Tag Archives: language

Chomsky on Post-Midterm America

Noam Chomsky: Liberal-conservative divide no more than an illusion amongst ordinary Americans. Bio Noam Chomsky has written and lectured widely on linguistics, philosophy, intellectual history, contemporary issues, international affairs and U.S. foreign policy. His works include: Aspects of the Theory of Syntax; Cartesian Linguistics; Sound Pattern of English (with Morris Halle); Language and Mind; American Power and the New Mandarins; At War with Asia; For Reasons of State; Peace in the Middle East?; Reflections on Language; The Political Economy of Human Rights, Vol. I and II (with E.S. Herman); Rules and Representations; Lectures on Government and Binding; Towards a New Cold War; Radical Priorities; Fateful Triangle; Knowledge of Language; Turning the Tide; Pirates and Emperors; On Power and Ideology; Language and Problems of Knowledge; The Culture of Terrorism; Manufacturing Consent (with E.S. Herman); Necessary Illusions; Deterring Democracy; Year 501; Rethinking Camelot: JFK, the Vietnam War and US Political Culture; Letters from Lexington; World Orders, Old and New; The Minimalist Program; Powers and Prospects; The Common Good; Profit Over People; The New Military Humanism; New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind; Rogue States; A New Generation Draws the Line; 9-11; and Understanding Power. His most recent book is called “Gaza in Crisis: Reflections on Israel’s War Against the Palestinians” published in November of 2010. added by: treewolf39

Is Sarah Palin the ‘New McCarthy’?

Trumka Says Palin Is ‘New McCarthy’ – Her Language Foments Violence http://www.theblaze.com/stories/video-trumka-says-palin-is-new-mccarthy-her-lang… added by: ibrake4rappers13

The Salt of the Earth – Struggle of People Who Became Immigrants Because America Took Their Land

