Swedish Meatballs
1 day ago
Here's my worry about Obama. Lots of people love him and he is indeed very lovable. But I wonder if anyone at all, anywhere in the world, really fears him....Read More......
Everyone was frightened of Fonzie. He could banish bad guys with a look. In one episode, Fonzie tried to teach Richie his style. Richie practised the grimaces, the flexes, the stares, but alas the bad guys were not impressed and certainly not deterred.
In the midst of a desperate scrape, Richie turned to Fonzie imploringly and asked: Why are my deadly looks, threatening flexes and strategic grimaces having no effect?
Oh yeah, Fonzie replied, I forgot to tell you. For all that to work, once in your life you have to have hit someone. You cannot imagine a deeper strategic insight.
At some point, Obama is going to have to do something seriously unpleasant to someone.
Mr. Obama needs to let the Blue Dog Democrats like Sens. Max Baucus, Ben Nelson and Kent Conrad know who is in charge. He needs to tear a page from the playbook of two other Southerners who knew how to put on the brass knuckles. Former GOP operatives Karl Rove and Tom Delay made it clear that any Republican representatives who crossed their agenda would face a well-funded conservative opponent in their next party primary.Read More......
Mr. Obama should let any Democratic foot-draggers know that if they don't get with the program, he will un-elect them and put in Democrats more in tune with his priorities. His threat would be credible, since Mr. Obama is one of the great campaigners of modern political history. He still enjoys popularity - though it is dwindling - among the broad coalition that mobilized to elect him. Mr. Obama could convincingly threaten to fund candidates to run against uncooperative senators in the Democratic primary and to campaign on behalf of his slate of candidates.
But to make that threat, Mr. Obama has to mean it. He has to show a quality that the nation has not seen in him since the presidential election ended last November.
If Carper is being sincere, it's hard to imagine a stupider thing for him to have said. Even if you accept his flawed premise that we should only do things everybody agrees on, the reality is that once you throw the twenty percent overboard, the GOP will decide to disagree with twenty percent of whatever is left over, and we'll be right back where we started.What is it with these Democrats who don't get that they've got power? The Republicans don't matter. Not even Olympia Snowe.
If Snowe doesn't support the bill in committee, are the Finance Democrats really going to vote out a bill that doesn't reflect Democrat values--the public plan, pay or play, etc.That's a very good question. Let's start by asking Tom Carper. Read More......
The president's coolness in the face of the right wing's relentlessly anti-intellectual assault on his policies has been impressive as a display of character. But it also has enabled his opponents to subvert his program and erode his popularity.Read More......
He hasn't been helped by the feckless performance of the Democratic leaders in the House and Senate, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. They've behaved like they think the public buys into such Republican talking points on healthcare as the "death panel" and "socialized medicine" claims -- all discredited fantasies.
By failing to take a strong line, the Democrats allowed the GOP to dominate the healthcare debate all summer. Senate Majority Leader Reid wasted weeks trying to enlist the GOP in a compromise, despite clear signs that Republican leaders were only interested in sabotaging reform. Obama didn't really take the reins of the debate until his address to Congress on Sept. 9.
Consequently, reform that Congress might have passed by Labor Day may not happen for months. Reid still isn't guaranteeing that healthcare reform will pass this year, saying only that there's "a very good chance" it will happen. Is this how a leader with a commanding majority should talk?
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Global warming and financial regulation -- big issues lying dead ahead -- are in many respects even more complicated than healthcare and more susceptible to demagoguery. If they want to achieve their goals on these issues, the White House and the Democrats may have to assert their electoral mandate more aggressively than they have so far, or they'll risk losing it.
We've already seen that Obama knows how to talk sense. Can he play hardball too?
Should Obama actually change his mind about Afghanistan, our elite journalists -- obsessed as they are with how the game is played -- will almost inevitably characterize this as vacillation and declare it a sign of political weakness. But that really misses the point.Read More......
The most important thing to keep in mind here is that over the last several months, what's emerged when it comes to Afghan policy is a sort of consensus of the realists -- from across the political spectrum. The consensus: That our national interests in Afghanistan are pretty limited and that the harder we try to change things over there, the more resistance we face; that Afghanistan, after eight years of U.S. occupation, has become a Vietnam-like quagmire where escalation only leads to more escalation, not victory; and that what little we could possibly accomplish there is not worth more American blood.
Pretty much the only people left supporting a massive sustained military approach (no matter how cleverly retooled) are the neocons, the reflexive Obama supporters, and the military commanders charged with carrying it out. Otherwise, a wide swath of experts and politicians -- not to mention a significant majority of the American public -- have concluded that our interests are best served at this point by getting out and certainly not by sending more troops in.
Democrats said a struggling economy is only partly to blame for the poor fundraising performance and acknowledged a more perilous problem: satisfaction among activists that the party now holds the White House, 60 votes in the Senate and 60 percent of the House.You beware. Read More......
"There was a little sense of complacency that set in despite our best efforts to warn people," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (Md.), chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. "We made it very clear: Beware."
To the surprise of many educators who campaigned last year for change in the White House, the Obama administration's first recipe for school reform relies heavily on Bush-era ingredients and adds others that make unions gag....Read More......
Labor leaders, parsing the Education Department's fine print, call the proposal little more than a dressed-up version of the No Child Left Behind law enacted seven years ago under Obama's Republican predecessor.
"It looks like the only strategies they have are charter schools and measurement," said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers. "That's Bush III."
U.S. regulators say that the level of losses from syndicated loans facing banks and other financial institutions tripled to $53 billion in 2009, due to poor underwriting standards and the continuing weakness in economic conditions.Read More......
According to the Shared National Credit Program (SNC) 2009 Review, an annual inter-agency report released on Thursday, credit quality deteriorated to record levels with respect to large loans and loan commitments.
The move comes in the wake of a major push by President Obama, the officials said. The G-20 will now essentially eclipse the G-8, which will continue to meet on major security issues but carry much less influence.Read More......
"It's a reflection of the world economy today and the players that make it up," said one senior official. Nations like China, Brazil and India -- which were locked out of the more elite G-8 -- will be part of the larger group.
Dotcom darling Twitter is close to securing a cash injection of $100m (£62m), with executives due to complete a surprise funding round that would see the total value of the much-hyped Californian company quadruple to an estimated $1bn.Read More......
More than half a dozen investors – including some existing backers – are understood to have lined up to pump even more cash into the three-year-old San Francisco-based startup, despite the fact that it has yet to make any money.
Mugabe, giving his first major Western network interview for at least five years, also defended his government's record in the face of international accusations that he has driven a once-prosperous country to the brink of ruin.To be fair to Robert Mugabe, yes, it's definitely not as bad as Pol Pot's Cambodia. Compared to the neighboring countries and considering how strong the agricultural output was even during his early years, it's a basket case. Having spent a good deal of time in southern Africa and being familiar with how it compares, Zimbabwe is a catastrophe. The sooner Robert Mugabe goes, the better. Read More......
"It is not a basket case at all," he said.
"Things are much better in terms of food. We have had hard years... years of drought. Sanctions as well. Combine effects of drought and sanctions and what do you get?"
A harvest of Anglo Saxon gold and silver so beautiful it brought tears to the eyes of one expert, has poured out of a Staffordshire field - the largest hoard of gold from the period ever found.Read More......
The weapons and helmet decorations, coins and Christian crosses amount to more than 1500 pieces, with hundreds still embedded in blocks of soil. It adds up to five kilos of gold - three times the amount found in the famous Sutton Hoo ship burial in 1939 - and 2.5 kilos of silver, and may be the swag from a spectacularly successful raiding party of warlike Mercians, some time around 700AD.
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