Recent comments

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Hi Quark!

    That sounds terrific! I think we were posting at the same time because I just saw your post. I so agree.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    The nutcases are sure coming to the surface these days. Wow! Maybe we're going through a national cleansing--forgive the unappetizing analogy--but in order to purge the toxins from our national system they have to come loud and clear to the surface and make us feel a bit sick!

    President Obama is very brave and I don't blame him a bit for not going farther left. That's our job and I did not do a very good job this last week of convincing those who are against a government run option that it is a moral no-brainer.

    Conversation #1 entailed speaking with a woman who owns a small business and is very worried about government regulations on health care "destroying the good health insurance" she has right now. She also feels free enterprise is essential to creating high-quality care, top of the line equipment, and research that has cured so many different kinds of cancer. She gave a personal example of health care in Canada where she thought the conditions were unsanitary. She is afraid that giving the government more control will reduce her care.

    Conversation #2 was with the wife of a doctor who is worried that doctors will receive lower payments and the government will limit the procedures and tests doctors can offer their patients.

    Conversation #3 was with a man who believes there will be "death panel". Good lord!

    Most of my friends agree that a public option is the only way we can fight the unfair practices of the insurance industry but those who are against it are very difficult to convince otherwise.

    The way we won the presidential election was not by convincing those who didn't agree with us to change their minds, but by getting those who do want changes to simply realize their vote would actually make a difference. We simply helped counter the apathy that so many years of Reaganomics created, apathy that hid the fact that we were by far the majority of voters.

    The only way we will win the health care debate is to fight in the same ways that we fought during the Presidential election. The nutcases are trying to look as if they are in the majority and we must doorbell and search for those voters a bit on the fence or too apathetic to speak up and let legislators know. We need to convince EVERYONE who agrees with us to let their legislators know they will not be re-elected unless they give us a decent public option.

    If we literally or figuratively come across a "c" door, someone who completely disagrees with us, we must move on quickly and find someone who does agree with us but feels their voice will not make a difference. We have to once again re-empower the disenfranchised, re-empower those who have been weakened and often nearly killed by the unfair healthcare system we have today.

    The only way we can win is by finding ALL of the people who support a public plan and getting them to speak up loud and clear. We can't waste time any longer on trying to change the minds of those who can't see the light and are too selfish to believe that everyone has the god-given right to see a doctor whether they can pay for it or not!

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Good on ya, Quark!

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    B Roll,

    Thanks for asking about me. I was so upset with Mark's remarks yesterday that I turned Thom's show off, along with my computer, until now. ( I am terrible when it comes to confrontations. It probably is an after-effect of my childhood extreme fear of punishment.)

    I am about to get much more involved with healthcare reform advocacy here in MN. There is a wonderful coalition of groups which advocate for healthcare reform, clean water and environmental concerns, and social justice issues, of which I am a member:

    http://www.healthcareforamericanow.org/

    I met today with another member of the group and am going to attend more community meetings, planning committee meetings, etc. I may decide to lobby for the group at the state legislature. They are also involved in candidate forums (shouldn't that be "fora?") and will be sponsoring a number of public meetings through the fall and into next year, with the goal being to have more leverage and input into the Dem. agendas, campaigns and endorsements.

    Anyway, as I said, it's a wonderful group --- and very energizing!

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Mark - Darfur DOES have oil - China contracted with the Jinjawee (sp?) for it, and China is arming the Jinjawee so they can implement their genocide. The US is staying out of it so China does not decide to call in our debt.

    mk - because there isn't A bill in progress - there are FIVE bills in progress - 3 in the House, two in the Senate. On the surface, one may think this is terribly confusing, but it actually does make one thing CRYSTAL CLEAR - anyone who makes reference to THE health care bill is either (a) grossly misinformed, or (2) LYING!

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Regarding the Health Care issue...
    Why don't they post the bill in progress on the White house web site! or publish it in the papers to clear up all the miss information?

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    The right is always trying to confound the left by giving them an either/or proposition on the Iraq war. There is a simple response beyond comparisons of before-and-after death totals. Amidst the sectarian strife in India, Gandhi told British authorities that yes, we have our problems, but they are OUR problems.

    Yes, lfe WAS bad in Iraq under Saddam Hussein, but sectarian violence continues unabated in Iraq. And when literal genocide was happening in Cambodia, Rawanda and to a lesser extent now in Darfur, where were we then? Why didn't we intervene in those countries? Because they didn't have something we wanted--like oil?

