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Sunday, August 19, 2012

Global corporate execs prefer Obama over Romney



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Why are so many global corporate CEOs socialists who hate business? Don't they realize that Romney was also a CEO? Perhaps they noticed the poor economic performance of Massachusetts under government Romney or his keen ability to squeeze every cent out of his investments before throwing them away when there was no money left.

Reuters:
Twice as many business executives around the world say the global economy will prosper better if incumbent U.S. president Barack Obama wins the next election than if his Republican challenger Mitt Romney does, a poll showed on Friday.

Democrat Obama was chosen by 42.7 percent in the 1,700 respondent poll, compared with 20.5 percent for Romney. The rest said "neither".
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Chris Christie's NJ hits 35 year high for unemployment



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Tell us more about the New Jersey economic miracle, Governor Christie.
New Jersey’s unemployment rate jumped to a 35-year high of 9.8 percent in July, the state Labor Department said.

The rate climbed from 9.6 percent in June and is above the national level of 8.3 percent, which also increased last month. New Jersey lost 12,000 jobs in July, with the largest drops in manufacturing, construction, and professional and business services, the department said in a statement today.
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Romney adviser proposing kicking 65 and 66 year old off of Medicare to pay for tax cuts for the rich



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Romney ways of making sure that other rich people don't pay any taxes either. Read the rest of this post...

Two guys talking about Social Security and Medicare



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These guys are in "the big club" — both of them. See how friendly?



They're in the club ... but you're not (don't click at work):



Watch these again, in order; both are short.

Protecting Social Security (and the rest of the safety net) from the Big Boys Club will be Job One during the Lame Duck session.

Obama's a charter member of that club, and he'll be off the electoral leash:



Our homework assignment — plan and organize now. Strengthen Social Security, don't weaken it. Put Obama on the record, now:
Mr. Obama. Paul Ryan wants to slash the social safety net. Will promise no cuts to Social Security and Medicare?

Including cuts by raising the retirement age and changing the cost-of-living calculation?

No waffling please — zero cuts period, right? 'Cause if we wanted a waffle, we'd go to Belgium. From you we want an unequivocal answer.

Your friends,
People who will rewrite your legacy if you fail us
Electing the lesser evil is still electing evil. Those of you who believe in "lesser evil voting" have work to do.

Only half of your task is finished in November. The other half is protecting the rest of us from the "lesser evil" guy you voted for.

No waffling please. Obama's been a member of the kill-it-to-save-it club since 2006.

And like Mr. Carlin said, he's coming for it, just like the two nice guys up top.

GP

To follow or send links: @Gaius_Publius
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"FRC's own activities are what brought this down on them"



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Classliberal2 writes in the comments to my earlier post about the Family Research Council and the recent shooting at its headquarters in Washington, DC:
The FRC is loudly claiming the "hate group" designation brought on this attempted massacre, and I think it needs to be pointed out, much more loudly and forcefully, that their own activities are, in fact, what brought this down on them.

People shy away from that, because they think it sounds too much like apologism for this would-be terrorist fellow, but there's no way to look at the history of the FRC and come to any other conclusion.

And even after something like this happens, which could have turned into a real horror, it didn't inspire one moment of pause or reflection on behalf of anyone there, no thought that maybe they'd gone too far and should tone it down -- instead, they're off blaming someone else, so they can continue to do what they've always done.
The Family Research Council has decided to treat this tragedy as yet another opportunity to defame its victims. First, they blamed the shooting on the Southern Poverty Law Center for standing up to the Family Research Council's decades of hate and defamation against gay and trans people.  Then they went so far as to blame President Obama for the shooting.

Since the FRC has been shameless in playing the blame game in an attempt to milk this tragedy for political benefit, then so be it. Let's do what they're demanding we do, and talk about whose rhetoric is to blame for the shooting.

First, the shooter is clearly to blame.  And he probably has a screw loose somewhere (I don't care how hateful an organization is, picking up a gun and planning a shooting rampage (which is what I assume he was planning), which is almost certainly going to end up a suicide mission, is more than a bit screw-loose-y)).  It's also interesting to note that it's difficult to remember even one recent act of violence that involved a gay person targeting the religious right - violence on our side simply doesn't happen.  (Though, I'm not sure we even know the shooter's orientation.)

Second, the absurd availability of guns in our country (the shooter reportedly got the gun legally) is also to blame. We can thank conservative groups, the Republican party, and Blue Dog Democrats for making guns so easily available to nuts like this shooter, and the shooters in all the previous mass murders.

Third, since the Family Research Council wants to talk, incessantly, about what motivated the shooter besides insanity - about how, in the FRC's mind, words can absolutely positively push someone to violence - then let's talk about whether words could push someone to violence, including the Family Research Council's own words.

Is it possible, as the commenter wrote above, that the Family Research Council's own decades of hate and defamation against the gay and trans communities, and more generally the religious right's decades of defamation, finally pushed one of its victims, who was already unstable, over the edge?

Yes.

Does that mean that the FRC deserved to be shot at?

No.

But if the Family Research Council wants to make this debate about words inspiring violence, then let's have that conversation, and make it an honest conversation that considers their words in addition to ours.

The Family Research Council says that the SPLC, and the rest of us, called them a hate group and that that caused someone to open fire on the FRC.  The thing is, the SPLC calls lots of groups hate groups, and you don't see people regularly opening fire on any of those groups.  These include the Klan and white supremacists, who are pretty well-hated groups. Yet, there's little violence against them.  Thus, the appellation itself does not historically seem to lead to violence.

