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Category Archives: The Parties

You know who shouldn’t be allowed to go to college? Poor people.

If it’s not college affordability it’s saying that ‘public education is socialism’ (h/t Ron Paul). Any time any of these candidates announces their ideas for education I want to find the nearest moving vehicle and jump in front of it. I’m sorry but they know not of what they speak. It’s sad and fairly indicative of the direction this country will take upon their being elected. Education which is the foundation for a strong country is treated as a nuisance that only few deserve. I’m sorry but no matter what side of the aisle you’re on, that’s bull shit.

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Also posted in Education, Election 2012, Republicans | 7 Comments

How the CNN Tea Party Debate Scared the Ever-Loving Crap Out of Me

Via Politico http://www.politico.com/

Yesterday morning a colleague said that he was going to text me Monday night during the now infamous Gardasil Debate of 2011 but he wasn’t sure if I was awake and thought he might be disturbing me. Little did he know that I was already disturbed beyond belief and wide awake thinking that should one of these eight GOP contenders become President (well, all except for Jon Huntsman) then how would I and could I possibly flee the country. It becomes a very real possibility when all of the candidates did a Perry pile-on. The man who formerly proposed that his state of Texas secede from the union wants to now be President of the entire country. Oh, the irony of it all.

I watch these debates in part to learn more about the ‘enemy’ but also because I enjoy being informed even if the process is maddening. Monday’s debate – the second in four days – was infuriating but at least now I know. I tell myself that knowledge is power as I listen to Tea Party audience members whoop and holler for the death of a coma patient who doesn’t have health-insurance. It’s disturbing, at least for me, but then again as someone on Twitter so brilliantly pointed out these debates aren’t ‘for liberals’ they’re for Republicans and their grassroots activists. So I sit back and watch while my toes curl in disbelief.

Some of my favorite moments – all in jest of course because if I were to point out the severity and my genuine shock of what was said well, I’d question how Montreal would feel about having me as a citizen. And please – and I mean this genuinely – if you do agree with points that the candidates made, feel free to share and enlighten me.:

1) Michele Bachman is definitely still around. Even better she hates vaccines or is unaware of the exact purpose of vaccinations. The definition of vaccine according to Merriam-Webster: a preparation of killed microorganisms, living attenuated organisms, or living fully virulent organisms that is administered to produce or artificially increase immunity to a particular disease.

The Gardasil vaccine that she is so virulently against – and I will say that no one should be forced into inoculation but one (a parent) should also be aware of the deep consequences of not vaccinating their child. But that is also a different discussion and a bunch of moms are now giving me the evil eye. The point is that I think she is mistaken as to the purpose of a vaccine against HPV which is what Gardasil is. She ended up coming across as a woman who would totally be down with Measles, Mumps and Rubella making a comeback.

2) That fucking fence to keep the brown people (from Mexico) out came up again. Apparently this is a good idea but the best part is the entire conversation against “illegal aliens” then less then five minutes later the candidates were asked how they plan to court the Latino vote. So..wait a minute: You’re going to keep a large population of Latinos out and/or insult them horribly by referring to them as illegal aliens and then you’re going to try and get them to vote for you? Again with the irony and head scratching on my part because really? I mean REALLY? At least Rick Perry had a Texas-sized DREAM Act to fall back on and the rest piled on because why should we allow these children of immigrants to get an education? How dare they?!

3) Another word where the candidates seem to be unaware of the definition would be ‘treason’. Back to Merriam-Webster for the definition: 1: the betrayal of a trust 2 : the offense of attempting by overt acts to overthrow the government of the state to which the offender owes allegiance or to kill or personally injure the sovereign or the sovereign’s family

My memory isn’t what it used to be but I don’t remember Ben Bernanke selling nuclear secrets to North Korea regardless, all eight candidates thought that Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve should be tried for treason. TREASON. Like he’s Benedict Arnold or some such BS.

I’ve run out of words for that nonsense save for; don’t any of these candidates own a dictionary? Or have access to Google?

4) Rick Perry is so adorable. He thinks that he deserves accolades and credit for creating jobs in Texas and then goes on to tell his base how gosh darn awful President Obama’s stimulus programs were. According to Governor Perry the stimulus didn’t create and/or save jobs. How much trouble will I get in for referring to him as a lying liar? Ok..I’ll say that he is clearly getting information on job creation in his state from an unreliable source. Immediately after Perry’s statement on how terrible stimulus was and how he’s the Texan wonder for creating all those jobs, PoliFact showed that no, stimulus helped to save and/or create the jobs he’s now taken credit for saving. Oy.

5) Jon Huntsman who? No, really, where was Ambassador Huntsman in all of this? Poor guy has one foot in the grave when it comes to this election and it really is a shame.

I tend to be facetious in times like this because I cannot allow my brain to wrap around this amount of absurdity. Conservatives will of course say that by agreeing with any of President Obama’s policies I, too, am absurd and in need of a lobotomy. That might be true but I will and always have looked at all candidates to find out where we agree and disagree. I only wish to see more of that from the Tea Party.

