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The Economy, Entitlements and Welfare: The Democratic Position — A Secular and Rational Validation

Evans Liberal Politics
April 24, 2012

The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

The Economy, Entitlements and Welfare:
The Democratic Position –
A Secular and Rational Validation

Evans Liberal Politics, April 24, 2012, by Paul Evans:
I have written quite a few articles arguing for compassion towards our fellow man in the form of funding for entitlements, welfare, and the like. More often than not, the primary rationale I have used has been not only coming out of liberalism and liberal values, but also from Christianity. I took Jesus’ life, as recorded in the Gospels, and the way the early Christian community was run in the years after his resurrection, from Acts, as well as the concept of Logos, and tried to translate that into my own vision for society, which, as I see it, amounts to a basically liberal conception. I was trying to say that if we listened to the words of Jesus and saw how he lived his life on earth, and how the early church was run, it points to a model for living and for a society, an economy and a government which must necessarily be very caring towards all of our people.

photo of Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans against a background of white roses

However, I don’t think that one necessarily needs to take one’s model for society from the Gospels or from the model of the early church in order to justify a society and a government which acts as its brothers’ keeper and takes care of society’s less fortunate citizens. In fact, growing up, I was agnostic, really basically into my late forties (I am 55 now), and I have always tended to follow ideals which followed those of New Deal sorts of Democrats.

I believe that there are so very many ordinary citizens, both Christians and secular citizens, who simply do not understand the situation faced by America’s poor and even, currently, that faced by much of our middle class. There is a lot of suffering in America, and many Republicans seem to feel it is the fault of the less fortunate that they find themselves in the predicament which they are in.

The right wing media, financed by very rich hard line Republicans who do not want to pay for social programs, have brainwashed far too many ordinary Americans. I refer to people like Rush Limbaugh, who (I believe) made about $53 million in 2009 or 2010. And now it seems that Mitt Romney is going to be nominated for 2012, and is being pushed by some Republican spokespersons as someone completely in touch with the “heart and soul” of ordinary Americans. This is just pure garbage, and we need to understand the facts: Mitt Romney is worth about a half a billion dollars ($500,000,000.00). Further, he has investments in the tax free Cayman Islands and owns at least one Swiss bank account. He may not be as extreme as someone like Newt Gingrich, but he certainly is much richer, and he is FAR from being any sort of “ordinary American.”

I would argue that someone like that, who grew up in a wealthy family, simply cannot be likely to understand the problems of ordinary Americans and also, may not even truly care about us. It is easy to make speeches which seem to be reaching towards us, but what does he know about running out of money halfway through almost every month, scrambling or even begging friends for money for gas, or being unable to pay the phone bill? What experience does Romney have working with the poor, and interacting with them on any sort of level of equality whatsoever?

One seventh of us live in poverty, you know. Are we beneath the rest of Americans in worth?

Barack Obama worked with the unemployed factory workers of South Chicago, and tried to help give them a hand up out of poverty and to advocate for them. He grew up in a rather modest middle class family. I would argue that he must necessarily understand ordinary Americans better.

FDR grew up wealthy. But he showed, time after time, for nearly four terms as President, that his heart and soul was with the less fortunate of society. And for that, most Republicans hate him and almost all the legislation he enacted, and everything he stands for.

What are the facts? Right now, about 400 or so people in America own one half of this nation’s wealth. The lower 80 percent of us actually only own 17 percent of the wealth. We are HURTING.

They say that the unemployment rate is dropping, that in fact it has dropped about a percent, now. Fine. Let’s just look for a minute at what the situation was about a year ago. Certain of these statistics in particular are burned into my consciousness and actually, I would bet my nose that they simply have not changed that much. In February, 2011, for those Americans making $100,000 a year or more, the unemployment rate was 3.2 percent. I hope they didn’t suffer too badly. For those making $20,000 a year or less, the unemployment rate was actually 31 percent. So, with the unemployment picture finding five applicants for every job opening, who do you think was getting the jobs, and what sort of jobs were these?

