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Saturday Open Thread [12.20.14]

Filed in National by on December 20, 2014 23 Comments
Saturday Open Thread [12.20.14]

Politico: “Obama’s turnaround in recent weeks – he’s seized the offensive with a series of controversial executive actions and challenges to leaders in his own party on the budget — can be attributed to a fundamental change in his political mindset, according to current and former aides. He’s gone from thinking of himself as a sitting (lame) duck, they tell me, to a president diving headlong into what amounts to a final campaign – this one to preserve his legacy, add policy points to the scoreboard, and – last but definitely not least – to inflict the same kind of punishment on his newly empowered Republican enemies, who delighted in tormenting him when he was on top.”

I am going to take much pleasure in that.

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The Weekly Addresses

Filed in Delaware, National by on December 20, 2014 5 Comments

President Obama on America’s Resurgence

His Press Conference yesterday:

Governor Markell:

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Saturday Daily Delawhere [12.20.14]

Filed in Delaware by on December 20, 2014 0 Comments
Saturday Daily Delawhere [12.20.14]

The most spectacular display of Christmas lights goes to what is known as the “Christmas Light House” on Red Lion Road in Red Lion. Over a million Christmas lights are used, and Santa makes an appearance by helicopter to open up the holiday season.

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Friday Open Thread [12.19.14]

Filed in National by on December 19, 2014 3 Comments

Roll Call says we might have a new governing coalition in Congress:

The hard right and the hard left ended up out in the cold last week — free to raise their fists and their profiles and make a ruckus, but ultimately powerless to stop the cromnibus. The deal represents a return — at least for a week — to the fabled establishment Washington dealmaking of yore, warts and all, like it or loathe it. It’s a return that could put the ‘do nothing’ label back on the congressional shelf — with Republicans and the president eyeing deals next year on trade and taxes, in addition to keeping the government open for business after four years of serial shutdown and default dramas.

No wonder Tom Carper has been annoying lately. He is living his dream. But such a coalition will be temporary, because we do live in polarized times, and living in polarized times is the normal condition of our politics. Brendan Nyhan calls the bipartisanship of the mid-20th century that Tom Carper dreams about “a historical anomaly.”

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Friday Daily Delawhere [12.19.14]

Filed in National by on December 19, 2014 1 Comment
Friday Daily Delawhere [12.19.14]

Yet another Christmas House with a mobile casino great light display is this one on Summit Bridge Road near Blackbird.

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Thursday Open Thread [12.18.14]

Filed in National by on December 18, 2014 2 Comments

Politico: “Obama feels liberated, aides say, and sees the recent flurry of aggressive executive action and deal-making as a pivot for him to spend the last two years being more of the president he always wanted to be.”

“As of Wednesday, that includes doing what 50-plus years of predecessors couldn’t do in relations with Cuba, propelling a generational shift in American foreign policy that could bring down the last pillar of the Cold War. The Cuba announcement follows a post-Election Day sprint that included sealing a landmark climate agreement with China, shielding five million undocumented immigrants from deportation and reaching a deal that funds most of the government for nearly a year while protecting Obamacare and other top priorities.”

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Thursday Daily Delawhere [12.18.14]

Filed in National by on December 18, 2014 1 Comment
Thursday Daily Delawhere [12.18.14]

Another Christmas House on Prior Road in Brandywine Hundred, by the Top of the Hill complex.

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Wednesday Open Thread [12.17.14]

Filed in National by on December 17, 2014 13 Comments
Wednesday Open Thread [12.17.14]

Jason330 wrote about Senator Elizabeth Warren’s speech on the Senate floor last week, and the punditry is still talking about it, and the possibility, despite her refusal, that she will run against Hillary Clinton for President. John Cassidy at The New Yorker:

Right now, the Democratic Party has three leaders: President Obama, who is term-limited; Clinton, the establishment successor-in-waiting; and Warren, whose role is difficult to define, but also increasingly difficult to ignore. Of the three, there’s no doubt who is conveying the most consistent message and generating the most enthusiasm among liberal activists: it’s Warren, with her populist crusade against Wall Street and moneyed interests. […]

The speech she delivered on the floor of the Senate on Friday evening has been viewed more than a quarter of a million times on YouTube. Also on Friday, more than three hundred people who worked on the Obama campaigns in 2008 and 2012 signed a public letter urging Warren to enter the Presidential race. […] In saying that she’s not running, Warren can continue to use her prominent position in the Senate to promote the causes she believes in. She can also wait to see if Clinton falters. If that doesn’t happen, Warren can eventually fall in line with the party establishment and help elect the first female President. But if Clinton does stumble badly, in Iowa or before, Warren would still have an opportunity to step in. With her name recognition and army of supporters nationwide, many of them young and tech-savvy, she could quickly raise money and put together an improvised campaign operation.

