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Fact-based Reporting as Heroic Defense of Freedom

February 20, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

What is democracy? That is the first question that is always asked by pro-regime elements, whether in 18th-century Britain or France or 21st-century Egypt or Bahrain, because their aim is to muddy the waters and oppose the spread of democratic freedom. Free and open access to factual information is the cornerstone right of all citizens of a free society. Journalists are the “Fourth Estate” —in the words attributed to Edmund Burke, by Thomas Carlyle—, the watchdogs of the people’s access to truth.

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‘Competition’ Doesn’t Improve Our Nation if it Impoverishes our People

February 18, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

There is a narrow ideological segment of the American political spectrum that obsessively pushes “competition” as the sole standard by which to measure the quality of our economic landscape. The problem here is that the word is too often used to promote the idea that to be “competitive” we need to drastically reduce wages and roll back rights most Americans take for granted. This vision of competition is not conservatism; it’s feudalism.

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Oil Subsidies are Not Smart Spending

February 17, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Oil as a combustible fuel is a 19th-century improvement on the 18th-century paradigm of burning coal to produce steam to run industrial machinery. The efficiency and portability of carbon-based fuels, in terms of the built-in energy they can store and which is released when they are burnt, has long been the driving factor in their popularity as an energy source. But new technologies are now making it possible to produce large amounts of portable energy sustainably, with none of the atmospheric damage resulting from the burning of carbon-based fuels.

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Public Broadcasting Makes us Free

February 15, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Public broadcasting in the United States is not like state-run television in other countries, where the ruling party often influences the editorial stance and the quality of reporting. In the United States, there is an absolute wall of separation between politicians for elective office and the editorial process that shapes what is produced by public broadcasting.

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Spending vs. Cutting to Spur Economic Recovery

February 14, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

There are some things that fit well with the phrase common sense, and some that don’t. Not everything that seems complex or uncertain is outside the bounds of reality, but some things, ultimately, just don’t make sense. There is a strong political bias that “cutting spending” is a conservative principle, because it is prudent to spend less, but whether the policy is in fact conservative, or whether it works: that is another story.

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Rick Santorum Joins Chorus of Retroactive Support for Mubarak

February 13, 2011 :: Eva Scherson :: Comments Off

Rick Santorum, onetime Republican senator from Pennsylvania, threw in his lot with Hosni Mubarak, criticizing Pres. Obama for siding “too soon” with the pro-democracy movement that was calling for the ouster of a brutal authoritarian dictator who ruled for three decades through a relentless campaign of abduction, torture and disappearances.

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Tim Pawlenty Calls Mubarak ‘Our Friend’, Professes Bully Foreign Policy

February 12, 2011 :: Eva Scherson :: Comments Off

On a day of joy for the people of Egypt, Republican presidential hopeful, Gov. Tim Pawlenty shamed himself and his nation by criticizing Pres. Barack Obama for siding with Egypt’s pro-democracy movement, and suggested that from his point of view, the dictator Mubarak is “our friend”. He also said “with bullies, might makes right”, and suggested US foreign policy should degenerate into the adolescent dysfunction of the bullies.

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Red-blooded Conservatives & Blue-ocean Progressives

February 12, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

There is a fallacy at the heart of the political discourse of late 20th and early 21st century America: that conservatives and liberals are diametrically opposed, unable to work together, and committed at their very core to one another’s destruction. Certainly, when ideology comes into the debate, there are hotly contested arguments to be had. But honest conservatives and honest liberals have a lot more in common than we normally admit.

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Republican Anti-abortion Plan Would Deny Life-saving Treatment

February 8, 2011 :: Eva Scherson :: Comments Off

The new Republican plan to amend the Affordable Care Act to institute a form of “backdoor ban” on abortion procedures would give legal protection to doctors who let women die without needed treatment, and impose a severe tax on any business that seeks to provide full health coverage to its employees. The original language of the plan specified that only in cases of “forcible rape” would a woman be entitled to treatment where abortion might be the only way to save her life.

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The Revolution Must Be Televised

February 8, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The people of Egypt today mark 14 days of nonviolent uprising against a brutal military regime that has ruled with near total power for 30 years. The peaceful protests are an astonishing coalition of educated and working-class, Muslim and Christian, secularist and religiously driven, old and young, male and female, and yet they are in fact a peaceful citizen-driven revolution against tyranny. The Mubarak regime has waged a brutal assault on peaceful demonstrators, human rights monitors and international press, and now there is concern the international attention may turn away.

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Freed Activist Stirs Egypt with Passion for Democratization

February 7, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

After intense pressure from Amnesty International, foreign governments, private business and the press, Egypt’s new vice president Omar Suleiman pledged yesterday that Wael Ghonim, a Google executive who is reputed to have launched a Facebook page denouncing police brutality and political persecution, would be freed. He was abducted by regime police near the beginning of the pro-democracy demonstrations, on 28 January, and was not heard from publicly till today.

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Egypt: Revolution, not Devolution

February 6, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

On Tuesday, more than one million Egyptians turned out for mass demonstrations in cities across the country. On Friday, crowds massing in central Cairo and Alexandria were reported to be even larger than the Tuesday crowds, despite brutal and bloody assaults by pro-Mubarak militia on Wednesday and Thursday. It is now day 13 of the Egyptian transition to demonstrations, and opposition leaders are reportedly negotiating with the government to shape an orderly and peaceful process of transition.

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Mubarak Has Spilled Blood, Must Leave Power & Face Charges

February 4, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Over the last two days, Hosni Mubarak has made Cairo the most dangerous place in the world for journalists. After Mubarak’s new prime minister issued an “apology” for the lethal violence waged by pro-Mubarak gangs on Wednesday and into Thursday’s pre-dawn hours, the government appeared to be engaged in an even more intense campaign of violent assaults on unarmed pro-democracy demonstrators and journalists.

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Cairo Attackers Carried Police IDs; Pre-dawn Gunfire in Tahrir Square

February 2, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: 4 Comments

The suspicion now seems to have been demonstrated to be fact: news media across the world have shown images from Cairo of police ID cards recovered from rioting pro-Mubarak forces allegedly paid to assault journalists and pro-democracy demonstrators. The Mubarak regime has seized control of state media, is lying the Egyptian people, and is paying “goon squads” to brutally assault journalists and unarmed pro-democracy demonstrators.

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‘March of Millions’ Fills Cairo’s Tahrir Square

February 1, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Marking one full week of mass demonstrations, on the 8th day of the pro-democracy popular uprising, the Egyptian people staged the largest demonstration to date. Estimates for the size of the crowd at Midan Tahrir —or Liberation Square— range from 500,000 to 2 million. Some say more may have come to central Cairo but were unable to enter the square. The military pledged not to attack or interfere with demonstrators and the rally was peaceful. Security, both military and civilian, checked people entering the square to ensure there would not be violence.

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New ‘People’s Parliament’ Planning Egypt Transition

January 31, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

A new body, called the People’s Parliament, is planning a process of peaceful and orderly transition to an electoral democracy in Egypt. The People’s Parliament has 100 delegates, representing every major opposition party, including the Muslim Brotherhood (which holds 16 seats), and is reported to also have caucuses representing youth, academia, labor unions and professionals. The People’s Parliament has grown out of the National Assembly for Change, a coalition of opposition groups that has been organizing since 2009, to bring about this transition.

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Assad Plans Reforms in Syria

January 31, 2011 :: Eva Scherson :: 6 Comments

Bashar al-Assad, who inherited the hardline regime that has ruled Syria for nearly four decades, and whose government imposed strict Internet controls after the beginning of the uprising in Egypt, has announced he will move to implement political reforms in his country. It is not clear how those reforms would affect his government’s control on power, or whether his office would be up for a national election, but the announcement is the latest sign of how pervasive an effect the Egyptian protest movement is having across the region.

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Egypt Updates: Thousands Camp in Tahrir Square, Call for Mubarak to Go

January 31, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Thousands of Egyptian protesters are holding Tahrir Square, which has repeatedly been closed by security forces. Reports from Cairo suggest embattled Pres. Hosni Mubarak is moving to reassert control over major sections of the capital, but has yet to order an offensive against protesters in the main square. Mubarak told the nation he has asked his new prime minister to engage in dialogue with the opposition to promote democratic reform in Egypt.

