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Cherry Blossom Photos by Mary Lee Cerillo

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Great photos as always by (former Sully District Democratic Committee chair) Mary Lee Cerillo. Click to “embiggen,” and enjoy; we deserve this after the blizzards!

Pissed-Off Orlando Urologist: No Idea What’s In Health Care Reform, But I Oppose It Anyway!

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Courtesy of Alan Colmes, this conversation is classic.  As Colmes writes:

Dr. Jack Cassell, the Orlando urologist who put a sign on his door letting patients know he doesn’t want to have to treat them if they are Obama/health care reform supporters, was on my radio show Friday night, but didn’t seem to know much about the health care bill he’s criticizing.

Here’s the exchange:

Cassell: Hospice cuts in 2012…Does the government want people to die slowly?

Colmes: Do you really think the government wants people dead?

Cassell: Well I think that they’re cutting all supportive care, like nursing homes, ambulance services…

Colmes: What to you mean they’re cutting nursing homes?

Cassell: They’re cutting nursing home reimbursements

Colmes: Isn’t what they’re cutting under the Medicare plan what was really double dipping; they were getting credits and they were getting to deduct them at the same time.

Cassell: Well you know, I can’t tell you exactly what the deal is.

Colmes: If you can’t tell us exactly what the deal is, why are you opposing it and fighting against it?

Cassell: I’m not the guy who wrote the plan.

Colmes: But if you don’t know what the deal is why are you speaking out against something you don’t know what the deal is?

Cassell: What I get online, just like any other American. What I’m supposed to understand about the bill should be available to me.

Colmes: It is; it’s been online for a long time; it’s also been all over the media…

To summarize, Dr. Cassell has absolutely no clue what’s in the new health care reform law, but doggone it he won’t treat anyone who supports the damn thing!  Make any sense? Of course not, but has the lack of facts and logic stopped opponents of health care reform up to now? Nope.

Dick Armey: Tea Pot “Historian”

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Former Rep. Dick Armey (R-TX) left Congress when he no longer could run things as majority leader in the House of Representatives. (That sexual harassment charge was before he went to Congress.) Then, he became a highly-paid lobbyist in Washington until he was asked to leave because his firm was lobbying for health care reform at the same time that Armey, through his right-wing group FreedomWorks, was helping organize last August’s “spontaneous” yelling matches against reform at those so-called “town hall meetings.”

Armey is always off the wall, but he is beyond absurd when he re-writes American history to fit his preconceived, right-wing notions. Recently, Armey contended that the people who settled Jamestown in 1607 were socialists and that their ideology almost doomed them.

“Jamestown colony, when it was first founded as a socialist venture, dang near failed with everybody dead and dying in the snow,” he said in a speech on March 15 at the National Press Club.

No, the settlement of Jamestown was pure capitalism in action.

Here’s a little history lesson for former college professor Armey, who was an economics major and should know about the Virginia Company since it was the first American business venture owned by stock holders.

James I, the king of England at the time, gave a private proprietorship to the Virginia Company, a joint stock venture. The original people funding the project sold shares to other investors, promising that a profit would be made from the raw materials that would be exported to England and from ownership of the land.

I suppose that Dick Armey might have been referring to the fact that basic commodities, which had been purchased in England, were held in a common storeroom at the Jamestown fort. However, I’m just groping for some rationale for his wacky mental processes.

The “Starving Time” of 1609-1610 wasn’t caused by “socialism.” It was the result of the first settlers not knowing how to farm, coupled with meager hunting available on Jamestown Island. Add a  growing conflict with the Powhatan Indians and rampant disease and you have the recipe for the high mortality of that harsh winter.

In that same speech, Armey stated that the tea party people and conservatives like him “cherish America,” while Democrats and the news media don’t because they haven’t read the Federalist Papers, which according to Armey advocate for a small, weak federal government.

Asked by a member of audience how the Federalist Papers could be considered a guide to tea party principles when the majority of them were written by Alexander Hamilton, widely regarded as an advocate of a powerful central government, Armey answered by making up more stuff.

“Widely regarded by whom?” Armey asked. “Today’s modern, ill-informed political science professors? I just doubt that was the case, in fact, about Hamilton.”

I suppose Armey, when he majored in economics, didn’t study anything about the first Secretary of the Treasury, either.

As a delegate to the Constitutional Convention, Alexander Hamilton advocated for the election of a president and senators who would serve for life and for state governors to be appointed by the federal government. Such views prompted James Madison to say that Hamilton was a monarchist sympathizer. So, either Armey and the Tea party rabble rousers support a massive increase in the influence of the central government, or Dick Armey doesn’t know what he is talking about. I’ll bet on the latter.

As someone once said, “You have a right to hold whatever opinion you wish, but you don’t have the right to invent facts.”

