ThinkProgress Logo

Yglesias

Barack Obama released his global warming and energy plan today, and my key climate change cronies like it. Brian Beutler says:

It’s extremely good. Exceptional in some places, slightly nebulous in others, perfectly in line with expectations in yet more, but perfectly in line what we should expect from good public servants at this point, and certainly more than I expected from Obama.

And Dave Roberts:

Overall, I’m pleasantly surprised — even shocked — at its quality. It’s a deft mix of good politics and strong, substantive policy.

The basic framework is a cap-and-trade system wherein the emissions credits are sold by the government rather than given away (

Yglesias

Red Baiting

Over on the blog-I-didn’t-know-he-had, Roger Cohen shows us all that he’s actually the kind of liberal hawk who likes going in for a little McCarthyite red baiting now and again, analogizing my former colleague Mike Tomasky to a Stalin apologist. He doesn’t cite any actual examples of Tomasky excusing or denying Saddam Hussein’s depredations and, indeed, he has to concede that Mike did, in fact, acknowledge Saddam’s crimes.

As Chris Hayes points out, Cohen’s logic seems to be that anyone who didn’t favor launching an unprovoked war with the USSR was, as such, an apologist for Stalinism.

And here we see the basic point that the I-was-wrong-but-I-was-right-anyway crowd on Iraq doesn’t really think they were wrong at all. They regret nothing! Sure, spending over a trillion bucks on an operation that’s led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis while leading hundreds of thousands — if not millions — to become refugees doesn’t seem like a very sound humanitarian position but the point is that they took a stand, damnit. And against Saddam Hussein. So there. In “Politics as a Vocation”, Max Weber calls this sort of thing the “ethic of ultimate ends” and contrasts it with an “ethic of responsibility”:

You may demonstrate to a convinced syndicalist, believing in an ethic of ultimate ends, that his action will result in increasing the opportunities of reaction, in increasing the oppression of his class, and obstructing its ascent–and you will not make the slightest impression upon him. If an action of good intent leads to bad results, then, in the actor’s eyes, not he but the world, or the stupidity of other men, or God’s will who made them thus, is responsible for the evil. However a man who believes in an ethic of responsibility takes account of precisely the average deficiencies of people; as Fichte has correctly said, he does not even have the right to presuppose their goodness and perfection. He does not feel in a position to burden others with the results of his own actions so far as he was able to foresee them; he will say: these results are ascribed to my action. The believer in an ethic of ultimate ends feels ‘responsible’ only for seeing to it that the flame of pure intentions is not quenched: for example, the flame of protesting against the injustice of the social order. To rekindle the flame ever anew is the purpose of his quite irrational deeds, judged in view of their possible success. They are acts that can and shall have only exemplary value.

And that’s what this is all ultimately about — an effort to evade responsibility by suggesting that what’s really at issue here is a controversy over ends. The hawks must have felt Saddam’s evil more intensely, must have been more moved by Kenan Makiya’s pleas, been more attuned to the gulag, whatever. But no. Everyone knows and everyone knew that Saddam was a bad man. What some also knew was that invading Iraq was unlikely to have beneficial consequences. Cohen considered this possibility and rejected it. Or perhaps he failed to consider it. But either way, he was wrong.

Yglesias

Baby Bonds

Pretty much everyone, including those of us who don’t think she would be the best Democratic nominee, are pretty impressed with how tight a campaign Hillary Clinton’s run. MSNBC’s first read, The New York Times, and Larry Sabato, however, see a hint of weakness:

Her $5,000

Politics

Right Wing Launches Baseless Smear Campaign Against 12 Year Old Recipient Of SCHIP

Two weeks ago, the Democratic radio address was delivered by a 12-year old Maryland boy named Graeme Frost. Graeme told his story of being involved in a severe car accident three years ago, and having received access to medical care because of the Children’s Health Insurance Program. He said:

If it weren’t for CHIP, I might not be here today. … We got the help we needed because we had health insurance for us through the CHIP program. But there are millions of kids out there who don’t have CHIP, and they wouldn’t get the care that my sister and I did if they got hurt. … I just hope the President will listen to my story and help other kids to be as lucky as me.

The right-wing immediately condemned Democrats for daring to put a human face on the SCHIP program at a time when Bush was proposing a “diminishment of the number of children covered.” Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) — who has posed with children to advance his own political agenda — claimed Graeme was being used “as a human shield.”

Conservatives have more recently turned their targets on young Graeme Frost himself. A poster at the Free Republic propagated information alleging that Frost was actually a rich kid being pampered by the government. Among other bits of information, the post by the Freeper “icwhatudo” asserts that Graeme and his sister Gemma attend wealthy schools that cost “nearly $40,000 per year for tuition” and live in a well-off home.

The smear attack against Graeme has taken firm hold in the right-wing blogosphere. The National Review, Michelle Malkin, Wizbang, Powerline, and the Weekly Standard blog have all launched assaults on the Frost family. The story is slowly working its way into traditional media outlets as well.

Here are the facts that the right-wing distorted in order to attack young Graeme:

1) Graeme has a scholarship to a private school. The school costs $15K a year, but the family only pays $500 a year.

2) His sister Gemma attends another private school to help her with the brain injuries that occurred due to her accident. The school costs $23,000 a year, but the state pays the entire cost.

3) They bought their “lavish house” sixteen years ago for $55,000 at a time when the neighborhood was less than safe.

4) Last year, the Frosts made $45,000 combined. Over the past few years they have made no more than $50,000 combined.

5) The state of Maryland has found them eligible to participate in the CHIP program.

