Archive for the ‘Liberals’ Category

Maher Slams Liberals For Being So PC They Don’t Notice They’re Losing and ‘Getting F*cked in the Ass’ – Mediaite

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In tonights New Rules, Bill Maher hit liberals for being overly outraged about every little thing that may seem to be somewhat politically incorrect to them and allowing those issues to take up their attention while Republicans took over the government.

Highlighting a number of incidents involving celebrities apologizing for being too insensitive, Maher sarcastically asked, Where do you think you are some kind of melting pot?

The comedian offered up a laundry list of sensible and fairly popular positions that Democrats endorse while still losing elections, stating that there could be a myriad of reasons for the dilemma, but one that can be quickly addressed.

The one we can immediately fix is that too often Democrats remind people of a man who has taken his balls out and placed them in his wifes purse, he explained. Maher also challenged the audience to be offended at the remark, telling them to tweet at him so he could tell them to go f*ck yourself.

Swinging back to celebrities having to apologize for something that in the grand scheme of things is trivial, Maher invoked the election of Donald Trump.

What matters is that while you self-involved fools were busy policing the language at the Kids Choice Awards, a madman talked his way into the White House, he exclaimed.

Maher ended the segment with this: While liberals were in a contest to see who could be the first to call out fat-shaming, the Tea Party was taking over school boards. Stop protecting your virgin ears and start noticing youre getting f*cked in the ass!

Of course, smacking liberals on the nose for being too PC has been a running theme of Mahers. Following Trumps election, Maher stated that one good thing coming from it could be the riddance of PC culture. Hes also called PC college protesters little monsters, begged the PC police to stop ruining Halloween, and smacked Democrats for betting caught up in PC bullsh*t.

Watch the clip above, via HBO.

[image via screengrab]

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Maher Slams Liberals For Being So PC They Don't Notice They're Losing and 'Getting F*cked in the Ass' - Mediaite

Democrats are putting up a tougher fight than liberals realize – Vox

As liberals prepare to fight back against Donald Trump and his nascent administration, they are swiftly finding reasons to be disappointed in the elected leadership of the Democratic Party.

Liberal senators like Sherrod Brown and Elizabeth Warren are voting to confirm Ben Carson as secretary of housing and urban development, outraging grassroots progressives.

Ben Carson openly said that he was against constitutional rights for Muslims - and Dems are voting him in.

Democrats are going soft on proposed Small Business Administration chief Linda McMahon, setting off even more establishment-oriented outlets like the Center for American Progresss ThinkProgress blog. And theyre offering a mixed message on Jeff Sessionss selections to lead the Department of Justice.

7. Only 17 Democrats are publicly opposing Sessions, who couldn't get confirmed as a federal judge because of his history of racism

Meanwhile, even as congressional Democrats mobilize to stymie Republican efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, they say they are trying to call Trumps bluff on infrastructure spending by introducing their own plan for $1 trillion in direct spending, a political tactic Jonathan Chait denounces as delusional on the grounds that anything that gives Trump bipartisan cover on anything will boost his popularity.

In the pungent words of the New Republics Clio Chang, Democrats are already screwing this up citing Democrats selective willingness to vote yes on some of Trumps Cabinet nominees.

Lurking in the background is the accurate perception that Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell orchestrated an unprecedented and successful years-long campaign of obstruction to Barack Obamas agenda, a campaign aimed in part at policy victories but largely at delegitimizing the new president and denying him the halo of bipartisanship. Is it really possible that Democrats have learned so little from the success of McConnells just say nothing approach?

The reality, however, is that while McConnell certainly did break precedent and certainly did have this kind of strategy, GOP opposition was less across-the-board than its remembered in liberal folk history. Obama passed a number of significant bills with Republican support in his first two years in office, and Democrats have, thus far, been drastically less cooperative with Trumps Cabinet nominees than Republicans were with Obamas.

McConnells success wasnt that he literally held his caucus together in unanimous opposition to everything. Its that he made sure the political agenda was dominated by the things he was choosing to oppose most of all the Affordable Care Act rather than the things that divided his caucus. Democrats core strategy at the moment is to paint Trump as a closet plutocrat, and to focus on aspects of his agenda that point to tax cuts, financial deregulation, school privatization, and health care cutbacks. And their votes have been consistent with that.

