Monday, October 31, 2011

Goodnight, Herman.



It's over.

NBC News has confirmed that one woman received a settlement from the National Restaurant Association after complaining about inappropriate sexual conduct by Herman Cain.

NBC News is not disclosing the name of the woman nor characterizing who she is.

What OWS has accomplished already.

Yep.
Two-thirds of likely voters say the American middle class is shrinking, and 55 percent believe income inequality has become a big problem for the country, according to this week’s The Hill Poll.

The Secessionist, wasted.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Oligarchy

A recent study of concentration of corporate control says that 737 entities have accumulated 80% of the control of the 43,060 Transnational Corporations (TNCs) listed in the Orbis database. I describe the methodology of the authors here, and it appears to be a sensible contribution to the task of identifying control in the complex ownership structures that make up the economy. There are valid criticisms of the results, but I believe it provides evidence that we live in an Oligarchy.
I don't know what the answer is, but I think it involves lower taxes for rich people and less regulation.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

The right really, really hates their presidential candidates.

George Will has a hissy fit.
Romney, supposedly the Republican most electable next November, is a recidivist reviser of his principles who is not only becoming less electable; he might damage GOP chances of capturing the Senate. Republican successes down the ticket will depend on the energies of the Tea Party and other conservatives, who will be deflated by a nominee whose blurry profile in caution communicates only calculated trimming.
You know it's bad when Village Republicans are hoping those incredibly popular Teabaggers will bail them out.

Hey, George -- if the Teabaggers are such a force in conservative politics, why don't they have their own candidate?

Friday, October 28, 2011

Romney panders to the flat-earthers.

Then again, give him a minute. He'll probably change his mind before the weekend.

Terrible political messaging from the Obama administration, Part 1,342.

Good God.
“On the domestic side, both Democrats and Republicans have really made it very difficult for the president to be anything like a chief executive,” Daley says. “This has led to a kind of frustration.”
Yes, one party routinely compares the president to history's greatest monsters, votes en masse against every piece of legislation he champions and has publicly stated time and time again that they're single greatest priority is removing him from office -- and then there's that pain-in-the-ass Nancy Pelosi.

Facepalm.

Meet Mark Block, Herman Cain's Karl Rove.

What would the wingnut reaction have been if David Axelrod or Mark Penn had a rap sheet like this?

Block has been accused of voter supression and was banned from running Wisconsin political campaigns for three years to settle accusations he coordinated a judge's re-election campaign with a special interest group.

Records show Block has faced foreclosure on his home, a tax warrant by the Internal Revenue Service and a lawsuit for an unpaid bill. He also acknowledges he was arrested twice for drunken driving.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Like a stone.

That is some drop.

The bulls are running wild.

Damn.

Clearly, what we need to do now is lower taxes on rich people and slash regulations.

Alpha male candidates who duck out of debates.

RedState:
Right now, this very moment, we have a candidate for the GOP nomination who is, by far, the biggest alpha male conservative in a generation. 
Bloomberg:
Rick Perry, whose performance in a series of Republican presidential debates has corresponded with a steep decline in his polling, plans to limit participation in future face-offs ahead of early state nominating contests.


The concession by the Texas governor, made by an aide on CNN last night, could benefit former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, who has taken a lead over his party’s contestants in the states with the first four primaries and caucuses.
Being too scared to face your opponents is very manly!


Wednesday, October 26, 2011

But no one calls it crazy.

Drum:
In the modern Republican Party, tax policy isn't really about tax policy anymore. It's mostly just meant to be evocative, a demonstration that you're really, truly part of the family. So the crazier it is, the better. Nobody — least of all Republican voters — seriously expects any of these proposals to become law.
This is absolutely true. The real problem, however, is that no one in the media (or Democratic leaders, for that matter) acknowledges that this is all make believe craziness. These proposals are treated seriously and given careful consideration and analysis.

Imagine an alternate universe where Democrats running for president unveiled competing plans to, say,  raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans to 90%, create single-payer health care and nationalize the oil industry.

They would be mocked endlessly and derided as unelectable extremists.

"I was JOKING!"

The Secessionist pulls out the old standby.

UPDATE

As does Willard.

There are so many right-wing shibboleths, it must be hard to keep track of which ones are still operative.