Virginia Gun Laws

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I replied to a post criticizing one of the gun bill that is on the Governor’s desk to sign.  Here is the text:  I’ve been carrying for 28 years (0.00 / 0)

I’ve been legally carrying for 28 years, and I’ve never even had to draw my pistol, let alone use it.  The whole point of concealed carry is safety, not mayhem. The “raging armed drunks” are already breaking a bunch of laws, including not having concealed carry permits.  Law-abiding citizens, such as myself, need to be able to defend themselves.  If you choose not to carry, that’s OK, but it is a citizen’s duty and right to defend himself and his family.  When I want to take my wife to a restaurant, I have to worry about whether or not they serve alcohol–even if I don’t drink myself.  Then, if they do serve alcohol, I’m required by law to disarm before going in.  Any lunatic who doesn’t care about the law can carry a pistol in there, but an honest citizen can’t.  This bill, passed 72-27, should be signed by the Governor.  There’s no reason not to.  Remember, if an armed permit-holder drinks even one sip at that restaurant, he is breaking this law.  I know that, having gone through the training, time, trouble, and expense of getting a permit, 99.9% of permit holders do not risk breaking the law.

iPad Released at Apple Store in Arlington

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As the Washington Post writes regarding a similar event in Bethesda, the people in line this morning were “a special type of technology enthusiast who get the first version of every Apple product: the Apple TV, iPhone, iPod, MacBook. They also enjoy the spectacle of first-day releases.” And as Howard Kurtz writes:

The iPad might turn out to be so revolutionary that we’ll look back on its unveiling like Alexander Graham Bell speaking to Mr. Watson. Or not. But Apple and its media maestro, Steve Jobs, are once again reaping what amounts to tens of millions of dollars in free publicity.

How Apple does it is part brilliant marketing, part mystery.  Now, we’ll see if the iPad turns out to be as revolutionary as some people suggest, or just another fancy-but-overhyped gadget for $500-%800.

Why Didn’t They Think of That?

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Cross-posted at Blue Commonwealth.

It has been nearly three years since the collapse of Lehman Brothers, and the related malfeasance of Lehman and other Wall Street firms.   Hank Paulson has admitted Lehman’s balance sheet was bogus.  According to Robert Reich, Goldman Sacks helped Greece hide its public debt and then bet against it with credit default swaps, those risky derivatives, in the news so much in 2007-2009, to avoid risking its own capital.  If you think the scenario is familiar, think AIG.  By any stretch of the imagination, these overpaid and overfed hacks and flacks should have been left to suffer the consequences, stripped of their wealth and in prison.  Why hasn’t this happened?  We have waited and waited for economic reform we can believe in, which Wall Streeters are fighting tooth and nail.  We’ve been told that we can’t have the meaningful reform we crave, that we must accept “bipartisan” compromise.  The GOP slings its empty “free market” bull (bull, because they never actually mean a free market, but rather a rigged market, in practice). Then they blame an administration inheriting the effects of their party’s utter lack of fiscal stewardship.  Now they fight reform to fix it and assure proposed re-regulation is toothless.  And of course, it’s everyone’s fault but their own.  The faux-helpless foxes at the SEC guarded the hen house then.  Even our own side has acted fairly helpless in the face of so many misdeeds. Should the administration not use the tools and methods available to it, it will deserve later scrutiny and judgment.  I reserve judgment for the time being. However, as Reich observes, it turns out that we do not need “reform” to do something about it.

The oft-forgotten Sarbanes-Oxley (2002) bill was designed just for such an occasion, says Robert Reich.  In his article entitled “Fraud on the Street,” Robert Reich points out what many inside (and outside) of government  won’t admit to you.  To wit:

Sarbox, as it’s come to be known, was designed to stop this. It requires CEOs and other senior executives to take personal responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of their companies’ financial reports and to set up internal controls to assure the accuracy and completeness of the reports. If they don’t, they’re subject to fines and criminal penalties.

Sarbox is directly relevant to the off-the-balance-sheet derivative games Wall Street has been playing. No bank CEO can faithfully attest to the accuracy and completeness of its financial reports when derivatives guarantee that the reports are incomplete and deceptive.

This statement appears in the newest issue of The American Prospect.  For those who do not have the magazine, here is the link. Why didn’t they ( our administration and our Congressional leaders) think of that?  Sarbanes-Oxley can bring fraudulent Wall Streeters to justice. In an adaptation of his original article, Reich also makes his case for current law’s power to bring economic justice to those whose “apologies are cheap” (and very, very late).  You can read the adaption at Huffington Post.  

I do not suggest that Sarbanes-Oxley is all the reform we need.  But it is a start.  Reich raises a legitimate point, which we in the progressive media should drive home.  Why shouldn’t the administration bring economic justice by holding the culprits accountable?  But more to the point, why didn’t they think of that?

Rachel Maddow On Phony ACORN and “Climategate” “Scandals”

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As Rachel Maddow says, these supposed “scandals” are complete “bull-pucky”, the “unmooring of politics from facts,” “the triumph of fake politics — outrage or advantage gleaned from stuff that’s not real.” Same thing with the Republicans’ supposed “outrage” over recess appointments (Bush did it and Republicans were fine with it then), the individual mandate (it’s a Republican idea), terrorism suspects being read their Miranda rights (again, they had no problem with this during the Bush administration), the stimulus (they admit it’s working great when they go back to their districts), etc., etc. Watch the video and get the long list of Republican “bull-pucky”; it would all be entertaining if it weren’t so damaging.