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Dick Armey Wants Tom Tancredo Out Of His Tea Party Tent

Recently, tea party profiteer and FreedomWorks chairman Dick Armey has taken a more vocal stance against anti-immigrant rhetoric. In an interview with Charlie Rose that aired late last week, Armey went as far as to list former Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) as representing part of the “tea party tent” that he feels “uncomfortable” with due to his “harsh and uncharitable and mean-spirited” immigration positions:

ARMEY: I tell you, I was for example not really happy to see Tom Tancredo calling himself a tea party guy.

ROSE: Because?

ARMEY: His harsh and uncharitable and mean-spirited attitude on the immigration issue.

ROSE: But what do you say to that? Do you speak out against that?

ARMEY: Absolutely have, and I’ve taken a lot of heat for it too. But first of all, we’re a nation of immigrants and a wonderful tradition. People have marched with their feet to America looking for freedom. Our biggest problem in immigration is we have a dysfunctional INS. If the government would do its job with some degree of efficiency –

ROSE: So the enforcement idea is what you would like to see more?

ARMEY: I mean look you drive by any INS office in America, and the one I see is mostly in Dallas, Texas. At 5:00 in the morning you see a line of four blocks long of people who want to be here and be here legally that are having the window slammed in their face and callous indifference by an inept agency.

Watch it:

In 2006, Armey referred to Tancredo as the “cheerleader of jerkiness in the immigration debate.” Nowadays Armey has to worry about Tancredo associating himself and his immigration jerkiness with a movement that Armey credits himself with creating. Tancredo isn’t Armey’s only problem. The anti-immigrant group Americans for Legal Immigration PAC has started urging its members to attack Armey’s immigration position and make their voices heard. According to ALIPAC, Armey has been fighting to “keep the illegal immigration issue out of the Tea Party movement.”

Armey shouldn’t be surprised. The Southern Poverty Law Center warned that hate groups and “nativist extremists” would begin exploiting the anger of tea baggers in an effort to recruit more hateful supporters. While it might seem that Armey would be glad to receive tea baggers of any kind, the long-term viability of the right-wing movement largely rests on its ability to embrace a more inclusive immigration approach and score much-needed political points with the growing Latino electorate. The majority of Americans, including Republicans and independents, support a solution to the nation’s broken immigration system that includes a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. Chances are, many would also be turned off by ALIPAC and Tancredo’s impractical “deport them all” strategy and nativist vitriol.

As he identified other groups he’d like to see kicked out of his tea party tent, Armey also described the LaRouchers as “an embarrassment” and the John Birch Society as “historically” having a “good deal of people that have regretted them.”

Justice

Petraeus Says He Served With Gay CIA Officers, Promises To Lay Out Comprehensive Position On DADT At Hearing

Last month, General David Petraeus suggested that he may be open to supporting a repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. Petraeus said that he was “not sure” that most servicemembers would care about fighting alongside openly gay men and women, and that he has personally done so without any problems.

Yesterday, during an appearance on CNN’s Fareed Zakaria, Petraeus clarified that he served with two gay CIA officers whose orientation did not undermine their performance or mission and promised to lay out his “thinking on the matter” before the Senate Armed Services Committee this spring:

PETRAEUS: I would like to clarify what I did say. What I said is I served with CIA officers actually who were known to be gay and one who was known to be lesbian. After the ten seconds of awareness wore off, the focus was on the professional attributes of these individuals. So given, again, standards of personal conduct, focus on human behavior, a focus on proper implementation, you know, I think that this is something that can be worked through, frankly. I’ll lay this out to Congress. My thinking on this matter, I’ve been wrestling with this. [...]

ZAKARIA: It sounds to me, though, if these — if the review process of scouting out the opinions of soldiers, if they were to go to this soldier, that is, you, it sounds like what you would tell them is that under — as long as it was carefully implemented, you would be comfortable?

PETRAEUS: I’ll lay that out, again, to the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Watch it:

Lawmakers will have to wait for Petraesus’ testimony before adding him to the ‘military leader who supports repeal’ column, but these statements suggest that the general is at least skeptical about the policy. His answer also betrays a certain level of indifference towards a soldier’s sexual orientation — reiterating the fact that repeal is only controversial in the minds of conservative fundamentalists — and mirrors the reaction of General Raymnd Odierno, the current Commanding General of forces in Iraq. Last month, Odierno was “asked repeatedly” about his stance on the gays in the military, until he finally told reporters, “I don’t have time to think about it…we’re kind of busy right now, trying to do our job in Iraq.”