If you're not cheating, you're not trying.

Taibbi:
Success is the national religion, and almost everyone is a believer. Americans love winners. But that's just the problem. These guys on Wall Street are not winning – they're cheating. And as much as we love the self-made success story, we hate the cheater that much more.

In this country, we cheer for people who hit their own home runs – not shortcut-chasing juicers like Bonds and McGwire, Blankfein and Dimon.

That's why it's so obnoxious when people say the protesters are just sore losers who are jealous of these smart guys in suits who beat them at the game of life. This isn't disappointment at having lost. It's anger because those other guys didn't really win. And people now want the score overturned.

All weekend I was thinking about this “jealousy” question, and I just kept coming back to all the different ways the game is rigged. People aren't jealous and they don’t want privileges. They just want a level playing field, and they want Wall Street to give up its cheat codes...

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Keep it classy, PJTV.


Wow.

(And I'm not linking to this shit.)

GOP base getting too wingnutty for Pat Robertson.

A victory for smaller government in Florida.

Suck on this, Rick Scott.

A federal judge on Monday temporarily blocked Florida's controversial law requiring welfare applicants be drug tested in order to receive benefits.

Judge Mary Scriven issued a temporary injunction against the state, writing in a 37-page order that the law could violate the Constitution's Fourth Amendment ban on illegal search and seizure.

"The constitutional rights of a class of citizen are at stake," Scriven wrote in an order filed in the Middle District of Florida Orlando Division.

[...]

"If invoking an interest in preventing public funds from potentially being used to fund drug use were the only requirement to establish a special need," Scriven wrote, "the state could impose drug testing as an eligibility requirement for every beneficiary of every government program. Such blanket intrusions cannot be countenanced under the Fourth Amendment."

Florida should be drug-testing the Republicans who voted for this law.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Saturday, October 22, 2011

The new, less inspirational Marco Rubio.

Benen noted that a few days ago, Sen. Anchor Baby's website read,
In 1971, Marco was born in Miami to Cuban-born parents who came to America following Fidel Castro’s takeover.
It now reads,
Marco was born in Miami in 1971 to Cuban exiles who first arrived in the United States in 1956.
Even "exiles" seems like quite a bit of a stretch, given that Batista's army routed Castro and Guevera's ragtag forces in December 1956.

Mitt Romney, neocon.

It's probably of the "Obama's for it so I must be against it" variety, but Americans have hated the Iraq war for 7 years -- so I don't know what he's gaining here.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Marco Rubio, anchor baby.


It really sucks when all that nativist garbage boomerangs on you, eh Republicans?

USA! USA! USA!

Geez.
The government has released the first official payroll data for 2010. As you might expect, the numbers aren’t too encouraging. The “raw” average wage--net compensation divided by total number of workers--was $39,959.30, according to the data from the Social Security Administration. But the median wage is far lower: 50 percent of workers earned less than or equal to $26,363.55 for 2010.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

You're going to have to do better than that, Herman.

Uh-huh.
Reacting to the flurry of stories about his abortion position, Herman Cain just tweeted, “I’m 100% pro-life. End of story.”
You wish, dude.

Michelle Malkin: not liking Fox News = bigotry.


One odd tic wingnuts I've noticed about wingnuts over the years is that they get extremely upset when someone criticizes Faux News. It's especially strange in light of the fact that Faux is so fair and balanced and not at all biased.

This is Adam Levine of the band Maroon 5.

If you have tween-age daughters or aspiring pop star sons, you know who this guy is. And yes, you may even have been guilty of downloading his songs on iTunes or buying his CDs.

Pleading guilty.

Well, if you also happen to be conservative and enjoy Fox News, Adam Levine doesn’t want your money.

He doesn’t want Fox News playing his music.[...]

There’s a word for this kind of irrational, self-defeating, blanket hatred: Bigotry.

When wingnuts attack NPR or the New York Times or Wonkette or call for boycotts of CBS or Katie Couric or whatever they're having a ragegasm about that day -- I shrug. I honestly could care less what they think of those media organizations -- which I have no emotional attachment to.

But some musician disses her beloved Faux and the Anchor Baby flips out and calls him a bigot.

Just bizarre.

And there's goes Herman Cain's 15 minutes.

Farewell, Herman. We hardly knew ye.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

This is gonna leave a mark.



