Friday Open Thread [5.30.14]

Filed in National by on May 30, 2014

According to Politico, Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton “offers a detailed account of the deadly attack on the American embassy in Benghazi — and a pointed rebuttal to Republican critics who’ve laced into her over the incident — in a much-anticipated chapter of her forthcoming book, Hard Choices.”

“The 34-page chapter is Clinton’s most complete account to date of the attack and its aftermath. Her tone is less defensive than defiant: Clinton takes responsibility for the “horror” of the loss of life in Benghazi, but puts it in the context of “the heartbreaking human stakes of every decision we make” — and she accuses adversaries of manipulating a tragedy for partisan gain.”

Good. A fighting Clinton is always a site to see. A new Washington Post-ABC News poll finds that 55% of Americans say they support Hillary Clinton running for president. The same poll finds 66% of Americans disapprove of Karl Rove raising questions about Hillary Clinton’s age and health in advance of her potential presidential run.

“The lopsided negative reaction to Rove’s commentary — just 26% approve of his topic of criticism — includes majorities of every age group as well as Democrats and independents. Republicans split evenly on the issue, with 45% approving and 46% disapproving of Rove broaching the issue.”

Rick Klein:

“That’s a clear majority even without an announcement, though the scrutiny that comes with an actual run would surely impact those numbers. Remarkably, her support is just about unaffected by the passage of time: She had 57 percent support for a presidential run a month after President Obama’s reelection, when the post-2012 glow was still on. The question for Clinton, as her book rolls out and that rolls into midterm campaigning, is whether this support is a ceiling or a floor. She’s faced a nonexistent Democratic field and a disorganized Republican one. That won’t last forever.

Well, we are about to find out.

Tim Kreider:

Look, we’ve collectively decided, as a country, that the occasional massacre is okay with us. It’s the price we’re willing to pay for our precious Second Amendment freedoms. We’re content to forfeit the lives of a few dozen schoolkids a year as long as we get to keep our guns. The people have spoken, in a cheering civics-class example of democracy in action.

It’s hard to imagine what ghastly catastrophe could possibly change America’s minds about guns if the little bloody bookbags of Newtown did not. After that atrocity, it seemed as if we would finally enact some obvious, long-overdue half-measures. But perfectly reasonable, moderate legislation expanding background checks and banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines was summarily killed in the Senate for no reason other than that a sufficient number of United States senators are owned by the NRA. It made our official position as a nation nakedly explicit: we don’t care about any number of murdered children, no matter how many, or how young. We want our guns.

MICHIGAN–GOVERNOR–EPIC-MRA: Gov. Rick Snyder (R) 47, Rep. Mark Schauer (D) 38.
MICHIGAN–GOVERNOR–Detroit News/WDIV-TV: Snyder (R), Schauer (D) 35.
MICHIGAN–SENATOR–EPIC-MRA: Gary Peters (D) 44, Terri Lynn Land (R) 38
MICHIGAN–SENATOR–Detroit News/WDIV-TV: Peters 40, Land 35.
OREGON–SENATOR–PPP: Sen. Jeff Merkley (D) 50, Monica Wehby (R) 36.
OREGON–GOVERNOR–PPP: Gov. John Kitzhaber (D) 49, Rep. Dennis Richardson (R) 36
GEORGIA–SENATOR–REPUBLICAN RUNOFF–Public Policy Polling: Jack Kingston (R) 46, David Perdue 34.
GEORGIA–SENATOR–Public Policy Polling: Michelle Nunn (D) 45, Kingston (R) 45; Nunn 48, Perdue, 46.
NEW MEXICO–GOVERNOR–DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY–Research & Polling Inc.: Gary King (D) 22, Lawrence Rael (D) 16 and Alan Webber (D) 16.
HAWAII–SENATOR–DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY–Honolulu Civil Beat: Sen. Brian Schatz (D) 44, Rep. Colleen Hanabusa (D) 39.

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  1. puck says:

    GunFail, Delaware edition:

    According to court records, King acknowledged that sometime during the day Tuesday she took her husband’s Glock semi-automatic .45 caliber handgun from its holster attached to the bed frame in the master bedroom and placed it in a kitchen drawer “next to where she plays games on her computer tablet.”

    King then admitted shooting her husband of 23 years once in the left upper arm, with the slug penetrating James King’s torso. She provided no motive.

  2. Jason330 says:

    Via the NJ

    Delawareans could legally possess up to an ounce of marijuana for “personal use” under new legislation backed by Democratic lawmakers in both chambers of the General Assembly.

    The legislation would set the minimum age for marijuana possession at 21 and would only impose a $100 civil fine on anyone found consuming marijuana in a public place, including streets, parks and sidewalks.

  3. MikeM2784 says:

    I love the polling data showing Republicans struggling in Georgia and Kentucky in a year when they are “supposed” to win a landslide victory at the polls. I know these are “local” races but it bodes well for 2016, at least at this point.

  4. liberalgeek says:

    I give the marijuana law a 2% chance of passing. This is just trying to build some cred with a contingent of voters. Introduce it in January and it’s got a chance.

  5. bamboozer says:

    When it comes to common sense I tend to count the general assembly out before the race starts, so it will be with decriminalizing pot. But it’s a start and I’ll take it. I’m calling my reps, even Bruce Hurray For The State Police Ennis.

  6. Aint's Taking it Any More says:

    When I was a kid, if you were caught smoking cigarettes, as punishment your parents made you chain smoke until you turned green and threw up. It worked. Many a smoker quit as their transformation was forged in the crucible of vomit and dry heaves.

    Instead of wasting time, money and people’s live sending them through the criminal justice system, why not make them smoke so much pot that they throw up?

    Maybe this could fix the casinos. Televise the smoke “therapy” and we could place bets on who hurls first.

    Tax revenue, saving our sacred gambling institutions and their inept owners, money saved on useless prosecutions, relieve jail overcrowding and we get people off pot all the while providing some bitching reality TV. Make about as much sense as what were doing now.