Reds Under Obama’s Bed

Ron Radosh, whose blog is fast becoming a petri dish of aging neocon obsessions, fearlessly exposes that Barack Obama over a decade ago had interaction with and support from a group called the New Party, whose left-liberal views amounted to "full employment, a shorter work week and a guaranteed minimum income for all adults; a universal ’social wage’ to include such basic benefits as health care, child care, vacation time and lifelong access to education and training; a systematic phase-in of comparable worth and like programs to ensure gender equity.”

How they must love Obama now! But, of course, Radosh's main concern is Israel, and he joins the throng of Likudniks who want to get the scalp of one Hannah Rosenthal, Obama's appointee to combat global anti-Semitism. His conclusion?

Obama has put in a major position of influence a person from the left-wing of the political spectrum, who as an official whose office monitors anti-Semitism, is using her position to support J-Street, on whose Board she previously sat.

Rosenthal's crimes – apart from those of association – are that she was in an organization that was "highly critical of Israel’s policies." And that she took offense at Michael Oren's blatant attacks on J-Street. Remember what the neocons believe is a criterion for public office: no criticisms of any Israeli policies. Or you are a suspect Jew or a closet anti-Semite. And they believe this. Thank God the younger generations are less paranoid and less blinkered.

From The In-Tray I

I thought it might be revealing to open up the in-tray from a few of my regular correspondents. A few of them are truly a little, well, passionate. The following writes multiple times a month – and has sent hundreds of emails over the years. Here's a selection. December:

Shameless shill … …that would be you….celebrating…in dishonest terms, of course….the health care disaster…."the government [sic] helping the working poor [sic]"…meaning, as always, forced re-distribution….well, duh!!….the "government" can always "help" whatever targeted group the bien-pensants wish to benefit, can't they…with MY money….that's always the left's claim as they accrue power and wealth to their New Class selves….at the same time exhibiting and expressing utter contempt for the intended beneficiaries…"clingers", remember? "tea-baggers" with obviously false consciousness failing to recognize the beneficence of their saviours…as that CNN bitch openly expressed it contemptuously… Oh, yeah…the Hope and Change thing, too….what a crock!…what liars!…what hypocrites, shameless dissemblers!

November:

He's probably just going through a PROH-sess, see…..LOL!!…His Oneness doesn't know whether to shit or go blind….if He lets the kooks have the nukes….He's toast…worse than the helicopters on the roof in Saigon (how did that work out for the left?)…it will be dolchstoss, baby!!…..and if He preëmpts….it's the Bush Doctrine…and the left will eat Him alive….we'll help them….can't wait….

October:

NOW you're just figuring it out?….it's worse than you expected?…LOL!!….you're the rube…He's taken you for a ride….on EVERY issue! "Does [H]e think we're stupid?"….well, actually…..yes!…He must!…or else He knows you have nowhere else to go….and will continue to support and outright SHILL for Him no matter what!…pretty shrewd, dude!…very clever…and you all trusted Him….because you thought that when He said He was against gay marriage…that HE WAS JUST LYING!….LYING WAS A FEATURE, NOT A BUG!!!…turns the joke is on you!!…and totally deserved… Ah!…but His temperament!…see…He's going through a PROH-sess….since He's a "robust self-contradiction" He cannot be held to rhetorical exactitude…that other stuff, remember, was "overheated and amplified rhetoric"….just "statements generated [sic] during the campaign", that all….

As I said, there are hundreds of these. So about that comments section … ?

The View From Your Recession: Checking Back In

This reader was a third-year law student about to take the bar exam in Massachusetts. Original post here. He writes:

I graduated this spring with a law degree, and spend the summer in bar preparation.  I sat simultaneously for the New York and Massachusetts bar exams, figuring that I would put my eggs in as many baskets as possible.  Afterwards, I moved to D.C. from Boston in search of work.  From all I had read, D.C. seemed to have a better job market for attorneys than any other locale.

