Author Archives: cassandra_m

About cassandra_m

"You don't make progress by standing on the sidelines, whimpering and complaining. You make progress by implementing ideas." -Shirley Chisholm

The NFL on Its Opposition to DE Sports Betting

The Sporting Blog (where you’ll have to sit through the usual snarkiness about Delaware) has been following the sports betting drama here and found themselves asking the same questions we do:

Why then, are professional sports leagues trying so hard to block this from happening? Late last week, there were reports that a federal appeals court will expedite a hearing on the litigation between Delaware and the entire American sports world, including the four major leagues and the NCAA. Originally set to be heard in December, an appeals court will review the case starting August 24.

Why would the leagues be so adamant about blocking Delaware from having sports gambling in the first place? You can make the case for the NCAA in that the organization, while making money hand over fist, claims to maintain an amateur, non-profit status. Add to the fact that Delaware has several universities and colleges that play NCAA-sanctioned sports and a clear conflict of interest arises.

But Delaware has no professional sports teams (save minor league baseball). And sports gambling is already legal in this country and has been a multi-billion dollar, taxable business. So what’s the big deal?

So they asked the NFL and got this answer (there’s more at their blog):

“We oppose further state-operated gambling on individual NFL games because it presents a threat to the integrity of those games and to the long-term relationship between the NFL and its fans,” NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy told me via email.

“If you make it easier for people to gamble then more people will. This would increase the chances for people to question the integrity of the game. Those people who are upset will question whether an erroneous officiating call or dropped pass late in the game resulted from an honest mistake or an intentional act by a corrupt player or official.”

This is pretty much the standard answer from the NFL here and this has never made any sense to me. People question the integrity of the game when there are real signs of corruption of conflicts of interest from players, owners or officials. A legal game is much more above board and provides a method to at least track back questionable activity. Besides which — whenever I watch the sports talking heads having on about football games, a discussion or at least a report of the point spread is a part of it. Wonder why the NFL doesn’t mind advertising the point spreads but doesn’t want people to bet.

NCCo Government Thinking of Advertising on Their Website

The Community News reports that NCCo is thinking seriously of allowing advertisers for the government’s website to help raise money:

Like other sites, Sheldon envisions banner ads across the top of the page and along the sides, with advertisers paying the county a small fee per click.

But Councilman Robert Weiner (R-Chatham) said allowing doing so could make the county vulnerable to lawsuits.

“Given the Constitutional protection given to freedom of speech, it would be difficult for New Castle County to exercise any discretion into which commercial entity could take advantage of it,” he said. “For example, an adult-entertainment business could file suit if we didn’t allow them to advertise.”

County Executive Chris Coons, said he had concerns about whether advertising could be clearly delineated from county services, and whether the ads could create a perceived conflict of interest if the company does business with the county.

It seems odd to question the propriety of advertising on the County site when there are plenty of regulations for what can and cannot be advertised on a billboard or on the side of a bus. I don’t think that DART is drowning in lawsuits from porn companies who want to advertise their lastest in one of those crazy wrap ads.

Personally, when I am going to the County’s website, I am going there for taxpayer business and information and I presume that the taxes that I already pay go to make this information accessible. I’ve already paid for this information — soliciting more funds to just do what ought to be a baseline seems silly. But — listen up NCCo — you could sell this as a way to pay for live streaming and long-term web access to video of County Council and Committee meetings. And then implement it. It wouldn’t that much effort or money, really.

(h/t anon friend)

Tom Carper Emerges to Speak

The News Journal reports that Senator Tom Carper will be available for a live video chat about Health Insurance reform on the delawareonline.com site TODAY at 5pm.

No idea how this would work (they include no directions) or even if the NJ has even done this before, but given the state of their website I gotta say I’m not so hopeful. I imagine that you’ll be able to ask questions via their website directly. I won’t be able to sit in on this, but if you do come back and tell us how it went.

