fearful weakling that has hidden his identity for years but the image he struts in front of the public that makes him envious of other men.  Sarah Palin’s popularity was elevated by white males who were attracted to her good looks and even conceived that her winks to the crowds were little cupid arrows shot straight at them, or so thought the National Review’s Rich Lowry who commented on Palin’s performance during the 2008 Vice-Presidential debates.

Palin “projects through the screen like crazy,” Lowry cooed.  “I’m sure I’m not the only male in America who, when Palin dropped her first wink, sat up a little straighter on the couch and said, “Hey, I think she just winked at me.” And her smile. By the end, when she clearly knew she was doing well, it was so sparkling it was almost mesmerizing. It sent little starbursts through the screen and ricocheting around the living rooms of America.” Perhaps for many white males it was more like a pulsating sensation around their frontal area below the waist line.

Is there anything more pathetic than some pot-bellied, middle-aged man whose thinning hair is combed in a way to give the illusion that there’s more there than there is so he can impress some attractive woman who wouldn’t normally give him the time of day?  The movie success of stars like Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Vin Diesel hinges on male audiences who watch their movies and live vicariously through the persona they portray because they are pretty much the total opposite.

I think Ames may be more right than not when he asserts that too many Liberals have been naive in their views about the people who keep putting the men and women in office that rob them of their dignity when they’re referred to as hobos and slackers for taking unemployment benefits during this recession or convincing them that health care reform is a tool of the devil.  Just take a look at the “death panel” clause in the bill that Democrats want to force on old people, many on the right are heard to exclaim.

What is there not to understand about people who attack health care reform that reduces premiums and prevents insurance companies from refusing coverage for pre-existing conditions or canceling what coverage they have when their hospital bills get too high for the insurer’s tastes?  Nobody is that stupid.  They have to be spiteful to want to vote for someone who laughs all the way to the bank because they got enough people with low self-esteem to vote against their self-interest by suggesting a political opponent was  a “socialist”, gay, a Muslim or an abortion rights advocate; those emotional wedge issues that conservatives always fall back on to push their candidates across the line in a tough races that are too close to call.

For those who doubt that smart people would cut their nose off to spite themselves let me share some information about voters here in my neck of the woods, North Texas (I know, that seems like a no brainer to the rest of the country).  While working for the Democratic candidate running against 5-term incumbent Michael Burgess I walked the streets a couple of days to get signatures so we could put my candidate on the ballot.  As I knocked on doors and talked to people I ran across several who were more interested in my candidate’s views on abortion than they were about job creation or controlling health care costs.

They all pretty much conveyed to me in some form what one lady flat-out told me.  “I won’t vote for anyone who is for abortions.” I told her I wasn’t sure where my candidate stood on the issue (I truly had not discussed this with him) but asked if that single item would lose her vote even if he represented every other value that she believed in.  She assured me it would.

Now whether this lady and the others were oblivious that there was no bill pending on abortion floating around in the U.S. Congress wasn’t clear to me, but whether they knew or not didn’t matter.  Being pro-choice was worse than being pro-life, even if you supported real life sustaining measures like cheaper, more available health care coverage or tougher regulations to insure clean air and clean water or prevented contaminated food from reaching store shelves.   Babies may die from these circumstances after they’re born but these people were not going to vote for someone they thought might support the right for some naive teen to terminate an unwanted pregnancy.  If that isn’t spiteful then Sammy Davis Jr. wasn’t black.

Now I am not of the mind that all conservatives, even all white male conservatives are spiteful.  Many of them do vote along lines with Liberals for issues that serve their best interest.  The right-wing fringe might call them RINO’s (republican in name only) but they are the traditional conservatives that still linger in the GOP despite their shrinking numbers.  It is highly conceivable however that Ames’ perception of the rest of the crowd is the only plausible reason that makes sense, as off-the-wall as it seems.

The bottom line though is that Liberals need to get over their kumbaya notion about educating “misinformed” people who vote Republican when common sense dictates the opposite.  It’s a waste of time that takes away from the necessary efforts to win elections for candidates and issues that will benefit even the most egregious white male, despite the fact that they routinely attempt to prevent this from happening.  The fact that a “huge bloc of American voters are worse than merely ‘irrational’ ” is something that Liberals need to take to heart and ask themselves as Ames does, “why the hell do we need to like them; why is ‘likable’ even a factor?”


Looking beyond his final “good night, and good luck” send off.

I thought at first he was informing us that his “Countdown” program was going to transition into something new and different when Keith Olbermann announced last Thursday night that this was his last telecast.  I grew somewhat shocked when it became clear it was not and that he was indeed leaving MSNBC for good, with no prospects of his progressive views airing again; progressive views that helped many of us make it through the nightmare administration of George W. Bush and his curmudgeon vice-president Dick Cheney.  It also served as a counterbalance for the right wing malignancy being aired on Roger Ailes’ FOX news, what Olbermann himself referred to as “FOX noise”.

