March 15, 2010

Um...No.

Richard Mellon Scaife's Tribune-Review is still at it.

In yesterday's Whispers column, they twice reference the Capital Research Center without mentioning the financial relationship between the CRC and the paper's owner, Richard Mellon Scaife.

Take a look:
Congressional Research Service employees apparently are as good at research as ACORN workers are at registering voters.

A recent report commissioned by House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., and House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass. -- both longtime ACORN supporters -- is an obvious whitewash.

So says the Capital Research Center, which found that CRS failed to unearth any examples of individuals registered to vote by ACORN who cast fraudulent ballots. In reality, at least two Ohio voters registered by ACORN were convicted of voter fraud -- one each in 2007 and 2009.
And here:
George Soros' Media Matters for America, which habitually smears the anti-American leftist billionaire's ideological opponents, has 70 employees, according to a recent report in The New York Observer.

Previous estimates had placed the number of Media Matters workers at between 60 and 100.

The group recently named radio and TV host Glenn Beck as its 2009 Misinformer of the Year -- undoubtedly because Beck last year was a constant irritant to the Obama administration.

While his minions indulge in mischief, Soros wants the International Monetary Fund to become, as the Capital Research Center described it, "a kind of globetrotting Bernie Madoff." Soros wants the IMF to offer poor countries low-interest loans so they can invest in the global warming industry.
I'll let Mediamatters speak on whether they've received direct funding from Soros:
In fact, Media Matters has never received funding from progressive philanthropist George Soros.
There's more here on any indirect funding.

Bottom line is that they've gone on record stating their funding relationship with Soros (none). Which is much much much more than can be said for Richard Mellon Scaife and the Capital Research Center. Foundations that he controls have given millions to the CRC over the years.

Recently:
  • The Sarah Scaife Foundation gave $225,000 in 2008.
  • The Sarah Scaife Foundation gave $250,000 in 2007.
  • The Sarah Scaife Foundation gave $250,000 in 2006.
In fact, according to (the non-Soros funded) mediamatters, Scaife has given more than $4.25 million to the Capital Research Center over the last 27 years.

That's a lot of money and a long relationship. And yet none of it is mentioned as Scaife's paper uses "research" from the CRC to make its political points.

The circle-jerk continues.

March 14, 2010

3.

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Happy Pi Day!

Jack Kelly Sunday

This week's column by the Post-Gazette's Jack Kelly is his usual weaving together of snippets of wisps of notions and calling it all factual. As you read, note the occurrences of the "seems to" wiggle words.

He begins with some hard and fast numbers:
President Barack Obama's national security policies are much more popular than his domestic policies, according to a poll released Monday by Democratic pollsters James Carville and Stanley Greenburg.

Fifty-seven percent of Americans approve Mr. Obama's policies on national security; 54 percent approve his policies on fighting terrorism and 52 percent approve his conduct of foreign policy, the Democracy Corps said. This compares to an overall approval rating for the president of 47 percent and just 42 percent approval on his handling of the economy.

A datum which must be galling to left-wingers is that the president's most popular policy is his prosecution of the war in Afghanistan, of which 58 percent approve.
Note the "must be galling" part. What part of the 58%, do you think, are "galled" left-wingers?

The next part is where he enters fantasy-land:
But the president's higher marks on foreign and national security policy seem to be mostly because Americans haven't been paying attention. On the two issues which have received much coverage in the news media, Mr. Obama scores poorly. Only 44 percent of Americans approve of his policies with regard to the interrogation and prosecution of terror suspects and only 42 percent approve of his handling of Iran. Fifty-one percent of Americans think our standing in the world has declined on Mr. Obama's watch.

"This is surprising, given the global acclaim -- and Nobel Peace Prize -- that flowed to the new president after he took office," Mr. Carville and Mr. Greenburg wrote.
Is Jack saying that there hasn't been much media coverage on foreign and national security policy? That's the clear implication here. Where there's "much coverage in the news media," he says, Obama scores poorly. So if Obama scores well, it must mean there hasn't been much coverage on national security.