Salt of the Earth – Herbert Biberman (1954) Pel

Emails Refute James Cameron’s Reason for Cancelling Global Warming Debate

E-mail messages obtained by NewsBusters refute claims that multi-millionaire filmmaker James Cameron cancelled a debate with prominent global warming skeptics because they weren’t as famous as he is. As NewsBusters reported Monday, a debate had been scheduled and placed on the program for last weekend’s AREDay summit in Aspen, Colorado, featuring internet publisher Andrew Breitbart, Sen. James Inhofe’s (R-Okla.) former communications director Marc Morano, and documentarian Ann McElhinney.  Within the past 36 hours, event organizers have absurdly claimed that since Cameron wanted to match wits with either Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin, or Inhofe, he decided to pull out of the debate when this didn’t happen. E-mail messages between the prospective participants and Cameron’s representative paint an entirely different picture.  To begin our story, Richard Greene, the man that negotiated the particulars with the skeptics, sent the following regrets to the prospective participants some time Saturday (h/t Big Hollywood ): Dear Andrew, Larry, Marc and Anne [sic], Here is the final decision in what has been, without a doubt, a very challenging road. There will be no debate as originally envisioned and discussed . . . for now. Instead, AREDAY and I offer the three of you (or two or even just one) the FULL platform – 5:30 – 7:00 pm Paepke Auditorium on The Aspen Institute campus . . .with FULL video and audio rights – to share “the other side” of the climate change and energy debate with the assembled notable in the environmental community. James Cameron will not participate. Again, this is my fault and my responsibility. Way back in April James authorized me to set up a debate with either Glenn Beck or Senator Inhofe. As Matt Dempsey will tell you, we tried very hard to get something done for Earth Day and then continued to talk. I communicated that the “denier” team was representing and indirectly chosen by Sen. Inhofe’s office (as Matt had 100% endorsed Marc for that role) but it somehow, given James’ travel, literally to Siberia, was not clear that Sen. Inhofe or someone of his public stature would not be involved. As a result, despite James’ total willingness to engage, he has been universally advised to wait for the time that Senator Inhofe or Governor Palin or Glenn Beck are willing and able to engage in this important debate. Best, Richard Greene For those unable to read through the lines, this was a classic CYA letter, although the A being covered wasn’t necessarily apparent. For some background, the “Larry” in the greeting is Larry Solov, Breitbart’s business partner. As for Greene, according to his biography at the Huffington Post: Richard Greene is an attorney, political and communication strategist, author of the Prentice Hall coffee table book, “Words That Shook The World: 100 Years of Unforgettable Speeches and Events” and Host of “Hollywood CLOUT!” on Air America Radio (Monday – Friday at 6 – 8 pm Pacific/9 – 11 pm Eastern, www.AirAmerica.com and on the air in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington DC, Detroit, Seattle, Santa Fe and elsewhere). He is also the Founder of a 501(c)(3) corporation that runs high school competitions to find and cultivate the next generation of great speakers and leaders in America. (www.WordsThatShookTheWorld.com). Greene has recently been collaborating with Cameron on Words That Shook The World events as reported by Bing Community and pictured at DayLife.com. With that as pretext, the following e-mail correspondence chronicles recent negotiations concerning debate rules and particulars (e-mail addresses scrubbed for privacy): In a message dated 8/16/2010 11:32:52 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, morano@xxxx.com writes: Hi Richard, Please give us your proposal for the format and rules of the proposed debate. The bios and press release are currently unacceptable as proposed. I have copied Andrew Breitbart’s business partner Larry Solov on this email to bring Breitbart directly into the loop. Let’s get this squared away. Thanks Marc Greene quickly responded: From: RHGreene@xxxx.com Sent: Monday, August 16, 2010 3:36 PM To: morano@xxxx.com; larry@xxxx.com; annmcelhinney@xxxx.com Cc: info@areday.net; sally.ranney@xxxx.com Subject: Aspen Debate – Important Details Dear Marc, Andrew/Larry and Anne, Very much looking forward to our Sunday debate. Here are the important details as of this moment. Richard 1. Press Release In order for us to have press we need to get this out asap. Please get me, by 4:30 pm Eastern, the following: a) Any changes you need to YOUR bios. We will include everyone in the final release. b) A written sign off on the press release title and copy. See below for the current iteration that has attempted to incorporate Marc’s feedback. Notice the urgency: “In order for us to have press we need to get this out asap.” Sounds like a done deal, doesn’t it? As such, on Monday, August 16, this debate was all a go with some particulars left to be ironed out. Greene included the format of the encounter: Introductory 5:30 – 5:31 Welcome by Moderator 5:31 – 5:40 Introduction of “James Cameron Team” members and a 2 minute per member “Opening Statement” 6:40 – 5:49 Introduction of “Andrew Breitbart Team” members and a 2 minute per member “Opening Statement” B. The 10 Issues 5:49 – 6:34 Moderator will raise, one by one, a total of 10 issues and will toss each issue to one team for a 2 minute response, and then the other team for a 2 minute rebuttal. Each team will decide, on their own, the member or members that will use the 2 minute timeT slot. Time: :30 second intro of the issue, 4 minute debate time per issue x 10 = 45 minutes, total. C. Questions from the Audience 6:34 – 6: 54 Questions from the Audience. Each side will choose the people to ask questions in alternating fashion. The moderator will not make these choices. D. Closing Statements 6:54 – 7:00 Each side will get 3 minutes, total, for