Wherein we castigate the middlebrow thinking of the willfully ignorant and hypocrites of Minnesota.
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Friday, September 25, 2009
Tim Pawlenty, big fat liar
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Iranian Election and Twitter
This article was originally captured from here:
http://reinikainen.co.uk/2009/06/iranelection-cyberwar-guide-for-beginners
Reposted here: http://heavenp2.somee.com/helpiraniantwitters.pdf
#iranelection cyberwar guide for beginners
Posted at June 16, 2009
The purpose of this guide is to help you participate constructively in the Iranian election protests through Twitter.
1. Do NOT publicize proxy IPs over Twitter, and especially not using the #iranelection hastag. Security forces are monitoring this hashtag, and the moment they identify a proxy IP they will block it in Iran. If you are creating new proxies for the Iranaian bloggers, direct message them to @stopAhmadi or @iran09 and they will distribute them discretely to bloggers in Iran.
2. Hashtags - the only two legitimate hashtags being used by bloggers in Iran are #iranelection and #gr88. Other hashtag ideas run the risk of diluting the conversation.
3. Keep your bull$h*t filter up! Security forces are now setting up Twitter accounts to spread disinformation by posing as Iranian protesters. Please don't retweet impetuously. Try to confirm information with reliable sources before retweeting. The legitimate sources are not hard to find and follow.
4. Help cover the bloggers: change your Twitter settings so that your location is TEHRAN and your time zone is GMT + 3:30. Security forces are hunting for bloggers using location and timezone searches. If we all become 'Iranians' it becomes much harder to find them.
5. Don't blow their cover! If you discover a genuine source, please don't publicize their name or location on a website. These bloggers are in REAL danger. Spread the word discretely through your own networks but don't signpost them to the security forces. People are dying there, for real. Please keep that in mind.
6. Denial of Service attacks. If you don't know what you are doing, stay out of this game. Only target those sites the legitimate Iranian bloggers are designating. Be aware that these attacks can have detrimental effects on the network the protesters are relying upon. Keep monitoring their traffic to note
when you should the taps on or off.
7. Do spread the (legitimate) word, it works! When the bloggers asked for Twitter maintenance to be postponed using the #nomaintenance tag, it had the desired effect. As long as we spread good information, provide moral support to the protesters, and take our lead from the legitimate bloggers, we can make a constructive contribution.
Please remember that this is about the future of the Iranian people. While it might be exciting to get caught up in the flow of participating in a new meme, do not lose sight of what this is really about.
Monday, April 13, 2009
Sad State of Health Care
Wednesday, April 01, 2009
Who supports Pawlenty these days?
Today's Timberjay editorial says in part:
The budget plan that the governor has proposed includes a deficit of approximately $1 billion, even after nearly $2 billion in federal stimulus funding is included. The governor proposes to address that deficit by issuing bonds, which will supposedly be repaid through future proceeds from the state’s tobacco settlement. With interest, the bonds will require payment of a total of $1.7 billion over 20 years.
The federal government does exactly the same thing when its available revenues don’t meet its spending plans. It issues Treasury bonds to cover the shortfall, and the cost of current spending is paid for by adding to the nation’s longstanding debt.
Pawlenty says he now wants to do that here in Minnesota. Now we can certainly argue about whether the state’s prohibition on deficit spending is a good thing, particularly in tough economic times, when most economists believe running government deficits is useful. But Pawlenty isn’t making that argument. In fact, he’s made considerable political hay chiding Washington for its own growing deficits, due in large part to the stimulus funds that have helped the states, including Minnesota, stave off the worst effects of the recession.
Pawlenty clearly isn’t content with mere doubletalk here - he’s speaking from both sides of his mouth while his hands are dealing three card monty. Hypocrisy is a term that just doesn’t do it justice.
Calling the proposal unconstitutional, the paper goes on to explain the problems with Pawlenty's plan, and how it's likely Pawlenty will be back asking for more deficit spending in the future. They also place blame for the cause of the state's financial trouble squarely on Pawlenty's shoulders:
There is, of course, a very simple reason behind the governor’s deficit spending. His reckless “no-new-taxes” pledge in conjunction with tax policy changes he backed as House Majority Leader, have left the state with an essentially permanent budget deficit.
It's commendable that the Timberjay editorial gets the whole story right - it's not just Pawlenty's time in the governor's office where he's done harm, but the many years in the State House where he pushed through bad financial policies.
