2006

Need to feel good about yourself

Go here, and donate what you can.

It’s important.

If you can’t donate, you can also volunteer. While I’m not sure how hard Madigan will get out there for Lipinski, Madigan and the elder are long time allies. Madigan can call up ground troops in a second that dwarf most political operations—usually that’s a good thing. John will need all the help he can get.

I know most of the volume is in the 6th, but frankly there are three good people running for that seat and it’s a tougher seat to win then this is to retain. If you want to fight over who’s more liberal or progressive, this is the District in which to do it. This is an easy seat to retain with a Dem. Worse, if Ethics reform is the issue de jour, getting your seat from your Daddy who dumped some hump on the Republican ballot so you’d have no real competition is sort of a problem.

John had a disappointing 4th quarter, but if there was ever a good fight to be had in a primary this is it. For all the piss and vinegar being used in other races, this one is a clear choice for Democrats–it’s a 59% Kerry District represented by not just a pro-life Democrat (there are many of those and I respect them), but a guy who is socially conservative across the board in a district that is quite Democratic. Did I mention, Lipinski is just a crod to boot?

Normally, I’m tough on candidates who have bad fundraising quarters, but John is in a situation where Dan Lipinski may face a perfect storm by the primary with disgust over how he got the position and a general unhappiness over his positions. Let’s put John in a position to take advantage of that situation.

Find a way to pay for it

And I’ll endorse tomorrow. No joke–in fact, I said this before

This is an issue I’ve done quite a bit of work on over the last few years and I feel quite strongly about it. I’ll be adding more to this over the next week in what I hope can be a fairly in depth policy analysis of why this is important–nay, essential. The most basic point is that the Minneapolis Fed study by Art Rolnick found that spending on early childhood education is one of the best investments a government can make. It far outstrips garbage like incentives for individual businesses and other targeted tax breaks of subsidies for business.

All that said, he has to pay for it, and without a significant increase in general revenue funds, this initiative is probably impossible. As I often make the point, if you don’t balance the budget, social justice cannot be achieved because you limit the ability of future generations to continue worthwhile programs or ameliorate future social problems. The doomsayers go overboard in suggesting the state is about go under, but adding this kind of initiatives without increasing revenues will result in Really Bad Thing (TM) down the road.

Sweet use of puns

Probably the trademark of Blogging is the use of bad puns in titles, fortunately, one of the newest bloggers has that down already. Zorn will be happy that the order of the posts is most recent first…

She also had someone get snarky with her over a Durbin quote with Rich Miller coming in and slapping them around in comments for being stupid.

One thing I find is that many bloggers and blog readers assume that journalism is just some job, and not a profession with strong ethical standards. It goes along with the assumption that reporting is actually easy and all that any reporter does is go to press conferences—there are some who do that and they usually are in front of a camera, but tracking down sources and getting useful information is incredibly difficult. The first point is more important because when someone accuses a reporter of lifting a quote, that’s a serious charge–especially someone of the stature of Sweet. Too many bloggers and blog readers don’t get that and too often attack reporters without understanding the context or, especially how politicians reuse lines, just makes one look like an ass.

Comments and trackbacks even so it looks good–and, of course, she got to gripe about the Washington Times plagerizing her as well, which complaining about the WT, is another favorite past time on blogs. (small thing about Markos–he was raised largely in Schaumburg, but also spent some of his early years in El Salvador-at a time when the civil war was very hot).

And, of course, this only ups the ante in her and the Trib’s Jeff Zeleney in a contest to see who can write more words about Barack Obama. Fortunately for the readers, both can actually write and usually find interesting angles.

Most disappointing thing about the coverage the McCain-Obama spat story in the Illinois press–no one pointed out that McCain and Fitzgerald got into screaming matches on the floor of the U.S. Senate over O’Hare. McCain getting snarky or losing his temper is about as noteworthy as John Kerry doing a liveshot.

On a more serious note, I’ve never been one of those who moan about the good ole days of blogs when it was this insurgent movement (AKA dorks without lives ranting). It’s a way of delivering information and providing far greater analysis that is available in an column or even a good news story. When good reporters do blogs you get someone filling in details that don’t make the paper and a more complete analysis. I was excited when Eric started, and most of those who have followed have been good additions–but someone at the Trib needs to get an RSS feed for Charles Madigan.

It is nice that blogs give more access to more divergent voices and it provides a good check on bad reporting, but in the hands of good reporters, it provides citizens with more information. I’m happy to blast people who I think are being lazy–hello Tim Russert—but too many bloggers don’t point out the good work that does go on–Eric, Maureen Ryan (best TV journalist out there), and now Sweet and the Swamp over at the Trib all deserve that sort of credit.

As an extra bonus, Lynn can start posting a minute by minute account of Obama’s fundraisers….

Hey Tim

How do any of these folks feel about the use of the word ragheads and it being used at a political event and garnering applause?

Speaker Dennis Hastert, Senator George Allen, U.N. Ambassador John Bolton, Senator Mitch McConnell, Texas Governor Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich, Ken Mehlman, Wayne LaPierre, Bob Novak, Grover Norquist, and Congressman Mike Pence or anyone from one of these organizations certainly should be asked about whether or not the support such language if Colin Powell and Barack Obama have to answer questions about Harry Belafonte not related to how many bananas the banana man has.

Elmer Fudd

So, let’s get this straight. Not only did he shoot someone in a hunting accident, but he did it at a place that is a ranch in as much as any ranch hosts dignitaries for Polo. Real Salt of the Earth there. And they were driving to the sites–but not driving and then hiking–the ranch owner could watch them from the car and apparently saw the whole thing.

Cheney’s spokeswoman, Lea Anne McBride, said the vice president met with Whittington at the hospital on Sunday. Cheney “was pleased to see that he’s doing fine and in good spirits,” she said.

Armstrong said she was watching from a car while Cheney, Whittington and another hunter got out of the vehicle to shoot at a covey of quail.

Whittington shot a bird and went to retrieve it in the tall grass, while Cheney and the third hunter walked to another spot and discovered a second covey.

Whittington “came up from behind the vice president and the other hunter and didn’t signal them or indicate to them or announce himself,” Armstrong said.

“The vice president didn’t see him,” she continued. “The covey flushed and the vice president picked out a bird and was following it and shot. And by God, Harry was in the line of fire and got peppered pretty good.”

That’s not hunting, it’s a damn trap shoot. I’d say the prey didn’t have a chance, but given his stellar hunting skills, they did.

Next you know, people will be hunting watermelons