closing statements, to be distributed as one minute per member or 3 minutes for one member or however the side decides. Next, he added a press release: James Cameron vs. Andrew Breitbart “The Great Climate Debate” at AREDAY Conference in Aspen Looming man-made crisis or a manufactured crisis? Sunday, August 22 Aspen, COLO… AVATAR Director and Producer James Cameron will face conservative pundit Andrew Breitbart in what is being called “The Great Climate Debate,” on Sunday, August 22, at 5:30 – 7:00 pm in Aspen, Colorado, as the culmination of the American Renewable Energy Day (AREDAY) Summit. Cameron and Breitbart will each be joined by climate and energy experts and advocates and will address questions of whether climate change is real, a horrific threat to humanity and, more specifically, whether human caused carbon emissions are responsible for extreme weather around the world, acidification of the oceans, the melting of the polar ice caps and glaciers and other environmental phenomena. The panelists for the debate will be: (please edit your blurb) 1. James Cameron, Underwater explorer, having spent over 3,000 hours, in submersibles and scuba diving, observing the devastation of the oceans first hand. Writer and Director of the environmentally themed film, AVATAR. 2. Dr. Julienne Stroeve, Research Scientist for The National Snow and Ice Data Center, specializing in remote sensing of snow and ice in the visible, infrared, and microwave wavelengths. Personally conducted research on Kangerlussuaq Glacier in Greenland and presented her findings and research at the UNESCO international experts meeting in Monaco and many other forums and featured on The Discovery Channel and the History Channel documentary “Underwater Universe” Dr. Graciela Chichilnisky is a world renown economist and mathematician and the author of the carbon market of the Kyoto Protocol that became international law in 2005. She also created the concept of Basic Needs voted by 153 nations at the 1993 Earth Summit to be the cornerstone of Sustainable Development, and in 1996 created the formal theory of Sustainable Development that is used worldwide. The “Climate Change is Not Real and/or Not Significantly Man Made and and/or Not A Significant Threat to Humanity” Side: 1. Marc Merano [sic], Former Communications Director for Senator James Inhofe, Executive Editor, “Climate Depot”, a website dedicated to challenging the “Climate Con”. 2. Ann McElhinney, Irish Journalist, Writer, Producer of Documentary Film attacking Al Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth”, “Not Evil – Just Wrong”. Most popular speaker (after Limbaugh and Ann Coulter) during 2010 CPAC Convention where she told James Cameron to grow-up, accusing the film Avatar of being an “anti-American, anti-capitalist, anti-mining celebrity guest. 3. Andrew Breitbart – Climate Change denier, Conservative blogger (www.Breitbart.com), Columnist for The Washington Times, author, “Hollywood, Interrupted: Insanity Chic in Babylon”, frequent Fox News Channel commentator and recipient of the Reed Irvine Accuracy in Media Award during the 2010 CPAC conference in Washington, D.C., Keynote speaker at the First National Tea Party Convention in 2010 and the journalist who released the edited videotape of Shirley Sherrod’s allegedly racist speech. Notice some of the wording in the bios was less than flattering. For instance, Morano’s name was misspelled, McElhinney was quoted as bashing one of the featured guests, and Breitbart was credited for releasing the Shirley Sherrod tape. Not very gracious, wouldn’t you agree?   On the other hand, both “captains” had clearly chosen their teams, and submitted bios to Greene. As he forwarded this proposed press release to Breitbart et al, isn’t it safe to assume Cameron and his participants were also kept in the loop? Greene was, after all, acting as the coordinator for this event. Wouldn’t it have been in keeping for him to apprise Cameron and Company of how this was going, and get their acceptance of the proposed press release? In fact, Greene later commented about how he was waiting on Cameron to approve the wording. As such, how is it possible that Breitbart, Sovol, Morano, and McElhinney knew on Monday who they’d be facing in this debate, but Cameron – who was having this set up by one of his representatives – didn’t? Regardless, Morano quickly responded: In a message dated 8/16/2010 2:27:53 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, morano@xxxx.com writes: For the title, let’s delete “looming.” How about: Global Warming: A man-made crisis or a manufactured crisis? My bio as follows: 1.Marc Morano, Senior Aide to Senator James Inhofe and Climate Researcher for Senate Environment & Public Works Committee. Currently Executive Editor, For “Climate Depot”, a website dedicated to exposing the manufactured “Climate Con”. We would also like to have our own film crew present to tape the proceedings. As for debate rules, my only further suggestion would be not to be held to 10 points. If a topic is getting hot and showing great energy, let’s stick with it for another round instead of changing the subject. This of course would be at your discretion. Even if we only get to 7 or 8 questions, we would end up having better back and forth. I am not ready to sign off on press release yet. Greene responded the next day: From: RHGreene@xxxx.com Sent: Tuesday, August 17, 2010 8:51 AM To: morano@xxxx.com Cc: info@areday.net; RHGreene@xxxx.com Subject: Re: Aspen Debate – Important Details Hi Marc, I agree about keeping things more open ended. A light went off when I received Ann’s revisions relative to the scope of the debate. Would like to suggest that, to make the debate even more relevant to the media and the country . . . and to keep it even further away from wonky, statistical, boring banter . . . that we focus mainly on the economic issues that are relevant to the Mid Term Elections, i.e., whether adopting “alarmist” climate change legislation will destroy jobs and the economy, the recent Harry Reid Senate energy bill, the $20 Billion Fund from BP and whether