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A Most Unsettling Tendency
The Supreme Court’s Aggressive Term

John Roberts Jr., the chief justice of the United States, did not write the most important opinion of his court’s just-concluded term:  the one that allowed unlimited corporate and union spending in election campaigns. [Read full story]

A Financial Crisis?
Boehner Gets a Little Antsy

WASHINGTON--If U.S. Rep. John Boehner (Rep., Ohio) feels like renting a movie this weekend, I suggest he steer clear of the 1954 sci-fi horror flick, "Them!"
In it, nuclear testing in the New Mexico desert creates a marauding colony of giant mutant ants. [Read full story]

‘A Very Deep Hole’
Obama and Congress Blowing It on Jobs

NEW YORK--I know the president has a lot on his mind, but the No. 1 problem facing the United States continues to fester, and that problem is unemployment. [Read full story]

It’s Up to You, Attorney General
Stand Up on Prison Sexual Abuse Reform Standards

In 2003, Congress acknowledged the serious problem of rape in the nation’s prisons and created a commission to develop a set of national standards for preventing and punishing these crimes. [Read full story] 

College Graduates

In his first commencement speech as president to a Black college, President Barack Obama talked about the importance of education to graduates of Hampton University [Read full story]

From the Editor’s Notebook
Justices Limit Life Sentences for Juveniles

WASHINGTON--The U.S. Supreme Court recently ruled that juveniles who commit crimes in which no one is killed may not be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. [Read full story]

Tea Party Pick Causes Uproar on Civil Rights

Rand Paul, the Tea Party candidate who overcame opposition from the Republican establishment to win the party’s nomination for Senate in Kentucky [Read full story]

Rein in Wall Street
Do It Before History Repeats Itself

With the economy finally starting to rebound, it’s worth pausing for a moment to recall the roots of the financial crisis that cost millions of jobs and spawned untold misery. [Read full story]

 

Quote Of The Month

Who will tell whether one happy moment of love or the joy of breathing or walking on a bright morning and smelling the fresh air, is not worth all the suffering and effort which life implies.

-Erich Fromm-

Weather

WeatherBug

What's On TV?

When Greatness Slips Away
Helplessness Becoming as American as Apple Pie

We’ve blown so many enormous opportunities over the past several years. 
In the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, when most of the world had lined up in support of the United States, President George W. Bush had the chance to lead a vast cooperative, international effort to combat terrorism and lay the groundwork for a more peaceful, more secure world.
He blew it with the invasion of Iraq. [Read full story]

Following BP’s Lead

I asked the sheriff of St. Bernard Parish, Jack Stephens, if he was at all optimistic about BP stopping the gusher of oil that is fouling the Gulf of Mexico...[Read full story]

Challenging Health Care Reform
Conservatives Persist in Their Demagoguery

The number of states jointly suing to overturn the new health care reform law on constitutional grounds swelled to 20 last week. [Read full story]

From the Editor’s Notebook
A Victory Lifts Democrats’ Hopes for Fall

WASHINGTON--Congressional Democrats the other day seized on their special election victory in a Pennsylvania House district and other primary results as evidence [Read full story]

Crist’s Change
Putting GOP on Defensive

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.--Charlie Crist returned to his hometown to launch a political campaign [Read full story]

Arizona’s Witch Hunt
State Challenges Federal Authority

WASHINGTON--Though it has been settled law since the Civil War ended that a state cannot secede from the union, Arizona’s extreme action suggests it imagines it can. [Read full story]

Wayne C. Chandler Sr.

