Skip to content

The Real Arms Problem

crmlu121223
© Mike Luckovich

Is anyone else worried about Political Weapons of Mass Destruction?

Share

All I Want For Christmas

In s must-read article in The Daily Beast, conservative Mark McKinnon says:

What I want for Christmas is a new Republican Party. Or I’ll take the old Republican Party of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, or George W. Bush. What I don’t want is the Republican Party we have today. As former George W. Bush and John McCain adviser Nicolle Wallace said, “I’m just tired of the Republican Party being the Stupid Party.”

So what is the big problem with the Republican Party?

But here’s the deeper point and the bigger problem for the GOP. Increasingly, it is becoming clear that the party is against everything and for nothing.

Nothing on taxes. Nothing on gun control. Nothing on climate change. Nothing on gay marriage. Nothing on immigration reform (or an incremental, piece-by-piece approach, which will result in nothing). It’s a very odd situation when the losing party is the party refusing to negotiate. It may be how you disrupt, but it is not how you govern, or how you ever hope to regain a majority.

And so, we have a Republican Party today willing to eliminate any prospect for a decent future for anyone, including itself, if it cannot be a future that is 100 percent in accordance with its core beliefs and principles. That’s not governing. That’s just lobbing hand grenades. If you’re only standing on principle to appear taller, then you appear smaller. And the GOP is shrinking daily before our eyes.

Ronald Reagan was long thought to be the most conservative of Republicans. And by any standard today he is the most popular Republican in modern history. Yet he raised taxes 11 times, supported a ban on assault rifles and the Brady Bill, which mandated background checks, and established amnesty for 3 million undocumented workers.

McKinnon has thrown down the challenge. Now what we need is a New Year’s resolution from the GOP to stop believing their own propaganda and get to work. Real work. As the mother of John Yoo (the lawyer who formulated Dubya’s justification for torture) said about the Republican party:

To protect the ego, you have a defense mechanism: denial and projection. You deny your problem, saying it’s your fault and not mine. Instead of projection, blaming other people, we have to think of a positive solution. But I didn’t hear that yet. They are still grieving. I hope not for more than six months. The grieving process should only be six months. If it goes on for more than six months, it could go into a major depression.

Share

The Latest in “Fair and Balanced”

Fox News continues to create their own bizarre reality. As of the time I’m posting this, an article from Dec 20 in Fox Nation still says “Bikers Turn Out to Protect Newtown Mourners from Left-Wing Westboro Cult”.

Yeah right, the ultra-conservative “God Hates Fags” WBC is a left-wing cult. And Fox News is fair and balanced. And my Christmas ham just started flying.

But it doesn’t stop there. They then say “Conservative bikers turned out yesterday to protect Newtown mourners from Democrat Fred Phelps and his Westboro cult from protesting.” Ah, so the leader of the WBC (you know, the people who own the website BeastObama.com and who protested Clinton’s second inauguration) is a Democrat? Really? And why would his (purported) political affiliation have anything to do with this (purported) news story? And those bikers were conservative? Really?

And they can’t get anything right. They give attribution to the Cochrane Times (a small-town Canadian newspaper), but the article there calls the WBC a “vocal right-wing Christian group”. And those “conservative” bikers? They’re from New York, that bastion of right-wing motorcycle clubs.

And by the way, the WBC didn’t even show up. I guess even they realized that it might turn into their own funeral.

And just in case Fox News edits their story to remove the gratuitous political references, you can see it here, or here.

Share

The Year in Crazy, Part One

This is always my favorite Tom Tomorrow comic of the year, for bringing back such fond memories!


© Tom Tomorrow

Stay tuned for part two!

Share

Is the NRA doing for Gun Rights what the WBC is doing for Christianity?

I have to confess that I stole that headline from Fark, which phrased it as “The NRA: Doing for gun rights what the Westboro Baptist Church does for Christianity since 1871”.

It is too bad that the NRA couldn’t keep their fool mouths shut after the Conn. school shooting. Their initial statement pissed off just about everyone, including gun owners. But they just doubled down.

Appearing on “Meet the Press” on Sunday, NRA spokesperson Wayne LaPierre said:

Israel had a whole lot of school shootings, until they did one thing. They said we’re going to stop it and they put armed security in every school and they have not had a problem since then.

But Israeli security experts quickly said that LaPierre doesn’t know what he’s talking about. A spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry said “What removed the danger was not the armed guards.” Another expert pointed out that Israel very strict laws licensing and controlling firearms, saying what should be obvious:

In a country where hundreds of thousands of people carry firearms, it is essential to manage the training, licensing and authorization of those who wish to be armed.

You know you’re in trouble when you compliment Israel by using them as a good example, and they respond that you are full of crap.

Back in the US, the response to NRA statements has been equally negative. Even Senator Joe Lieberman said “I have found the statements by the NRA over the last couple of days to be really disheartening, because the statements seem to not reflect any understanding about the slaughter of children.” Congressman Chris Murphy (D-Conn) called LaPierre’s interview “the most revolting, tone deaf statement I’ve ever seen.”