we should raise the cap on oil company liability (the Menedez Bill), and, also, a solution oriented discussion on how we deal with energy in the future. I’m going to assume that this is also right up your alley. Please submit some questions/issues on these areas that I can pose to the James Cameron side. Thanks. Pretty strange, don’t you think? This was supposed to be a debate about global warming, and suddenly the coordinator wanted to talk about the midterm elections, Reid’s energy bill, BP, and raising the cap on oil company liability. Apparently confused by this change in subject matter, Morano promptly responded: From: Marc Morano-ClimateDepot.com [mailto:Morano@xxxx.com] Sent: Tuesday, August 17, 2010 9:27 AM To: ‘RHGreene@xxxx.com’ Cc: ‘info@areday.net’ Subject: RE: Aspen Debate – Important Details Hi Richard, NOOOO!!!! Please not a wonky energy debate. The core of the debate should be about climate science, and the impacts of warming on the world’s poor and the impacts of alleged solutions to world’s poor. Please no gulf oil spill or energy bill. BORING! Let’s keep this to global warming with 25% or less devoted to energy, BP, etc! No policy debate! Let’s debate the state of global warming science in 2010!!! Thanks Marc After a phone discussion with Greene, Morano sent the following: In a message dated 8/17/2010 8:36:29 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, Morano@xxxx.com writes: Hi Richard, After our phone call, my team is fine with this change in debate format. Let’s go ahead and finalize this and as the energy debate you suggest. Can we get out press release announcing this asap? We are confirmed for the changes you suggest. Thanks Marc The following day, Greene responded with an updated press release not much different than the prior one: From: RHGreene@xxxx.com Date: Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 5:45 PM Subject: Hi Marc – Current Press Release To: Morano@xxxx.com Cc: info@areday.net, annmcelhinney@xxxx.com Hi. We’re just waiting for James to land from Siberia to approve the language. Here’s the current press release. Richard So, on Wednesday, Greene was just waiting for Cameron to approve the language in the press release. Nothing at all about him approving the participants. Yet, on Friday, after phone discussions with Solov the previous evening and despite the two sides appearing close to finalizing the deal, Greene again changed course: On Aug 20, 2010, at 4:56 AM, RHGreene@xxxx.com wrote: Hi Larry, Nice to talk with you last night. James has rejected the idea of NOT having video. He wants video. We are discussing another idea that I’d like to have you vet with Andrew which I think may even be better for everyone’s reputation, including Andrew’s, than the debate we have planned. What do you two think of an intelligent “Roundtable” where all 6 sit around with a glass of wine or coffee and have a serious conversation in order to try to find some common , ground. Instead of spinning around and around in an adversarial way with both parties claiming “victory”, what about honoring all the participants as “Thought Leaders”, fully listening to their perspectives and showing the American people that both Andrew Breitbart and James Cameron, in their own way and from an authentic perspective, really care about their country. It would even allow Marc Merano [sic] to be more understood and to be considered as such. It’s an easy adjustment. We all sit around and everyone gets their 2 minutes to share their perspective but the goal is to try to come to some joint way to move forward on these issues rather than a Gladiator approach trying to kill the other side. Thoughts? Richard A keen eye should detect mischief afoot. First of all, roughly 60 hours before showtime, the coordinator proposed completely changing the format.  Suddenly, reputations are of a concern “including Andrew’s.”  Greene wants to “[honor] all the participants as ‘Thought Leaders'” and “[show] the American people that both Andrew Breitbart and James Cameron, in their own way and from an authentic perspective, really care about their country.” So much for debate. Would this end with the participants singing “Kumbaya?” And what about this insult to Morano, “It would even allow Marc Merano [sic] to be more understood and to be considered as such.” For those that have seen Morano speak either in person or on video – I’ve witnessed both – he’s quite a commanding and effective orator that always makes his positions both interesting and understandable. Surpised by this correspondence, Solov replied three times in the next hour: On Aug 20, 2010, at 7:33 AM, Laurence Solov wrote: Richard – I have asked our “team” and will get back to you ASAP. I assume from your response/proposal that we can film it, too, but please correct me if that is not a correct assumption. Larry Solov On Aug 20, 2010, at 7:54 AM, Laurence Solov wrote: Also, is it moderated? By whom? Is there Q&A from audience? Is it each person gets 2 minutes to speak, then talk back and forth more free form, or questions asked by a moderator? How long? Larry Solov From: Laurence Solov Date: August 20, 2010 8:29:42 AM PDT To: RHGreene@xxxx.com Cc: Breitbart Andrew Subject: Re: James Cameron and Video/Roundtable Richard – I’ve talked to our “team.” Please call me ASAP. This is workable if we just nail down a few specifics – see my questions below. But, to make it happen, we need to “finalize” this by, say, noon PST. People have planes to catch, videographers to arrange, and the press release needs to incorporate the language changes we gave you and to get out, Chardonnay or Pinot or maybe a nice Bordeaux, etc. I do not have a phone for you in Aspen. So, please call as soon as you get this. Thanks. Larry Solov The “see my questions below” referred to Solov’s previous message wherein he asked: Also, is it moderated? By whom? Is there Q&A from audience? Is it each person gets 2 minutes to speak, then talk back and forth more free form, or questions asked by a moderator? How long? Readers should bear in mind that it was now late Friday morning on the East Coast, and