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Archive for November 24th, 2009


Update to the Obama bus….

The story on Harry Reid borrowing the Obama Bus was never really meant to be a story.  I was initially piqued about it when I heard Harry Reid lambasting David Broder.  As Broder is at BEST a Centralist and at worst way left, I was curious as to why Reid would bash him.  With so much else going on, it totally slipped my mind until I read the Jason Linkins article on Huffinton Post.
Still it was not going to be an article, just a quick little email to Listin giving him grief about his article.  And the following is the original email and Listins response.

On  Tue, Nov 24, 2009 at 6:28 PM, Patrick Michael  wrote:
Hi Jason,

I just wanted to give you some feedback on your recent article on David Broder.  Now as a conservative, I am not a big David Broder fan, but I am not blind to his accomplishments.  The following is David Broder’s Biography from Wikipedia admitted a cheap, quick and easy research page, but one that is relatively factual and easy to use:

“David Broder Before joining the Post in 1966, he worked at the New York Times, Congressional Quarterly, the now defunct Washington Star and the Pantagraph in Bloomington, Illinois.
Today, the longtime columnist is informally known as the “Dean” of the Washington press corps and the “unofficial chairman of the board” by national political writers. For many years he has appeared on Washington Week, Meet the Press, and other current affairs television programs.[3][4][5]
It was announced at the close of the August 10, 2008 broadcast of Meet the Press that Broder was celebrating his 400th appearance on that program, on which he first appeared July 7, 1963. He has appeared far more often than any other person. Excepting the program’s moderators, the person nearest to Broder in number of Meet the Press appearances is Bob Novak, who had over 120 fewer appearances.
Broder has been called “relentlessly centrist” by The New Yorker’s political commentator Hendrik Hertzberg.[6]
Broder won his Pulitzer for commentary in 1973 and has been the recipient of numerous awards and academic honors before and since. He is the author of several books about contemporary politics.
In 1990, Broder received the Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award as well as an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Colby College.
In 2001, Broder became a tenured, full professor at the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism while continuing writing full time at The Washington Post. He generally teaches one class a year on politics and the press. This class meets at the Post. Merrill College Dean, Thomas Kunkel, described Broder as the nation’s “most respected political journalist” when he announced Broder’s hire. Broder has also taught at Duke University (1987-1988)”

In fairness, I also looked up your information on Wikipedia and you (much like I) don’t have one, or else you are using an assumed name.  Now I did find your bio posted above your articles on Huffington Post, it reads “Jason Linkins is a Political Reporter at the Huffington Post, covering media and politics. He’s based in Washington, DC. Previously, he wrote for HuffPo’s Eat The Press, and has also contributed to DCist and Wonkette.”  Okay, not 400 appearances on Meet the Press, but okay.

But now, since David Broder has dared to speak against health care being villified as you stated in your article “Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid — a man not known for his zingers — referring to his Excellency as “a man who has been retired for many years and writes a column once in a while?” Maybe because Reid’s had it with Broder’s walleyed Washington take and the way he never makes a lick of sense! In that regard, Broder’s got a tidy two-week nonsensical streak going, even by his own shockingly low standards!”

Yes Jason, that’s what they hand those pulitizer prizes out for “shockingly low standards” which explains the pletera of said awards that no doubt line the bookcases of the Linkins’ household.

Hopefully Jason they will develop a “Harry Reid – You got my back” award.  You appear to be a shoe in for that.

Sincerely,

Patrick Michael

To which Jason replied:
Re: David Broder article‏
From: Jason Linkins (jason@huffingtonpost.com)
Sent: Tue 11/24/09 6:38 PM
To: Patrick Michael

Is your argument that David Broder’s long career entitles him to a pass when he’s demonstrably superficial on critical issues, or that my lack of a Wikipedia page forbids me from criticizing him?  Either way, it would appear to be you who’s not really heading in the direction of a distinguished career in letters.

Later, you can explain to me what “biograhy,” “pletera,” and “pulitizers” are!

Happy Thanksgiving!

In his defense, I did have the misspellings that he remarked on (shame on me) but my errors were in an email, not a nationally publicized article.  Other than that, hey – the guy wished me a Happy Thanksgiving!!

But, after that response which was no doubt intended to make me cry I had to write the story.  Hope you all liked it!!!

