Friday, March 28, 2008

This week on the Free World Radio Network

The Free World Radio NetworkThere's some great programming coming up for the week of March 28th through April 3rd.

Tomorrow I'll have as my guest Leo Lincourt, founder of the Carnival of the Liberals.

The big news comes Sunday when Brian Wolf welcomes Ayaan Hirsi Ali, one of Time Magazine's "100 Most Influential People" of 2005 (press release).

Here are the details on all of the upcoming broadcasts:

Complete details on the network's upcoming schedule, and our programs and hosts, plus a complete archive of our broadcasts, links to our blogs, and links to our friends and affiliates, can be found on our Web site.

The Free World Radio Network: Broadcasting over Blog Talk Radio from California, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey, Tennessee, Texas and Washington State


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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Through the lens of history

Faux News Channel

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Words of Wisdom

"If by a 'Liberal' they mean someone who looks ahead and not behind, someone who welcomes new ideas without rigid reactions, someone who cares about the welfare of the people — their health, their housing, their schools, their jobs, their civil rights, and their civil liberties — someone who believes we can break through the stalemate and suspicions that grip us in our policies abroad, if that is what they mean by a 'Liberal,' then I'm proud to say I'm a 'Liberal.'"

John F. Kennedy


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Friday, March 21, 2008

This week on the Free World Radio Network

The Free World Radio NetworkThere's some great programming coming up for the week of March 21st through March 27th.

Tomorrow I'll be joined by Alison Berke Morano, Chair of the Pasco County Florida Democratic Executive Committee and Vice Chair of the Florida Democratic Committee Chairs Association for a continuation of last week's discussion on the Democratic presidential campaign and Florida.

Here are the details on all of the upcoming broadcasts:

Complete details on the network's upcoming schedule, and our programs and hosts, plus a complete archive of our broadcasts, links to our blogs, and links to our friends and affiliates, can be found on our Web site.

The Free World Radio Network: Broadcasting over Blog Talk Radio from California, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey, Tennessee, Texas and Washington State


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Thursday, March 20, 2008

Rightwing Racism on Display

This continues the discussion from tonight's broadcast of The Political Atlas.

Partisanship Is Back! on The Hotline:

On the right, bloggers accused Obama of offering "false moral equivalence," "blame whitey," and "the politics of grievance." ...

One thing is clear: those who predicted that an Obama-John McCain race would lead to a "civil" debate about this country's future (we're looking at you, Andrew Sullivan!) are deluding themselves. If the conservative reaction to the Wright controversy is any indication, an Obama-McCain race would be just as nasty as a Hillary Clinton-McCain race.

(read the entire article)


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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Response to Obama's Speech on Race from Andrew Sullivan

One of the best I've read:

Alas, I cannot give a more considered response right now as I have to get on the road. But I do want to say that this searing, nuanced, gut-wrenching, loyal, and deeply, deeply Christian speech is the most honest speech on race in America in my adult lifetime. It is a speech we have all been waiting for for a generation. Its ability to embrace both the legitimate fears and resentments of whites and the understandable anger and dashed hopes of many blacks was, in my view, unique in recent American history.

And it was a reflection of faith - deep, hopeful, transcending faith in the promises of the Gospels. And it was about America - its unique promise, its historic purpose, and our duty to take up the burden to perfect this union - today, in our time, in our way.

I have never felt more convinced that this man's candidacy - not this man, his candidacy - and what he can bring us to achieve - is an historic opportunity. This was a testing; and he did not merely pass it by uttering safe bromides. He addressed the intimate, painful love he has for an imperfect and sometimes embittered man. And how that love enables him to see that man's faults and pain as well as his promise. This is what my faith is about. It is what the Gospels are about. This is a candidate who does not merely speak as a Christian. He acts like a Christian.

Bill Clinton once said that everything bad in America can be rectified by what is good in America. He was right - and Obama takes that to a new level. And does it with the deepest darkest wound in this country's history.

I love this country. I don't remember loving it or hoping more from it than today.

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Do you recognize the answer?

Click for a free on-line calculator
Here is a fun math trick.
  1. Key in the exchange of your telephone number (the first three digits of your phone number, NOT the Area code)


  2. Multiply by 80


  3. Add 1


  4. Multiply by 250


  5. Add to this the last 4 digits of your phone number


  6. Add to this the last 4 digits of your phone number again


  7. Subtract 250


  8. Divide number by 2
Do you recognize the answer ??

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Monday, March 17, 2008

No St. Patrick's Day would be complete without...

... the potato song:



Happy Birthday, Frank!

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For St. Patrick's Day, 2008...

... an Irish DUI test:


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Sunday, March 16, 2008

Eleven Tips on Getting More Efficiency Out of Women Employees

Eleven tips...
Blog Talk Radio Featured Host Brian Wolf had me in stitches when he read the following on tonight's broadcast of Shakedown Street:


Eleven Tips on Getting More Efficiency Out of Women Employees

from the July 1943 edition of Mass Transportation Magazine

1. If you can get them, pick young married women. They have these advantages, according to the reports of western companies: they usually have more of a sense of responsibility than do their unmarried sisters; they're less likely to be flirtatious; as a rule, they need the work or they wouldn't be doing it — maybe a sick husband or one who's in the army; they still have the pep and interest to work hard and to deal with the public efficiently.

2. When you have to use older women, try to get ones who have worked outside the home at some time in their lives. Most transportation companies have found that older women who have never contacted the public, have a hard time adapting themselves, are inclined to be cantankerous and fussy. It's always well to impress upon older women the importance of friendliness and courtesy.

3. While there are exceptions, of course, to this rule, general experience indicates that "husky" girls — those who are just a little on the heavy side — are likely to be more even-tempered and efficient than their underweight sisters.

4. Retain a physician to give each woman you hire a special physical examination — one covering female conditions. This step not only protects the property against the possibilities of lawsuit but also reveals whether the employee-to-be has any female weaknesses which would make her mentally or physically unfit for the job. Transit companies that follow this practice report a surprising number of women turned down for nervous disorders.

5. In breaking in women who haven't previously done outside work, stress at the outset the importance of time — the fact that a minute or two lost here and there makes serious inroads on schedules. Until this point is gotten across, service is likely to be slowed up.

6. Give the female employe in garage or office a definite day-long schedule of duties so that she'll keep busy without bothering the management for instructions every few minutes. Numerous properties say that women make excellent workers when they have their jobs cut out for them but that they lack initiative in finding work themselves.

7. Whenever possible, let the inside employe change from one job to another at some time during the day. Women are inclined to be nervous and they're happier with change.

8. Give every girl an adequate number of rest periods during the day. Companies that are already using large numbers of women stress the fact that you have to make some allowances for feminine psychology. A girl has more confidence and consequently is more efficient if she can keep her hair tidied, apply fresh lipstick and wash her hands several times a day.

9. Be tactful in issuing instructions or in making criticisms. Women are often sensitive; they can't shrug off harsh words the way that men do. Never ridicule a woman — it breaks her spirit and cuts her efficiency.

10. Be reasonably considerate about using strong language around women. Even though a girl's husband or father may swear vociferously, she'll grow to dislike a place of business where she hears too much of this.

11. Get enough size variety in operator uniforms that each girl can have a proper fit. This point can't be stressed too strongly as a means of keeping women happy, according to western properties.


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Sounds in nature

Have you ever heard the sound of a French existentialist seagull?

"PourQUOI!? PourQUOI!?"

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Saturday, March 15, 2008

Superdelegate Speaks...

Mitch Ceasar, Broward County DEC Chair, DNC Executive Committee member and Superdelegate to the Democratic Convention in August, had some great insights on this morning's broadcast of Situation Awareness:


Mitch talked about the chances of the so-called do-over election here in Florida, and what it will take to seat the Florida delegation. Plus, he answered the question, "Will the Superdelegates make the difference in Denver?"

This interview was featured on the home page of Blog Talk Radio:

Mitch Ceasar featured on BTR - Click for larger image
Click image for larger view

The discussion continues next week when my guest will be Alison Berke Morano, Chair of the Pasco County DEC and Vice Chair of the Florida Democratic Committee Chairs Association.

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Friday, March 14, 2008

This week on the Free World Radio Network

The Free World Radio NetworkThere's some great programming coming up for the week of March 14th through March 20th.

Tomorrow I'll have as my guest Mitch Ceasar, Chair of the Broward County Florida Democratic Party and a Superdelegate to the 2008 Democratic National Convention. We'll be discussing the Democratic Party nominating process, the history of Superdelegates, and answer the question, Will they make the difference in Denver?