I don't know the political persuasion of the editorial writer or writers at the Timeberjay, but I've got to imagine the general tenor of political discourse in the newspaper's circulation area to be traditional conservative. That might mean they're not fond of modern day self-labled Republicans who have stolen the party from true conservatives. Perhaps I'm going out on a log here. But the final sentences of the editorial certainly seem to indicate a lack of belief in Pawlenty as a conservative:
Pawlenty now proposes to deal with the situation he helped create by longterm borrowing that will only exacerbate the problem for future state leaders by stealing future revenues to pay for operational spending today. What we have is a governor who claims the mantle of fiscal conservatism while proposing the most fiscally damaging solution to a state budget crisis since the founding of the state.
And he has the guts to call Washington irresponsible?
Monday, March 30, 2009
Pawlenty supporters claim gov prevents wasteful spending
The legislative auditor again criticized Pawlenty administration fiscal controls, this time in monitoring federal funds flowing through state coffers. The Strib's Mike Kaszuba says there was a "material weakness" that, among other things, enabled a five-year-long, $1 million theft. Poor instructions to counties made it impossible to monitor some spending.
That's just brilliant. Mr. "I'm trying to save the state money" Pawlenty is allowing theft of money his office controls.
What does that make Pawlenty supporters? Ignoramuses? Or hypocrites?
Michele Bachmann apparently deaf
I can't believe this idiot was ever elected to any office. I guess it demonstrates that her supporters are likewise "deaf" idiots.
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
The problem with right-wing fear mongers
From the comments section on the Washington Monthly site, comes this:
the seal wrote: "She [Sarah Palin] is the only republican who is even dimly aware of the (white)working class, and she speaks their language."
That's hardly the case. Most of Rush Limbaugh's audience is "white working class" and much of the language that Palin uses has been pretty much lifted from Rush Limbaugh's script.
As for this discourse being "their language" -- i.e. the language of working class people -- it is really the language of their worst fears, basest instincts and most shameful prejudices, language which is used to manipulate them into despising and resenting other folks who share their interests and supporting right-wing Republican crooks who proceed to rob and steal from them on behalf of ultra-rich corporate oligarchs.
Posted by: SecularAnimist on January 13, 2009 at 1:05 PM | PERMALINK
The important part is the last paragraph. The Republicans I grew up with and admired were good conservatives, full of hope and optimism. They were honest and hard working. They did not manipulate and play to people's fears, basest instincts and shameful prejudices. They did not steal from the poor to coddle the rich.
But that's what many of today's self-labeled "Republicans" have become. Michelle Bachmann, Tim Pawlenty and many others sully the Republican name. It's no wonder so many voters have turned away from the party.
I guess that's as it should be. When a party allows itself to be corrupted and hijacked, it's time for it to die -- perhaps to be reborn as a better creature.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Downfall of the Empire, Rome Burns
"Bipartisan group works to revive auto bailout" reads the AP headline. Well, yeah, there are corrupt Congress-critters from "both" side of the aisle supporting the taxpayer money giveaway. But they're really all on the same page -- paid off by auto industries residing in their homes states.
And then there's this jerk, South Financial Group CEO Mack Whittle. He takes an $18 million golden parachute just before his company gets $347 million in taxpayer money bailout.
We've already heard about lots of other such cases, like the notorious AIG junket and party paid for its bail-out millions.
How bad does it have to get before taxpayers rise up and storm the offices of these greedy bastard CEOs bearing pitchforks, tar and feathers? Or are Americans so complacent and stupid these days, they won't do a thing?
Many years from now when they write the history of the USA ("a quaint democratic republic which died decades ago due to corporate greed and citizen apathy"), this bailout spending will be noted as a turning point in the downward spiral.
Michele Bachmann: Pathological Liar
Too bad this kind of stupidity isn't painful or fatal; it would put Bachmann out of our collective pain.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
FUD on the Coleman/Franken election recount
Jim Ragsdale of the Pioneer Press gets it right in his November 12 article:
The Coleman campaign, while promising to "work together to get things done,'' has dished most of the dirt, suggesting that normal bounces in the unofficial results are evidence of vote-tampering or worse. Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty jumped in this week, saying that the question is whether "ballots from outside the process are going to be allowed in."
I understand the freak-out factor for the Republican team when the net result of the "unofficial" changes has benefitted Franken, the Democrat. That will be sorted out in the recount. But having our top Republican officials suggest that state and local election officials are crooked is irresponsible and reminiscent of the battle in Miami-Dade, Palm Beach and Tallahassee in November and December 2000.
In fact, Ragsdale says it so well, I have little to add. He finishes his article with this:
Deep breath time. While it is true that Coleman-Franken is also a statistical dead heat and that vote-counting remains an inexact science, Minnesota has two important elements in its favor.