See what I mean by fantasy land?

The big spin happens next:
"I recently asked several senior administration officials, separately, to name a foreign leader with whom Barack Obama has forged a strong personal relationship during his first year in office," wrote Jackson Diehl, deputy editorial page editor of The Washington Post, Monday. "A lot of hemming and hawing ensued."
Jack leaves it up to his audience to think that Diehl is some sort of neutral player in all this.

But he's not:
Fred Hiatt directs the Post’s editorial page and is commonly blamed for its right-wing tilt on Iraq (and other matters), but a recent story in the Washington City Paper identified Jackson Diehl as even more important in shaping the paper’s positions. The story calls Diehl, a Yale-educated columnist and the editorial page’s deputy editor, “the panel’s specialist on foreign policy” and cites a memo from retiring columnist Colbert King that says Diehl’s “dogmatic” views have intimidated those with less hawkish opinions.

I went back and examined Diehl’s columns on Iraq and, as expected, the Post’s resident foreign affairs guru has been wrong on just about every key issue surrounding the Iraq war. Make an inventory of every cliché ever uttered about Iraq by war advocates, every hysterical charge of the global threat posed by Saddam Hussein—you’ll find them all in Diehl’s writings. You’ll also find that Diehl didn’t seem to consider that serious problems might arise in the aftermath of an invasion. When they did, he didn’t acknowledge that his own analysis might have been flawed, but instead blamed poor execution by the Bush Administration for everything he failed to foresee. Apparently, if Diehl had been deputized to run the war things would have turned out differently.
Any doubt Diehl's position on the Post's editorial board swayed the people he chose to talk to about Obama's foreign policy?

Then there's this obvious (even for Jack!) spin-away-from reality:
The most recent blow to the special relationship came March 1 when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, meeting with unpopular Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, a Hugo Chavez ally, offered to mediate Argentina's specious claim to the Falkland Islands.

The Falklands have been a British possession since 1833. The people who live there, all of whom speak English, want nothing to do with Argentina. When an earlier Argentine regime invaded the Falklands in 1982, the British -- with crucial support from President Ronald Reagan -- threw them out.
Really? Hillary Clinton "offered to mediate" Argentina's claim on the Falklands?

Um, no. (And this, my friends, should have been caught by the P-G's fact-checkers). Here's what actually took place. From the Buenos Aires Herald:
President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner yesterday said Latin American leaders backed her objections to British oil exploration in the Malvinas islands at the Rio Group summit taking place in Mexico, as drilling began on the first well.
And:
Since Fernández de Kirchner took office, she has been calling on Britain to resume talks regarding sovereignty over the islands, over which both countries fought a war in 1982. The dispute over the archipelago escalated in recent days, as Argentina formally objected to British-led drilling plans near the islands, and decreed that any ship travelling to or from the islands must obtain a prior permit from the government. They claim the oil drilling by British firm Desire Petroleum is a breach of sovereignty.

As part of the government’s diplomatic offensive, Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana is scheduled to meet tomorrow with United Nations’ Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, seeking help to pressure Britain to followUN resolutions urging both countries to negotiate their competing claims.
Secretary of State Clinton was asked in Argentina this past March 1 about this issue (i.e. the "Malvinas issue"):
INTERPRETER: The journalist was just asking how the U.S. intends to negotiate to get the United Kingdom to sit at the table and address the Malvinas issue. And he was then asking about this setting up of the fund. So, what’s the reserves of the country?
SECRETARY CLINTON: As to the first point, we want very much to encourage both countries to sit down. Now, we cannot make either one do so, but we think it is the right way to proceed. So we will be saying this publicly, as I have been, and we will continue to encourage exactly the kind of discussion across the table that needs to take place.
I’m sorry, I don’t know what fund we’re referring to.
This, to Jack and all his fellow wingnuts, means she "offered to mediate" the Malvinas' return to Argentina. In reality she was encouraging diplomatic discussions regarding British oil drilling off the coast of the Falklands. Exactly not the same thing. But why let reality get in the way of a good political point?

