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Scott Brown Yawns At Plane Attack On IRS Building: ‘No One Likes Paying Taxes’

Today a man flew a plane into a Texas federal building in an apparent domestic terrorist attack. The suicide bomber, identified as Joseph Andrew Stack, was allegedly a right wing extremist who wrote on a website that violence “is the only answer” and expressed anger at the IRS, the federal government, and health care reform.

Newly-minted Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA) appeared on Fox’s Neil Cavuto and showed none of the outrage and concern about terrorism that he exuded during his Senate election campaign. Asked for his reaction, Brown said he felt for the families, but quickly shrugged off the attack and transitioned to say that “people are frustrated” and “no one likes paying taxes.” Watch it:

Brown’s blasé attitude toward this terrorist attack is in stark contrast to the tone he struck during his campaign:

– “The President reacted too slow” to the failed Christmas Day plot.

– “We are at war. … We’re at war in our airports. We’re at war in our shopping malls. I have to be honest with you, folks. … I’m scared at some of the policies that I’ve heard.”

– Calling Coakley “naïve” on terrorism, Brown said she possessed a “deeply troubling lack of awareness and understanding of the threats facing our troops and on our national security.”

It is naive for Brown to think the dangers of right wing terrorism aren’t real. Last year, the Department of Homeland Security released a report warning of the dangers of rising right wing extremism, as was evidenced by the shooting at the Holocaust museum in D.C. and by a Pittsburgh killer who was partially inspired by Glenn Beck.

While conservatives are quick to make political hay out of terrorism when it suits their needs, they have been relatively silent in the wake of this attack, as well as in the wake of the news that the Obama administration struck a significant blow to the Taliban and to al Qaeda.

Transcript: Read more

Security

CPAC Features Contradicting Immigration Panels

Today, the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) is featuring two conflicting immigration panels in what seems like a blatantly duplicitous and opportunistic attempt to appeal to the nativist instincts of the anti-immigrant Right while simultaneously trying to grow the Republican base to include more Latinos.

One panel, entitled The Rise of Latino Conservatism, is sponsored by the American Principles Project’s (APP) Latino Partnership for Conservative Principles. “We represent a form of conservatism that is welcoming to people of all racial, ethnic and religious backgrounds,” explains Robert George, APP’s founder. According to George, his organization supports a “generous and welcoming immigration policy,” explaining that “a conservatism that is anti-Latino is not one that we want any part of.”

Perhaps unbeknownst to George, a screening of Border War: The Battle Over Illegal Immigration, a documentary from the self-described “conservative grass-roots advocacy organization” Citizens United is scheduled to take place just a few hours after his own CPAC panel. The movie has been panned by mainstream critics who claim that it leaves “little for a viewer to latch onto besides a transmitted sense of general anxiety and outrage.” The film, which calls for stricter policies and more enforcement, has also been described as a one-sided, offensive, negative portrayal of Mexicans.

Watch the trailer:

Former Arizona Congressman and U.S. Senate candidate J.D. Hayworth, who is featured in the documentary, will introduce the film at the screening. In a background briefing released today by America’s Voice, Hayworth is identified as a “practitioner in the strategy to drive Latinos away from the Republican Party.” In the past, Hayworth has referred to previous generations of American immigrants as “illegal invaders” and equated his hard-line immigration stance to “standing up for our culture.” However, Hayworth’s views didn’t bode well with Arizona citizens who voted him out of office after he opposed a harsh bill that that would have made undocumented immigrants and anyone who helps them into felons because it didn’t do enough to “turn back the massive invasion of our country by illegal aliens.”

CPAC’s two-faced agenda ultimately serves as a microcosm of the larger internal debate dividing the conservative movement. While some conservatives continue preaching a hardline and unrealistic immigration position to secure right-wing votes, shrewd Republican leaders have warned that an anti-immigrant platform could render the Party obsolete as Latino and immigrant voters will one day outnumber the wingnuts.

On Saturday, CPAC will also host a panel called “Saving Freedom from Obama’s Immigration Plan” with Sen. David Vitter (R-LA), Linda Chavez, Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation, Dino Teppara of the Indian American Republican Council, and John Fund of the Wall Street Journal.

Yglesias

ABC Can’t Find Economists Who Think the Stimulus Failed

cash-wad 1

A funny thing seems to have happened on the way to a he-said, she-said story for ABC on the stimulus:

“The stimulus worked,” said Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC Bank. Without it, “the unemployment rate would probably be closer to 11 percent” and the economy might not have grown at all last year.

Mark Zandi of Moody’s Economy.com thought the nation would be “still in recession.”

“It played a significant role supporting recovery,” said economist Diane Swonk of Mesirow Financial.

Not all the economists who responded to our survey agreed the stimulus was necessary.

“Throwing a trillion dollars at anything will move it,” said Standard and Poor’s David Wyss, “but the recovery would be beginning and the unemployment rate nearing a peak” without it.

“The economy would probably be recovering,” argued Jay Bryson of Wells Fargo, just maybe not “as fast as it is.”

