The Cartoon Prosecutor

Aqua-teen-hunger-force

Radley Balko makes the case that Coakley is "far to the right" of Kennedy on criminal justice:

The Melendez-Diaz case wasn’t an anomaly. Coakley has made her reputation as a law-and-order prosecutor. More troubling, she’s shown a tendency to aggressively push the limits of the law in high-profile cases and an unwillingness to cop to mistakes — be they her own or those of other prosecutors. Coakley’s most recent high-profile case was the “Aqua Teen Hunger Force” hoax, in which she defended Boston authorities’ massive overreaction to harmless light-emitting-diode devices left around the city as a promotional gimmick.

More on the 2007 "bomb scare" from Wiki:

The LEDs were arranged to show a cartoon character displaying the middle finger. Two variants were manufactured with the LEDs arranged in pixelated likenesses of Ignignokt and Err, Mooninite characters from Aqua Teen Hunger Force. Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley said the device "had a very sinister appearance. It had a battery behind it, and wires." Others compared the displays to the Lite-Brite electric toy in appearance.

“take the precinct, take the state, take the party”

Friedersdorf is guardedly optimistic about tea party activists taking over of the GOP:

Some of them obviously will be corrupted, but while I don’t imagine they’ll be spectacularly better than what we’ve got now, I do think that the way they came to power might make them marginally less corrupted by the power they’ll eventually wield… if only they don’t fall prey to the catastrophic success that Ross Douthat and Ramesh Ponnurru are smartly worrying about.

What they remind me of is the Labour party in the 1980s where a core group of left-wing activists took over the machinery of local parties in response to Thatcher’s victory and dragged the party to the unelectable left. It took over a decade and Tony Blair to repair the damage. These analogies are always faulty, of course. But then I watch Marco Rubio’s response to Larry Kudlow when asked what he’d do to lower unemployment and I realize these people have literally nothing to offer on the concrete problems of the day. Listen to the fumes of calcified, callow ideology:

Brown’s Platform

E.D. Kain looks at it:

All told, [Scott] Brown strikes me as the right sort of leader for the Republican party of 2010. Not exactly a social conservative, but not particularly liberal either, he represents the larger middle on social issues. On economics he is a fiscal conservative, and he doesn’t seem particularly hawkish beyond the standard, boiler-plate support for Israel. On abortion he makes a great deal of sense, and on healthcare I think he could potentially be a strong ally of some bi-partisan legislation in the future should the current bill fail.

My take here.

How Marriage Helps Gay Americans

A reader writes:

I've been reading through the live-blogging of the Prop. 8 trial and this caught my eye:

"Married couples live healthier, less likely to engage in dangerous behavior, less likely to smoke, less likely to drink in excess."

In every respect, this has proven to be true with both myself and my partner.  When I met him several years ago, I was addicted to meth.  He did what he had to do to break the addiction: we packed up, lived hand-to-hand on savings, and labored on the road for a while before settling in another city.  And with effort, with patience, and with love, we are leaving that far behind (breaking an addiction is always an ongoing process).  And for all of this, even if I weren't in love with him, I would be eternally grateful.

Meanwhile, since living with me, he has quit smoking, and both of us are drinking less. 

Instead of drinking at a bar and driving home intoxicated, we have friends over to dinner and watch a movie.  We've bought a house, have careers instead of moving from job to job, and have generally become stable and productive members of the community, no longer leading fast, hard, and dangerous lives.

These are the fruits of our marriage (which is exactly what it is, regardless of what the state says).  This is what social conservatives seek to deny me.  They would rather see me lying in a gutter, addicted to meth, and dying of HIV than a happy, healthy, productive member of society.  Because, in their minds, gay men by definition cannot be happy, healthy or productive.  I must be miserable and pitiable for my "sin."

And yet real conservatives – those who see the importance of marriage for social stability and are not motivated by fear or bigotry – should be the ones most adamant about marriage for gay men in particular. It is only if you see gay men as aliens to be ignored or cured that you can see marriage equality as a threat to society. Indeed it is only if you see gay people as inherently outside society that you can deny them the benefits of an institution that can literally save their lives and buttress their health.

It’s The Candidate, Stupid

Kristol parses a new poll:

The most striking finding in the Suffolk/7 News poll is that Brown has a 57 percent favorable/19 percent unfavorable rating. Coakley’s fav/unfav is 49/41. There are all kinds of difficulties with polling a special election, especially in terms of turnout—there are no real precedents from which to judge who’s really going to vote. Still, in a normal race, those fav/unfav numbers would suggest the contest is more likely to break wide open than to tighten. But that’s awfully hard to believe. And the Democratic assault on Brown this weekend will be massive.

This is about the awfulness of the candidacy of Martha Coakley and the arrogance of the Massachusetts Democratic establishment (whence, one might add, much of the leadership of the Human Rights Campaign is drawn.) The Dish's summary of her dreadful record and appalling campaign is here.