Make Us Thrifty, But Not Yet

Yglesias comes out as another liberal finding reasons not to tackle the long-term debt now:

The budget deficit isn’t currently a problem, but it almost certainly will be in the future and that’s when congress will act to deal with it […]  It would be wise and just and moral for the 112th Congress to pass a judicious long-term debt reduction program, but it doesn’t seem even remotely realistic. Is there any precedent for a country doing deficit reduction pre-emptively in the way everyone seems to be suggesting we should?

Bush And The Right: The Dysfunctional Slobber

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Is anyone surprised by this?

The live, 25-minute interview that Rush Limbaugh just conducted with George W. Bush was, not surprisingly, marked by excessive flattery and deference and a complete lack of follow-up questions. If anything, it resembled the weekly radio show of a college football coach, in which a professional-sounding host is paid to good-naturedly lob softballs and never — ever — offend the interview subject.

The closest Rush came to putting the former president on the spot was his response to Bush's defense of his "comprehensive immigration reform" initiative (a term that Rush himself, perhaps for the first time ever, used without sarcasm). "Many people," Limbaugh told Bush, "thought the Democrats wanted to register these people as new Democrat voters." Bush said he was aware of this but that he thought comprehensive reform was "good policy" anyway.

If there was one dominant theme in Limbaugh's questions, it was the mean-spiritedness of "the Democrat Party" — and the admirable, almost superhuman restraint that Bush has shown in not lashing back at his foes.

The interview encapsulates the conservative incoherence of the past ten years. Their partisanship made them – for the most part – blind to Bush's attack on real conservatism in his presidency. The fiscal catastrophe, the "deficits-don't-matter" lunacy, the off-budget nation-building endless wars, the budget-busting Medicare entitlement, the executive power supremacy, the descent into war crimes: all of this violated core conservative principles, and, even now, the alleged guardian of such principles, Rush Limbaugh, slobbers pathetically in front of a president he should have been debunking from the get-go.

(Photo: Tom Pennington/Getty.)

“God Made It” Ctd

About those poppy seeds

The birth of a couple’s first child is supposed to be a joyous occasion — and for the first three days, it was for Elizabeth Mort and her partner Alex Rodriguez. But then the commonwealth of Pennsylvania took their young daughter away after the hospital where she was born reported the mother for testing positive on a drug test. Her drug of choice? An "everything" bagel from Dunkin’ Donuts.

"The best thing in my life had been taken from me and there was nothing I could do to get her back," Mort says. For five excruciating days, officials with Lawrence County Children and Youth Services (LCCYS) kept mother away from child, all based on a positive drug test they didn’t even bother to investigate — and which the hospital never even informed the mother about.

Scott Morgan seethes over the story.

A Poem For Veterans Day

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Andrew Exum has posted several poems about military service today. Here's "Back" by Wilfrid Gibson:

They ask me where I've been,
And what I've done and seen.
But what can I reply
Who know it wasn't I,
But someone just like me,
Who went across the sea
And with my head and hands
Killed men in foreign lands…
Though I must bear the blame,
Because he bore my name.

(Photo: U.S. Marine LCpl. Kevin Sullivan of Hudson, MA with India Battery, 3rd Battalion, 12th Marine Regiment looks out over the Helmand River from outpost West perched above Forward Operating Base (FOB) Zeebrugge on October 22, 2010 in Kajaki, Afghanistan. By Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The Simpson-Bowles Breakthrough, Ctd

Kevin Drum complained that the Simpson-Bowles plan "turns suddenly vague and cramped when it gets to Medicare." Not so. Here's Don Taylor:

My bottom line is that the health aspects of the 'Chairman's mark' are tough, good and balanced policies. I like the health aspects more than I like the Social Security aspects of the plan … The most important aspect of the chairman's mark for health policy is that it provides a route to a doc fix in the very short run and draws bright attention to the role of tax expenditures generally, and the tax preference of employer paid insurance, particularly. It also moves to expand the [Independent Payment Advisory Board] IPAB in ways that will allow for the nitty gritty of health policy to move out of Congress, and into a more expert driven model. I think this is good. I also think the notion of some sort of cap in growth rate in health care is good (not sure if GDP + 1% realistic in 10 years) and is the type of thing that Congress should be doing.