They’ve attempted to frame this as a standard piece of “experts disagree on shape of the earth” shoddy policy journalism, but what you’re actually seeing here is that despite their best efforts they can’t find anyone to endorse the standard Heritage/NRO/GOP view that the stimulus is harming the economy. Hoffman and Zandi deem the stimulus vital. Swonk says it played a “significant role” in bolstering recovery. Wyss is sniffy and derisive, but the essence of his sniffy derision is to say that of course the stimulus helped. And Bryson says the economy recovered faster because of the stimulus. Everyone agrees!

Politics

On House GOP Website, Republican Leadership Takes Credit For Successful Stimulus Project

Yesterday marked the one-year anniversary of the historic American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, better known as the stimulus. Despite being called a success by most economists and independent analysts, Republicans have mocked the stimulus, calling it a boondoggle that has “failed to create a single job.” Essentially, the GOP has lied about the stimulus in order to justify their unified opposition to its passage.

Yesterday, GOP.gov, the official website for the House Republican caucus, continued the anti-stimulus drumbeat, blaring press releases calling the stimulus a failure. Ironically, posted just above two releases attacking the stimulus, the website features a release from Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) taking credit for $35 million dollars in stimulus highway money. Below is a screen shot:

GOP.gov website screen shot

The $35 million in TIGER highway funds were provided by the stimulus McMorris Rodgers tried to kill. McMorris Rodger’s press release, however, claims she was a “champion” in gaining the funding.

Yesterday, ThinkProgress released a report detailing how over half of the GOP caucus, 110 lawmakers — from the House and Senate — have either taken credit for its success or requested more money from the stimulus. As part of the GOP leadership team, McMorris Rodgers helped corral every single House Republican in voting against the stimulus. She is simply the next lawmaker hypocritically trying to “trash and cash” the bill.

Climate Progress

The IPCC lowballs likely impacts with its instantly out-of-date reports and is clearly clueless on messaging — should it be booted or just rebooted?

And should IPCC chief Pachauri stay or go?

I don’t know what value the IPCC now provides.  But then, I had the exact same concern back in December 2007 (see “Time to shut down the IPCC?“).

As I wrote back then, “I am a fan of what the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has done “” and they certainly deserve the Nobel Prize.”  But even back then I didn’t see a lot of value in the IPCC going forward, as I wrote in long column at Salon.com, “Desperate times, desperate scientists“:

Read more

Security

Getting Real About Divisions In Iran

iran_protest_rallyJosh Rogin’s story on the Obama administration’s intervention into whether Voice of America should attach its name to a statement protesting Iranian signal jamming indicates that the administration is still approaching certain aspects of the Iranian regime’s repression with meticulous caution. Perhaps too much caution, in my opinion.

This apparent caution does, however, work against Flynt Leverett’s suggestion that the administration is moving closer to endorsing regime change in Iran. As I’ve written previously, while I think the administration needs to elevate human rights on its Iran agenda, I don’t think that President Obama’s explicitly enlisting the United States in the Iranian reform movement in hopes of “regime change” is a wise choice right now. But I continue to find Leverett’s dismissal of that movement as a serious factor, either in Iranian politics or in U.S. considerations toward Iran, to be incredibly obtuse.

Appearing on the NewsHour on February 12, Leverett insisted “The United States needs to be doing serious strategic business with the Islamic Republic as it is, and not as some might wish it to be”:

That’s what the Obama Administration needs to be focused on, and not give in to what is, frankly, an illusion that Iranian domestic politics are going to produce some government that we’re going to find much, much easier to deal with.

Yes, by all means, let’s not have illusions that a new Iranian government will give us everything that we want. But it’s pretty clear that dealing with the Islamic Republic “as it is” means dealing with a government that is currently experiencing a serious crisis of legitimacy, probably the most serious since the immediate post-revolutionary period.

While Leverett sees the regime’s success in preventing large-scale anti-government demonstrations on February 11 as evidence that we should all just get over the Greens, Farideh Farhi writes that “the only message of February 11 is that, by spending a tremendous amount of resources and energy on security, arrests and mobilization, the government can control the crowds”:

But managing the stage and controlling the crowds on any given day are not the same as actually resolving the problems and grievances that have repeatedly brought protesters into the streets. Unless some of these are addressed, the Iranian state will remain on edge, vigilant, and engaged in a permanent crackdown that will effectively undermine the country’s economic and regional ambitions. [...]

Iran’s political system, with its bickering elites, remains as dysfunctional as ever. And President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s administration is still perceived as incompetent even by many of its conservative backers at a time when the government faces the dual challenge of embarking upon what it calls the “economic surgery” of reforming the country’s unwieldy subsidy system and thwarting growing foreign pressures to curb the country’s nuclear program.

While I don’t think we should bank on any particular faction to come out ahead (though obviously we’d like to see an Iranian government that was more democratic and less confrontational), neither should we refuse to see that the Islamic Republic is significantly divided right now. Simply denying that those divisions exist, or that they matter, is not realism.