What is the Republican solution to our current economic malaise? They want to cut spending, in particular entitlements and welfare, and to enact tax cuts which would almost certainly be in favor of the rich. Every since Ronald Reagan, the Republican line has been that tax cuts for the wealthy result in a “trickle down” effect which benefits everyone. This has been enthroned in the grand theory of “supply side economics.” But it’s bunk!


From Truman to Eisenhower the highest bracket tax rate was about 94 percent and the economy grew steadily at four percent, without deficits. Then the highest bracket was lowered to 75 percent. Still, the economy grew at about four percent. This continued, at decreasing tax rates under Nixon and Ford, with a downturn at the end of Ford’s term. We had a problem under Carter which I recall was called “stagflation.” The economy was contracting and there was inflation which reached about 17 percent.

Reagan swept into office under the banner of supply side economics, and two things did occur which stimulated the economy into growth. First the overall normal business cycle came around and the economy, as normally occurs after a recession, began to grow again. Normal recession, normal recovery. Secondly, tax cuts were enacted which, it could be argued, served as an effective stimulus to the economy. But the economy did not grow nearly as fast as it did under Reagan’s successor, Bill Clinton. Clinton raised taxes on the rich, and, what happened? We saw economic growth return to its “normal” post WWII rate of four percent a year, and a fairly severe budget deficit was entirely erased and turned into a surplus.

Let’s look at President Bush’s economy. In the first place, regulations which governed the banking and investment industry had just been trashed and these institutions then grew ascendant and arrogantly powerful, growing from about 14 percent of the economy to about 34 percent. This problem actually began in the Clinton administration but that most of the abuse was under Bush. There were then in fact two sets of tax cuts which strongly favored the rich. We saw economic growth of about 2 to 3 percent, followed by a severe turndown due to a typical Republican failure to regulate business. In this case the main problem was the investment industry, and the banking industry in particular with regard to the nearly unrestricted enactment of mortgage loans. Even after the picture for mortgages had deteriorated, the severe structural problem was concealed in the practice of issuing “derivatives,” as investments, which disguised bulk packages of trash mortgages in packages of corruptly highly rated bonds.

It was this combination which has put us in the severe downturn in which we find ourselves. It has not been a typical cyclical contraction but a severe structural problem in the economy because, mainly, America’s middle class lost the ability to finance loans, having lost any equity they had in their homes, assuming they were able to keep them. Progressive economists have argued that because of the severe and structural nature of the contraction, which some argue did in fact reach the level of a depression, only real stimulus of the overall economy by the government would pull us out of the slump. It has been shown factually, for example, that one dollar invested in infrastructure returns money into the economy at a significantly higher rate than does one dollar in tax cuts. But of course, the Republican line is that Obama’s stimulus accomplished little or nothing. Yet without it, we might have suffered far worse.

Recently among other things, the Republican majority in the House forced a continuation of the low Bush tax rates for the wealthy. Democrats wanted a return to the proven success of the Clinton tax rate levels, but did not have power to enact this. Has the continuation of low tax rates for the rich stimulated the economy into any sort of stiff growth? I would argue that, in fact knowing the facts about what tax cuts for the wealthy really are for (and it isn’t to stimulate economic growth), the almost single minded purpose behind a great deal of the proposals and enactments of Republicans during Barack Obama’s three plus years has been to PREVENT the economy from growing fast at all.

This is of course so that a “pro-business,” President can be elected who is a “true Christian” and has the “right sorts of social values.” In fact, Mitch McConnell has been quoted as saying at one point recently that he would allow no legislation to pass which would materially help Barack Obama to be reelected. This is the sort of “true patriotism” which the Republican Party demonstrates.

