links for 2007-10-14

Krugman: Where’s the Compassion in Conservatism?

This interview with Paul Krugman is fascinating – why is it, after all, that right-wing ideologues seem to lack empathy or compassion for people less fortunate than they are? Mostly, it’s about race, and a lot of of it is about “get your hands offa my stack, Jack.”

Conservatives keep their ilk in line by attacking anyone that criticizes them out of all proportion to the criticism – and as Krugman notes, in conservative circles, you can say anything about a liberal or a Democrat, no matter how untrue it is, and never be called on it. But say something unflattering, but true, about a Republican, and you’ll catch all kinds of froth-at-the-mouth abuse… which is why journalists tend to tread carefully around uncomfortable facts where loudmouth conservatives are concerned.

The end is illuminating – most Americans would not characterize Franklin Delano Roosevelt, architect of the New Deal that brought this country back from the economic brink during the Depression, as “the savior of Capitalism.” But when you think about it, he very may well have saved this country from trying something drastic, like socialism after the Russian model, or fascism after the post-WWI German model. He got this country back on its feet, or almost back on its feet, just in time to meet and overpower the WWII German Anschluss. Talk about “just in time” management.

And then Krugman comes to a startling insight about an earlier Roosevelt who was actually a progressive Republican… and how modern-day Repubs kind of wish they could  repudiate TR and go back to a dark time before government got in the charity business.  Because compassion for others’ misfortunes, apparently, is Un-American. And not very white, either.

AlterNet: WorkPlace: Paul Krugman: Why Do Right-Wingers Mock Attempts to Care for Other People?

Krugman: Well, what Roosevelt wrought was actually bad for you if you were in the top 1% or top 10% of income distribution. It is actually true that the rich got poorer as a result of the New Deal.Karlin: Or less rich.

Krugman: That’s right — less rich, if you prefer that. At the time, many of them did not appreciate that Roosevelt was maybe hurting their fortunes but saving their heads. As the memory of the crisis fades into the past, people just start to say why should I be paying taxes to support social insurance that I’m never going to need? And, not everybody who’s rich takes that attitude, but enough of them do to basically fund their movement.

It is amazing how not just the memory of what Roosevelt accomplished, but what followed, has been expunged. Again and again I’ve seen statements like, well, the U.S. economy has never been as successful as it was before the New Deal, and it was successful under Reagan, but it was terrible in between them. People completely miss the thirty-year era of incredible prosperity after World War II. The greatest equalization that ever took place in the United States was, in fact, followed by the greatest economic boom that ever took place in the United States. But it has really gone away.

Of course, some people like Norquist or Marvin Olasky, are saying I want things back to the way they were before Teddy Roosevelt. So Norquist doesn’t just want to undo the New Deal, he wants to undo the progressive era, too. And someone like Marvin Olasky, who’s actually the originator of “compassionate conservatism,” is a guy who says we really need to go back to the nineteenth century, when there was no public assistance to the poor. The only way they could get it was through faith-based organizations, which made sure they were morally upright before they could get any aid. It’s amazing, but people on the right just really wish that the twentieth century had never happened.

Moar Chikins Comin Home 2 Roost, Plz

That earlier note about Fitzmas? This is a story that will keep on giving, as it wasn’t just screwy prosecutions in Alabama, it was Mississippi, Wisconsin, and probably lots and lots of other places… anywhere that state justice officials took calls from the White House, probably.

Not that it couldn’t happen in a Democratic-controlled state – I live in Illinois, and the recent trial of a former (Republican) governor generated a lot of controversy. But in tit-for-tat, the Republicans in the IL General Assembly are forever trying to get some dirt to stick on the current Democratic governor, Blagojevich.

The United States Attorneys Scandal Comes to Mississippi – New York Times

Paul Minor is the son of Bill Minor, a legendary Mississippi journalist and chronicler of the civil rights movement. He is also a wealthy trial lawyer and a mainstay of Mississippi’s embattled Democratic Party. Mr. Minor has contributed $500,000 to Democrats over the years, including more than $100,000 to John Edwards, a fellow trial lawyer. He fought hard to stop the Mississippi Supreme Court from being taken over by pro-business Republicans.Mr. Minor’s political activity may have cost him dearly. He is serving an 11-year sentence, convicted of a crime that does not look much like a crime at all. The case is one of several new ones coming to light that suggest that the department’s use of criminal prosecutions to help Republicans win elections may go farther than anyone realizes.

Oh, there is so much more tasty goodness in the Attorney General/White House/Department of Justice scandal yet to be savored. I can hardly wait -NOM NOM NOM

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[tags]DOJ, Attorney General, election, scandal[/tags]

The Salt Lake Tribune Obituary Notices: Scrooge

Mom used to love reading the obits in the Salt Lake Tribune – especially the ones best described as “over the top.” I wonder what she would have made of this one? For my part, it’s a sad, even tragic story… and whoever felt they needed to mention that the subject “drifted from his standards” should be ashamed of themselves.  Because? Ew. Also, HIV and “Aids” are not two diseases, they are the virus that causes the disease, and the disease itself.

This man sounds like a lovely, talented person – how sad that he had to reject himself in order to be “happy” and acceptable in the society in which he lived.

The Salt Lake Tribune Obituary Notices

He loved music and acting and performed in theatres throughout the valley for over 30 years. His favorite role was of Ebenezer Scrooge-a role that changed his life. After graduating from Granger High School and serving an LDS mission in Paris, France, Scott drifted from his standards. During this period, he struggled with addiction and also contracted HIV and Aids, diseases which he survived for 21 years. In 1997, Scott was cast as the understudy for Scrooge in Hale Centre Theatre’s “A Christmas Carol.” During his first performance, Scott’s life profoundly changed. “I will have Christmas in my heart and try to keep it all the year. I shall live in the past, the present and the future, the Spirits of all three shall strive within me and I will not shut out the lessons they teach.” This was the beginning of an amazing transformation.

The “amazing transformation” was that he apparently decided not to be gay anymore, and made a big production of proposing to his future wife on stage before a large audience, and marrying. And thus, returning to the fold of the righteous as far as the rest of his family were concerned.

How sad.

As a commenter at City Weekly noted, “….he ‘married’ a beard, and his family [knew] it.”
The same commenter wondered if Scott had written the obit himself, the better to convince his family he really had changed. Even more so, “Ew.”

Hurry, Fitzmas?

Oh pleaseohpleaseohpleaseohpleaseohpleaseletitbetrueletitbetrue, we can has Fitzmas cheer?

Rove Linked to Alabama Case – TIME

A Republican lawyer claims she was told that Karl Rove — while serving as President Bush’s top political adviser — had intervened in the Justice Department’s prosecution of Alabama�s most prominent Democrat. Longtime Alabama G.O.P. activist Dana Jill Simpson first made the allegation in June, but has now provided new details in a lengthy sworn statement to the House Judiciary Committee. The Committee is expected to hold public hearings on the Alabama case next week as part of its investigation of possible political interference by the Bush Administration in the activities of the Department of Justice.

Hmm. But we don’t have Karl Rove to kick around anymore, because he very conveniently retired in the dog days of August. And this Republican lawyer doesn’t seem to have the dirt first hand. So there will probably a lot of sound and fury, signifying nothing in the long run.

But a voter’s gotta hope, or what’s an indictment for?