UPDATE

Apparently, Willard's people have pulled this video down. It was a scathing mockery of the Secessionist's debate performances.

Wonder why they pulled it?

Texas idiot.

Pretty much.
While there were plenty of negative words associated with Romney, such as "boring" and "fake," the most extreme negativity was reserved for Rick Perry. After "Texas" (55 mentions), the most common response to Perry was "No" (16 mentions) and "Idiot" (15 mentions).

Remember, Kathryn Jean Lopez was an editor at the National Review.


No, I don't think this is parody.
What does abortion have to do with the Star Trek transporter?

No more tax breaks for big oil!

Oooops.
I do hope Perry is pressed on his statement: “We don’t need to be subsidizing energy in any form or fashion.” That would seem to mean that the Texas governor is against all the tax breaks for oil and gas. Is that really his position now?
I'm going to go with 'no.'

UPDATE

It does look like the Secessionist has come out against subsidies before, albeit only after totally gutting regulations.

Petulance isn't very presidential.

The Secessionist, trying to get tough with Anderson Cooper.
"You ask the questions -- I get to answer like I want to."
Cringe-worthy.

And lookie here:
A new NBC/Marist poll out today shows Rick Perry in third place in two key primary states. In South Carolina, he's at 9 percent, behind Herman Cain at 30 percent and Mitt Romney at 26 percent. The standings are similar in Florida, where Perry has 8 percent, Cain has 32 percent and Romney has 31 percent.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

The right hearts El Rushbo.

Friedersdorf:
George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush ought to be embarrassed that they invited Limbaugh to the White House. The Claremont Institute, whose work I often respect, ought to be mortified that they sullied their Statesmanship Award by bestowing it upon Limbaugh. Shame on National Review for celebrating one of conservatism's most controversial figures in a symposium that didn't even acknowledge his many critics on the right. In it Heather Higgins remarked on "Rush's long track record of accurate predictions and analyses," Kathryn Jean Lopez commented on his "graciousness and humility," Mary Matalin said "he epitomizes what we all aspire to be, both as citizens and individuals," Andrew McCarthy claims his message is "always" delivered with "optimism, civility, and good humor," and Jay Nordlinger asserted that "he is almost the antithesis of the modern American, in that he doesn't whine." Every last claim is too absurd to satire, let alone defend.

Shame on The Heritage Foundation for sponsoring Limbaugh's radio show, and on the Media Research Center and Human Events for honoring Limbaugh's excellence ... and the list goes on, including the millions of people who support his radio show because they agree with Limbaugh's ideology, even though they'd be outraged if a liberal trafficked in similarly poisonous rhetoric.
And lest we forget, he was the keynote speaker at CPAC.

Really stupid Tweets.

Because nothing says "liberty" like trillions of dollars of taxpayer-funded bailouts.

Those dirty, smelly hippies may have a point, but...


I keep seeing these sneeringly condescending pieces from the financial industry media.
Some Tips For The Simpletons of 'Occupy Wall Street'
And, for the last time -- the fact that people purchase products made by some corporations doesn't mean they can't criticize criminality/fraud/greed by other corporations.

Assholes.

This is what happens when you call Social Security a criminal conspiracy.

Totally predictable.

In mid-September, Rick Perry was the leader in Florida, polling at 29 percent. Mitt Romney was at 20 percent, and Herman Cain was at 6 percent.

What a difference a month makes.

Results from the new InsiderAdvantage/Majority Opinion Research poll for the Florida Times-Union (the same poll that last month’s results came from): Mitt Romney (32.6 percent), Herman Cain (30.2 percent), Newt Gingrich (11.7 percent), Rick Perry (2.9 percent), Ron Paul (2.7 percent), Michele Bachmann (1.6 percent), and Jon Huntsman (0.2 percent).

Pretty soon, the Secessionist's corporate backers are going to believe raising money for his campaign is a Ponzi scheme.

Monday, October 17, 2011

The Republican solution to inequality.

