To protect the sanctity of marriage and for the betterment of society, sign the petition for a California state proposition that would prohibit divorce between heterosexual married couples.
An astute commenter (and Nathan Moore) points out the similarities in Steve Gill’s most recent opinion piece in the Nashville City Paper and an article entitled, “Hillary Clinton’s Fix,” by Al Kamen of The Washington Post.
In light of Milwaukee Magazine’s recently published must read by an ex-conservative talk radio program director, which confirms that “Conservative talk show hosts would receive daily talking points e-mails from the Bush White House, the Republican National Committee and, during election years, GOP campaign operations,” is it any wonder that certain talk show hosts find it difficult to originate a thought?
What’s so chilling about the article, besides it’s decidedly confessional tone (it was their coverage of Katrina that finally made the author “see the light” and move on to a less soul-killing job), is that you can easily replace the name of the Milwaukee conservative talker that is its focus, “Charlie Sykes,” with local conservative talkers “Steve Gill” or “Phil Valentine.” Go ahead. Try it:
To begin with, talk show hosts such as [Charlie Sykes]…are popular and powerful because they appeal to a segment of the population that feels disenfranchised and even victimized by the media. These people believe the media are predominantly staffed by and consistently reflect the views of social liberals. This view is by now so long-held and deep-rooted, it has evolved into part of virtually every conservative’s DNA.
and
The second strategy, The Preemptive Strike, is used when a host knows that news reflecting poorly on conservative dogma is about to break or become more widespread. When news of the alleged massacre at Haditha first trickled out in the summer of 2006, not even Iraq War chest-thumper [Charlie Sykes] would defend the U.S. Marines accused of killing innocent civilians in the Iraqi village. So he spent lots of air time criticizing how the “mainstream media†was sure to sensationalize the story in the coming weeks. [Charlie] would kill the messengers before any message had even been delivered.
and
Then along came the worst natural disaster in U.S. history. Journalists risked their lives to save others as the storm hit the Gulf Coast. Afterward, journalists endured the stench and the filth to chronicle the events for a stunned world. Then they documented the monumental government incompetence for an outraged nation. These journalists became voices for the voiceless victims, pressing government officials to get help to those who needed it.
Yet, while New Orleans residents were still screaming for help from the rooftops of their flooded homes, journalists were targeted by talk show hosts, [Charlie] and [Wagner] among them. Not the government, but journalists. Stories detailing the federal government’s obvious slowness and inefficiency were part of an “angry left” conspiracy, they said. Talk show hosts who used e-mailed talking points from the conservative spin machine proclaimed the Katrina stories were part of a liberal “media template.†The irony would have been laughable if the story wasn’t so serious.
and
But the key reason talk radio succeeds is because its hosts can exploit the fears and perceived victimization of a large swath of conservative-leaning listeners. And they feel victimized because many liberals and moderates have ignored or trivialized their concerns and have stereotyped these Americans as uncaring curmudgeons.
Because of that, there will always be listeners who believe that [Charlie Sykes], [Jeff Wagner] and their compatriots are the only members of the media who truly care about them.
Less plagarism than formula, I think.
Tennessee Republican Party Chief of Staff Mark Winslow responds to a congratulatory email from an FOL* on the selection of TNGOP Communications Director Bill Hobbs as the winner of our First Annual Thanksgiving Jive Turkey Award:
Yes we are always thrilled to get awards form local kook liberal radio hosts. Enjoy your new GOP state majority.
Thanks, Mark! We’ll deal with it…while it lasts.
In the meantime, the kooks at Liberadio(!) hope that Mr. Winslow enjoys his stay in the ‘Culture First!’ backwoods, where economic development, infrastructure development, educational development, and development of anything other than policies governing the U.S./Mexico border or the womb go to die.
Meanwhile, the kooks will continue their lives as public citizens working for the rights of all Americans via Tennessee Citizen Action and in various appointed roles recognizing longstanding commitment to actual policy ideas and outcomes.
Happy Thanksgiving!
*Friend of Liberadio(!)
While many of us are on the same page this Thanksgiving – thankful for the specter of a more thoughtful and unifying presence in the White House come January 2009 – others continue to spew their hate-filled bile solely for the purpose of trying to divide and conquer.
With this in mind, and in the spirit of the upcoming holiday, we’d like to present our First Annual Thanksgiving Jive Turkey Award.