Did you watch Monday night’s debate? What did you think?

Related:

The Fix: The Florida Republican Debate: What We Learned

Roland S. Martin: Best of the CNN Tea Party Debate (Video)

Rolling Stone: GOP Tea Party Debate: Highlights and Lowlights

Big Journalism: CNN Shows MSNBC How a Debate is Done

 

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Also posted in Election 2012, Tea Party | 10 Comments

Debt in Past Tense (Part I)

“Every two years the American politics industry fills the airwaves with the most virulent, scurrilous, wall-to-wall character assassination of nearly every political practitioner in the country – and then declares itself puzzled that America has lost trust in its politicians.”  ~Charles Krauthammer


My head just met desk in a sense of relief that our ‘self-inflicted national nightmare’ is over. And I can hardly remember how we got to this position where we ended up ass over tea kettle along with some inside the beltway type bullshit. The likes of which I have not seen in, like, ever. Actually it could have been worse, at least no one was caned! This past month has been a marathon of epic proportions and now that it’s all over I can hardly remember how it started.

Oh yes, I do remember; the debt ceiling. Though the right will argue that it started when House Republicans led by Speaker John Beohner – he of the orange persuasion and the tears – proposed a budget and the Democrats did not. Meanwhile, at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, the President was just twiddling his thumbs and not-leading as the House decided to cut every single program known to man. At least all programs that would actually help people. They did have time to increase spending for private school vouchers in the District of Columbia. Never mind that none of them are actually from the District of Columbia nor have set foot in a school inside of the District of Columbia. Unless of course that school is called Sidwell Friends. But whoa, digression. Where was I? Oh yes. Republicans in the House were doing all the heavy lifting of destroying discretionary spending. Poor people? Pshaw!. Or health care, or Medicaid or Medicare and screw the old people. Social Security needs to end anyway.

The quick and dirty version is that yes, the Republicans and Budget Chairman Paul Ryan came up with a horrific budget that should never have seen the light of day. But hey, they did it and that’s what counts. So, after the House voted along party lines to go with the Ryan budget, the President reminds both chambers that we’re coming pretty close to touching the debt ceiling so they – Congress – should get on that. The House replied with “Oh yeah, you want us to raise the debt ceiling? HA! Also HAAAAAAA! Also, what will we get in return?” So the President said, “What now? Just raise it. We need to pay our bills.” The House Republicans were like, “Yeah, buddy, not so fast, if we’re going to raise this sucker by $2.5 trillion then some cuts are going to need to be made”. And then the President was all, “Are you kidding me with this shit?”

Unfortunately for the President he soon realized that they were not kidding because they are Republicans after all and Republicans don’t know how to make – or take – a joke. Instead he attempted to bring both Democrats and Republicans from both houses together to work on a deal via something called ‘compromise’. A word, that we will soon find out is unfamiliar to those in the DC area. Things seemed to be going OK but fast forward to one of their many meetings and Bam! House Majority Leader Eric Cantor took his ball and went home because he wasn’t getting what he wanted and John Boehner was all, “Uhhh…ok then” and briefly agreed with Cantor, kind of. But there was some strain in their relationship. And between all of this Boehner, Biden, Obama and Ohio Governor Kasich walk onto a golf course. Which sounds like the start of a terrible joke but no, they fucking golfed while this was going on and then had the nerve to complain about their lack of conversing about the topic.

(Clearly I am ad libbing this timetable because this is a blog post not a novel)

(And if you want the down and dirty details that’s what the New York Times is for. Actually, go see Ezra Klein because this is my progressive skewed, probably flawed but you get the gist, version)

Fast forward to three weeks ago. Cantor has his ball at home and is pouting, John Boehner is either crying or smoking a cigarette or both and the Democrats are like “are you fucking kidding me?” and the President still isn’t leading, is leading too much, is all up in the bully pulpit or is walking out of meetings. It all depends on who you ask. There are a series of meetings one famously held on a Sunday afternoon where all parties were told to get comfy and prepare to settle in for the long haul and that meeting lasted all of 75 minutes.

While much of this was going on in front of those who are avid C-SPAN viewers and Congress followers, as the date that we would hit the debt ceiling got closer and closer, things started to heat up a bit. Never mind keeping it to Inside the Beltway, no, the President said, I’m taking this to the American people. And you guys? He totally did. Like 11 times he held press conferences and statements and Lord knows what else because we were headed for financial ruin. If this were a movie it would have been called Armageddon but damn, if that title wasn’t already taken.

(I’m now realizing that this will be a two parter. Part two will come very soon now that votes have been counted and cast and I will be far more serious as what the true problem has been over the past two months. Hint: It isn’t just about money. It’s deeper than money but it always is…)

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Also posted in Congress, House, President Obama, The White House | 1 Comment