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Friday, April 15, 2005

Frist's Theocracy Under Attack



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Bill Frist really got himself in to the middle of the maelstrom by deciding to make the Senate a theocracy.

The wire services have picked up on Frist's plan to headline Focus on the Family's conference to bash judges and Democrats because apparently that's what God wants:

Reuters: Senate Leader Urged to Withdraw from Telecast

Associated Press: Reid Calls Frist's GOP Politics 'Radical'
Can't wait to see what the other papers have to say. And it's good to see the Dems. are fighting back.... Read the rest of this post...

Friday Night Open Thread



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No Friday Orchid Blogging while John's away.

But for all you Sci Fi Friday followers, John reports that in between the orchids, he had a VERY exciting day in NYC. He spotted Malcolm, the English guy from the Star Trek that just got cancelled, and said hello. Then, they had a 15 minute conversation about the show, why it got cancelled, etc. Malcolm's in NY filming a movie.

What's going on? Read the rest of this post...

Harry Reid blasts the Frist/GOP Theocracy



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Man, that guy is really one tough SOB. Atrios has the statement.

Lots of good, strong language, but my favorite line: This is a democracy, not a theocracy. Read the rest of this post...

The Vatican Already Has The Nuclear Option



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Maybe Frist is taking his cues from the late pontiff John Paul II. I'm currently reading "Heirs of the Fisherman: Behind the Scenes of Papal Death and Succession" by John-Peter Pham (Oxford Univ. Press). It's a great primer for the conclave beginning Monday that will elect the next Pope of the roughly one billion Catholics in the world.

JP II was already disappointingly conservative to me and of course I despair of a liberal Pope coming out of a conclave where 99% of the voters were put there by him. But as if that weren't safeguard enough, I find out that "in a radical departure from previous legislation" JP II instituted the nuclear option.

Fiddling with the rules of the conclave is a perennial pasttime of pontiffs, but one long-term tradition is that the Pope must receive a vote from two-thirds plus one of the cardinals present. So if there were 90 voters, they'd keep working at it until 61 voted for one candidate. But JP II changed that. If after 10 to 12 days of voting a new Pope hasn't been elected (not an unusual amount of time for this process, by the way), then a simple majority of 50% plus one will prevail.

This change from a "super-majority" to a simple majority has all the pitfalls in a Pope that we've considered for a Supreme Court Justice -- rather than switching to a candidate that has broader support, a core group of a simple majority can potentially elect someone who is vehemently opposed by almost half of the people present.

Knowing this, of course, cardinals might be far less willing to compromise -- why bother when they can have their way if they just wait long enough, even if it means electing an extremely divisive pontiff?

In the past, a dragged out conclave usually meant a compromise candidate -- ie less extreme -- was going to come to the fore. Now it means the exact opposite. So the longer it takes, the more worried moderate, Vatican II loving Catholics like myself will be. Read the rest of this post...

Oh, by the way, GOP, your economy is tanking



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While the whole Bush economic agenda seems to be to destroy social security, the rest of the economy seems to be pretty shaky based on this piece from AP:

Stocks plunged again Friday, suffering their worst day of 2005 and the third straight triple-digit loss for the Dow Jones industrial average. Deepening concerns over economic growth and higher prices led to the worst week of trading so far this year.

The Dow fell 198 points after an already uneasy market was disappointed with the latest economic news. The Federal Reserve reported drops in manufacturing and other industrial production, while a Labor Department report also showed higher oil costs driving up import prices and worsening Wall Street's chronic inflation worries.
The last couple days for the stock market haven't really been the best selling point for private accounts.

And, I know, Bush, Frist and DeLay are way, way too busy to worry about anything as mundane as skyrocketing gas prices, higher prices in general and drops in manufacturing, but this is the GOP's economy. They own it. Read the rest of this post...

Republicans to Step Up Attack over Judges Even More



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Associated Press reports that the GOP is going to get even more aggressive in their campaign against judges and the filibuster:

Senate Republicans are moving to put some muscle behind their pitch to eliminate judicial filibusters after watching liberals push out TV ads against them in anticipation of a showdown over who sits on federal appeals courts.

"They're ahead of the power curve," Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., said of the orchestrated effort by Democrats and groups such as MoveOn.org and People for the American Way. "I think you'll see a greater, stepped-up message on part of the Republicans, to go on offense on this issues."
(By the way, that's the same John Thune who was elected with the help of male prostitute Jeff Gannon.)

We do have to ask, in the current climate, what do "aggressive" and "muscle" mean to the GOP?

Is it more violence provoking language from DeLay and Cornyn?

Setting up Mass Impeachments?

Invoking Stalinist solutions?

Making the Senate a theocracy? Read the rest of this post...

China Encouraged Protests, Now Fears Them



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This is kind of funny, actually. China at the very least implicitly encouraged a recent wave of public demonstrations against Japan. Unfortunately, their one billion citizens decided they LIKED raising a ruckus in public and have planned another wave of protests this weekend and in May and June. Now the Chinese government is freaking out. "Express your patriotic passion in an orderly manner," is one oh so Chinese missive from the police.