I threw myself into the job hunt with gusto – I was on ten different job email lists, and probably can immediately recite twenty different job posting websites off the top of my head.  I informational interviewed and attended alumni and networking events.  I also applied to thirteen temping agencies, primarily legal.  When I say I applied, I mean I actually went to their offices in suit and tie ready to sell my skill set and impress them – these were not anonymous resume drops.  Each agency’s representative was pleasant and said that opportunities would come in any day now. And then they shooed me out of the office when I tried to press for details.  I call each every Monday and leave a voicemail (always a voicemail).  Since mid August, I have not received one job opportunity from these companies.  Not one.

The first job I got out of law school requires me to wear an apron and hairnet, paying me twenty-five cents an hour less than a high school job I had in 2001.  I’ve also proctored the LSAT, and joined an HIV vaccination study for money – yes, my health is now for sale. 

Happily, my story ends on a happy note. 

I was selected for a fellowship through the Office of Personnel Management this past spring, and with this designation, I was able to get interviews for fellowship-specific management jobs in the federal government.   I received an offer to work for a federal agency just last week, and begin on January 4th.  It’s a non-attorney role, but I hope to use my fellowship (and the completed background check) to continue on in federal service.   It’s the best Christmas present anyone could ever dream of.

I’m very excited about this opportunity, but also very conscious about how dire things were getting. My savings are absolutely depleted, and my credit cards have been filed away lest I overdraw them in a weak moment when I want caffeine.  I qualified for food stamps the same day I learned I’d passed the New York bar exam.  I believe there is no entitlement to a job in this country, but I am very very angry to see so many of my peers struggling though no fault of their own – It's a great hardship to have a newly-minted professional degree right now.  Before the new job came along, my income-based repayment figure for my student loans was $0.00 monthly. I predict that student loans will become less easily available in the coming years as more and more students don't keep up on their payments, or pay very little as I was scheduled to do. 

The hardest part about this experience was when the Massachusetts bar association swore in this summer’s test takers.  I viewed all my law school classmates’ ceremony pictures on Facebook – I could not afford to travel back to Massachusetts and share this great accomplishment in Faniuel Hall at Qunicy Market, where the oldest bar association in the western hemisphere has always held its induction ceremonies.  Instead, I’ll have to be sworn in by affidavit later in January.  I'm a grown man, but I was in tears at viewing those pictures and being struck at how much I wanted to hug my classmates-now-attorneys. 

We live in interesting times, and I know my generation will come out of it with a very different perspective on savings, spending, and investment than did the graduates of the 1990’s and early 2000’s.

The Real Rogue Of 2009: Levi Johnston

Gallery_enlarged-levijohnston-gq-photos-05282009-06
 
Sure, Palin can get Adam Bellow to drop the last fig leaf from his commercial privates and turn Jonathan Burnham into an openly gay publisher of a vicious homophobe, but what courage does that take? Sure, Palin can bamboozle the press corps with fantastic lies, and a press strategy currently being used by Tiger Woods, but in the face of all this, a 19-year-old was prepared to one-up her with Vanity Fair and Playgirl and act as if he had not a care in the world.

And what a story he has told.

It is as follows: Palin is a total fraud. She is not what she says she is. According to someone who lived with her for years, who fathered her grandson and fell in love with her daughter, the last thing she is is what her followers blindly believe: authentic.

She's a phony, according to Johnston, a negligent mother, a devious plotter, an alienated wife. Far from a "real American", she is layer upon layer of political artifice, designed cynically to appeal to pro-lifers and feminists, evangelicals and populists, independents and rock-ribbed Republicans, all laid on top of a fanatically narcissistic sociopathy. Here's a taste of what Johnston has asserted:

The Palin house was much different from what many people expect of a normal family, even before she was nominated for vice president. There wasn’t much parenting in that house. Sarah doesn’t cook, Todd doesn’t cook—the kids would do it all themselves: cook, clean, do the laundry, and get ready for school. Most of the time Bristol would help her youngest sister with her homework, and I’d barbecue chicken or steak on the grill.

