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Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon: J.D. Hayworth Is ‘Full Of Racism’

Back in February, Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon joined a list of Arizona mayors who endorsed Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) in his bid for re-election. That was before Gov. Jan Brewer (R-AZ) signed SB-1070, the nation’s harshest immigration bill, into law. McCain says the law is a “good tool” for local law enforcement, while Gordon is an ardent critic of the bill.

It goes without saying that McCain has run to the right on immigration due to the tight race he is currently facing against former Rep. J.D. Hayworth (R-AZ). However, in an interview with ThinkProgress yesterday, Gordon explained why he still stands behind McCain, despite his troubling flip-flop:

The last thing we want in this country is an individual like J.D. Hayworth in the Congress who is full of racism, will talk forever, and use every means to push his hate. So, in that sense, Senator McCain should beat him and beat him handily. Then, I think, turning back that type of person with the issue is being run against McCain — even with McCain on that side of the spectrum, will be a good sign for the future.

Watch it:

Gordon told ThinkProgress that he has sat down with McCain and asked him to focus on comprehensive immigration reform if and when he is re-elected to office. In 2005, McCain sponsored a moderate comprehensive immigration reform bill with Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA). That same year, in the House, Hayworth voted against the “Sensenbrenner” immigration reform bill because the bill did not do enough to “turn back the massive invasion of our country by illegal aliens.” The Sensenbrenner bill would’ve made undocumented immigrants and anyone who helps them into felons.

McCain’s legislation succeeded in blocking the House bill from passing and Hayworth was voted out of office in 2006. Four years later, McCain has indicated that he will filibuster immigration reform if it is proposed in 2010. So far, he has said nothing about what he will do if it is proposed in 2011.

Yglesias

Europe and the U.S.

Of course you could hardly have the U.S. Treasury Secretary expressing public doubts about Europe’s capacity to resolve the situation:

“Europe has the capacity to manage through this,” Geithner said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital With Al Hunt,” airing this weekend. “And I think they will.”

Geithner, 48, said he doesn’t think the European turmoil will hurt U.S. growth because “our economy is getting stronger. We’re seeing a lot of strength, improvement and confidence.”

Europe really does have the capacity to manage this. But what needs to be done is politically difficult and it’s institutionally difficult, so I think there’s good reason for a fair amount of skepticism that it can ultimately be done. And if it’s not possible to pull off deeper integration, then some kind of breakup of the Eurozone that would deepen the crisis seems inevitable. Nor is it really all that clear to me that the U.S. economy actually could take such an event in stride. The Eurozone is our biggest trade partner on both the export and the import side.

Politics

Rep. Steve King Says It’s ‘Common Sense’ That Racial Profiling ‘Had Better Be Used’

On Thursday, Rep. Steve King (R-IA) took to the floor of the House to rail against the Obama administration’s policies on immigration and combating terrorism. King complained that Obama is against racial profiling, saying “it had better be used” in cases involving, for example, “a young Middle Eastern male.” He added, however, that racial profiling couldn’t be the “exclusive component” of screening people:

KING: He has said to all of his Federal officers from the White House down, ICE, CBP, Border Patrol, all of them, well, he really doesn’t want to see immigration law enforced. And it’s clear, of course, that he doesn’t want to have racial profiling used, and I would agree with him–as an exclusive component. However, if it’s part of the other indicators, it had better be used. Would we say that we can’t use as an indicator when it comes time to enforce the law against international terrorism that a young Middle Eastern male cannot be considered as one of the factors? We’ve kind of said that when people go through the airport. I think it’s wrong. I think it’s foolish. And in fact, Mr. Speaker, I think it’s downright stupid to set aside our common sense for the sake of political correctness.

Watch it:

What is ironic about King’s endorsement of using the race of a “young Middle Eastern male” to profile terrorist suspects is the fact that the last major attempted terror attacks in the United States were not commited by men from the Middle East. Faisal Shazad, the chief suspect in the attempted Times Square bombing, is an American citizen originally from the country of Pakistan, which is located in southwest Asia on the Indian subcontinent. Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the chief suspect in the Christmas Day bombing attempt, is from Nigeria, which is located on the continent of Africa.