And we some good polling goodness, and some pretty horrible polling badness about Americans and torture.

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This is going to be a LONNNG two years with Carper.

Filed in Delaware by on December 17, 2014 28 Comments
This is going to be a LONNNG two years with Carper.

Maybe our Senior Senator has this bug up his ass because he knows he will be retiring in 2018, God willing. But Senator Carper has been most annoying over the last two months, screaming about bipartisanship to anyone who can hear him. He realized his career-long dream to create a non-contiguous and non-existent Delaware National Park this past Saturday. So now he is itching to get his actually good Postal Reform bill passed by this Congress. Indeed, there were some reports that he tried to get the Reform bill passed by adding it to the CROmibus bill that passed the Senate last Saturday. And now he is blaming the President Obama for not delaying his immigration action, because not delaying made the Republicans mad, and you cannot make Republicans mad, ever. Not in Bipartisan Land.

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Finally.

Filed in International, National by on December 17, 2014 35 Comments
Finally.

It would appear that what began as an unexpected handshake between Cuban President Raul Castro and U.S. President Barack Obama back last year at Nelson Mandela’s funeral may have turned into actual negotiations that resulted today in the release of an American prisoner in Cuba, and the start of talks between the two countries about the resumption of diplomatic relations.

The U.S. is starting talks with Cuba to normalize full diplomatic relations and open an embassy, according to U.S. officials. The expanded relationship would also open imports of Cuban cigars somewhat, according to a CNN report. U.S. President Obama, Cuba’s Raul Castro plan to speak separately at noon ET about relations between the two countries. Obama plans to overhaul Cuba’s policy while Cuba plans to free 53 political prisoners and to allow U.S. debit and credit cards, Dow Jones reported. This follows Cuba’s release of American Alan Gross from a Cuban prison where he spent five years on espionage charges, NBC reported.

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Wednesday Daily Delawhere [12.17.14]

Filed in Delaware by on December 17, 2014 0 Comments
Wednesday Daily Delawhere [12.17.14]

There are several houses in Delaware that have huge Christmas light displays. This one is on Kelly Drive in Corner Ketch.

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A Revenue Task Force: The Result of Tax Cowardice and the Passing of the Buck

Filed in National by on December 16, 2014 15 Comments
A Revenue Task Force: The Result of Tax Cowardice and the Passing of the Buck

Longtime readers will know my frustration with Delaware and its revenues. We have what is essentially a flat tax rate system for the middle and higher brackets of income. If one person has $60,000 in taxable income and another has $600,000 and another has $6 million, they all pay exactly the same tax rate. But we can never… NEVER!!!!!! … raise taxes on those at the higher levels, because, you know, they are job creators and it will hurt their fees fees. So we have to scrounge around every year, waiting desperately for every DEFAC forecast to come out with good news. We have to talk about raising regressive fees and taxes, like the gas taxes, which fall disproportionately on those who least can afford to pay more. We have to talk about deeper and deeper spending cuts.

And we have to resort to a Task Force to tell us what is wrong with our “revenue structure.” And that task force will come back with proposals for a gas tax and a sales tax, both regressive taxes, and both unpopular, which will “force” the Governor to look to spending cuts to education and Medicaid. That’s the Delaware Way.

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Tuesday Open Thread [12.16.14]

Filed in National by on December 16, 2014 1 Comment
Tuesday Open Thread [12.16.14]

One of the great ironies of our time is that the radical Republican hates the tyrannical Big Obama Government, yet wants that tyrannical Big Government to torture. James Antle III calls out the Republican hypocrites who apologize for torture:

[T]he case for limited government is weakened when those making it ignore or defend torture, testicle-crushing, and waterboarding, complaining only about big government when someone proposes spending taxpayer dollars to help people. And I say that as someone who has written a book arguing that seemingly benign and compassionate government spending can curtail individual freedom.

It is difficult to take someone seriously who thinks the imprisonment of human beings in cages and the behavior of government agents with guns have less impact on personal freedom than the capital-gains tax rate. That is one reason it is so easy for many to dismiss arguments against programs like Obamacare as being motivated purely by economic self-interest.

The truth is that there is no irony, no hypocrisy. The truth is, and this issue, and the issue of abortion, lays bare the lie that is the Republican Party today: Republicans do not hate big government at all. They love it. And they love it precisely because they are fascists. They want to control you and society. That is why they also support police officers who murder with no provocation. It is why they support torture. It is why they want to abolish reproductive choice, public education, public health, and social security. All of those things free the citizen and uplifts them. But that is not what the Republican Party wants.

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