Archive for category Whack Jobs

If You Think Mexico Invaded the United States this Weekend…

You might be a Whack Job.

These guys had a tense night. And give whole new meaning to the words “well regulated militia.”

For nothing.

The usual suspects go nuts. She updates, but changes the subject.

Ya know, ya just gotta love America.

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Reasoned Discourse

[UPDATE: This post was originally published in an incomplete version.  The final version is now up.]

Frequent commenter Mike W., who writes on gun issues at Another Gun Blog, posted this comment to my post quoting John Adams in support of educating the young and poor.  Since he has taken the time to engage, and complains that I have not responded to his arguments, I have decided to address the points he makes there. Read the rest of this entry »

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Just When I Thought I Could Retire the “Whack Job” Label…

…I see something like this (H/T to Jesse Taylor over at Pandagon).  A small taste:

“Team Obama’s anti-anti-missile initiatives are not simply acts of unilateral disarmament of the sort to be expected from an Alinsky acolyte.  They seem to fit an increasingly obvious and worrying pattern of official U.S. submission to Islam and the theo-political-legal program the latter’s authorities call Shariah.

“What could be code-breaking evidence of the latter explanation is to be found in the newly-disclosed redesign of the Missile Defense Agency logo (above).  As Logan helpfully shows, the new MDA shield appears ominously to reflect a morphing of the Islamic crescent and star with the Obama campaign logo.”

If you think that the President of the United States personally designed a new logo for the Missile Defense Agency based on a crescent to show an official US Government policy of “submission to Islam and the theo-political-legal program the latter’s authorities call Shariah,” then you might be a whack job.  The stupid, it burns.

Of course, this is the same Project for a New American Century and Center for Security Policy wackaloon who thinks that Saddam Hussein had something to do with the first attack on the World Trade Center and even helped Timothy McVeigh make his Oklahoma City bombing happen.  So batshit crazy is nothing new to this guy.

I expect this sort of wackiness from guys like Christopher Logan, who apparently pointed this out to Gaffney.  Logan is really nothing more than a right wing talking head who claims expertise on Islam for “a lot of reading and studying, sort of on my own” because he read the Koran.  He reminds me of the Abe Lincoln character in those old commercials.

Logan also qualifies for whack job status, given his apparent belief that General McChrystal cares more for the Taliban than for his soldiers, and the tin-foil-hatted belief that the US Department of Justice has “turned on America and sided with Islam” because it acted to protect religious liberty.

So it’s a whack job twofer kind of day, and a reminder that some people are either just way out there or they spout this kind of tin-foil-hat crap to get attention.  Sometimes I wonder, because it is hard to imagine that anyone with Gaffney’s training and experience could actually believe that the Obama Administration wants to “submit” the US to Islamic legal theory.

Perhaps this rhetoric is just a way to generate unrest among the right wing base and help keep a generally corporatist and centrist government from moving on progressive issues (e.g., health care reform), as voters seemed to demand in 2008.  Maybe, like some religious leaders, Gaffney and Logan say crazy things so talk show producers will put them on the air and donors will support their “think” tanks, where apparently very few people do any actual thinking.  Or it could be that these guys just don’t really care for democracy and small-L liberalism if things like civil rights and religious freedom apply to non-Christians.

Any way you slice it, these guys are nuts.  They get the label.

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A Word About Whack Jobs–and Why I am Here

A few commenters challenged me over the last day or two because I refused to engage in a discussion with one of them because he characterized an essay I posted as “garbage” before he challenged the argument itself.  This, they suggest, shows liberal hypocrisy: since I characterize several blogs on my blog roll as “whack jobs” even as I complain about insulting characterizations of my work.  Since this is a valid point, I thought I would offer a few thoughts on the subject. Read the rest of this entry »

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End Time Whack Job

One of the radio stations here in Richmond is an American Family Radio affiliate, and I wound up listening one morning during the local National Public Radio station’s pledge drive.  Sadly for me, I landed on a show called Politics and Religion, hosted by Irvin Baxter.