Obama was inaugurated on January 20, standing in front of a record crowd despite the freezing cold weather. The very next day the Senate confirmed six of his Cabinet secretaries Hillary Clinton, Ken Salazar, Tom Vilsack, Steven Chu, Arne Duncan, and Janet Napolitano. Clinton received two no votes, Duncan and Napolitano received so little opposition that Senate only did unrecorded voice votes, and the other three were literally unanimous. The very next day, the Senate unanimously confirmed Obamas nominees for HUD, Transportation, Environmental Protection Agency, United Nations ambassador, Securities and Exchange Commission chair, and the Council on Environmental Qualities.

Other Obama nominees were more controversial but still had plenty of Republican support. Eric Holder, not exactly a conservative favorite, got 19 Republican votes. Hilda Solis got 24. Ron Kirk got 38. Tim Geithner got 10. Kathleen Sebelius ended up being the most contentious nomination, since anti-abortion groups decided to go hard at her, but she still got nine Republican votes.

At the time, there were only 40 Republican senators, so that meant about a quarter of the GOP caucus was voting for even the most controversial nominees.

Trumps nominees have received much less support than Obamas. Even his least controversial nominees like Defense Secretary James Mattis and UN Ambassador Nikki Haley have drawn token opposition from someone looking to make a point.

Obamas legislative agenda, of course, met with considerably more resistance. But though his signature creation of a new health care program paired with a consequential overhaul of student loans was famously passed on a strict party line vote, basically nothing else he did was.

That includes a stimulus bill that was backed by three Republicans (one of whom was later run out of the party as a result and became a Democrat) and the Dodd-Frank financial regulation overhaul (backed, like the stimulus, by the two Maine Republicans, this time joined by Massachusetts Republican Scott Brown).

But there was also a whole raft of less controversial but still consequential bills that passed with bipartisan majorities:

Beyond those seven measures, the 111th Congress also passed a series of lower-profile economic stimulus measures an employment benefits extension, a payroll tax holiday, the cash for clunkers program outside of the main stimulus bill, all of which garnered at least a handful of Republican votes.

To be clear, Democrats who say that Obama faced an unprecedented level of partisan opposition are not misremembering.

George W. Bush came into office with a much weaker electoral mandate than Obama, but nonetheless ended up getting a dozen Senate Democrats to vote for his tax cut plan. After the GOP gained seats in the 2002 midterms, Democrats simply chose to allow the GOP to pass a Medicare reform plan without filibustering it, even though the Republicans didnt have 60 votes to pass the bill.

Democrats were surprised to see that they received no comparable deference on anything. They were also surprised by the GOP leaderships determination to simply throw as much sand in the gears as possible of many of these bills using extensive delaying tactics even when they didnt have the votes to block legislation in order to chew up floor time and limit the amount Democrats could accomplish. Republicans also used their filibustering prerogatives to delay or block the confirmation of many sub-Cabinet appointees, often for trivial reasons.

Most of all, McConnell ensured that the dominant narrative of Obamas first year in office was one of highly partisan conflict. The stimulus passed with some GOP votes and was honestly not that substantively different from the Republican alternative. But as the economy continued to deteriorate, Republicans excoriated it as a blunder and a failure. They lured Democrats into a trap on health care, where Chuck Grassley and others maintained a protracted facade of bipartisan negotiations even while party leaders endlessly slagged the reform process. Its not that nothing else got done so much as nobody heard about anything else.

And with a not-so-trivial helping hand from objectively bleak background economic conditions it paid off in the 2010 midterms.

Republicans would counter, of course, that this was all merely retaliation for unprecedented Democratic obstruction during the Bush administration. Democrats counter-charge that Bill Clinton faced unprecedented obstruction. Republicans say the real problem was the tactics Democrats used to block Robert Borks Supreme Court confirmation back in the 1980s.

The truth is that this is a ratchet that has been shifting for a long time.

In the middle of the 20th century, the two political parties did not offer clearly contrasting ideologies. That meant members of Congress generally felt cross-pressured between partisan and ideological imperatives, and it fostered a broadly cooperative atmosphere. For decades now that has been changing, as both parties have become more ideological and thus members of Congress from both parties face more pressure from their respective activist bases to stand up to the other side. This means each new president is greeted by a level of uncooperativeness from the opposition party that is genuinely unprecedented.