A similar wave of anti-Japan protests in the mid-80s soon blossomed into protests over the CHINESE government and led to the ouster of the then-head of the Communist Party. As you know, tens of millions of Chinese literally roam the countryside looking for work and vague reports of mass protests in outer provinces are far from unusual. My favorite detail from the plans by organizers for this weekend's rallies: a plea for people to avoid bringing Japanese cameras or other electronic goods. Yes, you hate them but you love their toys.

So China woke up the dragon and now, hopefully, it's turning on its jailers. Read the rest of this post...

Friday Afternoon Open Thread



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It's almost the weekend.... Read the rest of this post...

Catholicism On The Decline in Latin America



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How effective was the papacy of John Paul II? The LA Times has been running a series of articles on the state of the Church. The latest looks at Latin America, where Catholicism was once so completely dominant it boggles the mind. Now evangelical Christians are gorwing by leaps and bounds. Per the LA Times:

In countries where Catholics once accounted for more than 90% of the population, evangelicals now constitute a significant religious minority, sometimes with social and political clout beyond their numbers.

In Chile, Honduras and Brazil, for example, about 15% of the population describes itself as evangelical Protestant. The figure rises to 22% in El Salvador; in Guatemala, it's 25%. In Mexico's southern Chiapas state, local press reports estimate the evangelical population to be 36% of adults.

Paraguay, albeit still overwhelmingly Catholic, now has its first evangelical president, Nicanor Duarte Frutos. President Alvaro Uribe of Colombia made news when he tried reaching out to evangelicals, who now make up about 10% of the country's population.


How'd they do it? Much like in the US -- the media. They've been buying up TV and radio stations, training ministers in months instead of years, capitalizing on the Catholic Church's entanglement in so many governments, and generally being smarter and more nimble.

One simple fact remains: the Catholic Church grew from 750 million to 1 billion during JP II's reign. But without enough priests to minister to them (the shortage of priests in Latin America is so severe people can go six months to a year without seeing one), how will the flock be tended? Read the rest of this post...

Bill Frist: Leader of the Theocracy



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The impending debate in the United States Senate over the nuclear option is now a religious battle according to Senator Bill Frist. That's what today's New York Times is reporting today in a front page piece titled "Frist Set to Use Religious Stage on Judicial Issue." Scary stuff. The Senate is now a theocracy:

As the Senate heads toward a showdown over the rules governing judicial confirmations, Senator Bill Frist, the majority leader, has agreed to join a handful of prominent Christian conservatives in a telecast portraying Democrats as "against people of faith" for blocking President Bush's nominees.

Fliers for the telecast, organized by the Family Research Council and scheduled to originate at a Kentucky megachurch the evening of April 24, call the day "Justice Sunday" and depict a young man holding a Bible in one hand and a gavel in the other. The flier does not name participants, but under the heading "the filibuster against people of faith," it reads: "The filibuster was once abused to protect racial bias, and it is now being used against people of faith."
So, on the one hand, we have DeLay and Cornyn threatening judges, we have some of the right wingers talking about invoking Stalinist "Death solves all problems: no man, no problem." techniques to deal with judges...and now, the Senator leader had decided the filibuster debate is about not only about God, but the "godless" Democrats.

Almost unbelievable. This is clearly Frist's attempt to break out of the pack in the race for President in 2008 which the Washington Post covered in their "nuclear option" story today:

The strategy carries significant risks for the Tennessee Republican, who is weighing a 2008 presidential bid. It could embroil the Senate in a bitter stalemate that would complicate passage of President Bush's agenda and raise questions about Frist's leadership capabilities. Should he fail to make the move or to get the necessary votes, however, Frist risks the ire of key conservative groups that will play big roles in the 2008 GOP primaries.
So Frist is cozying up to the right wingers in a big, big way, like by turning over the Senate agenda to them. Dr. Frist will be in the company of the leaders of theocracy wing of the GOP at their judge bashing gathering, the Times reports:

Some of the nation's most influential evangelical Protestants are participating in the teleconference in Louisville, including Dr. James C. Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family; Chuck Colson, the born-again Watergate figure and founder of Prison Fellowship Ministries; and Dr. Al Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.
There was a time when Senate leaders took a more measured view of God and politics. Back in 1987, during the Iran-Contra Hearings, former Senator George Mitchell (D-ME) said to Oliver North "Although he's regularly asked to do so, God does not take sides in American politics."

Those were the days. Now, we are faced with a Senate Leader who is running a theocracy and attacking the religious convictions of the opposition party. This is really scary stuff. It sounds like something that should be coming out of Tehran, not D.C. The Democrats have to stand strong, engage the remaining few normal Republicans and shut this debate down once and for all.

We all have to make noise too. Between the theocracy and the threats of violence, the GOP has given us the talking points. Read the rest of this post...

Regarding Michael's post below about the nuclear option on judges



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Now is the time for any of you who have given any money to anyone on this list to ask them why they let the best opportunity for us to kill the nuclear option slip by.