Not many of us heard of Keith when he first filled in and later remained to air what was then seen as a humorous take on top stories of the day back in 2003.  But news of him spread like wildfire when he took a hard turn in our direction on August 30, 2006 as he aired his first of many “special commentaries” that would become a mainstay for him for the next few years.  This one was a blistering attack on Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and his cavalier approach to the invasion and sustained war in Iraq.

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld shares a ...

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Olbermann’s words struck at the heart of a man and an administration that had for too long got a pass from the press for sheer arrogance, thus lifting the spirit of liberals and non-liberals alike everywhere.

Within hours the blogosphere was abuzz about the man that gave new hope for sanity’s resurrection in an era when neoconservatives were pushing the limits of moral responsibility.  For me personally I hadn’t been this charged since I heard Howard Dean attack the wrong-headed policies of Bush/Cheney on Meet the Press in 2002 as he also  notified listeners about his candidacy for the 2004 Presidential nomination.

Olbermann’s “Countdown” segment quickly became a broadcast staple for liberals and turned out not to be such a bad move for a faltering MSNBC.  A recent report by the AP noted that “‘Countdown’ became MSNBC’s most popular show. Instantly, a network that had often floundered in seeking a direction molded itself after Olbermann.”       

And as it did  more of us from progressive quarters helped boost those ratings and at times challenged the popular segments of the O’Reilly Factor, Hannity and Colmes and others on FOX during that prime time period.

As his popularity grew and his voice challenged the policies and inherent failures that guided the Bush/Cheney White House, the hope that not only Democrats would regain seats in Congress in 2006 but that some of them would be like-minded liberals became like cool running water to an arid progressive landscape.  Olbermann came along and literally pulled many of us out of the doldrums that was so pervasive at the time.  Our voices were being shouted down by the more prominent right wing talking heads on FOX and radio broadcasts like Rush Limbaugh and a rising poster child for the lunatic fringe, Glenn Beck.

I don’t feel remiss at all to say that had Olberman not changed his Countdown segment with a “liberal bias” that many who would finally find the courage to challenge the Bush/Cheney White House might never have advanced as quick as they did.  Surely his  success as a broadcaster would not have reached the level it finally did.

Olberman became part of trio with the other progressives broadcasts of Jon Stewart’s “The Daily Show” and Bill Maher’s “Real Time” that pushed the mainstream media into taking a closer look at the message coming from the White House and moving away from the neoconservative viewpoints of conservative commentaries  The support base that evolved from such programs ultimately fired up a grass roots drive that not only garnered wins for Democrats in 2006 but helped pushed their Party in 2008 to some of the biggest majorities in the Senate and House that had not been seen for decades.  The coup de gras was the Presidency recaptured as Barack Obama defeated a lack-luster John McCain and a then unknown, Sarah Palin.

I will miss Keith and his Countdown program.  I must confess there were a few times when I thought he made some tacky remarks but that hardly served to deflect from what was his greater contribution to the national dialogue.  However, when there was a comment that went over the line, as it did when he commented on Louisiana Senator Vitter’s wife’s attire and demeanor in a news clip that had her standing by her unfaithful husband, Olbermann came back the next day saying “there was no justification for such a segment about what a woman, a victim of her husband’s inappropriate behavior was wearing in public… so to Mrs. Vitter and to you, the viewer, I once again apologize.”

I can only count on one hand how many times this occurred with Keith over the years, the apologies that is for faux pas he had made.  Has his adversaries over at FOX made similar conciliatory gestures for many of their gaffes, their are not enough fingers to mark their sins by.

It is still not completely clear what the circumstances were that led to Olbermann’s exit from MSNBC.  There were clearly some tensions between him and management that became exposed last November when he was suspended for violating an NBC policy on campaign contributions; a policy that didn’t seem to be evenly applied to all at the network.  This air of conflict between Keith and his bosses, combined with the weight of losing his mother and father within a short period of time may have influenced his decision to call it quits.

What does appear to be clear to me at least is that his decision to leave was not some temperamental reaction but an honest assessment of who he was, where he was and what he wanted to do.  I believe him when he said that his continued presence there was more a response to the public’s “insistence” that he carry on than his desire to stay.

There were many occasions, particularly in the last 2½ years, where all that surrounded the show – but never the show itself – was just too much for me,” Olbermann said in his exit statement. “But your support and loyalty and, if I may use the word, insistence, ultimately required that I keep going. My gratitude to you is boundless.”

His exit then is more a reflection of a man being true to himself rather than currying favor with a management whose focus always has their eye on profit margins.  His absence should not be seen by those who rallied to his side in the dark days back in 2006 as an end to what he helped start.  Instead we can thank Mr. Olbermann for being there when we needed him and choose now to sustain that impetus to achieve future progressive gains.

“Good night, and good luck”



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