realclearpolitics | TODD: Thank you both. Let me move on to our next question here, and in fact it comes to us through New England Cable News.
Secretary Clinton, it's addressed to you, and it's about this issue of
the speeches, particularly to Goldman Sachs. This is what the questioner
wrote verbatim.
"I am concerned with the abuses of Wall Street has taken with the
American taxpayers money," and then she asks whether you would release
the transcripts of your Goldman Sachs speeches, and then added, "Don't
you think the voting public has a right to know what was said?"
But, let's make that bigger. Are you willing to release the transcripts
of all your paid speeches? We do know through reporting that there were
transcription services for all of those paid speeches. In full
disclosure, would you release all of them?
CLINTON: I will look into it. I don't know the status, but I will
certainly look into it. But, I can only repeat what is the fact that I
spoke to a lot of different groups with a lot of different constituents,
a lot of different kinds of members about issues that had to do with
world affairs. I probably described more times than I can remember how
stressful it was advising the President about going after Bin Laden.
realclearpolitics | NBC's Andrea Mitchell says Hill Clinton should release transcripts she
gave to investment banks to reassure the public she was not talking
about something that involves a conflict of interest. At Thursday's
Democratic primary debate moderated by MSNBC, former Secretary of State
Clinton said she would look into releasing the transcripts.
"It's very hard for the average working person to believe that someone
could make that much money from a speech and that there is nothing given
in return if it's someone who just left government," Mitchell said.
"She's been claiming all along that I'm invited to speak to these
investment banks because they want to know my world view -- what do I
think of Russia, what do I think of China, I'm a former Secretary of
State and all former Secretaries of State have done this in recent
decades. And if the transcripts shows that they were talking about
something that involves a conflict of interest, I mean, I have no idea.
But just to settle it, reassure the public that they are being brought
inside these secret board rooms and they know what's going on," Mitchell
said.
msnbc | In a Democratic primary that has been largely fought on Sen. Bernie
Sanders’ terms and issues, Hillary Clinton hasn’t gotten to be the
transformative candidate. But at Thursday’s MSNBC debate, she made the
risky choice to argue that as a woman, she could be.
“Honestly, Senator Sanders is the only person who I think would
characterize me, a woman running to be the first woman president, as
exemplifying the establishment,” Clinton said.
As for Clinton’s implicit point that gender has disqualified her from
being part of the establishment, Sanders’ press secretary, Symone
Sanders, responded in an interview with MSNBC, “Yes, women can be part
of the establishment… To me, that’s just like asking can a black person
be part of the establishment, can a white person be part of the
establishment. One’s gender or race is not the thing that determines
‘the establishment.’”
thefederalist | During the Democratic town hall that aired on CNN Wednesday night, Hillary Clinton completely fell apart onstage when Anderson Cooper asked her about $675,000 she received for delivering three speeches at Goldman Sachs.
Throughout the campaign, her opponentBernie Sanders has criticized Clinton’sability to deliver on her promises to crack down on Wall Street after taking more than $600,000 in speaking fees from Goldman Sachs in a year.
“Was that a mistake? Was that a bad error in judgement?” Anderson asked.
“Well, I dunno,” Clinton said. “That’s what they offered. Every secretary of State that I know has done that.”
Clinton’s remarks during the televised town hall may have given off the impression that she wasn’t very involved when negotiating speaking deals, but the truth is, she is actually a heavy-handed negotiator.
TheWashington Postreportedthat when Clinton agreed to deliver a speech at the University of California Los Angeles in 2014, she charged the publicly-funded school $300,000. When school administrators asked for a discounted rate, Clinton’s handlers informed UCLA that $300,000was the special, discounted rate for public universities.
NYTimes | On Sunday, at the Corinthian Baptist Church in Des Moines, former President Bill Clinton, looking frail and sounding faint, stumped for his wife, working through her qualifications with a husband’s devotion and a Svengali’s facility.
But one thing he said stood out to me for its clear rhetorical framing.