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Egypt Updates: ‘Basic Collapse of Law & Order’, Anger at Mubarak

January 30, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: 5 Comments

NBC journalist Richard Engel told the weekly program Meet the Press today that Egypt is experiencing a “basic collapse of law and order” and that looting overnight, prison breaks and street violence are being blamed on Pres. Hosni Mubarak, whom many say is using the unrest to make freedom appear undesirable. There are rumors that prison breaks have been “allowed” in order to frighten the people and that police have been withdrawn in order to justify their return with extreme brutality.

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Egypt Updates: Worldwide Protests Join Demonstrators’ Call for Mubarak to Go

January 29, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: 5 Comments

Day 5 of the Egyptian pro-democracy uprising against the 30-year rule of Pres. Hosni Mubarak saw massive crowds of tens of thousands marching through Cairo, Alexandria and other cities across the country. While many images show demonstrators standing with or even riding joyously with military personnel on security vehicles, there were clashes near the Interior Ministry, where government snipers killed at least 12 demonstrators.

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Egypt Updates: Uprising Intensifies, Mubarak to Dismiss Government

January 29, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: 5 Comments

Two days ago, US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was similarly artful in her response to the protests: she called on “both sides” to refrain from violence and urged the administration of Hosni Mubarak to honor the “universal rights” of the people of Egypt, including the rights to assembly, association and expression. Mubarak has not been seen or heard from publicly since the crisis began, and observers speculate he may be considering concessions that would allow him to remain in power, at least temporarily.

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Pro-democracy Protests Across Arabic-Speaking World

January 28, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: 7 Comments

Pro-democracy protests are spreading across the Arabic-speaking world. After popular middle-class protests ended the authoritarian reign of Pres. Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, Egypt has been gripped by mass street demonstrations, in Cairo, in Alexandria, in Suez. Hosni Mubarak’s regime has responded with brutal attacks in demonstrators and an expanding ban on Internet usage and other forms of communication. Now, a pink revolution has flooded the streets of Sana’a, the capital of Yemen.

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Tens of Thousands Protest Authoritarian Rule in Egypt

January 26, 2011 :: Evelyn Winston Perez :: 8 Comments

Yesterday, in defiance of a total ban on public gatherings, tens of thousands of Egyptians marched in Cairo, decrying the authoritarian methods of the regime of long-time president Hosni Mubarak. Organizers said they planned to repeat and expand the protests today, but thousands of military and riot police are reported to be lining the streets of Cairo, and the government has shut down all access to Twitter inside Egypt, in an effort to prevent social media organizing.

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Mitch McConnell Says Tax Cuts should be “Deficit Neutral”

January 26, 2011 :: Webb Tisch :: 2 Comments

Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY), the Senate minority leader, says tax cuts to spur job growth, like all tax cuts, should be “deficit neutral”. He went on, during an interview with MSNBC, to say that the Congress will “have to look at how to pay for” proposed reductions in the corporate tax rate. Throughout 2010, Republicans consistently argued that tax cuts don’t need to be paid for.

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Rahm Emanuel is a Resident of Chicago

January 26, 2011 :: Riga Listin :: Comments Off

An appellate court in Chicago has ruled that Rahm Emanuel cannot run for mayor of Chicago, because he worked for two years as White House chief of staff. The ruling relies on the notion that Emanuel forfeited his Chicago residency by taking a job with the federal government in Washington, DC, but federal law specifies that in such situations residency remains intact.

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Obama Calls for Education, Innovation, Infrastructure & Collaboration

January 26, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

One seat was left vacant, in honor of Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-AZ), who is currently recovering from a severe gunshot wound to the head, suffered during an assassination attempt that killed 6 people. Pres. Obama opened his remarks with a tribute to the new Speaker of the House, John Boehner of Ohio, a unifying gesture that won loud applause from the hall. Obama then struck a somber tone and asked everyone to consider the lessons of the tragedy in Tucson.

