Tag Archives | Rick Perry

What I'm Reading Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Climate & Climate Politics

Science

Politics

  • Rush Limbaugh: Joe Scarborough Praising Huntsman To ‘Keep [His] Job’ (VIDEO)
  • Does Rick Perry even have a clue about reality? Rick Perry Draws Ire From Turkey After Saying Country Ruled By ‘Islamic Terrorists’

    ANKARA, Turkey — United States Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry has drawn Turkey’s ire after the Texas Gov. said the country was ruled by Islamic terrorists.

    Turkey’s Foreign Ministry released a statement Tuesday saying Perry’s comments were “baseless and inappropriate” and the U.S. should not waste its time with candidates “who do not even know their allies.”

    [read on…] 

    What a friggen idiot. The guy is an embarrassment to both the Republican Party and Texans. Republicans should however be proud of the message they are sending this moron with his pathetically tiny minuscule rankings in the polls. It time for Rick Perry to go home.

  • The GOP’s Race Problem | The Nation

    Martin Luther King Day would have been a perfect occasion for the GOP presidential candidates to express their commitment to racial tolerance and diversity. Instead, just the opposite occurred at last night’s GOP debate in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Who needs a dog whistle when you’re in a state where the Confederate flag still flies atop the statehouse grounds?

    This Republican field has been marked by questionable racial assertions, as my colleague Gary Youngerecently noted. Rick Perry’s hunting at a camp called Niggerhead. Ron Paul’s publishing of scores of racist newsletters. Newt Gingrich’s calling Barack Obama the “food stamp president.” Rick Santorum’s saying “I don’t want to make black people’s lives better by giving them somebody else’s money.”

    This racially inflammatory rhetoric was on full display last night, as candidate after candidate auditioned to be the next George Wallace. It started when debate moderator Juan Williams asked Perry about South Carolina’s restrictive voter ID law, which the Department of Justice found would disproportionately impactminority voters. Here’s the key exchange:

    [read on…]

  • The GOP’s Blatant Racism | The Nation

    …So it has been these past few weeks with Republicans on the stump, campaigning as though in a time “before racism was bad,” when Rick Perry’s family had a hunting lodge known as Niggerhead and white people could just run their mouth without consequences. In Sioux City, Iowa, Rick Santorum was asked a question about foreign influence on the economy. As he meandered incoherently through his answer, he came out with this gem:“I don’t want to make black people’s lives better by giving them somebody else’s money; I want to give them the opportunity to go out and earn the money.”

    “Right,” said one audience member, as another woman nodded.

    “And provide for themselves and their families,” Santorum added, to applause. “The best way to do that is to get the manufacturing sector of the economy rolling again.”

    The black population of Sioux City is 2.9 percent. In Woodbury County, in which Sioux City sits, 13 percent of the people are on food stamps, an increase of 26 percent since 2007, with nine times as many whites as blacks using them.

    Just a few days later, in Plymouth, New Hampshire, Newt Gingrich told a crowd, “I will go to the NAACP convention and explain to the African-American community why they should demand paychecks…[instead of] food stamps.” African-Americans make up 0.8 percent of Plymouth’s population. Food stamp use in Grafton County is 6 percent—a 48 percent increase since 2007.

     [read on…]

  • Pepe Escobar: The Myth of “Isolated” Iran
  • Obama Has Proven to Be an Adamant Opponent of Marijuana Reform | FDL Action
  • Mitt Romney will Govern as a Tea Partier
  • The Immoral Minority: Is this the end of the Christian Right?
  • Michael Kazin: The End Of The Christian Right | The New Republic (the emphasis is mine)

    Is the Christian Right still a power in American politics? The lavish coverage which its partisans and their favorite issues have received during the current Republican campaign certainly leave that impression. Yet all this attention is akin to the dazzling glow of a setting sun. In fact, the Christian Right is a fading force in American life, one which has little chance of achieving its cherished goals.

    Yes, pious conservatives earned the underfunded Rick Santorum a virtual tie in the Iowa caucuses, and, last week, a large gathering of evangelical leaders nodded fervently in his direction. Every GOP candidate still in the race speaks of Planned Parenthood as if it were a band of terrorists and vows to stop the largest and oldest reproductive rights group in the country from winning even a dollar of federal funding—and all of them except Ron Paul has signed a firm pledge to support a constitutional amendment that would essentially ban same-sex marriage. As for the presumptive nominee Mitt Romney, who has earned the suspicions of many conservative evangelicals, he has worked tirelessly to ingratiate himself with the Christian Right. Pro-Romney robo-calls in South Carolina currently feature a right-to-lifer from Massachusetts who opens her pitch, “I know you have heard a lot of folks talking about Mitt’s record on life, faith, and marriage while governor of Massachusetts.”