Here are the details on all of the upcoming broadcasts:

Complete details on the network's upcoming schedule, and our programs and hosts, plus a complete archive of our broadcasts, links to our blogs, and links to our friends and affiliates, can be found on our Web site.

The Free World Radio Network: Broadcasting over Blog Talk Radio from California, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey, Tennessee, Texas and Washington State


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Thursday, March 13, 2008

Why I'm a Liberal

Ken Quinell, my friend and Executive Director of the Florida Progressive Coalition, used to maintain a personal blog, T. Rex's Guide to Life. One of his regular features was "Why I'm a Liberal." It was usually just a picture highlighting the absurdities of the right wing in this country.

The top-of-the-fold story in today's Tallahassee Democrat reminded me exactly why I am a liberal:

Lawmakers attend Tallahassee screening of movie by Ben Stein

The caption from the accompanying picture ("Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" on Wednesday at the Challenger Learning Center) demonstrates that few people understand the concept of "irony."

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Tuesday, March 11, 2008

A thank you....

Florida Progressive Coalition... to Kenneth Quinnell and Florida Progressive Radio for having me as their guest on today's broadcast of The Movement.

It was enjoyable to be able to discuss my network, the Free World Radio Network, and all the work my colleagues and I are doing. It is also a pleasure to work with Ken and all the good people in the Coalition in moving the Progressive agenda forward in Florida.

Thank you again, Ken!

For those who could not tune in live, here is the interview:


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Monday, March 10, 2008

Makes a lot of sense...

Media Girl Why modern-day conservatism makes no sense to me

By media girl

Once upon a time I was a moderate. I believed in Keynesian economics. I believed in using market forces to help institute desired policy. I believed in empowering people so that they could take charge of their own lives. I believed in incentives in business and personal tax deductions and rebates. I believed that people had a right to privacy. I believed that the government should stay out of people's private lives, but that the government is needed to protect people from not just crime but from abuse through pollution and fraud. I believed in free speech.

That was then. I was a moderate.

This is now ... and I still believe all those things. But now I find myself labeled as "left."

(read the entire article)

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Friday, March 7, 2008

This week on the Free World Radio Network

The Free World Radio NetworkThere's more great programming coming up for the week of March 7th through March 13th.

Situation Awareness will resume next week. Meanwhile, my colleague Brian Wolf has a great program coming up this Sunday. Be sure to tune in to his interview with Volga X.

Here are the details on all of the upcoming broadcasts:

Complete details on the network's upcoming schedule, and our programs and hosts, plus a complete archive of our broadcasts, links to our blogs, and links to our friends and affiliates, can be found on our Web site.

The Free World Radio Network: Broadcasting over Blog Talk Radio from California, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey, Tennessee, Texas and Washington State


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Thursday, March 6, 2008

Third-Tier Pundits, Part 6

The American Prospect
Jonah Goldberg's Bizarro History

In his new book, Goldberg has decided to dream up fascists on the left rather than acknowledge the fact that the real American fascists have been lurking in the right's closet for lo these many years.

by David Neiwert
January 8, 2008

The public understanding of World War II history and its precedents has suffered in recent years from the depredations of revisionist historians -- the David Irvings and David Bowmans of the field who have attempted to recast the meaning of, respectively, the Holocaust and the Japanese American internment. Their reach, however, has been somewhat limited to fringe audiences.

It might be tempting to throw Jonah Goldberg's Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left from Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning into those same cloacal backwaters, but there is an essential difference that goes well beyond the likely much broader reach of Goldberg's book, which was inexplicably published by a mainstream house (Doubleday). Most revisionists are actually historians with some credentials, and their theses often hinge on nuances and the interpretation of details.

Goldberg, who has no credentials beyond the right-wing nepotism that has enabled his career as a pundit, has drawn a kind of history in absurdly broad and comically wrongheaded strokes. It is not just history done badly, or mere revisionism. It’s a caricature of reality, like something from a comic-book alternative universe: Bizarro history.

The title alone is enough to indicate its thoroughgoing incoherence: Of all the things we know about fascism and the traits that comprise it, one of the few things that historians will readily agree upon is its overwhelming anti-liberalism. One might as well write about anti-Semitic neoconservatism, or Ptolemaic quantum theory, or strength in ignorance. Goldberg isn't content to simply create an oxymoron; this entire enterprise, in fact, is classic Newspeak.

