Rabu, 20 Februari 2013

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This, Tea Party Friends, is Why We Can’t Have Nice Things

Posted: 19 Feb 2013 11:47 AM PST

Good, Tea Party Patriots. Go get ‘em!

"He [GOP strategist and PAC-guru Karl Rove] sounds like he's challenging us, and we're ready to rise to the challenge," Jenny Beth Martin, founder of the Tea Party Patriots, told The Hill. Martin's group last week launched the Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund, a super-PAC that will be active in House and Senate races in 2014, largely through providing organizational support to help get out the conservative vote.

"I'm going to be engaging with the donors over the next several weeks to let them know what we're doing and to show them that we can do what the Republican Party is not doing right now, which is building a ground game," Martin said.

Whoa! Even, better Tea Party Patriots. Set a really big goal and get after it. Be aggressive. Take the fight to the entrenched professional Republicans.

"The big-government politicians and consultants of both parties believe the tea party's time has passed. They believe we no longer have the power, the enthusiasm or organizational muscle to fight them," says Jenny Beth Martin, co-founder of the Tea Party Patriots, the movement's largest umbrella organization, representing some 3,500 local groups.

"They are dead wrong. So we are going to shock the entire political world by raising $1,000,000.00 in just 10 days," she continues. "We are going to show the entrenched big-government politicians and their allies that the tea party is stronger than ever."

No, no, no, no! Too far, Tea Party Patriots! TOO FAR!

Karl Rove as Nazi Photoshop

This is the problem when you get a bit overexcited and buy into the same hype your cranking out to your donors regularly. At some point, you have to have a couple people near the end of your content-production chain who have the common-sense to say, “You know, you should probably double-check that link because I see a picture of Karl Rove as a Nazi and I’m sure that’s about a hundred steps farther than you wanted to take this.” It’s possible the photo was included accidentally, as the result of a photo search and a lazy link. It doesn’t matter; it’s still the product of lazy work and enthusiasm getting the better of common-sense.

If I could give one piece of advice to any Tea Party group (and, for the record, I’ve never been asked, so this is entirely unsolicited and should be judged accordingly), it would be this: remember that you only borrow the name “Tea Party”. No one owns the label. It is a mantle worn by tens of thousands around the country, moms and dads and grandmas and grandpas, very few of whom use it to draw a paycheck. So be careful with it, because whatever dirt you get on it as a result of your hasty and emotional actions will smear all those people who will then have to live with the humiliation you heaped on them. You may have the cash to hire a publicist to craft an apology that will get you back in the game, but that soccer mom in Iowa or hard-working Dad in Texas doesn’t. They’re stuck with the consequences of your mistakes, so be very, very careful with the Tea Party name.

UPDATE: An apology. The Tea Party Patriots farmed the e-mail out to another group, which added the photo. I would hope TPP fires that firm and we spread the name “Active Engagement” among as many conservative groups as possible so they have a very hard time finding work for a while.

Senin, 18 Februari 2013

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The Delivery Presents – Happy Thanksgiving! Now Ask Me Questions

Posted: 17 Feb 2013 09:43 PM PST

TD_CoverArt_174Happy Thanksgiving! The last two shows were pretty heavy, so we were due for something more light and enjoyable in Episode 174. Honestly, I don’t know how in the world anyone brings the weighty politics on a Thanksgiving show. Fie on anyone who does, I say. I have a lot for which to be thankful, not the least of which is my upbringing, which instilled in me the proper food to have for Thanksgiving dinner. Don’t make fun. Dinner, especially Thanksgiving dinner, is serious business. We’ll rumble over cranberry sauce.

I tried something a little bit new in the second half. Partly because I like to try new things on the show and partly because I got caught short for show-prep (and didn’t want to talk about politics), I threw the whole second half open to random questions from the live chatroom. As I expected, the Deliverati did not disappoint. Question Time (or whatever I decide to call it) will happen again, so if you missed it this time around, be patient!

The Delivery - Episode 174

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The Delivery Presents – Bring On the Pander Bears!

Posted: 17 Feb 2013 06:24 PM PST

TD_CoverArt_173The post-election malaise set in during Episode 173, but not in the way you might expect. It didn’t last long, though, so if you want to skip over that bit, you won’t miss much of the show. On the other hand, you may want to hang in there to catch the beginning of a theme I’m sure will come up again in future shows: the utter lack of contrition from people who campaigned among conservatives for Mitt Romney like a bully campaigns for popularity on the schoolyard.

The whole postmortem took most of the show, which means I didn’t get to the non-political stuff until right at the very end. However, I think what’s in this hour is going to be important in a few months when conservatives are ready to figure out just how they screwed up the election and put together a few strategies to win the next one. Of course, this assumes the President doesn’t get his way and destroy the Republican Party before then with the help of the Pander Bears.

The Delivery - Episode 173

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The Delivery Presents – After the Election, What? Tell More Stories

Posted: 17 Feb 2013 05:56 PM PST

TD_CoverArt_172It is not enough, as I say in Episode 172, to break out the spreadsheets and line charts when we want to explain why over-sized government is bad for us all. We have to put those numbers into a narrative that people can share easily. Throughout history, we humans have passed down our morals, cautions, legends, and lessons through stories. Myth is the first “viral content”. In the first half, I hash out the whole matter of conservative storytelling — why we should tell good stories and what sort of stories we might want to tell first. Consider the show an expansion on Episode 171, in which I left a whole lot on the table and decided this week to scoop it all up and make a delicious podcast goulash out of it.

But that’s the second half. Before that, a little Election Night advice to “stay frosty” and a look at what problems we’ll face after the election. The list is long and we’ll need some patience. Okay, we’ll need lots of patience. Tons of it.