    But, whatever their influence on the Republican primary, the Christian Right is fighting a losing battle with the rest of the country—above all, when it comes to abortion  and same-sex marriage, the issues they care most about. A strong majority of Americans backs abortion in the early months of a pregnancy. If elected president, it’s exceedingly unlikely that Romney would ever sign legislation that could lead to the indictment of millions of women and tens of thousands of physicians for fetal murder. Last fall, even voters in Mississippi soundly rejected a bill that might have done just that.

    [read on…]

  • Plus ça change, plus c’est la même choseIke’s Nightmare | MyFDL
    Fifty-one years ago today, President Dwight D. Eisenhower issued his final, prescient warning about the rising power of the military industrial complex. More than half a century later, we find ourselves in a political system which has ignored Eisenhower’s sound advice as the influence of the war industry on our society reaches a crescendo. Nowhere is this “disastrous rise of misplaced power” more apparent than in the debate about the Pentagon budget taking place in Washington, D.C.
  • Capitalism’s real “risk-takers” – 2012 Elections – Salon.com 

    Mitt Romney is casting the 2012 campaign as “free enterprise on trial” — defining free enterprise as achieving success through “hard work and risking-taking.” Tea Party favorite Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina says he’s supporting Romney because “we really need someone who understands how risk, taking risk… is the way we create jobs, create choices, expand freedom.” Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donahue, defending Romney, explains “this economy is about risk. If you don’t take risk, you can’t have success.”

    Wait a minute. Who do they think are bearing the risks? Their blather about free enterprise risk-taking has it upside down. The higher you go in the economy, the easier it is to make money without taking any personal financial risk at all. The lower you go, the bigger the risks.

    Wall Street has become the center of riskless free enterprise. Bankers risk other peoples’ money. If deals turn bad, they collect their fees in any event. The entire hedge-fund industry is designed to hedge bets so big investors can make money whether the price of assets they bet on rises or falls. And if the worst happens, the biggest bankers and investors now know they’ll be bailed out by taxpayers because they’re too big to fail.

    Continue Reading
  • Is Obama Really The ‘Food Stamp President’? Fact-checking The S.C. Debate : It’s All Politics : NPR

    …Gingrich criticized Obama for the growth in food stamps, calling him “the best food stamp president in American history.” He later said that “the fact is that more people have been put on food stamps by Barack Obama than any president in American history.” We’ve rated that Half True because the number was headed upward before Obama became president.

    [read on…]

    Gingrich, a master at  playing disgusting dog whistle politics.

  • Does Obama push food stamps? – Jan. 17, 2012

Politics — Health Care

SOPA

  • The End of the Internet? 

    A rival bill to the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) could protect copyrights without killing the web.

    After President Barack Obama released a statement over the weekend that he would not sign any bill resembling the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), Representative Darrell Issa postponed Wednesday’s hearing on the proposed law. News as of today is that SOPA is DOA. Since December, prominent tech figures and digital activists, including luminaries like Sergey Brin of Google and Jack Dorsey of Twitter, have characterized the bill as a draconian measure that would chill online innovation. A number of popular websites like GoDaddy, Reddit, and Wikipedia have threatened to black out service for a day to boycott the law, and Craigslist, in its rudimentary script, has a running message on its site protesting the measure. New legislation introduced by Issa and Senator Ron Wyden called the Online Protection and Enforcement of Digital Trade Act (OPEN) looks to avoid a number of the problems with SOPA that upset Web-service providers. The debate over how to protect copyrights online nevertheless continues to pit entertainment moguls against tech’s celebrity innovators in a fight for the future of the Internet.

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Rachel Maddow: A pantheon of pregnant pauses & Why we need the department Perry cant remember he wants to cut

Rachel Maddow: A pantheon of pregnant pauses.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Rachel Maddow: Why we need the department Perry cant remember he wants to cut.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking newsworld news, and news about the economy

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Rick Perry & Cameron Todd Willingham

I first read about Cameron Todd Willinghan’s case with this article all the way back on Friday, September 11, 2009:

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What I'm Reading Saturday, September 17, 2011

Climate:

The Politics of Climate Change

Energy

Economics

The Rick Perry Watch

The Other Stuff (Misc. Politics,News, Opinion, etc. well almost anyway)

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Well that does it for me, I am definitely NOT voting for Rick Perry

This just in:

Anti-global warming Sen. Inhofe formally endorses Perry

By NBC’s Carrie Dann

TULSA, Okla. — Sen. Jim Inhofe, a strident conservative voice in the Senate and a vocal skeptic of global warming, formally endorsed Gov. Rick Perry on Monday, calling him “the only guy who can really win this thing.”

