Sunday, July 26, 2015

Why Am I Enjoying The GOP's Donald Trump Debacle So Much? (Updated Yet Again)

Because it's causing shit like this to happen:
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) on Saturday invoked the specter of the Holocaust to criticize President Barack Obama for his decision to negotiate with Iran over its nuclear program.

“This president’s foreign policy is the most feckless in American history. It is so naive that he would trust the Iranians. By doing so, he will take the Israelis and march them to the door of the oven," Huckabee said in an interview with Breitbart News.
The one thing I like about Huckabee is that he always doubles down on the stupid shit he says, so don't expect any apologies from him over his "Obama Exterminates Jews" remark.  I fully expect him to evoke more Holocaust imagery in future attacks on President Blackenstein.

As I wrote a couple weeks ago, Republican presidential candidates who decide to run a normal campaign just won't be able to compete in this Trump-infused environment, so they will be forced to attempt to "trump Trump" by saying and doing some really crazy shit during the last half of July.  Huckabee acting out during the Breitbart interview is a good example of this.  Here's another:



More please.

UPDATE:  Here is what Mike Huckabee said in 2008 about Iran:
"We cannot live with al Qaeda, but we might be able to live with a contained Iran. Iran will not acquire nuclear weapons on my watch. But before I look parents in the eye to explain why I put their son's or daughter's life at risk, I want to do everything possible to avoid conflict. We have substantive issues to discuss with Tehran."
Yes, that's right -- Huckabee was for negotiating with Iran before he was against it.

You just can't make this shit up.

UPDATE II:  It's Ted Cruz's turn:



For some reason, this sort of reminds me of those "pork-infused bullets" designed to "send Muslims straight to hell."

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Donald Trump's Major Weakness Is His Extraordinarily Thin Skin

From TPM:
Donald Trump attempted to punish the Des Moines Register on Friday for publishing a critical editorial calling for the real estate mogul to to drop out of the presidential race.

The Iowa newspaper claimed on Friday that Trump barred one the paper's reporters and columnists from attending a Saturday event. Trump's campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, told the paper that it had been denied press credentials because of the paper's Monday editorial, according to the Des Moines Register.
This is Trump's Kryptonite.  He responds to criticism and mockery by lashing out wildly against his critics. Indeed, his single biggest "gaffe" so far -- attacking John McCain's service to our country -- was triggered by McCain's criticism of Trump.

We've seen Trump's thin skin on display before. Back in 2011, Obama hilariously mocked The Donald during a speech at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, and Trump was none too happy about it.  He was reportedly "ticked off by the mocking he took from the podium" and his "'mood shifted from playing along to unvarnished anger.'"

That is how you get Trump -- you mock him.  He hates that.  If I were a Republican candidate for president, I would hire a comedy team to produce at least three videos hilariously mocking Trump, and would release these videos in the days preceding the first GOP primary debate.  And - of course - I would release the most hilarious one on the morning of the debate.

Some would say that such a strategy won't work against Trump, even if it does cause him to lose his shit and say potentially campaign-damaging stuff.  After all, The Donald's attack on McCain didn't seem to hurt him in the polls.  One commentator stated the other day that Trump is "gaffe proof" and that "there is no way he can damage himself by sticking his foot in his mouth."

That may be so.  But there is only one way to find out, and that is to continually mock Trump in order to get him to say outrageous stuff.  Even if this strategy does not work, at least it'll be good for a few laughs.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Bonus Quote Of The Week

"We might as well demand that Iran give us a unicorn that we can ride all the way to Candy Mountain."
- Max Fisher, responding to the GOP argument that any nuclear deal with Iran should require a binding commitment that no one in the Iranian political system say bad things about the United States or Israel.

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Quotes of the Week

"In the debate over this deal, we’re hearing the echoes of some of the same policies and mindset that failed us in the past.  Some of the same politicians and pundits that are so quick to reject the possibility of a diplomatic solution to Iran’s nuclear program are the same folks who were so quick to go to war in Iraq, and said it would take a few months.  And we know the consequences of that choice and what it cost us in blood and treasure.

