Malkin Award Nominee

"But, in fact every, when I was sworn into the Marine Corp, I was sworn to uphold the Constitution against every enemy, foreign and domestic. We’ve got a lot of domestic enemies of the Constitution (applause) and one of those sits in the speaker’s chair of the United States Congress, Nancy Pelosi," – Congressman Paul Broun (R-GA).

Playing Defense

Jim Burroway watches a new Protect Maine Equality ad responding to an anti-equality ad and leaves discouraged:

It’s a good ad, but I’ve got to be honest. I’m worried about the direction this campaign is going. No good general would ever dream of allowing his enemy to choose the terrain of battle, but that is exactly what the Protect Maine Equality is doing. Frank Schubert, the campaign manager behind Maine’s Yes on 1 is still calling the shots, and the “No” side is dancing to his tune.

The Daily Wrap

Today on the Dish we received the underwhelming news of a gay ambassadorship, compelling Andrew to make a plea to the president's people. He also took a long look at the controversial Oren piece, with reader follow-ups here, here, and here.

In other news, we heard that the first Iranian protest leader could be executed and that our captured soldier in Afghanistan is still missing. Juan Cole offered an interesting take on Iran's intentions. Andrew parsed the latest polling on healthcare while Patrick rounded up some initial reaction to the opt-out option.  Jonah Lehrer dropped some science on the failure of menu labeling while Ezra dropped his head.

In random happenings, Bob Dole chastised the GOP, Gail Collins told Rangel to go, Matt Welch defended Breitbart, Goldblog stood up against fat jokes, would-be gay-bashers got bashed themselves, O'Reilly saw starbursts, and TNC spun some wisdom.  And this was the best thing on the Internet today.

And last but not least, it appears the world will get to see Levi's Johnston after all.

— C.B.

How Reagan Could Teach Obama Something

Dan Savage notes the latest act of symbolism by the Obama administration to mollify the gay community: the ambassadorship to New Zealand and Samoa. Ronald Reagan also used an ambassadorship to send a symbolic message: he appointed a black man as ambassador to apartheid South Africa. So why not appoint an openly gay ambassador to, say, Jamaica?

Politico Jumps The Shark

Steve Benen rips apart the headline, "Roman Polanski Backers Gave $34K to Barack Obama, DNC."

It's almost a parody of the kind of story Politico's critics might come up with to make fun of the publication. […] As the story goes, a prominent filmmaker is accused of a horrible crime. The filmmaker nevertheless has some supporters in the film industry. Some of those supporters, for reasons entirely unrelated to the alleged crime, also contributed to Democrats, and some of those contributors also donated to Obama. So? Why is that a news story? […] Chances are, they wanted to get "Polanski" and "Obama" in the same headline. It didn't matter if the story made sense.

Face Of The Day

MarineDavidFurstGetty

A US Marine from Fox Company 2nd Battalion 3rd Marines rests as his platoon finishes searching houses for the day during day two of Operation Germinate into the restive Bhuji Bhast Pass in Farah Province, southern Afghanistan, on October 8, 2009. The Bhuji Bhast Pass is effectively a Taliban corridor, mined with IEDs from one end to the other, and lined with villages that are hostile to the Western troop presence. Aboard Marine CH-53 helicopters Fox Company inserted yesterday into the pass on the 8th anniversary of the US invasion of Afghanistan in an effort to clear insurgent forces from local villages and improve security for the local Afghan population. By David Furst/AFP/Getty.

People Love Their Big Macs

Ezra Klein, a fierce advocate for menu labeling, reads the sobering news:

The first big study out of New York City, however, suggests that menu labeling has been a bit of a bust in changing ordering habits at fast food restaurants in low-income neighborhoods…I could make a couple of bank shot arguments here (it's possible higher-income people will cut back more, leading chain restaurants to reformulate their offerings to secure their business, leading to calorie reductions across the customer base), but I don't think they make a lot of sense.

You could also see it going in the other direction: people could gravitate toward higher-calorie items on the grounds that they'll prove more satisfying, and represent a better deal. I'm still a supporter of calorie labeling on the simple grounds that people should have this information, no matter how they choose to use it. But so far, the evidence suggests that it's not going to make a dent in obesity rates.

Screw You Guys. We’re Going Home

A reader writes (I suspect) for many:

I'm a non-practicing, non-believing guy with Jewish heritage — therefore, a "self-hating Jew" I suppose. Still, I believe there is a solid post-Holocaust rationale for a Jewish state to serve as a safe-haven. I also believe the manner in which Palestinians were dispossessed to make Israel a reality is almost as ugly as Indian Removal policies of United States. I'm 100% in favor of there being an Israel, and I'm 100% in favor of there being a Palestine (contiguous and unadulterated).

But right now, I'm 100% firmly in the camp of "a pox on both their houses."

I've seen this fucking merry-go-round spin and spin and spin for years. It's not going to stop until Israelis and Palestinians have either wiped each other out or decided they no longer enjoy the taste of one-anothers' blood. There just isn't anything any nation or group of nations external to this blood-feud can do to stop it. So, let it burn itself out. If the West (and I suppose China, India, and Russia) begin by publicly acknowledging that both sides are clearly more invested in conflict than peace, then we can move on to consideration of some sort of containment policy that confines the combatants to their own regional Thunderdome.

I'd be perfectly happy if our stated position was: "Kill each other all you want, but have the common courtesy to keep it amongst yourselves."

That means ending aid to both Israel and the PA. I wonder what the vote would be on that if the American people were allowed to have the final say.

Playground Politics

New Jersey governor Jon Corzine is catching heat for mocking the waistline of his opponent, Christopher Christie. One of those critics is obesity expert David Kessler, who recently told Goldblog:

This ad reflects a total lack of understanding, empathy and tolerance. No one should be criticized for being overweight. We're all wired to respond to different stimuli — sex, gambling, alcohol, illegal drugs — and for many people it's food. I would rather have this problem than some of these other problems. Some of the world's greatest leaders, from Winston Churchill to Ted Kennedy, struggled with their weight. This struggle has nothing to do with leadership abilities. It doesn't translate into a lack of control in any other part of a person's life. In any case, voters identify with people who are honest and open about their struggles. To be cruel to someone because of this struggle is just unacceptable. It shows a lack of understanding about human nature, and about the environment in which we live.

Ambers adds his thoughts, as does Zengerle.

The Coming Jobs Debate

E.J. Donne thinks the 2010 elections will be fought on the issue:

While official Washington and much of the media focus on the great health-care struggle, the administration’s economic advisers have been busy reviewing proposals to create jobs, aware that pressure on them will grow to deal with high unemployment that threatens to persist through Election Day next year. President Obama’s aides insist that they knew all along that the original stimulus, as one of them put it, would “never fill the full gap from the recession.” Whether or not they anticipated this, they’re planning to act, even though — for political reasons — what comes next will not be called “a second stimulus.”