Some things just seem too silly for words — and music.
South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
The Cranbury Press Blog
E-mail me by clicking here.
Some things just seem too silly for words — and music.
South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
The Cranbury Press Blog
E-mail me by clicking here.
I think if you look up hypocrisy in the dictionary, you’ll find John McCain’s photo.
South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
A second Dispatches (two for the price of one!) is up, this one from today’s Cranbury Press. It is on the weak property tax relief offered instead of reform.
South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
I know I was in the minority on this point among liberals and progressives, but back when the Senate was preparing to vote on several Bush court nominees I wrote a column calling for the end of the Senate filibuster.
My argument was a simple one: The filibuster thwarts, rather than defends, democracy, giving the minority too much power over the Senate.
The filibuster is, as the self-professed “liberal Democrat” Timothy Noah wrote … on the online magazine Slate, a conservative instrument designed to thwart the will of the majority. The Los Angeles Times, in an editorial, echoes this: “The filibuster is a reactionary instrument that goes too far in empowering a minority of senators,” the paper wrote.
At the time, Democrats were threatening to use the method to prevent some noxious Bush nominees from rising to the federal bench. Liberals were calling loudly for all Democrats to stand firm, their 45-vote bloc allowing them to prevent the majority from closing out debate, which would mean that no vote could be taken and the judicial nominees would remain in limbo. (Disclosure: I had the same argument in an earlier column, before thinking the issue through.)
Republicans were livid and were calling for the “nuclear option” (a poor choice of words in a time of war), in which the party would just change the rules and eliminate the maneuver. Thanks to a group of so-called moderates, it never happened. A compromise was reached and some of the nominees were confirmed.
The compromise ended two debates — one on the judges and the other on the legitimacy of the filibuster.
The filibuster is back in the news these days, as the Republicans, now in the minority, are resorting to the very tactic they decried just two years ago in an effort to prevent debate over a nonbinding resolution opposing the Bush surge plan for Iraq.
Democrats should take note and remember their history. They may have successfully used the filibuster to keep some nominees from getting through, but conservatives also have been successful in the past — Southern Democrats used it from the mid-1950s to the mid-1960s to derail civil rights legislation.
Basically, if there were no filibuster, the Senate would be debating war and not whether to debate.
South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
I’ve avoided talking about the Libby trial because I just don’t have the energy. We all know there was a coverup of some sort, that the administration has been trafficking in secrets and that the constitution has been shredded. The trial, unfortunately, while interesting political theater, will not repair any of this or even confirm it.
If we are lucky, some of the bad stuff will come to light — but I doubt it. The story has been mishandled for too long, focusing on Joe Wilson and the personalities and not the consiratorial nature of all this. If Watergate had been covered in this manner, Nixon would probably still be president.
South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick