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Infinite Loop


© Mike Stanfill

This comic leaves out one important step in this computer program, where the congressman receives large campaign contributions from the corporations.

In a related irony, the GOP rejects the “millionaires surtax” but NPR can’t find a single millionaire who objects to it. And neither could Republicans in the House and Senate, or business groups that have been lobbying against the surtax.

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Ron Paul points out the obvious

Whether or not you think he’d make a good president (and I personally don’t think he would), I’m really glad Ron Paul is running for president, since it gives him a platform to point out truths (which is the job that our corporate-owned mainstream media is too scared or too dishonest to do).

For example, that the Bush administration wanted to invade Iraq before 9/11, and simply used the 9/11 attacks as an excuse. Thursday night, Paul repeated the charge. “Think of what happened after 9/11, the minute before there was any assessment, there was glee in the administration because now we can invade Iraq, and so the war drums beat. … Extremists have taken over, and they’re the ones who run the foreign policy and have convinced us to go along with all these wars. … That’s exactly what they’re doing now with Iran.”

Rather than dispute the charge, a former Bush press secretary responded to the “glee” charge by attacking Paul, tweeting “The man is nuts.”

The 9/11 attacks were also used as an excuse to pass the PATRIOT act. Paul says that the act was written 20 years before 9/11 (during the Reagan administration), and was just waiting for an event like 9/11 when they could pull it out.

Paul also attacked the “war on drugs”, pointing out that “A lot more people died from the consequences of the war on drugs than the drugs themselves.”

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Jon Stewart is going to hell

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It couldn’t happen to me … whoops!

The Republicans have managed to frame public opinion about Obama with the constant media noise about how he hasn’t accomplished anything. It doesn’t matter that the Republicans have filibustered just about everything Obama does, but that hasn’t stopped the media from convincing former Obama supporters to feel betrayed by him.

For example, the LA Times has a story on a middle-class woman who campaigned for Obama, but after the election felt let down by him. She changed her registration from Democrat to Independent, and even blacked out the top of the “h” on her Obama bumper sticker so it would read “got nope” instead of “got hope”.

The good news is that she has changed her mind and issued a public apology to Obama. The bad news is why she changed her mind — she was recently diagnosed with stage three breast cancer. Two years ago, after her husband was laid off from his job they faced a difficult choice — they only had enough money to either pay their mortgage or pay for their health insurance (the latter bill being larger than the former!), so they took a desperate but necessary gamble and lost.

Without insurance or enough money to cover the expensive treatments, this could have been a death sentence for this mother of two children, but she found a lifesaver (perhaps literally) in a part of Obama’s healthcare reform that has already kicked in — the “Pre-existing Condition Insurance Plan”. In her words “The application was short, the premiums are affordable, and I have found the people who work in the administration office to be quite compassionate (nothing like the people I have dealt with over the years at other insurance companies.)”

A Harvard study says that more people die from lack of adequate health insurance each year than died in the 9/11 attacks. The next time someone complains about Obama not accomplishing anything, point out that Obama was able to pass health care reform, something that had eluded every prior president who tried. And now the Republicans are campaigning that they will repeal it (or find a way to gut it) and go back to the dark ages.

Hopefully, it won’t take a life threatening disaster to change your mind about Obama. Try to ignore the noise machine and look at the facts. As our mother with breast cancer puts it:

So this is my public apology. I’m sorry I didn’t do enough of my own research to find out what promises the president has made good on. I’m sorry I didn’t realize that he really has stood up for me and my family, and for so many others like us. I’m getting a new bumper sticker to cover the one that says “Got nope.” It will say “ObamaCares.”

Another blogger has picked up this story, and the best part are the comments on it.

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That’s So Gay

Presidential candidate Rick Perry released a campaign ad that starts “I’m not ashamed to admit that I’m a Christian, but you don’t need to be in the pew every Sunday to know there’s something wrong in this country when gays can serve openly in the military but our kids can’t openly celebrate Christmas or pray in school.” You can watch it here if you have the stomach.

But what makes it ironic is what Perry is wearing in the ad:

As Taegan Goddard of Political Wire tweeted yesterday Perry is wearing the same jacket in his anti-gay ad as the late Heath Ledger wore in Brokeback Mountain. Is this a subliminal message that Perry identifies with that movie? If so, maybe there is someone out there who can collect this million-dollar reward.

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Class War for Dummies


© Tom Tomorrow

Given the situation, why was the media so surprised by the Occupy Wall Street protests? Oh that’s right, the media is owned by the one percent!

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Stocking Stuffer

Commentary by Ed Stein:

I couldn’t resist this one. After seeing ads for expensive new cars with big gift bows on top, diamond necklaces and fancy winter vacations, I started wondering what the average American will be getting from Santa this year. With so many unemployed, so many forced out of their homes, so many desperate, and so much of the nation’s wealth going to so few, millions of families won’t be having much of a Christmas.

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Health War

Speaking at a Christian college in Iowa, presidential candidate Rick Santorum was asked an interesting question by a student. Citing a study from Harvard University, the student asked if “God appreciates the fact that we have 50 to 100 thousand uninsured Americans dying due to a lack of healthcare every year.”

“Dying?” he countered. “I reject that number completely, that people die in America because of lack of health insurance.”

If Santorum doesn’t like the facts, he just denies them. He then added insult to injury with the standard talking point of blaming the victims:

“People die in America because people die in America. And people make poor decisions with respect to their health and their healthcare. And they don’t go to the emergency room or they don’t go to the doctor when they need to. And it’s not the fault of the government for not providing some sort of universal benefit.”