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Glenn Beck Calls for Murder, Should Be Barred from TV

January 23, 2011 :: Eva Scherson :: Comments Off

Glenn Beck has once more taken extremist hate-speech to a new extreme, calling for the murder of liberals and progressives, whom he alleges are revolutionaries who are plotting an armed struggle to overthrow the United States government. It is the most unfounded and absurd of his conspiracy theories to date, and is clearly aimed at inciting a violent emotional reaction from people who are susceptible to the language of combat and armed intervention in the political realm.

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Olbermann Abruptly Leaves MSNBC: Neither Party Gives Reason

January 22, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

Liberal cable news powerhouse Keith Olbermann, one of the staunchest and most successful critics of the Republican party’s politics, has abruptly resigned from his show Countdown, on MSNBC. Olbermann’s success had driven MSNBC, which had dismissed then top-rated host Phil Donohue for criticizing the Iraq war effort, to re-orient its editorial stance toward the more progressive end of the political spectrum.

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Is Hu Tone-deaf, or is He Bargaining?

January 19, 2011 :: Eva Scherson :: Comments Off

China’s president Hu Jintao is visiting the United States and will be the focus of several state-level functions, including a full state dinner and a special luncheon hosted by the vice president, Joe Biden. In the face of US demands that China remove rate controls and allow its currency to appreciate, Pres. Hu has said the yuan should be thought of as the world’s currency standard, with other currencies priced against its value.

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Two Key Bush Policies Have Broken the US Job Market

January 18, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

There is little doubt that the United States is experiencing a long-term crisis in the scarcity of gainful employment. It is, in fact, persistently difficult for many laid off workers to find jobs even at a steep pay cut. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act did a great deal to staunch the bleeding, and has helped move the economy toward a grudging reversal in job trends, but we are still saddled with two major Bush-era policy shifts that are hampering job creation almost across the board.

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Bluster About Concealed-Carry Permits is Dangerous

January 15, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Democratic Congressman Heath Shuler and Republican Jason Chaffetz have responded to the rampage in Tucson by calling on staffers to obtain concealed-carry firearms permits and weapons training. Chaffetz has said he will carry a weapon himself when in his home district, implying he will be armed when visiting with constituents. While the emotion behind the [...]

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George Will’s Misguided Attempt to Justify Vitriolic Rhetoric & Violent Threats

January 11, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: 5 Comments

George Will today has written a vicious criticism of any attempt to examine whether political rhetoric over the last election cycle was too violent, too full of vitriol and hostility. He flippantly leads with the remark that “It would be merciful if, when tragedies such as Tucson’s occur, there were a moratorium on sociology.” Will argues that conservatives who used inflammatory distortions and thinly veiled threats of violence should not be scrutinized for demonizing others, then leads with a demonization of the entire field of sociology as made up of “half-baked explanations”.

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Congress Should Pass Permanent Assault Weapons Ban

January 11, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The United States Congress should honor the value of human life and the service of Rep. Giffords and her aides, those who showed uncommon valor and those who lost their lives, by taking up legislation to reinstate the national Assault Weapons Ban, and to make it permanent. There is no sane or defensible reason for allowing people to purchase weapons designed to kill large numbers of people in seconds or minutes. There is no way to justify such a reckless policy as somehow being written into the Constitution.

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Tea Party Express Raising Money from Giffords Shooting

January 10, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

The shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who has been targeted by opponents and conservative critics who have put her in gunsights in campaign advertisements and talked of taking her out, has raised ire across the nation for the mounting campaign of extremist rhetoric that over the last four years has seen repeated violent threats against members of Congress, candidates for public office, minority groups and people favoring healthcare reform. Now, the Tea Party Express is raising money, using the shooting and its aftermath as motivation, saying it will not allow anyone to tone down this extremist rhetoric.

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South Sudan Enters Day 2 of Secession Vote

January 10, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

South Sudan, a region that lives every day with the deep wounds of a long-running civil war that took more than 2 million lives, yesterday saw democracy play out peacefully, as locals went to the polls to vote in the referendum promised by a 2005 peace treaty with the Khartoum government in northern Sudan. The referendum will decide whether southern Sudan secedes from the larger nation, and with international observers and aid groups staging a formidable presence, and Khartoum sounding peaceable, day one of the vote was free of violence, and much like a celebration.

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Nothing Justifies Extremist Rhetoric or Violent Threats

January 9, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

In the wake of the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) and 19 other people, six of whom have already, tragically, died from their injuries, the national political establishment (media, pressure groups and elected officials) has turned its attention to the perils of extremist and vitriolic rhetoric. We are being asked to consider whether the use of metaphorical violence (putting Rep. Giffords in the crosshairs, which both Sarah Palin and her 2010 opponent did) leads to actual violence, and while direct responsibility is not being alleged, the ethical obligation to honor our democracy with civil discourse must be considered.

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Christina-Taylor Green Born on 9/11, Died in Tucson Shooting

January 9, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Christina-Taylor Green was born on 11 September 2001, a day of national tragedy for the United States, and she died yesterday in Tucson, in a hail of gunfire, as a result of the assassination attempt against Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. Christina-Taylor was seen by her family as a sign of hope, something beautiful born in the midst of a terrible tragedy.

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Rep. Giffords (D-AZ) Shot, Federal Judge Roll Killed in Tucson Attack

January 8, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) was shot today in an assassination attempt during a public outreach event in Tucson. She was prematurely reported killed by CNN and NPR, but her status is listed as critical, and she is said to be “responding to commands”. The bullet reportedly “passed through her brain”. At least 9 other people were brought in for emergency treatment of wounds suffered. One 9-year-old child, a 63-year-old federal judge, and at least three others have reportedly died.

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Repeal of Affordable Care Act Would Inflate Deficit, Cause Health Insurance Costs to Rise

January 7, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The planned vote to repeal last year’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act [pdf], if successful, would increase the federal budget deficit by $230 billion over the next ten years, would leave 32 million Americans with no access to affordable healthcare insurance, would strip small businesses of tax credits they get to help cover employee health costs, and would increase the cost per insuree across the nation. The Congressional Budget Office has released a study showing the negative impact repeal would have on the federal budget, the welfare of average Americans and the economy more broadly.

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Justice Scalia Says Constitution Allows Discrimination Against Women, Gays

January 6, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Justice Antonin Scalia, long considered one of the most right-wing justices to sit on the United States Supreme Court during the last century, has outraged Constitutional scholars and civil rights advocates by saying the Constitution provides no protection against discrimination for women or for gay Americans. He specifically targeted the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment, arguing that the intent of the words “any person within its jurisdiction” was not to include women or people of homosexual orientation.

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GOP Freshman Holds Lavish Fundraiser for DC Lobbyists

January 4, 2011 :: Denver Lessing :: Comments Off

Capping a season of lavish fundraising events where Republican members of Congress raised huge sums from lobbyists, corporate donors and special interests, one Republican freshman is holding a major bash, at $2,500 per person, complete with live performance by Leigh Ann Rimes, $50,000 all-inclusive package deals and luxury suites at the W hotel. Despite Tea Party opposition to corrupt corporate-interest politics, Rep. Jeff Denham is openly positioning himself to be the go-to rainmaker for fellow Republicans.

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Rep. Issa Asks Corporate Interests for Wish List of Regulations to Kill

January 4, 2011 :: Webb Tisch :: Comments Off

Less than one year after the historic passage of healthcare insurance reform, financial regulatory reform and the initial phase of EPA regulation of greenhouse gas emissions, Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) is asking industry to provide a wish list of regulations they would like erased from federal law. Issa is the new chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Affairs, and has announced his intention to use the post to eliminate consumer protections and anti-fraud regulations.

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Will 112th Congress Be Constructive or Ineffectual?

January 3, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The 112th Congress will be officially sworn in on Wednesday, and its work will be fraught with challenges and controversies from the very first. On Wednesday, for instance, the House of Representatives will vote on a rules change that will allow Budget Committee Chair Paul Ryan to dictate spending priorities and caps to the entire House and Senate, by disallowing any revision of his rewrite guidelines, should the two chambers fail to reach agreement on a budget resolution. Issues like raising the debt ceiling, implementing START, mortgage and foreclosure reform and expanding medical coverage, will all pit liberal against conservative in a split Congress.

