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Stuff's Moving
I'm busy busy busy. Too busy to keep two blogs up to date. I'm moving all my new Stuff to 0xdeadbeef. At some point, I'm going to put this space to use again - but for the time being, work, house-hunting and various other stuff are keeping me real busy. |
Are Demos asking the right question?
When the weapons of mass destruction turned up missing, you knew it had to happen: Someone would ask the Watergate Question. Not surprisingly, it was feisty Howard Dean, who attacked President George W. Bush in Iowa the other day by demanding, “What did he know and when did he know it?” The implication: that Bush lied so he could drag us into a distracting, counterproductive war in Iraq.
Howard Fineman makes an interesting point on why "Where's the WMD's" is the wrong question. World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
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Jacob Fred in Denver
Jacob Fred will be at Dulcinea's in Denver on July 2nd at 9pm (a Wednesday unfortunately). The only other Colorado appearance that has been announced is August 27th (another Wednesday) in Steamboat Springs.
Rumor has floated around that the Fred is avoiding Colorado because of the small crowds they get at the show, so if you can possibly make it (even if you have to leave early) you should - in the hope that they will be inspired to add a few more dates to their busy schedule. Tell your friends! Music From Wozz Permalink comment [] |
The China-Japan Economic Dependency Act
Everyone wants taxes to be cut, but no one wants services to be cut, which is why Democrats have to reframe the debate — and show President Bush for what he really is: a man who is not putting money into your pocket, but who is removing government services and safety nets from your life.
An interesting (Krugmanesque in The Note's assessment) point of view from Tom. Considering our dependence on foreign investment, we might want to consider playing nicer with others.
[via The Note] World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
ePatriots
Daily Kos has worked with the Democratic Party to help narrow the GOP's massive cash advantage. Our nominee will emerge from the primaries bloodied and broke, only to run smack head into $200 million in GOP attack ads. The DNC recognizes the increasing power of the blogosphere, and was receptive when I approached them with a request -- give us the tools to help the party and our nominee defeat Bush. The end result? ePatriots. So donate now and help us retake our nation from Bush and his cabal. Your donations will be crucial to this effort.
The DNC is planning on making it easy for the blogosphere to put its money where its collective mouth is. Kos is testing it out and raised $4000+ in a few hours yesterday. The small individual donor is the big difference between the Democratic and Republican parties - the Republicans have them, the Democrats want them. This could be big. World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
National Security Homework
Rep. Ike Skelton, "an influential Democrat on military matters, warned Monday that American policy makers may be forgetting history's lessons as clashes escalate between Iraqis and American troops," the Kansas City Star reports. "As a remedy for that ignorance, the 14-term Missouri congressman is recommending a reading list of 50 books to U.S. military officers, members of Congress and anyone else who cares about national security."
[via Political Wire] World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
John Dean: Is Lying About The Reason For War An Impeachable Offense?
To put it bluntly, if Bush has taken Congress and the nation into war based on bogus information, he is cooked. Manipulation or deliberate misuse of national security intelligence data, if proven, could be "a high crime" under the Constitution's impeachment clause. It would also be a violation of federal criminal law, including the broad federal anti-conspiracy statute, which renders it a felony "to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose."
Former Nixon attorney John Dean on the possibilities facing President Bush.
[via DrudgeReport] World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
Flying Toasters and Democrats
In the season of their discontent -- out of power and on the defensive -- Democrats are looking for inspiration and leadership. A bunch of them found it yesterday in the unassuming figure of Wes Boyd, the man who gave America the flying toaster.
An interesting profile in the Washington Post about Wes Boyd, founder of Berkeley Systems (the folks behind the Flying Toasters - which any old-school Mac owner should recognize) and MoveOn.org, one of the fastest growing online progressive political organizations around. World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
The Return of Class War
Separation of the spheres also depends on an unspoken deal, a nonaggression pact, between democracy's political majority and capitalism's affluent minority. The majority acknowledge that capitalism benefits all of us, even if some benefit a lot more than others. The majority also take comfort in the belief that everyone has at least a shot at scoring big. The affluent minority, meanwhile, acknowledge that their good fortune is at least in part the luck of the draw. They recognize that domestic tranquility, protection from foreign enemies, and other government functions are worth more to people with more at stake. And they retain a tiny yet prudent fear of what beast might be awakened if the fortunate folks get too greedy about protecting and enlarging their good fortune.
Michael Kinsley in Slate on the Bush-coordinated breakdown between the opposing (but equally necessary) spheres of Capitalism and Democracy.
In a similar vein, Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics comments on this TAPPED post regarding the motivation behind Republican tax policies and how similar idiocy brought down Margaret Thatcher and made the Tories effectively un-electable to the present-day in much of the UK:
Apparently Rep. DeMint has argued that it is necessary to make the tax system more regressive. DeMint said that "unless something is done, most people will have no reason not to keep voting for more government, because they won't be paying for it." Exempting too much of the low-income groups would give them little reason to vote for a smaller government - others would be paying for it. Tapped also published a letter from Bruce Bartlett, a conservative columnist, who argued that the evidence seemed to show that narrowing the tax base tended to help the Republicans, since it increased the voting levels among the rich, rather than widening it as the Republicans have recently done. World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
Mayor Hickenlooper
Brew pub owner John Hickenlooper cruised to victory tonight in the race to be Denver's first new mayor in more than a decade.
World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
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Watch the results live...
You can watch the results 'live' starting when the polls close at 7pm. World Affairs from Wozz Permalink comment [] |
Must See TV?
But increasingly, critics are asking some pointed questions: Is broadcast television worth saving, especially when the industry arguably has abandoned the pact struck decades ago that is, in exchange for serving the "public interest," TV stations get to use the airwaves for free? Why give broadcasters the ability to become more profitable when many of them no longer air the kind of community-oriented programming that once was their mandate?
Some interesting thoughts on the FCC's role in the modern media landscape. Why should NBC, CBS, ABC, and Fox get to make money off a medium they don't pay for, especially when their 'public service' is a joke. Take the spectrum back, auction it off to cell phone providers, wireless internet companies, etc and use the money to subsidize pay-tv for those that don't already have it. If we're not getting our end of the bargain, lets just dump the bargain. Interesting thoughts.
[via Slate] |

