Monthly Archives: February 2010

Frank Rich On The Tea Party Movement

New York Times op-ed writer Frank Rich takes a look at the Tea Party movement and the GOP embrace of it:

No one knows what history will make of the present — least of all journalists, who can at best write history’s sloppy first draft. But if I were to place an incautious bet on which political event will prove the most significant of February 2010, I wouldn’t choose the kabuki health care summit that generated all the ink and 24/7 cable chatter in Washington. I’d put my money instead on the murder-suicide of Andrew Joseph Stack III, the tax protester who flew a plane into an office building housing Internal Revenue Service employees in Austin, Tex., on Feb. 18. It was a flare with the dark afterlife of an omen.

Frank discussed the right’s curious embrace of this domestic terrorist and the failure of the GOP establishment to condemn people like Scott Brown or Steve King who tried to claim Stack as their own. I think Brown’s words were more truthful than he intended when he compared his followers to Joe Stack. Rich continues:

Equally significant is Barstow’s finding that most Tea Party groups have no affiliation with the G.O.P. despite the party’s ham-handed efforts to co-opt them. The more we learn about the Tea Partiers, the more we can see why. They loathe John McCain and the free-spending, TARP-tainted presidency of George W. Bush. They really do hate all of Washington, and if they hate Obama more than the Republican establishment, it’s only by a hair or two. (Were Obama not earning extra demerits in some circles for his race, it might be a dead heat.) The Tea Partiers want to eliminate most government agencies, starting with the Fed and the I.R.S., and end spending on entitlement programs. They are not to be confused with the Party of No holding forth in Washington — a party that, after all, is now positioning itself as a defender of Medicare spending. What we are talking about here is the Party of No Government at All.

The GOP is trying to pull the energy and the votes out of the movement and I think they’ll have some success, but this movement doesn’t seem like one that will be satisfied with Republicans talking the talk and not walking the walk. The teabaggers have put up primary challenges against highly conservative lawmakers because of insufficient purity. In fact the Republicans most hated by the movement are long-time legislators who have had to practice the art of compromise during their time, which is how governance works. There’s already been a big backlash against teabagger darling Scott Brown for daring to vote for a very modest Democrat-sponsored jobs bill.

The distinction between the Tea Party movement and the official G.O.P. is real, and we ignore it at our peril. While Washington is fixated on the natterings of Mitch McConnell, John Boehner, Michael Steele and the presumed 2012 Republican presidential front-runner, Mitt Romney, these and the other leaders of the Party of No are anathema or irrelevant to most Tea Partiers. Indeed, McConnell, Romney and company may prove largely irrelevant to the overall political dynamic taking hold in America right now. The old G.O.P. guard has no discernible national constituency beyond the scattered, often impotent remnants of aging country club Republicanism. The passion on the right has migrated almost entirely to the Tea Party’s counterconservatism.

The leaders embraced by the new grass roots right are a different slate entirely: Glenn Beck, Ron Paul and Sarah Palin. Simple math dictates that none of this trio can be elected president. As George F. Will recently pointed out, Palin will not even be the G.O.P. nominee “unless the party wants to lose at least 44 states” (as it did in Barry Goldwater’s 1964 Waterloo). But these leaders do have a consistent ideology, and that ideology plays to the lock-and-load nutcases out there, not just to the peaceable (if riled up) populist conservatives also attracted to Tea Partyism. This ideology is far more troubling than the boilerplate corporate conservatism and knee-jerk obstructionism of the anti-Obama G.O.P. Congressional minority.

We’re starting to see a bit of pushback from the GOP to the teabaggers. Rush Limbaugh and Mark Levin have criticized Beck’s CPAC speech, not for the crazy stuff in it, but for its criticism of Republicans. Fox has tried to dismiss the Ron Paul’s win in the CPAC straw poll as votes just from college kids. If Rich is right, the GOP still doesn’t recognize the danger to itself from the Tea Party movement.

