Scarabus

Crawling toward the sunlight

Archive for the ‘Wingnuts’ Category

Contemporary American politics

Monday, June 17th, 2013

 

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Discussion thread on Truthout re Edward Snowden and his “outing” of the NSA

Monday, June 17th, 2013

 

I’m assuming I needn’t tell anyone about either the current NSA scandal or Edward Snowden’s role in it. This entry is not so much about what Snowden revealed to the press as about how those revelations were received, especially by those usually thought of as liberals or progressives.

 

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I said I needn’t tell anyone likely to be reading this about who Edward Snowden is or what the NSA is … Wait! Perhaps I should take that back. What do you know about the NSA? How does it differ from the NSC? When was it established? What is its mission? What are its legal constraints? Who leads it? To whom does it report?

Really, I’m formally well educated (earned Ph.D. from a prestigious research university), and since my retirement in 2009 I’ve been spending a lot of time catching up on “civics” and “current events,” so to speak. I’ve known for some time about the official distinctions among the CIA, NSA, NSC, etc. — at least on a “primer” level. But since this particular scandal broke, I’ve had to do a lot of digging and studying to catch up.

President Obama was asked once at a press conference why he hadn’t yet stated a position on some still breaking story. He responded that, being the president, he liked to make sure he knew what he was talking about before he stated his position. Whatever else I might approve or disapprove about Barack Obama’s presidency, that particular principle I wholeheartedly endorse: Research; consult; reflect; take a deep breath while counting to at least 10; and then speak.

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All of which leads to the focus here: the disappointing knee-jerk responses of liberals to Snowden’s whistleblowing. On the one hand these responses have included calling Snowden a “traitor,” without consideration (or even knowledge) of what he actually revealed. On the other hand they have ignored the REAL betrayal here: Why are we American citizens, within the U.S., being spied on? Why is this spying being “privatized” to companies with a “revolving door” relationship with the Pentagon and the federal government? Why (as they just admitted) is the NSA — supposedly limited to foreign intelligence — tapping voice conversations of U.S. citizens, within the borders of the U.S., without a warrant?

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I read this post on Truthout, though as I recall it might have been reprinted from elsewhere:

 

Clarity From Edward Snowden and Murky Response From Progressive Leaders in Congress
Saturday, 15 June 2013 11:55 By Norman Solomon, Norman Solomon’s Blog | Op-Ed

 

Here’s my initial response to the post, plus some subsequent back-and-forth. I hope you’ll read the post and join the discussion:

 

Scarabus:

The fundamental problem is that liberals and progressives in general are damaging, not just their own credibility, but also the foundations of our democracy – not deliberately but through their tepid and, at times, embarrassingly superficial response.

Sure, I agree that “Occupy” is important. However, in this context Occupy is “something shiny over there.” I would add MSNBC. How often and how extensively has that supposedly left of center network covered either this or the closely related Bradley Manning issue? Important but, again, potentially distracting.

We need to emphasize the *combination* rather than one or another of its constituent parts. The grassroots (represented here by Occupy) haven’t stood up. The media (represented here by MSNBC) haven’t stood up. And elected leaders (represented here by Congress) haven’t stood up.

I agree with Solomon that Congress is crucial. But Congress can be pushed by the grassroots and the media. The *parts* of the liberal/progressive community should be spotlighted discretely, for sure. But always in the context of the *overall* failure, failure of the whole that’s greater than the sum of those parts.

Walt Kelly’s Pogo says, “We have met the enemy and he is us!” The enemy is “them” as well, to be sure! But in many, many ways “us” above all. Not one or another division of “us,” but all of us.

Douglas:

I cannot agree with your equating MSNBC, a corporate media channel featuring talking heads who shill for the corporate controlled Democratic Party, wirh Occupy, an anti-corporate grassroots movement. The anti-corporate media, such as Truthout, Firedoglake, Counterpunch, Alternet, Truthdig and others have stood up for Occupy as well as for Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden. Last week some of the anchors on ultra conservative Fox News, most notably Shepherd Smith and Judge Napolitano, were defending Edward Snowden and Glenn Greenwald, while so-called porogressives like Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell on MSNBC were putting as much distance between themselves and Snowden and Greenwald as possible.. I do agree with your overall point. In its insistence in defending neo-liberal Obama and the Democrats, liberals and progressives have discredited themselves and their movement. Too many of them have become police state liberals.

Scarabus:

I realize my argument was fuzzy and confused. Basically, though, I was envisioning sort of “four estates” plus spontaneous ad hoc opposition. If the four estates function as they should, they’ll put a check on each other and matters will stay in reasonable balance. If they don’t — and we’re lucky — ad hoc opposition will coalesce and move the system back toward positive stability.

I intended that MSNBC be seen, not individually, but as just one example of the failure of the fourth estate; and Occupy as an example of ad hoc outside-the-system attempts to restore justice and balance.

As you note, however, MSNBC is also part of the Wall Street/Corporate power structure. That’s where the metaphor disintegrates. The corporate system isn’t discrete from the four estates. Rather it’s like a cancer metastasizing throughout that system. Enough. I’m getting depressed.

Douglas:

Good comment. Thanks for clarifying your position. We seem to be in basic agreement.

 

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Having lost our copy of the 1984 movie version of George Orwell’s novel, I ordered a replacement on line. While doing so, I read that sales and inquiries (for novel and movie) had skyrocketed since Snowden’s revelations and NSA’s subsequent admissions of guilt. (I’m not a lawyer, so let me restrict that to moral and ethical and “spirit of the Constitution” guilt. Constitutionality is yet to be determined.)

My colleague Chuck Vedder and I team-taught a winter term course on this matter in … wait for it! … 1984. Chuck is a sociologist, and, at the time, I wan an English professor. One of the works we taught was 1984 (both novel and movie, as I recall – though that was a long time ago and I could be wrong). Obvious choice, naturally, but nonetheless a good one, I think.

I recommend that every thoughtful, conscientious American read the novel and/or watch the 1984 John Hurt, Richard Burton, Suzanna Hamilton version of the movie. I’ve read that a re-make is in the works. I think that’s both appropriate and inevitable. Problem is how to get Americans to recognize that, regardless of its fictional setting, 1984 is about us, now.

 

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Extra Credit!

 

  • Who is Keith Alexander?
  • Why do persons in the “intelligence community” call him Emperor Alexander?
  • Why is he often referred to as one of the most powerful persons on the planet?
  • Why have 99.99% of Americans never heard of him? (Including the craziest of wingnut conspiracy freaks!)
  • Does that matter? Why or why not?

Spying on the organization that is supposed to supervise the spying

Sunday, June 16th, 2013

 

What’s the trouble with bringing a baby crocodile into your home as a pet? The trouble is that it will grow up to be an adult crocodile that will kill and eat you.

 

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Trashing nature’s gift (or God’s gift, if you’re a believer)

Saturday, June 15th, 2013

 

h/t Susie Madrak at Crooks and Liars

For the rich abundance of life on this planet to have evolved required the confluence so many variables that it’s hard to get one’s mind around it. What a wonderful opportunity, and beautiful gift, the human race was presented. So of course we’ve disfigured the beauty and destroyed the gift.

As Hamlet says:

“What a piece of work is a man!
How noble in reason! How infinite in faculties!
In form and moving, how express and admirable!
In action how like an angel!
In apprehension how like a god!
The beauty of the world!
The paragon of animals!
And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust?”

 

This time lapse video of a supercell forming over Texas reminds us both of the terrible beauty of nature, and of the terrible forces we’ve turned against ourselves. As the prophet Hosea says (KJV):

 

For [we] have sown the wind, and [we] shall reap the whirlwind: it hath no stalk: the bud shall yield no meal…

 

 

Nixon: “If the president does it, then it’s legal.”

Saturday, June 15th, 2013

 

Often heard these days: “If the good guys do it, then it’s a good thing to do.” Besides…

 

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NATIONAL SECURITY!

KEEP AMERICA SAFE!!

 

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Freedom *of* religion vs. freedom *from* religion.

Saturday, June 15th, 2013

 

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Texas Gov. Rick Perry: Americans have no right to freedom from religion
By Eric W. Dolan
Thursday, June 13, 2013 17:15 EDT

 

“I think it was Thomas Jefferson who said the price of liberty is eternal vigilance,” Nichols remarked. “One of those freedoms is the freedom of speech, freedom of expression, and as the governor was saying the Constitution refers to the freedom of religion, not the freedom from religion.”

“So, challenges to these freedoms that we enjoy can come in a lot of different ways,” the state senator continued. “They can come in very large ways like the war on terror or our freedoms can be taken away in small ways like the removal of a Christmas tree from a classroom.”

 

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U.S. version of Stassi? Even in their happiest wet dreams the Stassi couldn’t have imagined this!