For our first award we could have picked Sarah Palin as she continues to telegraph her almost zen-like tone-deaf political aspirations, or treasury secretary Henry Paulson for “assuring” the stability of our financial institutions just a few days before Citigroup stocks dropped another 26%. But we thought this year we’d stay a bit closer to home.
And so, without further ado, let’s introduce our winner. Ladies and gentlemen, the First Annual Liberadio(!) Thanksgiving Jive Turkey Award goes to…Tennessee Republican Party Communications Director Bill Hobbs!
Insert golf clap here
Bill’s many achievements include:
1) Twisting the Words of Others to Fit His Agenda. At this, Bill is a master. Take for instance his presentation of an LA Times article which lists Obama’s many achievements during his 4-year career as a full-time lawyer. Mr. Hobbs’ take on the article? “LA Times: Obama was a Lazy Lawyer.”
2) Not Using a Dictionary. Because if he did, we’re sure he’d know the definition of “lie” (as in “to lie”). A lie is not when someone takes a statement like “Republicans may not be able to stop this bailout,” and infers that the issuer of said statement, as a Republican, is against the bailout. A lie is, well, pretty much anything Bill Hobbs has ever written about President-elect Barack Obama.
3) Spewing Hate-Filled, Divisive, and Thinly-veiled Bile for the Sole Purpose of Winning. We’re sure that when Bill is writing about this Senator or that presidential candidate he sometimes forgets he’s a human being. What else could explain his labeling President-elect Obama as “America’s First Pro-Death President?” You stay classy, Bill.
Some are calling for the ouster of Hobbs, but if he wasn’t given the boot after crafting his now infamous “Anti-Semites for Obama” press release, which was roundly criticized by several of Tennessee’s high-ranking members of the GOP, we’re pretty sure he’s not going anywhere. Which is unfortunate because Hobbs is the worst kind of partisan hack – the intellectually dishonest AND really, really creepy kind.
(Congratulatory emails can be sent to Bill’s boss, Robin Smith, Chairperson of the Tennessee Republican Party at chairman@tngop.org)
After weeks of blaring headlines atop the Financial Times, the collapse of Lehman Bros., the transformation of standalone investment banks Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs into deposit-takers (as a mechanism for accessing bailout money), a $25 billion bailout of the carmakers, a $700 billion bailout of the financial industry, a secondary $800 billion bailout focused on secondary credit markets, a record low in consumer confidence, unemployment as high as its been in 15 years, a separate bailout for Citigroup, a decline in GDP in the 3rd quarter that was already negative and then revised downward, and probably a few other staggering indicators (including much of the global turmoil) I’m missing, reading Bob Krumm as the tire falls off the swing is almost amusing.
Finally, as an exclamation point, last week, the Nashville Public Library, a participant in the ITVS Community Cinema project, screened I.O.U.S.A, a documentary about America’s problem with debt. The movie provides a stark reminder that we’re facing a fiscal crisis in addition to our current financial crisis. It prominently features David Walker, until recently the Comptroller General of the United States, who engaged in a Fiscal Wakeup Tour with The Concord Coalition. (See Liberadio(!) coverage from their Nashville stop, which was hosted by Congressman Jim Cooper.) The documentary provides an excellent visual reiteration of the finer points of the presentations given during that tour, and the issue, unsurprisingly, has not gone away. Incidentally, Mr. Walker left his job as a bureaucrat to focus full-time on America’s fiscal crisis. He’s now CEO at the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, which shares his personal mission. His work will bear watching, for once the financial crisis is behind us, we have a fiscal crisis to tackle.
I highly recommend the movie, and there’s a substantial trailer available:
For those living in the reality-based community, Marketplace has complete coverage of the financial crisis, which, by any measure of the coverage from the financial news industry and economists, does, in fact, exist.
Summary: Guests include State Senator Andy Berke, Councilman at large Jerry Maynard, Jennifer Buck Wallace, and Elbert Ventura.
Part 1 – We Are Thankful For… – Freddie gets a crazy idea for us to say, out loud and on the radio, what we are thankful for. Bet you can guess one of them.
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Part 2 – Interview with Senator Andy Berke – No! Not the Chattanooga Choo-Choo! Tweetin’ State Senator Berke represents the 10th District of Tennessee (the Fightin’ 10th!), which includes parts of Hamilton and Marion counties. He’s a Democrat and proud of it. We find out why.