"So I believe there’s a smarter, more responsible way to protect our national security -- and that is what we are doing.  Instead of dismissing the rest of the world and going it alone, we’ve done the hard and patient work of uniting the international community to meet a common threat.  Instead of chest-beating that rejects even the idea of talking to our adversaries -- which sometimes sounds good in sound bites, but accomplishes nothing -- we’re seeing that strong and principled diplomacy can give hope of actually resolving a problem peacefully.

"Instead of rushing into another conflict, I believe that sending our sons and daughters into harm’s way must always be a last resort, and that before we put their lives on the line, we should exhaust every alternative. That’s what we owe our troops.  That is strength and that is American leadership."
- Barack Obama, from a speech he gave yesterday at the VFW National Convention regarding the nuclear deal with Iran.

And here's a good one from Hillary Clinton, responding to Mitch McConnell's assertion that he wasn't sure arguing "vote for me because I'm a woman" is enough:
"Wow -- if that’s what he said, Mitch McConnell really doesn’t get it. There is a gender card being played in this campaign. It’s played every time Republicans vote against giving women equal pay, deny families access to affordable child care or family leave, refuse to let women make decisions about their health or have access to free contraception." [...] These aren’t just women’s issues, they are economic issues that drive growth and affect all Americans. Anyone who doesn’t get that doesn’t understand what our lives are like."
Readers of this blog know that I'm not a big Hillary fan, but I am impressed with the way she is handling her campaign so far.  One thing candidates must do when attacked by the other side is to respond and then aggressively counter-attack, and Hillary seems to have taken this notion to heart.

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Donald Trump Swift Boats John McCain (Updated)

I'm trying to figure out if this is The Greatest Thing Ever or merely in the Top 5 of greatest things ever:
Billionaire eccentric Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said on Sunday that he did not owe Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) an apology after stating that the senator is only viewed as a war hero because he was held captive and that Trump likes “people who weren’t captured.”

“No. Not at all,” Trump responded to ABC’s Martha Raddatz when asked if he owed McCain, who was held for five and a half years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, an apology.

Later in the interview, Trump demanded an apology from McCain for the senator stating that the billionaire candidate was firing up the “crazies” with his anti-immigrant rhetoric.
I love it. God help me, I do love it so.

UPDATE:  Steve Benen has some suggestions for Republicans in the wake of the vicious GOP response to Trump's attack on John McCain:
[I]f Republican leaders want to argue that attacks on Americans’ military service are simply beyond the pale, perhaps party officials can take this opportunity to apologize to John Kerry, who was smeared by Swiftboat lies in the 2004 cycle – lies that were celebrated at the time by 2016 candidates like Jeb Bush and Rick Perry – and who saw the spectacle at the Republican National Convention of party activists mocking Purple Hearts. While they’re it, Republicans can express some regret for related smears directed at former Sen. Max Cleland (D-Ga.).

And let’s also recall the time Rush Limbaugh said that any U.S. serviceman or woman who supported ending the war in Iraq is a “phony soldier” – a smear that did literally nothing to undermine Limbaugh’s standing as one of the most powerful voices in Republican politics.

If the rule is that Democratic veterans should expect to have their service and their patriotism questioned, while Republican veterans must be celebrated without question, GOP leaders should come right out and say so. If the RNC is right, and there is “no place in our party or our country for comments that disparage those who have served honorably,” can Republicans explain why this principle took root just 48 hours ago?
Trump does appear to be some type of operative for the Democratic Party -- he has a way of exposing GOP dirty laundry (entrenched racism, Swift Boating) and doing so in hilariously entertaining fashion.

UPDATE II:  Ed Kilgore adds this:
The one thing we won’t hear is any Republican apology to Kerry. After all, he just played a central role in the greatest diplomatic betrayal since Munich—no, since Eve-and-Satan!-unleashing the most terrifying military superpower in the history of the world, Iran! Yes, in their account, John Kerry has been stabbing his country in the back for more than four decades, and just can’t stop. You know, like Republican smear-masters.
Amen.

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Forget Iran -- A Successful Obama Presidency Is What Republicans Fear Most

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told NBC's Lester Holt the other day that the landmark Iran nuclear deal "is not only a threat to us -- we think this is a threat to you as well."  In other words, we should all be soiling ourselves in fear right now.  What horse-shit.  The bottom line here is that Netanyahu -- along with the entire Republican Party -- are terrified that this deal will succeed.

One of the themes of this blog in the last few years is that total Republican opposition to "All Things Barack" is based upon -- more than anything else -- the need for the GOP to de-legitimize America's first Black president.  But I do admit that some GOP opposition to Obama isn't based entirely on the President's race, and one example of this is the overwhelming Republican opposition to the recent nuclear deal with Iran.

GOP hardliners have long opposed deals such as this.  E.J. Dionne gives us some history here:
When President Ronald Reagan met Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva in November 1985, he whispered to the Soviet leader: "I bet the hard-liners in both our countries are bleeding when we shake hands.” Reagan had a point. His inclination to negotiate with the Evil Empire left many of his conservative friends aghast.

In an otherwise touchingly affectionate assessment of the 40th president’s tenure, my Post colleague George F. Will said that Reagan had “accelerated the moral disarmament of the West . . . by elevating wishful thinking to the status of political philosophy.” Further right, the conservative activist Howard Phillips accused Reagan of being “a very weak man with a very strong wife and a strong staff” who had become “a useful idiot for Kremlin propaganda.” Wow!
Wow indeed. Don't forget -- Ronald Reagan currently enjoys a higher approval rating with Republicans than does Jesus Christ, so it is pretty hard to imagine that members of Reagan's own party opposed him on anything.  But there it is.

Much of the GOP opposition to the deal with Iran is based on the notion that we can never negotiate with our enemies. Dionne notes:
There is no way of knowing if this deal will lead to a dramatic transformation inside Iran, and there are some legitimate doubts that it will. But then, Reagan’s conservative skeptics were also insistent that the Soviet Union could never change, and surely never fall. They were wrong and Reagan’s bet paid off. Obama is now making a comparable wager.
But as Steve Benen observes, there is a big difference between the Reagan Era and the Obama Era, namely, Reagan -- in deciding to negotiate with the USSR -- at least had some support within the GOP and very little opposition from the Democrats.  The same cannot be said for the current president:
Three decades later, Democrats are terrified of supporting a popular nuclear agreement and the number of Republican elected officials who’ve endorsed international talks with Iran – not just the final agreement, but the talks themselves – is roughly zero. Reagan mocked the contingent of “hard-liners” in his party who always oppose nuclear talks, but a generation later, isn’t it fair to say the GOP is made up entirely of “hard-liners”? What was once a faction of the party is now, for all intents and purposes, the party?
Benen concludes that although it is possible some Republicans are secretly impressed with the international agreement reached this week, the fact that they feel the need to remain silent for fear of a partisan backlash "says quite a bit about the state of Republican politics in 2015."

I believe the one thing the GOP fears most is that this nuclear deal with Iran will succeed.  It's akin to Obamacare in this regard.  Clearly, such a success would make this the greatest diplomatic accomplishment for America in well over three decades; and the chance that history will give the President credit for such a success cannot possibly sit well with Republicans, particularly given that they have spent the last six years trying to destroy the Obama Presidency.

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Quotes of the Week

"He's a belligerent, loudmouth racist with not an ounce of compassion for less fortunate people, In other words: He's exactly the kind of person the Republican base consists of and identifies with."
- Paul Krugman, describing Donald Trump.

And here is what Benjamin Netanyahu had to say today about Obama's historic nuclear deal with Iran: “From the initial reports received, it is already possible to say that this agreement is a historic mistake for the world,”

Netanyahu really has a knack for being on the wrong side of history when it comes to important U.S. foreign policy decisions.  Here is what he had to say on Sept. 12, 2002, during testimony before the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee, on whether Bush and Cheney should invade Iraq: “If you take out Saddam, Saddam’s regime, I guarantee you that it will have enormous positive reverberations on the region.”

You really nailed that one, Bibi.

Friday, July 10, 2015

Does This Mean That All The Confederate Flags Can Go Back Up Now?