Tuesday, June 11th, 2013

Update: Yeah. I misspelled “Stasi.” I recognized it as soon as I saw it on my blog.  But I left it. I’m a fuck-up, and so is everyone else. Including everyone at every level of government. And every official part of our security establishment. And every “private contractor” like Snowden and his employers — the cyber-equivalents of “Blackwater.”

You trust these fuck-ups? including me? Then it’s game over. Democracy is done.

 

Referring to Snowden’s revelations about the NSA’s spying on Americans, MSNBC’s Chris Matthews just said, “Apparently a majority of Americans are OK with this program.” I hope “Tweety” is wrong (as he is most of the time). Here’s why:

Were these same Americans OK with the “inform on your neighbors” practices Nazis encouraged in occupied Europe? Remember Anne Frank? You like both the child’s idealistic diary and the craven domestic spying of the weasels who outed her to the Nazis … who, albeit indirectly, murdered both her and her family? Then look up the term “cognitive dissonance” on the web.

You like the NSA spying on Americans program? But you hate the spying on East Germans program of the notorious Stassi? Same advice: Look up the term “cognitive dissonance.”

 

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Why did J. Edgar Hoover remain in office for so long? Even though several successive presidents recognized his poisonous evil and personally hated him? Because Hoover’s F.B.I., on his personal orders, had for decades been collecting covert information with which to blackmail anyone who even hinted at deposing him.

You think the feds can be trusted to use data they collect only against those we all would consider enemies of or threats to our nation? You’re sane, sober, and drug-free? And you still believe that?

You a Democrat? Remember that what David Spitzer did was the same as what a whole lot of politicians do, regardless of party. But only Spitzer was targeted by an official federal investigation. Why Spitzer? Uh, you do remember that his nickname was “Sheriff of Wall Street,” right? And that he was investigated and threatened with prosecution by the Alberto Gonzales “Cheney/Shrub” Justice Department, right? You a Republican? Remember your hysteria about your conviction that the feds — IRS to be specific — were using information they had collected to target ultra-rightwing 401 (c ) tax dodgers?

You still trust the feds to collect information about every American citizen, indiscriminately, and then cherry-pick that information to target our nation’s enemies? And you trust that your definition of our nation’s enemies will be the same as that of whichever bureaucratic/elected/private contractor is doing the cherry-picking?

Then you’re beyond the reach of evidence and rational argument. Just return to your leftwing or centrist or rightwing pipe dream.

Welcome to Florida!

Tuesday, June 4th, 2013

 

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Citing Stand Your Ground, Jury Acquits Man Who Killed Wife’s Lover

By Nicole Flatow on Jun 4, 2013 at 9:00 am

 

Ralph Wald, a 70-year-old Vietnam veteran, walked into his home around midnight, and less than ten seconds later, fired three shots at Walter Conley, according to ABC News. He told the jury he thought Conley was raping his wife when he saw them having intercourse in his home. But during a 911 call, when the dispatcher asked Wald if the man was dead, Wald responded, “I hope so!” and refused to help the man. He asked for medical help for his wife, Johnna Flores, since he thought he accidentally shot her also. He said he didn’t recognize Conley even though he had been roommates with his wife prior to her relationship with Wald, lived next door to Wald, had tattoos of Flores on his neck and back, and worked for Flores at her fencing company.

Prosecutors argued that Wald, who suffered from erectile dysfunction, killed Conley in a jealous rage, pointing out that Wald used the word “fornicate” in reports to police, and never the word “rape.”

 

 

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The scandal is turning a nothing into a scandal

Monday, June 3rd, 2013

 

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William Boardman
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Monday 3 June 2013

Can’t Anyone Here Play This Game Straight?

Almost everything you hear and read in the media about the current IRS “scandal” is based on deliberate falsification of basic facts. Some might call it lying.

Here’s a reasonably typical media-framing of the IRS lie, from the usually careful and accurate Economist, posted May 23: “Even before this month’s revelation that conservative political groups applying for 501(c)(4) status were being singled out for special scrutiny….”

You see this false framing of the IRS story across the media spectrum, from Info wars to ABC News and NBC News to the Economist to DemocracyNOW! (The latter on May 24: “the scandal over the targeted vetting of right-wing groups…). Even the usually reliable Wonkblog at the Washington Post doesn’t get the story right, apparently because it hasn’t read the relevant law.