This complete nutcase thinks that the end of the world is coming any minute–at least he says that on the radio every morning.  To be sure, he always carefully hedges with “I don’t know exactly when” rhetoric.  But he sells his magazine by describing the End of the World as prophesied by the Bible–complete with Antichrist, one world government, one world religion, and a war which will kill a third of human beings–and then saying that he expects it to come during his lifetime.  And he’s no spring chicken.

I’ve heard his rants against homosexuality, the European Union, the World Court, and the Federal Reserve.  Baxter actually says he worries that RFID chips are the Mark of the Beast.   He interviews true freaks, like John F. McManus, the President of the John Birch Society.  McManus writes conspiracy theory books on the Bilderberg Group and thinks that if it ain’t a precious metal, it ain’t money.

These people are all paranoid freaks and conspiracy theorists who think that someone who lived two thousand years ago had a vision of attack helicopters at the end of the world and wrote it down in the Bible.  They make a great addition to the Whack Job list.

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The Nutty Professor Reads the Polls

Donald Douglas writes at American Power that the latest New York Times/CBS News poll shows “disastrous” numbers for Democrats.  To make his case, he cites two results which indicate a preference for smaller government, and a third showing more concern over the economy and jobs than health care.  Douglas then points out that a bare plurality has more faith in Republicans to “ensure a strong economy” and a bare majority who don’t think the President has offered reasonable solutions to the economic problems faced by their families.

Not so fast.  These cherry-picked results don’t tell the whole story, and “it doesn’t take a statistician” to see that this grossly exaggerates the bad news in the poll for the President and Democrats.  That’s a good thing, because for a political science professor, Douglas isn’t much of one if that’s what he gets from this poll.

Now on the face of it, this looks like a solid argument: Americans care about the economy, they think the GOP could fix it, and they think Obama doesn’t have his eye on the ball.  If all of this is so, perhaps The Nutty Professor™ is right.

Not so fast.  Douglas’ analysis ignores other results from the poll, not to mention the behavior or real life politicians.  For starters, the same poll shows a 47-34 plurality approving Obama’s handling of terrorism, and a 55-34 majority approval of his foreign policy, suggesting that not all has gone south for the Administration.  Moreover, only seven percent each say they blame the President for the current state of the economy or federal budget deficits, which suggests that even those who don’t think he’s found the right solution yet may not be prepared to turn to someone else in a search for it.  And the respondents were evenly split on whether or not the stimulus package will make the economy better–suggesting that the American popular jury is still out on whether they think it was a mistake by an overactive government.  Finally, though somewhat more respondents said that they think the GOP would be more likely to ensure a strong economy, the same group had more faith in Democrats when it comes to creating jobs or fixing health care.  It is not clear from these contradictory results that the President or his Party are in trouble.

Douglas’ claim that this poll shows an American preference for smaller government also stands on less solid ground than he thinks.  Respondents said they thing government should spend to create jobs, 47-45%, and 62% think Congress should let the Bush tax cuts expire, even though this would raise taxes on high earners.  Fifty-six percent would like to see more regulation of banks and financial institutions, and 52% think the President should do more to fix the economy.  Half say they would change Senate rules to make legislation easier to pass, and 58% think that Obama has expanded government “the right amount” or “not enough.”  It looks like Americans worry less about the size of government than they do its effectiveness–they want more policy that works and less that doesn’t.

It’s no secret that politicians–even conservative, small government politicians–don’t behave as if their constituents want smaller government.  Indeed, according to the Washington Times, over a dozen Republicans wrote letters to one agency alone seeking money from the stimulus package, even though they had voted against it and claimed it had no effect (except in letters like Kit Bond’s request from the USDA for stimulus money for a project in his state on the grounds that it would “create jobs and ultimately spur economic opportunities.”  Even Republicans know that Americans want more government action to solve problems on the ground.