Second, the FRC would like you to believe that calling an organization a hate group is enough to push someone to murder; but actually being a hate group, acting like a hate group, talking like a hate group will have no impact whatsoever on some unhinged person's decision to take up violence.

That's a bit naive (and I suspect the FRC is anything but naive).  As I explain in this other blog post, the FRC is essentially blaming the SPLC for exposing the fact that the FRC is hateful.  Are we really to believe that the shooter would have been fine with the FRC's hateful anti-gay words and deeds - would have been fine being repeatedly mislabeled a pedophile - had the Southern Poverty Law Center not also added the moniker "hate group"?  Unlikely.

The thing is, it's not really news to gay people, and our allies, that the FRC is hateful.  As victims of far right hatred for all these years, we knew about the FRC and its brethren long before the SPLC spoke out in 2010.  So it's, again, naive to think that gay people, or our allies, were unaware of the Family Research Council's anti-gay rhetoric until the SPLC decided to call them on it.  If we were motivated to violence by the fact that we thought the FRC was hateful, you'd think the violence would have happened long before the SPLC got involved because all of us thought/knew they were hateful the first time they wrongfully accused us of being pedophiles, oh so many years ago.

Second, the FRC is, in essence, (and pardon the cliché under the circumstances) asking us to shoot the messenger.  FRC would like you to believe that even if someone didn't know about FRC's hate before, the fact that they learned about FRC's hate now via the SPLC, makes the SPLC responsible for any subsequent actions by any unhinged persons.  I explain the logical fallacy:
Isn't it a bit like complaining, "Joe punched me because you told him I slept with his wife." 
But you did sleep with his wife.

That doesn't mean Joe should resort to violence, ever. But you did sleep with his wife. So let's stop pretending that the sinner here is the guy who caught you.
The Family Research Council has made a business out of calling out "sinners," as they lovingly call us.  Yet when they're called out for their sins, their accusers are accused of inciting murder with their words, and told to STFU.  So the FRC is saying that it's okay to intentionally mislabel an entire class of Americans as pedophiles, but it's not okay for the so-called pedophiles to say "stop."

Not only is the Family Research Council's anti-gay rhetoric so hateful that I think it could inspire one of its less-level-headed victims to violence, I also fear, and have said so many times before, that their hateful rhetoric could motivate one of their less-leveled-headed followers to violence as well.  And it wouldn't be the first time "good Christians" took up violence against gays in order to be true to their God.

The Family Research Council has claimed for 20 years that gay men are after America's children - either to convert said children into a Satanic lifestyle of emptiness, disease and death; or we simply want to rape the kids, a lot.

Now, I'm not a parent, but I am an uncle.  And if I met someone who wanted to rape, or kill, my nieces and nephews, God help him.  That's all I'll say on the matter.  The suggestion that such language might not inspire violence in the defense of children is ludicrous.

The Family Research Council, and more generally the anti-gay right, can't have it both ways.  Either words can incite violence or they can't.  Falsely labeling someone a bad person can either provoke violence, or it can't.  The FRC would have us believe that our admonitions incite violence but theirs couldn't.

But if words can incite violence, then it's fair to examine all the words of all the parties to the dispute, not just the words of one side.

And if you examine what the Family Research Council, and really the entire religious right, has said - lied - about gay and trans people for the past two decades, not only is what they've said far worse than what any of their critics have said in response, but their language is so hateful, so damning, so incendiary on its face (and false, which only makes it all the more incendiary), that I believe it's difficult not to consider the possibility that the religious right might share some of the blame for recklessly inciting the violence that finally, and sadly, unfolded this past week. Read the rest of this post...

Billy Stewart - Summertime



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Though I still prefer the Zombies version a year earlier Billy Stewart's version is lots of fun.

Our plans to escape the heat yesterday never materialized, as the trains were all booked solid. At one point there were more than 600 kilometers of traffic jams in France due to summer travel, so everyone and their mother was on the road or rail. Instead, we melted a bit and eventually rounded up enough energy in the late afternoon to head across town to find some gardening stuff and then a gelato. It was simply too hot to muster up any more energy. The forecast for today is again 100F.

One of the worst parts of returning from summer vacation (besides not being on vacation) is realizing just how flavorless fruits and vegetables can be in the city. Though we have had some decent apricots and nectarines in town this year, figs, peppers, tomatoes don't even come close. My simple summer salad that includes red peppers and figs is still OK in Paris, but it was fantastic with the local food in the south.

I'm also missing local, fresh garlic that is everywhere in the south. The taste is much, much better than what is typically available in Paris. Oh well, there has to be a long weekend sometime soon when I can get back into the country. Read the rest of this post...

US consumer sentiment up



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Is the worst over? While it's hard to see much great news out there, enough people are starting to think that at least it can't get worse.
The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary August index of consumer sentiment increased to 73.6, the highest level since May, from 72.3 the prior month. The gauge was projected to be little changed at 72.2, according to the median forecast of 72 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

After two months of sliding sentiment, August’s advance indicates consumers may be feeling the benefits of growing payrolls. Rising confidence raises the odds households can sustain July’s pickup in retail sales, which set the pace for stronger growth in the third quarter.

“People have said the worst scenario is not going to happen,” said John Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina. Confidence “seems to be stabilizing at a fairly low level, suggesting to me that consumer spending is going to continue. I don’t see a huge pick- up in growth.”
Though there's very little great news ahead, the economy could certainly get much worse if the GOP implements its plan of austerity. If one looks at what is happening in the UK or Spain, it's clear that the economy can get much, much worse with Republican tampering. Read the rest of this post...


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