“The one thing that he has that nobody else has is this background of experience, not just him being an administrator but doing the right thing, cutting down the deficit, increasing jobs. And he’s done everything right,” Inhofe said, adding, “No one out there running is as aware as to the cost of all the overregulation that we’re experiencing right now.”

Nah, seriously I was never going to vote for him anyway. As I’ve already said here before both directly and indirectly I think Rick Perry is arguably the worst candidate for President of the United States I have seen in my lifetime. I think his  getting the endorsement from Inhofe, the lead climate change denier in congress, falls under the “why am I not surprised” category.

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President and Crazy are not two words we want connected

Ron Reagan (Jr.) in the Hardball Let Me Finish segment, Monday, August 22, 2011, gives a stinging commentary on "Crazy Presidential Candidates".

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

"Let me finish tonight with science and the Republican Party. Two out of the three presidential candidates generally considered frontrunners for the Republican Party nomination believe the moon is made of green cheese. Does that cause you concern?

You’d think it would. After all, astronauts have been to the moon and have brought back rocks that seem utterly cheese-free. And no giant space mice have been observed nibbling at lunar craters.

Ah, but Rick Perry and Michelle Bachman – the frontrunners in question – don’t believe NASA ever landed men on the moon. As for space mice, the Governor and Congresswoman think they may just be lurking out of sight on the moon’s dark side.

I’m kidding, of course. As far as I know, neither Perry nor Bachman really harbor any such thoughts about our planet’s satellite. If they did, they’d be laughed right out of any presidential contest. Wouldn’t they? I mean… the moon made of green cheese? NASA landings faked? That’s way too crazy for the White House, right? That’s out there where the buses don’t stop. Yeah…

Trouble is, both Bachman and Perry profess other beliefs just as crazy. For instance, neither seems to accept Charles Darwin’s idea that species – including the human species – evolve over time. Instead, they pretend there’s a scientific controversy involving evolution where none exists.

Both also reject the consensus of over 90% of climate scientists worldwide that human activity is warming our planet to dangerously disruptive levels. One of Rick Perry’s first pronouncements upon entering the presidential contest was to declare any such scientific consensus a hoax. Bachman seems to agree.

That would be a massive global charade involving not just the world’s scientists but the governments of virtually every nation as well. If they wanted to be taken the least bit seriously, anyone making such an extraordinary claim would have to back it up with extraordinarily compelling evidence. Wouldn’t they?

Perry and Bachman offer no such evidence. Not a shred. Any rational person would consider such wild, unsupported claims an embarrassment and the folks who made them unfit for high office. Yet here they are, Perry and Bachman, frontrunners for the Republican presidential nomination.

That ought to tell us something – and it’s not something good – about the current Republican Party. And if either of these two were to actually move into the White House, it would say something even more tragic about our body politic. President and crazy are not two words we want connected."

"President and Crazy are not two words we want connected." What an important line!

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Rick Perry-Taxes & Revenues In The So-called "Texas Miracle"

Following a link attached to a blurb I read this morning in Wall Street Journal Blog: Real Time Economics

"Howard Gleckman examines presidential hopeful Gov. Rick Perry’s record as a low-tax politician. His record, “suggests, in fact, a politician who has gradually toughened his anti-tax views over the years but remains willing to boost some levies…Perry’s biggest revenue challenge came in 2004-2006. Texas had been funding its schools through local property taxes, an arrangement courts found problematic. In 2004, Perry proposed replacing some school property levies with a basket of other taxes, including sales taxes, a higher cigarette tax, and an increased payroll tax. Perry’s plan died in the legislature in 2004 but in 2006, after the state Supreme Court determined the school funding system was unconstitutional, lawmakers did pass a major tax reform bill—a measure praised and signed by Perry. This version reduced local property taxes but created a new gross receipts tax on business (called a margins tax), raised the cigarette tax, and even taxed patrons of topless bars…Conservatives blasted the 2006 deal as ‘the largest tax increase in state history.’”

I ended up over on TaxVox where I read a great post there: Rick Perry, Texas, and Taxes

Excerpt (the emphasis is mine):

…Perry’s plan died in the legislature in 2004 but in 2006, after the state Supreme Court determined the school funding system was unconstitutional, lawmakers did pass a major tax reform bill—a measure praised and signed by Perry. This version reduced local property taxes but created a new gross receipts tax on business (called a margins tax) , raised the cigarette tax, and even taxed patrons of topless bars. Thanks to my Tax Policy Center colleague Yuri Shadunsky for helping review the Perry years.