I’ve often wondered if the teabaggers are the right’s counterculture movement. Right now, because of the attempts of the GOP to claim them, the teabaggers are associated strongly with the GOP. So the crazy antics and conspiracy theories of the teabaggers will be associated with the GOP for many years to come, even if the GOP starts to renounce them. Many people think that this movement will collapse upon itself like other rightwing populist movements have in the past. The question I have is what kind of damage will they do in the meantime?

Weekend Open Thread

Well I have to say that last snowstorm was a bit of a dud, but I’m not complaining. It’s nice not to be stuck inside for a couple of days. I have to add, I’m really, really ready for spring to arrive.

This story just makes me sad:

Last week, the South Dakota House of Representatives passed a resolution to “urge” public schools to teach astrology. By a 36-30 vote, the legislators passed House Concurrent Resolution 1009, “Calling for balanced teaching of global warming in the public schools of South Dakota.” After repeating long-debunked denier myths and calling carbon dioxide “the gas of life,” the resolution concludes that public schools should teach that “global warming is a scientific theory rather than a proven fact”

The full text of the resolution is at the link. It has sense been amended to remove most of the kooky.

All our thoughts go out to the people affected by the Chilean earthquake. Not only do people in Chile have to worry about earthquake damage and aftershocks, but people on the pacific coasts have to worry about tsunamis. An 8-foot tsunami is expected to hit Hawai’i this afternoon. Luckily they have some warning. Here is a map, put out by NOAA showing the energy generated by the earthquake (and the risk of tsunami).

Weekend Foodie Post — 50 Things Every Foodie Should Try

This was talked about on A Chef’s Table this morning, talking to the author Pim Techamuanvivit who has a new book called Foodie Handbook: The Almost Definitive Guide To Gastronomy.

I’ve included a screen capture of the 50 things here. But here are the top 10:

1. Go native
2. Eat a whole roasted turbot on the Basque coast of Spain
3. Eat a fugu
4. Give up trying to like something you hate
5. Try a durian
6. Dine at a Parisian three-star restaurant
7. Eat a perfect peach
8. Try a stinky cheese
9. Find your signature dish
10.Try khao chae, in Bangkok, at the height of summer

Of this list, the ones I can check off are: 1,3,7,8,12,15,16,17,19,21,22,26,31,33,38,39,40,42,43,46,50. 9 is a strange one since I keep changing my signature dish and 27 is a non-starter since I’m allergic.

Cool list! Which ones have you done? Any thoughts on foodie experiences that should be here? There’s no bacon anywhere on here, you know….

DE GOP Abuse of Legislative Perks

That is the topic of a fine piece of reporting by Ginger Gibson in this morning’s News Journal, providing some detail how how the GOP spent their budgets to support themselves when they were in control of the House.  This report has the feel of a tip of the iceberg — as in there is likely more there to look at. But it is very good to see how the people who want to lay claim to making a better use of tax money (largely via hyping their own bete noirs, insensible math and trying to paint everyone else as being profligate) are especially profligate on their own behalf.  Using Delaware tax money.

Among the items Democrats say were partisan and should not have been funded with tax dollars were the salary of a political consultant who many longtime staffers say never came to work, thousands of dollars in improper tuition payments to a former Republican legislator, questionable payouts to political advisers for unused vacation and sick time, and money for a Web site that delivered Republican perspectives.

A no-show legislative job, giving themselves more benefits than prescribed and trying to build a partisan messaging website that was supposed to be a stand-in for a vehicle that actually told the people of Delaware about the business being conducted on their behalf. Perhaps that is what they mean by open government.

Majority Leader Pete Schwartzkopf notes that:

Attorneys for House Democrats are researching measures in other states, Schwartzkopf said. He hopes the two caucuses will come to an agreement to approve legislation that would impose rules on Delaware lawmakers and their staffs.

