Sunday, August 04, 2013

8.4.13: The Most Serious of Threats...

Since September 11, 2001 is what we're being told as the U.S. government shuts down 22 embassies (some reports state 21) across North Africa and the Middle East.

 

With the consulate attack in Benghazi fresh in U.S. officials' minds, the State Department isn't taking any chances with the significant amount of 'chatter' the NSA has been monitoring.  Senator Saxby Chambliss (R-GA) assessed this chatter as the most serious threat we've faced since that day almost twelve years ago.  Apparently, the chatter has been emanating from Yemen where Al Qaeda is still operation on the Arabia Peninsula.

In their joint interview, Senator Durbin let Senator Chambliss answer all the questions on the threat, for which we still don't know the nature of the attack.  It's obvious from these embassy closings this weekend that the Intelligence Committees must have been briefed about these terrorist plot communications at least a three to four months prior to last week.  What is troublesome is if the NSA through its PRISM program has been intercepting all of these communications, why is it that we don not know the specific nature of the attack or where it is going to occur? Mostly likely, our intelligence officials have a good idea about these two notions (we hope so) but are not sharing that information.

Also, Andrea Mitchell mentioned the prison breaks of thousands of Islamic radicals in Libya, Iraq, and Pakistan.  There is no coincidence here that the timing of these breaks and the threat are falling around the same time.  Al Qaeda is broken, badly decimated, but these actions are its last ditch effort to counter that while at the same time, adding to the growing chaos across the region.

Given this pertinent new threat to one of our outposts overseas, it's unfortunate to hear Rick Santorum spout the same empty attack rhetoric against the president and his administration's efforts to keep the American people safe abroad.  For most government officials, Benghazi was a tragedy that taught us a very hard lesson in securing our people abroad, but to some it will remain a sad political 'gotcha' that won't be fixed.  Mr. Santorum said that the president has been timid and has politically withdrawn from the fight, also saying that Mr. Obama has not confronted radical Islam, citing an allegiance with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt.  The reason we say it's unfortunate is because Mr. Santorum is incorrect on several accounts.  Starting with Egypt, the United States respected the result of democratically held election, just as we do here.  But note that the Administration also didn't call the military intervention in toppling the Muslim Brotherhood to install a more moderate administration a coup, something Mr. Santorum selectively left out.  As far as being timid with Muslim extremists, we would direct you to Joe Scarborough's comments about the Mr. Obama's use of drones, more ruthless than the Bush/Cheney administration had been. 

Joy Reid stated it most accurately in that the Obama Administration has dialed back the blustery rhetoric but has ramped up the operations.  This second part is not to be glossed over however, due to the intensity in which Mr. Obama has employed the use of drones.  The reason all those embassies are closed today is the result of our use of these weapons.  With the drones, we've targeted the most important Al Qaeda operatives in the Middle East and North Africa (with awful collateral damage) and when it came time to capture or kill the most radical of them all (Osama Bin Laden), we sent in personnel.

It's this notion of personnel that leads us to a broader point.  The reliance of the PRISM program and drone use seems to be replacing personnel on the ground where the key intelligence is gathered and in this latest threat example, that means the where and how.  However, given what happened with Edward Snowden reliable personnel has become an issue as well.  Where this can be corrected is through the elimination of using private contractors for national security, as was the case with Mr. Snowden.  The owners of these private firms are in business to ultimately make money and we believe that the profit motive should be taken out of the effort to provide security to American citizens.

Also, being mindful of this context, the idea of shutting down the government, as some Republican lawmakers have suggested, would leave our overseas personnel vulnerable due to a lack of resources.  Additionally, it will leave us ill-equipped at home as well.  Is it comforting to know that our first responders, in the case of an emergency, will be unable to operate effectively due to lack of funds?  It's refreshing to know that the conservative Mr. Chambliss believes in governing, as opposed to obstruction, and that a shutdown would be detrimental to the American people.  Not to mention, of course, a shutdown would hit the Republican party hardest politically.

Government shutdowns, debt defaults and isolationist approaches to foreign policy will only serve to make the United States less secure and more vulnerable.  That's not to say that we agree with what Mr. Santorum called a robust approach to foreign policy.  His notion of engagement is one of a unwise hawkish militarized nature.  Simply droning people out is not the way to stem the most serious threats. 


Interview: Assistant Democratic Leader Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Vice-Chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-GA). 

Roundtable: Host of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Joe Scarborough; former Republican Presidential Candidate Rick Santorum; managing editor of TheGrio.com, Joy Ann Reid; and NBC News Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent Andrea Mitchell.

Show Note: What was with the gratuitous introduction of the round table guests?  The voice over felt like an amateurish promotion for the uninitiated.  Silly and unnecessary.