- An automatic statewide recount law. In Florida in 2000, there was no statewide ballot-by-ballot recount. Gore had to seek hand recounts in selected counties. Minnesota law provides for an automatic recount of all votes in close races. It ends with two district court judges, two Supreme Court justices and Minnesota's Secretary of State, Mark Ritchie, a Democrat, voting on challenged ballots and deciding who won.
- "Intent of voter" language. Those good Floridians looking at punch-cards for hours upon hours had no law to guide them to determine what a voter intended when the hole wasn't punched clearly through. Minnesota uses paper ballots marked by voters and counted by optical scanners. For incorrectly marked votes, state law gives officials considerable guidance on how to determine a voter's intent.
That was the civics-class version. It will produce a winner, sometime before Christmas. But Florida showed that there are separate legal and political realms where this battle will also be waged. Either side can go to court and contest the election or challenge specific decisions; there is even the possibility of a court-supervised Recount II.
And the political fight goes on. While the Franken side has been quiet, the Coleman team has not gotten out of campaign mode. When the unofficial results change, the Coleman team issues a statement saying that "improbable and statistically dubious chunks of votes appear and disappear.'' Coleman went to court over Minneapolis absentee ballots that his lawyer later said proved not to be a problem. He fired off demands to vote-counters as if he were dealing with a hostile nation.
The tie will not be broken to everyone's satisfaction. Election officials have to check out all allegations, operate out in the open and show their work; but we as citizens do not have to assume the worst until proven otherwise. And we can judge Coleman and Franken by how they allow their supporters to behave in this difficult challenge to our precious democratic system.
Deep breath, indeed. Coleman should rethink his criticism, essentially of every person involved in the election process, and his fear-mongering. He knows the facts better than what his statements say; his complaints about a few hundred votes changing are ridiculous in the face of his benefiting from changes in the thousands in the very same manner in the 2002 election.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Minnesota District 6 Voters: Morons
That's completely nuts.
One can only draw one conclusion when a district elects a woman who hides in the bushes at rallies, places a lip-lock on the president upon meeting him and repeatedly shoots herself in the foot by making completely false or inflammatory statements -- amongst the many, many crazy, bigoted, racist, and just plain stupid additional things she has said and done.
That one conclusion can only be that too many of the district 6 voters are complete, utter, mindless, uninformed, raving, idiots.
For example, several 6th district supporters claimed they voted for Bachmann because of her "Christian" morals -- as if her opponent, Tinklenberg, a minister himself were not Christian. With that kind "thinking" (or lack thereof), they can't be anything other than plain stupid.
A commenter on the Star Tribune web site (who appears to be named Lisa and live in Savage) describes the situation well:
I don't know what ever happened to the Republican party I used to support. Oh wait... yes I do. The party I used to support did not embrace far-right evangelicals trying to impose their specious religious beliefs upon the rest of us. THAT party lauded higher education. THAT party was fiscally conservative. THAT party embraced reason and logic. Now you all seem to rejoice in your lack of education, celebrate your lack of heart and hold up your fear tactics and warmongering as virtues. I was a registered Republican from 1988 to 2000. George W. Bush drove me away from the party and I remain a proud anti-Republican - voting against the party of theocracy, hatred and fear at every opportunity.
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
How can any sane person support Michele Bachmann?
Speaking with reporters in Colorado yesterday, Palin said she does not agree with Rep. Michele Bachmann’s recent comments suggesting that some congressmen hold “anti-American views,” NBC/NJ’s Matthew E. Berger reports. “Well that's quite subjective,” she said of Bachmann’s comments. “I would think that anybody running and wanting to serve in Congress is quite pro-American because that's what the mission is, to better this country, so I would question the intent of that."
Who are the people who are supporting Bachmann? There is no way she represents mainstream conservatives and Minnesotans.
Brilliant
However well-intentioned it was, the catastrophic and unpopular intervention in Iraq has served in some parts of the world to discredit the very idea of western democracy.
The recent collapse of the banking system, and the humiliating resort to semi-socialist solutions, has done a great deal to discredit - in some people's eyes - the idea of free-market capitalism.
Democracy and capitalism are the two great pillars of the American idea.
To have rocked one of those pillars may be regarded as a misfortune.
To have damaged the reputation of both, at home and abroad, is a pretty stunning achievement for an American president
Saturday, October 11, 2008
This is why our country is in a mess
It's all over the media, how John McCain dialed back the hatred and incitement at his rally in Lakeville, Minnesota, where he defended Barack Obama and asked for respect for his opponent. The eyes of the world are on Minnesota once again.
Here's how the Star Tribune reported one particularly boneheaded Minnesotan's racist remarks at the rally:
Late in the town hall meeting, Gayle Quinnell of Shakopee called Obama "an Arab." Taken aback, McCain shook his head and, taking the microphone from her, said, "No, ma'am. He's a decent family man, citizen that I just happen to have disagreements with on fundamental issues."