The Reagan Revolution of 1981-82 was undertaken even though Democrats held a majority in the House of Representatives because Speaker Tip ONeil was willing to repeatedly bring Republican bills to the floor that would then pass with the support of a small number of conservative Democrats a scenario that is totally unthinkable under todays legislative norms.

Democrats are responding to the Trump administration by offering so far an unprecedentedly low level of support for his Cabinet nominees. They are signaling potential willingness to pass an infrastructure spending program that, if it comes together, would essentially amount to Trump coming around to a view Democrats have espoused for years. Meanwhile, there is zero indication of any Democratic support for any Republican Party legislative initiatives to reduce taxes or federal spending.

Given the combination of rising polarization, Trumps unprecedentedly low approval ratings, and Trumps unique personal attributes, an unprecedented lack of cross-party support is probably to be expected. But the ratchet of activist expectations has moved even faster than the ratchet of legislative reality, and consequently Democrats currently find themselves disappointing their own supporters, who want them to adopt a posture of root-and-branch opposition that they mistakenly believe McConnell took eight years ago.

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Democrats are putting up a tougher fight than liberals realize - Vox

When it comes to Trump, liberals can’t see shades of gray – Los Angeles Times

Manichaeanswas a favorite derogatory way to describe GOP President George. W. Bush and his Iraq war supporters in the mid-2000s. The term referred to the followers of Mani, a third-century Persian prophet who founded a highly successful religious movement that rivaled Christianity. Mani was a dualist who believed that the world was divided between the forces of light and good, and the forces of darkness and evil, both locked in a never-ending conflict. Christians, who believe that despite the existence of evil, God and his creation are good, deemed Manichaeism heresy.

On Jan. 30, 2002, not long after 9/11, Bush gave a speech in which he described the war on terror and the looming Iraq war as a conflict between good and evil. There is no middle ground like none. The people we fight are evil people. The day before, in his State of the Union address, Bush had designated Iraq, together with Iran and North Korea, the Axis of Evil.

With the speed of a wildfire, the word Manichaean spread through the liberal punditry to characterize Bushs supposedly simplistic and intellectually challenged analysis. Princeton bioethicist Peter Singer promptly ground out a 2004 book about Bush, The President of Good and Evil. On a book-tour stop at UCLA, Singer accused the president of engaging in a childish reading of moral rules. Singer traced that notion to Bushs evangelical Christian beliefs, arguing that evangelicals had never managed to eradicate the Manichaean heresy from their primitive mind-sets.

Vox founder Ezra Klein, then a Washington Post columnist, published an online essay in the American Prospect titled The Manichean War. President Carters formernational security advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski, used the phrase Manichaean paranoia in 2007 with reference to Bush when he was interviewed by Jon Stewarton The Daily Show. Veteran journalist Glenn Greenwald capped it all off with a 2008 book, A Tragic Legacy: How a Good vs. Evil Mentality Destroyed the Bush Presidency. The book was all about Bushs simplistic Manichaean world view.

The idea was that truly sophisticated thinkers which is the way liberal pundits like to viewthemselves have a far more nuanced view, seeing the world not in terms of darkness and light but in terms of infinite shades of gray. The words complexity and ambiguity were said to be more intelligent than good and evil to describe moral questions and assess moral character moreGame of Thrones rather than Lord of the Rings. Never mind that, for all the fact that the Iraq war turned out to be a huge mistake, there might actually be some forces out there that could be accurately described as genuine forces of evil such as, say, Islamic State.

Then 2016 arrived, and with it, Donald Trumps winning run for the White House. Suddenly the words complexity and ambiguity not to mention nuanced disappeared from the vocabularies of the so-called sophisticates, washed away in the swirling high tide of the return of that simplistic word: evil.

Here is Brian Beutler, writing for the New Republic on Nov. 10, two days after the election: The depth of potential horrors in Donald Trumps presidency is nearly bottomless. The headline on Beutlers essay reads: Donald Trump and the Evil of Banality.

A couple of weeks earlier, the Washington Posts Jennifer Rubin had written: It matters not at all whether there is some diagnosable problem with Trump or whether he is simply evil. Theres that e-word again.

At Politico, Joe Keohane wrote in April 2016 about the sad mind and evil media genius behind @realDonaldTrump. Steve King sputtered this in an article titled Donald Trumps Undeniable Evil for Death and Taxes magazine: He is a cancerous tumor devoid of any redeemable quality, slowly infecting and corrupting everyone and everything around him. Billionaire entertainment mogul Barry Diller told CNBC that Trumps candidacy was an evil miracle. No nuance there.