He attributed much of the anger that’s present in the electorate to anxiety over a changing demographic profile of the country, but then said:We are going to share the future. The only question is: What will be the terms of the sharing?
This idea of negotiating the terms of sharing the future is an expansive one, on both ends of the ideological spectrum, but it also seems to me to be an internal debate white America is having with itself.
Much of the energy on both the left and the right this cycle is coming from white Americans who are rejecting the direction of America and its institutions. There is a profound disappointment. On one hand, it’s about fear of dislocation of supremacy, and the surrendering of power and the security it provides. On the other hand, it’s about disillusionment that the game is rigged and the turf is tilted. It is about defining who created this country’s bounty and who has most benefited from it.
White America is wrestling with itself, torn between two increasingly distant visions and philosophies, trying to figure out if the country should retreat from its present course or be remade.
The results from the Iowa caucuses revealed that Republican caucusgoers gave roughly even support to the top three finishers — Ted Cruz, a much-loathed anti-institutional who has shown a pyromaniac’s predilection for wanting to torch Washington rather than make it work; the real estate developer spouting nativist and even fascist policies with the fervor of a prosperity preacher; and Marco Rubio, a too-slick-to-be-trusted stripling who oozes ambition with every obviously rehearsed response.
On the left, the white vote wasnearly evenly split in Iowabetween Hillary Clinton, a pragmatist who believes that the system can be fixed, and Bernie Sanders, a revolutionary who believes that system must be dismantled. At least on the Democratic side, age, income and liberalism seemed to be the fault lines — older, wealthier, more moderate people preferred Clinton and younger, less wealthy and “very liberal” people preferred Sanders.
Clintonwon the support of nonwhitesin Iowa 58 percent to Sanders’s 34 percent. This gap also exists — and has remained stubbornly persistent — in national polls, and in some polls is even wider. For instance, according to a JanuaryMonmouth University Poll, nationwide black and Latino support for Clinton was 71 percent as opposed to 21 percent for Sanders. At this point, this is a settled issue for nonwhite voters, and those voters are likely to be Democratic primary king- or queen-makers.
npr |
Mice were much healthier and lived about 25 percent longer when scientists killed off a certain kind of cell that accumulates in the body with age.
What's more, the mice didn't seem to suffer any ill effects from losing their so-called senescent cells.
These are cells that have stopped dividing, though not necessarily because the cells themselves are old. "It's a normal cell that experienced an unusual amount of stress, and it decided to stop dividing," saysJan van Deursen, who studies senescent cells at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine in Rochester, Minn.
Older creatures have a lot more of these cells than young 'uns. And even though the cells aren't dividing, they do keep busy — they secrete a mixture of chemicals that can trigger inflammation, which seems to be involved in just about every major age-related disease.
sciencemag | Entanglement is a key resource for quantum computers, quantum-communication networks, and high-precision sensors.
Macroscopic spin ensembles have been historically important in the development of quantum algorithms for
these prospective technologies and remain strong candidates for implementing them today. This strength derives
from their long-lived quantum coherence, strong signal, and ability to couple collectively to external degrees of freedom.
Nonetheless, preparing ensembles of genuinely entangled spin states has required high magnetic fields and
cryogenic temperatures or photochemical reactions. We demonstrate that entanglement can be realized in solid-state
spin ensembles at ambient conditions. We use hybrid registers comprising of electron-nuclear spin pairs that are localized
at color-center defects in a commercial SiC wafer. We optically initialize 103 identical registers in a 40-mm3 volume
(with 0:95þ0:05 −0:07 fidelity) and deterministically prepare them into the maximally entangled Bell states (with 0.88 ± 0.07
fidelity). To verify entanglement, we develop a register-specific quantum-state tomography protocol. The entanglement
of a macroscopic solid-state spin ensemble at ambient conditions represents an important step toward practical
quantum technology
WaPo | The Iowa Democratic Party has an unusual system in the event that a caucus vote ends in a tie: They flip a coin.
Given how close the Democratic race in Iowa was this time around, and given how well Hillary Clinton did at those moments that a tie needed to be broken, you probably already know this. But in case you don't, there wereat least six caucus locationson Monday in which unallocated delegates were assigned by a coin toss.
dailykos | One of the best questions you can ask people in organizations that are struggling is:
If you could get rid of one thing, what would it be?
It’s a great question (and also one that should be asked in confidentiality) because:
It’s hard to think about changing everything.
It’s easier to think about one thing to eliminate.
People often have a really good idea about what that one thing is
in an organization. Often it’s the elephant in the room that people
can’t talk about publicly for fear of retribution. Sometimes, it’s a
person.
One thing clearly stands head and shoulders above the rest when you
talk to many people in corporate America. It’s an idea that completely
removes responsibility from many corporations in our society. It’s an
idea that threatens not only our constitutional democracy, but also
every value Christians hold dear and every value we hold dear from
modernity and post-modernity.
NYTimes | The intelligentsia on the left rarely lets a moment pass without
reminding us of the demographic eclipse of white middle-class voters.
Sometimes, those voters are described as racists, or derided as dull
suburbanites who lack the élan of the new urban “creative class.” The
message: White middle-class Americans aren’t just irrelevant to
America’s future, they’re in the way.
Conservatives are no less harsh. Pundits ominously predict that the
“innovators” are about to be overwhelmed by a locust blight of
“takers.” The message: If it weren’t for successful people like us,
middle-class people like you would be doomed. And if you’re not an
entrepreneurial “producer,” you’re in the way.
Is it any surprise that white middle-class voters are in rebellion?
Democratic and Republican Party establishments appeal to the interests
of these voters, promising to protect them (Democrats) or spur growth
that will renew economic opportunity (Republicans). But these appeals
miss the point.
Our political history since the end of World War II has turned on the
willingness of white middle-class voters to rally behind great causes
in league with the wealthy and political elite: Resist Communism! Send
a man to the moon! Overcome racism! Protect the environment! Today,
white middle-class voters want to be reassured that they can play an
active role in politics. They want someone to appeal to their sense of
political self-worth, not just their interests.
This is precisely what Mr. Trump and Mr. Sanders offer. Mr. Trump
speaks about restoring American greatness, rhetorical gestures akin to
Barack Obama’s vague 2008 slogan, “Yes, we can.” We can mock both as
empty. But voters who feel disempowered and marginalized latch on to
this promise. They want to be partners with the rich and powerful in
defining our future as a country, not recipients of their benevolent
ministrations, which explains why they’re untroubled by Mr. Trump’s
great wealth.
Mr. Sanders also appeals to the strong desire that the white middle
class has to recover its central role in the national project. While he
attracts support from a wealthier stratum of the middle class than Mr.
Trump, the appeal is the same. He asks them to join him in
fundamentally remaking our political economy. We can dismiss his
socialism as an unworkable throwback, but he’s doing something our
political establishment can’t or won’t: asking middle-class voters to
undertake a nation-defining transformation.
If these candidates have traction, it’s because over the last two
decades our political elites, themselves almost entirely white, have
decided, for different reasons, that the white middle class has no role
to play in the multicultural, globalized future they envision, a future
that they believe they will run. This primary season will show us
whether or not they’re right.
observer | Sidney Blumenthal has been an intimate family friend to Hillary Clinton for two decades, and the emails between them show late night calls, social visits to one another’s home, and all the informality expected of two close and trusted friends. We know Mr. Blumenthal was a senior adviser to Ms. Clinton during her 2008 campaign for the presidency and would have continued during her time as secretary of state had his appointment not been stopped by President Obama’s staff due to Mr. Blumenthal’s penchant for nasty campaign tactics.
Nonetheless, Ms. Clinton valued Mr. Blumenthal’s advice to such a degree that she secretly hired him as a private advisor, paying him $120,000 a year for his services.
A number of columns have been written exposing how Mr. Blumenthal sent articles to Ms. Clinton from his son Max, one of America’s most notorious Israel haters. Ms. Clinton responded very favorably to them. Some of these writings would later be the basis for Max’s anti-Semitic Goliath, whose book launch was thrown by Sid at his own home. The disgraceful writings compare Israel to the Nazis, call for the expulsion of the Jews from Israel and whitewash Palestinian terrorism. For good measure Max also compares the Israel Defense Forces to the SS.
The emails thus released show that Mr. Blumenthal sent 19 articles written by Max, most of which contained deep anti-Israel sentiment.
What is truly unsettling is Ms. Clinton’s glowing praise for Max’s work. On numerous occasions she forwarded the articles to her staff with the words “Pls print,” and a number of times she asked for multiple copies so that she could hand them out to her staff and discuss them.
RT | The former finance minister of Greece says people must work to save democracy from capitalism, otherwise the voracious economic system will completely devour the fragile political philosophy, he warned in a recent talk.
I was in attendance at a conference in Beirut last year when it was reported thatSyriza, the left-wing Greek party, originally founded in 2004, had just done the impossible—or at least what we all thought was impossible. There was talk about ending austerity measures and Greece leaving the Eurozone:Grexit. Surely, a people’s victory in the US was just around the bend?
At that moment, I felt hope that Athens would lead Europe and finally the United States in a people-focused policy that rejected neoliberalism and the nostrums of banksters. Indeed, after Syriza surged in Greece, Podemosmade its appearance in Spain; Jeremy Corbynwon the nod for leader of the UK Labour Party; a leftist governing coalition was voted into power inPortugal. Suddenly, it seemed that the people finally had austerity on the run. The events in Europe gave me hope for a resurgence of progressive politicians in the US.
And then the unthinkable occurred: Syriza dashed my hopes when they sat down at the negotiating table with Germany and the banksters to ease terms on the repayment of Greece’s debts to the EU. Yes, after the Greek people had voted Syriza into power, and then voted a resounding “No” to austerity policies in a referendum, Syriza was now at the bargaining table, agreeing to their demands. I couldn’t believe what I was witnessing: A real-time betrayal of its own values as well as the people by a political party created to be anti-austerity.
For unemployed adults in 22 states, that's how long they can count on help with the grocery bills: Starting this January, they have three months to find a job or lose their food assistance.
SNAP benefits — formerly known as food stamps — have been tied to employment for two decades. Unless they are caring for children or unable to work, adults need to have a job to receive more than three months of benefits.
But after the recession began, that three-month cap was waived in many areas, as state and federal governments acknowledged that jobs were hard to come by.
Now, as the economy is improving, the time limits are being reimposed — by federal policy in some areas, by state legislators in others.
For 22 states, the time limit returned in some or all of the state at the beginning of this year. It's the largest reinstatement of the three-month cap since the recession, The Associated Press reports
A million SNAP Recipients Affected
The three-month time limit applies to people ages 18 to 50 who aren't caring for a child or other dependent, aren't pregnant and aren't disabled or otherwise prevented from working. After their three months are up, such recipients must be working or in a training program at least half-time (80 hours a month) to receive SNAP benefits.
Guardian | The richest stand to gain more from the introduction of new technology than those in poorer sections of society, according to a report which warns that policymakers may be required to intervene to tackle the widening inequality.
The so-called fourth industrial revolution, following on from the introduction of steam power, electricity and electronics, will have less of an impact on developed economies, such as Switzerland, Singapore and the UK. Emerging markets – notably in parts of Latin America and India – will suffer when artificial intelligence and robots become widely used, reducing the competitive advantage of their cheap labour.
The report by Swiss bank UBS, published on Tuesday to coincide with the start of theWorld Economic Forum in Davos, warns that some skilled work is also at risk as robots become more sophisticated.
Axel Weber, the chairman ofUBS, said: “Inequality increases not just between developed and developing and emerging countries. It’s also within our society. It will have an impact not only between the rich and the poor but also the young and the old.”
The report outlines a polarisation in the labour force and “greater income inequality imply[ing] larger gains for those at the top of the income, skills and wealth spectrums”.