Getting a Lot Done and Not Caring About Being Credited [Read full story]

News Worth Noting
For GOP, United Stands Might Net Drawbacks, Too

Passage of the health care legislation challenges the heart of the Republicans’ strategy this year [Read full story]

Constitution Trumps Arizona
Courts Should Stamp Out State’s Immigration Law

The Obama administration has not always been completely clear about its immigration agenda, but it was forthright last week when it challenged the pernicious Arizona law that allows the police to question the immigration status of people they detain for local violations. 
Only the federal government can set or enforce immigration policy, the government said in its lawsuit against the state, and “Arizona has crossed this constitutional line.” [Read full story]

Editorials

 

EUGENE ROBINSON
Washington Post

Be Ye Warned
More Obstruction If GOP Wins

WASHINGTON--I'm cautious about the conventional wisdom that the Democratic Party is about to get flattened by a Republican steamroller.
Pollsters are less certain than they'd like you to believe about who's a "likely voter" and who isn't.
It's easy to imagine how Democrats, facing near-unanimous predictions of a wipeout, could bestir themselves to narrow the enthusiasm gap by just enough to turn a potential "wave" election into a regular midterm setback for the party in power.
Then again, Democrats might react to the prospect of big losses by pulling the blanket over their heads and going back to sleep. If this happens, Republicans could plausibly win not just the House of Representatives, but the Senate, as well.
America will have sent Washington a message -- and Washington will go on, basically, with business as usual.
The conservatives and Tea Party activists who believe they're going to fundamentally change the relationship between citizens and their government will become just as disillusioned as the progressives and independents who believed they were fundamentally changing that relationship in 2008.
Two years from now, we might well be looking at yet another wave -- surging in the opposite direction.  Our politics have become tidal.
Begin with the central argument that Republicans, and especially the Tea Party people, have been making: that the federal government, especially under President Barack Obama, is grotesquely large and tyrannically intrusive.
If the GOP takes control of one or both houses of Congress, voters will expect action to cut the federal beast down to size. All right, the 2010 budget was about $3.5 trillion.  Where should the dragon-slayers begin to make meaningful cuts?
If you add up all the items generally thought of as mandatory -- Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, unemployment benefits, interest on the national debt -- you've already spent about two-thirds of the total.
Add in the close to $700 billion spent for defense, which Republicans hold as sacrosanct, and you've spent four-fifths of the budget.
This leaves just one-fifth for "discretionary" programs, many of which aren't discretionary at all. I doubt many Americans would want to risk going without food inspection, say, or air traffic control, or the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
It's true, though, that we can't continue to run huge deficits -- for 2010, an estimated $1.3 trillion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
There are two ways to close the gap.  One of them, raising taxes, is anathema to today's GOP and has been ruled out by party leaders.
The other, slashing expenditures, would mean taking an axe to entitlements. Republicans, looking ahead to the 2012 presidential campaign, aren't going to do anything but pretend to nip at the edges.
O.K., if the revolutionaries of the right aren't likely to make a serious attempt to get the federal budget under control -- and, really, anyone who refuses even to discuss raising taxes isn't serious -- then at least they can reverse some of what President Obama has done, right?
No, not really.
The president will still have veto power, which makes the whole "undo Obama" thing moot.  But set this aside for a moment.
Look at the president's most controversial accomplishment, health-care reform.
Republicans vow to repeal it.
But in their "Pledge to America" manifesto, they promise to replace the system they call "Obamacare" with….elements of "Obamacare" that the GOP seeks to rebrand.
For example, Republicans say they want to prohibit insurance companies from denying coverage due to preexisting conditions -- just as the president's reform package already does.
But they want to do this without a mandate compelling Americans to buy health insurance, and without that mandate the figures don't add up.
All of this is posturing, not policy.
Here's the real question:  Would Republicans in charge of one or both houses of Congress work with the Obama administration or simply obstruct it at every turn?
If they choose the former, true believers will accuse them of aiding and abetting the enemy.
If the latter, they open themselves to charges of playing politics at a time when the nation can ill afford such foolishness.
I expect obstruction.
That would be bad for the country, but it would be a gift to a White House seeking to regain its political footing.
Every time President Obama reached out to Capitol Hill and had his hand slapped away, more independents -- frustrated with partisanship and inaction -- would drift back into his column.
He'd be well positioned for 2012.
That's the thing about electoral waves:  They crash on the perilous shores of reality.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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