People who have followed this blog for a while know that I believe in the Second Amendment right for people to own guns. But that doesn’t mean we can’t have common sense laws that require background checks, gun training, and sensible safety rules for all gun owners. And most people — including gun owners — agree. Why is the NRA so out of touch with their own constituency?

Share

The Eve of Destruction

Matt Wuerker
© Matt Wuerker

Have a happy Christmas Eve and a merry Christmas!

Share

Corrupt Regulations Are the Problem

Here’s an interesting twist on an old political argument, and it’s coming from the Harvard Business Review no less.

Some politicians like to argue for less regulation — regulations are bad, and stifle the economy. Others like to argue for more regulation — regulations protect the middle class. But the problem isn’t regulation per se, the problem is corruption.

This distinction should be obvious to us. After all, many of the same people who are arguing against some regulations, are arguing just as strongly for other regulations. Mainly regulations that don’t apply to them. Sound familiar? It’s just like entitlements, where “entitlement” is defined as “money someone else receives”. Or pork.

The corruption that the Harvard article is talking about is money in politics. This isn’t about overt (and illegal) bribes in return for favors. They are talking about corruption that amazingly enough has been made legal in this country. And yet the damage it does to our economy and to our future is far worse than any illegal corruption.

For example, copyrights. Every time the copyright on Mickey Mouse is about to expire so that he will enter the public domain, Congress passes another bill to extend the length of copyrights. Somehow, much shorter copyrights were enough to encourage Walt Disney to come up with his character in the first place, but now it makes more sense to big content corporations to spend more money on campaign contributions to buy the regulations they want, rather than on developing new characters and stories.

Or the thousands of regulations that make it more difficult for anyone to start a new automobile company. The National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) recently sued Tesla Motors for opening up stores to sell their cars, because laws in many states prohibit car factories from owning their own dealerships. Can you imagine if Best Buy sued Apple because they opened up their own stores? In Indiana, there are laws that require dealerships to house at least 10 vehicles of the type that the dealer is selling. That’s easy for car companies like GM or Ford, but makes no sense for new companies like Tesla or Fisker.

I recently toured a museum that holds several hundred antique cars from the 1800s and early 1900s, and the guide stated that back then there were over 4000 different car manufacturers, all competing and innovating. But today, we are left with car companies that are “too big to fail” and whose major innovations are things like center-mounted brake lights and improved gas milage, which were forced down their throats.

Another huge example are regulations that hurt companies that are innovating on the Internet. For example, AirBNB, which lets normal citizens rent out spare bedrooms that would otherwise go empty, or Uber, which uses the Internet to let independent taxi drivers book fares. Both companies are being fought by trying to impose new regulations that are all but designed to put these upstarts out of business. For example, the International Association of Transportation Regulators is proposing a new set of regulations, which would prevent the use of GPS to measure the precise time and distance of a trip (using GPS is much easier and cheaper than installing a traditional taxi meter). The new regulations would also prohibit anyone from making a booking less than 30 minutes from the pickup time. Why? You guessed it, so drivers won’t accept electronic hails.

Similar regulations and rules are being used against disruptive technologies and companies, including NetFlix, which is forced to pay more to transport movies over the Internet than large incumbent companies like Comcast.

In general, the corrupt regulations are the ones that benefit incumbent companies at the expense of innovators and upstarts. Not surprisingly, the incumbent companies that are benefiting the most from these corrupt regulations are some of the least innovative. Imagine the problems we could solve if we had true competition and innovation in energy (rather than subsidizing big oil and coal), transportation, housing, and other sectors.

Not mentioned in their article (but in the same category of corrupt regulations) are tax breaks given to large companies to get them to locate factories in a specific state or county. How much does that hurt small businesses, who are the real innovators?

What benefits accrue when these regulations are eliminated? A few years ago, the city where I live rewrote their health laws to make it easier for street vendors to operate. The changes didn’t compromise health or cleanliness, they just eliminated regulations that made it next to impossible for food carts to operate. As a result, my city has undergone a food renaissance. Did removing these regulations hurt the large restaurants that they were ostensibly protecting? Not really. In fact, many of them opened up their own food carts. Often, successful food carts have graduated and opened up their own restaurants. The creation of a vibrant food culture has helped all restaurants, not just the food carts, and grown a supply of excellent cooks and restaurant entrepreneurs.

I’m not arguing against all regulations. There are definitely many areas where we need more regulations. I’m arguing against corrupt regulations. This is an important distinction that we should be careful to make when we are discussing whether or not we need regulations.

Share

Armed and Dangerous


© Matt Bors

The NRA is proposing that the solution to school violence is to add more guns. Their proposal is to have an armed guard at every school. But they forget that at the worst school shooting in our history, Columbine High School, there was an armed guard there, and that wasn’t enough to stop that tragedy.

Meanwhile, an 11-year-old showed up for school on Monday, armed with a .22, which his parents had encouraged him to bring for protection. But at recess, he put the gun to a fellow 6th grade student’s head and said he was going to kill her.