Significantly, in the seventeen years since Congress passed DADT, real world experiences and the multitude of Defense Department-funded studies on the effects of the policy have convinced former proponents of DADT (i.e. military leaders) to come out against it. Support for the policy has been largely relegated to the most fundamentalist but well organized elements of the conservative movement. And fortunately, these groups and their rhetoric won’t provide cover for undecided moderate lawmakers.

Yglesias

Endgame

This was my dream:

— Panda pregnancy tests.

— CAP report on working women.

— Rahm’s 2006 House recruits are no more or less conservative than the caucus as a whole.

— I’ve never really understood how the Scientologists dupe anyone into joining an outfit whose high command is called the “Sea Org.”

— FedEx is lucky to have two Senators eager to do its bidding.

Dialing the clock back to Superdrag’s “Sucked Out”.

Politics

After Telling Women, Gays How To Live, Oklahoma GOP Outraged At ‘Government Intervention’ In Divorces

Oklahoma flag The Oklahoma legislature is currently locked in a dispute over whether to tackle the state’s divorce rate, the third-highest in the nation. Although some Republicans are pushing the legislation, other conservatives are outraged at the “government intrusion” into their private lives:

Republican members proposed three pieces of legislation imposing new regulations on marriage and divorce in Oklahoma. Two of the measures were defeated, but another — requiring counseling for those planning to wed, and therapy sessions for couples considering divorce — is awaiting action.

The issue has produced sharp clashes among conservative colleagues who normally find themselves in agreement. The debates have featured charges of hypocrisy and of betraying Republican principles against government intrusion into private lives. [...]

“How far do I want government to come into my home and your home about private personal matters?” asked Rep. Leslie Osborn, a Republican from Tuttle, in a debate. She referred to state government as a “huge monster.”

ThinkProgress spoke with state Rep. Jeannie McDaniel (D), who opposes the divorce bills because one hour of counseling — as proposed by one of the measures — won’t make a major difference in people’s marriages:

We know that one hour of counseling doesn’t do anything. We have counseling programs, especially in Family and Children Services…for families that are going through divorce who have children…and those have proven to be very effective. And they’re paid for by our Department of Human Services; they have grants available. They’ve been in place for over 14 years. They have a very high success rate of good outcomes. … They [participants in the programs] sort of laughed at this and said, “One hour, you’ve got to be kidding?” And it can be by anybody — it can be by your priest, it can be by a faith-based counselor.

McDaniel noted that some of the strongest debates on the divorce measures are coming from within the Republican Party, many of whom are against the government intervention. However, some of their concern rings a bit hollow; some of these same lawmakers — including Osborn — have had no problem imposing “government intrusion” into women’s “private lives.” Last fall, the Oklahoma passed a law that would have collected personal details about every single abortion performed in the state and posted them on a public website. (The Oklahoma County District Court struck down the law last month because it covered too many topics for one piece of legislation.)

McDaniel noted that Republican lawmakers are now putting forth several anti-choice measures once again, as single bills. Just last week, for example, the state House passed a measure “that would require a woman be given a description of ultrasound images of her unborn child and be offered those images before getting an abortion.” Rep. Dan Sullivan (R), the sponsor of the abortion website legislation, opposed the divorce counseling bill in a Feb. 22 vote.

Oklahoma also bans same-sex couples from marrying — a clear “government intrusion” into private life that many Republican lawmakers seem to find perfectly acceptable.

Tony Perkins, president of the far-right Family Research Council, said that he endorses efforts to lower the divorce rate, as long as the government does not “mandate” them. “I prefer the carrot versus the stick,” said Perkins, who opposes marriage equality.

Yglesias

Give ‘Em Enough Rope

There’s an excellent point about all this conservative concern-trolling on health reform lurking in Steve Benen’s post on the subject. If Mitch McConnell & co were really so sure that passing health reform would be a political loser for Democrats and that organizing around repeal will be a big winner, then wouldn’t they be making it easier to pass the damn bill?

It’s not that if McConnell believed what he said he’d be voting for the bill. But if your opponents are determined to inflict a wound on themselves, why not just let them, in a procedural sense? Why not stop the bitching and moaning about reconciliation? Why not stop talking about gambits to stick the reconciliation process up?

Security

Why The Obsession With Being ‘At War’?

lindsey grahamHere’s Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) on Face the Nation yesterday stating his view that Gitmo and waterboarding make Americans less safe:

GRAHAM: We will never win this war until we understand the effect that Guantanamo Bay has had on the overall war effort.[...]

One reason it drives my train, I know how images are used against our troops in the Mideast. When you talk about waterboarding here at home, it may get some applause and make you feel good and make you feel tough, but it spreads like wildfire in the Mideast. If you’re a young soldier walking the streets of Afghanistan and Iraq, you’ve just been put in danger.