“These individuals are likely to be best placed from a skills perspective to harness extreme automation and connectivity; they typically already have high savings rates and will benefit from holding more of the assets whose value will be boosted by the fourth industrial revolution,” the report says.
dailycaller | California Rep. Darrell Issasaid Friday that the FBI “would like to indict both Huma [Abedin] and Hillary Clinton” for conducting classified government business on a private email server.
The Washington Examiner reports that Issa, the former chairman of the House Oversight Committee, said FBI Director James Comey is “in a position where he’s being forced to triple-time make a case of what would otherwise be, what they call, a slam dunk.”
Abedin has been a long time Clinton confidant and top aid both during Secretary Clinton’s tenure as Secretary of State, as well as on the 2016 Campaign.
“You can’t have 1,300 highly sensitive emails that contain highly sensitive material that’s taken all, or in part from classified documents, and have it be an accident,” Issa explained.
“There’s no question, she knew she had a responsibility and she circumvented it. And she circumvented it a second time when she knowingly let highly-classified material get onto emails in an unclassified format,” Issa said.
Documents related to a US police association have been dumped online, as well as a database of personal information and member-only forum backup.
The affected organisation is the “Fraternal Order of Police” (FOP),which describes itselfas “the world's largest organization of sworn law enforcement officers, with more than 325,000 members in more than 2,100 lodges.”
“We have learned today that our data system has been hacked by the Group known as Anonymous,” said a statementposted on Facebookby the FOP national president Chuck Canterbury on Thursday. The attack “appears to have originated outside of the United States,” the statement continued.
It’s unclear why Canterbury attributed the hack to Anonymous. There is nothing in the dump that suggests someone acting under the Anonymous umbrella was involved.
The dump itself includes hundreds of documents, many of which are so-called “agreements” between US cities and law enforcement associations or lodges of the FOP. These touch on everything from holiday pay to motorcycle cleaning, sick leave, and purchasing of department badges, and date back to 2006. A few text files containing snippets of emails are also in the dump.
The files also include a database sourced from the “Grand Lodge,” the national part of the organization, and a backup of the group's forum.
thenation | The starting point for understanding Bill Clinton’s economic program is
to recognize that it was thoroughly beholden to Wall Street, as Clinton
himself acknowledged almost immediately after he was elected. Clinton
won the 1992 election by pledging to end the economic stagnation that
had enveloped the last two years of the George H.W. Bush administration
and advance a program of “Putting People First.” This meant large
investments in job training, education, and public infrastructure.
But Clinton’s priorities shifted drastically during the two-month
interregnum between his November election and his inauguration in
January 1993, as documented in compelling detail by Washington Post
reporter Bob Woodward in his 1994 book The Agenda. As Woodward
recounts, Clinton stated only weeks after winning the election that
“we’re Eisenhower Republicans here…. We stand for lower deficits, free
trade, and the bond market. Isn’t that great?” Clinton further conceded
that with his new policy focus, “we help the bond market, and we hurt
the people who voted us in.”
How could Clinton have undergone such a lightening-fast reversal? The
answer is straightforward, and explained with candor by Robert Rubin,
who had been co-chair of Goldman Sachs before becoming Clinton’s
Treasury secretary. Even before the inauguration, Rubin explained to
more populist members of the incoming administration that the rich “are
running the economy and make the decisions about the economy.”
Wall Street certainly flourished under Clinton. By 1999, the average
price of stocks had risen to 44 times these companies’ earnings.
Historically, stock prices had averaged about 14 times more than
earnings. Even during the 1920s bubble, stock prices rose only to 33
times earnings right before the 1929 crash.
A major driver here was Wall Street’s craze for Internet start-ups. In
1999, for example, AOL’s market value eclipsed that of Disney and Time
Warner combined, and Priceline.com’s value was double that of United
Airlines. The Clinton team created the environment that encouraged such
absurd valuations. Throughout the bubble years, Clinton’s policy
advisers, led by Rubin and his then protégé Larry Summers, maintained
that regulating Wall Street was an outmoded relic from the 1930s. They
used this argument to push through the 1999 repeal of the
Glass-Steagall financial regulatory system that had been operating
since the New Deal. The Clinton team thus set the stage for the
collapse of the Dot.com bubble and ensuing recession in March 2001,
only two months after Clinton left office. They also created the
conditions that enabled the even more severe bubble that produced the
2008 global financial crisis and Great Recession.
antimedia | Oxitec firstunveiledits large-scale, genetically-modified mosquito farm in Brazil in July 2012, with the goal of reducing“the incidence of dengue fever,”asThe Disease Dailyreported. Dengue fever is spread by the same Aedes mosquitoes which spread the Zika virus — and though they“cannot fly more than 400 meters,”WHO stated,“it may inadvertently be transported by humans from one place to another.”By July 2015, shortly after the GM mosquitoes were first released into the wild in Juazeiro, Brazil, Oxitec proudlyannounced they had“successfully controlled the Aedes aegypti mosquito that spreads dengue fever, chikungunya and zika virus, by reducing the target population by more than 90%.”
Though that might sound like an astounding success — and, arguably, it was — there is an alarming possibility to consider.
Nature, as one Redditor keenlypointed out, finds a way — and the effort to control dengue, zika, and other viruses, appears to have backfired dramatically.
The particular strain of Oxitec GM mosquitoes, OX513A, are genetically altered so the vast majority of their offspring will die before they mature — though Dr. Ricarda Steinbrecher published concerns in areport in September 2010that a known survival rate of 3-4 percent warranted further study before the release of the GM insects. Her concerns, which were echoed by several other scientists both at the time and since, appear to have been ignored — though they should not have been.
Those genetically-modified mosquitoes work to control wild, potentially disease-carrying populations in a very specific manner. Only the male modified Aedes mosquitoes are supposed to be released into the wild — as they will mate with their unaltered female counterparts. Once offspring are produced, the modified, scientific facet is supposed to ‘kick in’ and kill that larvae before it reaches breeding age — if tetracycline is not present during its development. But there is a problem.
According to an unclassifieddocumentfrom the Trade and Agriculture Directorate Committee for Agriculture dated February 2015, Brazil is the third largest in“global antimicrobial consumption in food animal production”— meaning, Brazil is third in the world for its use of tetracycline in its food animals. As a study by the American Society of Agronomy, et. al.,explained,“It is estimated that approximately 75% of antibiotics are not absorbed by animals and are excreted in waste.”One of the antibiotics (or antimicrobials) specifically named in that report for its environmental persistence is tetracycline.
In fact, as a confidentialinternal Oxitec documentdivulged in 2012, that survival rate could be as high as 15% — even with low levels of tetracycline present.“Even small amounts of tetracycline can repress”the engineered lethality. Indeed, that 15% survival rate was described by Oxitec:
“After a lot of testing and comparing experimental design, it was found that [researchers] had used a cat food to feed the [OX513A] larvae and this cat food contained chicken. It is known that tetracycline is routinely used to prevent infections in chickens, especially in the cheap, mass produced, chicken used for animal food. The chicken is heat-treated before being used, but this does not remove all the tetracycline. This meant that a small amount of tetracycline was being added from the food to the larvae and repressing the [designed] lethal system.”
Even absent this tetracycline, as Steinbrecher explained, a “sub-population” of genetically-modified Aedes mosquitoes could theoretically develop and thrive, in theory,“capable of surviving and flourishing despite any further”releases of ‘pure’ GM mosquitoes which still have that gene intact. She added,“the effectiveness of the system also depends on the [genetically-designed] late onset of the lethality. If the time of onset is altered due to environmental conditions … then a 3-4% [survival rate] represents a much bigger problem…”
billmoyers | The answer to the problem of money in politics is political change. We
need a Supreme Court that will accept political equality as a
compelling interest that justifies reasonable campaign regulations, and
to build the jurisprudence necessary for a new progressive Supreme
Court. That Court cannot come until after the retirement of four older
justices currently sitting on it, which would open up the potential for
a new progressive majority.