The leaders of the Republican Party don’t care how much ordinary Americans suffer so long as they can have full political power to do as they will. In other words, they will do whatever is necessary to have full control of the House, the Senate and the Presidency. And why should they care about ordinary Americans? Because of their – I might call it almost a pure capitalist religion, but, you know, “their sort” of capitalism – corporations are growing, Wall Street is again expanding, and the rich are seeing their stock portfolios once again grow fatter. While ordinary Americans suffer.
To sum it up, these Republicans are entirely for the wealthy, for big corporations, against any sort of prosperity so long as a Democratic President is in office, against continued aid to society’s less fortunate at current levels, and they lie about their true purposes. They are adamantly pro-life, but pro-life ends at birth. Children of the poor are supposed to get by as best their parents are able, and if this means babies and children suffer or even die, somehow this is the fault of the poor. This is not the Republican Party of Lincoln or Eisenhower. This is the truly patriotic and morally steadfast Republican Party at it’s absolute best, as it has been over about the last eleven or twelve years.

In conclusion, if we always favor the rich, even when in fact it has been shown that this does NOT stimulate the economy effectively, if we fail to enact or even roll back crucial regulations and laws which keep our economy functional and support the welfare of all of our people, and if we are against continuing aid to society’s less fortunate, I ask you: how moral is that? I would argue that purely secular and rational considerations point to a strong superiority in the liberal or Democratic positions about government, and that the current Republican agenda is in fact morally bankrupt.

These are some of the secular arguments which come to my mind in favor of basically Democratic positions about the economy, entitlements and welfare. ~ Paul

Comment by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: So fiscal conservatives want to slash Medicaid. OK, fine, note to world: many doctors and most dentists no longer accept Medicaid. I have a broken off tooth with inflamed gums and my jaw hurts. Well, there is only one Medicaid dentist in Wooster, serving a county of 105,000. So there’s a long wait, and many people just resort to going to the ER. See Hidden America: Medicaid’s Youngest Face Dental Crisis, ABC News, April 24, 2012, by Chris Cuomo:

With more than 16 million low-income U.S. children on Medicaid not receiving dental care — or even a routine exam — in 2009, according to the Pew Center on the States, dentists and ERs say they are treating very young patients with teeth blackened from decay and bacteria and multiple cavities.

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See “Supply Side Economics, the Bush Tax Cuts & John Boehner Completely Discredited,” Evans Liberal Politics, December 31, 2011, by Paul Evans.

See In Addition to Geithner, Republican Economists Also Argue That Tax Cuts Do Not Pay for Themselves, Center for Budget and Policy Research, August 8, 2012, by CEPR.

See Americans Believe in Tax Equity: Polls Show Americans Want Tax Fairness as Part of Deficit Fix, Center for American Progress, April 15, 2011, by James Hairston.

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Republican 2012 race ‘mathematically’ over: Graham

Evans Liberal Politics
Monday, March 12, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

Republican 2012 race
‘mathematically’ over: Graham

Republican 2012 race ‘mathematically’ over: Graham, Agence France-Presse on The Raw Story, March 11, 2012, by AFP, used with permission, quoted verbatim: Evans Liberal Politics is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news.

WASHINGTON — Mitt Romney has all but won the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, top senator Lindsey Graham said Sunday, agreeing with the candidate that “mathematically, this thing is about over.”


Romney has won 14 of 25 state-by-state votes that decide which Republican candidate takes on President Barack Obama in November, compared to eight wins for Rick Santorum and just two for former House speaker Newt Gingrich.

These victories have given Romney almost 40 percent of the 1,144 delegates needed to secure the nomination. He has 446 delegates, Santorum 199 and Gingrich 117, according to authoritative poll aggregator RealClearPolitics.

“Mathematically, Rick would have to win 75 percent of what remains,” Graham, a senior Republican who serves on various Senate committees, told ABC’s “This Week” program.

“He’s done an outstanding job, Rick has, of starting with almost nothing and being a real contender, and Newt’s come back from the dead two or three times,” Graham said. “But mathematically, this thing is about over, but emotionally it’s not.”

Graham was speaking ahead of two do-or-die contests for Gingrich on Tuesday in the conservative southern states of Mississippi and Alabama — although the former House speaker has pledged to stay in the race until the bitter end.

The Santorum camp argues that if he can consolidate the conservative vote behind him, at Gingrich’s expense, then he can still overtake the frontrunner before the race wraps up at the party’s end of August convention.

“I think everybody believes, if I could just get a one-on-one with Romney, I could win this thing,” said Graham.