Indeed, Goldberg even makes some use of Orwell, noting that the author of 1984 once dismissed the misuse of "fascism" as meaning "something not desirable." Of course, Orwell was railing against the loss of the word's meaning, while Goldberg, conversely, revels in it -- he refers to Orwell's critique as his "definition of fascism."

And then Goldberg proceeds to define everything that he himself considers undesirable as "fascist." This is just about everything even remotely and vaguely thought of as "liberal": vegetarianism, Social Security, multiculturalism, the "war on poverty," "the politics of meaning." The figures he labels as fascist range from Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt to Lyndon B. Johnson and Hillary Clinton. Goldberg's primary achievement is to rob the word of all meaning -- Newspeak incarnate.

The term "fascism" certainly is overused and abused. The public understanding of it is fuzzy at best, and academics struggle to agree on a definition, as Goldberg observes -- and he makes use of that confusion to ramble on for pages about the disagreements without ever providing readers with a clear definition of fascism beyond Orwell's quip.

Along the way, he grotesquely misrepresents the state of academia regarding the study of fascism, which, while widely varying in many regards, has seen a broad consensus develop regarding certain ineluctable traits that are uniquely and definitively fascist: its populism and ultranationalism, its anti-intellectualism, its carefully groomed culture of violence, its insistence that it represents the true national identity, its treatment of dissent as treason, and what Oxford Brookes scholar Roger Griffin calls its "palingenesis" -- that is, its core myth of a phoenix-like rebirth of the national identity in the mold of a nonexistent Golden Age. And, of course, it has historically always been vigorously -- no, viciously -- anti-liberal.

So when Goldberg proclaims early on: "This is the monumental fact of the Nazi rise to power that has been slowly airbrushed from our collective memories: the Nazis campaigned as socialists," more thorough observers of history might instead just shake their heads. After all, the facts of Mussolini's utopian/socialist origins and the Nazis' similar appeals to socialism by incorporating the name are already quite well known to the same historians who consistently describe fascism as a right-wing enterprise.

What these historians record -- but Goldberg variously ignores or minimizes -- is that the "socialism" of "National Socialism" was in fact purely a kind of ethnic economic nationalism, which offered "socialist" support to purely "Aryan" German business entities, and that the larger Nazi cultural appeal was built directly around an open antipathy to all things liberal or leftist. Indeed, whole chapters of Mein Kampf are devoted to vicious smears and declarations of war against "the Left," and not merely the Marxism that Goldberg acknowledges was a major focus of Hitler's animus.

This became manifest in the Italian fascist and German Nazi transformations from a faction of street thugs into an actual political power that seized the reins of government, when fascists gradually shed all pretensions or appeals to socialism and became violently anti-socialist and anti-communist. But it was present all along; "the Left" were the people who were beaten and murdered in the 1920s by the squadristi and the Brownshirts; and the first Germans sent off to Nazi concentration camps like Dachau were not Jews but socialists, communists, and other left-wing political prisoners, including "liberal" priests and clerics.

The same incoherence underlies what Goldberg imagines is his provocative thesis: the notion that "modern progressivism and classical fascism shared the same intellectual roots," and therefore that "fascism, properly understood, is not a phenomenon of the right at all. Instead, it is, and always has been, a phenomenon of the left." The core of this claim is his insistent description of populism as a form of left-wing politics -- which, in many of its manifestations, it certainly was.

Yet Goldberg incorrectly claims that "populism had never been known as a conservative or right phenomenon before" Mussolini. In fact, populism has historically been a broad-ranging phenomenon that expressed itself in both right- and left-wing politics, as Chip Berlet has described in some detail in his 2000 book, Right-Wing Populism in America, which details its history from Bacon's Rebellion to the Ku Klux Klan to the modern-day Posse Comitatus and militia/Patriot movements. What distinguishes these populists from their left-wing counterparts, as Berlet explains, is that "they combine attacks on socially oppressed groups with grassroots mass mobilization and distorted forms of antielitism based on scapegoating." Yet, building on a false characterization of the history of populism, Goldberg goes on to characterize such historical figures as Father Charles Coughlin, the rabid anti-Semitic radio talker of the 1930s, and Sen. Joe McCarthy as left-wing figures simply because of their populist foundations.