    Support for war enjoys wide support when it has a multi-national dimension, and a clear moral objective, such as World War II. But unilateral wars without clear moral objectives, like the Mexican-American and Spanish-American wars, saw widespread opposition; Abraham Lincoln and Ulyses S. Grant both opposed the former, and Mark Twain was especially strident in his opposition to the latter. In Vietnam, and now in Iraq and Afghanistan, we have not listened to the aphorism quoted by Lord Palmerston in not choosing to recognize the South's claim of independence in the American Civil War: "They who in quarrels interpose, will often get a bloody nose."

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Brilliant post Steven, yes - this is how they get out of the argument altogether by not dealing with it.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Stephen C. Meyer claims the premise that information always comes from a mind. He uses this to reach the conclusion that a mind (in this case a god) created life, since DNA contains information. However, that makes the premise depend on the conclusion, making this a circular argument. Besides, information is made out of raw experience. Light reaching your eyes is not information, but the processes of the retina and the optic nerve turn it into information before it even reaches the brain. Frankly, a signal counts as information because of its value as input, not as output.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    The case for creationism requires zero proof and therefore is NOT science. It is faith-based and just as likely to be pulled out someone’s backside as being divine intervention.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Even the Pope said its okay to believe evolution. We can see evolution at work when we give birth and our children physiology contains our genetic material.

    We engineer our food with these basic principles of evolution including animal husbandry- give it up fella.

    Darwin's work and religion are a non-sequiter.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Suggestion,

    Next time you need a fill-in host, maybe you could ask Jeff Santos or some other person of color. It seems your substitutes are always white folks.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Was Steve Carell in the crowd at Claire McCaskill's town meeting?

    Maybe it was my imagination, but I would SWEAR I heard the voice of Evan Baxter (from Bruce Almighty) screeching: "I do the cha-cha like a sissy girl" and "My tiny little nipples ran off to France."

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    By the way, the newsletter is a great resource, probably the best recent innovation from your show.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Thom,

    You're not a socialist until you're ready to watch Olberman and Maddow on your government made TV and walk around in your government made shoes.

    I don't see how you can even imagine that you're a socialist when you frequently claim that socialism can't work in societies over 150 people.

    You're a small businessman who supports capitalism with a strong social safety net and public ownership and/or supervision of what you consider the commons. One of things you don't believe is the economy.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    First, I wouldn't have Scott Wheeler on again if he's going to say things like "Nutsy Pelosi". But in response to the "Obama Enemy List" hallucination, Obama has asked people to report criticisms, not the people that make those criticisms. Another hallucination is the "death panel". I heard someone on the radio last night expressing distress over a bill's stipulation that a health care professional "shall [not may] address the issue" of end-of-life questions. (Oh, my God! They're addressing issues. Run for your lives!) Somehow people interpret this as Blofeld showing up and threatening, "How would you like to die, Mister Bond?"

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Thom,

    I know you're a good decent caring person, so I'm puzzled when you tell stories like the one about the about a TV host in Brazil commissioning murders to boost ratings as if that’s a funny story. Where’s the humor? Would it be funny if it happened in Portland, Oregon or San Francisco, California.

    I believe I've heard you tell similar stories about bizarre violence as if they were funny. I don't get the disconnect.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Re; The government can't afford health care. Can the government afford war? Can the government afford bank bailouts? Can the government afford tax breaks for the rich?

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    One wonders what color the sky might be on the planet Scott Wheeler came from.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Quark,

    How are you doing? Are you OK?

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Re: How goes the progess of the Right’s efforts to trash our Founders’ vision of a secular Republic and replace our Constitution with the Bible?

