Good News and Republican Delusions

The latest job numbers are out, showing an increase of 114,000 jobs in September, with unemployment down to 7.8 percent. Now, one could still complain about those numbers, stating that they aren’t good enough, and arguing that more needs to be done to spur growth through investment — as opposed to encouraging decline by cutting investment in the name of slaying the Deficit Dragon.

But conservatives aren’t doing that. They aren’t making a case for how to produce a healthy economy with decent jobs and career opportunities for all. Instead, they’re concocting conspiracy theories.

Here’s Jack Welch on Twitter…

And there are plenty of other examples, from radio host Laura Ingraham to the Republican media outlet called Fox News.

I actually think that the conservative reaction helps President Obama’s re-election campaign. A lot. By reacting with such outrage, conservatives are suggesting that these are fantastic numbers that (if true) would mean that Obama is doing a terrific job. Considering that most people will believe the numbers put forth by the non-partisan bureaucrats at the Bureau of Labor Statistics, it means that today the conservatives are making a loud and forceful argument on behalf of Barack Obama’s stewardship of the economy.

Friday Night Charts & Graphs – Non-Payers of Income Tax by State

As noticed on DailyKos, reminded of by 0dysseus, and featured on the Tax Foundation website.

Sunday Night Video – Rick Santorum Rails Against Intelligence

For me, the amazing aspect of Rick Santorum’s remark to his fellow religious fanatics that…

SANTORUM: We are never going to have the elite, smart people on our side.

…is how serious he is about it. When I first read the comment, I thought that he had perhaps delivered it sarcastically, to indicate disagreement with the designation. That may have been what he intended, but it’s not how it sounds.

Plus, take a look at his entire sentence.

SANTORUM: We are never going to have the elite, smart people on our side, because they believe they should have the power to tell you what to do.

This from a man who thinks that government should regulate women’s bodies and make health care decisions for them, while also telling other adults who they can and can’t marry. Heck, isn’t the Values Voters Summit all about telling people what to do?

It’s true. Rick Santorum is not smart; he’s dangerous.

Quote of the Day: Paul Krugman on the Republican Base

It’s not a matter of individual speeches or strategic positioning. The Republican Party is where it is because that’s where the base is. You’ve watched that whole primary process. The Republican candidates had to appeal to their base, which is by and large elderly white people arguing with empty chairs.

- Paul Krugman on ABC News “This Week” (September 9, 2012)


SEE ALSO
Lioness: VIDEO: Clint Eastwood’s “Empty Chair Obama” Speech at the GOP Convention (Transcript, too!)
therileyreilly: The Real Empty Chair: Mitt Romney

Saturday Night Video – John Lewis on Voter Rights

It’s pretty obvious after watching the respective political conventions that the Republicans can’t win on ideas. That’s one of the reasons why they failed to get the traditional convention poll bounce that Democrats are now enjoying.

For Mitt Romney to win this election, he has to rely upon:
1. Money from billionaires.
2. Voter suppression.

John Lewis gave one of the more powerful speeches at the Democratic Convention when he spoke to the second point on Thursday.

LEWIS: Brothers and sisters, do you want to go back? Or do you want to keep America moving forward? My dear friends, your vote is precious, almost sacred. It is the most powerful nonviolent tool we have to create a more perfect union. Not too long ago, people stood in unmovable lines. They had to pass a so-called literacy test, pay a poll tax. On one occasion, a man was asked to count the number of bubbles in a bar of soap. On another occasion, one was asked to count the jelly beans in a jar — all to keep them from casting their ballots.

Today, it is unbelievable that there are Republican officials trying to stop some people from voting. They are changing — they are changing the rules, cutting polling hours and imposing requirements intended to suppress the vote. The Republican leader in the Pennsylvania House even bragged that his state’s new voter ID law is “gonna allow Governor Romney to win the state.” That’s not right. That’s not fair. And that is not just.

And similar efforts have been made in Texas, Ohio, Florida, Wisconsin, Arizona, Georgia and South Carolina. I’ve seen this before. I’ve lived this before. Too many people struggled, suffered and died to make it possible for every American to exercise their right to vote.

Each election, we have to ask ourselves, how far have we come?


SEE ALSO
Texpatriate: The best DNC speeches
Odd Man Out: Update on Ohio voter suppression efforts

Quotes of the Day: Bill Clinton at the Democratic National Convention

My favorite quotes from Bill Clinton’s speech last night nominating Barack Obama for re-election. The quotes are as delivered, which is not necessarily as prepared, given that the Big Dog doesn’t always stick to the script.

CLINTON: I want to nominate a man whose own life has known its fair share of adversity and uncertainty.

Read more of this post

The DNC Tribute to Ted Kennedy

At the Democratic National Convention last night, they played this video tribute to the late Ted Kennedy. It’s well put-together, with a few particularly effective elements.

For starters, the list of Teddy’s accomplishments reveals just how diametrically opposed his values were to those of Mitt Romney and the current Republican Party.

Expanded Civil Rights
Sponsored Voting Rights
Author of Immigration Reform
Author of Consumer Protection
Champion of Women’s Rights
The Leader for LBGT Rights
For Education and Job Training
For Raising the Minimum Wage
Fought to Protect Social Security and Medicare
Fought to Pass Patients’ Bill of Rights
Leader Against the War in Iraq
Family and Medical Leave Act
Children’s Health Care

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The Daily Show: Lies, Damned Lies, and Republican Talking Points

THE DAILY SHOW: A party too patriotic for facts. A candidate too successful for taxes. A city where flip-flops are evening wear. From Tampa, Florida, this is the Republican National Convention: the Road to Jeb Bush 2016.


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Republican Racism: Birther Joke of the Day

So yesterday the brave white man running for office made a joke about how no one has accused him of being non-American. Mitt Romney was speaking in Michigan, in front of a proud sea of white spectators, who laughed and applauded at the following…

MITT ROMNEY: No one’s ever asked to see my birth certificate. They know that this is the place where we were born and raised.

Read more of this post

Tuesday Night Video – Art Not War on GOP Strategy

Last week Art Not War uploaded a new video to YouTube, calling out the GOP for their racist election strategy. I wish it moved a little quicker, because I think these online videos need to move briskly in order to capture the audience, but hey, it’s still well done and they’re excellent on the substance. Progressives (as well as centrists like President Obama) should be more vocal about the GOP deliberately slowing the economy in order to cast blame on Obama. And, I would add, to make an argument for less government.

Here you go. Connect the dots with between the GOP’s anti-growth policies, the GOP reliance on big money, and the Republicans’ racist voter suppression efforts.

H/t: The Fifth Column

Tuesday Night Video – Rachel Maddow on Republican Racism

The modern Republican Party is built on a bedrock of racism. Most political observers know about the Southern Strategy. In 1964, Barry Goldwater and the Republican Party began using “states’ rights” as a code word for their anti-black and anti-voting rights strategy to win the Southern states away from the Democratic Party. Nearly 50 years later, the Republican Party is still attacking voter rights in their attempts to suppress minority voting.

In 1980, Ronald Reagan kick-started his presidential campaign in Philadelphia, Mississippi, with a speech about states’ rights. Philadelphia is where Civil Rights activists Schwerner, Chaney, and Goodman were killed in 1964. Reagan also created imaginary Welfare Queens to infuriate white voters with this idea of black women somehow getting a free ride in this country. In 1988, the infamous Willie Horton ad made fear of black criminals a mainstay of George Herbert Walker Bush’s presidential campaign.

Now Mitt Romney is using “obvious dog whistle racism” to attack Barack Obama, lying that Obama is dismantling Welfare to Work, and we should not be surprised. Melissa Harris-Perry joins Rachel Maddow to discuss this and rightfully includes Bill Clinton in the history of this Republican-created racist strategy. For the Republicans, racism has been a mainstay of their presidential campaigns for the past half century. When might it ever stop?


SEE ALSO
Northup News: Romney’s racism isn’t even original
3ChicsPolitico: Mitt Romney’s False Welfare Attack Shows He Lacks The Principles We Need In A PRESIDENT

Monday Night Video – The Ed Show on Romney v. Democracy in Ohio

Ohio Republicans, like Fox News, are vocal opponents of democracy when it means actual democracy (enabling people to vote) rather than their version of democracy (allowing rich white males to vote). Hence the conservatives’ attempts to suppress the vote, including a move to restrict in-person early voting.

Ed Schultz is joined by former Ohio Governor Ted Strickland to discuss how Mitt Romney is attempting to spin the Democrats’ lawsuit to restore these rights as an attack on patriotism, soldiers, and patriotic soldiering apple pies. Schultz starts off his report on the situation by saying…

SCHULTZ: Once again, Mitt Romney doesn’t have the facts.

…but I disagree. Romney has all the facts. He just don’t care.

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