After the rally, Quinnell was unrepentant. "You can't trust Barack Hussein Obama because he is a Muslim and a terrorist," she said.
Obama is a Christian, and has been all of his adult life.
Moreover, what if a politician were Muslim? Or Jewish? Or Buddhist, or Catholic, or whatever religion? Should it matter in a country where church and state are supposed be separate?
Gayle Quinnell of Shakopee is just exactly the kind of person who has caused this country to sink so far from the Founding Fathers' vision. Ignorance is not bliss, and bigotry is worse. It's harmful to our nation and to the well being of all its citizens.
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
What is Norm Coleman hiding?
Actually, we should already be very concerned. Anybody who would stonewall on such a trivial issue must have something to hide. The more he refuses to simply answer yes or no, the more it looks like he's got something to hide. What is it?
Wednesday, October 01, 2008
No Bailout!
Citizens contacting their representatives and senators were 100 - 200 to 1 against the first bailout bill, and that's why it failed to pass. Now is the time to call your Congress person and tell them no again. Otherwise, they'll sell us down the river.
No economist has made the case that if this bill does not pass, we will suffer 10 years of double-digit unemployment like we did during the Depression. But politicians and Wall Street bankers all throw the word "Depression" around to cow the taxpayers in fear, even though there is no evidence we are facing such a thing.
If this bill passes, once again the wealthy gamblers on Wall Street will make out like bandits, not learn their lesson, and continue their greed-filled business as usual while we taxpayers and out children and our grand-children get stuck paying the bill. And because Wall Street didn't have to feel the pain and pay the piper, this same mistake and cycle will happen all over again before the 22nd century. Will the taxpayers get screwed again then?
Tell your Congressman: vote no on this $700 billion bailout bill!
Monday, September 22, 2008
Trillion dollar accident?
Congress shouldn't tinker on the edges of the administration's bail-out proposal. Their substitute plan should put the pain on the pin-striped grifters where it belongs, instead of on those Americans who have been repeatedly victimized by them.
Friday, September 19, 2008
The financial market meltdown
Last February, Fortune Magazine called Gramm "McCain's Econ Brain." Gramm lost the official title of economic adviser for making an impolitic remark about this being "a nation of whiners." But Gramm's belief in letting speculators do as they please was never an issue. And even after he left the campaign, Gramm had been mentioned as a possible treasury secretary in a McCain administration.
On Dec. 15, 2000, hours before Congress was to leave for Christmas recess, Gramm had a 262-page amendment slipped into the appropriations bill. It forbade federal agencies to regulate the financial derivatives that greased the skids for passing along risky mortgage-backed securities to investors.
And that, my friends, is why everything's falling apart. That is why the taxpayers are now on the hook for the follies of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bear Stearns and now the insurance giant AIG to the tune of $85 billion.
Reuters, estimates that when you combine all of the bailouts and other rescue deals orchestrated in the past year, taxpayers could be on the hook for up to $900 billion, or about $6,500 from each and every taxpayer (not including interest, of course).
I don't think conservatives have truly grasped what this means for the big picture. The fact federal authorities had to essentially nationalize the largest mortgage companies and the largest insurance company within weeks makes the government's role in our financial markets unprecedented. This is not the Republican party I grew up with.
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Wishing for Tim Pawlenty
But he's not ignorant, and he's not rash, and he's not a religious nutcase.
Sarah Palin is all of those.
So here I am wishing that Tim Pawlenty would have been John McCain's pick for VP. At least then when McCain was elected, we would have VP who would have a Clue. As much as I might disagree with Pawlenty's ideas, they would be much more carefully considered, more fully informed and a whole lot safer for the country and the world than anything Palin might do.
Sarah Palin, nitwit
Ok, let me hear it -- "neither does Obama." Let's compare!
Obama spent 3 years as a community organizer, became the first black President of the Harvard Law Review, created a voter registration drive that registered 150,000 new voters, spent 12 years as a Constitutional Law professor, spent 8 years as a State Senator representing a district with over 750,000 people, became chairman of the state Senate's Health and Human Services committee, spent 4 years in the United States Senate representing state of 12.8 million people while sponsoring 131 bills and serving on the Foreign Affairs, Environment and Public Works and Veteran's Affairs committees.
Sarah Palin's resume is: beauty queen, local sports girl, 4 years on the city council and 6 years as the mayor of a town with less than 7,000 people, 20 months as the governor of a state with only 650,000 people. Then she's qualified to become the country's second highest ranking executive? Not.