Never. Someone should tell this guy that it’s just gross.

Steve Gill On John Murtha

We do admire his restraint in using only one explanation point, but the politicization of the death of a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, the first Vietnam War combat veteran elected to Congress, and a 19 term Congressman? Not so much.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

“…You can smell it,” wrote Tennessee Williams, “It smells like death.” In the case of radical conservative pundits, talk show hosts, and cable news talking heads, it also smells like desperation and fear.

Fear that they are losing their powerful ideological grip on American political culture and desperation as the gravy train they’ve been traveling on for too long begins to dry up.

As their fear and desperation increases, so do their lies.

Local conservative talker Steve Gill got caught by the Sumner County Democrats lying about a Vol State class. Is it right that his listeners called the college to harass a professor based on Gill’s lies? No, it’s irresponsible broadcasting.

During one of his shows last week, Steve Gill took aim at a Vol State class that encougrages meaningful community service with instruction, a widely recognized and respected concept called “service-learning” Listen:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

…98% of what he and his caller say are lies. The class isn’t connected to http://serve.gov/, nor is it connected to ACORN, nor does it require students to dig ditches. The 2% that is not a lie? Jennifer Pitts teaches at Vol State! Not surprisingly, Volunteer State has been flooded with calls denouncing the “liberal professor” and her “crony of the Democratic party” boss.

If you have a free moment, please call 230-3501 or write Warren.Nichols@volstate.edu to express your support for their mission and to express your disapproval for the hatred and lies of Steve Gill.

And Tom Kovach is spreading the lie that started at Breitbart.tv and quickly spread through the right-wing echo chamber that “community organizers” were “praying” to Obama. Tom wants you to be very afraid. But Tom is lying. He is desperate. An afraid.

And Fox News is lying about another Obama Admin official. This time it’s that Kevin Jennings of the Dept. of Education “cover[ed] up statutory rape” in Massachusetts and wants to “turn” your child gay. Hannity is after Mr. Jennings as is minions at the Washington Times. But they are also lying.

Mendacity. It’s oozing out of the pores of radical right-wing commentators everywhere.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

I’m looking for a little “word up” from anyone on the right about this Voter Confidence Act kerfuffle.

Anyone? Anyone?

Slater? Gill? Valentine? DelGiorno? Bristol?

Aren’t free and fair elections something we can all agree on? Don’t you guys see the dangers inherent in electronic voting?

I can only assume that like us, you want to win elections fairly. Wouldn’t it be nice to all be working towards that goal together?

  • Share/Bookmark

I tuned in to WWTN and WLAC this morning for, quite literally, a minute each and heard the same misinfo coming from both DelGiorno and Gill*: Sen. Chris Dodd added a loophole to the recovery bill that allowed AIG to give out the suspect bonuses everyone is talking and/or writing about.

Except he didn’t. Dudes gotta stop getting all their material from Drudge.

*I suspect that if you turn on Valentine right now you’ll be hearing the same thing.

  • Share/Bookmark
He looks pretty good.

He looks pretty good.

Mike Morrow over at the Tennessean’s In Session blog asks a very good question, “Why is it so bad that Rush Limbaugh said he wants President Obama’s economic policies to fail when Nashville talk radio host Steve Gill said it would be good if John McCain were elected and ‘dies maybe’?”

Back on Oct. 3, just after the vice presidential debate, Gill, whose program airs on WLAC-AM, said there wasn’t a “dime’s worth of difference between Barack Obama and John McCain,” then said about one-quarter of the way through the program,

“Now, you know, vote for John McCain, because then Sarah Palin gets to be vice president, and we can just hope John McCain dies maybe. And yeah, then you get something good.”

Morrow has more. I guess this is the kind of stuff that passes for humor over at the radio shack that Gill built.

  • Share/Bookmark
Never okay.

Never okay.

Because a simple phone call or email is, you know, a little too civilized, WLAC’s Steve Gill wants Senator Dianne Feinstein’s constituents to shove “their fingers into her chest” when she gets back to her district – just to make sure she understands just how much they dislike what’s going on up there in Washington.

And because laying your hands on a United States Senator just might not be enough to make your point, he suggests “literally getting in the face of these people and talking to them like hired help.” Sheesh, glad I don’t produce Steve’s show. Or drive his taxi. Or clean his house. Or carry his bags. Or wait on him at The Palm.