Donald Douglas is not a very good political scientist and an even worse poll analyst, based on this example of his work.  He pulled a few results that support his preconceived notion of the state of American public opinion from a long survey while ignoring data points which might refute his claim.  This poll contains nothing particularly disastrous for Democrats or President Obama.  If Douglas cared about good analysis, he would have pointed this out.


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Wish I’d Thought of This Department

Pat Robertson said, during a 700 Club report on the earthquake in Haiti, that

“They were under the heel of the French, you know Napoleon the third and whatever. And they got together and swore a pact to the devil. They said ‘We will serve you if you will get us free from the prince.’ True story. And so the devil said, ‘Ok it’s a deal.’ And they kicked the French out. The Haitians revolted and got something themselves free. But ever since they have been cursed by one thing after another.”

This of course sent all kinds of people into high dudgeon over the insensitivity of the remark.  Pat Robertson of course gives not a whit for the opinions of others, unless they speak to him from on high.

Or maybe it’s down low:

Dear Pat Robertson,

I know that you know that all press is good press, so I appreciate the shout-out. And you make God look like a big mean bully who kicks people when they are down, so I’m all over that action. But when you say that Haiti has made a pact with me, it is totally humiliating. I may be evil incarnate, but I’m no welcher.

The way you put it, making a deal with me leaves folks desperate and impoverished. Sure, in the afterlife, but when I strike bargains with people, they first get something here on earth — glamour, beauty, talent, wealth, fame, glory, a golden fiddle. Those Haitians have nothing, and I mean nothing. And that was before the earthquake. Haven’t you seen “Crossroads”? Or “Damn Yankees”?

If I had a thing going with Haiti, there’d be lots of banks, skyscrapers, SUVs, exclusive night clubs, Botox — that kind of thing. An 80 percent poverty rate is so not my style. Nothing against it — I’m just saying: Not how I roll.

You’re doing great work, Pat, and I don’t want to clip your wings — just, come on, you’re making me look bad. And not the good kind of bad. Keep blaming God. That’s working. But leave me out of it, please. Or we may need to renegotiate your own contract.

Best, Satan

LILY COYLE, MINNEAPOLIS

Man, I wish I’d thought to send a letter to the editor like this.  Good work, Lily.

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Rules for Whack Jobs

Roy Edroso does everyone a public service by wading through the mud of the right-wing-nutjob attack on President Obama’s speech to school kids.  I’m almost sorry I clicked through to any of the blogs he cites: the stupid, it burns.

It is difficult to overstate the amount of ignorance permeating the discussions and essays on these blogs.  The discussions of Saul Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals, for example, suggest that few have actually read the book.  Click over from WikiPedia to Amazon, folks, and order it.  Read it.

James Lewis, who may be an American but is not much of a thinker (he thinks socialists are “deeply committed” to the “Internationalist Ruling Class!”), asserts that Alinsky’s prescription to “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it” has something to do with scapegoating groups:

“That slogan defines mob scapegoating, of course. It is an exact prescription for whipping up mobs — by race, by gender, by ethnicity, by religion.”

This makes, of course, very little sense.  Personalizing and polarizing the target is about putting an individual, and preferably evil, face on class oppression, not about blaming rich white mortgage lenders for the problems caused by all those lazy poor people who bought houses they couldn’t pay for.

But what about Alinsky?  Lewis wants to paint him as a dangerous radical who means to bring down capitalism and the American way of life with the help of his protege, President Obama.  Capitalism has, of course, quite effectively begun the process of destroying itself without Alinsky’s help, thank you very much.

Lewis is bent out of shape because President Obama is scapegoating the “capitalists who run General Motors and Wall Street,” and some B-list comedienne thinks the tea partiers are racist, don’t you see.  Never mind that the executives who brought down our economy by mismanaging both its industrial and financial sectors sort of brought the blame upon themselves.