The Deep Roots of the Right Wing Crazy Tree

Rick Pearlstein wrote an amazing op-ed today, which shows how the wingnut crazy has been a persistent part of the political landscape throughout much of the 20th century. (I love the story about how the right thought of Truman and Roosevelt years as “20 years of treason”. Especially since the current expectation by their descendants is that history will rehabilitate BushCo in the way it rehabilitated Truman.) Pearlstein makes this point:

Liberals are right to be vigilant about manufactured outrage, and particularly about how the mainstream media can too easily become that outrage’s entry into the political debate. For the tactic represented by those fake Nixon letters was a long-term success. Conservatives have become adept at playing the media for suckers, getting inside the heads of editors and reporters, haunting them with the thought that maybe they are out-of-touch cosmopolitans and that their duty as tribunes of the people’s voices means they should treat Obama’s creation of “death panels” as just another justifiable political claim. If 1963 were 2009, the woman who assaulted Adlai Stevenson would be getting time on cable news to explain herself. That, not the paranoia itself, makes our present moment uniquely disturbing.

It used to be different. You never heard the late Walter Cronkite taking time on the evening news to “debunk” claims that a proposed mental health clinic in Alaska is actually a dumping ground for right-wing critics of the president’s program, or giving the people who made those claims time to explain themselves on the air. The media didn’t adjudicate the ever-present underbrush of American paranoia as a set of “conservative claims” to weigh, horse-race-style, against liberal claims. Back then, a more confident media unequivocally labeled the civic outrage represented by such discourse as “extremist” — out of bounds.

While there’s no one left with the authority of Cronkite or Huntley and Brinkley that is presenting the news any more, I really wonder what the point is of shining a spotlight on the clearly extreme and legitimizing what they are so very clearly misinformed over. There isn’t a single legit journalist that does not know that the “death panels” are a clear fabrication, and most know by now that the Summer of Spittle has been astroturfed onto the news — so now what it the point in continuing to treat this as news? And covering this at the expense of covering stuff like the LA free medical event, which is certainly more germane to the “debate”.

How American Health Care Looks from Europe

british_healthcare_cover1

This bit of embarrassment is from the Saturday Independent — and the accompanying article is worth a read too:

In the week that Britain’s National Health Service was held aloft by Republicans as an “evil and Orwellian” example of everything that is wrong with free healthcare, these extraordinary scenes in Inglewood, California yesterday provided a sobering reminder of exactly why President Barack Obama is trying to reform the US system.

The LA Forum, the arena that once hosted sell-out Madonna concerts, has been transformed – for eight days only – into a vast field hospital. In America, the offer of free healthcare is so rare, that news of the magical medical kingdom spread rapidly and long lines of prospective patients snaked around the venue for the chance of getting everyday treatments that many British people take for granted.

There isn’t much new in this article, except the angle that makes us look like a third world country. Interesting that this group’s founder is a stone Tory — and even he wouldn’t give up the NHS for the world.

(h/t Bob Cesca)

Dick Armey Out of His Cushy Lobbying Job!

This was an interesting Friday afternoon news item: Dick Armey — lately infamous for his work promoting Freedomworks, the corporate-backed group astroturfing Town Halls this summer — has quit his lobbyist job at DLA Piper,claiming to want to work full-time on the Freedomworks thing. Rachel Maddow, you’ll remember, did an extensive piece showing Armey’s connection to Freedomworks as well at to DLA Piper and the multiple corporate backers of both. TPM has the statement from Armey and notes:

Reading between the lines here, it looks like DLA Piper — concerned about Armey’s activism against an administration it seeks to influence — pushed him out.

FreedomWorks has played a major role in coordinating the efforts of the right-wing Tea Party movement, including on opposing health-care-reform.

And as TPMmuckraker reported this morning, it also is helping to fund astroturf events aimed at blocking climate change legislation.

The NY Times reports that Armey was specifically pushed out by the drug companies his firm represented. They are currently supporting of some form of reform and they didn’t want the face of the astroturf working both sides of the street.