Harry Reid get’s to borrow the Obama bus get’s Huff Po to drive

First and foremost, I am not a David Broder fan.  David is a left wing journalist (many have called him a centralist – but I disagree) who has been around since 1966.  Now I can’t pretend that I have followed politics since then, but it is hard to hate someone who has famously said things like “He came in here and he trashed the place, and it’s not his place.” when speaking of Bill Clinton.

So I was somewhat taken back when Harry Reid went ballistic on Broder calling him  “”a man who has been retired for many years and writes a column once in a while?  Which apparently is the official “Get under the bus old man!!!”cry of this administration and it’s cronies.  This was born out by an article in the Huffington Post which paid tribute to this giant of journalism with the article entitled “David Broder causes confusion with his incomprehensible health care column” Hmmm, maybe it wasn’t paying tribute after all.

But in Huffington Post’s defense, it did give the job of lambasting Broder to an equally eminent journalist Jason Linkins.  Now while Linkins unlike Broder has not appeared 400 times on Meet the Press he has appeared at least…ummm…well, it seems like he has never been on the show.  But in terms of awards, Linkins may have won the Pultizer like Border but hey he did win the,,,ummmm….well, I’m sure he won some really cool awards in high school.

In fairness however, awards and book authorship and TV appearances are not necessarily the mark of a great journalist.  I’ve never won anything of any significance either, and look at me!!  No, the mark of a true journalist is the quality of their work.  So let’s not look at Linkins in terms of awards or achievements, lets look at the article itself.

Linder starts out ” David Broder is a Washington Post columnist who’s often credited with being the “Dean Of The Washington Press Corps,” which sound super fancy and important?”  Not sure what the question was there Mr. Linder, you probably meant to add something like “doesn’t it” at the end of the sentence but it is probably the fault of sloppy editing at Huffington Post, we’re used to it.
Hoping that the article would improve, I advanced to the next paragraph, only to be sorely disappointed “Maybe because Reid’s had it with Broder’s walleyed Washington take and the way he never makes a lick of sense! In that regard, Broder’s got a tidy two-week nonsensical streak going, even by his own shockingly low standards!”  It might just be me, but saying ‘lick of sense’ and the 1st paragraph’s ’super fancy and important’ does seem to provide ammunition to Mr. Linder’s critics who claim that he is a huge fan of cliche’s.
I regret to inform you that the article does not get better in sense of cliche’s or hackneyed phrases or just poor editing on the part of whoever is responsible for bringing this ‘article’ to publication.  For someone who is apparently concerned about an onset of dementia on the part of Border (which seems to be borrowed from what I call the Obama Inspector General Strategy) Linder does not show the same level of concern about the comprehensibility of his own writing.  Why else say something like “He’s just so sick of hearing about generals and lawmakers, pondering options, trying to figure out a sound strategy, so that a bunch of human beings wearing uniforms, representing this nation, don’t get arbitrarily killed for no good reason! Nuts to that!”  Note to readers:  No, I am not making any of this up, I will leave a link to this article at the end of this along with a link to Borders so that you can decide which one is the craziest.
Now rather than present ANY postings from the article in question – you know, just to show us how crazy and confused and “walleyed” David Broder is, Linkins gives us the following ’summary’

“This week, Broder has taken a look at the state of the Senate health care plan. His column, which is damn near inscrutable, seems to say the following:

1. The CBO has determined that the Senate health care bill will reduce the deficit.

2. BUT! Some obscure poll says that a majority of Americans don’t believe that whatever health care bill we end up with will do what the CBO says it will!

3. There are people who David Broder knows whose stock in trade is concern trolling about deficits who say that the health care bill will not reduce the deficit.

4. OH NO!”

I’m not that smart, so I would appreciate it if someone would explain to me what the hell point Linkins is trying to make in #3 or better yet, just what the hell Linkins is saying.  “whose stock in trade is concern trolling about deficits who say” What?????

Now as I mentioned, Linkins never quotes from Broder’s article – which is quite a trick when you are writing a critic of said article.  He does post one small paragraph from a previous article by Broder on Afghanistan, but no where does the “inscrutable” article appear at all.  Can it possibly be MORE inscrutable than Jason Linkins article that we have discussed here?  Let’s take a look.  If Linkins is correct, we probably won’t be able to make out much of the article, but we will try.

The article is entitled “A budget-buster in the making”  Sure makes sense so far, but I digress.

“The day after the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) gave its qualified blessing to the version of health reform produced by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Quinnipiac University poll of a national cross section of voters reported its latest results.