Conservatives blasted the 2006 deal as “the largest tax increase in state history.” While it remains unclear whether this new mix of taxes was a net revenue increase, many in Texas did pay higher taxes.

In recent years, Perry has taken a much harder line on revenues but not an absolute one. While in 2009 he signed Grover Norquist’s anti-tax pledge (to “oppose and veto any and all efforts to increase taxes”), he also increased taxes on smokeless tobacco by $105 million over two years. In June, Perry vetoed a bill that would have required some Internet retailers to collect Texas sales taxes.

While state taxes are generally regressive, Texas is among the worst– not surprising since it has no personal income tax. In 2009, the labor-funded Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy estimated that the lowest-earning 20 percent of Texas households paid about 12.2 percent of their income in state and local taxes, while the top 1 percent paid only 3.3 percent, compared to the national average of 10.9 percent and 5.2 percent .

There are a couple of things to keep in mind when reviewing Texas taxes. The first is that the state has an extremely weak governor, one of the least powerful in the nation. Thus, many of these tax changes can properly be laid at the feet of the legislature, although Perry did sign them into law.

It is also worth noting that Texas has enjoyed the benefits of the run-up in oil prices in recent years (the price of a barrel of oil was just $25 when Perry first became governor). High energy prices may be bad for most state economies, but not for Texas, where the oil and gas business produced $13 billion in state revenues last year, more than 40 percent of total revenues. Texas also receives an outsized amount of money from the federal government and has embarked on major spending cuts. In this environment, Perry has been under much less pressure to raise taxes than other governors.

"…a new gross receipts tax on business (called a margins tax)" That’s a tax on businesses right? And it’s not a tax on the profit a business earns it’s a tax on the gross receipts. Well I’ll be.

And I find the disparity between what the folks at the top pay in taxes vs. what the folks at the bottom disconcerting too. The folks at the bottom in Texas pay 400% more in terms of percentage of their income than do the folks at the top? Texas is #5 on the list of the ten most regressive tax systems in the country (regressive meaning that the poor pay a higher percentage of their income in taxes than do those that are well off) (see Who Pays? A Distributional Analysis of the Tax Systems in All 50 States).

The bit about Texas (being a lot like Alaska) in that a large substantial portion of the state’s revenues are thanks to a quirk in geography rather than any great management policy are certainly worth noting (see In Texas, Perry has ridden an energy boom).

And one last point if Rick Perry and Rick Perry’s supporters want to use the "the state has an extremely weak governor, one of the least powerful in the nation" to shirk the responsibility for such a unfair regressive tax system and not admit to the energy revenues being so helpful then they/he can’t claim it due to his brilliant fiscal management and the policies he instituted as governor.

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Rick Perry's records of accomplishments in his 26 years as a government employee in Texas

Some notes regarding Rick Perry’s records of accomplishments in his 26 years as a government employee in Texas and the so-called "Texas Miracle" he created as Governor. The emphasis on some of the items in the list is mine.

From:

LADIES AND GENTS… THE REAL RICK PERRY

[…]

The truth of the matter is that Texas actually lost 352,500 non-farm jobs since 2008 according to seasonally adjusted data over the past three years… and they lost 61,600 additional since March 2011 alone according to the Texas Workforce Commission.

The only “Miracle” is that this degenerate hasn’t yet been struck by lightning.

Texas standings against all 50 states on a variety of issues (1st means highest ranking, 50th means lowest ranking).