“But if Romney does well, wins either Mississippi or Alabama and wins Illinois, then I think it’s virtually impossible for this thing to continue much beyond early May.”

Graham, who has yet to officially endorse any candidate, stopped short of calling on Santorum, Gingrich, or even veteran Texas congressman Ron Paul — who has yet to win even one state vote — to quit.

“It’s Romney’s to lose,” he said. “And, quite frankly, every time he had his back against the wall, he’s performed. And I like his chances, but the other two candidates have got to make that decision themselves.”

See Mary Matalin: Romney has ‘heart and soul’ of an average American, The Raw Story, March 11, 2012, by David Edwards: "Mitt Romney may have a net worth of a quarter of a billion dollars (AND a Swiss bank account, AND investments outside of the US in the tax-free Cayman Islands — PE), but he has the “heart and soul” of an average American, according to GOP strategist Mary Matalin." – Ha, ha, ha, ha ha ha. I laugh. – Paul Evans

Obama Behind Romney in New Poll

See Obama poll rating drops in Republican boost, Agence France-Presse on The Raw Story, March 12, 2012, by AFP:

President Barack Obama’s approval rating has plunged below 50 percent and he would be beaten by Republican frontrunner Mitt Romney if November’s US election were held today, a poll showed Monday.

The survey, by ABC News and The Washington Post, indicated that only 46 percent of Americans now approved of the way Obama is handling his job and 50 percent disapproved as he took a hit from rising gas prices.

The situation was a reversal from early February when 50 percent approved of the president’s performance and 46 percent disapproved.

The survey was released as the battleground for the Republican presidential nomination moved to the deep South for Tuesday’s primaries in Alabama and Mississippi.

If the presidential election were held today, the poll found that Romney would beat Obama 49 percent to 47 percent.

Agence France-Presse: "AFP journalists cover wars, conflicts, politics, science, health, the environment, technology, fashion, entertainment, the offbeat, sports and a whole lot more in text, photographs, video, graphics and online."

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Robert Reich: The Precarious Jobs Recovery

Evans Liberal Politics
March 10, 2012


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Robert Reich: The Precarious Jobs Recovery

The Precarious Jobs Recovery, Robert Reich.org, March 9, 2012, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

February’s 227,000 net new jobs – the third month in a row of job gains well in excess of 200,000 – is good news for President Obama and bad news for Mitt Romney.

Jobs are coming back fast enough to blunt Republican attacks against Obama on the economy and to rob Romney of the issue he’d prefer to be talking about in his primary battle against social conservatives in the GOP.

The Seven Biggest
Economic Lies

But jobs aren’t coming back fast enough to significantly reduce the nation’s backlog of 10 million jobs. That backlog consists of 5.3 million lost during the recession and another 4.7 million that needed to have been added just to keep up with the growth of the working-age population since the recession began.

If the American economy continues to produce jobs at the good rate it’s maintained over the last three months, averaging 245,000 per month, the backlog won’t be whittled down for another five years — long after Barack Obama finishes his second term, should voters grant him another.

But whether even that good rate continues depends largely on whether consumer demand can be revived. Spending by American consumers is 70 percent of U.S. economic activity. But so far, spending is anemic.

American consumers have replaced worn-out cars and appliances, but little else. They haven’t had the dough. Their wages are still falling, adjusted for inflation. The value of their homes – most consumers’ single biggest asset – continues to drop.

Save the Children Tax

Home values are down by an average of a third from their 2006 peak. Consumers understandably feel far poorer as a result. Declining home prices also mean consumers can’t use their homes as collateral for new loans, as they did before 2008. And even with low interest rates, refinancing is difficult.

Corporate profits are up but the money isn’t flowing to American workers. The ratio of profits to wages is the highest on record – since the government began keeping track in 1947. Not only has the median wage continued to drop, adjusted for inflation, but a far smaller share of working-age Americans is now employed (58.6 percent) than was employed five years ago (63.3 percent). Today’s employment-to-population ratio isn’t much higher than it was at its lowest point last summer, when it dropped to 58.2 percent.

