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Monday, April 30, 2012

Video: Moyers/Kaplan Tackle Money, Media and Democracy

Were you ever doing a chore in another room or reading a good book and heard some guy talking on the TV in the background and you had to drop what you were doing and pay full attention? That happened to me Sunday evening while overhearing the Bill Moyers Show on PBS during his interview of Marty Kaplan. I had no idea who Marty Kaplan was before this show. In short, Kaplan is currently the Norman Lear Professor of Entertainment, Media and Society at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism. You can read his bio here.

He’s also an expert on how big money and big media have coupled to create a Disney World of democracy.

Many of us already know what Kaplan had to say and can almost mime his next response before he does, but I have heard few people put it all together with such command, precision and depth in a cohesive presentation as Kaplan does. The segment with Kaplan is over 30 minutes long and Moyers ices the cake at the end of his show with short piece on nutty tea bagger Allen West.

Highly recommended. A must see!



What others are saying:

Newton*** --"I just finished watching the segment with Marty Kaplan, and I was very impressed. He's not bogged down being indebted to a Republican or Democratic agenda, so his observations come with a refreshing clarity."

Potdf*** -- "This program feeds my mind and soul and is a moment in media of responsible journalism, interview expertise and a storm of fresh air."

deliar*** -- "Marty Kaplan was a brilliant choice! It's not that he's told us what we didn't already know in broad strokes -- most of us on this comment thread, anyway -- but he brings it all together so beautifully, and complete with lots of details and examples."

Friday, April 27, 2012

Paul Ryan Re-Invents Christianity For Role In His Future Dystopia


“The reason I got involved in public service, by and large, if I had to credit one thinker, one person, it would be Ayn Rand.” -- Paul Ryan

It's too bad Paul Ryan didn't give that credit to Jesus Christ, because that endorsement played a huge part in shaping the congressman's public persona. But Ryan now claims that any philosophical connection drawn between him and Ayn Rand is either overstated or an urban legend.

According to Think Progress, he's broken off his well-documented and longtime love affair with Ayn Rand. At least that's what he now claims. Hmmm. So which Paul Ryan should we believe? And, will Ryan's Ayn Rand rejection today be his urban legend of tomorrow? What will brainless sheep like Sen. Ron Johnson now say after he sold his soul to the devil when he claimed that Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" is his foundational book? Oh Lord forgive RoJo, for he not know what he do.

But, why did Ryan suddenly throw Ayn Rand overboard, albeit with a life preserver and rope? For starters, mainly out of political expediency. Paul Ryan first and foremost is a politician if he is anything. Ayn Rand was hanging like the Sword of Damocles over his career, particularly more so when the Catholic clergy indirectly confronted him in a letter to choose between atheism and Christianity. He chose Christianity of course, but only under that proposition. For a Sunday mass politician like Ryan, rejecting Rand was an easy call to make. In reality though, Ryan still messages Ayn Rand so what he did was akin to sliding a book slipcover of the New Testament over Atlas Shrugged.

Ryan's callous public rejection of his life hero also shows as to what extent he is willing to go to reach his ultimate goal. In my view, this was an obvious yet insidious move by a deceitful politician to use anything at his disposal, including Christianity, to get there. There was no way Ryan was going to sell a trickle-down "upwardly-mobile" austere future built on the fictional tales of anti-American, anti-Christian Ayn Rand. He needed a new philosophical apropos for the new poor his dystopian plan will bring and he thinks he found it buried within Catholic Church teachings of subsidiarity.

Subsidiarity in a nutshell...

Religion News Excerpt: Society’s decisions should be made, Clark wrote at the Catholic Moral Theology blog, “at the lowest level possible and the highest level necessary.” It’s not just a matter of ever smaller government, or reflexively devolving responsibilities downward, but of making sure that key societal functions are provided for.

But that's not how Ryan understands subsidiarity. He believes, "the [Catholic] principle of subsidiarity is really federalism, meaning government closest to the people governs best, having a civil society of the principle of solidarity where we, through our civic organizations, through our churches, through our charities, through all of our different groups where we interact with people as a community...." Ryan's words. Ryan must then view Christianity as the future governing body for the lowest rungs of American society and relegates Jesus Christ to the lowest denominator (a communal subsidiary) for the sake of the poor.

But the congressman doesn't care if he's completely wrong because in his infinite wisdom, he believes some Catholics for too long have had a monopoly on the social teachings of the Church. He'll re-invent Christianity and show them. Another of Ryans' ideological blindspots becomes evident in this passage...

“[T]he preferential option for the poor, which is one of the primary tenets of Catholic social teaching, means don’t keep people poor, don’t make people dependent on government so that they stay stuck at their station in life, help people get out of poverty out onto life of independence,” -- Paul Ryan


That's one-half Catholicism, but 100 percent Rand.

"It only stands to reason that where there’s sacrifice, there’s someone collecting the sacrificial offerings. Where there’s service, there is someone being served. The man who speaks to you of sacrifice is speaking of slaves and masters, and intends to be the master" -- Ayn Rand


In Ryan's real worldview, the master here is the current service government. The slave of course is the one subservient and fully dependent on government and permanently stuck in their station of life.

In his effort to decouple government from subsidiarity, Ryan is then gambling that no one will argue Christ's relationship with the poor. This is why he no longer needs Rand in his future construct. She won't take care of the poor and Ryan's future government only serves Rand's industrious "individual." So that too leaves the poor out. But his proposals do require a communal subsidiary outside of government and if Christianity did not exist, Paul Ryan would have no choice but to invent it. Christianity then becomes nothing more than a convenient but necessary shelter for the poor in Ryan's divided world. Just a shameful and diseased outlook for someone who calls himself a Christian.

On a recent show, Chris Matthews asked a Catholic nun, "Sister, why do you think some people believe the way to get poor people to work harder is to cut their money, to basically hurt them? And the way to get the rich people to work harder is to give them more money. Why do they have different views of incentives?"

Watch it:



Additional:

John Nichols - Ryan's Claim Budget Reflects Catholic Teaching is Nonsense

Forbes Blog - Ryan Now Rejects Ayn Rand - Will The Real Paul Ryan Please Come Forward?

WKOW - Ryan explains His Catholic Defense of His Budget Plan

Democurmudgeon - Ryan Flops at Georgetown University, insists his plan the only true religion. Pt. 1

Democurmudgeon - Ryan Flops at Georgetown University, Pt.2

BartCop - Cognitive Dissonance On Christianity and Ayn Rand

Huff Post - Ryan Suddenly Does Not Embrace Ayn Rand

Chicago Tribune - Ryan cites Pope to defend Budget Cuts

Thursday, April 26, 2012

This Is What Scott Walker Means ...

When he said, "Anyone who didn't know this was coming ...


...has been asleep for the past two years."

Click newspaper for story.

Those Invisible Walker Savings


620 WTMJ Excerpt:
MADISON - Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker says that for the first time in 12 years, the typical home owner in Wisconsin is paying a smaller amount of property taxes than the year before.

According to a news release from the Governor's office, the "median" tax bill for a home owner is $2.952, compared to $2.963 in 2011.

Political Environment Excerpt:
I'll use my mine for smelling salts. After a few months, I think I can afford it.

Don't forget that Walker promised that a Wisconsin home owner with a median-valued home would see a property tax reduction of $700 during his first, two-year budget - - or about $350 a year, or close to $30-a-month - - a calculation and statement PolitiFact found "false."

Those "invisible" $350 annual savings. This $11 then must be Walker's refund on that terrible ...terrible billion dollar tax hike Doyle rammed through 3 years ago that Republicans claimed state taxpayers could not afford. No, that's not right either. Because that billion dollar tax hike was as invisible as that $700 in savings Walker claims we all now have in our pockets. Fact is, without republicans and their parrot supporters telling me Doyle rammed through a billion dollar tax hike, I would have never noticed it before Walker was elected. Did Walker reduce state spending in response? Ummm, no. In fact he increased state spending by $1.1 billion over the current biennium.

So, was this all worth $11 with an economy shrinking budget that demands continuous running cuts before it will reach bottom to balance?

Again Democratic Party of Wisconsin spokesman Graeme Zielinski comes through with a statement in response:

"This is a deceitful premise and part of a job-losing political shell game. Scott Walker's unfunded state mandate imposed a property tax freeze on localities at the same time decimating state aid. This has led to layoffs and diminished services. Dozens of school districts and localities have actually had to increase local taxes, as well as hikes on fees.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Newspaper Enumerates Local Theft Under Walker

Tuesday's Janesville Gazette headlined an article titled, "Walker: Policies Paying Off" and posted some of the numbers of dollars Scott Walker forcibly lifted from local public employees and tax paying jurisdictions. According to Walker's campaign style reforms.wi Webpage, Rock County's school district employees (excluding Janesville) had $2.5 million taken from their pension and health care distributions and another unsubstantiated $5.41 million in "savings" by local governmental agencies under Act 10 provisions.

JG Excerpt: The savings from employee pension payments was actually $2.65 million, said Randy Terronez, assistant to the county administrator, while cuts in state aid were about $2.57 million.

The net benefit to the county's $77 million budget was $78,129, according to county figures.

County taxpayers did not benefit, even in a small way, because the county was already taxing to the maximum allowed, Terronez said.


After collective bargaining was terminated and the public trust flushed down the toilet, county taxpayers under Walker's class war Act 10 provision did not "save" one dime. The county portion of my property tax bill operating under Walker's budget act went up 6.4 percent, from $757 to $806. The taxpayers "saved" mantra is a bunch of hooey.

In Walker's campaign terminology, any dollar amount connected to the word "save" and any of its derivatives really means how much was stolen from public employees and how much tax revenue Walker withheld from local jurisdictions. If we're lucky and I mean really lucky, it's a wash, BUT only providing we're taxed to the max locally under "limits" of Walker's budget act. In the meantime, local government bodies, wage earners and taxpayers all got screwed while Walker's claim he did not raise taxes is politifact safe.

What Walker did is either pure evil or genius depending on your moral code. So, who got all the loot?

Of note are a few commenters on the article reminding readers that a large part of the "savings" Walker takes credit for were already concessions delivered by public sector unions from around the state before he suddenly decided to wipe out collective bargaining. Another mentions the less regarded consequence of public employees each having several thousands less in taxable earnings due to Act 10, thus returning less revenue to the state.

If you wanted legislation that would effectively shrink the state's economy without lowering state government spending - Walker's budget reform is it.

ADDITIONAL:

Badger Democracy - The “Big Five” Lies in the Walker Budget – in his own words…

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

City Council Opens Municipal Facilities To Service Group Vending Machine Fundraising

The Janesville City Council agreed to allow the Janesville Noon Lions Club to place gumball machines in city facilities for free. At first glance, this appears to be no big deal. Afterall, we are talking about gumballs here. But in all fairness, this decision opens city facilities to all service groups who want to receive financial gain from selling their products at city facilities.

Only after approving the Lions Club, but not before, the council instructed the city manager to come up with a set of guidelines to regulate private vendors.

Moral to the story: What good is government if you can't use it to your own competitive advantage?

Monday, April 23, 2012

Media Glomerate's Politics Ruining Journalism



Saw this story first at Uppity Wisconsin about how Lee Enterprises, parent company of the Wisconsin State Journal, La Crosse Tribune and scores of other newspapers across the country, started their own web-based political campaign against private sector labor unions. This coming just a couple weeks after scolding their employees into silence for engaging in one of the most fundamental of our civic freedoms - signing a petition.

We've got our own activist unionfree media org right here in south-central Wisconsin, but we call it the Janesville Gazette. Now that unions have been all but smashed here in auto town Janesville, wages are going down, pensions are becoming non-existent, home values are plummeting, foreclosures have skyrocketed, big ticket consumer purchases are nose-diving, more crime and unemployment is up.

Ironically, after spending decades bashing and chasing unions out of town, they now blame the unions for the area's economic decline. But don't you worry because while individual local businesses are forming powerful ALEC-like political unions of their own, one of their main legislative priorities is to make sure employees don't get any ideas about doing the same. Individual wage earners must stand alone at the whim and call of their masters. Individuals they claim, not unions, make the difference.

Media institutions engaging in this sort of brazen political activity should be an added concern among dedicated journalists and other media employees who work hard every day and make that extra effort to keep their personal politics out of their news presentations and articles, only to have their editors and employers ruin that hard won public perception of neutrality and balance with political endorsements and institutionalized partisan game playing. Real journalist's work has become little more than a foil and an easy public target for their employers against accusations of partisanship, and is often relegated to bring some undeserved legitimacy to what for all practical purpose is a politically programmed daily publication.


ADDITIONAL:

Rock Netroots - Media Outlets Apply Double Standard For Their Own Political Activity

Uppity Wisconsin - State Journal's Company Aligned with Group Running Pro-Walker Ads

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Norquist: Romney Would Make Capable Puppet



Daily Beast Excerpt: All we have to do is replace Obama. ... We are not auditioning for a fearless leader. We don't need a president to tell us in what direction to go. We know what direction to go. We want the Ryan budget. ... We just need a president to sign this stuff. We don't need someone to think it up or design it. The leadership now for the modern conservative movement for the next 20 years will be coming out of the House and the Senate.-- Grover Norquist

Republicans don't need anyone to think up a plan. Ayn Rand's already thought it up. It's right there in her book "Atlas Shrugged" and Paul Ryan is the messenger.

Daily Beast Excerpt: If Americans get the idea that a vote for Romney is a vote for the Ryan plan, Romney is more or less doomed. -- David Frum