It says a lot about the state of American conservatism that his opposition to waterboard torture and support for closing Guantanamo Bay prison is enough to make Graham a “moderate.”

but while it’s great that Graham, unlike the majority of the GOP, agrees with our top military commanders that waterboarding and Gitmo hurt American national security, unfortunately Graham also shares the Cheneyite obsession with being “at war,” something he repeatedly came back to in yesterday’s interview:

The president is getting unholy grief from the left, but Bob, I think we’re at war. [...]

We need a legal system that gives due process to the detainee, but also understands they didn’t rob a liquor store. We’re at war, and some of this information is very sensitive and classified. [...]

We have got to win this war within our values system, but understand that it’s a war. [...]

[W]hen you talk about closing Gitmo or giving these guys constitutional rights as an American citizen and losing the fact that we’re at war and reading them their Miranda rights as soon as we capture them, you lose the American people.

We are at war in Afghanistan. We are at war in Iraq, though thankfully bringing that to an overdue end. But this whole “we’re at war” against “the terrorists” thing is so 2002. Lots of people who do things worse than “rob a liquor store” get tried in civilian court. Mass murderers, for example — like Khalid Sheikh Muhammad. He and his cohorts are not soldiers, and don’t deserve the recognition that being treated as “combatants” bestows.

Former General Wesley Clarke wrote in 2007 that, by treating such terrorists as combatants, “we accord them a mark of respect and dignify their acts.”

And we undercut our own efforts against them in the process. Al Qaeda represents no state, nor does it carry out any of a state’s responsibilities for the welfare of its citizens. Labeling its members as combatants elevates its cause and gives Al Qaeda an undeserved status.

If we are to defeat terrorists across the globe, we must do everything possible to deny legitimacy to their aims and means, and gain legitimacy for ourselves.

Being “at war” with terrorism obviously plays to Republican political advantage, but I’ve never heard Graham, or anyone, explain what being “at war” actually gains the U.S. in terms of practical advantage against terrorists. The evidence suggests that, like Gitmo and waterboarding, framing America’s anti-terrorism efforts as a “war” actually hampers those efforts by bolstering the legitimacy of those we should be seeking to discredit.

A 2008 RAND study confirmed Clarke’s view, concluding that the use of “at war” terminology for counter-terrorism efforts actually “encourages others [extremists] abroad” and “elevates them to the status of holy warriors. Terrorists should be perceived and described as criminals, not holy warriors.” RAND’s analysis of the data also suggested that the “at war” approach “alienates the local population by its heavy-handed nature, and provides a window of opportunity for terrorist-group recruitment.”

The “at war” approach elevates terrorists’ status and complicates partnerships with governments whose populations are understandably unenthusiastic about their countries being transformed into new fronts in America’s war. On the upside… well, I’m not really sure what the upside of this approach is, other than helping Republicans win elections.

Politics

Home-school textbook market dominated by books skeptical of evolution.

Bob Jones University

Bob Jones University

According to the Associated Press, home-schooling parents seeking textbooks that include evolution are finding the dominance of Christian-based materials to be isolating and frustrating. The publishers that largely control the home-school textbook market, which include Bob Jones University Press and Apologia Educational Ministries Inc., often include overt affirmations of Christianity and “stack the deck against evolution“:

Those who do not believe that the Bible is the inspired, inerrant Word of God will find many points in this book puzzling,” says the introduction to “Biology: Third Edition” from Bob Jones University Press. “This book was not written for them.” The textbook delivers a religious ultimatum to young readers and parents, warning in its “History of Life” chapter that a “Christian worldview … is the only correct view of reality; anyone who rejects it will not only fail to reach heaven but also fail to see the world as it truly is.”

In 2007, 83 percent of home-schooling parents said they preferred to give their children “religious and moral instruction.” But science educators who have reviewed sections from some of the popular home-school books say the texts could “steer students away from careers in biology or the study of the history of the earth.” According to Jerry Coyne, an ecology and evolution professor at the University of Chicago, “These books are promulgating lies to kids.” When the AP asked for comment from Bob Jones University on the “History of Life” chapter criticized widely by scientists, a spokesman said the “ultimatum” inclusion was “an editing error” and would be excluded from future editions.