The major driver of the U.S. economy over the past several months hasn’t been consumer spending. It’s been businesses rebuilding depleted inventories. Wholesalers increased their stockpiles again in February, bringing them up almost a quarter from their low in September 2009.

But businesses won’t continue to rebuild inventories unless consumers start buying again. big-time. And consumers won’t resume spending as they did before the recession until they’re far better off financially.

Yet how can they be sufficiently better off when their major asset has shrunk so much and when so few of the economic gains are going to them?

This is the central paradox at the heart of the American economy today. If it’s not resolved, the jobs recovery will stall, as it did last spring.

A year ago, remember, we had another three-month run of good job numbers. Last February, March, and April saw net gains of more than 200,000 jobs a month. But that job boomlet abruptly ended.

At the time most observers blamed the stall on external events – the Japanese earthquake, Europe’s gathering debt woes, and higher gas prices. In reality, it stalled because of the shallow pockets of American consumers.

Another stall this time might be blamed on any number of external events – slower growth in China and India, the unraveling of Europe’s debt-crisis deal, and higher gas prices.

But if another stall occurs, the real reason will be Americans once again ran out of money.

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MN GOP lawmaker compares food stamp recipients to wild animals

Evans Liberal Politics
Sunday, March 4, 2012


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MN GOP lawmaker compares
food stamp recipients to wild animals

MN GOP lawmaker compares food stamp recipients to wild animals, The Raw Story, March 3, 2012, by Andrew Jones, photo courtesy of The Raw Story, Commentary by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: Evans Liberal Politics is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news:

One Republican lawmaker in Minnesota expressed a peculiar but existing belief in GOP circles Friday afternoon, claiming that food stamps recipients are virtually similar to feeding wild animals.

photo of Minnesota GOP Representative Mary Franson who in a cold and calculating appeal to her base described Food Stamps recipients as like wild animals

State Rep. Mary Franson released a Youtube video describing her hopes of reducing the amount of time residents in Minnesota could stay on food stamps from five years to three.

“And here, it’s kind of ironic, I’ll read you this little funny clip that we got from a friend,” she said. “It says, ‘Isn’t it ironic that the food stamp program, part of the Department of Agriculture, is pleased to be distributing the greatest amount of food stamps ever. Meanwhile, the Park Service, also part of the Department of Agriculture, asks us to please not feed the animals, because the animals may grow dependent and not learn to take care of themselves.”

Franson is not the first Republican to make this comparison. In 2010, then South Carolina Lieutenant Governor Andre Bauer said exactly the same thing.

According to the USDA, Todd County in Franson’s district contains one of Minnesota’s highest poverty rates, with 16.9 precent of residents in 2010.

Republicans and Racist Class Warfare

Commentary by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: It would be a mistake to think of political figures such as Franson and South Carolina Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer (and others), who echo the exact same metaphor, as ignorant. (This is not quite the same thing as uneducated, is it? So for example Ms. Franson’s use of the long “a” in “agriculture” in her pronunciation in the video – twice. Is that the way they say it in Minnesota? The body of the video is actually great Republican PR.). At the level of state political figures, these people are generally very cold and calculating about public positions they take. (Democrats have to be too – it is simply what politicians have to do.)

At the national level, Republicans have, through the long-time use of political “framing” and spin — repeated over and over again — managed to convince their base, who are at least in part ordinary Americans without much political knowledge, that somehow Republicans are more Christian than are Democrats. (In reality, for example, just as many Republican lawmakers as Democrats are caught in public scandals for corruption such as influence peddling or sexual promiscuity or the use of prostitution, etc., at the state and national level. See The Record of Republican Corruption, LiberalsLikeChrist.org, no date.) In a similar process of indoctrination, they have managed to train their base that the poor are on welfare because they are lazy and that they are undeserving of our help and care (and, that most of them are black). Here’s another lie: that tax cuts for the rich help the economy. (See Supply Side Economics, The Bush Tax Cuts & John Boehner Completely Discredited, Evans Liberal Politics, December 31, 2011, by Paul Evans.)