I’m hoping that Rachel Maddow ate Armey’s lunch this AM when they met on Meet the Press.

Damon Weaver Interviews President Obama

This is an impressive interview — Damon Weaver is a 6th grader from a school in Florida whose claim to fame before now was his delightful interview with then Senator Biden — finally gets to interview the President. I thought many of his questions were smarter and more interesting than many I’ve heard at a WH Press Conference. Someone should teach this young man how to press for answers, because I think that some of President Obama’s answers didn’t do this young man’s questions justice. Take a look:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rP-695ATg-c[/youtube]

Politico interviewed Damon Weaver after his interview:

What a great young man!

New Ad Targeting Tom Carper

Health Care for Americans Now is airing this ad in six states, targeted at Rep. Jason Altmire (D-Pa.), Rep. Rick Boucher (D-Va.), Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D-S.D.), a number of upstate New York members and Sens. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) and Tom Carper (D-Del.). Take a look and tell us what you think:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jkzAGmunS7g[/youtube]

Netroots Nation

So Netroots Nation starts today in Pittsburgh (lucky UI!), and apparently the wingnuts have theirs going on at the same time in the same city:

Even though conservatives are holding their own convention of online activists in Pittsburgh this week, they are not trying to directly compete with the giant Netroots Nation. If they did, they would be squashed.

The RightOnline conference starting tomorrow morning at the Sheraton Station Square will have about a quarter of the 2,000 attendees at the liberal conference in the convention center, and only about 20 speakers to the 400 at Netroots. Liberals are throwing multiple parties at the Warhol and a gay-lesbian kiss-in. Conservatives end Friday night with a film criticizing Al Gore.

The liberals are enjoying themselves and the conservatives are still stewing in their resentments against Al Gore. There’s something telling in that juxtaposition. The rest of the article notes how the wingnuts are working to catch up — which is especially hard for them since their base is older (not so internet friendly) and way fluent in operating radios rather than computers.

But it is still odd though that they would want to shadow Netroots Nation rather than work out their own deal. On the other hand, the conservative blogosphere has always shadowed the progressive one, so perhaps there is some symmetry in that.

If you are interested in the goings on at Netroots Nation this year, they are streaming alot of events and panels, including the opening remarks today from President Bill Clinton at 5PM. You can also follow here:

Facebook
CSPAN and CSPAN-2 is covering some panels and events.
Twitter or at the #nn09stream.

And there’s even a Second Life options for those of you into that.

This Is How It Gets Done

Brendan Nyhan wrote recently about the proven playbook of getting misinformation (lies, really) about Obama’s birth certificate and about some details of the health insurance reform actually get into the media rotation:

1. Take a complicated issue that people don’t understand (e.g. presidential citizenship reqirements and Hawaiian birth records or the complex health care reform bills pending in Congress).
2. Advance a disturbing hypothesis about the issue that will appeal to your side of the aisle (e.g. Obama isn’t a legitimate president; the health bill will take away your freedom).
3. Misconstrue available evidence to construct arguments supporting your point.
4. Promote these myths widely. If you are successful enough in doing so, the media will feel obligated to report on them. Coverage will then frequently be presented in an artificially balanced “he said,” “she said” format, giving further credence to your claims.
5. When your arguments are debunked, claim that the media is trying to silence you to prevent the truth from being revealed.
6. Repeat steps 3-5 until various elites (e.g. John Boehner on health, Lou Dobbs on Obama’s birth certificate) start claiming you have raised legitimate questions about the issue of interest.

See how easy? And you should recognize lots of this since the local wingnut crew are here working this strategy at every opportunity. Nyhan has lots to say about this and notes that this tactic would actually lose much of its utility if the media would stop just repeating and treating these folks as good-faith players. What do you need a J-school degree for if you pretty much just write down what gets said? Even from folks you already know have a reputation for mis- and disinformation?