Since the inauguration, the sinister president theme is only metastasizing: Narcissist or evil genius? asked the National Catholic Reporter.Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin: The plutocratic evil twins opined the headline on a Paul Rosenberg piece in Salon.

Strange, isnt it, that when the tables are turned, the liberal pushers of moral ambiguity are as absolutist as any fundamentalist preacher associated with George W. Bush? Theres a lesson or two to be learned here. With all due respect toBrzezinski, the right doesnt have a lock on paranoia. And dualism our side good, your side evil is actually baked into human nature and doesnt really have much to do with how smart you are or how many shades of moral gray you think you can discern.Whenever you let loose your moral indignation at high decibel, someone somewhere will be laughing.

So who are the Manichaeans now?

Washington-based Charlotte Allen writes about social and cultural issues.

Follow the Opinion section on Twitter@latimesopinionandFacebook

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When it comes to Trump, liberals can't see shades of gray - Los Angeles Times

Federal Liberals to tighten rules around cash-for-access fundraisers – CBC.ca

The Liberal government plans to enact a new lawto limit cash-for-access fundraising, a senior Liberal source confirmed to CBC News.

Newlegislation will aim to make cash-for-access fundraising more transparent and reportable to Canadians by requiring the events to be held in publicly accessible spaces rather than private homes or clubs.

The events will also have to be publicly advertised in advance and followed up with a timely public report detailing how many people attended and how much money was raised.

The story was first reported in the Globe and Mail Friday.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has come under fire for attending $1,500-a-head fundraising events, often held in the homes of wealthy Canadians. News of the planned legislation comes as the prime minister facesmore heat from the opposition Conservatives and NDP when Parliament re-opens Monday after a six-week break.

Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson has raised concerns about events Trudeau attended involving business leaders with ties to China.

She said information to date was not sufficient to warrant an investigation, but she said she planned to "follow up" with the prime minister about his involvement in the events.

Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson has raised concerns about the prime minister's involvement in cash-for-access fundraising events. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose called the Liberal plan a "smokescreen" for unscrupulous practices and urged Trudeau to simply stop holding the cash-for-access fundraisers.

"It's not about where you hold the event as much as who you are selling influence," she said during a Conservative caucus meeting in Quebec City.

"He is the most powerful person in Canada. He cannot charge people to come to an event$1,500and talk about government business."

The new rules are expected to apply to party leaders and leadership candidates, but critics say the real issue is about those holding power in office selling influence.

Conservative ethics critic Blaine Calkinssaid Trudeau is merely enshrining into law the current"unsavoury" practices.

"The cash for access is still there. He's just changing the rules and moving it to a bigger room," he said.

"He can still invite the same people. He can still conduct the same government business that he was doing. He can still be lobbied the same way."

MPs on the Liberals' proposed fundraising rules revamp10:59

NDP Leader Tom Mulcairissued a statement Friday asking if this development is an admission the events were inappropriate, and if the Liberals will return the money that was raised.

"Or is this just what it looks like, a cynical game to distract from Liberals helping themselves?" his statement asks. "Let's also be clear, there is nothing here that actually bans selling access to ministers, which is the overarching problem."

Trudeau has defended his participation at the events, insisting attendees hold no special sway on government policy.

Answering questions on the so-called "cash-for-access" controversy, Trudeau insisted he will answer questions or listen to anyone who wants to speak with him about issues that are important to them.

"The fact is, my approach continues to be to listen broadly through every possible opportunityI get and make the right decisions based on what's best for Canada," he said during a year-end news conference in Ottawa last month.

"I can say that in various Liberal Party events, I listen to people as I will in any given situation, but the decisions I make in government are ones based on what is right for Canadians, not on what an individual at a fundraiser might say."

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Federal Liberals to tighten rules around cash-for-access fundraisers - CBC.ca

Are Liberals Launching Their Own Tea Party? – The Atlantic

Like whitecaps on the surf, thousands of homemade signs bobbed above the sea of protesters who surged through downtown streets in last weekends womens march against President Trump in Los Angeles.

The messages were blunt (Trump is a racist), earnest (Kindness is everything), witty (Bad Hombre Raised by Nasty Woman), and punctuated by variations on the theme that even the Secret Service couldnt protect the new president if he tried to grab the sign-holder the way he described in his Access Hollywood video.