Really, these lawmakers, especially at the national level, are rich Republican players, or tools or puppets of the rich — “wannabe’s,” you might say — and their appeal to the base is in no way ignorant, but cold and calculating. (Even though this comment may be questionable, please note: if you watch the video, you will see where Rep. Franson ends her video with a pitch for a sexual abuse website — what does that have to do with the rest of the subjects of the video, and how calculating an appeal is that?) The overall idea, insofar as I can see, is that if you claim a thing over and over again, and you do so as supposedly lily-white Christian Republican leaders, the ordinary Republican voter can be trained to believe almost anything. In reality, as knowledgeable liberals and progressives have been trying their best to get across, the GOP, and far too many Democratic Party leaders as well, are of, by and for the rich.

They couldn’t care less about ordinary Americans, much less America’s poor.

How Christian is that?

See Why ‘Welfare Queen’ Stories Will Never Die, Yahoo! Contributor Network, January 24, 2012, by Owen Rust:

John Blake at CNN discusses the return of Ronald Reagan’s “Welfare Queen” through the current presidential campaign of the three leading Republicans. Reagan brought up the “Welfare Queen” story in 1976 during his first presidential candidacy, and today critics contend Newt Gingrich, winner of the recent South Carolina GOP primary, is trying to bring back the stereotype through his assertions that Barack Obama is a “food stamp” president and that black people should “want a job” and not a “handout.”

Many people apparently think the unnamed “Welfare Queen” is a racist stereotype of a black woman. Blake discusses the allegation and insists Republicans will have to avoid “racially loaded messages” in the future, especially when nonwhite voters become the majority by the year 2050.

But is the “Welfare Queen” anecdote a racist stereotype that will erode as America becomes more diverse? No. That’s because the staying power of the “Welfare Queen” is not her alleged racial background but rather human nature itself (though many would argue that racism is itself part of human nature) — we rank, judge and place things on a spectrum.

We will always rank certain recipients of government assistance as more worthy than others. There will always be those we deem less worthy of receiving aid in the form of tax dollars. There are many things we all will inevitably use to deem an aid recipient as more of less worthy: Education, job status, number of children, relationship status, health and physical appearance, etc.

See The Food Stamp Fallacy, The Root, January 12, 2012, by Edward Wyckoff Williams: “When will Republicans be honest about who really gets the most out of welfare programs?”

See GOP Race-Baiting Masks Class Warfare, Salon on Alternet, January 29, 2012, by Daniel Denvir:

By demonizing some, the Republicans seek to discredit the safety net for the 99 percent.

It’s commonplace to note that Newt Gingrich’s dog-whistle appellation that Barack Obama is the “food stamp president” is both racist and politically cynical. But the stereotyping of black government dependency also serves the strategic end of discrediting the entire social safety net, which most Americans of all races depend on. Black people are subtly demonized, but whites and blacks alike will suffer.

See Screwing Over Urban America: Why the GOP’s Top Contenders Hate Cities, Salon on AlterNet, January 3, 2012, by Daniel Denvir.

WATCH: Video from Youtube, which was published on March 2, 2012.

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Santorum accuses Romney of rigging Michigan primary

Evans Liberal Politics
March 3, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
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Santorum accuses Romney
of rigging Michigan primary

Business Insider logo used as a link to their website

Busineess Insider on The Raw Story, March 2, 2012, by Grace Wyler, used with permission, excerpt quoted verbatim: Evans Liberal Politics is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news.

The Michigan Republican Party awarded Mitt Romney an official delegate victory today, granting him 16 of the state’s 30 delegates just one day after the tally showed Romney and Rick Santorum tied with 15 delegates each.

USA TODAY

The Santorum campaign is now accusing Romney’s team of using “political thuggery” to “rig” the delegate count.

The issue is over the allocation of two “at-large” delegates: Romney and Santorum each won seven of the Michigan’s 14 Congressional districts, splitting those delegates 14-14. The remaining delegates were originally supposed to be awarded proportionally based on the popular vote, which would have given each candidate one more delegate. But on Thursday, Michigan Republican Party officials voted to change the rules and give both at-large delegates to Romney.