These past two weeks, the Republicans have been on the defensive on the judge issue like never before. For the first time they're scared. And why are they scared? Because their hatred of judges and hatred for our system of government, along with their hubris and lock-step loyalty to the religious right, finally caused them to overstep. They bullied their way into the Terri Schiavo fiasco like a bull in a China shop. DeLay then threatened judges. Cornyn then showed empathy for the murder of judges. The religious right then held a conference in which one participant said Stalin had the right idea of how to deal with judges, then quoted a line from Stalin justifying the murder of millions.

How did the traditional old-school non-profits on that list reac to this incredible opportunity to expose the Republicans for who they really aret? Our groups launched a Web site with a talking cartoon called Phil. A. Buster. They then sent out email alerts and DIDN'T EVEN MENTION ANYTHING THAT HAPPENED OVER THE PAST WEEK. No DeLay, no Cornyn, no religious right, no anti-judge hate speech. Just a nice scholarly explanation of why a filibuster is important. No passion. No seizing the moment.

These are the groups that get the lion's share of the money from the big donors and big foundations. And what they do with all those millions is launch cute cartoon Web sites like SavePhil.com while the Republicans fight back with howitzers. They pass up golden opportunities that are handed to them like this kill-the-judges debacle, then they wonder why they're losing our respect.

This is a fiasco and a travesty, what these groups have done - or failed to do - with the opportunity that's been presented them. The Republicans screwed up big time and know it and are scared, the Democrats on the Hill are speaking out loudly and in unison on this issue, the media is dying to cover it and already has. The issue of anti-judge hate speech is read to explode, it's our for the picking. And our traditional groups are sitting back and doing nothing to take advantage of this opportunity (and spare me the "they gave a quote to a newspaper" line).

I'm talking launching a campaign, a real campaign, to capitalize on anti-judge hate speech and anti-judge violence and the culture of violence created by the religious right and the GOP's hateful rhetoric, rhetoric that condones and empathizes with domestic terrorists. It's the kind of thing the traditional non-profits wouldn't touch with a ten foot pole because it's "too mean" and "too edgy." It's the kind of thing that someone like me or my friends could do for $50k versus the millions those groups will spend on their boring and ineffective little lectures.

We just lost the opportunity of a lifetime, an opportunity that will affect the filibuster debate, but more importantly, court nominees all the way up to the Supreme Court, because those groups just don't get it and couldn't seize an opportunity that dropped in their laps.

It's time for a revolution in our party, and it needs to start at the top and work its way down. The old-school organizations, the ones that have been around for years, have lost their way, their backbone, their will to live. It's time we did the humane thing, pull their plugs, and pass the torch to a new generation who can do better work, real work, at a pittance of the cost.

PS By old school I mean the traditional non-profits that have been around for years. Not the NEW ones like CREW, Democracy for America, Center for American Progress, etc. They're new and doing their jobs. Read the rest of this post...

So this is what morning looks like...



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Have to catch an 8am flight to NYC for the orchid show. I can't believe I'm doing this. I can count the number of times I've been up this early in my life on, probably, two hands. Vacations with mom and dad (dad always had us wake up at 4am to hit the road before traffic). Debate tournaments (nothing like Chicago at 6am, in the dark, with your hair freezing off). Princess Diana's funeral. And now this. Ugh.

Anyway, I'll probably have limited access to the computer this weekend, but Joe in DC has promised to fill in mightily, as will, of course, Rob and Chris and Michael. Enjoy. Read the rest of this post...

The other side of the Oil for Food scandal



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I don't have any faith left in Kofi Anann after his own failures in the past (Rwanda) and more recently the Oil for Food mega-scandal that linked his son to a tasty $365,000. The only thing that annoys me more than that mess is the GOP hypocrits who somehow overlook the Americans who have been involved in the scandal. If you follow the MSM you would hardly know that Americans were involved because surely we all know it's only those pesky Frenchies, Russians and Germans who somehow tried to deny America's right to invade and bomb a poor nation and its people.

Now if this story is true about vocal Food for Oil critic and Clinton-hating wingnut who received campaign money from Bayoil, let's see how much coverage it receives. It's probably somehow Clinton's fault though. Read the rest of this post...

Another day, another loss of personal data



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This time it's Polo Ralph Lauren data, right on the heels of yesterdays "surprise" (oh how shocking) from LexisNexis about the identity theft there. With so many identity thefts making the news we should expect Congress to do something about it, right? Just kidding of course, as they're all tied up at the moment paying back those generous campaign donors with the Star Spangled Bankruptcy Bill that will no doubt resolve the problem and help average Americans.

Congress is of course talking about this problem and is talking tough but I'll believe it when I see it. Looking at recent history, one can guess the end result. At least we have the Democratic party out there fighting for us and standing up to the bullies on the right. (Joking, of course.) Read the rest of this post...

Congress throws a bone to big business



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As if we had any doubt where their bread is buttered. Read the rest of this post...


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