The End of the American Century

But the most politically relevant message may have been written on a hand-lettered, four-word sign that inverted a famous catchphrase from Star Trek. Resistance Is Not Futile, it read.

Its easy to understand why Democrats would feel otherwise. In last Novembers election, Hillary Clinton won more than 65.8 million votes. That was more than any candidate in American history except Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012 (and he just barely beat her haul the second time). Clinton beat Trump in the popular vote by nearly 2.9 million votes. With that she marked the sixth time in the past seven presidential elections that Democrats have won the popular votea record unmatched since the formation of the modern party system in 1828.

And yet, Democrats emerged from Trumps inaugural completely excluded from federal power, with Republicans simultaneously controlling the White House, House, and Senate. In state governments, Democrats began the Trump era at a low ebb, too.

So for many of those I spoke with, the marchs first purpose was to find reassurance that they were not isolated in their undiminished opposition to Trump. More than anything we want to feel that were not alone, said Mina Olivera from West Los Angeles, who marched with her husband and two children. We just cannot be quiet and let it happen.

Oliveras simple declaration captured what is likely to be the marchs most important political impact. The unprecedented turnoutwhich by the best estimates drew about one in every 100 Americans into the streetssent the message that even after Trumps upset victory there is a still a huge mass of Americans viscerally opposed to him. Were trying to show we have a voice and were not scared, Roger Palencia, a marcher from Whittier, California, told me.

For many marchers, that messages principal audience wasnt Trump, or even congressional Republicans. Instead, the target was congressional Democrats, who protesters expected to do whatever they could to hold the line against Trump, as Erica Mayorga of Whittier put it.

That sentiment is where a comparison to the Tea Party movement may be most aptly applied. The Tea Party eruption in summer 2009 had no discernible impact on then-President Obamas decisions, and relatively little on congressional Democrats either. But the uprising sharpened congressional Republicans resistance to Obama. The effect was particularly evident on health-care reform, when the Tea Partys emergence doomed Obamas hopes of reaching a bipartisan Senate agreement.

Its true, as skeptics have noted, that even if the womens marches inspire sustained activism, that wouldnt answer the key long-term challenges Democrats face. Based predominantly, though not exclusively, in urban areas, the marches reflected the excessive concentration of Democratic support in big cities and coastal statesa concentration that largely explains why the party holds so little power despite consistently amassing a bigger national coalition than the GOP since the 1990s.

But movements usually matter more in generating opposition than in formulating alternatives; they typically function more as a red light than green. Its difficult, for instance, to see Trumps rise as a policy victory for the Tea Party movement. Trumps agenda on several fronts, like infrastructure and health-care spending, could even revive the big-government conservatism of George W. Bush that infuriated Tea Partiers. Still, by creating demand for a more militant party, the movement reconfigured the GOP and helped pave Trumps bellicose run to its nomination.

If it becomes a sustained movement, the womens march might similarly reorient Democrats. Democratic elected officials remain divided over the right balance between confronting and cooperating with Trump. Privately, some leading Democratic strategists worry that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, despite some forceful criticism, will lean too much toward making deals with Trump, rather than working to systematically mobilize resistance and limit his supportas Senate Republicans, under Tea Party pressure, did against Obama.

Some deal-making may be unavoidable since Schumer must worry about protecting 10 Democratic senators facing 2018 reelection races in states Trump carried. But Saturdays marcheslike the Tea Party uprisingsignaled that the passion in the party tilts decidedly toward resistance. Post-inaugural polls reinforce that conclusion. In the Gallup Poll this week, Trump became the first newly inaugurated president to enter office with a positive job rating from less than half of Americans. And just 14 percent of Democrats said they approved of his performance, while 81 percent disapproved. That was by far the lowest initial approval rating for a new president from voters in the opposite party. Bush, at 32 percent, marked the previous low.

Trumps tumultuous first week made clear that even after his narrow victory he is determined to pursue the sweeping policy changes, at home and abroad, that typically follow a landslide. The massive crowds that braved winter weather in most places to march last weekend testified to how many Americans are equally determined to resist him at every step. Its the liberal side of the Tea Party, said Joyce Holiday of Granada Hills, as the Los Angeles crowd swirled around her. Were going to fight. The lines are quickly hardening in a presidency that may divide America like no other.

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Are Liberals Launching Their Own Tea Party? - The Atlantic