  • State Aid Per Pupil in Average Daily Attendance – 47th
  • Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) Scores – 45th
  • % of Population 25 and Older with High School Diploma – 50th (RTOL- No wonder 48% of the jobs Rick Perry claims credit for are minimum wage jobs!)
  • High School Graduation Rate – 43rd
  • Per Capita State Spending on State Arts Agencies – 43rd
  • Birth Rate – 2nd
  • Percent of Uninsured Children – 1st
  • Percent of Children Living in Poverty – 4th
  • Percent of Population Uninsured – 1st
  • Percent of Non-Elderly Uninsured – 1st
  • Percent of Low Income Population Covered by Medicaid – 49th
  • Percent of Population with Employer-Based Health Insurance – 48th
  • Total Health Expenditures as % of the Gross State Product – 43rd
  • Per Capita State Spending on Mental Health – 50th
  • Per Capita State Spending on Medicaid – 49th
  • Health Care Expenditures per Capita – 44th
  • Physicians per Capita – 42nd
  • Registered Nurses per Capita – 44th
  • Average Monthly Women, Infant, and Children (WIC) Benefits per Person – 47th
  • Percent of Population Who Visit the Dentist – 46th
  • Overall Birth Rate – 2nd
  • Teenage Birth Rate – 7th
  • Births to Unmarried Mothers – 17th
  • Percent of Women with Pre-Term Birth – 9th
  • Percent of Non-Elderly Women with Health Insurance – 50th
  • Rate of Women Aged 40+ Who Receive Mammograms – 40th
  • Cervical Cancer Rate – 11th
  • Percent of Women with High Blood Pressure – 16th
  • Percent of Pregnant Women Receiving Prenatal Care in First Trimester – 50th
  • Women’s Voter Registration – 45th
  • Women’s Voter Turnout – 49th
  • Percent of Women Living in Poverty – 6th
  • Mortgage Debt as Percent of Home Value – 47th
  • Foreclosure Rates – 10th
  • Median Net Worth of Households – 47th
  • Average Credit Score – 49th
  • Retirement Plan Participation – 47th
  • Amount of Carbon Dioxide Emissions – 1st
  • Amount of Volatile Organic Compounds Released into Air – 1st
  • Amount of Toxic Chemicals Released into Water – 1st
  • Amount of Recognized Cancer-Causing Carcinogens Released into Air – 1st
  • Amount of Hazardous Waste Generated – 1st
  • Amount of Toxic Chemicals Released into Air – 5th
  • Amount of Recognized Cancer-Causing Carcinogens Released into Water – 7th
  • Number of Hazardous Waste Sites on National Priority List – 7th
  • Consumption of Energy per Capita – 5th
  • Workers’ Compensation Coverage – 50th
  • Income Inequality Between the Rich and the Poor – 9th
  • Income Inequality Between the Rich and the Middle Class – 5th
  • Homeowner’s Insurance Affordability – 46th
  • Number of Executions – 1st

A stunning list of achievements huh?

In particular one article I read the other day that I found particulary good reading was from Texas Kaos: The Success of Rick Perry. In it we learn that Governor Rick Perry….

"….earned a D in The Principles of Economics while an undergraduate at Texas A&M University. As the Governor of Texas for the past ten years his so called fiscal conservative economic policies managed to rack up a $27 billion budget deficit."

"…His brilliance also lies in the Governor’s ability to fool voters by whipping them into frenzies about secession, bashing the "evil doing" government and by fomenting fear, unrest and anger over social wedge issues and culture wars that have absolutely nothing to do with the complex financial challenges that continue to undermine the U.S. economic security."

"…what on earth would a life long politician who never held a job outside politics know about U.S. and global defaults and credit ratings? After all Rick Perry himself ran his own state’s fiscal house into the ditch. And the Governor essentially outsourced his fiscal responsibilities and duties to the next legislative session. After the 2012 elections of course."

Can praying to Rick Perry’s God(s) save us from Rick Perry?

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Governor Perry Arrives: II. The Continuing Collapse of the Republican Establishment « The Reality-Based Community

I couldn’t agree anymore with this had I written it myself.

Never in my lifetime has the Republican Party nomination process involved so many divisive figures, second-rate figures and genuine loons, nor evoked such a lack of broadly shared enthusiasm for any one candidate. In short, the Republican Party today is reminiscent of the Democratic Party of the early 1970s, and that’s a huge edge for President Obama no matter which Republican nominee he faces in 2012.

via Governor Perry Arrives: II. The Continuing Collapse of the Republican Establishment « The Reality-Based Community.

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Ed Brayton With His Very Own 'Badass Quote of the Day'

Ed Brayton who writes the blog Dispatches From The Culture Wars has this thing he does there where he often cites the Dumbass Quote of the Day (it goes without saying what that one is all about) and/or the Badass Quote of the Day.

Today I give my RTOL Badass Quote of the Day to Ed Brayton for this in his post God Ends Relationship with Rick Perry about the Onions take on the Texas Govenor’s conversations with God (the emphasis is mine):

"I’ve always found it interesting the people who have voices in their heads are always being told by those voices to do terrible things like kill people. Why don’t people have voices in their head telling them to volunteer at a homeless shelter or something? In that same manner, people who think they talk to God almost invariably think God tells them all the things they want to be true. Like all those political candidates who think — or at least say — that God has called them to enter the race. How come God never tells them they’re gonna get beaten like a drum if they run? The Onion apparently has the answer."

Nicely put Ed. And a hat tip to you for drawing my attention tothe Onion’s great piece: God Urges Rick Perry Not To Run For President

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