Santorum displays an amazing lack of Christian morals, as well as a willingness to ignore established facts. This is a sure sign that conservatives are going to ramp up their disinformation campaign against health care reform in the run-up to the 2012 election.

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Iron Knee Is Back!

It’s been lots of fun but I gotta run!

– Iron Filing

UPDATE: Yup, I’m back, but totally jetlagged. Will start posting again soon. Thanks so much to Iron Filing for filling in while I was on vacation. – iron knee

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MICROPHONE CHECK! vs. mic chk


©W. Wuerker

Scott Turow says it well in a Bloomberg post:

The bedrock of our democracy is embodied in the most famous line of the Declaration of Independence, “All men are created equal.” Our belief in the equal dignity and value of every human being has led to the fundamental precept of one person, one vote — a tangible recognition that each citizen deserves an equal say in who governs her or him.

By treating money as an analog for speech, the court’s post-Buckley jurisprudence has figuratively allowed the rich to speak through microphones while the poor can barely whisper, and tolerates a situation in which the voices of contributors are amplified to the point that they drown out the opinions of mere voters. I have never understood how permitting the wealthy so much greater influence over the political process can be squared with the vision of equality on which the country was founded.

I think it’s important to keep in mind that money isn’t the problem in politics, it’s how much and where it comes from. If a candidate can raise a million in $10 donations from 100,000 individuals then more power to him. If a Donald Trump creates a PAC and funds it with a million dollars to attack one candidate, then more power to Trump. Freedom of speech just isn’t the same if no one can hear you over the din from the well funded speakers.
– Iron Filing

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Good Point, Bad Point: Dialectic or Diatribe on Trump Debate

Again, two points of view are presented but you’ll have to decide for yourself which is the good point and which is the bad.
– Iron Filing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cKVTljo-5jA&feature=player_detailpage’

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Late Night Political Humor

“Republican candidate Rick Perry is denying rumors that his top advisers are being demoted. Yep, Perry was like, ‘I want to make it clear that at no point in this campaign have I had any advisers.'” – Jimmy Fallon

“I don’t know if you know the Occupy L.A. protesters have been evicted. They all were evicted. As of this morning, according to reports, and all that was left of their campsite was trash, empty tents and the smell of urine. Then someone pointed out that was not Occupy Los Angeles, that was Gary Busey’s house.” – Conan O’Brien

“After two months, the LAPD broke up the Occupy protest outside city hall here in Los Angeles last night. Surprisingly, the police didn’t find any drugs on the premises, which means that the police are not very good at finding drugs.” – Jimmy Kimmel

“How many of you are here just because you got kicked out of Occupy L.A.? The police shut down the camp, so it’s time for the homeless people to go back to the public library where they belong. And at last the park can be returned to its rightful owners, crack salesmen.” – Jimmy Kimmel

“Riot police arrested hundreds of people outside city hall, still less violent than Black Friday at every Walmart in America.” – Jimmy Kimmel

“Occupy L.A. encampment is over and with it, the world’s longest hacky sack game comes to an end. Meanwhile, in New York tonight, the annual lighting of the Christmas tree. A dozen protesters are living in the tree right now. ” – Jimmy Kimmel

“Congress may allow Americans to start selling horse meat for human consumption. When they heard the news, McDonald’s unveiled their new breakfast offering, the Sea Biscuit biscuit.” – Conan O’Brien

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Scrapitalism: Blogging the Freeways

Regardless of possible safety concerns and issues of esthetics, FREEWAYBLOGGER has reinvented the soapbox for the modern Commons.

Sign viewed by 90,000+ drivers per day for 3 days

View more images – many more images – at FREEWAYBLOGGER’s website.
– Iron Filing

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Huntsman and Paul Available for Real Debate

While the lesser candidates are kissing Trump’s pinkie ring at the NewsMax Reality Debate Show, Huntsman and Paul should have a real debate.

©Paul Szep

Clown Donald Trump is hosting the next Republicandog and pony show. Seems appropriate to me but Jon Huntsman and Ron Paul disagree; apparently thinking that running for president should be serious business.

In declining to participate in the glorification of Diddly Trump, Paul’s campaign chairman Jesse Benton said,

Mr. Trump’s selection is also wildly inappropriate because of his record of toying with the serious decision of whether to compete for our nation’s highest office, a decision he appeared to make frivolously.

Jon Huntsman spokesman, Tim Miller’s response in an email to Business Insider was appropriately snarky:

Lol. We look forward to watching Mitt and Newt suck-up to The Donald with a big bowl of popcorn

What’s really ironic is that Paul and Huntsman could have a good substantive debate on their own without the distraction of the clown candidates.
– Iron Filing

UPDATE: Romney is available too. He’d be welcome in a debate sandwich between Paul and Huntsman

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False Memories of the Bush Administration

A New York Times Book Review of memoirs by Dick Cheney and Don Rumsfeld is notable for it’s imminently quotable subtitle: In retrospect, Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney realize they were right about everything.


©David Horsey

The books themselves appear to be a waste of wood fiber but the review, Memories of the Bush Administration, is well worth reading as a concise history of “the two most important figures (other than the president) in the years of terrorism and war.” My criticisms of the review are all minor quibbles such as disagreeing with the qualifying “(other than the president)” since Cheney was more influential than his puppet Bush, and a later misleading statement that Bush chose Cheney as his vice president in 2000. Cheney chose Cheney, Bush merely complied.

– Iron Filing

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