As a counterterrorism strategy, racial profiling is completely ineffective. A study released last year by the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science conducted a mathematical analysis to compare random screenings to racial profiling. It found that racial profiling is “no more effective” than using the random method in detecting terrorists. Additionally, former Bush Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told NPR last December, the recent Christmas Day bombing attempt illustrated “the danger and the foolishness of profiling because people’s conception of what a potential terrorist looks like often doesn’t match reality.”

Alyssa

Public Figures Are Not Characters, Either

(Technically yesterday was our last day of guestblogging, but I wheedled Alyssa into letting me keep the blog open for one more post. Thanks so much for having me, y’all, and to my awesome fellow guestbloggers. Alyssa’ll be back on Monday.)

Over at the Atlantic’s culture channel, Sady Doyle has a fascinating column on “The Secret Inner Life of Laura Bush” — something which she notes liberal women have often speculated about as a way to justify their “otherwise unaccountable sympathy” for a rather regressively boring First Lady. But when she compares Laura to her fictional counterpart Alice Blackwell from Curtis Sittenfeld’s novel American Wife, she writes something that really gives me pause:

American Wife is a great book for several reasons, but most crucially, it allows liberal readers to like Laura Bush without guilt.

Admittedly, I’m not a fan of Sittenfeld — I didn’t read American Wife because I found her first novel, Prep, to be uninsightful and overrated. (I’m still a little alarmed that coastal-elite reviewers praised its insights about their social milieu, since it didn’t say anything I hadn’t already figured out as a Midwestern high schooler — before going coastal.) But my feelings toward the work aside, I don’t like the notion that a novel written to satisfy liberal fantasies about the “subversive” inner life of a conservative political figure justifies real sympathy for the political figure herself. You’d have to assume that Laura Bush’s own behavior is less representative of her than a work of fiction written by someone who shares your political convictions and sympathies, not hers. In fiction, this is a form of hermeneutics; in politics it’s called false consciousness. In either case it’s dangerous if taken too far.

I had a discussion the other day with American Scene co-blogger Peter Suderman about Aaron Sorkin. Peter compared Sorkin to Bertolt Brecht, because both treat drama as a vehicle for the clash of ideas. But the way Sorkin forces his audience to think about the ideas under discussion is by making sure that (most of the time) both sides are being presented by sympathetic characters. He writes characters worth listening to, so we listen to them, even if most of us aren’t ultimately persuaded by the other side. Brecht did the opposite: he tried to create characters who were so completely unsympathetic that audiences wouldn’t get invested in the human drama of his plays at all. They’d be forced to think about the ideas because they’d be alienated from the characters. (It didn’t work for Brecht, but it’s an interesting theory.)

But both of these techniques are at least impartial. They understand that an audience’s sympathy is a powerful thing, and resist manipulating it to advance the author’s agenda. Of course, there’s a long and illustrious tradition in fiction of playing with sympathies for politics’ sake, from Harriet Beecher Stowe to Upton Sinclair to Ayn Rand. But even in those cases, the fictional characters are designed to represent ideological ideas, not ideological figures.

To use an author’s power of sympathy to give the audience a different read on a human being they actually see on television fairly regularly is a different thing entirely. While Sorkin and Brecht both tried to get audiences to take ideas seriously, Sittenfeld (at least as Doyle reads her) used Laura Bush’s silence to assume she disagreed with what her husband said, despite the lack of any evidence as such. Under the guise of giving her the credit she deserves (i.e. inner sympathy to “enlightened” ideas), it belittled her. And just because she turned out to be somewhat right, in this case, doesn’t make it a good idea.

Of course, novelists aren’t the only ones who can create sympathetic “inner lives” for political figures. Just look at the political journalists who are shocked and wounded by John McCain’s recent turn to the right in his primary campaign: they’d bought so completely into the idea that McCain was a “maverick” that they forgave everything he’d done from 2006-2008 to pander to the base, assuming he’d changed costumes but the character was the same. But with journalism as with fiction, trusting speculation over reality doesn’t actually lead you to a richer understanding of a public figure. It substitutes the political protagonist you see for the novelistic protagonist you’d rather imagine.