Saul Alinsky wrote Rules to show the politically weak how they could effect social change despite the efforts of the powerful to hold their priveleged economic and political positions.  He compared the book to The Prince:

What follows is for those who want to change the world from what it is to what they believe it should be. The Prince was written by Machiavelli for the Haves on how to hold power. Rules for Radicals is written for the Have-Nots on how to take it away.

Alinsky suggested that organizers identify privileged individuals and personalize social injustice–that is, show exactly who benefits from the perceived class differences they had organized to fight.  Lewis does not support his claim that the President has decided to use this technique to demonize groups rather than individuals except by assertion: he just knows they are doing this, because this is what the Dixiecrats did to blacks, don’t you see.  But the evidence suggests that people who wish to curb the excesses of Capitalism and capitalists have followed Alinsky’s lead by targeting the individual executives who made corporate decisions on things like bonuses.

This article, for example, targets Edward Liddy, the CEO of AiG, not capitalists in general.  Other discussion of Wall Street bonuses challenge them on capitalist grounds by making the credible claim that the poor performance of financial wizards should preclude bonuses–they should not be rewarded for destroying their companies.

“These bonuses should be zero,” wrote one poster on the firedoglake.com blog. “Not down 44%. Zero. These banks should be using their profits to reinvest in the shoring up of their capital reserves, so that they [can] start underwriting and lending again, not paying discretionary bonuses. It’s not about keeping the “best and the brightest”…if they were that sharp, we wouldn’t be in this mess, would we now?”

Janeane Garafalo’s assertion that racism pervades the Tea Party movement also has merit–at least StormFront thinks so.  They have asked members to join the Tea Parties, and along with other white supremacist groups believe they would find a fertile recruiting ground at such meetings.

In no sense can anyone characterize either as scapegoating.  Neither Wall Street bonus babies nor teabaggers are taking blame for others.  To the extent liberals use Alinsky’s methods to effect social change, they target the actual malefactors of wealth and privelege–along with the rubes who support an unjust system.  They do not blame innocent individuals or groups for the sins of others.

Indeed, it is arguably the right that favors Alinsky’s techniques.  They make a din that creates the impression of a larger movement at boisiterous town hall forums.  They force rules of civil conduct on liberals even while violating them.  They bully and ridicule, and attract activists who enjoy using these methods.  They use any event as a reason to attack, and offer no constructive alternatives.  And they picked, froze, personalized, and polarized Obama.

They also scapegoat amorphous groups–the liberal media, academic or Hollywood elites, unions,  socialists, communists,  and all those welfare mothers who think rich people owe them a Cadillac.

We should of course expect reactionaries–capitalists, corporatists, and religious leaders who see their base of political and economic power crumbling before changing social norms, demographics, and economic and scientific realities–to protect the foundations of their power.  They have to demonize cultural, political, economic and demographic changes as socialist in order to hold the support of uninformed masses who fear out groups, “socialism,” “secularism,” and “liberal elites” more than they fear losing everything when some corporation sends their job overseas or refuses to pay for the cancer treatment because they had acne ten years ago.  This is how they preserve the every-man-for-himself system that allows a small group of wealthy patriarchs to control the vast majority of US wealth.  But they have no stronger a claim to America, and what it means to be an American, than liberals who believe that we can improve society by acting collectively.

And if they believe that socialism is about commitment to the “International Ruling Class,” they come to the intellectual gun fight without a good understanding of what bullets are.

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Putting Yourself Out There

It seems I really touched a nerve with this comment on a post about gays in the military over at The Western Experience.  The proprietor, Jason Corley, responded sharply, and upon reflection I would like to say something about why I am more open about my background than he. Read the rest of this entry »

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Military Quote of the Day

Degenerates who think torturing prisoners is morally acceptable edition:

“Hold it the Greatest sin to prefer existence to honor, and for the sake of life to lose the reason for living.”

–Juvenal

Bonus quote on the same subject:

“A man has honor if he holds himself to an ideal of conduct though it is inconvenient, unprofitable, or dangerous to do so.”

–Walter Lippman

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