Rick Santorum, now running for his political life, is developing a habit of making public statements that can be easily disproved with rudimentary searching of the public record. For example, he's recently been disclaiming any real connection to Grover Norquist's "K Street Project" to ensure that lobbyists hire Republicans only.
Think Progress tracked down a different set of facts from a 2002 newspaper report. How do you respond to what many perceive to be a crisis in military manpower? If you're the Bush administration, you propose cutting the size of the Army Reserve to "its lowest level in three decades...." In his 1-26-06 NY Times column "Dollars & Sense," David Brooks continues his occasional efforts to inform the Democrats about what they're doing wrong. Brooks' advice is free, and worth every penny.
Mr. Insight offers two basic concepts:
"[L]iberals have adopted an overly negative view of reality" which leads them to think that more people are poorer than is really the case. In the course of this analysis, Brooks pooh-poohs the dangers of globalism and outsourcing, and proudly points out one economist's view that "only 19 percent of males and 27 percent of females are poor or working poor."
"There has been a tendency in Democratic circles to regard values as a sideshow that Republicans use to fool the working class into voting against its self-interest," which misses the point that voters "use value issues as stand-ins and figure the candidates they associate with traditional morality are also the ones with sensible economic policies."
Well, there are certainly a few things to be said about that.
I, like so many others, have been following the evolution vs. intelligent design debate rather closely. It is both disheartening and infuriating that this public debate has been full of lies, half-truths, intellectual dishonesty, and logical fallacy. It was an angry sea. The good ship "America" rolled and heaved as the foamy waves broke over the bow. The embattled skipper stood on the bridge, his brow furled in concern.
Flashback in time, one year. Remember President Bush saying THIS in his 2005 State of the Union address? Feel like the Republicans are running roughshod over the government in Washington? You aren't alone. The Washington Post's front page on January 24 carried a story headlined "Closed-Door Deal Makes $22 Billion Difference, GOP Negotiators Criticized for Change In Measure on HMOs."
Many of the billion dollar legislative proposals are hammered out in private, behind closed door, with no member of the opposing party allowed to attend. It's been going on for years now, although our mighty and independent media, especially the yammering heads on the evening news-talk shows, have largely managed to avoid spreading the word just nicely.
This is what the Republicans mean when they talk about governing for the people, about being fiscally responsible, about restoring ethics to the institutions of government? On Monday, the President spoke at Kansas State University, and, unlike in most of his public appearances, he actually let people in the audience ask questions. The White House is, as usual, sufficiently proud of its chief occupant that it put a transcripts of the event on its web site.
You can read through the questions yourself and see that vast majority were of the extremely "soft" type that makes one (me) wonder if they came from people planted in the audience.
Mr. Bush did get one kind of touchy question from the audience on how the government was helping students' futures by cutting the student loan program by $12.7 billion. Unfortunately, it looks like he got his answer wrong. I had decided earlier that I wasn't going to launch into another "rant" about the White House today. Then I made the mistake of going to the White House's web site looking for a transcript of the forum that discussed the NSA surveillance program after Alberto Gonzalez gave his vague defense of it. I found my way to the "Ask the White House" page where Alberto Gonzalez answers questions supposedly submitted by ordinary, uncoached Americans.
The page describes itself as "where you can submit questions to Administration officials and friends of the White House."
Uh huh. Where "you" can ask questions. If "you" are a panting administration sycophant. Or a paid stooge planted to ask just the right questions. Then, to top it off, he answers the only substantive question--why can't you get a court order under the emergency procedures of the FISA statute--by apparently misrepresenting what the statute says.
See for yourself. Every now and then, a political animal gets caught up in the moment and responds honestly to a question. Maybe they simply didn't realize how normal folks would view their comments, maybe they got excited and forgot to think about that. Who knows; it happens.
Witness Republican strategist Ed Rogers on Hardball with Chris Matthews last night, talking about the NSA spying issue:
"I hope [President Bush is] going to talk about the wiretap issue. Maybe I`m missing something, but I love this issue for us, in a partisan context.
"In Washington, we always say, a bumper sticker beats an essay. Right now the Republicans have a bumper sticker. The Democrats have a convoluted essay, and the degree to which the election is going to be about who is tougher on terror and who is not, that`s a clear Republican advantage.
....Now we have a 21st century national security issue where again the Democrats are reverting to form as being more passive, more docile, more weak on national security issue. I like this NSA issue."
|