Desperate to defend Bush’s decision to cut off millions of children from health care, the right wing has stooped to launching baseless and uninformed attacks against a 12 year old child and his family.

Right wing bloggers have been harassing the Frosts, calling their home numerous times to get information about their private lives. Compassionate conservatism indeed.

Digg It!

UPDATE: TP commenter Mr. Ed notes that Malkin visited the Frost’s home and business today. A coworker of Mr. Frost tells Malkin that the family is “struggling,” but she refuses to believe it.

UPDATE II: More from John Aravosis, Whiskey Fire, All Spin Zone, Matt Ortega, FDL, and Kos.

Climate Progress

Travolta vs. Clooney on global warming advocacy

clooney.jpgGeorge Clooney is reluctant to endorse environmental causes because he flies private jets — a concern 5-jet-owning John Travolta doesn’t have. Clooney told Time:

You don’t want to be a spokesperson unless you are absolutely committed to a cause because you can hurt it. I’ve been asked to help represent environmental groups. I’m a big proponent of cleaning up the environment. I have two electric cars. But I also have a big weak spot because I’ve flown on private jets. However, I welcome any of these dumb pundits who make celebrities out to be bad guys to a discussion about Darfur. Because I’ve been there and I’ve met all the players, and I guarantee you, the pundits haven’t.

travolta.jpgIf only all celebrities were as serious as Clooney. Take Travolta (please!):

His serious aviation habit means he is hardly the best person to lecture others on the environment. But John Travolta went ahead and did it anyway.

The 53-year-old actor, a passionate pilot, encouraged his fans to “do their bit” to tackle global warming.

Travolta may well hold the celebrity record for private jet travel: “Clocking up at least 30,000 flying miles in the past 12 months means he has produced an estimated 800 tons of carbon emissions” — probably 100 times what you produce. He also has some very dubious ideas on what to do about global warming that make him sound more like Vinnie Barbarino:

Read more

Yglesias

Expertise

A little glance back at the 2002-vintage thoughts of Bernard Lewis, every conservative’s favorite Middle East expert. Speaking before the invasion of Iraq, he notes that “Parallels to the Iraq quandary can be found by looking at post-World War II Germany and Japan” which were turned into successful liberal democracies. And then:

I am particularly optimistic that the same can be done in Iraq, which has many positive features upon which it can build. For example, of all the oil-producing countries, Iraq made the best use of its oil revenues in terms of creating a real infrastructure, including a good secondary and university education system. Here I speak from personal knowledge. Earlier in my career, when I was teaching at the University of London, the overwhelming majority of my graduate students came from the Middle East. All of these Middle Eastern students were graduates of Arab universities and, before that, of Arab high school systems. I got to evaluate them well enough to know what sort of education and training they had received and, more particularly, whether their credentials really meant something. In the case of Iraqi students, their degrees were more reliable than those of students from other countries; the students from Iraq had received better training under more rigorous standards.

For this and other reasons, there is genuine hope. The main task is not creating opportunities, but removing obstacles.

Prescient!

Politics

Petraeus adviser: Petraeus’ testimony ‘potentially misleading.’

In his column yesterday, New York Times Public Editor Clark Hoyt examined “the confusing world of statistics from Iraq.” As TPM’s Greg Sargent notes today, Hoyt quotes one of Gen. David Petraeus’ own advisers, Stephen Biddle, saying that the Petraeus’ September testimony to Congress was “potentially misleading” because it emphasized “isolated points” rather than “broad trends”:

Biddle was an adviser to Petraeus last spring but believes the general’s testimony was “potentially misleading” because it didn’t discuss all the reasons why the numbers might have improved.

He said the best way to analyze statistics from Iraq is to gather all the numbers from all sources and look for broad trends instead of picking isolated points, as Petraeus did.

Politics

Gassy

oil2.png

We all know that correlation doesn’t prove causation anyway, but the issue I’d like to raise about the purported tight link between the price of gasoline and George W. Bush’s approval rating is that it’s hardly clear to me that there’s even a correlation here beyond the basic fact that Bush’s approval rating has generally gone down since 9/11 and oil prices have generally gone up.

Consider, if you will, the detail to the left. This shows the data from September of 2005 to September of 2007, a period during which the final price of gas was very close to the initial price, but Bush’s approval rating fell by a small but clear amount. Nothing about eyeballing this chart would lead you to conclude that gas prices were driving changes in Bush’s approval rating. Sometimes the two indexes move in the same direction and sometimes they move in different directions. But since each index can only go in one of two directions, one would expect totally unrelated quantities to move in the same general directions about half the time.

All that said, obviously we do know that economic conditions are one of several factors that impact presidential approval ratings and that gasoline prices are an important determinant of people’s assessments of their economic well-being. We also know that sometimes gas prices go up because of events (Katrina, for example) that independent make the president look bad. But the initial formulation of the gas-approval chart is meant to show a very tight link between the two quantities and it seems to me that the link just isn’t there.

Yglesias

Columbus Day

I keep kinda sorta forgetting that today is Columbus Day. One of the United States’ niftier quirks is that Columbus has been adopted as the Italian-American national hero, so in cities with large historic Italian immigrant populations you see some Columbus Day celebrations, but in places like DC there’s nothing. This, in my view, is how you can tell that Baltimore — with its Columbus Day parade — is the southernmost of Northeastern cities whereas parade-less DC is the northernmost city of the southeast (if you doubt me, note that the original lyrics of “Hail to the Redskins” enjoined the team to “fight for old Dixie”).

Older

Switch to Mobile
ThinkProgress Signup Overlay Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress

Sign Up