Yglesias

Norms and Domestic Violence

It seems that men who engage in domestic violence are likely to believe that such behavior is common and they’re basically just typical guys doing typical stuff. This suggests that media portrayals of violence against women could be very influential in creating the context for actual opinion, and that building strong social norms around how these things are treated in movies, ads, and on TV is very important.

Politics

Pawlenty Hypocritically Supports Chamber Using Taxpayer Bailout Funds To Lobby Against Wall St Reform

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is the most powerful lobbying force fighting financial reform in Congress. Last month, the Chamber announced that it is “fundamentally” against reform efforts. Accordingly, the Chamber has hired top insider lobbyists to pressure Senators to water down the bill while running millions of dollars worth of television and online ads smearing Wall Street reform as a “government takeover.”

Historically, the Chamber’s role is to help big business achieve its goals — fighting the minimum wage, opposing health reform, pushing for outsourcing — while hiding the corporate identities of its funders. As ThinkProgress originally reported, many backers of the Chamber with a stake in financial reform are banks that were bailed out by taxpayer TARP funds. For instance, CitiGroup is a Chamber member that was bailed out by taxpayers and still has not repaid the money.

ThinkProgress recently caught up with Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R-MN) to ask him about firms who are using bailout money to lobby against financial reform. Pawlenty became defensive when asked about this, eventually arguing that the Chamber has a right to use taxpayer money in lobbying because “it’s important that groups in a free society with free speech rights to express themselves in the public policy arena”:

TP: Excuse me, Gov. Pawlenty, you’ve criticized ACORN for using taxpayer money for political purposes. The Chamber of Commerce here is funded by dues-paying members including CitiGroup and many other banks that were bailed out by taxpayers using TARP. Do you think that’s appropriate that the Chamber of Commerce is now using those taxpayer dollars to lobby against reform?

PAWLENTY: Who are you with? … Well I think it’s important that groups in a free society with free speech rights to express themselves in a public policy arena whether its the Chamber, or the unions, or your blog. I welcome and applaud people who want to join the debate.

TP: Right but we don’t accept taxpayer money for what we do, but the Chamber uses taxpayer money to lobby against reform. Is that appropriate? [...]

PAWLENTY: I think the Chamber of Commerce is an important business voice. We need people who will advocate for private sector job growth in our country, they’re one of the leading voices in the country to do that. I think they do a good job and I think they’re an important group.

Watch it:

Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-GA), who cosponsored a draconian bill to cut off funds to ACORN, similarly shrugged off ThinkProgress’ question about the Chamber’s use of taxpayer funds to lobby against reform. Chambliss instead took the opportunity to lavish praise on the Chamber before disregarding its membership of bailed out banks. “I don’t think [the Chamber is lobbying] with our money,” he said.

Tom Donohue, the President of the Chamber, first told ThinkProgress that all the bank members of the Chamber have “paid back all their [bailout] money.” However, when presented with the fact the CitiGroup still has not repaid the TARP funds, Donohue became dismissive and absurdly argued that the Chamber is not lobbying against the larger framework of financial reform. Before quickly darting to another reporter in the room, Donohue said the Chamber had proposed financial reform even before the financial crisis.

In reality, the Chamber was the top lobbying front that fought to weaken bank regulations that led to the crisis in the first place. In a 2005 speech outlining the Chamber’s latest financial deregulation campaign, Donohue declared that “the Chamber is engaged in a comprehensive campaign to protect the capital markets from overzealous regulators” and rating agencies.

Yglesias

No Substitute for Persuasion

Glenn Greenwald sums up the frightening political erosion of the civil libertarian posture:

A bipartisan group from Congress sponsors legislation to strip Americans of their citizenship based on Terrorism accusations. Barack Obama claims the right to assassinate Americans far from any battlefield and with no due process of any kind. The Obama administration begins covertly abandoning long-standing Miranda protections for American suspects by vastly expanding what had long been a very narrow “public safety” exception, and now Eric Holder explicitly advocates legislation to codify that erosion. John McCain and Joe Lieberman introduce legislation to bar all terrorism suspects, including Americans arrested on U.S. soil, from being tried in civilian courts, and former Bush officials Bill Burck and Dana Perino — while noting (correctly) that Holder’s Miranda proposal constitutes a concession to the right-wing claim that Miranda is too restrictive — today demand that U.S. citizens accused of terrorism and arrested on U.S. soil be treated as enemy combatants and thus denied even the most basic legal protections (including the right to be charged and have access to a lawyer).