Nick McClellan

Alyssa

God Bless Fisher Stevens

Who won an Academy Award last night for producing The Cove, which in turn, gives me an excuse to defend Hackers, the role (other than Early Edition) with which I most associate him, from Alex Remington’s lambasting it, which I’ve been meaning to do for days.  I’m definitely not going to deny that it’s a patently ridiculous movie.  I mean, come on:

But despite the silliness of the cultural depiction of hacking, the movie has a number of virtues.  First, the cast.  I mean, my goodness people.  Stevens is a dorky, villainous hacker.  Dr. Melfi is his semi-dumb girlfriend.  Bunk Moreland is a hardass, humorless Secret Service agent.  J. Lo’s husband is one of his coworkers.  Lara Croft is a teenaged computer vixen.  Jesse Bradford is an adorable wannabe badass hacker.  Felicity Huffman is slumming it as a district attorney!  It’s this repository of things that were supposed to be huge in the 1990′s, and blew up in the aughts.  It’s also responsible for my irrational fondness for Jonny Lee Miller, which I will not attempt to defend except to say that he makes me happy, and sometimes that’s enough.

And while Hackers was obviously an inaccurate portrait of hacking, combined with special effects that have aged extraordinarily poorly.  But in one respect, I think it was extremely accurate.  As a portrait of bored, smart, angry kids, Hackers rang extremely true to me when my friend Tony showed it to me as part of his effort to instruct me in the ways of action movies.  I didn’t get myself into trouble with computers, but I sure had “Play with the best, die like the rest,” the movie’s hacker credo, taped to the back of the accordion files I used to store evidence in as a high school debater.  It gave voice to a lot of the rage and competitiveness I felt back then, and I still appreciate that.

Health

Obama’s Closing Argument For Reform: Don’t Let Health Insurers Run The Roost

Obama speaking at Arcadia University in Glenside, Pa.

Obama speaking at Arcadia University in Glenside, Pa.

I’m usually not a fan of President Obama’s campaign-like policy rallies, but I think today Obama did a very nice job of laying out the case for why we can’t allow insurers to continue running the roost. I just wish he would have said this sooner:

OBAMA: And the insurance companies continue to ration health care based on who’s sick and who’s healthy; on who can pay and who can’t pay. That’s the status quo in America, and it is a status quo that is unsustainable for this country. We can’t have a system that works better for the insurance companies than it does for the American people. (Applause.) We need to give families and businesses more control over their own health insurance. And that’s why we need to pass health care reform — not next year, not five years from now, not 10 years from now, but now. (Applause.) [...]

Every year, the problem gets worse. Every year, insurance companies deny more people coverage because they’ve got preexisting conditions. Every year, they drop more people’s coverage when they get sick right when they need it most. Every year, they raise premiums higher and higher and higher.

Just last month, Anthem Blue Cross in California tried to jack up rates by nearly 40 percent — 40 percent. Anybody’s paycheck gone up 40 percent?

[Insurers] organized a conference call in which an insurance broker was telling Wall Street investors how he expected things to be playing out over the next several years, and this broker said that insurance companies know they will lose customers if they keep on raising premiums, but because there’s so little competition in the insurance industry, they’re okay with people being priced out of the insurance market because, first of all, a lot of folks are going to be stuck, and even if some people drop out, they’ll still make more money by raising premiums on customers that they keep. [...]

This year, insurance companies will be banned forever from denying coverage to children with preexisting conditions. (Applause.) This year, they will be banned from dropping your coverage when you get sick. (Applause.) And they will no longer be able to arbitrarily and massively hike your premiums .

It’s a combative message that cuts through all of the detailed discussions about specific provisions and process and says something that actually resonates. It also corners the opposition: are your with the insurance companies, or are you on the side of the consumer? Do you want to allow insurers to continue practicing a business model that makes more money by denying care or, do you want to lay down a foundation of reform that encourages providers and payers to deliver (and pay for) care more efficiently?

For too long, the White House has ceded this kind of binary argument to the opposition, which has convinced Americans that the beast you know is better than the one you don’t. Fortunately, now that the administration has decided to move ahead with this frame, it should have no problem demonstrating that without reform, insurers will continue to earn profit by denying coverage. After all, they’ve already admitted it:

- WellPoint CEO Angela Braly: “We will not sacrifice profitability for membership.” [WellPoint Inc. Earnings Conference Call, 4/23/08]

- Aetna CEO Ronald Williams: “We have a clear bias toward profitability over growth.” [Hartford Courant, 7/28/09]

- Humana CEO Michael McCallister: “It is important to note if we have to choose between achieving our membership goals and achieving profitability goals, profits will win every time.” [Q4 2002 Humana Earnings Conference Call, 2/3/03]

Update

HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has written another letter to insurers “calling on them to publicly justify their premium increases in the individual and small group rate markets”:

To that end, I am reiterating the request I made at our meeting on Thursday: post on your websites the justification for any individual or small group rate increases you have implemented or proposed in 2010, and continue to post such a justification in connection with any future increases. Posting this information will give Americans the opportunity to learn more and ask questions about rate increases that affect them.

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