My friends at the P-G who look over Jack's shoulders to check on whether he's using facts as facts or "facts" as facts should have caught this.

The fact that Jack used it (either he knew it was bogus and used it anyway or should have checked before using it) invalidates the rest of the column.


March 12, 2010

Pittsburgh's St. Politics Day, I mean St. Patrick's Day Parade

Pittsburghers know that our city holds one of the nation's largest St. Patrick's Day parades. We also know that -- coming as it does two months before primary elections -- it is chock full of politicians looking for votes. This year will be no exception, however there will also be activists targeting politicians:
  • Pro Health Care Reform
    Undoubtedly Rep. Jason Altmire will be there. Why not let him (and all the pols) know that you want TO FREAKIN' PASS HEALTH CARE REFORM NOW. Make your own sign or pick up one today at Organizing for America Office, 5170 Butler Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15201 and make your voice heard.

  • Pro Police Beating Up Innocent Teens

    Via The Trib:
    Pittsburgh police plan to use tomorrow's St. Patrick's Day Parade to show support for three officers accused of beating a Pittsburgh teen.

    In a memo dated today, the Fraternal Order of Police Fort Pitt Lodge No. 1 encouraged its members to come out in "unprecedented" numbers during the parade and to purchase T-shirts for $12 stating "We Support Our Three Brothers."

    On the front of the shirts are the numbers 3599, police code that represents the officers' zone number and status as being assigned to plainclothes duty

    [snip]

    FOP President Dan O'Hara wouldn't say what the sales of T-shirts tomorrow would benefit.

    It's "really not relevant," he said. "This is something we want to do to show support for our officers, and that's what we're going to do."
    Guess it beats the Blue Flu . . .

  • Parade Info:
    Saturday, March 13, 2010
    10:00 AM
    Route here
    .

    "The List"


    Like yinz already didn't know there was one . . .

    .

    Thank GAWD-OH-MIGHTY!

    Thank God for the Itawamba County School District!
    A Mississippi county school board announced Wednesday it would cancel its upcoming prom after a gay student petitioned to bring a same-sex date to the event.

    "Due to the distractions to the educational process caused by recent events, the Itawamba County School District has decided to not host a prom at Itawamba Agricultural High School this year," school board members said in a statement.
    It's only with this kind of vigilant protection of our precious liberty can we expect to save our once great and Christian Nation from the godless liberals who want nothing more than to shred the moral fabric of this society and replace it with satanism, sodomy and socialism.

    If we let teh gays think they're the same as normal people, next think you know they'll be demanding full equality and such.

    Pray, my friends. Pray for our future.

    March 10, 2010

    Barbara Hafer Drops Out

    Via PoliticsPA:

    “Today I am announcing I am withdrawing my petitions and will not be seeking the Democratic Party’s nomination for the U.S. House in Pennsylvania’s 12th congressional district. We had a spirited campaign for who would make the best nominee in the special election, but in the spirit of Jack Murtha I believe now is not the time to continue this race. I look forward to finding other ways to continue to serve the public and change this state and this country for the better.”

    .

    The Trib Smears

    In yet another bit of climate-change-is-a-hoax snark, the braintrust over at the Pittsburgh Tribune Review smears. AND they don't get the irony of that smear. Here it is:
    The climate science community says it's ready to fight back against the forces of truth responsible for exposing extensive fraud in global warming research, reports The Washington Times. At least one scientist involved in the fight-back campaign -- Stephen H. Schneider -- already is dropping the "M"-bomb, claiming that legitimate questions about such "settled science" amount to "McCarthyism." Which prompts only one logical question: Are you now, Mr. Schneider, or have you ever been, a real scientist?
    Here's the Washington Times piece the braintrust cites. When you read it (and I wonder if the braintrust gave it more than a cursory glance) you'll see that the Times does NOT characterize what the science community is fighting back against as anything close to "the forces of truth responsible for exposing extensive fraud". Here's how they describe the stolen East Anglia emails:
    The scientists have been under siege since late last year when e-mails leaked from a British climate research institute seemed to show top researchers talking about skewing data to push predetermined outcomes.
    And:
    The e-mails emerged months after another set of e-mails from a leading British climate research group seemed to show scientists shading data to try to bolster their claims, and are likely to feed the impression among skeptics that researchers are pursuing political goals as much as they are disseminating science.
    That's as close as they get. Where is the indication that it's the "forces of truth"? The Times even uses the weasel-phrase "seems to show" to characterize the emails. If it did show what they want you to believe, they'd say it. But because it doesn't, they inject the "seems to show" wiggle.