This poll may not be as famous as some others, but I know the care and professionalism of the people who run it, and one question was particularly interesting to me.

It read: “President Obama has pledged that health insurance reform will not add to our federal budget deficit over the next decade. Do you think that President Obama will be able to keep his promise or do you think that any health care plan that Congress passes and President Obama signs will add to the federal budget deficit?”

The answer: Less than one-fifth of the voters — 19 percent of the sample — think he will keep his word. Nine of 10 Republicans and eight of 10 independents said that whatever passes will add to the torrent of red ink. By a margin of four to three, even Democrats agreed this is likely.”  Hopefully none of you have been forced to give up reading due to the “inscrutable” nature of the article so far.  A brief sidebar may be necessary to educate readers about Quinnipiac Universities Polling Institute from their website:

Timely and accurate polls
Frequently cited by journalists, public officials and researchers, the independent Quinnipiac University Poll regularly surveys residents in Connecticut, Florida, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania and nationwide about political races, state and national elections, and issues of public concern, such as schools, taxes, transportation, municipal services and the environment.

Known for its exactness and thoroughness, the Quinnipiac poll was selected a “winner” by the New York Post for the most accurate prediction on the Schumer-D’Amato Senate race in 1998, and results are featured regularly in The New York Times, The Washington Post, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal and on national network news broadcasts.

Student interviewers use a computer-assisted telephone interviewing system to collect data from statewide and national residents. For a typical public opinion survey, a randomly selected sample of about 1,000 registered voters age 18 and over is interviewed over five or six days. The polls are conducted at the Polling Institute on West Woods Road, close to the main campus.The Polling Institute can be contacted at 203-582-5201 or e-mailed at pollinginstitute@quinnipiac.edu.

Broder made clear that the poll was not as well known as others, but he also clearly stated his reasons for using it.  Continuing to sound very logical and not quite ready for pasture as Reid and his fan Linkins suggest, Broder continues “I have been writing for months that the acid test for this effort lies less in the publicized fight over the public option or the issue of abortion coverage than in the plausibility of its claim to be fiscally responsible.

This is obviously turning out to be the case. While the CBO said that both the House-passed bill and the one Reid has drafted meet Obama’s test by being budget-neutral, every expert I have talked to says that the public has it right. These bills, as they stand, are budget-busters.

Here, for example, is what Robert Bixby, the executive director of the Concord Coalition, a bipartisan group of budget watchdogs, told me: “The Senate bill is better than the House version, but there’s not much reform in this bill. As of now, it’s basically a big entitlement expansion, plus tax increases.”

Here’s another expert, Maya MacGuineas, the president of the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget: “While this bill does a better job than the House version at reducing the deficit and controlling costs, it still doesn’t do enough. Given the political system’s aversion to tax increases and spending cuts, I worry about what the final bill will look like.”

These are nonpartisan sources, but Republican budget experts such as former CBO director Douglas Holtz-Eakin amplify the point with specific examples and biting language. Holtz-Eakin cites a long list of Democratic-sponsored “budget gimmicks” that made it possible for the CBO to estimate that Reid’s bill would reduce federal deficits by $130 billion by 2019.

Perhaps the biggest of those maneuvers was Reid’s decision to postpone the start of subsidies to help the uninsured buy policies from mid-2013 to January 2014 — long after taxes and fees levied by the bill would have begun.”

Okay, Linkins failure to quote the article in anyway is making more sense now.  I am going to let the end of Broders article also end mine, because it should be apparent by now that he is no more insane, inscrutable or suffering from Alzheimers than IG Gerald Walpin was.

Border concludes “Even with that change, there is plenty in the CBO report to suggest that the promised budget savings may not materialize. If you read deep enough, you will find that under the Senate bill, “federal outlays for health care would increase during the 2010-2019 period” — not decline. The gross increase would be almost $1 trillion — $848 billion, to be exact, mainly to subsidize the uninsured. The net increase would be $160 billion.

But this depends on two big gambles. Will future Congresses actually impose the assumed $420 billion in cuts to Medicare, Medicaid and other federal health programs? They never have.

And will this Congress enact the excise tax on high-premium insurance policies (the so-called Cadillac plans) in Reid’s bill? Obama has never endorsed them, and House Democrats — reacting to union pressure — turned them down in favor of a surtax on millionaires’ income.

The challenge to Congress — and to Obama — remains the same: Make the promised savings real, and don’t pass along unfunded programs to our children and grandchildren.”