Remember that Johnston is the only family member who actually knew and lived with Palin and has broken ranks. He could be lying, of course, or seeking revenge, or bargaining for more access to his son, or something else we don;t know about. But given Palin's record of dissimulation, it seems to me he deserves at least as fair a hearing as she has had, even if nothing like the millions she has raked in. His story deserves to be taken more seriously as a real account of what Palin really is. Until Wallace and Schmidt screw their courage to the sticking place, he's the best we've got.

Here, for example, is his recounting of an incident that few MSM observers can quite handle:

Sarah told me she had a great idea: we would keep it a secret—nobody would know that Bristol was pregnant. She told me that once Bristol had the baby she and Todd would adopt him. That way, she said, Bristol and I didn’t have to worry about anything. Sarah kept mentioning this plan. She was nagging—she wouldn’t give up. She would say, “So, are you gonna let me adopt him?” We both kept telling her we were definitely not going to let her adopt the baby. I think Sarah wanted to make Bristol look good, and she didn’t want people to know that her 17-year-old daughter was going to have a kid.

So the "outrageous" conspiracy theory aired on the Internets in late August 2008 that Palin had a cockamamie idea to pass off her daughter's baby as her own actually happened, according to Johnston. But it was not about Trig as the soon-debunked rumors first had it – whom Bristol simply could not have chronologically given birth to. But it was about Tripp – and indicative of a deeply deceptive, half-nuts mentality. I mean: did Palin think she could ever have gotten away with that kind of baby switcheroo, when the real father and mother opposed it? Notice that this was not planned as an open adoption. It was designed to hide Bristol's pregnancy, which would remain a total secret, meaning "nobody would know that Bristol was pregnant," meaning in turn that Palin's own pregnancy would have had to be faked. Now, maybe Levi is just harassing Palin using half-baked Internet rumors about Trig to apply to Tripp. But, again, she is the one with the record of proven lies, not Johnston. And what this says about Palin's capability for outright deception is quite striking, if true.

Johnston's account for the reasons for Palin's bizarre resignation are also more convincing than Palin's classic insistence that she was quitting because she was not a quitter:

Sarah was sad for a while. She walked around the house pouting. I had

assumed she was going to go back to her job as governor, but a week or two after she got back she started talking about how nice it would be to quit and write a book or do a show and make "triple the money." It was, to her, "not as hard." She would blatantly say, "I want to just take this money and quit being governor." She started to say it frequently, but she didn't know how to do it. When she came home from work, it seemed like she was more and more stressed out. It seemed like she couldn't handle the job anymore. I think that she was just through with it all or that she'd become used to getting everything she wanted handed to her. She'd rather take the money and keep that kind of lifestyle. When a magazine offered six figures to be at the hospital when Bristol gave birth, she said yes at first but then told us not to do it.

She was not exactly a diligent governor either:

Throughout the years I spent with them, when Sarah got home from her office — almost never later than 5 and sometimes as early as noon — she usually walked in the door, said hello, and then disappeared into her bedroom, where she would hang out. Sometimes, she’d take an hourlong bath. Other times she sat on the living-room couch in her two-piece pajama set from Walmart — she had all the colors — with her hair down, watching house shows and wedding shows on TV. She always wanted things and she always wanted other people to get them for her. If she wanted a movie, Bristol and I would go to the video store; if she wanted food, we’d get her something to eat, like a Crunchwrap Supreme from Taco Bell. She’d try to bribe everyone in the house, or give us guilt trips. She used to make Bristol feel bad by telling her that she did everything for her. This was unfair because, even before the campaign, Bristol was already the mom in the house, and she got tired of having to take care of her siblings.

What can we make of this?

It's unverifiable – but no less so than Palin's autobiography. And compared with her bizarre, constantly changing stories and multiple lies about any number of empirically indisputable facts, Johnston's monosyllabic yeses and nos and plain English eye-witness accounts that have never changed are like oases of sanity and calm.

When I got to meet Johnston, I asked him simply how he seemed so calm as a nineteen year old up against an international celebrity with millions of dollars and every pimp in the "publishing" and political industries trying to suck up to her. "Because I'm tellin' the truth," was his simple, and immediate answer.