More to the point, perhaps, is that discussing fascism's "intellectual foundations" is a nonsensical enterprise in the face of the consensus of historical understanding that anti-intellectualism is an essential trait of fascism, a fact that Goldberg briefly acknowledges without assessing its impact on his thesis. As Umberto Eco put it, the fascist insistence on action for its own sake means that "it must be taken before, or without, reflection. Thinking is a form of emasculation." In this worldview, the instincts of the fascist leader are always superior to the logic and reason of puling intellectuals.

Probably the essential fascist statement is one that Goldberg in fact cites unreflectingly -- Mussolini's famous reply to those who wanted policy specifics from him: "The democrats of Il Mondo want to know our program? It is to break the bones of the democrats of Il Mondo. And the sooner the better." This remark's noteworthy anti-liberalism also seems to elude Goldberg. And the notion that liberal humanism -- with its long history of rationalism and reliance on logic and science -- has anything whatsoever to do with the fascist approach is, once again, an almost comical upending of reality.

Liberal Fascism is like a number of other recent attempts at historical revisionism by popular right-wing pundits -- including, notably, Michelle Malkin's attempt to justify the Japanese-American internment in her book In Defense of Internment, and Ann Coulter's attempt to rehabilitate McCarthy's reputation in her book Treason -- in that it employs the same historical methodology used by Holocaust deniers and other right-wing revanchists: namely, it selects a narrow band of often unrepresentative facts, distorts their meaning, and simultaneously elides and ignores whole mountains of contravening evidence and broader context. These are simply theses in search of support, not anything like serious history.

What goes missing from Goldberg's account of fascism is that, while he describes nearly every kind of liberal enterprise or ideology as representing American fascism, he wipes from the pages of history the fact that there have been fascists operating within the nation's culture for the better part of the past century. Robert O. Paxton, in his book The Anatomy of Fascism, identifies the Ku Klux Klan as the first genuine fascist organization, a suggestion that Goldberg airily dismisses with the dumb explanation that the Klan of the 1920s disliked Mussolini and his adherents because they were Italian (somewhat true for a time but irrelevant in terms of their ideological affinities, which were substantial enough that by the 1930s, historians have noted, there were frequent operative associations between Klan leaders and European fascists).

Beyond the Klan, completely missing from the pages of Goldberg's book is any mention of the Silver Shirts, the American Nazi Party, the Posse Comitatus, the Aryan Nations, or the National Alliance -- all of them openly fascist organizations, many of them involved in some of the nation's most horrific historical events. (The Oklahoma City bombing, for instance, was the product of a blueprint drawn up by the National Alliance's William Pierce.) Goldberg sees fit to declare people like Wilson, FDR, LBJ, and Hillary Clinton "American fascists," but he makes no mention of William Dudley Pelley, Gerald L.K. Smith, George Lincoln Rockwell, William Potter Gale, Richard Butler, or David Duke -- all of them bona fide fascists: the real thing.

This is a telling omission, because the continuing existence of these groups makes clear what an absurd and nakedly self-serving thing Goldberg's alternate version of reality is. Why dream up fascists on the left when the reality is that real American fascists have been lurking in the right's closet for lo these many years? Well, maybe because it's a handy way of getting everyone to forget that fact.

Liberal Fascism may come complete with copious but meaningless footnotes, but it is in the end just a gussied-up version of a favorite talking point of right-wing radio talkers that the real fascists are those nasty liberals, those feminazis and eco-fascists. It may be all dressed up with a pseudo-academic veneer, but the quality of logic contained therein is roughly the same. If only it would vanish into the ether as quickly.

Requires free Adobe Acrobat Reader - Click to installAdobe Acrobat copy of Jonah Goldberg's Bizarro History

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Wednesday, March 5, 2008

2006 global military spending at a glance

2006 global military spending at a glance

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Tuesday, March 4, 2008

List of the Day: Great Olan Mills photos

Great Olan Mills photos

This is a must see/read for humor fans everywhere. Here's a sample:

Kenneth and his prom date - Click for the entire collection on List of the Day Kenneth and his prom date.


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Saturday, March 1, 2008

From the "I didn't know that" category...

I didn't know that

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