The Delivery - Episode 172

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Jumat, 15 Februari 2013

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What in the Heck is Going on with the Chuck Hagel Nomination?

Posted: 14 Feb 2013 12:31 PM PST

Earlier today, I tweeted this:

A little explanation is in order.

Normally, a Cabinet nominee has distinguished themselves in the field for which they’ve been nominated. Steven Chu was a Nobel Prize-winning physicist with a body of work about energy policy before he was Energy Secretary. Hilda Solis was a labor leader and union advocate before she was Secretary of Labor. Now, you may not agree with the ideology of the nominee, but ideology is different from qualifications. The notion that the President is entitled to have his nominees approved after a thorough Senate hearing presupposes the President’s nominee is competent to take on the job.

Obama Hagel BrennanHere’s where I get confused. Chuck Hagel is not competent to be the Secretary of Defense. Set aside his foreign policy views for a moment and look at his management skills. He’s shown no aptitude toward running an organization even half the size of the Department of Defense; indeed, his Senate office was the very hottest of messes. He wasn’t particularly liked in the Senate, mostly because he was a grumpy coot, which is saying something in a body full of grumpy coots. His performance in the nomination hearing reminded me of a college student who showed up an hour late for class only to find out it was final exam day. He stuttered, stammered, blustered, fumbled, bumbled, hacked and choked his way through the hearing and impressed only those who want to do America harm.

Now, let’s pick up his foreign policy views. Hagel was an outspoken nutball on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. His opinions were outside the mainstreams of either party, though completely at home in the anti-war left (which was odd since he’s a Republican). He considers Israel an enemy, though he’s never mustered the courage to say so in public. Again, that puts him firmly in the mainstream of the radical left, but miles outside the center of either party (or the rest of the country).

On the surface, Hagel’s views on Chimpy McBushHitler and Israel make him the perfect SecDef nominee for Barack Obama, whose own foreign policy views vacillate between 60′s radical retread and bored indifference. Aside from their party affiliation, Obama and Hagel are very similar: bad managers who think they’re far more brilliant than they are who got whatever fame they have by embracing old-school progressive radicalism.

So that’s that, right? President Obama wanted a guy who sees the world the way he does who is also a Republican, so he can say the other Republicans are horrible, horrible people who hate him so much they’d even block one of their own. Well, not so fast. That explanation would make sense if Hagel was passable as a Senator, if he hadn’t mangled his hearing so badly, and if Barack Obama was a bungling political neophyte surrounded by bungling political neophytes. But Hagel is, he did, Barack Obama isn’t, and he doesn’t. The President is a clever political operative, a product of a machine that is to politicians what Purdue or Stanford are to NFL quarterbacks. He’s surrounded by advisers who also know how to bend just enough to win a political fight even though they are also progressive ideologues. He’s closely allied with Harry Reid, who runs the Senate and could get any half-assed nominee though the Senate gauntlet as surely as he’s delayed any budget vote for well over three years. John Kerry, a former Democratic Presidential nominee, who actually accused every American soldier in Vietnam of war crimes and never recanted his accusation, was confirmed as Secretary of State in just days.

The Hagel nomination makes absolutely no sense to me at all. It is a bone-headed decision for a number of reasons, not the least of which is it gives Republicans an almost fool-proof way to label his foreign policy clueless and dangerous and the Democrats as a bunch of lemmings who’ll choose partisanship over competence. It’s not the decision I’d expect from a President who just thrashed Mitt Romney in November and whose party actually managed to claw back some of the losses they suffered in 2010. It’s not a decision I’d expect from a politician of Barack Obama’s heritage and history.

Having said that, the Republican response to Hagel’s nomination is every bit as puzzling to me. Senators who ought to know better, like Susan Collins and John McCain, are weaving about like a pack of 20-something women on the streets of London after a night-long bender. As I wrote earlier, a President ought to get his nominees confirmed, so long as his nominees are competent. Hagel, who was never a particularly popular Republican Senator anyhow, is not competent to do the job. That’s an easy message to get out. Park a Senator, any Senator, in front of a podium and have them read this off a TelePrompTer:

“Chuck Hagel is not fit to lead our brave soldiers nor the hard-working civilians who support them in the Department of Defense. His appearance before us proved he does not take his nomination seriously and we see no reason we should either. We ask the President to withdraw his nomination and send us someone worthy of the task. If he forces us to vote on this man, we Republicans and not a few Democrats will refuse to confirm him. We do not want to do this, but we will. Our Oath of Office and our responsibility to America require it.”

After that, walk away, and mount a filibuster — a real filibuster during which Senators will repeat variations of that same statement over and over again and intersperse it with the particulars of Chuck Hagel’s incompetence, bizarre hatred for one of our most steadfast allies, and fringe views about Afghanistan, Iraq, and Iran. Force the President to either back down and give us a real nominee or

Now it seems Senate Republicans will filibuster Hagel, the first time in history (I believe) a Cabinet nominee has ever been filibustered, though they will reportedly stop the filibuster in a couple of weeks then confirm him. Harry Reid does not have enough Senators to break the filibuster and he’s scrambling for backers even though he’ll apparently get what the President wants if he’s patient and quiet. The White House, on the other hand, is in a state of delusion. And I am confused and angry.

None of this makes sense. The Republicans should not be this limp. The President should not be this stubborn. Harry Reid should not be this frantic. The politics are all screwed up and there’s no discernible logic to the actions of any of the major players (and most of the minor ones) right now. Our elected officials are playing silly games with the lives and careers of thousands of Americans and no one has spent any time at all to give us, their bosses, any clue about what they’re doing. I shouldn’t be the only one angry about the whole ridiculous affair.