End Note: We didn't find it worthy to comment more on Anthony Weiner and the like anymore, except to agree with Andrea Mitchell that it's all about ego.   And with regard to baseball, if you still desire to have faith in the game and its players, you just have to remember two words (especially for you Yankee fans) - Derek Jeter.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

7.28.13: Over the Limit


(Anthony Weiner Comment below)

Whether of not you agree with the president's economic agenda or not as outlined by Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, there is one thing he said that is certainly true, which is that Americans are tired of self-made crises in Washington DC.  However, sure enough (every one of today's guests conceded the point) we're going to have a fiscal fight in September when the Congress is set to vote of the debt limit. 

As discussed, the president has hardened his position that he is not going to allow deep cuts in domestic programs for a debt ceiling deal while conversely, Speaker John Boehner is on record saying that the debt ceiling will not be raised without real spending cuts.  With these two dug-in positions, you have to ask who has the leverage, the higher ground?  Given Mr. Boehner's abysmal record so far as the Speaker, it's difficult to take what he says seriously because on any given issue, he is unable to rally his caucus, a caucus that has been unwilling to compromise with the Democratic party and more specifically the president.  For his trouble, the president hasn't offered anything new with regard to his economic agenda, something for which the Washington press corps has knocked him, but the reason for that is because he hasn't gotten much of his agenda through.  Despite that, the economy has come back, be it modestly overall - 2 percent.  Even Maria Bartiromo, a fiscal conservative, nodded her head in agreement when David Axelrod asserted that the antics in Washington [Republican brinksmanship] is what is holding us back economically.

Compromise isn't an option at this point, something that everyone knows, so what's going to happen?

We find it hard to believe that the Republican-led House would willfully default on our debt thus tanking the economy by not raising the debt ceiling.  The reasoning for this statement is obvious because you think to yourself that no one would in their right mind would do that.  However, given the unpredictability of the House Republicans, we can not be 100 percent sure and therein lays the problem  It's the same trepidation that big business feels - they're not a 100 percent sure the Republicans won't tank the economy - and that's the reason they're not investing back in the United States the great amount of capital they've accumulated.

Secretary Lew wouldn't answer Mr. Gregory's question as to whether or not the president would go to the brink on the economy in a debt ceiling fight, and frankly, he didn't have to.  From the administration's point of view, they'd prefer an up or down vote on the debt ceiling extension.  It's John Boehner who is playing the brinksmanship game because he's the one who has put conditions on even having the vote. One of those conditions is to completely defund the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare), which is not going to happen.

Mike Murphy stupidly said that the president has to make a painful ideological move [to the right] if we're ever to move forward, but why would he ever do that knowing full well that Republicans wouldn't make any such shift themselves. 

Bottom line is that the Republicans will be blamed if there is a government shutdown. And we don't know about you but that means that we've defaulted on our debt and now we're all just deadbeats.

The backlash will come from all sides including from establishment conservatives in of the business and intellectual communities who may line up hard against the extreme ideologues, who simply don't understand that governing isn't a proposition of 'all or nothing' but one of 'more or less.'  However, if they are not there to govern as many of them either confess or suggest, then they also don't understand that Republicans have the leverage to obtain 'more' in the equation. They could get the Keystone Pipeline and long-term cuts as Harold Ford suggested or the tax reform and lowering of the corporate tax as Ms. Bartiromo outlined.

Even given all the acrimony, you would think that lawmakers would come together on infrastructure and energy, but it's not to be.  Mr. Lew threw out a significant statement that was left out there in the wind by Mr. Gregory (and the media at large), which is defense funding and the cutting of domestic programs to accomplish it.  It's a larger conversation that we're not having as a country, but it is money that should be shifted to those two aforementioned sectors - energy and infrastructure.  Enough of the build up abroad, how about it at home.  It would go a long way in solving the growing crisis of income inequality (more on this to come in a separate column) in this country.

***

Never mind that Anthony Weiner's private sexual proclivities are flat out creepy and completely inappropriate for someone seeking high office, it's his public record that is almost as offensive.  Democratic mayoral candidate City Council Speaker Christine Quinn pointed out that in 12 years in Congress, Anthony Weiner passed one bill.  In 2000, members of Congress were paid $141,000 and have given themselves a raise just about every year since.  As taxpayers' we invested about $2 million in Anthony Weiner over 12 years and we have one bill to show for it - the facts amongst the farce.

The point is that there is no redeeming quality to his candidacy in the slightest.  What more can you say when just on today's program you hear words and phrases such as: absurd, reckless behavior, beyond the pale, delusional, shameful, disrespectful to voters, and insulting to describe Mr. Weiner's behavior.

Here's our message to Mr. Weiner - if you really care about New York City and its residents then stop embarrassing them and leave the race.