    Some say that's not entirely honest, that it seems to show a lack of confidence in the information, but I'm just asking the question - I don't have to resolve it.

    But let's get to the unintentionally ironic smear:
    At least one scientist involved in the fight-back campaign -- Stephen H. Schneider -- already is dropping the "M"-bomb, claiming that legitimate questions about such "settled science" amount to "McCarthyism." Which prompts only one logical question: Are you now, Mr. Schneider, or have you ever been, a real scientist?
    The implication, of course, is that Mr. Schneider is not a real scientist. The truth, of course, is that Professor Schneider is. From his page at Stamford University, we find that:
    Dr. Stephen H. Schneider is the Melvin and Joan Lane Professor for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies, Professor of Biological Sciences, Professor (by courtesy) of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and a Senior Fellow in the Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford University. Dr. Schneider received his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering and Plasma Physics from Columbia University in 1971. He studied the role of greenhouse gases and suspended particulate material on climate as a postdoctoral fellow at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies. He was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in 1972 and was a member of the scientific staff of NCAR from 1973-1996, where he co-founded the Climate Project.
    Hence the unintentionally ironic smear. By calling him "Mr." and asking the rhetorical question whether he's ever been a "real scientist" (when knowing all along that he is and hoping that no one will check the details) the Trib itself is dancing the McCarthy-ite dance. Even while criticizing Schneider for using the "M-word."

    Isn't it, ironic (doncha think?)

    March 9, 2010

    For Rep. Eric Massa:


    (story here)
    .

    Please, Rush, please!


    Limbaugh vows to flee the country if health care passes
    ...and move to Costa Rica.

    .

    This is not the first time that Bank of America has wrongly repossessed a home

    It may bring small comfort to Angela Iannelli of Hampton, PA, but this is hardly the first time that Bank of America has wrongly repossessed a home in the last few months.

    It happened to Dr. Alan Schroit in Texas and to Christopher Hamby in Kentucky and to Charlie and Maria Cardoso in Florida.

    In each case, Bank of America hired companies which trespassed, committed a home invasion, stole and destroyed property, rendered the homes uninhabitable and have refused proper compensation. Hell, in most of these cases the wronged parties didn't even have a relationship with BofA.

    In the case of Angela Iannelli, they also kidnapped her pet, refused to give it back for a week and then made her go pick her pet up.

    The Cardosos' lawyer said that he "has been fielding calls from other homeowners throughout the country with similar complaints."

    I have a question:
    Why aren't there criminal charges being filed?


    SIDE NOTE: Bank of America received tens of taxpayer millions in TARP monies and expects to payout record bonuses this year.
    _________________________________________________________

  • Pittsburgh Post-Gazette story here.
  • WTAE TV story here.
    .

  • More on Scaife's Tribbing

    This is getting redundant, I know.

    Spending all this time pointing out the conflicts of interest found on the editorial pages of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review is a path that "lies the way to madness" I've been told.

    So be it. If it's madness then I'll see you on the dark side of the moon.

    Today, Richard Mellon Scaife's braintrust talks about welfare. And references, lovingly and devotedly, this piece by Katherine Bradley and Robert Rector and at the Heritage Foundation.

    The same Heritage Foundation who's incestuous relationship with Scaife's editorial page is detailed here.

    The circle-jerk continues.


    Missy Hart In The Tribune-Review

    Remember this?

    The OPJ posted a link (with a photo) to an online article detailing how it looks as if Melissa Hart abandoned her car in DC. In the House parking lot. For going on three years.