Yeah, right. We definitely need more of that.

Share

Actual Voter Fraud!

The vast majority of what has been reported as “voter fraud” has actually been voter registration fraud. For example, the supposed “voter fraud” cases that were used to destroy ACORN were actually cases where people who were paid to register voters submitted extra registrations in order to get paid more, and almost certainly resulted in no actual voting fraud.

So it is interesting to see an actual, bona fide case of voter fraud. In this case a Democratic state representative from Massachusetts has pleaded guilty to casting absentee ballots for voters who were either ineligible or were not aware that ballots were being submitted in their names.

As a result, the guilty party will resign and will not be allowed to run for office for five years.

It is also interesting to note that none of the current voter ID laws that claim to be fighting voter fraud (but are really thinly veiled attempts to suppress the vote) would have prevented this actual voter fraud.

Share

And Justice Wept

What happened to the American dream? The dream that anyone can make it if they work hard enough, and maybe have a little luck. That “you can make it if you try”. The dream that all men are created equal, and that nobody is above the law.

As if it wasn’t bad enough that corporations have been given the rights of people, now we see in plain sight that corporations have become our version of an aristocracy, with rights above and beyond what are given to “normal” people. But what else can you think when a large, multi-national bank admits to extremely serious crimes — including manipulating interest rates, aiding terrorists, and laundering money for drug cartels — and their punishment is no worse than a slap on the wrist?

We used to have “too big to fail”. Now we have “too big to prosecute”. As the NY Times put it:

State and federal authorities decided against indicting HSBC in a money-laundering case over concerns that criminal charges could jeopardize one of the world’s largest banks and ultimately destabilize the global financial system.

They are now above the law.

In fact, they are being rewarded. The government is bragging about their record $1.92 billion settlement with HSBC for their wrongdoing, but the good news that they aren’t even being indicted for their crimes has pushed their stock price up 10% in the last month, raising their market capitalization by $19 billion. Who is laughing all the way to the bank now? $1.9 billion may sound big but HSBC’s profits last year were $21.9 billion.

As Matt Taibbi puts it “Outrageous HSBC Settlement Proves the Drug War is a Joke“.

Or as Glenn Greenwald notes, the same day that the government let HSBC off from criminal prosecution for massive drug laundering, they sentenced a 27-year-old black single mother of three to life in prison without parole for a minor drug offense — her former boyfriend had hidden a lockbox containing a half kilo of cocaine in her attic without her knowledge. Even the judge in the case said that what she had done “does not warrant a life sentence” but he had no choice due to strict sentencing laws.

Greenwald’s bottom line? “Justice is dead in America“.

Share

I’m not a birther, but…

The joke used to be that people would say “I’m not a racist, but…” and then go on to say racist things.

Well, the GOP apparently has a new version of that. It may not be acceptable to say racist things in public, but it is ok to accuse our first black president of having an invalid birth certificate.

When Arizona’s eleven electors met in order to cast their electoral college votes (for Mitt Romney of course), the Associated Press reported that three of them went “birther”, and “spoke up during the ceremony to voice doubts about Obama’s eligibility as a native-born U.S. citizen.”

One of these three electors is the chairman of the Arizona Republican party. So a local radio station — thinking that his statement had somehow been taken out of context — invited him on the air. Their first question was “are you a birther?” to which he answered “No”.

But then he went on to explain that he didn’t think the president had produced a “true document,” and that the president’s birth certificate “doesn’t ring with [him].”

Sure sounds like a birther to me.

Share

Clutching


© Clay Bennett

How did America react to the shootings? By buying up assault weapons in record numbers in anticipation of tougher gun laws.

Share

Enter the Internet


© Tony Auth

Is social media really changing what is politically possible? I hope so.

Share

Late Night Political Humor

“According to the Mayan calendar, December 21 marks the end of the world. Then why am I Christmas shopping?” – David Letterman

“December 21, the end of the world, is a Friday. So it means dress is casual.” – David Letterman

“Japan and South Korea are on high alert after North Korea successfully launched a long-range rocket. Both countries are surprised by North Korea’s successful launch, but definitely not as surprised as North Korea.” – Jimmy Fallon

“New Jersey Democrats say Republican Governor Chris Christie will be impossible to beat. It’s unclear if they’re talking about the 2013 governor’s race or Coney Island hot dog-eating contest.” – Conan O’Brien

“A company in California designed a flying drone that will drop burritos over your house using a parachute — or as Chris Christie calls that, ‘the best forecast ever!'” – Jimmy Fallon

“According to the latest census poll, a large number of Californians are moving out of state and going to places like Texas and Nevada. Look, I know a lot of us are disgusted with the Lakers, but that’s no reason …” – Jay Leno

“The Lakers are so bad, when Mitt Romney talks about the 47 percent, he means Dwight Howard’s free throw shooting.” – Jay Leno

Share

NRA – Not Really Accountable


© Matt Bors

Ironically, suggesting that we not talk about guns in the wake of a massacre is just as political as talking about them.

Share