Listen:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

  • Share/Bookmark

It’s a tremendous leap from “[t]he national coordinator for health information technology shall undertake the development of a nationwide health information technology infrastructure that provides appropriate information to help guide medical decisions at the time and place of care” to “Barack Obama wants old people to die,” but leave it to Tennessee’s own Steve Gill to make the jump. And he’s been making that same jump for over a week now, ever since Rush Limbaugh picked up former New York Lt. Gov. Betsy McCaughey false claim that provisions in the economic recovery act would allow the federal government to determine what is and is not “unnecessary care”:

But the bill goes much further on page 442. It explicitly says that the government will be delivering information to your doctor at bedside, quote, “to guide decisions at the time and place of care”—at the time and place of care. So, in fact, this is going be a two-way system. Your medical treatments will be stored in the medical database but the government will also be communicating with your doctor at the time and place of care.

Freddie and I talked about what a load of hooey this was on the show this morning – McCaughey left out one tiny, but crucial, word and oh, by the way, she gets paid by the very people who want to stop healthcare reform at any cost:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

But our Aunt B. (can we call you “our Aunt B.?) of the Tiny Cat Pants wrote in with another salient point:

I was listening to you on the way into work talking about the weirdness with the Republican talking point about the Dems wanting there to be some kind of live-chat between your doctor and Obama during your appointment in order to determine what kind of medical treatment you should get. And I loved it! But I just wanted to say that you missed, I think, the most obvious weird thing–the Republicans really do want half of us to have to okay our medical procedures with the government. You’re going to tell me that they wouldn’t love some system whereby when a woman wanted an abortion, the doctor had to text Rush Limbaugh and discuss her case with him to see how to procede? So, how come what’s good for the gander isn’t good for the goose?

Shhhhhh, Aunt B! Don’t give them any ideas! Come to think of it, maybe that’s what they’re afraid of? Monitored medical records might mean a whole mess of skeletons tumbling out of the closets of the “No Uterus” crowd, which would undoubtedly mess up their very deft use of abortion as a political football.

So, Rush, Steve, et. al, which is it? Medical privacy for everyone – including women – or not?

UPDATE: Another email from a loyal listener:

This is the dumbest argumnent I’ve ever heard. Evidence-based medicine is one of the most basic changes that we can make to fix the healthcare system. This isn’t: we’re going to tell you how to treat your patient. This is: we’re going to see what actually works and what doesnt’ and give you the results so that you can have the most effective information possible. Are they against the CDC?? This is so dumb. I want this opposition engraved on their tombstone so that for all of eternity they will be remembered as dumb.

Have the heard the one about the birth certificate?

UPDATE: Don’t forget to read about my Aunt B.’s powerful female bits. How powerful, you ask? So powerful that elected officials feel the need to regulate them.

  • Share/Bookmark

I was going to start this post by saying that I can understand economic policy differences between Republicans and Democrats but, well, actually, no I can’t, considering where we’ve found ourselves after the last eight years of tax cuts and non-existent regulation of financial services.

And, as if the last eight years were a figment of our collective imagination, House and Senate Republicans have created, with the help of flacks Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and Tennessee’s own Steve Gill, an echo chamber of misinformation criticizing President Obama’s economic recovery plan. Most egregiously, is that the misinformation in this particular echo chamber is getting bounced around to a mainstream media that refuses to fact check instead choosing only to regurgitate talking points :

During the Senate debate, between Feb. 2 and Feb. 5, Republican lawmakers outnumbered Democratic lawmakers 75 to 41 in interviews. During the House debate the week earlier, cable outlets hosted a 2 to 1 ratio of GOP to Democratic lawmakers.

Media Matters is on the case, however, offering red meat to those of us in the reality-based community:

CLAIM: Recovery package is “spending,” not “stimulus”

REALITY: The notion that “spending” is distinct from “stimulus” and the claim that the bill is not “stimulus” have been challenged by economists. CBO director Douglas Elmendorf stated in congressional testimony that the House legislation, H.R. 1, “would provide massive fiscal stimulus” and that the CBO, along with “most economists,” believes that all of the spending in the bill “provides some stimulative effect.” Additionally, Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, has said, “[S]pending is stimulus. Any spending will generate jobs. It is that simple.”

CLAIM: Spending after beginning of recovery is ineffective stimulus

REALITY: In his January 27 written testimony, CBO’s Elmendorf said: “Because most periods of economic weakness are fairly short-lived, it is generally preferable that stimulus policies be short-lived. Currently, however, CBO projects that economic output will remain significantly below its potential for several more years, so policies that provide stimulus for an extended period of time may be appropriate. Indeed, a fiscal stimulus that ends before the economy has started to regain its footing runs the risk of exacerbating economic weakness when the stimulus ends.”