The sooner the better, really. And even better would be if they post their proposed new rules up as soon as they are ready to discuss with both caucuses — so we can all get an idea of what is on the table and perhaps have a chance to weigh in.

ps. This:

Wozniak, who now serves as policy director for the right-leaning Caesar Rodney Institute think tank, received $4,525.50. Brittingham received $6,251.90.

(Emphasis mine) is a WIN for everyone who called out the CRI’s “non-partisan” BS.

About that Slavery Apology…..

When I wrote the other day that I thought it might be a distraction for the General Assembly to pass a resolution apologizing for Delaware’s role in the horrid disgusting dehumanizing bigoted evil institution of slavery, I did say the undeniable racism of certain leading conservative and Republican Party officials and of certain elements of the conservative base was almost enough of a motivation to pass such a resolution anyway, if only to expose their racism, sort of like spitting in their evil faces, if you will.

And boy, a full 48 hours did not pass to move the dial on my “almost enough of a motivation” to a “passionate and complete motivation:”

Arizona Congressman Trent Franks told blogger Mike Stark that African Americans were much better off under slavery.

[…]

FRANKS: In this country, we had slavery for God knows how long. And now we look back on it and we say “How brave were they? What was the matter with them? You know, I can’t believe, you know, four million slaves. This is incredible.” And we’re right, we’re right. We should look back on that with criticism. It is a crushing mark on America’s soul. And yet today, half of all black children are aborted. Half of all black children are aborted. Far more of the African American community is being devastated by the policies of today than were being devastated by the policies of slavery. And I think, What does it take to get us to wake up?

Wake us up to what, Bigot Franks? To the realization that we should return to the institution of slavery? You are the only telling us that the choice is between the policies of today (which by the way include the policies of equality and civil rights for our African American brethren if not complete freedom from the stain of discrimination) and the institution of slavery? You presented this as a black and white (no pun intended) choice between then and now, did you not?

Yes, abortion rates among African American women are much too high, but the solution is not to put them back in chains! And what about abortion rates among white women, or hispanic women, or Asian women? To people like Franks, who believes reproductive freedom is akin to a holocaust worse than the actual holocaust, one abortion is too much. So why is the Bigot Franks focusing his ire upon African American women or African American society?

Simple.

He is a dirty racist. And he thinks things were much better under slavery. Blacks knew their place then, at least. Unlike now, when one of them is President.

I suspect Franks is a dirty sexist too, for placing all women in chains has been the social conservative solution to the problem of women exercising their reproductive freedom, if not their complete freedom. I am sure if asked Bigot Franks would say things were much better back when women as a whole did not have a right to vote.

The solution, Bigot Franks, in case you even care, to higher abortion rates among African Americans, and in the American population as a whole, is better education. Awareness of safe sex protection and birth control. Awareness of adoption services.

So when faced with fuckin bullshit bigotry like this, were a prominent Republican Congressman yearns for a return to slavery, I say pass that slavery apology resolution everywhere. If only to spit in their faces.

New Senate Poll Gives Castle A 18 Point Lead (Updated)

A new poll from Daily Kos/Research 2000 gives Mike Castle a lead of 18 points over Chris Coons:

Research 2000 for Daily Kos. 2/22-24. Likely voters. MoE 4% (10/14/09 results)

Senate

Mike Castle (R) 53 (51)
Chris Coons (D) 35 (39)

Castle has a +30 favorability rating, Coons is +27.

Favorables, for what it’s worth: Castle is at 65%-32% (was: 64%-30%); Coons 52%-25% (was: 34%-8%). Castle’s favorables for a Republican in a blue state are unsurprising when you remember that Castle has served in statewide office since 1981 — as Delaware’s Lieutenant Governor, Governor, and since 1993 its lone representative in Congress. Against someone who’s as much a fixture in Delaware as tax-free shopping, friendly treatment of corporations and screen door factories, New Castle County Chief Executive Chris Coons indeed has an uphill battle in store.

Coons has obviously increased his name recognition, but still lags behind. This race will be an uphill battle for Coons and I think he can win, but he needs to start generating some excitement. I think that excitement starts with the grassroots Democrats.

This race may be an interesting one, because it’s a photo-negative of a lot of the other races. Will Castle be able to generate the excitement in the Republican base that we’re seeing in other states? He’s the opposite of a diehard, teabag conservative. Castle is obviously counting on support from independents and Democrats to get elected. Can he count on them? Castle will be the establishment candidate, the de-facto incumbent. Can Coons take advantage of that fact?

There’s some danger for Castle, I think. His election number (53%) is significantly lower than his approval number (65%). To me that’s saying that at least 12% of people who approve of him aren’t voting for him. The same can be said for Coons’s numbers, but his name recognition is lower. I think this poll is also saying that last few weeks of bad publicity for Castle have not taken a toll on his popularity.

These results look fairly similar to the Rasmussen results released yesterday:

* Castle leads Coons 53% to 32%. 8% prefer some other candidate (O’Donnell?? Anti-Coons or Pro-Biden sentiment?) and 8% are unsure.

This feels about right to me, in that I feel the Castle-Coons race is a 50-40 race at the moment, with Castle as the favorite. I really want to see the partisan breakdown here, though.

* Coons has a 43% favorability rating, versus a 35% unfavorability rating. 22% don’t know who he is or are not sure.

* Castle has a 65% favorability rating, versus a 30% unfavorability rating. 4% live in caves.

UPDATE FROM DELAWARE DEM: Here are the full crosstabs, with favorability ratings for all sorts of Delaware pols.

Daily Kos/Research 2000 Delaware Poll

Research 2000, MoE 4%, Feb 22, 2010 – Feb 24, 2010

FAVORABLE/UNFAVORABLE

  VERY FAV FAV UNFAV VERY UNFAV NO OPINION
COONS 24 28 17 8 23
CASTLE 26 39 19 13 3
O’DONNELL 16 17 18 21 28
CARNEY 22 25 13 9 31
COPELAND 9 12 13 10 56
CULLIS 5 5 8 10 72
WHARTON 21 27 22 16 14
MARKELL 23 31 17 13 16
CARPER 22 30 18 15 15
KAUFMAN 17 23 15 12 33
OBAMA 27 32 20 16 5

 

Chris Coons

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 52 25 23
MEN 49 29 22
WOMEN 55 21 24
DEMOCRATS 74 10 16
REPUBLICANS 23 47 30
INDEPENDENTS 50 22 28
18-29 56 22 22
30-44 54 24 22
45-59 50 26 24
60+ 48 28 24

Mike Castle

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 65 32 3
MEN 70 28 2
WOMEN 60 36 4
DEMOCRATS 43 53 4
REPUBLICANS 87 10 3
INDEPENDENTS 79 19 2
18-29 58 37 5
30-44 64 33 3
45-59 67 30 3
60+ 70 28 2

Christine O’Donnell

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 33 39 28
MEN 35 36 29
WOMEN 31 42 27
DEMOCRATS 16 57 27
REPUBLICANS 59 13 28
INDEPENDENTS 31 40 29
18-29 25 43 32
30-44 32 41 27
45-59 34 38 28
60+ 38 36 26

John Carney

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 47 22 31
MEN 44 26 30
WOMEN 50 18 32
DEMOCRATS 69 6 25
REPUBLICANS 16 49 35
INDEPENDENTS 48 14 38
18-29 50 20 30
30-44 49 21 30
45-59 45 23 32
60+ 43 25 32

Charlie Copeland

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 21 23 56
MEN 24 21 55
WOMEN 18 25 57
DEMOCRATS 12 30 58
REPUBLICANS 34 13 53
INDEPENDENTS 20 24 56
18-29 17 26 57
30-44 20 25 55
45-59 23 21 56
60+ 24 21 55

Fred Cullis

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 10 18 72
MEN 12 16 72
WOMEN 8 20 72
DEMOCRATS 5 23 72
REPUBLICANS 17 11 72
INDEPENDENTS 8 19 73
18-29 6 20 74
30-44 10 19 71
45-59 11 18 71
60+ 12 16 72

Ferris Wharton

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 48 38 14
MEN 52 35 13
WOMEN 44 41 15
DEMOCRATS 30 59 11
REPUBLICANS 73 18 9
INDEPENDENTS 49 26 25
18-29 43 44 13
30-44 46 40 14
45-59 50 36 14
60+ 51 34 15

Jack Markell

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 54 30 16
MEN 50 34 16
WOMEN 58 26 16
DEMOCRATS 77 8 15
REPUBLICANS 21 66 13
INDEPENDENTS 56 22 22
18-29 59 26 15
30-44 55 28 17
45-59 52 31 17
60+ 50 35 15

Tom Carper

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 52 33 15
MEN 48 37 15
WOMEN 56 29 15
DEMOCRATS 75 10 15
REPUBLICANS 20 64 16
INDEPENDENTS 53 33 14
18-29 57 28 15
30-44 53 32 15
45-59 51 34 15
60+ 48 36 16

Ted Kaufman

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 40 27 33
MEN 37 32 31
WOMEN 43 22 35
DEMOCRATS 65 8 27
REPUBLICANS 6 60 34
INDEPENDENTS 39 18 43
18-29 43 23 34
30-44 42 25 33
45-59 38 28 34
60+ 38 31 31

Barack Obama

  FAV UNFAV NO OPINION
ALL 59 36 5
MEN 53 41 6
WOMEN 65 31 4
DEMOCRATS 86 10 4
REPUBLICANS 19 74 7
INDEPENDENTS 63 32 5
WHITE 52 43 5
BLACK 91 4 5
18-29 67 29 4
30-44 61 34 5

QUESTION: If the election for U.S. Senate were held today, for whom would you vote for if the choices were between Chris Coons, the Democrat, and Mike Castle, the Republican?

  CHRIS COONS MIKE CASTLE UNDECIDED
ALL 35 53 12
MEN 32 58 10
WOMEN 38 48 14
DEMOCRATS 61 24 15
REPUBLICANS 6 87 7
INDEPENDENTS 27 61 12
WHITE 30 61 9
BLACK 58 16 26
18-29 39 46 15
30-44 37 52 11
45-59 34 55 11
60+ 31 57 12

QUESTION: If the election for U.S. Senate were held today, for whom would you vote for if the choices were between Chris Coons, the Democrat, and Christine O’Donnell, the Republican?

  CHRIS COONS CHRISTINE O’DONNELL UNDECIDED
ALL 47 31 22
MEN 43 34 23
WOMEN 51 28 21
DEMOCRATS 75 8 17
REPUBLICANS 12 65 23
INDEPENDENTS 43 29 28
WHITE 42 37 21
BLACK 71 4 25
18-29 50 27 23
30-44 49 29 22
45-59 46 32 22
60+ 43 36 21

QUESTION: If the election for Congress were held today, for whom would you vote for if the choices were between John Carney, the Democrat, and Charlie Copeland, the Republican?

  JOHN CARNEY CHARLIE COPELAND UNDECIDED
ALL 46 29 25
MEN 42 33 25
WOMEN 50 25 25
DEMOCRATS 72 8 20
REPUBLICANS 10 59 31
INDEPENDENTS 45 28 27
WHITE 41 35 24
BLACK 70 2 28
18-29 49 25 26
30-44 48 27 25
45-59 44 31 25
60+ 42 33 25

QUESTION: If the election for Congress were held today, for whom would you vote for if the choices were between John Carney, the Democrat, and Fred Cullis, the Republican?