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Part 3 – Nothing Says “Thanksgiving” Like The West Wing – The turkeys from Jasper Farms are back, and more relevant than either Phil Valentine or Rush Limbaugh.
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Part 4 – Interview with Councilman at large Jerry Maynard – Councilman at large Jerry Maynard is the former deputy chairman of the Tennessee Democratic Party and he gives us his take on why these are the best of times and the worst of times in Tennessee.
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Part 5 – Interview with Jennifer Buck Wallace – Ms. Wallace is a CMT producer turned community organizer who quit her job last year to volunteer as the principle organizer for the Obama campaign in Tennessee. We talk to her about how, as a white female, she was not compelled to do service to her gender and support Hillary Clinton, her experience as an Obama campaign organizer, and her very, very bright future.
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Part 6 – Media Matters for America Smackdown – Media Matters Research Fellow Elbert Ventura talks to us abut the history of how the media treats presidential transitions. Guess who gets the shaft?
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If Governor Bredesen had welcomed Barack Obama to Tennessee during his campaign he might have learned something about fostering party unity with grace and quiet leadership. Hell, he could have learned that from Republican Jason Mumpower much more recently.
Instead, the titular head of the Tennessee Democratic Party decided, with his latest statement funneled through spokesperson Lydia Lenker, to ignore the old axiom “When you find yourself in a hole, stop digging” and make public his “trust issues” with current House Majority Leader Gary Odom.
“Unfortunately, there have been some trust issues with Rep. Odom,” Bredesen spokeswoman Lydia Lenker told The Associated Press in an e-mail exchange late Wednesday. She did not elaborate on what those issues have been.
“We’re actively exploring options other than Rep. Odom to carry the administration’s legislative package,” she wrote.
Has the Governor’s relationship with the Democratic caucus deteriorated so badly that he has to communicate his leadership preference through the press? Or is his intended purpose to embarrass Rep. Odom?
Regardless, during the past year our Governor “suggested” the Democratic nominee for President not visit the state, all but disappeared from the stump when the State party needed his 95-county-winning-ways the most, and made public a long-standing political feud within his own party.
Perhaps now would be a good time for him to take a play from the Obama book and put an end to the petty bickering. Yes, he has a state to run and a budget to balance and he may not always get the cooperation of his fellow Democrats on the hill, but the people (remember them?) who make up the Democratic Party of Tennessee – those who foresee two hellish years of fighting the last gasp of this country’s culture war – are aching for leadership.
Despite what he and many others may want to believe, the United States is not a “center-right” nation. No political candidate needs to wallow at Walmart for votes. Nor are we “center-left.” In the words of WaPo’s E.J. Dionne, we are a “fundamentally non-ideological nation” because “Many who would like the government to act more boldly still need to be persuaded of government’s capacity to succeed.” So use the skills of your able-bodied spokesperson for good and not evil, Governor, and help develop a message that will define Democratic ideas and persuade of the capacity to lead and succeed. Then choose the right language with which to present the message and build an infrastructure to communicate it.
And what is the Democratic/Progressive message? It’s simple, really. Smart and efficient government. Freedom, equality and security for all. Responsibility to ourselves and to others.
UPDATE: Senator Andy Berke is on it: “So I find nothing wrong with our party that can’t be solved by talking to voters about Democratic accomplishments, Democratic commitments and Democratic values.”
The Nashville chapter of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State is organizing a local protest this Saturday November 15th at 12:30 pm to coincide with the nationwide protests against bans on gay marriage. Join them at One Public Square, adjacent to the Metro Courthouse (where James Robertson Parkway, 3rd Avenue North and the Main Street bridge meet.
And no matter what issue you may have with Keith Olbermann (he doesn’t vote?!? WTF?), it’s hard to argue against the points he makes in his most recent “Special Comment.” Yes, Keith sweetie, it IS all about love.
Oh, and by the way, 538.com boy wonder Nate Silver disproves the meme that African-Americans singlehandedly defeated Prop 8 in Cali.
At the end of the day, Prop 8’s passage was more a generational matter than a racial one. If nobody over the age of 65 had voted, Prop 8 would have failed by a point or two. It appears that the generational splits may be larger within minority communities than among whites, although the data on this is sketchy.


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