Archive for March, 2008

The Radio Is In The Hands Of Such A Lot Of Fools

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Today on the Northern Alliance Radio Network:

  • Volume I “The First Team” – Chad, John and Brian will do their thing from 11-1.
  • Volume II “The Headliner”Ed is out, and I’ll have some special plans.  The 1PM hour will be “So You Wanna Be A Radio Star”, with “winners” of Kool Aid Report’s poll vying to “replace” Ed.  We’ll take your votes.  After that, James Lileks will be in for the 2PM hour.
  • Volume III, “The Final Word”King joins Michael from 3-5.

So tune in to all six hours of the Northern Alliance Radio Network, the Twin Cities’ media’s sole guardians of sanity. On the air at AM1280 in the Metro, or streaming at AM1280’s Website, or via podcast at Townhall.

I’ll also be appearing on the David Strom Show at about 9:30AM, talking about Rep. Tony Cornish’s “Stand Your Ground” bill.  There’s a lot of disinformation almost no legitimate factual information in the mainstream media about this bill; I’ll try to set the record straight. 

Who’s Shading the Downey Campaign?

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Late yesterday, I wrote about this curious postcard that a correspondent in Edina recieved:

And on back…:

I got this email along with the attachment. The email is from a known, Republican source who is highly familiar with both the Downey campaign and GOP politics in the area:

Today in mailboxes in Edina, delegates to Saturday’s endorsing convention for HD41A received a misleading postcard, clearly intended to suppress turnout of Keith Downey supporters.

Keith is NOT running for Hennepin County Commissioner and is going full tilt at the endorsement on Saturday in spite of this desperate attempt to derail his campaign.

To the casual observer, this appears to be a dirty trick, intended to confuse people as the endorsement battle reaches its climax tomorrow.

Did anyone else in Edina see this?

Lesson To Be Learned

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Palestinian gunman kills eight Jewish seminary students:

Witnesses said the gunman went into the library at the Mercaz Harav seminary in the city’s Kiryat Moshe quarter and opened fire.

Here’s the interesting part:  the shooting was stopped…wait for it…wait for it…

…by an armed student:

One of the students, Yitzhak Dadon, reportedly shot the gunman twice before he was finally killed by an off-duty Israeli army officer, who had gone to the school after hearing gunfire.

“I shot him twice in the head,” he told the Reuters news agency.

“He started to sway and then someone else with a rifle fired at him, and he died.”

I have a strong hunch he wasn’t going to be doing any more shooting after that.

Israel has had a policy of allowing lawful concealed carry in schools of all types since an earlier rash of terrorist school shootings.  The rate of school shootings in Israel is vanishingly low.
Why does the American left hate students?

Petards Hurt

Friday, March 7th, 2008

For starters; if you’ve not been reading Michael Brodkorb’s extended coverage of Al Franken’s labor scandal in New York City (he allegedly didn’t pay “Al Franken Inc’s” workmen’s comp bills), you should get caught up right now.

But I was drawn in particular to this bit here; a spokesman for Franken bemoans the plight of the small businessperson:

“‘We’re not actually sure what happened at this point. As most small business owners know, when you’re dealing with bureaucratic entities sometimes they make the mistake, sometimes you do,’ she said. ‘We don’t know which one happened in this case but we’re going to pay the fine in good faith so our accountant can deal with it on his time not the presses and not the Republican party’s.’

You read that right; a representative of the would-be candidate of the party of lumpen, leaden, gray bureaucracy, the party that loves small business (as long as they don’t mind regulation, confiscatory taxes, and being hounded to death should they succeed financially), is whinging about the vagaries of dealing with…lumpen, leaden gray bureaucracy!

Ratched Rising

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Dennis Miller on the Clinton comeback:

Well, you know, it reminded me that in many ways, Hillary Clinton is Glenn Close in “Fatal Attraction.” And you better hold her for the extra breath or she’s coming up with a Ginzu. And that’s what happened last night.

To be fair, only Vince Foster’s rabbit got boiled…

I think Barack Obama — you know, when I hear Dick Morris, and I had my earpiece in, so I was privy to him talking a little bit about how he didn’t think the Clintons would go to the nuclear option. I think people ascribe more nobility to them vis-a-vis the Democratic Party than I do. I’ve always said I think they’re in the Clinton business.

And I loved this bit:

To me, they’re like Bonnie and Clyde ripping through the countryside in that jalopy. And they’ve got Buck Barrel in the back. He’s kicked out the window. He’s shooting out the window. Madeleine Albright is Estelle Parson. She’s screaming. You hear that banjo music. They’re just going to do what they have to to advance their cause.

On the Jack Nicholson endorsement:

Listen, there are surprises every week with Hillary Clinton. Jack Nicholson has endorsed Hillary Clinton. Now, I know there are always cultural scholars that theorize that, apres the lobotomy, Randall McMurphy would, indeed, fall in love with Nurse Ratchet. I guess this validates that theory.

The whole thing, as they say, is worth a read.

(Via Brad C)

Blast From The Past

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Yesterday’s explosion at the Times Square military recruitment office is still under investigation – but, as Malkin notes, the left in America, by commission and omission, has long been engaged in a campaign against the military, through its most visible representatives, its recruiters.

Those of us watching the far-left’s preparations for the GOP Convention in Saint Paul this fall have been warned to keep an eye out around military recruiting centers, memorials (downtown Saint Paul has several) and anything else with military connotations.

Malkin also covers the continuing investigation into yesterday’s bombing; while the leftymedia continues to back away hard from the notion that it could be left-wing domestic terrorism, Congressional Democrats have been getting mail from someone claiming to be involved.  While in itself this proves nothing, it’s interesting watching the lengths that ABC went to (in the linked post) to avoid mentioning the target of the blast (is journalism really about getting the who, what, when, where, why and how?).

At any rate, watch how this coverage shakes out for cues about how the leftymedia will cover potential violence this fall in Saint Paul.

(Hint:  Poorly)

Desperate?

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Keith Downey is running for the GOP endorsement in Edina, against RINO Ron Erhardt.

A correspondent of mine in Edina got the following postcard today:

And on back…:

Of course, Downey is running for the House, not the Henco Commission.

Where did the come from?

Coming Soon To Saint Paul

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

One of the things we’ve been told to look out for during the Republican National Convention is for the anarkids and the Code Pink harpies to try to blockade or vandalize military recruiting stations and other military-associated landmarks; monuments, armories, and so on.

While the NYPD isn’t saying much about this morning’s bombing at the Times Square recruiting station in New York, John Hinderaker speculates:

The Times Square recruiting station “has been the site of regular antiwar protests since the start of the Iraq war.” Given the increasing virulence of attacks on the military and on military recruiting facilities by antiwar groups like Code Pink, most notably the repeated confrontations in Berkeley, one could speculate that a liberal group is the most likely culprit. So far, however, there are no suspects.

We’ll see, of course; one suspects that the NYPD (and the alphabet soup of federal agencies) will take this pretty seriously.

MinMon Will Be Despondent

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

King notes the state’s economy might not be nearly as bad as the Tics need it to be:

When state economist Tom Stinson first came forward to say the state was in a recession, he was quoted as saying

“We should normally add somewhere around 23,000 jobs or a little bit more just to keep up with labor market growth,” Stinson said. Instead, the year-over-year job total fell by 700.

Last week DEED reported a revision of the number of jobs in Minnesota to a gain of 15,300 from January 2007 to January 2008. Most of these jobs came from revision of the previous data. This isn’t booming growth by any stretch of the imagination, but it puts Minnesota quite close to the national average. I wonder if that revision makes him a little less certain of his recession forecast. It would for me. The revisions in the St. Cloud data are equally profound.

Pop  your Xanax, lefties.

If I’ve noticed anything in 30 years of watching economies (as a participant, not an academic), it’s that if the “experts” are saying we might be in a recession, it’s already well underway and bottoming out.  If they say we might be growing, the boom has been going on for months.

Noted In Passing

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Given the pessimism some of us note from the Obama campaign, I love the quote that DowningWorld noted, from the late William F. Buckley:

But the recently-departed William F. Buckley knew better. He knew that there is no need for despair in America. Here’s a quote from a collection published by the Wall Street Journal:

Despair is inappropriate for a culture as buoyant as our own.

Well, one American party vaguely remembers this…

Beware Of Flaks Bearing Gifts

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

If there’s someone who qualifies as “The Lori Sturdevant of the NYTimes” – the Gray Lady’s most reliable Tic flak – it’s Frank Rich.

So when he Mcomes out and admits the Times’ great nemesis, Rush Limbaugh, is right, conservatives would do well to keep the exits to that Trojan Horse covered with machine guns and artillery.

BEFORE they were sidetracked into a new war against The New York Times, the Rush Limbaugh posse had it right about John McCain. He is a double agent. Some Democrats do admire and like him. So does Jon Stewart, and so do many liberal editorial boards and card-carrying hacks in the mainstream American press. So, in fact, do many at The Times, including myself. As long as I don’t look too hard at the fine print.

Rich’s “fine print” must be on the contract he signed, obliging him to be a mindless flak – but I digress.

You’ve got to love a guy who said a few years ago that he regretted likening Mr. Limbaugh to “a circus clown” because of all the complaints from circus clowns insulted by the comparison. “I would like to extend my apologies to Bozo, Chuckles and Krusty,” Senator McCain told a rather startled Neil Cavuto of Fox News.
News Flash, Frank Rich – conservatives have all sorts of problems with John McCain. Some of us made peace with them weeks ago, when Romney bowed out. Some of us were dragged to the table by your paper’s hatchet job against the man.

What’s more, Ann Coulter and Tom DeLay aren’t entirely wrong when they bluster that a vote for Mr. McCain amounts to a vote for Hillary Clinton (or, for that matter, Barack Obama).

Oh, puh-leeze.

When Frank Rich “agrees” with Ann Coulter or Tom DeLay, start looking for the punch line.  Or the whammy.

The Arizona senator’s otherwise conservative record is closer to the Democrats on immigration, campaign-finance reform, stem-cell research, global warming, oil drilling in Alaska, waterboarding, Gitmo and, until a recent flip-flop, the Bush tax cuts.

Which are, in order; lamentable, a travesty for which conservatives will need to get their pound of flesh, an important but not critical issue, something we need a Republican Congress to countervail, not really the President’s turf, understandable, ditto, and I don’t give a rat’s ass if someone “flip flops” if they “flip flop” in the right direction.

In The New Republic, Jonathan Chait concluded that Mr. McCain’s Senate votes made him “the most effective advocate of the Democratic agenda in Washington” during the first Bush term.

If you leave out the war, spending, taxes (mostly) – y’know, the things that matter for presidents.

The good news for the Democrats so far is that whatever Mr. McCain’s sporadic overlap with liberals, he is emulating almost identically the suicidal Clinton campaign against Mr. Obama. He has mimicked Mrs. Clinton’s message and rhetorical style, her tone-deaf contempt for Mr. Obama’s cultural appeal, and her complete misreading of just how politically radioactive the war in Iraq remains despite its migration from the front page.

Frank?  Slapnuts?  He’s been running for the endorsement.  Republican primary and caucus voters aren’t really looking for Obama’s “unicorn in every garage” message.

Hence, he won.  And beats Obie and Madame Putin in hypothetical polls.

Which is why, naturally, Frank Rich is writing this noxiously disingenuous article.

A Bright, Shining, Cheery Spot of Springtime Red In a Sea of Dismal, Depressive Blue

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

I went to my District (aka BPOU) convention last night,

66B is deep in the heart of the urban beast; half of the district is in John Marty country, and the other half is in Saint Paul proper. Alice the PhantomHausman is our “representative” in the House, with Ellen Anderson in the Senate. It’s one of the bluest places in Minnesota.

But last night, we drew a record number of delegates from the precinct caucuses. As I noted yesterday, some longtime Republicans were concerned about some of the tactics the Ron Paul campaign was talking about pulling to stack the delegates at the Fourth District convention next month. But energy is the last thing you want to stifle, especially when you’re drawing hordes of younger voters, which is a fairly rare thing at a GOP convention in a place like Saint Paul. Chad the Elder put it well:

Lots of people (many of them young and many of them Ron Paul backers) are getting actively involved in politics for the first time. We need their energy and their enthusiasm and we need to do our best to keep them involved. That’s why this reflexive urge by Republican regulars to mock and dismiss Paul supporters needs to stop.

Yes, some of them are a little too enthusiastic and can veer to the extremes at times. But that’s part of the package that you tend to get with youth. They’re passionate and they care deeply, two qualities in short supply in today’s GOP.

But there was little evidence of procedural shenanigans. One woman who appeared (verbally) to be a Paul supporter tried to amend the rules to allow unseated delegates to vote anyway – which failed. Note to the Paul supporters; your website listed all sorts of procedural maneuvers, but you need to learn how Robert’s Rules of Order work.

Still and all the district sent eight delegates; I think 1-2 of them were Paul supporters, and at least half were hardcore Republican activists.

Beyond that? The Resolutions voting had to dispose of a bunch of obvious Paulbot resolutions bubbling up from the caucuses, including one that called for “Bringing all the troops home from around the world right now”. Gratifyingly, even in the mixed room, it garnered not a single vote – although I did get to unleash one fun stemwinder in opposition anyway.

I’ve never been in a District 66B convention that was so much fun. I’m hoping the CD4 convention (to which I’m a third alternate delegate) is as energetic.

Malevolent Beats Trite

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Clinton tops Obama in Texas, Ohio and the all-important Rhode Island vote:

Clinton won the big races in Ohio and Texas, as well as Rhode Island, to break her costly losing streak, and asserted, “This nation’s coming back and so is this campaign.” But Obama came away with a large share of delegates, too, in counting that continued Wednesday, meaning he’s got a lead that’s tough to overcome.

Democrats:  Clearly, Hillary is the only candidate that truly carries the Democrat standard.  You need to support her.

Liberal:  Clearly, Obama is the only candidate that truly upholds liberal values.  You need to support him!

Undecided Democrats:  Send money to both of them!

A Penny Saved Is 1.4 Pennies Earned

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

The price of producing a penny has risen to 1.4 cents.

King, at the end of a piece about the factors in the rise and the government’s frustration with efforts to eliminate the coin, writes:

It would be nice to make arguments about the penny and price granularity, but the explanation for the penny’s existence is not moved by these concerns. We are used to seeing prices with $.01 as the smallest grain; we don’t process below that very well (as Nick Szabo argues) and we’re not inclined either to deal with rounding up as Speed Gibson offers for a way to eliminate the penny. There’s a feeling to the consumer that he or she has been had by this, that it’s a scam, and I don’t think any amount of explanation is worth the benefit of getting pennies out of the till.

For my part? Eliminating the penny is justification for guerrilla warfare.

Open Questions: Music Edition

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

In their 1982 classic “This Beat Goes On”, the lead singer of the Canadian band “the Kings” tells some unnamed strumpet “You said to call me up when I was in Tirana”. Now, this being 1982, Albania was run by a paranoid Maoist clacque (sort of like Minneapolis) and among the most closed societies on earth. Was this a toss-off espionage reference? Or was the singer of Albanian descent?

Longing For The Relatively Sane Days of Ralph Nader

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Minnesota Greens have McKinneymania!

At the Green Party’s caucus on March 4th, Cynthia McKinney led the state’s straw polling with 62% of the votes, with 50 out of 67 senate districts reporting. While the straw poll is non-binding, it is a good indication that Ms. McKinney will likely have a lot of support in the coming June convention, where Minnesota’s 12 delegates to the national convention will be chosen.

Cynthimentum!

Dead But Not Necessarily Out Of It?

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Hillary is coming out of the gate strongly in Texas.

Jay Reding:

Real Clear Politics has the latest round of Texas polling, and it is looking very good for Hillary Clinton. PPP has Clinton up by 6%. Insider Advantage has her up by 5%. Zogby has her up by 3%. Rassmussen shows her down, but only by 1%. At this point, Clinton leads in the RCP Poll Average—narrowly, but it’s a lead nonetheless.

Clinton has a solid lead in Ohio, which puts her in a position to almost certainly take that contest. If she takes both Texas and Ohio, she will be in a strong position going into Pennsylvania and some of the later contests. With each passing contest, the idea that this race may not be settled until the convention becomes more and more likely.

On to Denver, baby!

Rule Of Law Emotion, Fad, Mob Whimsy

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Jay Reding on Obama’s policy on judicial nominations:

Stephen Bainbridge notes that Sen. Obama doesn’t exactly get it when it comes to the rule of law. The basic principle at stake here is this: judges are supposed to say what the law is, not what they think it ought to be…Here’s what [Obama] said about the type of judge he would nominate:

We need somebody who’s got the heart, the empathy, to recognize what it’s like to be a young teenage mom. The empathy to understand what it’s like to be poor, or African-American, or gay, or disabled, or old. And that’s the criteria by which I’m going to be selecting my judges.

Paying attention yet?

That’s precisely the wrong way to pick a judge. There is a reason why the statutes of Lady Justice has her wearing a blindfold—the law should not discriminate based on how sympathetic a defendant or a plaintiff is. It is not the position of a judge to decide that someone should be treated differently under the law merely because of the color of their skin or their social disposition. We are nation of laws, not of men. The law applies equally to all, and should not be subjugated to social whim, no matter how well-intentioned.

It’s the legislators who are supposed to base their decisions on “sensitivity” – given that they are elected, that’s part of not only their job description, but – in theory – a prerequisite for the job.

Obama:  More and more, he sounds like Jimmy Carter.

Packed House

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

At my precinct caucus – a month ago, now – we were pretty well mobbed with Ron Paul supporters.  Many of them were utterly clueless about how caucuses worked (no biggie – we’re all about the education), although a few of them were pretty rude about it; they wanted to come in and vote for Ron Paul and leave.

So while Romney won by a landslide across Minnesota, in my district, which is pretty well glutted with college kids, the Paulbots were out in force – they tipped Romney by a single vote in my district, and won by significant margins in other precincts.

Of course, there’s a method to the madness.  The Paulbots packed the convention for a reason.

From the Paul/Minnesota website:

We’re on to Step Two: election of delegates from the local conventions to the Congressional District and State conventions.

If you were elected delegate or alternate from your caucus, you need to attend your County or Senate District convention, for which you have already received a convention call, or soon will.  These will be held as early as February 23 and into March.

We will be going through much the same process as with the caucuses.  You will receive a list of fellow supporters also elected delegate or alternate, and you need to coordinate amongst yourselves (with our help) to elect a full slate to the next conventions.

I got this email from an east-Metro GOP activist:

I just want you to know, and to publicize it without naming me, please, that there are a LOT of Ron Paul moles out there getting Delegate spots. I have at least two of them of my six slots that got elected; I only know me and [redacted] of the six, so two more are suspect as well. There is a 4th District coordinator for the Ron Paul campaign, going to conventions as a “guest” to “learn about the process’, but actually coordinating all the Ron Paul flying monkeys to vote a slate, and its very effective.

I’ve noticed that a few of my own precinct’s delegates (I’m a precinct chair) didn’t leave valid addresses or phone numbers.

This rankles, for people who’ve been working in the party for a while:

I will never see these morons again after this November, and they’re taking up delegate slots for true party activists.

Of course, this was the same complaint you heard from people two years ago in the Sixth District – disgruntled by Michele Bachmann’s ability to turn out votes at the caucuses and conventions.  Of course, Bachmann was a Republican, which is something most of the Paulbots can hardly say with a straight face.

You may want to remind the BPOU chairs that while guests are allowed, they are NOT allowed on the floor at any time, and are not to interfere in the business of the BPOU.

BPOU chairs?  Consider yourself on notice.

This guy, Jeff Hagen, was walking all over and [name redacted] and I could see him talk to people and then they’d look our way and just GLARE at us.

I am so angry that good delegates are now second alternates because of these frauds.  This guy, for example, is a self-proclaimed member of the Libertarian Party, but basically running a coup of the Republican Party. I can guarantee you the reason we had such a huge turnout at caucus was in part because of the Ron Paul group.

Okay, I feel better.

Thanks!

As we head into District Convention season (my own, 66B, is tonight, although I’m not a delegate), remember – we’re a big tent, but there are some basic principles this party is supposed to follow.  And while there are some libertarian ideals that the Party could stand to (and, in many cases, does) embrace, the Paulbots are pushing some lines that Republicans should find noxious.

Classless

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

As the Twin Cities’ best feminist, I get a little queasy when I see some of what passes for “feminism” these days.

The most notable thing about this campaign, of course, is that it inevitably pits two key “identity politics” camps against (in this case) an older white guy – but, first, against each other.

And, to some – the WaPo’s reliably shallow and shrill Linda Hirschman, in this case – there’s just no getting past the identity politics:

Maria Shriver sure has great hair. Stepping up to the microphone at a girl-power rally in Los Angeles on Feb. 3, California‘s first lady tossed her tawny tresses with authority and instructed Golden State women to vote for Sen. Barack Obama in the Democratic presidential primary on Super Tuesday. So urgent was the matter, she said, that she had come to the rally “straight from my daughter’s riding lesson.”

Two days later, working-class California women, many of whom can’t even afford to give their daughters health care, much less riding lessons, ignored Shriver’s mane-shaking advice and voted for Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton by a margin of 2 to 1, even as many of their better-off sisters fell into lockstep with the Kennedy heiress.

And there we have one of the most puzzling conundrums of the 2008 Democratic contests. Black voters of all socioeconomic classes are voting for the black candidate. Men are voting for the male candidate regardless of race or class. But even though this is also a year with the first major female presidential candidate, women are split every way they can be. They’re the only voting bloc not voting their bloc.

The simple reason, of course, is that America is not a nation of blocs.

Well, that’s not true.  America has tons of blocs.  80% of active-duty military, most married women with children, white married males with kids, engineers, Cuban-Americans, Southerners and Westerners, businesspeople and evangelicals vote Republican.  Most teachers, union members, unmarried women, drug dealers and professors  vote Democrat.

What do those “blocs” have in common?

Well, as opposed to “women” and “black Americans”, they’re matters of choice.  One chooses to be each of those things (even “Cuban-American”; the status started and continues with a choice).

For the Clinton campaign, this is devastating. A year ago, chief strategist Mark Penn proclaimed that the double-X factor was going to catapult his candidate all the way to the White House.

At the time, I figured Mark Penn was an idiot.  Apropos nothing much.

Instead, the women’s vote has fragmented. The only conclusion: American women still aren’t strategic enough to form a meaningful political movement directed at taking power. Will they ever be?

If “women” (womyn?) want to marginalize “themselves”, “they” should feel free.

Hirschman seems bedeviled by the notion that woman are people, not X-chromosome-seeking vote-bots:

I can imagine the strategists for the senator from Illinois thinking, “What’s that song in Verdi‘s ‘Rigoletto’?” Women are fickle.

Turns out it’s true.

From the moment the primary season began, the group “women” divided along racial lines. Black women have backed Obama by more than 78 percent. But even after subtracting that group, white women (including Hispanics) are still the single largest demographic in the party, at 44 percent. If they voted as a bloc, it would take only a little help from any other bloc to elect the female candidate. White women favor Clinton. So why is she trailing as the contest heads to Ohio and Texas?

The answer is class. As of Feb. 19, the day of the Wisconsin primary, ABC pollster Gary Langer found that white women with a college degree had favored Clinton in the primaries by 13 percent up to that point. Among less educated women, meanwhile, she commanded a robust 38-point lead. But each passing week since Super Tuesday has seen a further erosion in support for the senator from New York among the educated classes. In Wisconsin, she won a minority of college-educated women. And unless there’s some sort of miracle turnaround in Ohio and Texas, this is what may cost her the Democratic nomination.

In other words, drat the luck, women – even Tic women – aren’t votebots!

For the chattering classes – and there is no chatter-ier columnist in American than Linda Hirschman – “women’s politics” all starts with abortion, extends through “swag”, and ends…well…

This isn’t the class divide I would have predicted a year ago. Among women, the obvious thing would be for lower-income, non-college-educated white and black women to line up behind the candidate with the more generous social platform. Both Clinton and Obama have generous platforms, but Clinton’s health-care plan is more ambitious, and she was the first to propose mandatory paid family leave (which mostly women take).