I can't know who's telling the truth for sure. But after a decade of frauds enabled and abetted by political corruption and media cowardice, Palin might well be the biggest fraud of all, perpetrating a hoax so massive no one can quite see it. Perhaps the most memorable quote of the year came when Levi said quite simply, even after unloading all of the above:

"There are some things that I have that are huge. And I haven't said them because I'm not gonna hurt her that way … I have things that can, you know — that would get her in trouble, and could hurt her. Will hurt her. But I'm not gonna go that far. You know, I mean, if I really wanted to hurt her, I could, very easily. But there's — I'm not gonna do it. I'm not going that far.

Or as he also put it:

:She knows what I got on her."

But the rest of us don't.

Yet.

(Photo: GQ).

Not Blue America, Not Red America

Kevin Drum wants to know when Obama willl give up on bipartisanship:

Obama clearly seems dedicated to a program of compromise and bipartisan comity, and he wants to keep at it long enough to give it a real chance of working.  But how long is long enough?  I never really believed Republicans were ever likely to respond to olive branches in the first place — they need a few more years in the wilderness before they're willing to really take stock of the corner they've painted themselves into — so I'm not a good judge of this.  But it's been nearly a year now and Republicans, if anything, are more intransigent than they were on inauguration day. How much longer does Obama give them? Another year? Two? At what point does he finally give up and decide that he's just being played for a patsy?

He keeps going because the party that loses the middle is the party that looks the most intransigent and ideological. I hope he keeps up the kind of discipline he has so far.

Depressing Christmas Songs, Ctd

A reader submits Merle Haggard's "If We Make It Through December." Lyrics after the jump:

If we make it through December
Everythings gonna be all right I know
It's the coldest time of winter
And I shivver when I see the fallin snow

If we make it through December
I got plans of bein in a warmer town come summer time
Maybe even California
If we make it through December we'll be fine

I got laid off down at the factory
And there timings not the greatest in the world
Heaven knows I been workin' hard
I wanted Christmas to be right for daddy's girl
Now I don't mean to hate December
It's meant to be the happy time of year
And why my little girl don't understand
Why daddy can't afford no Christmas here

If we make it through December
Everythings gonna be alright I know
It's the coldest time of winter
And I shivver when I see the fallin' snow

If we make it through December
I got plans of bein' in a warmer town come summer time
Maybe even California

If we make it through December we'll be fine

250,000 People Without A Bookstore, Ctd

A reader writes:

I live very near Laredo and it is no more appropriate to talk about book stores in Laredo without mentioning Nuevo Laredo than it would be to talk about Brooklyn and fail to mention Queens. They are right on top of each other and most Laredoans routinely cross the border for groceries, tools and, yes, books. Nuevo Laredo, like much of Mexico, is awash in oodles of little book stores with titles primarily in Spanish, but English too. Book store life – with readings, discussion groups, good coffee and bad guitar playing – are very alive and well in Nuevo Laredo and enjoyed by the Laredo crowd as well.

Quote For The Day

"Pope Benedict’s action this week seeks to destroy the evidence, which is the point. If he were to have his declaration hoisted as a sign, it would say: “The Holocaust was the work of a few Nazis, period.” In fact, that has been a theme of his controversial papal statements on the subject. In Cologne, in 2005, he told an audience of German Jews that Nazi anti-Semitism “was born of neo-paganism,” as if it were unrelated to the long history of Christian anti-Judaism, embodied in the “Christ-killer” slander, and preached from nearly every Christian pulpit nearly every Good Friday for more than a thousand years. Speaking at Auschwitz in 2006, Benedict blamed the Holocaust “on a ring of criminals,” an exoneration of the larger German nation that is almost unheard of among the impressively self-critical Germans of Benedict’s generation. At the death camp, he went on to make the astonishing claim that by eliminating Jews, the Nazis were “ultimately” attacking the church. He complained of God’s silence, but not of the previous pope’s," – Jim Carroll, whose Practicing Catholic was one of my favorite books of the year.