Yglesias

Dutch Coalition Collapsing Under Afghanistan Pressure

As far back as when I was in the Netherlands in late 2007 it was clear that the Dutch military deployment in Afghanistan was causing political problems for the main center-left party, PvdA. They’ve been in an awkward position as junior partners in a coalition led by the main center-right party, and standing by an unpopular extension of an unpopular deployment past its 2010 deadine risks further erosion of the party’s base vote in favor of other left-of-center parties.

Erik Voeten ably breaks down the details but I think he goes wrong in explaining the resulting situation as an example of the limits of presidential appeal:

On average, it is better for diplomacy to have a President who is admired by many than one who is not. In the end though, this is not going to help when it conflicts with the bread and butter of politics.

I think this is actually an example of exactly the sort of diplomatic problem that could be solved through having a President who’s admired. The problem is really just that the President in question isn’t admired enough. Or, at a minimum, that he’s not been sufficiently persuasive on the topic at hand. This isn’t really a question of “bread and butter” politics, it’s pretty directly a consequence of the fact that the Dutch population doesn’t have confidence in Obama’s strategy. Consequently, it looks like the Dutch coalition may collapse.

Politics

Utah state senator wants to create holiday honoring ‘gun pioneer’ on MLK Day.

Madsen3Utah State Sen. Mark Madsen (R) is introducing legislation to create a holiday honoring John Moses Browning — the Utah native and “gun pioneer” who founded the Browning Arms company — on the same day as Martin Luther King Day. Browning’s birthday is believed to be around Jan. 21, so “Madsen proposes doubling up Browning and King”:

I see them as complimentary,” [Madsen] said. Browning is known for developing a variety of guns, including the gas-operated machine gun. Madsen said he plans to meet with the NAACP to discuss his proposal.

“We’ll see if they can take it in the spirit it’s intended,” Madsen said. [...]

Guns keep peace,” [state Senate Majority Leader Scott] Jenkins [R] said. “I kind of like the idea of making his birthday a holiday. I’m all over that.”

Salt Lake NAACP President Jeanetta Williams said she was “furious” about the idea. “It is not acceptable for the name John M. Browning to jointly share the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday,” she said. “Dr. King was assassinated by a man using a gun. John M. Browning was a gun manufacturer. … To me it’s a very mean-spirited act.” King would probably be outraged aswell, having said that by allowing guns to be “purchased at will and fired at whim…we have created an atmosphere in which violence and hatred have become popular pastimes.” For several years, Utah “purposely” omitted King’s name from the holiday, calling it Human Rights Day until 2000. Madsen noted that he’s not committed to MLK day and will find another day “if the race baiters are out there looking for an opportunity” to start a controversy.

Health

Health Insurers Inadvertently Make The Case For Health Care Reform

Our guest blogger is Emma Sandoe, a Health Care Researcher at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

America's Health Insurance Plans President Karen Ignani

America's Health Insurance Plans President Karen Ignani

Today, Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius released a report that shows premiums in the individual market are expected to skyrocket in Connecticut, Maine, Michigan, Oregon, Rhode Island and Washington. This report comes on the heels of the widely-reported Anthem Blue Cross premiums increase of 39 percent in California.

Responding to this report, Karen Ignagni of the America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) released a statement joining the growing argument that “health insurance premiums are increasing in the individual market because of soaring medical costs and because younger and healthier people are dropping their coverage due to the economy.” This is known as adverse selection and leads to higher cost for the remaining covered individuals.

Ignagni’s insistence that the premium increases are a result of the recession is a compelling argument for health insurance reform, especially in the individual insurance market. Health reform is needed in any economic climate, and the recession only shines some light on the already existing instability of the market.

Health reform will help prevent premium increases during a recession by creating a stable, well-regulated insurance market within the health insurance exchange. First, the market will not be overwhelmed by sicker individuals because exchange will have a broader, healthier risk pool. The individual insurance requirement ensures that healthier individuals have the responsibility of paying for reform, which will lower costs for all individuals.

Under reform, premiums will likely be more affordable and stable. During times of economic decline, many individuals will qualify for federal subsidies to help pay for coverage. This will prevent healthier individuals from dropping their health coverage when facing financial hardship, which in turn, keeps everyone’s premiums stable.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, health care reform should also lower premiums for a good number of Americans. The design of the exchange does this by creating competition within the marketplace, whereas currently “more than 94 percent of insurance markets in the United States are highly concentrated. ”

Finally, as Kathleen Sebelius noted today, under reform insurers will have to report spending and the premiums they receive from individuals. If the administrative costs and profits exceed the Medical Loss Ratio limit, premium dollars will have to be reimbursed to the consumer. So the insurer’s claim of higher health costs would be verified, before they were passed on to consumers.

The administration responded to Ignagni’s claim by insisting that the insurers “want to defeat reform.” Instead, the insurers have laid out the clearest case to date: the recession demands that reform occur.

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