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Citizens United v. FEC: Watershed or Call to Action?

December 31, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United v. FEC is guaranteed to be controversial long after the shock of its meaning fades from public consciousness. The ruling effectively gave multinational corporations free rein to spend unlimited sums of money with the specific intent of distorting the public discourse and swaying the democratic process in their favor. Some say it amounts to the death of real democracy in the United States.

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‘All-of-the-Above’ Energy Policy is Under-thought & Dangerous

December 30, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

With a new wave of elected officials coming to Capitol Hill next week, there is talk of a shift, at least in the House, to a so-called “all-of-the-above” or “let’s-do-everything” approach to energy policy. The idea sounds reasonable at first glance, because it suggests the maximum available energy will be made available to consumers, which should mean more choice, lower prices, less risk. The truth is: “all-of-the-above” is under-thought, ignores major costs associated with certain resources, and is, therefore, a risky economic strategy.

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Could it Be that Henry Kissinger Just Lacks All Human Empathy?

December 30, 2010 :: Eva Scherson :: Comments Off

There is much controversy over attempts to defend Henry Kissinger in the wake of revelations that he said the use of gas chambers to exterminate Jews was not “an American concern”. He was not just making a statement about past atrocities, and the ethical underpinnings of what should motivate diplomatic or military action; he was in fact suggesting to Pres. Nixon that if the Soviet Union, from which Jews were emigrating in large numbers, were to commence a new genocide, it would be of no concern to the US.

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Climate Destabilization & Cold Winter Weather

December 27, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: 8 Comments

Climate change means “global warming”, so how can severe winter storms and excessively cold breezes be evidence of a warming climate? The key is in the word “global”: the warming of the overall global average temperature need not manifest in all places at all times as warmer weather. Throughout the history of human civilization, the Earth’s climate has remained relatively stable, due to optimal global average temperatures; as global average temperatures slip outside that optimal range, the warmer air makes the interaction between climate systems more inconsistent and more severe.

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UN Recognizes Opposition Leader as President of Ivory Coast

December 24, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The small west African nation of Ivory Coast (also known by its French name Côte d’Ivoire) may be on the brink of civil war. After delaying presidential elections for 5 years, Pres. Laurent Gbagbo is reported to have disqualified over 500,000 ballots from opposition strongholds and is refusing to accept the results which show his opponent as the winner. Yesterday, the UN General Assembly (representing all member nations) formally recognized Gbagbo’s opponent, Alassane Ouattara, as president, in a unanimous vote.

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Tuition Fee Rise Pits Cameron Against the People

December 12, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

David Cameron, who campaigned as a rights-focused, green-conscious Tory, claims a steep rise in tuition fees will be good for Britons educational aspirations; but his plan to triple tuition fees for average British citizens seeking a university education initially led to nationwide protests, student rallies and sit-ins at the Conservative party headquarters. Now, the political crisis has escalated as passage of the tuition fee hikes has provoked violent riots in the streets of London.

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Assange Hype Sad Commentary on Security Policy

December 7, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The media storm surrounding the personal story of Julian Assange, reputed founder of WikiLeaks, is in many ways a sad commentary on the state of our security policy. The malice directed at Assange, and the coincidental pursuit of him on accusation of sexual assault in Sweden, appear to fit into a campaign designed to dissuade the general public from taking seriously anything produced by WikiLeaks. The fact is: there would be no use for WikiLeaks and no controversy whatsoever, if democratic governments did not rely so heavily on secrecy.

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Against the Good Nukes / Bad Nukes Fallacy

Cynicism often lends itself to the construction of intellectually convenient, overly facile descriptions of future events, which —bolstered by the impassioned worries and self-promotion of the cynic, the anti-prophet— quickly assume an air of prophetic certainty. Buoyed by the psychological satisfaction of carrying prophetic certainty within, the cynic then commits more and more fully to the proclamation of unshakeable doctrines about the future, based on bad-faith arguments and a passion for the despairing global outlook.

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