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CNN Tea Party Debate Live-Blog

9:53: Asked what he’d bring to the White House, Cain said: “I would bring a sense of humor to the White House because America is too uptight.”

9:52: This would have been a good time for Newt to scold the media for asking stupid questions.

9:50: Wolf Blitzer asks the candidate a vapid question about what they would change in the White House. If Rick Santorum was president, he would expand the White House — not for government, but for his seven children who would need lots of bedrooms.

9:50: Neocon favorite Rick Perry, the so-called “hawk internationalist” wondered if U.S. assistance to Afghanistan “is best spent with 100,000 military who have a target on their back in Afghanistan? I don’t think so at this particular point in time.”

9:49: Rick Perry: It’s really important for us to maintain a presence in Afghanistan. When it comes to his Afghanistan position, consistency is not Perry’s strong suit, however: “Time to bring our young men and women home as safely as we can, but important to keep a presence there.” He responded to Huntsman who called for withdrawal — and got best applause of the night for it.

9:48: FLASHBACK: Before it was known as Tea Party Express, CNN’s debate co-sponsor was known as “Move America Forward,” a Republican front group that organized pro-Iraq war rallies.

9:45: One hour and forty-five minutes into the debate and finally a person of color gets to ask a question — an Afghan woman.

9:45: Audience begins to boo Ron Paul when he tries to explain to Rick Santorum why we can’t blame all Muslims for terrorism caused by extremists. Audience again boos when Paul complains of “unfair treatment” of Palestinians.

9:44: Paul says most of the danger to America comes from the “lack of wisdom” that comes from our foreign policy. He says we’re in “great threat” because of our occupations of other countries and vast network of military bases worldwide. Santorum accuses Paul of blogging on his website that the United States was responsible for 9/11. Santorum says Paul is “parroting” what Osama bin Laden said. Santorum says we were not attacked because of our actions in the world, but rather because of our character — leading CIA and Pentagon analysts disagree.

9:40: The two largest audience cheers in last two debates: government execution and death by lack of health insurance. See the video from tonight’s crowd reaction:

9:38: Huntsman takes a shot at Romney: “We could spend all day” talking about Mitt’s flip-flops.

9:36: Rick Perry stands by the Texas DREAM Act because it’s a states’ rights issue, and he decided it was the right choice for his state.

9:33: Bachmann: The immigration policy in America worked very well until liberals changed the policy in the 1960s. Incidentally, that “change” was an end to the discriminatory “immigration quotas” that dictated the numbers of certain ethnicities that could emigrate to the U.S.

9:32: Huntsman says that for Perry to say you can’t secure the border is a “treasonous comment.” He then smirks, suggesting it’s a joke — Perry does not look amused.

9:30: Perry booed when saying that we should allow illegal immigrants to get in-state tuition. Bachmann wildly cheered when saying that is not “the American way.”

9:29: Oops: Santorum confuses “Latino vote” with “illegal vote.” “What Gov. Perry has done is he provided in-state tuition for illegal immigrants, maybe that was an attempt to attract illegal — I mean Latino — voters,” Santorum said.

9:24: Will CNN ask the candidates about the undue influence of corporate lobbyists and other special interests in Washington? CNN’s partner for the debate, Tea Party Express, is managed by a Sacramento-based Republican lobbying firm called Russo Marsh and Rogers.

9:21: Ron Paul the doctor says a 30-year-old who has an accident and needs intensive health care should’ve planned ahead and is responsible for himself. When Blitzer asks if society should let that young man die, some in the crowd shout in approval. Tea Party audience members heard yelling: “Yeah!” “Let him die!”

9:20: Ron Paul’s position: Freedom’s just another word for dying of preventable illness due to lack of money.

9:18: Bachmann campaign email blasts Perry his HPV vaccine mandate and Merck drug company ties: “Rick Perry’s Crony Capitalism: The 2007 Vaccination Executive Order Fiasco.”

9:17: Romney is still touting his illegal plan to unilaterally give a “waiver” to all states from the Affordable Care Act.

9:16: Repealing the Affordable Care Act would actually increase the costs of health care. As the Congressional Budget Office recently concluded, “growth in spending will be restrained by reductions in updates to payment rates that were included in the 2010 health care legislation.”