folks scheduled to get on airplanes in less than 24 hours still didn’t know whether this event was going to take place. Sensing the growing urgency, Solov had several telephone conversations with Greene to finalize the particulars so that he could instruct the participants to head to Aspen. By late Friday evening his time – Solov is based in the Los Angeles area – he had ironed out the final details with Greene, and sent the following e-mail message to confirm everything: From: Laurence Solov Date: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 at 10:08 PM Subject: Aspen Debate To: RHGreene@xxxx.com Cc: Breitbart Andrew , Ann Mcelhinney , phelim mcaleer , Marc Morano Richard: You have revised your proposal to the following: 1. A private debate – no video or audio, no press, not open to the public (not even the conference organizers would be allowed tape it); A. Introductory 5:30 – 5:31 Welcome by Moderator 5:31 – 5:40 Introduction of “James Cameron Team” members and a 2 minute per member “Opening Statement” 6:40 – 5:49 Introduction of “Andrew Breitbart Team” members and a 2 minute per member “Opening Statement” B. The 10 Issues 5:49 – 6:34 Moderator will raise, one by one, a total of 10 issues and will toss each issue to one team for a 2 minute response, and then the other team for a 2 minute rebuttal. Each team will decide, on their own, the member or members that will use the 2 minute timeT slot. Time: :30 second intro of the issue, 4 minute debate time per issue x 10 = 45 minutes, total. (Richard – I will add, based on our previous conversation, that you told me you intend to provide the questions before the debate, no later than, say, 5:00 pm Saturday the 21st – Aspen time) C. Questions from the Audience 6:34 – 6: 54 Questions from the Audience. Each side will choose the people to ask questions in alternating fashion. The moderator will not make these choices. D. Closing Statements 6:54 – 7:00 Each side will get 3 minutes, total, for closing statements, to be distributed as one minute per member or 3 minutes for one member or however the side decides. (or, the more interactive format Marc suggested) 2. Romm to replace Stroeve; 3. A 20 – 30 minute exclusive interview by our side of Mr. Cameron that can be videotaped. Without rehashing the long history of trying to put this together, Andrew, Ann and Marc are disappointed that they were originally told they would be permitted to video a public debate, but are now being told that a condition of going forward is that the debate be private and that no video or audio will be permitted. Having said that, they will accept the invitation, and look forward to the event and the interview. Larry Solov At this point, Solov informed Morano and McElhinney that the debate was a go, and the former got on a plane heading to Colorado only to find out upon landing a few hours later the debate had been cancelled. On Monday evening, Environment & Energy News reported that someone involved in this event blamed the debate’s cancellation on the participants (subscription required): But Chip Comins, founder and executive producer of the event, said the details of the debate had never been confirmed and accused Morano of distorting the truth. Organizers had considered holding a climate debate pitting Cameron against high-profile foes like former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R), conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh, and FOX News hosts Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity, Comins said. “Morano is not at James Cameron’s level to debate, and that’s why that didn’t happen,” Comins said. “Cameron should be debating someone who is similar to his stature in our society.” Imagine that. After weeks of negotiations, it was decided that Breitbart, Morano, and McElhinney were not up to Cameron’s stature. Then why did Greene go through this tedious process with the prospective participants – including numerous e-mail messages and phone calls – if this were the case? Shouldn’t that decision have been made quite some time ago? According to Morano, Greene had initially contacted Inhofe’s office hoping the Senator would be interested in debating Cameron. As this was not going to work, Greene was referred to Morano. At that point, Morano recommended Breitbart and McElhinney as his debate partners, and the negotiations began. In his view, there was never any pushback from Greene after this point about Cameron wanting to match wits with personalities other than those already on the table. Instead, as he has written at Climate Depot, Morano was told by event organizers that once Climate Progress’s Joe Romm got involved in the discussion, he convinced Greene that having Cameron debate Morano would be a big mistake.  As Romm got absolutely demolished by Morano in a debate last April, we can understand why he’d prefer nobody else on his side go up against him. With this in mind, Greene’s job appears to have first been to continually change the format of the debate while making more and more absurd demands hoping Breitbart et al would give up and quit. When this didn’t happen, the fallback was a preposterous cover story that the participants just weren’t up to Cameron’s high-standing in the society. What a crock! Of course, all of this points to the continued obfuscation concerning this issue by climate alarmists.  For years, folks like Nobel Laureate Al Gore, his minions James Hansen and Gavin Schmidt of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, and Romm have been trying to convince the public the global warming debate is over. At the same time, climate realists nee skeptics have been arguing the debate hasn’t yet begun because those on the other side refuse to do so. This latest episode with Cameron et al acts to further prove this, for in the end there likely never was going to be a debate at AREDay in Aspen. As Romm demonstrated last April, his side looks foolish when their dogma is challenged by folks that aren’t members of the choir. The only possible victory for the alarmists in such encounters is for them simply not to happen.

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Emails Refute James Cameron’s Reason for Cancelling Global Warming Debate

Amanpour Elevates British Journalist Who Sees ‘Culture of Hate’ in U.S., Time to Divide Up Our ‘Pie’

Christiane Amanpour elevated a liberal British journalist, with little U.S. television experience, to the This Week roundtable where she presumed the government must run the economy and distribute the economic pie while she took pot shots at how the efforts to control illegal immigration proves America’s descent into a “culture of hate.” Gillian Tett , U.S. Managing Editor of the London-based Financial Times newspaper, began by insisting, that to respond to stagnant employment numbers: “The big question now is can the economy keep growing if the government doesn’t keep pumping in money?” Applying a European economic model, Tett fretted “that so much of America in the last few decades has been about trying to focus on growing the pie, not worrying about how to divide it up” as Americans didn’t “worry about social equity and things like that.” But, showing little faith that Obamanomics will work, she ruminated, “if we are entering a period when the pie is stagnant, the question that’s going to be very political is how do you divide that pie up?” In her final remark on unemployment, she warned “you really are starting to see the beginnings of a culture of hate, of finger-pointing, of scape-goating.” Minutes later, however, in a discussion of the proposal to modify the 14th amendment to end automatic citizenship through birth, Tett assumed those dark days have already arrived: “It’s quick fix soundbite politics in this culture of hate and this, you know, scape-goating that’s going on right now.” Others on Amanpour’s panel: Politico’s John Harris, New Yorker’s George Packer and former Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson. Last week, on reviewing Amanpour’s debut: “ Amanpour Slums to Take on U.S. Politics, Flummoxed Pelosi’s Victories Aren’t Better Appreciated ” Comments from Gillian Tett during the roundtable on the August 8 This Week with Christiane Amanpour: > I think it’s important to realize that it illustrates is that the President, right now, is at an important juncture point. For the last year, we’ve had some growth in the American economy, but much of that’s been due to government aid, government spending, or what economists call an inventory rebuild – basically, companies and shops ran down their stocks back in late 2008, they rebuilt them, but that process is kind of finished. And the big question now is can the economy keep growing if the government doesn’t keep pumping in money? > The problem in a way, in a sense the social contract in America., the American dream is starting to fragment because for years America’s prided itself on having an unemployment rate that was a lot lower than Europe’s, but it didn’t have a social safety net like Europe. Now, in a sense, it doesn’t have a social safety net, and yet, shockingly, the unemployment rate is approaching European levels, in some cases actually exceeding it. And that’s a real challenge, not just in an economic sense, but in a political sense too about what is the American dream? > What’s fascinating is that so much of America in the last few decades has been about trying to focus on growing the pie, not worrying about how to divide it up because if you keep growing the pie, through innovation, through private sector enterprise, then you don’t have to worry about social equity and things like that. But if we are entering a period when the pie is stagnant, the question that’s going to be very political is how do you divide that pie up? > And poisonous as well. You really are starting to see the beginnings of a culture of hate, of finger-pointing, of scape-goating. And that could fuel the way for some very nasty, very negative politics going forward.   > [on amending 14th amendment] It’s quick fix soundbite politics in this culture of hate and this, you know, scape-goating that’s going on right now.

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Amanpour Elevates British Journalist Who Sees ‘Culture of Hate’ in U.S., Time to Divide Up Our ‘Pie’

Maddow Guest Harris-Lacewell Describes Abortion Providers as ‘Termination Services’

That’s odd, those describing themselves as pro-choice usually aren’t this candid when it comes to abortion. On her MSNBC show Thursday night, Rachel Maddow spoke with Princeton professor Melissa Harris-Lacewell about Republican Senate candidates Rand Paul, Sharron Angle and Ken Buck opposing abortion, including for pregnancies conceived through rape or incest. Harris-Lacewell said this in response to a question from Maddow — MADDOW: So what would be the consequences of having a whole bunch of new sitting senators, elected to the US Senate, who are opposed to abortion not just in all regular cases but also cases in which the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest? HARRIS-LACEWELL:  Well, I mean, I think we’ve already seen the consequences of having a significant portion of even one party, even the party out of power, with a very strong anti-reproductive choice agenda. We saw it for example in the health care fight where somehow, you know, abortion became the central issue in a comprehensive health care reform bill, the central issue became controlling women’s right to choose, controlling women’s fertility, not giving women the ability to control their own, but having the government do it. So, I think clearly every time we move more aggressively against women’s reproductive rights, the more that we will see the consequences show up in everything from health care policy to, you know, potentially actually moving towards reducing the opportunities for women to, uh, you know, actually find healthy, safe termination services. As a conservative you get used to liberals euphemizing on abortion, to the point that when a left winger speaks with something resembling clarity, it’s enough to make you catch your breath. Naomi Wolfe, author of “The Beauty Myth” and “Fire With Fire: The New Female Power and How It Will Change the 21st Century” and as staunch a feminist as you’re likely to encounter, lamented her fellow pro-choicers’ tendency toward evasion in a widely read 1995 essay in The New Republic titled “Our Bodies, Our Souls: Rethinking pro-choice rhetoric.” Among the passages I’ve highlighted — At its best, feminism defends its moral high ground by being simply faithful to the truth: to women’s real-life experiences. But, to its own ethical and political detriment, the pro-choice movement has reliquished the moral frame around the issue of abortion. It has ceded the language of right and wrong to abortion foes. The movement’s abandonment of what Americans have always, and rightly, demanded of their movements — an ethical core — and its reliance instead on a political rhetoric in which the fetus means nothing are proving fatal. … Clinging to a rhetoric about abortion in which there is no life and no death, we entangle our beliefs in a series of self delusions, fibs and evasions. And we risk becoming precisely what our critics charge us with being: callous, selfish and casually destructive men and women who share a cheapened view of life. In the following pages, I will argue for a radical shift in the pro-choice movement’s rhetoric and consciousness about abortion: I will maintain that we need to contextualize the fight to defend abortion rights within a moral framework that admits that the death of a fetus is a real death … Many pro-choice advocates developed a language to assert that the fetus isn’t a person, and this, over the years, has developed into a lexicon of dehumanization. Laura Kaplan’s “The Story of Jane”, an important forthcoming account of a pre-Roe underground abortion service, inadvertently sheds light on the origins of some of this rhetoric: service staffers referred to the fetus — well into the fourth month — as “material” (as in “the amount of material that had to be removed …”) … In one woman’s account of her chemical abortion, in the January/February 1994 issue of Mother Jones, for example, the doctor says, “By Sunday you won’t see on the monitor what we call the heartbeat …” How can we charge that it is vile and repulsive for pro-lifers to brandish vile and repulsive images if the images are real? … We would be impoverished by a rhetoric about the end of life that speaks of the ill and the dying as if they were meaningless and of doing away with them as if it were a bracing demonstration of our personal independence. … After Harris-Lacewell’s brief lapse into candor, however, she reverted to form, blaming the economic downturn for what she decries as harsher criticism of abortion from Republicans ( click here for link to segment on Maddow site; Harris-Lacewell’s remarks quoted below start at 2:32) — HARRIS-LACEWELL: You’ve been doing a lot of history tonight and so I just want to pause and maybe do a quick history lesson here and remind your viewers that what’s happening is, we’re in a period of deep economic anxiety and often when America is in a period of economic anxiety, it starts looking around for individuals to blame. And sometimes the very best place to start asserting control is right in the middle of a woman, in her uterus. … the search for scapegoats also extending to the first minority candidate of either major party, thereby ensuring his defeat in November 2008. No, that didn’t happen either, nor does economic malaise account for shifting public sentiment against abortion (as embodied by Paul, Angle and Buck), a dynamic that long preceded the recession. (After I mentioned Harris-Lacewell’s remarks to a friend, he sent me a link to a great piece at The Onion, titled “U.S. Out of My Uterus,” that dovetails with Harris-Lacewell’s views.) In May 2009, eight months after the economic slump began,  Gallup found that more respondents described themselves as pro-life than pro-choice, and by the substantial margin of 51 to 42 percent — This is the first time a majority of U.S. adults have identified themselves as pro-life since Gallup began asking this question in 1995. The new results, obtained from Gallup’s annual Values and Beliefs survey, represent a significant shift from a year ago, when 50 percent were pro-choice and 44 percent were pro-life. Prior to now, the highest percentage identifying as pro-life was 46 percent, in both August 2001 and May 2002. Would less than a year of economic insecurity account for the shift? I suggest three other causes extending over the past decade, including one that occurred in the same timeframe as the Gallup polling — increased use of ultrasound technology that revealed unborn babies to their parents as never before, widespread revulsion and a Supreme Court ruling against partial-birth abortion, and finally, Sarah Palin. In a provocative Weekly Standard article in April 2009 titled “Honor Killing, American-Style,” Sam Schulman elaborated on the “reaction of horror — visceral, immediate, and continuing — to the Sarah Palin phenomenon of last fall” — We can understand it if we think of one particular affront that Palin presented to the best among us: flamboyant nubility. Sarah Palin decided to carry her Down Syndrome baby to term. Bristol Palin not only decided to give birth to her illegitimate baby, but may have been encouraged to do so by her mother. Babies are born in these circumstances every day. But in the judgment of our most worldly women and of our most persnickety men, these births, however commonplace, offend propriety. To have one such baby may be regarded as a misfortune; to have both seems like carelessness. The unapologetic fertility of this ordinary Alaska family became an obstacle that prevented many from thinking clearly about anything that Sarah Palin might have touched — John McCain, free trade, low taxes, the war on terror. A kind of honor-rage descended, and those whom it touched ran amok. And why not? In the language of honor, the fertility of the Palin women, mother and daughter, was shameless, and Palin didn’t have the decency to be ashamed. (emphasis added) That same Gallup poll found an even split among those most dug in on abortion — 23 percent opposed in all circumstances, 22 percent not wanting any restrictions. Thus, a majority of respondents fall into “the mushy middle,” as described by pro-choice defector Norma McCorvey, better known by the legal pseudonym of “Jane Roe” in Roe v. Wade. “McCorvey still supports abortion rights through the first trimester — but is horrified by the brutality of abortion as it manifests more obviously further into a pregnancy,” Wolfe wrote in her New Republic essay. ” ‘Have you ever seen a second-trimester abortion,’ she asks. ‘It’s a baby. It’s got a face and a body, and they put him in a freezer and a little container.’ ” A “mushy middle” that discerns a moral difference between the single mother with too many mouths to feed who contemplates abortion after unexpectedly becoming pregnant — and the teenage girl who wants a late-term abortion so she can fit into her prom dress. A broad swath of the populace leaning more toward the ever popular Palin and away from abortion apologists.

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Maddow Guest Harris-Lacewell Describes Abortion Providers as ‘Termination Services’

NPR Sneers Palin’s Fractured Lingo Shows She Avoids ‘Books and Periodicals That Have Semicolons’

From his usual perch on the NPR show Fresh Air, liberal linguist and Berkeley professor Geoffrey Nunberg  predictably sneered on Tuesday at Sarah Palin’s use of “refudiate,” and then her refusal to correct herself. He suggested she obviously doesn’t read enough. “You have to frequent the places the word hangs out in, the kinds of books and periodicals that have semicolons in them.” But he also tried to cover his tracks a little bit by suggesting eloquence is overrated in politicians: Palin could have picked up refudiate from someone else or come up with it on her own. The question is why she didn’t correct it along the way, before she got called on it and felt the need to defend it. After all, the course of our lives is strewn with abandoned misconceptions about words. I’m always struck by how tenacious these are. A word will go right past me five or 10 times before I suddenly have this duh moment. As in, duh, it has a ‘c’ in it. Or duh, compendious doesn’t mean comprehensive at all. But Palin apparently never had a duh moment with repudiate, probably because she hasn’t encountered it often enough. People don’t use it a lot in ordinary conversation – as in, I used to think Peter Frampton was cool, but I totally repudiate that now. You have to frequent the places the word hangs out in, the kinds of books and periodicals that have semicolons in them. [Note he places the emphasis on the second syllable of fre-QUENT. Thank you, Henry Higgins.] But not even Palin’s most ardent supporters would claim that she’s been a great reader. They prize her for her attitude and authenticity, not her erudition. Of course, there are other people who blanch at the thought of a head of state whose speech flows so far from the stream of literate English prose. Fair enough. But inarticulateness doesn’t preclude political competence – think of Dwight Eisenhower. As the linguist Mark Liberman put it in the LanguageLog blog, politics is not a vocabulary contest. And it’s a mistake to read too much significance into these slips and solecisms. Take the way the logotariat reacted to Palin’s use of verbage in place of verbiage during the 2008 campaign. It’s a very common error, and in its way a logical one. The i in verbiage doesn’t make a lot of sense if you think, as most people do, that the word is related to verb and verbal. It actually comes from the same root as warble. But in The New Yorker, James Wood took verbage as Palin’s own invention and called it a perfect example of the Republicans’ disdain for words. Verbage – so close to garbage, so far from language . That’s a pretty clever way for Nunberg to dull his Berkeley barbs and then stick Palin with another one. Nunberg realized there’s some political danger in smugness, even as he betrayed it: Where do you begin with that? With the remarkable condescension of garbage — so close to trash? Or with the insolence of imagining that faulty usage betrays stupidity and turpitude? One way or the other, it’s a form of smugness that transcends partisan lines. People on the right are just as quick to ridicule Obama and Biden for their mistakes. Yet the well-spoken aren’t necessarily wiser or better than the rest of us. Most of the horrors that the human race has had to endure in modern times were inflicted at the bidding of men who spoke in shapely grammatical sentences. Unfortunately, eloquence doesn’t come next to godliness. A devotion to language will have to be its own reward. Could we just celebrate that?

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NPR Sneers Palin’s Fractured Lingo Shows She Avoids ‘Books and Periodicals That Have Semicolons’

Scoring Sunday’s Nuptials: Hair Comes the Bride, All Tressed in White [Altarcations]

Fearless Gawker wedding correspondent Phyllis Nefler is braving the heat this weekend as well as the picture-perfect pairings featured in the vaunted pages of the New York Times Weddings section. Come along, but beware: Trinity, teachers, and Maine: oh my! More

Sarah Palin Invents New Word: ‘Refudiate’ [Language]

If there’s one thing that’s wrong with the English language, it’s that there just aren’t enough words. Luckily for all of us, former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin invented a new one this weekend, and then compared herself to Shakespeare. More

CNBC’s Santelli Warns U.S. ‘Could End Up Worse than Japan’ Facing a Lost Decade

Fresh off his Tea Party cover story   in the June 24 Weekly Standard , CNBC’s Rick Santelli foresees what could be classified as an economic black hole for the United States of America. On the network’s June 24 broadcast of “Strategy Session,” the CME Group reporter explained how the country could be headed down the same path and face the economic calamity the Japanese faced in what is known as   the “lost decade.”   That period, from 1991-2000, was one which the Asian nation failed to grow economically despite countless efforts by the government to intervene. But as Santelli explained – the U.S. version of Japanese economic policies could result in Greek-style austerity measures. “The notion that we are turning into Japan has been something talked about on this floor for probably a year and a half,” Santelli said. “What changes though, is that it is now a toss up between Japan and Greece and trust me the eventual solutions or recommendations for avoiding the pitfalls of either are completely different strategies. A lot of Japanese say, ‘More Keynesian, more stimulus, spend, spend, spend, spend, spend.’ And the other side of the equation says, ‘Well then, you are going turn into Greece.’ Where does the truth lie? One thing I can tell you is, is that demographics are a big issue in this story as well. The Japanese have a demographic time bomb similar to the U.S. in terms of underfunded pensions and liabilities.” But according to “Strategy Session” anchor David Faber, the United States doesn’t face the same demographic obstacles as Japan, which has an aging population. “They also have a much older population,” Faber said. “I mean the fact is with our immigration patterns, with our birth patterns – we’re at a much better demographic point than they are, Rick – to be fair. You know, I hate to even use this but it’s true – they sell more adult diapers in that country than they do baby diapers. We don’t have that problem, thankfully.” However, as far monetary policy is concerned, the United States is positioned much differently than Japan because the world uses the dollar as a reserve currency. And that makes financing government debt much easier – but it also puts the United States in a potentially much more untenable position as well. “We could end up worse than Japan and I’ll tell you why,” Santelli said. “When Japan had their horrible decade and they were doing the sterilization and trying to print Yen, they were also issuing a pretty significant amount of debt but who was buying the Japanese debt? The Japanese. Now we have a reserve currency, so who’s buying our debt? Well, pretty much the rest of the world. People might say, ‘Well that’s a great thing, we could monetize it.’ And that’s where the trouble lies. Go to what Steve said – our government is a free-for-all of dumb ideas. And the fact is, if you have interest rates this low and a reserve currency, in a world that keeps wanting to eat in what turns out to be a cruddy cake – where does that leave us when we finally figure it out?

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CNBC’s Santelli Warns U.S. ‘Could End Up Worse than Japan’ Facing a Lost Decade