    Well, Richard Mellon Scaife's Tribune-Review has picked up the story:
    Having apparently left her car unattended for more than three years, you'd think Melissa Hart would have received a parking ticket by now.

    Hasn't happened yet. But that doesn't mean the Republican and former U.S. representative from Bradford Woods will be able to leave her Volkswagen Jetta parked indefinitely in the Longworth House Office Building garage in Washington, D.C.

    You would think Hart would have gotten the vehicle out of the garage after returning to Pittsburgh in the wake of her defeat by Democrat Jason Altmire of McCandless in 2006, when she sought re-election. But former House members are allowed to park there as long as they are not registered lobbyists, the Daily Caller Web site reported.

    Therein lies the problem. As head of the Pittsburgh-based law firm Keevican Weiss Bauerle & Hirsch's government relations practice, Hart is now registered in the Senate's lobbyist database.
    When something like this is reported about a conservative politician (now lobbyist) in a conservative newspaper, you know something's up.

    It's time, Missy. It's time to move the car or prove that it ain't yers.

    March 8, 2010

    Palin Used Socialist Canadian Health Care System


    From HuffPo:
    Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin -- who has gone to great lengths to hype the supposed dangers of a big government takeover of American health care -- admitted over the weekend that she used to get her treatment in Canada's single-payer system.

    "We used to hustle over the border for health care we received in Canada," Palin said in her first Canadian appearance since stepping down as governor of Alaska. "And I think now, isn't that ironic?"

    How could her parents subject her to the death panels? But, I guess she did learn a valuable lesson in how to hustle...
    .

    Teh Crazie GOP Fringe

    This is getting funner and funner.

    Joseph Farah, editor-in-chief of the wingnut World Net Daily has declared CPAC (the "Conservative Political Action Conference") dead.

    The reason?

    They're not crazie enough to take him seriously.

    I touched on this last September linking to this article at the LATimes:
    Amid a rebirth of conservative activism that could help Republicans win elections next year, some party insiders now fear that extreme rhetoric and conspiracy theories coming from the angry reaches of the conservative base are undermining the GOP's broader credibility and casting it as the party of the paranoid.

    Such insiders point to theories running rampant on the Internet, such as the idea that Barack Obama was born in Kenya and is thus ineligible to be president, or that he is a communist, or that his allies want to set up Nazi-like detention camps for political opponents. Those theories, the insiders say, have stoked the GOP base and have created a "purist" climate in which a figure such as Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.) is lionized for his "You lie!" outburst last week when Obama addressed Congress.
    And so on. The point to remember is that GOP insiders fear the "purist" climate.

    Well today, Farah fights back. He tells his side of this story and hangs his victimization onto the actions of two people:
    Fresh from sponsoring CPAC in 2009 and addressing the group on multiple occasions dating back to the 1980s, I thought I would plant a seed in the minds of the organizers for the 2010 affair.

    So I sent a brief e-mail to event director Lisa De Pasquale suggesting that if CPAC 2010 were planning to do anything on the constitutional eligibility issue, I would like to be the speaker on that subject – what are the facts, why it's important.

    I never heard back from her and didn't really give it another thought, until September – eight months later – when suddenly that innocent, private e-mail between a sponsor of CPAC and the director suddenly became "news."

    It began when Republican blogger Jon Henke declared an ill-fated boycott of WND. I say ill-fated because WND had a banner year for revenues and traffic. That should tell you something about his level of influence in the world of politics and news. Henke did his best to get the Republican Party to withhold advertising from WND, never thinking, of course, to suggest the same to the Democrats, who outspent Republicans nationally and in WND in the election year 2008.
    Hissy fit begun, Farah complains about what was allowed at CPAC 2010:
    Apparently, De Pasquale and the CPAC leadership are more concerned about pleasing the media than their long-time sponsors and speakers – even people like me who are under siege from the left, the soft-right and the media establishment.

    It didn't surprise me later, therefore, when this same leadership made the conscious decision to include in its sponsors for 2010 a group promoting same-sex marriage.
    This was also the year CPAC accepted back into its ranks the formerly too-crazie for us John Birch Society. But Farah thinks they've gone soft on their conservative purity. So his solution:
    That's why today I pronounce CPAC dead.

    It's one of the reasons I am organizing a conference this September called "Taking America Back." This one is about the ultimate issues of God, the Constitution, the tea-party uprising, freedom and justice.

    There will be no two-headed monkeys.

    There will be no same-sex marriage sponsors.

    But there will be free and open discussion of issues like the constitutional eligibility of the man occupying the White House.
    Screw you guys, Farah Cartman sez, I'm going home.

    March 7, 2010

    Democracy for Pgh Endorses Sestak & Hoeffel, NOW Endorses Sestak

    ...
    A couple of Joes

    The Allegheny County Democratic Committee (ACDC) is holding their primary endorsement process right now, but progressives may want to consider these recent endorsements:
  • NOW PAC has endorsed Rep. Joe Sestak for the U.S. Senate from Pennsylvania.

  • Democracy for Pittsburgh has endorsed Rep. Joe Sestak for the U.S. Senate from Pennsylvania.

  • Democracy for Pittsburgh has endorsed Montgomery County Commissioner Joe Hoeffel for Governor of Pennsylvania
  • http://joehoeffel2010.com

    http://joesestak.com

    .

    Jack Kelly Sunday

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette columnist Jack Kelly is plays "concern troll" in this week's column. For those unaware of the term, Time magazine has a pretty good definition:
    Noun, derived from "internet troll." A more subtle beast than your standard troll, this species posts comments that appear to be sympathetic to the topic being discussed but who, in reality, wishes to sow doubt in the minds of readers.
    Not an exact fit to what Jack's trying to do in this column, but it's pretty darn close.

    I want to start here:
    The key thing to remember about Mr. Obama's aides is that he chose them. Shaking up a troubled presidential staff is mostly an exercise in reshuffling deck chairs on the Titanic because each administration takes on the characteristics of its chief. There is a reason why Richard Nixon's chief aides were conspiratorial; that so many in the George W. Bush administration were mediocre; that so many in the Clinton administration were corrupt.
    First, note the adjectives. Remember, Jack said that each administration takes on the characteristics of its chief. So if that's true, then according to Jack, Nixon was conspiratorial, Bush (43) was mediocre and Clinton was corrupt.

    No mention, of course, of Ronald Reagan. As Haynes Johnson pointed out in "Sleepwalking Through History" that:
    By the end of his term, 138 Reagan administration officials had been convicted, had been indicted, or had been the subject of official investigations for official misconduct and/or criminal violations. In terms of number of officials involved, the record of his administration was the worst ever. (p. 184)
    Granted, Johnson wrote this in 1991 (though there was a reissue with no correction to that sentence published in 2003) and so could not have possibly missed the rampant corruption of the two Clinton Administrations.

    Nevertheless it's strange, isn't it, that Jack would omit any mention, for example of:
    • The HUD scandal
    • The S&L Scandal
    • The Iran-Contra scandal
    Considering he was there, at least part of the time. He was appointed, doncha you know, as a "deputy assistant secretary" of the Air Force during the first Reagan Administration.

    No wait. That might explain why he'd omit that part and all of the other 138 Reagan convictions.

    And yet it was Clinton who gets tarred as corrupt by Jack Kelly.

    Not surprising at all.

    March 6, 2010

    idiots

    How fucking drunk, drugged or stupid do you have to be to go to the wrong house and ring someone's doorbell at 4:30 in the fucking morning???

    Thanks for scaring me half to death, morons.

    March 5, 2010

    Adam!

    Actually, his name is pretty much all we know about Adam Ravenstahl (other than he's Lil Mayor Luke's baby bro and he's running for PA State Rep). And, it's not just us. Adam's not returning calls or written requests from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. His campaign web site doesn't work.

    But, the P-G did manage to snag some lit:


    In it, he promises to continue his family's "tradition of service." One would hope that at a minimum he could do better than that.
    .