9:15: Tea Party audience member worries about expensive cost of health insurance, a concern rarely aired by the candidates on stage.

9:14: Rick Perry defends his vaccine order by saying that he is for life. But what about his death penalty execution record?

9:13: Governor Perry makes it clear that he can’t be bought with a $5,000 campaign contribution (it was actually $6K). How much would it take?

9:12: On the same day that Merck’s political committee donated $6,000 to Perry, his chief of staff had “met with key aides about the vaccine.”

9:12: Bachmann suggests that Rick Perry’s HPV vaccine mandate was done in direct financial benefit to a drug company. “That’s flat out wrong.” Perry notes the company was Merck, and said he “received $5000 donation” (it was actually $6,000) while raising millions more. To say that he could be bought for $6,000, Perry says, “I’m offended.” Bachmann says she’s offended for all the mothers and daughters, to great applause.

9:11:Perry’s HPV vaccine actually had the word mandate in it! It read: “The Health and Human Services Executive Commissioner shall adopt rules that mandate the age appropriate vaccination of all female children for HPV prior to admission to the sixth grade.”

9:10: Bachmann takes a firm stance against requiring children to have a “government injection.” Like the polio vaccine. Or measles, mumps and rubella.

9:08: Perry says that his executive order mandating that young girls receive a vaccine was a mistake, but he defended the decision as recently as September of 2010. “I knew was going to take a political hit … at the end of the day, I did what was right from my perspective, and I did something that saved people’s lives and, you know, that’s a big deal,” he said.

9:07: Romney notes that the “Fair Tax” would slam the middle-class. He’s right. Romney also claims that a national sales tax would make American more competitive. In reality, a national sales tax would destroy seniors’ retirement savings.

9:05: Economic populism rears its head! Gingrich bashes GE for not paying any taxes in 2010. Takes a swipe at Obama for inviting GE Chairman and CEO to his jobs speech before Congress.

9:03: Gingrich knocks taxpayer subsidies for ethanol. But not too long ago, Gingrich was paid by the ethanol lobby to support those same giveaways in the tax code.

9:01: Bachmann does not think Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is committing treason, unlike Rick Perry.

9:00: Taking a swipe at the title of Ron Paul’s book, End the Fed, Cain, a former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas, says we shouldn’t end the Fed, we should “fix the Fed.”

8:59: Rick Perry suggests that Ben Bernanke and Barack Obama have devalued the dollar. Was he expressing this concern during the much larger Bush-era devaluation?

8:59: Audience bursts into applause at mention of Perry’s plan to try Fed Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke for treason. Treason is a death penalty offense.

8:55: Rick Santorum wants the federal reserve to be switched to a single-mandate of price stability just like they do in…socialist Europe! The dual mandate (including supporting full employment) was good enough for Ronald Reagan.

8:54: Several candidates have called for corporate tax cuts to spur job creation, even though corporate after tax profits are currently the highest they’ve been since 1947.

8:53: Romney’s opposition research shop sends out document titled “RICK’S RETREAT: FIRST SOCIAL SECURITY, NOW PRESCRIPTION DRUG BENEFITS.” In his book, Perry “sharply opposed” the Medicare Prescription Drug Program.

8:50: Herman Cain says the National Restaurant Association, a lobbying group he once led, is composed of “small businesses.” The National Restaurant Association represents McDonalds, Burger King, and other massive fast food corporations. Cain helped the group defeat efforts to raise the minimum wage.

8:49: First mention of Reagan comes from Newt Gingrich, 49 minutes into the debate.

8:47: Ron Paul criticizes government job growth under Perry’s watch. In fact, between 2007 and 2010, 47 percent of all government jobs were created in Texas. Perry has supported the largest tax hikes in Texas’ history.

8:46: Perry pronounces Romney’s name as “Mitch.”

8:46: Perry created that tort reform has created jobs, but in reality his 2003 law has done nothing to reduce health care spending and Texas has been designated as an official health professional shortage area. The state ranks 48th out of 50 states in the number of physicians per 100,000 residents.