    Rep. Randy Forbes (R-VA) Issues Challenge For Debate To Prove We're A Judeo-Christian Nation
    On January 28, Rep. Randy Forbes (R-VA), founder of the Congressional Prayer Caucus, introduced H. Con.=2 0Res. 34, a resolution "Calling upon the Capitol Preservation Commission and the Office of the Architect of the Capitol to place the Lincoln-Obama Bible on permanent display upon the Lincoln table at the Capitol Visitor Center for the benefit of all its visitors to fully understand and appreciate America's history and Godly heritage."
    Now, I have no objection whatsoever to this Bible being displayed in the Capitol Visitors Center. It is an historical fact that this was the Bible that Abraham Lincoln used at his second inauguration, and an historical fact that Barack Obama chose to use this same Bible at his inauguration, so displaying it on the table used to hold it at Lincoln's inauguration, which is already in the exhibit, and adding a sign saying that Obama also used it, is absolutely appropriate. I don't think anyone could reasonably disagree that the symbolism of our first black president incorporating in his inauguration this connection to the president who freed the slaves is something that should be seen by future generations visiting the Capitol, and putting the Bible on the table used to hold it at Lincoln's inauguration would add to the accuracy of the exhibit's recreation of that event.
    What I do object to in H. Con. Res. 34 are some of the reasons given by Forbes for displaying the Bible, in both the resolution's title and its "Whereas" clauses, the most objectionable of which is:
    "Whereas the Holy Bible is God's Word"
    This is nothing20but a sneaky way of getting the Congress of the United States to declare that the Christian Bible is the word of God, which, of course, for many Americans, it is not. This "Whereas" should be struck from the resolution entirely.
    That whole "Separation of Church and State" clause really is soooo hard to grasp, isn't it? Rodda has since introduced HR 397 affirming our "rich spiritual and religious history" and designating the first week of May as "America’s Spiritual Heritage Week". He also issued a challenge to Obama or any takers to debate when we stopped being a Judeo-Christian nation:
    "I challenge the president or anyone else -- come up, either debate me on this issue or simply tell me where that single moment in time was when you can say we crossed the threshold -- we ceased being a Judeo-Christian nation -- and you can't do it."
    Oh ye of too much faith and too little information. Your challenge has been accepted by Chris Rodda of Talk To Action and she's ready to rumble:
    Mr. Forbes, just name the time and place -- your turf, my turf (up here in NJ-6), DC, or anywhere else -- and let's debate your resolution clause by clause and see how well that very impressive looking list of footnotes you keep boasting about stands up to scrutiny.
    I'll be sending a registered, return receipt letter to Mr. Forbes's office formally accepting his challenge to make sure he knows that I, as an "anyone else," have stepped up to accept it.
    For those who are unfamiliar with Mr. Forbes's "spiritual heritage" resolution, it's a re-introduction of H. Res. 888, the "religious heritage" resolution he introduced in the last congress. In a series of pieces last year, I debunked the dozens of instances of historical fiction in that resolution, and thanks to the efforts of a few organizations and a whole bunch of bloggers who joined in the fight, H. Res. 888 never made it to the floor. But, a few months ago, outraged over President Obama's statement in Turkey that America is not a Christian nation, Mr. Forbes reintroduced the same resolution as H. Res. 397. It currently has 74 co-sponsors.
    I recently re-posted my debunking of H. Res. 888, as soon as I saw that Mr. Forbes had re-introduced it as H. Res. 397, so, if anyone wants more details about the resolution, or to see why I'm thrilled that he h as issued a challenge for someone to debate him on it, you can find it here.
    You can contact Forbes here to encourage him to schedule the debate.
    http://crooksandliars.com/nicole-belle/rep-randy-forbes-r-va-issues-chal...

    To my knowledge Mr. Forbes has not accepted Chris Rodda's challenge.

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    THX for the pleasecutthecrap.com site- my mom forwarded me the infamous '500 pages' wacko email. It even contained a link to soil it green! You should have seen the comments various persons would make as they passed it on from person to person.

    Thankfully, http://www.plesaecutthecrap.com had the exact same email and had it already rebutted in bright red ink and so all I had to do was copy and paste that right back along with some links to other legitimate sites.

    AARP's
    Mike Huffington recommended this one for example http://www.healthactionnow.org/ and Rachel Maddows story about who is behind these http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/vp/32337676#32337676

    And of course AM1090 and the Thom Hartmann show!

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Huh?

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    The next guest up is Scott Wheeler, representing the National Republican Trust. One of his blog posts at www.nationalrepublicantrust.com is entitled "Special Election in New York, Why Obama Lost", about the close race for the Congressional seat vacated by Kirsten Gillibrand when she took over Hillary Clinton's Senate seat.

    This election WAS very close (it wasn't decided until after the absentee ballots were counted), - but in a VERY conservative region of upstate NY, the Democrat, Scott Murphy, WON! So how, exactly, was this a loss for Obama?

    Wishful thinking?

  • Wednesday August 12 2009   15 years 12 weeks ago

    Terror is designed to inflict control through fear upon society through acts of violence a subjective group.

    Propaganda is designed to inflict control through fear upon society through deliberately encoded jingoistic messaging typically of a misleading nature.

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