An exception to this remarkable mental stampede in the wrong direction was Jeffrey Toobin (New Yorker, May 14) who wondered, “Did the I.R.S. actually do anything wrong?” His answer started to put the story in reasonable perspective, with a focus on tax law and political money: “…the scandal isn’t what’s illegal—it’s what’s legal. It’s what society chooses not to punish that tells us most about the prevailing ethical standards of the time.”
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Only near the end of the story, in a clumsily written paragraph, does the AP reporter touch on the factual context for the news Lerner was breaking and in which she had been a central player:

“In all, about 300 groups were singled out for additional review, Lerner said. Of those, about a quarter were singled out because they had ‘tea party’ or ‘patriot’ somewhere in their applications.”

In other words, about 225 applications were not “political conservative groups, as AP had reported at the top of the story, and for which it has yet to issue a correction or an apology.

 

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Saturday, June 1st, 2013

 

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Michael Glatzke back before he realized that the only boy he was supposed to love was God.

 

THE GAYING OF AMERICA
Homosexuality – the way God sees it
Exclusive: Michael Glatze calls on Christian men to stand against ‘rape’ of divine relationship

By Michael Glatze

Homosexuality is a problem.

For you, perhaps, Bozo. For me, your attitude toward homosexuality is the problem.

Let’s just be clear: Everybody knows that homosexuality is not the same thing as heterosexuality. But what not everybody understands is that homosexuality is not a perversion of heterosexuality. Homosexuality is a perversion of the correct relationship between God and His creation, man.

Hmmm… To start with, homosexuality is not a “perversion” of anything. Beyond that you seem to be saying it’s a perversion of a “relationship” between two “guys.”

Thus, since God is male and His creation – man – is male, the appropriate relationship (under the Headship of Christ) is to be satisfied in spiritual union with God.

In rhetoric this is called “begging the question.” It means assuming the conclusion in presenting the premise. You can’t base a second conclusion on the fact that God is “male” until you first prove that he/she/it is. Are you sufficiently presumptuous as to claim you know what one would see if God were to raise the hem of his dainty pink nightie?

This “Headship of Christ” thing is kind of funky! Are you saying that there’s a three-boy relationship here, and that Christ is the “dom” and you and God “subs”? But with no hint of carnality since just one of the three of you is flesh and blood, the other two manifesting themselves only in visions of what someone existing only as pure spirit might look like. Maybe like an image appearing in a desert. mirage?

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That is why Paul, in 1 Corinthians 6, says we have “become one spirit” with God. And, it is also why Paul describes, in Romans 1, the pattern of degradation that takes place when men turn from God. Ultimately, it results in homosexuality, because the man – seeking for a spiritual fellowship with God – positions himself either as a “god” for another man, or in the position of worshiping another man as “god.”

This seems an acknowledgement of the practical difficulty I mentioned just above. A man wants to bridge the existential gap and consummate his love. In terms of this threesome that means making it with another man, with either him or the other guy pretending that his carnal flesh is in fact spirit of the same substance as God. And that’s how you define homosexuality?

God gifted me with a personal walk through homosexuality to the other side. Now, today, I’m happy and living a good, God-honoring life. I am satisfied with my God; thus, He is satisfied with me. And in that satisfaction I am able to share with people the kind of Christianity I know honors my Lord and Savior…

So God was like Virgil, and you like Dante the Pilgrim, walking through that part of Mt. Purgatory where the “unnaturals” were going through detox? That seems somewhat prideful on your part. But what comes next goes way beyond pridefulness and into world class hubris. “I am satisfied with God; thus He is satisfied with me.” In other words, you control God’s emotional state (God being the sort of spiritual being that experiences human emotions like love and anger and jealousy and fulfillment). It’s a strange universe you inhabit, Mr. Glatze.

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Oh, incidentally, how does the Holy Ghost fit in here. Does it have sex or gender? And what about  women – like Eve, Lilith, and the Virgin Mary? And how does the last’s impregnation relate to the question above concerning sexual consummation of a relationship between a flesh and blood human and a spirit?

 

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Lilith, Adam’s first wife. A common version of the legend is that Lilith liked to be on top during sex. Adam wanted always to be dominant, so he asked God to make another woman for him, one who wouldn’t try to be his equal. So God took one of Adam’s ribs and made Eve, a subordinate part of her master. Lilith was kicked out and left to wander the earth — some say as a witch, some a demon, some a succubus. She’s often depicted with red hair. In earlier centuries she was blamed for wet dreams and SIDS.