Obamaland, where 36% = a majority

Remember when we were young and naive (me either) but I think that at one point in my life I used to believe that Politics made sense.  You know, if 51 % of Americans wanted traffic lights to go Green Red Yellow instead of Red Yellow Green, by God that’s the way it would be.  Sadly the truth is much stranger.  The truth is that if 95% of Americans wants Green Yellow Red and 4 Percent wants Red Yellow Green but 1% who happen to be lobbyists want their lights mounted sideways on telephone polls well…you know where to look for your traffic lights now don’t you?

How can this be fair?  I was reading a rant from some left wing blogger who was trying to convince me that “That’s how things are done in the big leagues”  Oh, Really? So that’s how it is?  Maybe that’s because we allow it to be that way.  And it is so easy to justify.  If you are a Republican or Conservative and ask a liberal or Progressive if the 300 Million dollars now included in “Special Language” in the Reid Bill for the State of Louisiana is a bribe  you’ll get an answer that is similar to the “That’s how the big league’s work” that I did.  Bob Beckel (everyone’s favorite liberal) said basically the same thing on Hannity.  And when pushed on the issue, what is the next line of defense that the left throws up?  No, it’s not the race card – the race card is their “game ender’, I’ve never had one honestly answer what was wrong with Republicans when Hillary care didn’t pass, we’re we prejudiced against women in pantsuits?  Surprisingly, I’ve never gotten an answer.  No, it’s not the race card it’s the Bush Card.

Yes, George Bush did it first, he was worse, that is the liberal answer to everything, I only hope that this card wears out quicker than the race card has.

Who remembers when Bush, Sr., said “Read my lips, no new taxes” he was villified by the left, how many times did we watch the enlargement of Bush’s lips saying this, time and time again.  But Obama has been the President with the free pass,the following list of the top ten broken promises is not from Fox News, Glenn Beck or even Sarah Palin, it is from that bastion of liberalism the Huffington Post:

1.  End the war in Iraq, troops home in 2009 – Nope

2.  Close Gitmo in first year of his presidency – Nope

3.  Immigration reform (substantial in 200) – Nope

4.  End Detainee Torture – I’m not going to say Nope on this, even though Huff Po does.  I’m not going to score this one as I do not know what critera Huffington Post was using to determine this.  But you can argue it anyway you want to.

5.  Break the cycle of Bush’s abuse of power – Nope Bush policies restored, and the administration as secretive or more than ever

6.  Pass Net Neutrality – Nope (PS:  Thank God)

7. No Earmarks in Stimulas Package – Actually I am laughing too hard over the thosands of earmarks in the Stimulas to type poperly

8.Dump The Patriot Act – Nope Apparently he found out why we have one, or just likes keeping secreats

9. Promised to redo NAFTA – Nope and has no known plans to

10. Promised no more Wall Street Bailouts – Well we all know how that turned out.

Please keep in mind, this is just the top ten, not an all exhaustive list, it does not even include my favorite “Lobbyists will not have a home in an Obama Whitehouse” I guess that means he makes them leave at night, because God knows that there are about 20 working there.

The bottom line is that Obama promised “No more business as usual” was it unrealistic to believe him?  Probably, but we (America) wanted so badly to believe in his “hope and change” message.  No one should feel more offended and more orphaned than the true believers who work hours and hours for this guy, just to see another Ivy League guy in a suit promising things.  And just think it is this loyal core of the Obama machine that falls into the 36%, and represents a number that shrinks each day as the Independent members of the 36% grow discouraged and leave.

Many of those on the right who voted for Obama were voting against McCain as much as voting for Obama, and many thought that he would rise to the job.  Well, if he made some effort to govern from the middle it would have provided the right with some hope.  But Obama was in a no win position between making his ‘friends’ or the nation happy.  He has choosen his friends more often than not.  Why do I say that?  Because it can’t be the nation.  Why would we possibly be attempting to raise taxes for a program that less than 1/2 of the country wants (actually 36%) when it will not generate jobs or even the health care benifits that it is supposed to for four more years?

If you COULD poll everyone in America right now, how would they rank the following problems?

Unemployment,  The economy, Health Care, Climate Change, Immigration, Afganistan

Would healthcare be on the top of the list of 50% (or more) of the country?

No, 36% regardless of where you went to school does not equal a majority.  It is not a mandate.  Repeating over and over again “America wants this bill” will never make it true.  Well, maybe it does in Obamaland, but no where else.