Quote of the Day

I’m having a hard time deciding who is stupider. Is it people who have their tongues split or legislators who feel the situation is in desperate need of being outlawed.


Rep. Ron Stephens, R-Troy, was the only legislator who did not vote "yes" to the bill. He voted "present" because the bill had no merit, he said.

"There is no necessity for this," Stephens said. "If this gets carried away and needs to be regulated like we do the tattoo parlors, then I’ve outlived my usefulness in the General Assembly."

Double-Down on the Middle East

Chris Mathews has made the argument that the Iraqi invasion will bring about 1,000 years of hatred of the west by Arabs. For a variety of reasons, I don’t buy this argument. The war will be short enough and even a botched reconstruction will result in a better outcome than Saddam. It won’t win us many friends either, but wars generally don’t.

Josh Marshall has written an excellent article that explains the neo-cons plans for the Middle East and sums it up quite well:

The audacious nature of the neocons’ plan makes it easy to criticize but strangely difficult to dismiss outright. Like a character in a bad made-for-TV thriller from the 1970s, you can hear yourself saying, "That plan’s just crazy enough to work."

But like a TV plot, the hawks’ vision rests on a willing suspension of disbelief, in particular, on the premise that every close call will break in our favor: The guard will fall asleep next to the cell so our heroes can pluck the keys from his belt. The hail of enemy bullets will plink-plink-plink over our heroes’ heads. And the getaway car in the driveway will have the keys waiting in the ignition. Sure, the hawks’ vision could come to pass. But there are at least half a dozen equally plausible alternative scenarios that would be disastrous for us.

How are these two bits connnected? Well, the neo-cons apparently like to do things big, such an effort would not lead to 1,000 years of hatred, but 2,000.

Of course, this entire endeavor would be the US alone. Blair and Great Britain seem to have some sense of history and remember when they got booted out of the region and they aren’t looking for a rematch. Beyond that it is hard to imagine such an effort being tolerated by the US public. Iraq was a tough sell and trying to convince the public that the entire Middle East is a threat isn’t going to go very far.

Why I am Liberal

The central liberal truth is that politics can change a culture and save it from itself.

(quote via Kaus)

Attacked for pointing out that unstable homes in the African-American community reinforced poverty and above all, kept children from reaching their full potential as human beings, Daniel Patrick Moynihan died yesterday.

For some time he has been seen as a liberal icon for intelligent discourse on a variety of issues ranging from social security reform to foreign policy. But his true legacy will be changing welfare and policy for the poor from one of entitlements versus doing nothing to a debate about how to empower poor families to achieve a meaningful and joyous lives. He fought liberals when the refused to see the cultural problems leading to generations of poverty and he fought conservatives when they didn’t care.

He reformed welfare in 1988 into a program that encourage work for the sake of the recipient. That reform fundamentally changed the system regardless of what conservatives want to claim. Work became part of the process as was education. The states were forced to deal with day care and single mothers in a constructive way for the first time.

He fought welfare reform in 1996 because he saw that reform as punitive. He was right. While a good economy has mitigated the impacts, the likely long run effect for those mired in the worst poverty is a revolving door of low-wage low-skill jobs with little opportunity for advancement. Despite what some have claimed, having a job that goes nowhere isn’t necessarily an improvement in the long run. The 1996 reform was a cheap and easy way out of dealing with some of the most difficult issues any society faces. As a liberal, I still believe we can create a system that looks to improve lives over punishing them.

Iraqi Strategery

Kos is doing a bang up job summarizing the state of the war and battles within the larger war. He points out one of the most fortunate aspects of this war, the Iraqi incompetence on the battlefield. Reports yesterday indicated a thousand vehicle convoy left its positions and was moving towards the US forces. More recent reports are a bit less clear, but this may be repositioning. Either way, it is really stupid. Schwartzkopf, on MSNBC last night, seemed to forget his famous appraisal of Saddam, and seemed befuddled that any army would do something as stupid as give up its secured positions when it was vulnerable.

Apparently, you can’t fix stupid.

While I hope we don’t face significant casualties and McCaffrey is wrong about the consequences of going forward without more forces, if he is right, we need to be looking for a different Secretary of Defense who is more concerned about troops and not doctrine.

No Racism Here, Move Along Now

Via Atrios:

Charles Johnson says:

Since the media?s barrage of images of Corrie looking Caucasian and saintly has not abated, every time I cover a story about her I?m going to repost one of these photographs, unmasking the hidden face of Rachel Corrie.

Now how does she not look caucasion in the pic?

I believe the response is something about, "you know what I mean"

And yes I do. And as a warning, LGF is one of the more hateful little hellholes on the net.

The Adults are Back in Charge

Cellucci joins in the bashing of close allies and Daniel Drezner starts with three reasons this is stupid.

The Shorter Drezner is:
1) Don’t make empty threats
2) Don’t bother criticizing actions beyond the scope of the federal government.
3) Don’t make the Iraq question a make-or-break one for allies.

Why does this have to be pointed out?

And I’ll add threatening to slow the border is bad for trade and thus bad fore everyone.

Maybe Not God, but Damn Funny

Via Nathan Newman:

John Stewart:

Speaking of the Haliburton contract in Iraq:

On the bright side, I won my office pool. On the other hand, hearing that does make me feel like the government just took a shit on my chest (shit bleeped)…Of course, Haliburton has refused to disclose the value of the contract, but company spokesmen said, well we’re going to do alright on this one.

[Cut to "senior correspondent" Steve Colbert]

Jon, keeping in mind that Haliburton was a major campaign contributor to the campaign and Dick Cheney was the former CEO, this move is extremely…I’m a bit of a stickler for language…if this word was a flavor, it would be a thick brown taste in the back of your throat, an acrid tang of decay, like you’re rotting from the inside…I’ve tried appalling, shameful, reprehensible– I’ve tried cramming words together, greed-ragicous, backstabtastick, and Christ-just-when-I-was-beginning-to-buy-their-line-of-crappical, but nothing quite captures it.

Let me repeat:

I’ve tried cramming words together, greed-ragicous, backstabtastick, and Christ-just-when-I-was-beginning-to-buy-their-line-of-crappical, but nothing quite captures it.