  JOHN CARNEY FRED CULLIS UNDECIDED
ALL 50 26 24
MEN 47 30 23
WOMEN 53 22 25
DEMOCRATS 77 7 16
REPUBLICANS 11 53 36
INDEPENDENTS 52 25 23
WHITE 45 31 24
BLACK 72 2 26
18-29 54 22 24
30-44 52 24 24
45-59 48 28 24
60+ 45 30 25

QUESTION: If the election for Congress were held today, for whom would you vote for if the choices were between John Carney, the Democrat, and Ferris Wharton, the Republican?

  JOHN CARNEY FERRIS WHARTON UNDECIDED
ALL 45 35 20
MEN 41 38 21
WOMEN 49 32 19
DEMOCRATS 75 9 16
REPUBLICANS 7 72 21
INDEPENDENTS 40 34 26
WHITE 40 41 19
BLACK 70 5 25
18-29 49 30 21
30-44 47 33 20
45-59 44 36 20
60+ 40 41 19

Demographics

MEN 283 47%
WOMEN 317 53%
DEMOCRATS 269 45%
REPUBLICANS 195 32%
INDEPENDENTS/OTHER 136 23%
WHITE 476 79%
BLACK 102 17%
18-29 84 14%
30-44 196 33%
45-59 217 36%
60+ 103 17%

Friday Open Thread

Welcome to Friday. If you’ve noticed that I haven’t been around so much, it’s because I’m absolutely swamped at work. It looks like you kept yourself entertained without me. So let’s open this thread.

Why?

The Charleston Post and Courier reports the final divorce hearing for South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford (R) will be televised tomorrow with Jenny Sanford taking the witness stand to explain why her marriage is over.

As many as three television outlets have showed an interest in being in the courtroom Friday, some looking to broadcast live.

I wonder if the IOC thinks excessive celebration hurts women’s delicate ladyparts?

After Canada’s women’s hockey team defeated the U.S., 2-0, to win the gold medal Thursday at Canada Hockey Place, they decided to do some celebrating.

More than half an hour after they clinched their third consecutive Olympic title, they came back onto the ice. Beer was involved in their festivities.

The International Olympic Committee plans to investigate the matter and whether the players’ celebration outside the locker room is harmful to their image and the game’s.

The celebration involved beer, cigars and at least one woman sat on the zamboni. It certainly looks like poor sportsmanship but an investigation? Good grief! Thank God that the IOC is around to protect us from the horror of seeing women drinking beer and smoking cigars in the future!

Paterson Ends Gubernatorial Campaign

The New York Times bombshell on Paterson’s possible intervention to cover up domestic violence by an aide has convinced Paterson to end his campaign:

Less than 48 hours after the New York Times revealed in a bombshell story that the administration of Gov. David Paterson had intervened in the domestic violence case of a top aide, Paterson has decided to pull the plug on his campaign for governor, the Daily News and the Post are reporting.

No official announcement has been made, but the Post says one is expected later today. Two sources familiar with the decision confirmed to TPM that Paterson will end his campaign.

Paterson became governor of New York after Eliot Spitzer resigned. He was losing badly to primary rival Andrew Cuomo and was also polling badly against possible Republican challengers.

3 Pit-Bull Attacks In 3 Days

I found this amazing and horrifying.

THE BLOODY paw prints were still in the snow, and a bunch of white gauze lay nearby.

The pinkish snow was packed down where two pit bulls had attacked a 10-year-old boy – severely injuring his right arm and puncturing his neck, left arm and back with their teeth shortly after 11 a.m. yesterday.

The child had been walking with two boys who had both dogs on leashes. The dogs – one brown and the other white with brown spots – began fighting each other, then turned on the 10-year-old, said Capt. Ben Naish, police spokesman.

It was the third vicious pit-bull attack in Philadelphia in three days.

On Friday, a victim’s wrist was nearly severed. On Saturday, a woman was mauled to death. And last night, doctors were trying to save a little boy’s arm. All three attacks involved dogs known to the victims.