This book sets out new thinking about how to rescue our politics from
plutocracy. We need to move beyond a partisan world in which Chris
Christie bows before Sheldon Adelson and in which Democrats propose
futile amendments to “overturn Citizens United” while engaging in
fundraising practices similar to Republicans. We should think through
these issues before American democracy is too far skewed toward the
interests of the wealthy, in the hope that some future Supreme Court
proves willing to accept reasonable limits on money in politics. This
book offers a way to advance the goal of political equality to resolve
the inevitable tension between free economic markets and voter equality. Fist tap Arnach.
WaPo | Calling someone dishonest is one of the most serious political
insults in the United States. The country has been obsessed with its
politicians' honesty at least since President George Washington's first
biographer popularized the tale of him hacking at the trunk of a cherry
tree. "I cannot tell a lie," a young Washington supposedly said when
confronted about the damage.
Now, with less than a week until the
Iowa caucuses and with Bernie Sanders advancing in the polls, Hillary
Clinton still hasn't been able to clear away the accusations of
dishonesty that have clouded her campaign. At the Democratic
presidential town hall on Monday, a Sanders supporter noted that it's
a reason Clinton has struggled to attract young voters: "I've heard from
quite a few people my age that they think you're dishonest," he said.
Here's the thing, though: There was no cherry tree. Washington's biographer apparently fabricated it. "The
great founding myth of American political integrity, chopping down the
cherry tree, is, in fact, itself a lie," said Martin Jay, a historian at
the University of California at Berkeley and author of a book called "The Virtues of Mendacity."
That's
the real lesson of the tale of Washington's cherry tree: Americans
might just be overly attached to the ideal of a scrupulously honest
president. Especially at a time of intense polarization in Congress,
recent experience suggests that the direction of public policy will
have little to do with whether the Oval Office's next occupant really
believes what he or she says on the campaign trail.
"It's necessary, in politics, to have a certain willingness to bend the truth," Jay said. "You're not electing the pope."
WaPo | To understand why the current conservative
crack-up so confounds the Republican establishment, you have to
recognize that the party is facing two separate but simultaneous
revolts: one led by Ted Cruz, the other by Donald Trump.
The first is well described by E.J. Dionne Jr. in his important new book, “Why the Right Went Wrong.”
For six decades, he explains, conservatives promised their voters that
they were going to roll back big government. In the 1950s and early
’60s, they ran against the New Deal (Social Security). Then they railed
against the Great Society (Medicare). Today it is Obamacare.
But they never actually did anything. Despite nominating Goldwater
and electing Nixon, Reagan and two Bushes, despite a congressional
revolution led by Newt Gingrich, these programs endured, and new ones
were created.
Whatever
the reality, Republicans kept promising something to their base but
never delivered. This has led to what Dionne calls the “great betrayal.”
Party activists are enraged, feel hoodwinked and view those in
Washington as a bunch of corrupt compromisers. They want someone who
will finally deliver on the promise of repeal and rollback.
Enter Cruz. How did a first-term senator, despised within his party
both in Washington and Texas, get so far so fast? By promising to take
on the party elites and finally throttle big government. Cruz has said
that he will repeal Obamacare, abolish the IRS and propose a constitutional amendment to balance the budget — which would mean hundreds of billions of dollars in spending cuts.
Trump’s
supporters, on the other hand, are old-fashioned economic liberals. In a
powerful analysis, drawing on recent survey data from the Rand Corp., Michael Tesler
shows that the Trump voter is very different from the Cruz voter. “Cruz
outperforms Trump by about 15 percentage points among the most
economically conservative Republicans,” he writes. “But Cruz loses to
Trump by over 30 points among the quarter of Republicans who hold
progressive positions on health care, taxes, the minimum wage and
unions.” Trump is well aware of this fact, which explains why he has said repeatedly he won’t touch Social Security
or Medicare, spoke fondly of the Canadian single-payer system,
denounces high chief executive salaries, promises to build
infrastructure and opposes free-trade deals.
Rejuvenation Pills
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Return of the Magi
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Covid-19 Preys Upon The Elderly And The Obese
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sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
arrived at the emergency room at the University of Vermont Medical Center.
He ...