Epic fail:
As the 99 percent movement protests spread across the globe, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) finally agreed yesterday that “there is too much income disparity” in the U.S. and determined that the government should rely on America’s wealthy to take care of this “complaint.” Continuing this theme, Cantor announced today that he will give an address on income disparity “and how Republicans believe the government could help fix it” on Friday. According to his aide, Cantor will specifically focus on how Washington can help “a single working mom…a small business owner..and how we make sure the people at the top stay there.”
This is just terrible messaging by Cantor. First, he admits wealth inequality is a problem -- it's an article of faith among wingnuts that it's not. Second, he says government can make people's lives better. Third, the "people on the top" thing is just classic.

Golden opportunity, Democrats.

New Yorkers love OWS.

Suck it, wingnuts.
By a 67 - 23 percent margin, New York City voters agree with the views of the Wall Street protesters and say 87 - 10 percent that it is "okay that they are protesting," according to a Quinnipiac University poll released today.

Agreeing with the protesters views are Democrats 81 - 11 percent and independent voters 58 - 30 percent, while Republicans disagree 58 - 35 percent, the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN-uh-pe-ack) University poll finds. Even Republicans, however, agree 73 - 23 percent with the protesters right to be there.

Outsourcing my Reynolds-bashing to Edroso.

An old Putz favorite: "I'm not offering any evidence for this claim whatsoever, but I'm sure I'm correct."
Reagarding a photo of protesters with a "Class War" sign -- which might shock the Little Old Lady from Dubuque, if no one else -- Ole Perfesser Instapundit lays on the bullshit:
And Reuters ran this pic, but I doubt many newspapers front-paged it as they would have a similar photo of masked Tea Party protesters proclaiming some sort of war...
Yeah, the MSM commissioned it and ran it -- but they didn't run it big enough to suit the Perfesser, the Perfesser bets!
Heh.

Wow.

Surprisingly good news.
Unemployment, as measured by Gallup without seasonal adjustment, is 8.3% in mid-October -- down sharply from 8.7% at the end of September and 9.2% at the end of August. A year ago, Gallup's U.S. unemployment rate stood at 10.0%. While seasonal hiring patterns may explain some of this improvement, the drop suggests the government could report an October unemployment rate of less than 9.0%.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Leonard Pitts is talking to you, Glenn Reynolds.

You really get the feeling Pitts reads a lot of Instapundit.
He [Herman Cain] thus neatly encapsulates what has become an article of faith for many white conservatives; namely, that it is they, not black and brown people, who are the true victims of bigotry. Mind you, they have not a shred of a scrap of a scintilla of evidence to support this cockamamie idea, but they believe it anyway. And now they find support for their idiocy in this Negro from Atlanta.

If you support Occupy Wall Street, you're a Nazi.

I really hate to break it to these wingnuts but -- poll after poll shows that most people don't like Wall Street.

Friday, October 14, 2011

The whiniest people in the world.

Make it stop.

Listened to "Left, Right and Center" today and Tony Blankley, who's usually a good gauge of where the GOP is on stuff, said the Secessionist is toast.

And he said it with a good deal of contempt.

The real victims of discrimination are white, Christian conservatives.

I'm certainly familiar with that sorry tune, though I've never heard it sung in a Republican primary before.

Too much Hillbilly Heroin?

El Rushbo, 3 years ago:
I think now, based on the way the campaign has shaken out, that there probably is a candidate on our side who does embody all three legs of the conservative stool, and that’s Romney.
El Rushbo, this week.
Romney is not a conservative. He's not, folks.
Think this would give the dittoheads who hang on his every word some cognitive dissonance?

Nah.


This really does need to be said, apparently, over and over.

Cole:
The tea party didn’t come about because of crony capitalism, the tea party was wholly a reaction to the election of Barack Obama. We’ve gone over and over this. The tea party is not some organic movement that just appeared out of nowhere- it was the Republican base re-branding themselves with the help of the Koch brother’s various wingnut welfare organizations, Fox news and Roger Ailes, and out of work conservative political consultants. It wasn’t overtaken by “mainstream” Republicans- it punished all the mainstream Republicans in primaries. That is how we got lunatics like Sharon Angle and the masturbator-hater from Delaware whose name I can not remember.
That would be Christine O'Donnell.

Anyway, it amazes me that even with the dozens and dozens of hard polls about the Teabaggers (as well the fact that there's a "Tea Party" caucus in the House that -- wait for it -- caucuses with Republicans) -- that there are still some in the legacy media that treat them as a distinct movement from the GOP.

And no, they weren't angry at TARP -- they were angry at ACORN.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Most Americans hate Real America.

I know wingnuts feel that they have to reflectively oppose everything that "liberals" are for, but siding with the banksters is a real loser at the polls.

Buncha lazy whiners and complainers.

Someone's got to be behind all of these shenanigans.

Reuters asks,
Who's behind the Wall St. protests?
Personally, I'm not sure, but I'm going to go with George Soros, unions, ACORN and the Black Panthers.

Also, too, PETA.

Happy warriors.

Because when you say "Teabagger" -- you immediately think "happy."

“The left is trying to create a counter force to the tea party, but it’s almost laughable that anyone is comparing the two, because they’re totally different,” said Sal Russo, chief strategist for the Tea Party Express.

Brendan Steinhauser, campaigns director for FreedomWorks, evoked leaders of the civil rights movement in distinguishing the protests, saying the tea party’s tactics resemble those of Martin Luther King Jr., while the Occupy Wall Street protesters are more like Malcolm X and Stokely Carmichael.

“They just seem really, truly very unhappy, angry,” he said of the anti-corporate protesters. Tea partiers, on the other hand are for the most part “kind of cheerful, happy warriors,” he said.

I love it when wingnuts compare themselves to MLK.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

McCardle: still wrong about everything.

McMegan sez:
Unprecedented Congressional Obstructionism Is Actually Quite Precedented
Uh-huh.


And it got worse after '08.

Glenn Reynolds cites more random, unnamed people to discredit OWS.

Putz:

OCCUPY L.A. SPEAKER: Violence Will Be Necessary To Achieve Our Goals. “Long live revolution! Long live socialism!”

Maybe they should change the name to “Doucheify L.A.” Do the Dems and Obama really want to endorse these guys?

And who was this speaker? We don't know! The article doesn't say.

However, we do know who sent this email, and who put up this billboard, and who held up this sign, and who wrote this tweet and who wrote this letter.

Why would Glenn Reynolds and the Republicans want to endorse those guys?

Amen.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Occupy Wall Street is just like the Holocaust for bankers.

Yes, really.
If there’s one thing you can say about President Obama, the Democrats and their Poopstock movement, it’s that they’ve done a bang-up job of dividing Americans like never before. It’s horrible. Class warfare is horrible, and it’s no better than the way Hitler blamed everything on the Jews. Today it’s the Wall Street executives, tomorrow it will be anyone with a job.
I wonder if these people realize that 82% of Americans blame Wall Street for the mess we're in.

Shorter entire right-wing.

LEAVE WALL STREET ALOOOOOOONE!

Monday, October 10, 2011

The GOP's clown car just got a little more crowded.

Hilarious.

About that "just another race-card-playing black politician" stuff.

Putz takes it all back about Herman Cain, because:
Republican presidential contender Herman Cain amplified his criticism Sunday of the growing Occupy Wall Street movement, calling the protesters “jealous’ Americans who "play the victim card” and want to “take somebody else’s” Cadillac.

Everything you need to know about K-Lo, in one short sentence.

Uh-huh.
Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin recently said something both profound and essential.
Because no one says "profound and essential" like the Quitter.

"Our blacks."

Charming part of the country the Secessionist hails from.
“We weren’t integrated nearly as rapidly as the North,” she said. “But we’ve always had a different relationship with our blacks than the North has, too. It’s often been said, and I think it’s true, we love them individually and kind of distrust them as a group, whereas in the North, they don’t want to get too close to them individually but they embrace them as a group.”

Saturday, October 08, 2011

Why I don't feel a bit sorry for Mitt Romney.

When you associate with bigots, you shouldn't be surprised when they turn on you.
Now, all eyes turn to Mr. Romney, who is scheduled to speak Saturday at the conference, just before Bryan Fischer, director of issue analysis for government and public policy at the American Family Association. Mr. Fischer is known for his strident remarks on homosexuality, gay rights, Muslims and Mormons.

Probably shouldn't have spent of 2010-2011 talking about "tightening our belts."

Benen:

Following up on this morning’s job numbers, it’s worth reemphasizing a point the right generally prefers to ignore: spending cuts are making unemployment worse. Dealing with the jobs crisis is hard enough, and conservative policies are akin to throwing an anvil at a drowning economy.

Where I get a little impatient with Steve these days is, while it's true that conservative polices are screwing us, who said this just 3 months ago?

Government has to start living within its means, just like families do. We have to cut the spending we can’t afford so we can put the economy on sounder footing, and give our businesses the confidence they need to grow and create jobs.

Hint: it wasn't John Boehner.

Friday, October 07, 2011

Wingnuts still don't know what First Amendment rights are.

The other day, I wrote:
1) right-wingers, when told to STFU, frequently whine that their "First Amendment rights" are being trampled;
And right on cue:

AFTER ESPN SUSPENDS HANK JR. FOR ONE-WEEK, HANK JR. DECIDES TO PULL HIS SONG FROM BEING USED ON ESPN FOR REMAINDER OF SEASON!

"After reading hundreds of e-mails, I have made MY decision. By pulling my opening Oct 3rd, You (ESPN) stepped on the Toes of The First Amendment
Freedom of Speech, so therefore Me, My Song, and All My Rowdy Friends are OUT OF HERE. It's been a great run." -- Hank Williams Jr

They really are just incredibly stupid people.

Vice Presidential Candidates = random, unnamed people.

Putz, like all wingnuts, does love his false equivalences.
HOW’S THAT HOPEY-CHANGEY STUFF WORKIN’ OUT FOR YA? (CONT’D): ‘Time to kill the wealthy,’ says fan of Occupy Wall Street. “And now, the same people who insisted that a U.S. map with crosshairs symbols on it somehow caused an act of horrible violence — by someone who never even saw that map — will insist that the Occupy Wall Street geniuses bear no responsibility for the actions of this lunatic.
And who sent this email? We don't know -- the article doesn't say. But whoever it was, it's totally the same thing as the Quitter's gun porn!

Also, too, any attempt to smear the entire Occupy Wall Street protests as violent is blood libel.

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

The Palinbots haz a big sad tonight.


One of the Quitter's biggest fans, Cornell Putz, is coming apart at the seams with grief.
Probably for the better in the drive to unseat Obama, but only because of the political corruption of the media and establishment Republicans, who have been relentless in their attacks on her. It disgusts me that a candidate of such quality cannot run as a practical matter, and that we are left with second and third choices. But reality is reality, and it would have been a tough road to overcome the past three years.
Yes, the fact that the Quitter is one of the most reviled figures in politics -- and that over 70% of Teabaggers didn't want her to run -- is all because they read too much of the New York Times.

And I love this touch.
At a moment when Erickson could have shown himself to be a mensch he showed himself to be a schmuck.
On which planet is Erickson ever a "mensch"?

Sarah Palin quits the race before she gets in.

Yep, figured.

All that campaignin' and governin' stuff is far too much work. Much easier to be a paid Patron Saint to the rubes -- and just rake in the dough.

Republicans to entertainers: STFU (unless we agree with you).


I'm always amused when some right-winger tells a celebrity to STFU (they do this a lot) for a couple of reasons:

1) right-wingers, when told to STFU, frequently whine that their "First Amendment rights" are being trampled; and,

2) right-wingers are total starf****ers, and elevate/excitedly promote every has-been, B-list celebrity who happens to agree with them on stuff (see Norris, Chuck; Hasselbeck, Elizabeth; Baldwin, Stephen; Reagan, Ronald).

And remember, this clown won the Iowa straw poll.


Geez.

"I was talking with a businessman this morning up in Minneapolis," she said. "And he was up in Williston, North Dakota, where the Bakken oil field is producing."

"Someone told me that last year that North Dakota was the only nation that actually was running a surplus. And it's because they're utilizing their natural energy resources," Bachmann added.

The congresswoman calling North Dakota a "nation" was clearly misspeaking. But more glaring: North Dakota was one of four states to run a surplus last year.

Feel the Cain-mentum.

It looks like a big segment of wingnuts looked at the Secessionist, thought "Meh" -- and jumped on the Cain bandwagon.

The more people see of Rick Perry, the less they like him.



When your unfavorables go up 50% in one month -- you're doing it wrong.

Someone give this guy a radio show.

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Matt Y. makes a funny.

