Archive for August, 2015

Thursday Daily Delawhere [8.20.15]

Filed in National by on August 20, 2015 2 Comments

A farm in Milford.

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Wednesday Open Thread [8.19.15]

Filed in National by on August 19, 2015 29 Comments
Wednesday Open Thread [8.19.15]

Jonathan Chait: “It is tempting to treat the lack of specifics in the Republican health-care plans as a problem of details to be filled it. But it is not a side problem. It is the entire problem. They will not finance real insurance for the people who have gotten it under Obamacare, nor will they face up to the actual costs they’re willing to impose on people. The party is doctrinally opposed to every available method to make insurance available to people who can’t afford it. They have spent six years promising to come up with an alternative plan, and they haven’t done it, because they can’t.”

Indeed. And it is because they do not believe healthcare is a right. They believe it is a privilege for those who can afford it. If you are poor and sick, then you die. If you are rich and sick, then you don’t. That is the Republican healthcare plan.

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This is why Sanders is kicking ass

Filed in National by on August 19, 2015 22 Comments
This is why Sanders is kicking ass

Just watch Bernie’s plain spoken hammer of common sense and decency smash the media memes and tropes the reports want to prop up.

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Scott Walker’s stock is crashing in betting markets

Filed in National by on August 19, 2015 1 Comment
Scott Walker’s stock is crashing in betting markets

I can’t say that I’m sad to see Walker on the ropes. He is a evil, sick MF’er with big money backers, a gloss of respectability, and the ability to charm the feeble minded thereby making him one of the tougher GOP opponents in the general election.

Well, if current trends continue, it looks like Walker will continue to plague Wisconsin with his “tax cuts work” idiocy. From a peak of .40, Walker is now trading at .15 on Predictit.

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Wednesday Daily Delawhere [8.19.15]

Filed in National by on August 19, 2015 1 Comment

Dolles on the Rehoboth Boardwalk. Photo by Ryan5717 on Instagram.

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Why Trump is still a factor

Filed in National by on August 18, 2015 5 Comments
Why Trump is still a factor

It took a while for it to sink in, but now I get it. There is no real “news” anymore. When I was a kid, the news was a thing. On TV and in the “newspapers” reporters researched stories, and wrote down quotes. There was nobility in it. Reporters and their editors were arbiters of […]

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Tuesday Open Thread [8.18.15]

Filed in National by on August 18, 2015 8 Comments
Tuesday Open Thread [8.18.15]

Eric Jaffe at CityLab reports on a good thing that our own Tom Carper has proposed. Indeed, I am personally shocked, and I am sure Jason is currently being resuscitated at Christiana.

The federal gas tax that pays for America’s highways hasn’t been raised in decades, but that doesn’t stop some determined lawmakers from trying. The latest effort comes via Senator Tom Carper of Delaware, who has introduced a plan to raise the tax four cents a year for four years then index it to inflation so it remains effective over time. The move would ultimately bring the fuel tax to 34 cents a gallon—nearly double the existing rate of 18.4 cents.

That might seem like a big bump, but even a gas tax twice as high the current one would be incredibly low by global standards. A U.S. Department of Energy review of fuel taxes among Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries in 2011 placed the U.S. just about at the bottom of the pack. Kyle Pomerleau of the Tax Foundation recently updated these figures to reflect 2013 tax rates via OECD data—and found very little change.

The U.S. rate of 53 cents a gallon reflects the federal gas tax as well as the average state tax. Adding Carper’s 16 cents wouldn’t budge the U.S. position way back of the pack—nor would doubling the entire 53 cent average. As the numbers stand, lawmakers would have to raise the average gas tax at least eight-fold for Americans to pay the steepest rate in the world.

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Tuesday Daily Delawhere [8.18.15]

Filed in National by on August 18, 2015 1 Comment

The Brandywine River off Brandywine Creek Road in Chateau Country.

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Governor Markell’s Inexplicable Veto [Updated with the Governor’s Explanation]

Filed in National by on August 17, 2015 44 Comments
Governor Markell’s Inexplicable Veto [Updated with the Governor’s Explanation]

From the bill in question’s sponsor, Representative Kim Williams:

I found out today that Governor Markell is vetoing a bill that I sponsored, House Bill 130, Unlawful Sexual Contact. It passed the House and Senate unanimously. The Criminal Justice Council voted in support of this bill and whose members are Delaware judges, AG Denn, and other respected folks. I never heard a word from the Governor’s office until the day he decides to veto the bill that his office had an issue with it. I filed this bill early May. The only group that I heard a peep from was the Medical Society and that was after it was released from the House Judiciary Committee. I spoke to them briefly and never heard another word from them. Currently, if a healthcare worker (person of trust) has sex with a patient it is a misdemeanor, this bill would make it a felony. If a prison guard has consensual sex with an imate it is a felony but a healthcare worker who is treating a patient who has been sexually abused and the healthcare worker gains the individual’s trust and has sexual relations it is not a felony. This is unbelievable to me.

I look forward to Governor Markell’s explanation, and I do not envy his spin doctors. For the General Assembly, override.

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No Joe. Not That.

Filed in National by on August 17, 2015 21 Comments
No Joe.  Not That.

Donors are not especially anxious about Joe Biden getting into the race. If he did declare this late in the game, he would be in at least a $45 million dollar fundraising deficit against Clinton, with no real hope to catch up since virtually every major fundraiser in the party — including many who were once Biden people — are now on Clinton’s team.

For this reason, as I have said many times here, I am not a fan of Joe Biden getting into the presidential race, for I believe it will tarnish his legacy. Instead, I viewed him as a Plan B that could step in should Clinton die or drop out.

But it seems that Joe Biden, while on vacation down in South Carolina, was actively considering a campaign, if not planning for it. And one of the trial balloons that was floated as a result, through the fingers of one Carl Bernstein, was this notion of a one term Presidency that would finally bring this country together.

“[O]ne thing that I keep hearing about Biden is that if he were to declare and say, because age is such a problem for him if he does, I want to be a one-term president. I want to serve for four years, unite Washington. I’ve dealt with the Republicans in Congress all my public life,” Bernstein told CNN’s “New Day.”

“I think there’s a conversation going on to that effect among his aides and friends,” he said. “It could light fire to the current political environment.

Fuck. No.

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Monday Open Thread [8.17.15]

Filed in National by on August 17, 2015 14 Comments
Monday Open Thread [8.17.15]

Molly Ball asks “What on earth do Republican voters want?”

“The candidates, at this stage, are as clueless as the pundits, and the pundits have no idea. They certainly never foresaw Donald Trump, this election season’s flesh-colored gap in the space-time continuum. Trump has inspired horrified bouts of introspection within the GOP, as shocked party stalwarts try to figure out where the tycoon’s momentum is coming from—and how it can be stopped.”

I think they just want to scream.

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Monday Daily Delawhere [8.17.15]

Filed in National by on August 17, 2015 3 Comments

The Governor Ross Mansion, on the Pine Street Extension in Seaford. Governor William Henry Harrison Ross served as governor from 1851-1955, and began construction of this house in 1856. Ross was a slaveowner and Confederate sympathizer, and smuggled arms to the Confederacy before fleeing for Europe and coming back to grow fruit after the war. So, he was a traitor and deserved to die.

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Sunday Daily Delawhere [8.16.15]

Filed in National by on August 16, 2015 1 Comment

Nonantum Mills in Newark.

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