And as far as that clown in San Diego, Bob Fillner, is concerned, sexual harassment in the work place is an offense subject to immediate termination so why does he get to decide whether he stays or goes?  He admitted his behavior has been going on for years - disgraceful. 


Roundtable: former top strategist for President Obama, now NBC Senior Political Analyst David Axelrod; Host of CNBC’s “Closing Bell,” Maria Bartiromo; GOP strategist Mike Murphy; and former Democratic Congressman from Tennessee, Harold Ford.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

7.21.13: President Obama and Leadership on Race

There is no way that we could, or even would, consider making some grandiose statement on race relations in America in this column.  Even if we strictly stuck to solely what was said on today's Meet The Press, it would still come off as trite, let's face it. However, much of the discussion today focused on whether or not President Obama has done enough to lead on the discussion of race relations, especially in the wake of the George Zimmerman-Trayvon Martin verdict in Florida (We've reprinted our comment on it from last week's column.) followed by the Justice for Trayvon rallies yesterday in 100 cities across the country.

Some conservatives have criticized the president's remarks on Friday to the White House press corps (http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/07/19/remarks-president-trayvon-martin) for politicizing the issue.  More center-right, Michael Steele, who admitted that race was an underlining theme, said that he felt that the president dropped the ball on the discussion just as he did on the conversation about guns. Then on the president's left flank, Tavis Smiley said today that the president was pressured into making a statement, and it was too-little, too-late in his estimation.  He said that on this issue the president could not afford to lead from behind.  Mr. Smiley repeated that Barack Obama was the right man in the right place at the right time to have this discussion, and there should be no more waiting as the first black president.

Harvard Law professor Charles Ogeltree, who taught Mr. Obama, disagreed saying first 'to clarify' that Mr. Obama is a president who happens to be black, but that also he has now elevated Trayvon Martin as a symbol of racial profiling and injustice. Adding to this, conservative New York Times columnist David Brooks declared the speech a symphony - touching on many points thoughtfully and personally.

The praise, as you can see, comes mostly for the speech so the question remains as to whether he's done enough overall.  We would suggest that you look at it this way - Pragmatics is the study of implied meaning - what's really being said behind the words - and in that context Barack Obama is having a discussion on race every single day.  Professor Ogletree's presidential sentiment above is nice because it does presume to put the content of Mr. Obama's character before the color of his skin, but in all honestly, and we all know it to be the truth, there are many out there thwarting his agenda simply based on the color of his skin.  That fact that he has to continually wade through instances of prejudice and bigotry continually such as the Birther Movement. The only president in history to be pressured into showing his birth certificate. (How are conservatives going to react to a Senator Ted Cruz presidential candidacy since he was born in Canada?) Then there is disrespect shown to him by an idiot South Carolina Congressman who essentially called him a liar during a State of the Union address.  Why is it that no other president in our lifetime has been shown such disrespect and loathing, from public officials no less, as Mr. Obama?  If you don't think race plays a part in that, you're just denying an ugly truth about America. 

And in addition those instances, and that's not even getting into the healthcare debate (if you can call it that), the constant complaint is that President Obama has no agenda and doesn't get anything done, which is really like stacking the deck even more.  Yet, here we are, during his Administration it had been about 50 years since the last piece of major healthcare legislation came along, 30 years since the prospect of any major immigration reform, and it should have been 20 years since there was a major adjustment to our gun laws.

What we're saying is that on a certain level, Mr. Obama has to do everything he can to get some people to forget about race so that other important things can get done.   In the face of that, the president ultimately made a profound, personal, and ultimately optimistic statement on the matter because he empathizes with the pain out there.  He understands the anger being felt by a large part of our community and we should be glad he spoke to it.  As Governor Granholm commented, he was explaining it to white people.  As Dr. Ogletree said, the president did in fact elevate Trayvon Martin as a symbol of racial profiling and injustice, but it's because Mr. Obama is a rare position with a unique perspective. And because Trayvon Martin is not guilty for his own death as the verdict makes it out to be.

We would contend that since the then-Senator Barack Obama started the conversation on race in a speech in Philadelphia in March of 2008 up until Friday's remark in the White House Briefing Room, the conversation has never stopped.


Roundtable (first segment): Marc Morial, President of the National Urban League and former Mayor of New Orleans; Rep. Marcia Fudge (D-OH), Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus; Tavis Smiley, Host of the "Tavis Smiley Show" on PBS; Charles Ogletree, Professor at Harvard Law School; and Michael Steele, MSNBC Political Analyst and former Chairman of the Republican National Committee.

Roundtable (second segment): Marc Morial, along with former Democratic Governor of Michigan Jennifer Granholm, NBC’s Political Director and Chief White House Correspondent, Chuck Todd, and columnist for the New York Times David Brooks.