8:46: Romney praises Texas’ “Republican supreme court.” Seven of the Texas Supreme Court’s nine members were appointed by Perry, and it sides with corporations over people in nearly three of four cases.

8:46: Romney zings Perry by pointing out that job creation grew at a faster rate under both of Perry’s predecessors, George Bush and Democrat Ann Richards.

8:45: Romney says to follow the rule of law by stopping the NLRB decision to block Boeing’s move. This, ironically, is a statement slamming the NLRB for following the rule of law.

8:45: Michele Bachmann supports a zero percent tax on overseas funds that corporations bring back to the U.S., but it didn’t work before.

8:44: Perry says stimulus “created zero jobs.” CBO says it created up to 2.9 million.

8:42: Herman Cain calls for cutting the corporate tax rate to 9 percent. Not only do American corporations already pay the second-lowest taxes in the developed world, but such a tax cut would cost more than $2 trillion over ten years.

8:40: Huntsman says the U.S. has a “heroin-like addiction to foreign oil” and advocates for investing in alternative energy. Incidentally, most Tea Party members support that too.

8:40: Rick Perry admits that cutting taxes actually cuts revenue.

8:37: Huntsman promotes his tax reform plan, failing to note that it would ask veterans and the disabled to pay more in taxes, while cutting taxes for the very richest Americans.

8:34: Bachmann says we have to be an “ownership society” where we take “personal responsibility for ourselves,” adds “We can’t be ashamed of that.” So says the candidate on the federal dole.

8:33: Romney touts his record of “taking waste out of enterprises.” By “waste,” he might mean “people”: Romney’s private equity firm laid off thousands at firms within its control.

8:32: Romney is the first candidate to utter the words “balanced budget amendment.” Mitt Romney endorses a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution, which would render his own economic plan unconstitutional.

8:32: Perry claims he would not repeal the Medicare prescription drug programs that he believes are unconstitutional. Medicare Part D added $395 billion to the national deficit between 2004 and 2013 and created a doughnut hole of coverage that Democrats had to close through the Affordable Care Act.

8:30: Perry holding up Texas as a model for health care. There are more uninsured people in Texas than any other states.

8:28 Gingrich touts yet another one of his own books, this one written in part by his for-profit health care lobbying firm.

8:27: Good to know that Gingrich believes in modernizing the federal government. The Affordable Care Act — which the GOP would repeal — modernizes the health care system and will save the federal government ” nearly $600 billion in health spending over the next decade, and $9 trillion over the next 25 years.”

8:26: FYI: Serbia’s Novak Djokovic just won the U.S. Open. He won three Grand Slam singles titles this year. Now back to the debate.

8:24: A number of debaters, most clearly Newt Gingrich, seem to think that current Social Security retirees can keep their benefits even while younger workers stop paying payroll taxes and instead put their money into private accounts. This is confused. If workers the age of ThinkProgress bloggers aren’t contributing to the system, there’ll be no money to pay benefits to today’s seniors.

8:23: Herman Cain calls for “personal retirement accounts” for Social Security. An October 2008 retiree would have lost tens of thousands of Social Security dollars in that month’s stock market crash if personal accounts had been in place then.

8:23: Huntsman references Kurt Cobain. He accuses Mitt Romney of poaching the title of his book — “No Apologies” — from Kurt Cobain. We think he means “All Apologies”.

8:20: Asked by Wolf Blitzer if he agrees with Perry, even Ron Paul makes a clean break, won’t say that Social Security is “unconstitutional.” Paul said that Social Security is “broke” and “on its last legs.” Actually, it can pay full benefits until 2037 and with minor tweaks will be fully solvent for 75 years.

8:20: Crowd seems to side with Perry in battle with Romney of Social Security, giving him big applause when he quotes Romney’s book back to him, accusing him of calling Social Security a “criminal enterprise.” Romney responds by (correctly) noting that his charge was directed at Congress, not Social Security.

8:19: Mitt Romney says Perry’s use of the term “Ponzi scheme” is “over the top” and “frightening” to people. Says no one was forced into Social Security, gives strong defense of its social value. Challenges him to state is true position. Perry will not answer whether he still believes that Social Security is unconstitutional or should be returned to the states.