Now, I’m fully expecting the response that you can’t blame the breed and that pit-bulls are some of the sweetest dogs, but… they scare the hell out of me.  There are simply far too many of these stories.  And it’s the severity of these attacks – and the fact that the dog involved had no previous history of violence, but rather just snapped – that most concerns me.  And when it comes to maiming and death certain breeds stand out.

According to the Clifton study, pit bulls, Rottweilers, Presa Canarios and their mixes are responsible for 74% of attacks that were included in the study, 68% of the attacks upon children, 82% of the attacks upon adults, 65% of the deaths, and 68% of the maimings. In more than two-thirds of the cases included in the study, the life-threatening or fatal attack was apparently the first known dangerous behavior by the animal in question. Clifton states:

If almost any other dog has a bad moment, someone may get bitten, but will not be maimed for life or killed, and the actuarial risk is accordingly reasonable. If a pit bull terrier or a Rottweiler has a bad moment, often someone is maimed or killed–and that has now created off-the-chart actuarial risk, for which the dogs as well as their victims are paying the price.

Clifton’s opinions are as interesting as his statistics. For example, he says, “Pit bulls and Rottweilers are accordingly dogs who not only must be handled with special precautions, but also must be regulated with special requirements appropriate to the risk they may pose to the public and other animals, if they are to be kept at all.”

The life-threatening or fatal attack was apparently the first known dangerous behavior by the animal in question.  Either someone is lying or this is a big problem.  Let me be clear.  ALL dogs bite.  But what we’re dealing with when it comes to certain breeds is an attack so vicious and relentless it resembles the behavior of a wild animal rather than a household pet.

Erb was unable to stop the dog from clamping down on her daughter’s throat, and the dog was still attacking Staab when medics arrived, police said.

The attack was stopped only after responding police officers shot the dog to death. After the shooting, a second pit bull charged the cops, prompting them to kill that animal too, police said.

Staab was pronounced dead at 7:24 a.m. in her mother’s home.

Wow, just wow.  But these sorts of stories involving pit-bulls have become almost expected.  Seriously, when we hear about attacks like this our first thought isn’t Golden Retriever.  And, no, I’m not advocating outlawing certain breeds.  That said, I really don’t want to be in the same room with those breeds – which is my problem/phobia, not yours.

And just to add some HCR politics into the mix… if domestic violence can be classified as a preexisting condition then how long before insurance companies charge more depending on what breed of dog you own?

Things I Learned From Ron Williams

This week’s Ron Williams column in the News Journal was more informative than usual. I learned the following:

  • Anthony Wedo is rich.
  • Anthony Wedo is not running for the DE-AL U.S. House seat, did I mention that Wedo is rich?
  • Richard Korn has black hair, is from New York and has a New York accent.
  • People in Sussex and Kent Counties have Delaware accents, and not New York accents.
  • State employees don’t want to lose their benefits.

Of course, Ron Williams takes a lot more words to say this, but I read these things so you don’t have to. You can thank me later.

Ask Dr. Liberal: Good Deal!

Dear Dr. Liberal,

Should I buy a used car from Barack Obama?  It is a 2005 Mazda Protege with 65,000 miles on it.  He is asking $3,000 for it.  What do you think?

Signed,
Car Shopping in DC

Dear Shopping,

Kelly Blue Book tells me that the car you describe is probably worth around $3,500.  So in the immortal words of Maya Angelou – oh hell yes.  Buy the car, but be sure to offer Barack Obama only $160 dollars for it.   When Barack Obama hems and haws at the $160 say that you were only kidding and would really only pay $60 for it.  When he says, “Okay $60 it is.”  Say, “Not so fast. I see a dent in the fender which is going to cost me $200 bucks to fix, so give me the car plus $140 and we’ll call it even.

When he hands over the $140 and the keys be sure to give him tons of attitude and act like you were thoroughly abused.

Yours truly,

Dr. Liberal

Allow Dr. Liberal to apply a poultice to your karmic sores.  Write to me in care of liberalgeek@delawareliberal.com.

The Doctor is out!