The Santorum campaign basically blew a gasket, calling the vote a “backroom deal” brokered by Romney supporters and “people affiliated with the Romney campaign.”

“There’s just no way this is happening,” Santorum communications director Hogan Gidley said in a statement. “We’ve all heard rumors that Mitt Romney was furious that he spent a fortune in his home state, had all the political establishment connections and could only manage a tie Rick Santorum. But we never thought the Romney campaign would try to rig the outcome of an election by changing the rules after the vote. This kind of back room dealing political thuggery just cannot and should not happen in America.”

In a last-minute conference call with reporters tonight, Santorum campaign advisors said they were sending a memo asking the Republican National Committee to “immediately intervene.”

“We’re probably less concerned with the one delegate that happened to move and more concerned that any entity involved in this would go and do something so anti-to the American voter,” Santorum strategist John Brabender said on the call. “To me the desperation is somebody who lost the state, then tried to change the rules…It goes right to heart of character.”

It appears that Santorum’s campaign expected something like this would occur. Campaign officials were quick to announce the delegate tie on Wednesday, before state party officials met to determine the formal tally.

On a conference call with reporters yesterday, Brabender said the campaign was “trying to avoid another Iowa.” ….

Read the full article here.

Gaiam.com, Inc

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Listening Post – Drums of war: The Media on Iran, Syria and in Libya

Evans Liberal Politics
February 25, 2012


Listening Post – Drums of war:
The Media on Iran, Syria and in Libya


Commentary by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: Below is a fairly long (25:05) video produced by AlJazeera, the independent Arabic news operation which does a good job with the English language versions of its news and has a global reach. In my experience, they have been fairly unbiased as a news source. So when AlJazeera does a segment describing the current media frenzy regarding an imagined necessity of going to war with Iran, and comparing that to the run-up to the Iraq war, it sends chills down my spine. And it should for you, too.

If you remember,there was absolutely no need to go to war with Iraq. There were no weapons of mass destruction, and even the last U.N. inspectors who had been in Iraq (not too long before the war) stated that, while there was no transparency in the inspection process, there also was no evidence of a dangerous capacity in regard to WMD. Moreover, Saddam Hussein (the dictator in Iraq) was a secular Muslim, who hated fundamentalist groups such as Al Qaeda. There was no Al Qaeda in Iraq before the U.S. invaded.

Do you remember all the speeches Bush made about WMD and “yellowcake” going to Iraq from Africa and “significant contacts” between Iraq and Al Qaeda? Do you remember the sham speech that Colin Powell was conned into making at the U.N., which gave us the necessary backing to go to war with Iraq?

In this video, the second and third sections are about the media in Syria and the altogether new, free media in Libya.

Please at least watch the first part, describing the building media hysteria about going to war with Iran. Going to war with Iran is a much bigger deal, than was going to war with Iraq, too. You would see the whole Middle East region go up in flames. Israel would be fighting a war on three fronts, against Hamas, Hezbollah and Syria. Probably the U.S. and likely Saudi Arabia would be fighting Iran inside Iraq. (Iraq and Iran share a 906 mile (1458km) border.)

It is also likely that it would be necessary to re-instate the draft, and that gasoline prices would double, destroying the economy’s fragile recovery and sending America deep into an economic depression.

There is no evidence that Iran’s nuclear enrichment program has reached the level of 90 percent purity, necessary to produce an atomic weapon. The last news I read about it had their enrichment level at 20 percent, which is a level consistent with medical uses.

One fifth of the world’s oil passes through the 21 mile-wide Straits of Hormuz, adjacent to Iran. There are two (and only two) main Saudi oil terminuses and Iran has 1,000 or more ballistic missiles. Do you think we could put in a sufficient number of Patriot missile batteries so that the Saudi oil terminuses remained safe? Likewise, Israel has only two major cities, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. So that would give Iran only four primary targets for 1,000 or 1,500 ballistic missiles.

Folks, do we really want to do this?