8:18: Romney to Perry: do you still believe that Social Security is unconstitutional and should be “ended as a federal program.” Perry still won’t answer the question. Says “I think we need to have a conversation.” Romney retorts that we’re having a conversation right now.

8:17: First question to Perry is about Social Security. He attempts to moderate his rhetoric, telling today’s seniors that they have nothing to worry about. It will be a “slam dunk guarantee that program will be there” for you. But doubles down on Ponzi scheme claim

8:16: Bachmann talked about reforming Social Security, but she’s previously said that she wants to “wean everybody off” the program.

8:15: Newt Gingrich says that it is meaningful that the debate is being held on 9/12; however, he spent the 10th anniversary of 9/11 at the opera. Glenn Beck famously created his own Tea Party group called the “9/12 movement.”

8:14: Perry says his goal is to “make D.C. as inconsequential in your life as I can.” He gets loudest applause so far during opening statements. More than Bachmann & Paul.

8:13: Obama did not “steal” money from the Medicare program. The reductions in the Affordable Care Act will slow the growth in the program by removing $500 billion from future spending over the next 10 years. The cuts help stabilize Medicare by eliminating overpayments and slowly phasing in payment adjustments that encourage greater efficiency.

8:13: In introductory remarks, Bachmann touts her creation of the Tea Party Caucus in the House.

8:10: CNN nicknames: Romney: The Early Frontrunner Rick; Perry: The Newcomer; Bachmann: The Firebrand; Gingrich: The Big Thinker

8:09: Remember: Florida, where the debate is taking place, has a 10.7% unemployment rate, much higher than the national average, and one of the highest foreclosure rates in the country.

8:06: Approximately 75 protesters have gathered outside of the debate venue with signs about protecting Social Security. Some are holding signs that read “Corporations are not people,” referencing statements made by Mitt Romney.

8:05: After their feisty confrontation at the last debate, Rick Perry and Ron Paul still greet each other and shake hands before the debate. Again, they are standing next to each other.

8:05: Tea Party Debate fun fact: Tea party members hate the debate.”This is nothing more than a press stunt for CNN that cries out ‘Pay attention to us!’” said Everett Wilkinson, an organizer with the South Florida Tea Party. He said tea party members talked about protesting the debate or even infiltrating it.

8:03: Prior to the debate, Democratic National Committee Chair Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz slammed the eight GOP candidates for “continuing to worship on the altar of the tea party.”

8:00: Debate sponsor Tea Party Express, the group partnering with CNN tonight, may have a favored candidate on stage: the Tea Party Express PAC made a $2,000 contribution to Rep. Michele Bachmann last year during her reelection campaign. CNN pundit Erick Erickson says it’s Bachmann’s “make or break night.”

7:58: Avid tea partier and Saturday Night alum Victoria Jackson is in the crowd.

7:57: Among those security have been instructed NOT to allow inside the debate: Fred Karger.

7:56: Birther website World Net Daily is flying a helicopter-born banner over the convention hall asking, “Where’s the Real Birth Certificate?

7:53: Chuck Norris will be at the debate as Rick Perry’s guest.

Let the CNN Tea Party debate commence!

Economy

Despite 600,000 Public Sector Layoffs, Darrell Issa Says Government Shouldn’t Try To Prevent Teacher Layoffs

At least 600,000 government workers have lost their jobs since the recession began, but Republicans nevertheless keep scapegoating public employees who have shouldered more than their fair share of economic pain. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), chairman of the House Oversight Committee, became the latest lawmaker to join in this trend during an appearance today on MSNBC’s Morning Joe, where he said that government shouldn’t try to save teachers’ jobs because that would be like another stimulus package:

ISSA: Whether or not the federal government borrows money from overseas sources to keep teachers in XYZ state on the payroll seems to be stimulus II. It seems to be something that the states have to decide what the right number of teachers are, and fund that, and not have us borrow money from overseas to keep $30 billion worth of money to try to aid the states. We did that once. It’s time for us to say states have to step up to the plate. That’s a good example where I don’t think that belongs in this stimulus bill. I don’t think we should be maintaining government workers with borrowed money.