But Hirschman can’t resist the snooty (emphasis):

But women, black and white, stubbornly refuse to behave according to a strict model of economic self-interest. Black women of all income levels have gone for Obama.

Even before Wisconsin, a plurality of elite white women split off from their poorer counterparts to vote for Obama. So did many of their opinion leaders — Shriver and her Kennedy cousin Caroline, and powerful female governors including Janet Napolitano of Arizona and Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas.

And to Hirschman, it’s just unconscionable that women would think (or, given Obama’s dearth of considered policy, “think”) beyond their chromosomes:

So many feminists’ turn to solidarity with their own class is a surprise.

Because, Linda Hirschman, for women who you’d probably not call “elite” – and men, for that matter, too – it’s the pocketbook, stupid.

I’d tell you to read the whole thing, but all that’d do is get you depressed.

Where Credit Is Due

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Over at True North, Matt Abe notes that KTLK-FM afternoon host (and my long-time talkradio role model) Jason Lewis has built quite the one-stop shop for conservatives:

Tired and frustrated at waiting for conservative leadership elsewhere, Lewis is beginning to lead a conservative reformation in Minnesota politics, but not from where he would be subject to the slings and arrows of elected office. Instead Lewis is working from his bully pulpit of talk radio, the Internet, and a growing network of conservative activists. Overreaching by the DFL in the Legislature this session, and the crumbling of the Pawlenty veto firewall, may be adding fuel to Lewis’s fire.

Not to plug the competition, but kudos to Jason.  He’s also got one of the best “blogrolls” of conservative sites in the business.

And kudos, in addition, to everyone that’s been in the online agitation game for the past six years; the MOB, my fellow NARN hosts (especially Ed and Powerline), and True North.  After six years of running the most vibrant blog community in the country, it’s really impossible to be taken seriously in this market if you don’t have a solid online presence – which doesn’t just mean “a slick website” anymore. 

(But note to Jason; get an RSS feed.  Actually clicking on websites is so 2000).

Life Imitates Art Imitating Life

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Over at Hot Air, Allahpundit points us to a SlateV video that starts out showing similarities between Barack Obama and West Wing’s “Jimmy Santos”.

But the similarities don’t end there.

Go over and spend three minutes watching it.

Kafka Lives

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

I knew early on that I didn’t want to be a teacher. 

Don’t get me wrong.  My dad was a high school teacher for four decades, and – as I’ve noted in this space many times – a great one.  And for my whole life, he’s evangelized his trade very eloquently.

Of course, by the time I was in college the profession had changed quite a bit – and I knew pretty much from the beginning it wasn’t the field for me.  I’ve gotten the impression that the teachers’ union has turned it into a blue-collar factory job – like an assembly line, bolting little bits of knowledge onto passing units students – while the education academy has imposed a politically-correct culture on the profession that seems, from my experience as a parent, to stifle thought and teach a one-sided view of pretty much everything with more than one side.

Still, I’ve seen or heard of nothing quite as Sartreian as this piece from last weekend’s edition of “This American Life” – “Act One”, about the New York Public Schools’ “Rubber Rooms”, places where hundreds of teachers, held on probation for one charge or another.  As the blurb notes:

Teachers are told to report there instead of their classrooms. No reason is usually given. When they arrive, they find they’ve been put on some kind of probationary status, and they must report every day until the matter is cleared up. They call it the Rubber Room. Average length of stay? Months, sometimes years.

They get paid full salary as they wait.

And wait.

And wait.

Oh, just  listen. 

Your tax dollars at work.

The Company He Keeps

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Roosh over at RooshFive thinks that the election is eventually going to turn on economic issues – and he’s seeing some good news from the McCain campaign:

In anticipation of this fact, coupled with his own implicit admission that he lacks executive and economic experience, McCain has enlisted a dream team of financial advisors – presumably potential cabinet members.

Read the whole thing.  It’s generally good news.

Belated

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Missed this over the weekend; Brad Carlson’s father in law passed away.

Condolences, prayers and best wishes to one of the first couples of the Twin Cities blogosphere.

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