From HuffPo:
Dylann Roof, the 21-year-old from South Carolina who is accused of killing nine people at a historic African-American church in Charleston last month, never should have been allowed to purchase a weapon, the head of the FBI said Friday.

A flaw in the background check system operated by the FBI, the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, didn't turn up a record of Roof admitting to drug possession, the FBI director told reporters, according to reports.

“We are all sick this happened,” FBI Director James B. Comey said Friday, according to The New York Times. “We wish we could turn back time.”

Donald Trump Supports Mandatory Abortion For U.S. Victims of Mexican Rapists

"Don't you see what these rapists are doing?  They come into this country, rape the first woman they see, and impregnate their victims just to get more Mexicans into this country.  These quasi-anchor fetuses must not be allowed to become quasi-anchor babies.  When I become president, I'll order that all rape victims who become impregnated be asked if a Mexican illegal immigrant was the perpetrator, and if that's the case, then any such fetus must be aborted."
- Donald Trump.

Okay, Trump did not really say this -- at least not yet . . .

No Way To Lose On This One

From Greg Sargent:
The Hill notes that the fate of Obama’s executive actions on deportations will be argued over today in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, and the government is probably going to lose.

This is a major setback. But this is probably going to the Supreme Court — where arguments could take place next year, meaning Republicans will again renew their opposition to deportation relief right when the presidential race heats up.
As Sargent implies in that last sentence, this whole debate centers not on whether the Democrats lose on this issue, but on how they play the game.  The entire point of this exercise is to draw out the GOP in order to demonstrate Republican hatred for Hispanics.  Looks like this strategy is working quite well.

Wednesday, July 08, 2015

GOP's Refusal To Govern Pays Off Big Time . . . For Democrats (Updated)

I was telling my wife the other day that I think Donald Trump is actually an operative for the Democrats and his mission is to destroy the GOP from within.  Just look at the damage he's doing to the Republican Party right now.  After Trump announced that only Mexican rapists are illegally entering the U.S., just a handful of the 47 GOP candidates currently running for president criticized him for the racist remark and the criticism was tepid at best.

I can understand why Republicans are reluctant to attack Trump on this issue.  After all, a good percentage of Republicans are racist, and a lot of these racist Republicans undoubtedly vote in the primaries.  But what I find hilarious is that this problem could have easily been avoided had Republicans in Congress simply set aside their intense hatred for America's first Black president and passed immigration reform in 2013 and 2014.

But they refused to do so, and now they have Donald Trump and his particular brand of racism to deal with.  The really cool part about all this is that the first GOP presidential debate is just around the corner, and only the top ten Republican presidential candidates can participate in it.  What this means, of course, is that the candidates polling just outside the Top 10 have only two choices:   (1) they can run a normal campaign and not move up in the polling, or (2) they can attempt to "trump Trump" by saying some really crazy shit during the last half of July in the hope of appealing to the Radicalized Right and maybe cracking the Top 10 as a result.

Needless to say, I'm hoping that a lot of them choose the latter course.

UPDATE:  Sean Illing at Salon goes back even further and blames the rise of Fox News for the GOP's Trump Disaster:
Fox News – and the conservative media-industrial complex – have created a Frankenstein. His name is Donald Trump, and his political success is now a huge problem for the Republican Party. In so many ways, Trump’s political existence was inevitable. For years, Fox News and the conservative talk radio machine have played to the populist Tea Party id: fomenting fear, demonizing immigrants, and enabling every nativist anxiety imaginable. Now they’re paying the price. ***

The wonderful irony of all this is that the conservative media have ruined conservative politics, far more than liberals ever did. And the results speak for themselves. It’s true that Fox News has promoted the conservative brand and very likely energized grass-roots conservatism in some sense, but at what cost? The GOP, increasingly, is no longer a national party – it’s confined more and more to the South and to pockets of rural America. ***
Illing also notes that it'll be hard for Fox to dump Trump because he is "a boon for ratings" and the "delightful dolts on Fox and Friends can’t get enough of him."

Ironically, the Democratic Party also can't get enough of Donald Trump.  The Democrats could spend a billion dollars on ads attacking Republicans and still not do as much damage as Trump is doing to the GOP right now.

Thursday, July 02, 2015