Watch it:

As of March 2011, 132,000 teachers have been laid off since the beginning of the recession. Recent months have seen the sharpest decline in state and local jobs since the 1982.

In fact, federal payrolls have been mostly flat for years, even as the population has been growing. In November, President Obama announced a two-year pay freeze for 1.9 million federal workers.

Issa is also wrong to suggest that the first stimulus package was unsuccessful. At its height, Recovery Act funds were supporting up to 3.6 million jobs. In June of this year, Recovery Act funding was still supporting up to 2.9 million jobs.

According to David Leonhardt, if state and local governments had continued to hire at their previous pace, they would have added half a million jobs to the economy. In other words, government austerity over the past two years “has cost the economy about one million jobs.”

Justice

NRA Bill With 243 Sponsors Would Create Race To The Bottom On Concealed Handguns

The NRA is pushing a sweeping new bill to radically weaken the nation’s gun control regime. Already co-sponsored by 243 members of the House, the legislation would force any state to recognize a concealed weapons permit issued by any other state:

If Congress adopts a bill that the National Rifle Association is pushing, Florida’s licenses would apply to 49 states in all — allowing their holders to carry hidden guns in places such as midtown Manhattan, where the New York Police Department rejects most such applications for “concealed- carry” permits.

Only Illinois and Washington D.C., where residents aren’t allowed to carry concealed handguns at all, would be exempt.

While states can and do already adopt reciprocity agreements between each other, a federal law could create a potentially dangerous “race to the bottom” where a single gun-friendly state with lax regulations could become a haven for anyone in the country who wants a permit. In much the same way Delaware and South Dakota have done with credit card regulations, these states, where gun-rights lobbyists could focus their efforts, would effectively impose their permissive gun regulations on the rest of the country. Already, “in some states, the permits are practically a rubber stamp,” noted Laura Cutilletta, a senior staff attorney with Legal Community Against Violence.

For example, Bloomberg reporter John Crewdson was able to acquire a concealed weapons permit in Florida even though he doesn’t live there and has never held a gun in his life. All it took was watching a 30 minute online safety video and sending some documents and $117 to Tallahassee. A spokesperson told him Florida “doesn’t distinguish between in-state and out-of-state applicants.” Under the new law, Crewdson would be allowed to carry a loaded concealed firearm anywhere in entire country, save D.C. and Illinois

The spokesperson later told him the permit’s approval was an accident, but only after he called them inquiring about it. And he still received his card in the mail. “As of last month, Florida had issued 843,463 such permits, 93,722 of them to people who don’t live there,” he wrote.

“It is so ironic that it is the conservatives who are trying to push this encroachment, since they usually are very active in championing states’ rights,” said John Donohue, a professor at Stanford Law School.

From 2005 through 2009, U.S. domestic handgun production and foreign-made imports more than doubled, in part due to states like Wisconsin adopting laxer gun laws. Over the same period of time, violent crime fell by over 5 percent. Given that the legislation is already sponsored by more than half of the House, its passage is almost guaranteed in that chamber, and it’s already gaining support in the Senate.

NEWS FLASH

ThinkProgress live-blogging tonight | The GOP debate airs tonight on CNN at 8 p.m. ET from Tampa, FL. It will be moderated by Wolf Blitzer, with questions contributed by tea party members. Will Rick Perry continue his vehement campaign against Social Security and Medicare? Will anyone on the stage take Perry’s side? Will Ron Paul call Perry or Romney a “pretty boy” to their face? We’ll find out tonight.

NEWS FLASH

NC Lawmaker Likens Anti-Gay Marriage Amendment To Three-Fifths Compromise | Rep. Henry M. Michaux, Jr. (D) warned the North Carolina General Assembly — which is considering a constitutional amendment prohibiting same-sex marriage — against writing discrimination into the state’s founding document, arguing that it will forever stain the history of the state. “The Constitution is a living document,” he said. “If you think it’s hard to get something out of a living document, you take a look at the united states Constitution, where it says that I’m three-fifth of a person — even though we’ve had amendments come along to sort of change that, it’s still says it in that Constitution. What you put into a Constitution is there permanently.” Watch it:

Justice

Once Again, Tom Coburn Feeds The Judicial Vacancy Crisis In His State

Earlier this year, President Obama nominated Arvo Mikkanen, who would become the only sitting Native American federal judge in the country if he is confirmed, to a federal court in Oklahoma. Almost immediately, Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) placed Mikkanen on double-secret probation — vowing to block Mikkanen’s nomination, but refusing to tell anyone why.

Just six months later, Coburn is back to his same obstructionist tricks:

Sen. Tom Coburn shot down the impending nomination of the dean of the University of Tulsa law school for the vacant seat on the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, according to Oklahoma attorneys who said Coburn was concerned about Janet Levit’s background in international law. [...]

Levit is a Yale Law School graduate with a distinguished resume that includes serving as a clerk for the former chief judge of the 10th circuit court and arguing cases before the court. She has been dean of the University of Tulsa College of Law since 2008.

Levit’s academic specialty is international law, and she is a member of the American Society of International Law.

Coburn is one of the leading proponents of a paranoid fantasy that claims that activist judges are on the cusp of replacing American law with some kind of international legal new world order, but his decision to block Levit is bizarre even by Coburn’s standards. Apparently, merely knowing something about international law disqualifies you from service on the federal bench.

Coburn’s veto over judicial nominees within his state stems from a process known as “blue slipping” that effectively enables home-state senators to block nominees within their state that they disapprove of — although this rule somehow doesn’t apply when there is a conservative president. And it is unlikely that any nominee will survive Coburn’s effective veto given his deeply radical views of the Constitution. Coburn believes that Medicare, Medicaid, and education programs such as Pell Grants, federal student loans and Title I are all unconstitutional.

In other words, this is just one more example of how the Senate’s broken rules are failing the country. It makes no sense whatsoever to give a single senator with radical and idiosyncratic views the ability to prevent any new judges from being confirmed within his state.

Economy

Cantor Voted For Billions To Rebuild Schools In Iraq, Now Opposes Funding School Construction In America

Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) voted for over $120 billion to rebuild Iraq and Afghanistan, funds that were used to construct and repair schools, roads, bridges, and other critical infrastructure.

Now, Cantor is opposing President Obama’s proposal to spend $30 billion to modernize 35,000 American schools. Reuters has the story:

U.S. House Republican Leader Eric Cantor said on Monday he will not support President Barack Obama’s proposal to renovate U.S. schools as part of the administration’s bill to spur job growth.

He added that Obama should focus instead on cutting federal regulations that he says kill U.S. jobs…

The president’s proposal is a modest effort. The total maintenance and repair backlog at U.S. schools is estimated at $270 billion to $500 billion. While the funding Obama is proposing is fully offset, Cantor voted to build schools in Iraq and Afghanistan with deficit spending.

Construction and building projects generally create about 10,000 jobs per billion spent. At a time of high unemployment, the funding that Cantor opposes would create about 300,000 jobs. Economist Jared Berstein explains that funding to modernize schools is “a smart way to get a lot of people who really need jobs back to work, fix a critical part of our institutional infrastructure, save energy costs, provide kids with a better, healthier learning environment, and do so in way that everyone can see and feel good about each morning when they drop their kids at school.”

Contact your member of Congress and tell them that it is time to rebuild america now. You can do so: HERE.

NEWS FLASH

Huckabee: Rick Perry ‘hurt himself a lot’ by saying ‘Social Security is a criminal enterprise’ | Former Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-AR) panned Gov. Rick Perry’s derision of Social Security as a “Ponzi scheme” and “monstrous lie.” “Perry hurt himself a lot with his Social Security talk and what he said may be technically true, but you go to South Florida or even any part of Florida or even the part where I live in the panhandle where you have a lot of retired people and essentially say that Social Security is a criminal enterprise, that’s problematic,” said Huckabee. He joins former and current GOP presidential candidates Rep. Michele Bachmann (MN), former U.S. Ambassador to China Jon Huntsman, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty (MN), and — naturally — Mitt Romney in taking Perry to task.

Green

Mike Pompeo (R-Koch) Attacks ‘Radical’ Environmental Justice, Global Warming Internships

Rep. Mike Pompeo (R-KS), the top Koch Industries man in Congress, is continuing his assault on the Environmental Protection Agency and its mission to protect the public welfare from toxic polluters. Pompeo has introduced legislation (HR 2876) to kill the Environmental Justice Eco-Ambassador Program, a small graduate student internship program that deals with the connections between economic disparities, discrimination, and environmental health. According to Pompeo, the program is part of the Obama administration’s plot to “indoctrinate” students “to act as tools of this Administration’s radical policies“:

At a time when millions of Americans cannot find work and are saddled with record deficits and crippling environmental regulations, spending $6,000 of taxpayer money per student to act as tools of this Administration’s radical policies is clearly not acceptable — nor is it ever the role of the federal government to indoctrinate.

“The requirements outlined the EPA’s stated desire to recruit and hire, at taxpayer expense, only those college students who are ideologically in line with the Obama Administration’s radical environmental policies,” Pompeo claims.

But the “radical” requirements are simply as follows:

Applicants must have previously been involved and/or have a strong interest in environmental justice, social justice issues and/or environmental health disparities in an academic, volunteer and/ or employment setting.

Quite simply, Pompeo believes that justice is a radical ideology, based on willful ignorance of reality. Children living in poverty have higher exposure to toxic chemicals. Neighborhoods near toxic waste facilities are disproportionately minority and poor. Although this internship is a new program, the EPA’s Office of Environmental Justice was established under President George W. Bush, not President Obama.

Although Pompeo claims the federal government should never “indocrinate,” he is a co-sponsor of the Sanctity of Human Life Act, which decrees that “human life shall be deemed to begin with fertilization.”

Pompeo’s legislation would also forbid EPA spending on student “programs related to the study of greenhouse gas emissions.”

His bill is co-sponsored by Reps. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), John Carter (R-TX), Gregg Harper (R-MS), and David McKinley (R-WV).

Media

Fox Host Suggests Serena Williams’ Outburst Had A ‘Racial Undertone,’ Says It ‘Is What’s Wrong With Our Society’

After suffering from a career-threatening foot injury and subsequent life-threatening blood clots, rant-prone tennis player Serena Williams waged a serious comeback in pursuit of her 14th grand slam title at the U.S Open this year. But Williams not only lost her finals match yesterday — she lost her temper. Down a set, Williams ripped a forehand in the first game of the second set that she thought was a winner and yelled, “Come on” before the ball reached her opponent Samantha Stosur. Umpire Eva Asderaki invoked the hindrance rule and awarded the point to Stosur, giving her the game.

Williams berated Asderaki at a later changeover. “If you ever see me walking down the hall, look the other way, because you’re out of control,” she said. “You’re a hater. You’re unattractive inside. Who would do such a thing? And I never complain. Wow, what a loser.” While most reports deemed this emotional rant inappropriate, Fox and Friends host Gretchen Carlson views Williams as “what’s wrong with our society“:

CARLSON: See, this is what’s wrong with our society today. That’s the entitlement generation right there.

Somewhat out of character, Fox’s Brian Kilmeade flatly rejected Carlson’s notion and rightly pointed out that tennis legends like Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe had similar outbursts on court. Indeed, one of McEnroe’s threatening rants at the U.S. Open landed before the New York Supreme Court. Carlson, however, insisted that William was acting like a petulant child and even suggested that her outburst had a “racial undertone“:

CARLSON: Who’s with me on this? That that shows our kids that “I have no fault.” This is what I combat with my two little kids all the time. If you’re not a responsible parent, to constantly say “No, you need to take your own personal responsibility,” you end up saying things like that.

KILMEADE: You can use that as a teaching moment. If you’re going to be in a heated situation, please don’t call the referee on the inside.

CARLSON: And a “hater!”…I mean was that a racial undertone? I don’t quite get that.

Watch it, via Media Matters:

There’s a lot things that the Fox and Friends hosts “don’t quite get”: Spongebob Squarepants, Ramadan, Christmas, evolution, gay people, black people, etc. However, Carlson’s insistence that Williams’s not-uncommon outburst is a racially-charged sign of societal decay meets the very high threshold needed to leave even her fellow curvy-couchers a tad perplexed.

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