Tactics, Strategy And Israel-Palestine

Goldblog calls out Bibi:

I don't believe Israel should not give up control of its holiest sites — would Muslims give up control of Mecca? — but the neighborhoods of East Jerusalem aren't holy, at least in my understanding of the notion. A peace deal between Israel and the Palestinian Arabs — which, along with the neutralization of Iranian eliminationist ideology and practice, is the only thing that will guarantee Israel's long-term existence as a Jewish state — requires a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem. Bibi Netanyahu knows this, of course, but he won't tell his coalition partners such a basic truth, which is why they a) remain in his cabinet, and b) continue to build apartment blocks that will serve to stymie the creation of a contiguous Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem.

An important distinction:

[T]he building of new apartments in the settlement city of Ariel only underscores another central fact of the conflict, that settlements are in many ways a diversion from a more basic issue, which is the issue of borders. Instead of talking about settlements, the parties should be talking about the future borders of Palestine. The borders will define which settlements remain, and which ones have to go. This is why it was a mistake of the Obama Administration to fetishize settlements, and make a freeze a pre-condition of negotiations. Of course, this was merely a tactical mistake. Netanyahu, I fear, is making a strategic mistake, by refusing to frame,  out loud, and in a way that, yes, might threaten the stability of his governing coalition, his vision for an eventual peace.

Gay Soldiers: No Special Treatment, Please

The leak of the DADT report notes how gay servicemembers are utterly uninterested in making grand statements, probably won't come out in any substantive fashion and so not want to be treated differently than anyone else:

The report also concludes that gay troops should not be put into a special class for equal-opportunity or discrimination purposes, the individual said. The recommendation is based on feedback the study group obtained from gay troops and same-sex partners who said they do not want a special classification, according to the source. Gay troops were encouraged to participate in the survey and to submit comments to the anonymous online drop box.

Just allow them to serve their country without the constant threat of blackmail, persecution or being treated as political football. That's all they want; it's the least we owe them for their service.

The Odd Lies Of Sarah Palin XLVIII: Grocery Inflation, Ctd

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A reader writes:

Here’s an inflation chart for your fun and amusement. Nothing new to the dialog you’ve been having but it’s fun to see how pictures show the story. It shows the annual percent change for “food at home,” one of the major subindexes within the overall consumer price index.

What’s remarkable about the chart is that prices were contracting for most of the last few years. Deflation, not inflation, was the real story, at least when it comes to the cost of putting food on the table. In the latest data, food prices have since turned back up but remain well below the long-term average. Perhaps food inflation will actually surge in a replay of the mid-seventies. But that is an economic forecast and not a statement of recent fact.

Another writes:

In the debate over grocery prices, I think you've missed the bigger lie in Palin's statement:

"Now I realize I'm just a former governor and current housewife from Alaska, but even humble folks like me can read the newspaper. I'm surprised a prestigious reporter for the Wall Street Journal doesn't."

Current housewife?  Seriously?  Does she believe that?  Does anyone?  She's the de facto chairperson of the RNC.  She's one of the biggest Republican fundraisers in the country. She is also a reality television star and political pundit.  I know many housewives.  It is a full-time job.  She is not a housewife.  She's a full-time politician.

In her mind, she is what she says she is. That will change depending on the audience and time of day – like reality itself.

(Correction: for many of the more recent odd lies, I got my Roman numerals wrong, putting a C where an L should be. From now on, we'll get it right. My bad – and my old Latin teachers would be appalled. Still, I never really thought we'd be closing in on fifty of them.)