Yglesias, on Putz's Herman Cain meltdown.
See, Perry’s not a racist. But if Perry did do anything racist, it’s because he used to be a Democrat (heh). Yet the real victims here are white people, and once upon a time Herman Cain looked like he might be a hero to the white race. Now we see, though, that he’s just another black politician being all “racist racist racist racist” to get ahead just like the rest of them. The fact that actual African-Americans, including African-Americans with deranged right-wing views on non-racial issues, find Perry’s conduct problematic is immaterial to Reynolds’ assessment of the situation. After all, since white conservatives are the primary victims of racism in contemporary America, who better than Reynolds to put Cain back in his place and tell him how it is?

The GOP's minority outreach continues.

Boycotting Univison is probably a smart play for the Secessionist, though, since his weakness with the Republican base is being insufficiently nativist.

BREAKING: Franco still dead.

And Chris Christie still not running for president.

Romney piles on Perry.

Tsk-tsk, Willard.

I notice Putz hasn't criticized Willard for it, but then, Romney's not "just another black-race-card-playing politician."

Monday, October 03, 2011

Glenn Reynolds turns on Herman Cain.

Why? Because Cain committed the cardinal sin of suggesting a Southern Republican was "insensitive" about race. (h/t Digby)

You might have anticipated that Perry would face a firestorm for being associated with the property, but it's Cain whose remarks are drawing the most criticism from the right. At RedState, Erick Erickson concluded, "It also seems to be a slander Herman Cain is picking up and running with as a way to get into second place." Glenn Reynolds remarked that until now, Cain's "big appeal is that he's not just another black race-card-playing politician." Over at the Daily Caller, Matt Lewis called Cain's remarks "a cheap shot, and, perhaps a signal that Cain is willing to play the race card against a fellow Republican when it benefits him."

Just another black politician. Lovely.
...no one thought Cain was "playing the race card" when he said in the same program that black people are "brainwashed" into voting for Democrats and suggested that black people who vote Republican are "thinking for themselves." Cain wasn't rebuked by conservatives when he previously suggested President Barack Obama was not "a strong black man," implied liberals were out to commit genocide against blacks through support for abortion rights, and said he wouldn't appoint a Muslim to his cabinet.
Of course not. Because as Putz notes, those are not examples of "siding with the media against other Republicans."

Can't have that.

Not your father's GOP.

Willard:
“The President’s party want to take from some and give to others,” Romney said in a recent debate. “That isn’t the way to lift America.”
Ronald Reagan:
We’re going to close the unproductive tax loopholes that allow some of the truly wealthy to avoid paying their fair share. In theory, some of those loopholes were understandable, but in practice they sometimes made it possible for millionaires to pay nothing, while a bus driver was paying ten percent of his salary, and that’s crazy.
The Birchification of the Republican Party is complete.

L.A.'s transportation problems: Obama's fault.

Los Angeles is the nation's second-largest city. So it's not unreasonable to expect that presidents will, on occasion, visit it.

Los Angeles also has terrible transportation problems, and has for decades -- and the solutions all involve stuff conservatives fight: taxes, building more roads via eminent domain, public transportation, rail, subways, bike lanes, etc.

And yet, conservative partisans -- who resist all of the above remedies to L.A.'s transportation problems -- blame Obama for the awful traffic every time he visits. (h/t Putz.)

Priceless.

Sunday, October 02, 2011

This story has Karl Rove's fingerprints all over it.

Just an educated hunch, but when I read this WaPo piece about the Secessionist's unfortunately-named hunting ranch, I immediately thought of Rover.

Motive (hates Perry), means (surely hunted there and can name others who did as well) -- and opportunity (still has contacts at the Post).

Saturday, October 01, 2011

Rick Perry wants to invade Mexico.

Getting a little desperate, maybe?

Yank their tax exemptions.

Freedom isn't free.
“There should be no government intrusion in the pulpit,” said the Rev. James Garlow, senior pastor at Skyline Church in La Mesa, Calif., who led preachers in the battle to pass California’s Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage. “The freedom of speech and the freedom of religion promised under the First Amendment means pastors have full authority to say what they want to say.”
Yeah, that's fine. Just as long as you pay taxes like the rest of us, Jim.

Only conservatives can say America has become weak.

Even when Obama says some variation of something conservatives say all the time (ie., compared to the Greatest Generation, America's become soft) -- Putzy and co. jump all over him for it.

It really is a tic with these people.