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State Attorneys General Sue Obama Administration Over Birth Control Rule (Updated)

Evans Liberal Politics
February 25, 2012


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and US Politics

State Attorneys General Sue Obama Administration
Over Birth Control Rule (Updated)

State Attorneys General Sue Obama Administration Over Birth Control Rule, The Raw Story, February 23, 2012, by Eric W. Dolan, quoted verbatim, used with permission: Evans Liberal Politics is happy to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news, UPDATED, with poll results, below:

Seven state attorneys general have filed a lawsuit against the Obama administration that seeks to block the implementation of new federal government rules regarding contraception coverage.

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The attorneys general of Florida, Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas, along with some Catholic organizations, said in their lawsuit that the new rule violates the First Amendment.

In recent weeks, a controversy has erupted over the policy, which requires virtually all private insurance policies to cover family planning, including female contraceptives, essentially guaranteeing near universal access to birth control once all the provisions of the Affordable Care Act are implemented.

“Obamacare’s latest mandate tramples the First Amendment’s Freedom of Religion and compels people of faith to act contrary to their convictions,” said Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott. “The President’s so called ‘accommodation’ was nothing but a shell game: the mandate still requires religious organizations to subsidize and authorize conduct that conflicts with their religious principles.”

The White House offered to change the rules by exempting religion-related organizations with moral objections. Instead, the insurance companies would be required provide those services free of charge. Republicans have derided the compromise as an “accounting gimmick.”

The lawsuit alleges that the proposed compromise is too narrow because it does not exempt businesses and organizations that primarily serve or employ persons who do not share their religious tenets.

The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court of Nebraska.

According to a Quinnipiac University national poll released Thursday, 54 percent of Americans approve of Obama’s compromise concerning insurance coverage for birth control. Thirty-eight percent disapprove. Women are slightly more likely than men to approve of the compromise, while white Catholics are split 46 percent to 48 percent. Not surprisingly, Democrats are much more likely to approve of the compromise than Republicans.

Eric W. Dolan has served as an editor for Raw Story since August 2010, and is based out of San Diego, California. He grew up in the suburbs of Chicago and received a Bachelor of Science from Bradley University. Eric is also the publisher and editor of PsyPost. You can follow him on Twitter @ewdolan.

Also Watch Jon Stewart – The Daily Show: The Vagina Ideologues, February 14, 2012.

You Are Especially Encouraged to Read Rethinking the Abortion Debate from a Liberal Christian Perspective (Updated), Evans Liberal Politics, May 13, 2011, by Paul Evans.

UPDATE: See Contraception debate divides swing voters, according to new Gallup poll, The Ticket on Yahoo News, February 24, 2012, by Olivier Knox:

The fight over whether religious-based employers should provide birth control coverage as part of their health plans sharply divides Americans, six in ten of whom say they have been following the volatile debate on the issue, according to a new a href=”http://www.gallup.com/poll/152963/Contraception-Debate-Divides-Americans-Including-Women.aspx” target=”_blank”>Gallup poll.

Overall, 48 percent of Americans say they back religious leaders who object to extending such coverage against 45 percent who say they back President Barack Obama’s administration.

Believe what you will about Gallup’s numbers, but you owe it to yourselves to also see: Poll: Most back White House birth control rule, Politico, February 23, 2012, by MJ Lee:

A slim majority of Americans approve of President Barack Obama’s recent change to the administration’s rule that mandated religiously affiliated institutions offer free contraception coverage to their employees, according to a new poll Thursday.

More than half of American voters, 54 percent, said they approve of Obama’s plan to allow faith-affiliated employers to refrain from offering free birth control to employees while mandating that it be covered by insurers. Thirty-eight percent said they disapprove of the plan, a Quinnipiac survey found.

Paul Evans: Looking at these two poll results, given that both pollsters are usually reliable and unbiased, I would say there has to be a problem with the methodology in one or the other. Here are still two more polls you may want to take a look at on contraception:

See Support Is Found for Birth Control Coverage and Gay Unions, The New York Times, February 14, 2012, by Marjorie Connelly.

Recommended: In Polls, Obama Wins on Contraception Compromise, Catholics Hold Steady, The Daily Beast, February 19, 2012, by Douglas Schoen.

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