CLAIM: Illegal immigrants receive tax credits under stimulus plan

REALITY: A January 29 Associated Press article cited a single anonymous “top Republican congressional official” in reporting that the stimulus bill “could steer government checks to illegal immigrants,” as it “would allow people who don’t have Social Security numbers to be eligible for” tax credits. The claim, however, is false. In fact, the recovery bill specifically precludes from eligibility for the Making Work Pay tax credit of $500 per individual and $1,000 per family “any individual unless the requirements of section 32(c)(1)(E) are met with respect to such individual.” Section 32(c)(1)(E) of the Internal Revenue Code specifies requirements for individuals to qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit which include having a social security number issued by the Social Security Administration. The AP later revised its January 29 article to make that clear.

CLAIM: The New Deal failed, prolonged Great Depression

REALITY: Such claims have been flatly rejected by prominent economists, including Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, who has said that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt did not go far enough to end the crisis and that it was actually Roosevelt’s reversal of New Deal policies — in an attempt to balance the budget — that hindered recovery.

CLAIM: Fiscal stimulus in Japan failed during the “lost decade” of the 1990s

REALITY: Prominent economists have stated that economic conditions did improve when Japan undertook fiscal stimulus policies but that reversals of those policies hindered Japan’s recovery. On February 6, for example, Krugman said: “[I]t’s clear. The Japanese — when they were really pushing hard, when they had strong programs, when they spent a lot on trying to buck-up their economy — it actually did grow. What happened was they chickened out very early in the process, said, ‘OK, let’s cut back, let’s raise interest rates, let’s raise taxes, let’s cut back on those public works.’ And they lost momentum, and they never got it back.”

CLAIM: Economic recovery bill amounts to spending more than $200K per job created

REALITY: By calculating the per-job cost by dividing the estimated total cost of the recovery bill by the estimated number of jobs created or saved — and thus suggesting that the sole purpose of that package is to create jobs — Hannity and Limbaugh joined other media figures in ignoring other tangible benefits stemming from the package, such as infrastructure improvements and investments in education, health, and public safety.

In a January 24 post on The American Prospect’s Beat the Press blog, Baker wrote: “The Republicans have become fond of saying that President Obama’s stimulus package will cost $275,000 for every job created. The media have been typically derelict in simply reporting this number without making any assessment to evaluate it — as though readers in their spare time are supposed to determine whether it is accurate or not.” So Baker did their work for them:

“First, where do the Republicans get this number? They divide the the $825 billion cost of the stimulus by 3 million jobs that President Obama had originally pledged. Their arithmetic is right but both numbers are wrong. First, the projections from the Obama team is that their package will create 4 million jobs, not 3 million. Furthermore, it is important to note that this over 2 years, not one year. The cost is also wrong, or at least misleading. If we assume that the stimulus will work as planned, then it will boost GDP by approximately 1.5 times the amount of spending or $620 billion a year. If GDP rises by this amount, then it will translate into roughly $155 billion a year in higher taxes/lower spending than if we didn’t do the stimulus. This is money that should be subtracted from the cost to the taxpayers. So, if net out the increased revenue from the growth generated by the stimulus we end up with a 2-year cost of $515 billion which will generate roughly 8 million job-years. That comes to about $65k per job year, less than one-fourth of the Republicans’ number.

CLAIM: $4 billion for ACORN

REALITY: The bill does not mention ACORN or otherwise single it out for funding, and it requires that the $4.19 billion it allocates for “neighborhood stabilization activities” be distributed through competitive processes. Moreover, ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis wrote on The Huffington Post that “ACORN isn’t getting any of this money” because “we aren’t eligible for it in the first place.”

CLAIM: Corporate tax rate cuts and capital gains tax rate cuts would provide substantial stimulus

REALITY: Many economists do not view corporate tax rate cuts and capital gains tax rate cuts as particularly effective methods for stimulating the economy. Mark Zandi — the chief economist and co-founder of Moody’s Economy.com, who was reportedly a McCain campaign economic adviser — included in 2008 written congressional testimony a table stating that every dollar spent through a “Cut in [the] Corporate Tax Rate” produces a GDP increase of only $0.30 — the third least-efficient provision of the 13 he studied. A 2003 Congressional Research Service (CRS) report stated that a “capital gains tax cut appears the least likely of any permanent tax cut to stimulate the economy in the short run; a temporary capital gains tax cut is unlikely to provide any stimulus.”