Charli Carpenter comments:

He declines however to suggest what ought to be done to change this trend – in other words, is it too late for dissent to make a difference? I welcome readers’ ideas. I think many voters thought they’d already taken the appropriate step by electing a progressive, pro-civil liberties leader. With the writing on the wall, what now?

I don’t think the answer to her question is particularly difficult—people who want to halt the erosion of civil liberties need to do a better job of persuading people that the erosion of civil liberties would be a bad thing. If you have an incumbent administration being urged by the opposition to seize more power, and the public wants the administration to seize more power, then you get what we have today. People on the good team are sometimes in denial about opinion on this subject, but read the numbers—the public wants Guantanamo Bay open, wants suspects tried in military courts, and thinks we should give up more civil liberties in order to enhance security.

Politics

As oil continues to gush into the Gulf, Mississippi offers $75 gas cards to tourists who come to the region.

As ThinkProgress reported yesterday, Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour (R) has been an outlier amongst Gulf Coast governors, downplaying the BP oil spill instead of working to mitigate the disaster and rethinking the wisdom of offshore drilling. He has claimed that this new spill “it isn’t anything like Exxon Valdez” and is encouraging visitors to “[c]ome on down here and play golf, enjoy the beach, catch a fish.” Now, Mississippi officials are encouraging tourists to use more oil, offering people gas cards if they come to the region:

Gov. Haley Barbour said that the Mississippi Gulf Coast is open for business, despite the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

In an effort to encourage tourism, Mississippi Gulf Coast officials are offering $75 gas cards for those who book a two-night stay at one of the participating hotels or resorts listed online at www.gulfcoast.org. Resident can also sign up online for a chance to win one of four getaway packages.

Hotel room cancellations are above 50 percent right now, even though the Mississippi beaches are clear of oil, said Linda Hornsby, director of the Hotel and Lodging Association.

State tourism officials are planning to pressure BP to “pay $7.5 million a month for a national advertising campaign” in the aftermath of the oil spill. While encouraging tourism to the region is important, it’s also necessary to be honest about the environmental damage of the spill, and as questions arise about U.S. dependency on oil, offering gas cards might not be the best idea.

Yglesias

SCOTUS Lottery

My new pet idea for improving the Supreme Court confirmation process emerged from a lunchtime conversation with Dara Lind: Why not use a lottery? The details could be quibbled over, but my idea would be that every year on January 1 there’d be a Supreme Court Lottery among all the active Appeals Court judges with at least five years of service. One judge would be selected, and he or she would serve a nine-year term on the Supreme Court. Whichever justice was currently on Year Nine would act as Chief Justice, and at the end of Year Nine he or she would be busted back down to the Court of Appeals.

The main problem with choosing public officials by lottery is that you need to worry about outliers, but since the Supreme Court operates as a nine-vote collective outliers don’t really matter that much. Having a fluid up-and-down path between the Supreme Court and the circuits would also drive home the fact that the justices have a responsibility is to create a workable legal system and not just toy with the law. And making the exact composition of the court semi-random would do a good job of honestly capturing the fact that there’s a level of indeterminacy surrounding legal questions.

Of course to make this work well you’d want to have some kind of system to avoid the current situation of mass vacancies on the lower courts, but that would be advisable on its own terms.

Climate Progress

Peak oil production coming sooner than expected

Media, public, governments unprepared for the End of the World (As We Know It)

Source: Sweetnam, DOE, April 2009

The BP oil disaster reminds us once again of the many large costs of oil use not included in its price.  But because conservatives have blocked or rolled back all serious efforts to move us off of oil in the last three decades, peak oil will soon change that (see Deutsche Bank: Oil to hit $175 a barrel by 2016 and World’s top energy economist warns peak oil threatens recovery: “We have to leave oil before oil leaves us”).

Energy economics expert and long-time guest blogger Craig Severance, has a review of recent research in this important area, which is largely ignored by the status quo media.

Read more

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