CLAIM: Bloomberg’s Betsy McCaughey, falsely claimed that under provisions in the economic recovery bill passed by House Democrats, “[o]ne new bureaucracy, the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology, will monitor treatments to make sure your doctor is doing what the federal government deems appropriate and cost effective. The goal is to reduce costs and ‘guide’ your doctor’s decisions.”

REALITY: The language in the House bill that McCaughey, a former lieutenant governor of New York, referenced does not establish authority to “monitor treatments” or restrict what “your doctor is doing” with regard to patient care, but rather addresses establishing an electronic records system such that doctors would have complete, accurate information about their patients “to help guide medical decisions at the time and place of care.”

And then there’s my personal favorite:

CLAIM: On this morning’s Steve Gill show, Steve and a listener had a grand old time comparing President Obama to Hitler because, like Hitler, President Obama and his economic stimulus plan want to kill old people.

REALITY: It’s beyond time for us to stop comparing our elected officials to Hitler. That, and both the House and Senate versions of the bill have kept in $87 billion to help states with Medicaid, the joint federal/state program that covers medical services for the elderly and the needy.

Additional misinformation that’s being spouted by national media is also of a more general kind: that the President is “losing [the] stimulus message war.” They get that from the wishful thinking of El Rushbo. The reality is much different.

As a Gallup poll released yesterday noted, “The American public gives President Barack Obama a strong 67% approval rating for the way in which he is handling the government’s efforts to pass an economic stimulus bill.” Despite conservatives’ vocal opposition to the recovery bill, 52 percent favor a roughly $800 billion package, while 38 percent are opposed. Independent voters favor the progressive priorities set forth by Obama: 50 percent independents favor “increased government funding of projects” in the recovery package, compared to only 36 percent who favor “tax cuts for individuals/businesses” promulgated by conservatives. Congressional Republicans, who see political gain from their “party of no” status, have a “staggeringly high” disapproval of 58 percent. Their approval rating is at 44 percent compared to 60 percent for Democrats.

  • Share/Bookmark

Steve Gill’s Birthday Suit

One of the things most worrisome about last week’s English Only special election was the effect that anti-immigrant right-wing ideologue mouthpieces Steve Gill, Phil Valentine, and Michael “It’s Delivery Not” DelGiorno, would have on the outcome. Let’s face it, two hours a week of us presenting reasoned and well-rounded interviews and opinion opposing the referendum versus 11 hours a day of them presenting bratty fear-based lies, half-truths, and accusations had us a little worried.

Not anymore! Last week’s election showed that we should have more faith in our listeners, the power of the grass roots coalitions, well-reasoned debate, and civil dialogue.

It’s not just Eric Crafton’s English Only that was defeated on Thursday. The brand of name-calling alarmism practiced by the three mouthkateers (can Tom Negri, General Manager of Loews Vanderbilt Hotel, or Rev. Jim Lawson, civil rights icon, really be defined as “liberal-wackos”?) was also given the smackdown by facts, figures, and the intellectual optimism practiced by a wide coalition of business, community, and spiritual leaders.

At this point, Gill et. al. should be frightened. Although they would never admit it, they know their fearmongering has both limited appeal and a limited shelf-life. Which is why hanging on to it while the rest of the country strides ahead is bad for business. Those boys say that they are giving people what they want, but our show – which with only 2 hours a week on a non-commercial station and engaging, reasonable guests, helped to defeat a city-wide referendum – clearly shows that they are so not. These emperors have not a stitch on.

The arguments against the Fairness Doctrine or the viability of progressive talk radio are red herrings use to deflect what DelGiorno, et. al. are really afraid of – that in these times, the majority of people in Middle-Tennessee would rather do what we do – discuss how public policy, elections, and elected officials can best serve the people of Tennessee – rather than what they specialize in – fear-based and divisive bombast (cue tax! abortion! immigration! gun! discussions). And they have no earthly idea how to adapt.

  • Share/Bookmark

Anti-Anti-English

On this morning’s This Week with Bob Mueller, Steve Gill labeled those who are against Councilman Eric Crafton’s English Only referendum the “Anti-English crowd.” I know he likes his catch phrases – leaving out any semblance of a nuanced argument makes it easy for him to inflame the masses with feelings of false persecution – but considering all involved in the discussion were, you know, speaking English, it was terribly absurd.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with: