Hannity Turns Boston Tragedy Into Action Movie Montage

There was a late entry to the list of totally unacceptable reactions to the Boston Marathon bombing when Sean Hannity’s Fox News program opened with the following video clip. Apparently someone decided the footage from the tragedy wasn’t dramatic enough, so they set it to what Deadspin notes is the theme “I Am the Doctor” from the BBC sci-fi series Doctor Who. In a word, no.

Read more posts by Margaret HartmannCaroline Shin

Filed Under:
boston bombing
,hannity
,things that are terrible

via Daily Intelligencer http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/04/hannity-turns-boston-tragedy-into-action-montage.html

A Majority of the Senate Now Supports Gay Marriage

A Democratic senator declaring his or her support for gay marriage just isn’t as thrilling as it was a few weeks ago, but Florida senator Bill Nelson’s switch is still notable as he’s the 51st senator to endorse same-sex marriage. “If we are endowed by our creator with rights, then why shouldn’t those be attainable by gays and lesbians?” Nelson said in a statement to the Tampa Bay Times on Thursday, adding, “Simply put, if the Lord made homosexuals as well as heterosexuals, why should I discriminate against their civil marriage? I shouldn’t, and I won’t.” Now there are only six Senate Democrats who haven’t jumped on the marriage equality bandwagon.

Read more posts by Margaret Hartmann

Filed Under:
equal rites
,bill nelson
,gay marriage
,poltics

via Daily Intelligencer http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/04/majority-of-the-senate-supports-gay-marriage.html

Chief Justice’s Guest for Gay Marriage Arguments: His Lesbian Cousin

The fact that John Roberts has a cousin, Jean Podrasky, who is gay was first mentioned in a 2011 profile of the chief justice in Fortune, but at the time she didn’t seem comfortable discussing his stance on marriage equality. Though Podrasky said she wanted the right to marry her girlfriend, all she would say about her cousin’s position was, “I really would never disrespect him by asking him about his cases.” While she still doesn’t know what Roberts thinks about same-sex marriage, now she’s more willing to put public pressure on him. The L.A. Times reports that when the Supreme Court hears arguments in two gay marriage cases this week, Podrasky and her girlfriend will be in seating reserved for Roberts’ guests and family members.

Unfortunately for those trying to read the tea leaves on the chief justice’s gay marriage stance, he didn’t invite his cousin to the courtroom. Podrasky e-mailed Roberts’s sister, who put her in touch with his secretary — though Roberts is aware that she’ll be attending along with several other family members. While Roberts hasn’t shared his thoughts on the issue with Podrasky, she expects the court to overturn Prop 8, allowing her to marry her girlfriend, who lives with her in San Francisco. “He is a smart man,” she said. “He is a good man. I believe he sees where the tide is going. I do trust him. I absolutely trust that he will go in a good direction.”

Podrasky also wrote a column for the National Center for Lesbian Rights that will be e-mailed to members on Monday. “Everyone in this country has a family member who is part of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community … ,” she writes. “As a Californian, I want nothing more than to marry my wonderful girlfriend. And as a tax-paying citizen, I seek basic fairness.” Roberts will probably want to relax after listening to arguments on gay marriage for two days, but it sounds like he’s getting an awkward family dinner instead.

Read more posts by Margaret Hartmann

Filed Under:
john roberts
,equal rites
,prop 8
,jean podrasky

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New York Times Destroys Roger Ailes Book

Despite the author receiving “considerable access to Mr. Ailes and Fox News,” Times assassin Michiko Kakutani calls Zev Chafets’s new valentine to the cable news virtuoso a “slapdash … familiar … oddly defensive … long, soft-focus, poorly edited magazine article” that “doesn’t ask … many tough questions” and “serves as little more than a plastic funnel for Mr. Ailes’s observations,” with “a tiny bit of context here and there,” but “little cogent analysis.”

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Filed Under:
roger ailes
,michiko kakutani
,new york times
,fox news
,media
,cable news news
,zev chafets

via Daily Intelligencer http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/03/new-york-times-roger-ailes-zev-chafets-kakutani.html

Assault Weapons Ban Probably Isn’t Happening

It’s always seemed unlikely that Congress would reinstate a version of the 1994 assault weapons ban, and Harry Reid is now poised to put the final nail in the coffin. Politico reports that following a meeting with the Senate majority leader on Monday, Dianne Feinstein said the bill she sponsored won’t be part of the Democratic gun bill that might be offered on the Senate floor as early as this week. “My understanding is it will not be [part of the base bill],” Feinstein said. “It will be separate.” The assault weapons ban would be offered as an amendment, which would almost certainly be defeated.

When asked about the reasons behind the decision, Feinstein said, “You will have to ask him [Reid].” The move highlights that it will be difficult to pass any gun control measure in Congress, even without the assault weapons ban. The Senate Judiciary Committee has approved a gun trafficking bill, a plan to increase school safety, and a universal background checks proposal backed only by Democrats (efforts to reach a bipartisan deal fell apart, though Chuck Schumer and Joe Manchin are still hoping to get a Republican senator on board). Negotiations are still underway, but Politico reports that there are two paths Reid is likely to pursue:

Reid could advance a gun trafficking bill with a school safety provision; some form of background checks and the assault weapons ban would then be offered as amendments. In the other scenario, Reid might offer a background checks bill that includes the gun trafficking and school safety provisions, with assault weapons again offered as an amendment.

The Senate Majority Leader has never been a big proponent of Feinstein’s assault weapons bill. On This Week With George Stephanopoulos last month he wouldn’t commit to supporting it himself, and remarked, “I didn’t vote for the assault weapons last time because it … didn’t make sense.” Though, Reid has promised that “the assault weapons ban gets a vote on the floor.”

Read more posts by Margaret Hartmann

Filed Under:
gun control
,dianne feinstein
,harry reid
,assault weapons ban

via Daily Intelligencer http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/03/assault-weapons-ban-probably-isnt-happening.html

Indictment Probably Wasn’t a Surprise for Reuters Social Media Editor

After news broke on Thursday that Reuters Deputy Social Media Editor Matthew Keys had been indicted for allegedly providing Anonymous hackers with access to the website of the Los Angeles Times, Keys tweeted, “I found out the same way most of you did: From Twitter.” However, it seems the prolific Tweeter has known that he was under investigation for at least several months. FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller has confirmed to Daily Intelligencer that the agency executed a search warrant on Keys’s home in Seacaucus, New Jersey in early October 2012.

Eimiller said evidence related to the case was seized during the search, although she could not comment on the specific items recovered. The filing for the search warrant was accompanied by an affidavit submitted by agent Gabriel Andrews, an investigator in the FBI’s L.A. Office, as first reported by Reuters. The investigation included agents from the FBI’s offices in Los Angeles, Sacramento, and New Jersey, where Keys currently resides. Keys lived and worked in Sacramento during the time of the alleged hacking in 2010.

The federal charges against Keys allege that when he was a web producer at the Sacramento FOX affiliate, he gave Anonymous hackers the log-in information for Tribune Company’s content management system. This allowed them to alter the website of at least one major property, the Los Angeles Times. Several years after leaving the station, Keys moved to the New York area to begin his current job as Deputy Social Media Editor at Thomson Reuters, where he has worked since early 2012. Keys faces a maximum of 25 years in prison and fines up to $750,000 if convicted on all charges.

Read more posts by Stefan Becket

Filed Under:
the internet
,matthew keys
,reuters
,media
,anonymous
,hackers
,twitter

via Daily Intelligencer http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/03/indictment-wasnt-surprise-for-matthew-keys.html

National Organization for Marriage Believes in Gaylord Tolerance

CPAC’s organizers have stirred up some controversy by banning the gay conservative group GOProud from participating, in any official capacity, in this year’s festivities, which, somewhat ironically, are being held at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in Maryland.

One group that surely doesn’t mind the decision is NOM, the National Organization for Marriage, which withdrew from CPAC in 2010 after GOProud got an invite. But while they don’t care much for gay rights, NOM is willing, at least, to tolerate Gaylord.

“It’s not awkward,” an unamused NOM spokesman told us this morning at the group’s exhibition booth when we asked about the name. “The word gay existed long before we did.”

Asked whether he would have nevertheless preferred it had the nation’s most prominent gathering of conservatives taken place at the Extremely Heterosexual Convention Center, the spokesman said he’d be happy to answer any serious questions if we had them. Which is not a no.

Correction: An earlier version of this post abbreviated the National Organization for Marriage as NOW. We regret the error.

Read more posts by Dan Amira

Filed Under:
cpac 2013 dispatch
,national organization for marriage
,politics
,cpac 2013

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Hurricane Sandy Troll Returns to Twitter

Shashank Tripathi, better known as @comforablysmug, is notorious for creating more panic during Hurricane Sandy by sending out false Tweets about a complete blackout in Manhattan, flooding inside the New York Stock Exchange, and Con Edison workers trapped in a building. Tripathi was threatened with prosecution, quit his job as campaign manager for Republican congressional candidate Christopher R. Wight, and skulked off Twitter after apologizing on October 31, but BuzzFeed notes that he made a less than triumphant return to the site on Sunday.

His latest missives consist mainly of responses to his admirers, but there are also dispatches on his partying:

And foods he’s consumed:

If only we could trust that those are really pulled -pork pancakes.

Read more posts by Margaret Hartmann

Filed Under:
the art of trolling
,comfortably smug
,hurricane sandy

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The Republican Sequestration Plan

Whether or not it you agree with it, and whether or not it will work, President Obama’s strategy on sequestration is perfectly obvious. His goal is to end the automatic budget cuts, which he regards as stupidly constructed and likely to harm the economy, and replace it with a long-term deficit reduction deal, balanced between cuts to retirement programs and closing off tax deductions. His plan to win involves isolating the unpopularity of both sequestration and the Republican Party’s goals (especially its refusal to raise taxes on the rich) in order to force the opposition to compromise.

The whole drama, then, lies with the Republicans. And deciphering the GOP strategy is as mysterious as gaming out the plans of a tiny band of warring clans in some mountainous region of Afghanistan. Nearly everything about the GOP strategy is almost completely inscrutable to outsiders. What is the party actually hoping to accomplish in the end? How do Republican leaders think they will arrive there?

Deepening the bafflement is that the Republicans’ apparent approach bears no relation either to political reality or to its stated goals. President Obama is offering up something – hundreds of billions of dollars in cuts to Social Security and Medicare – that Republicans say they want, and which (due to their unpopularity) they have proven unable to obtain even when they have had full control of government. They are instead undertaking a public showdown against a figure who is vastly more popular and trusted, who possesses a better platform to communicate his message, and whose message itself – spread the pain among rich and middle class alike, don’t cut retirement programs more deeply than needed to protect tax loopholes for the rich – commands overwhelmingly higher public support.

I think the Republican Party’s behavior can be at least partly explained, though not necessarily rationalized. The main thing that’s going on is that, in the face of cross-pressures, the party’s anti-tax wing has once again asserted its supremacy. As has held true since 1990, when conservatives revolted against the (highly successful) deficit reduction deal negotiated between President Bush and Congressional Republicans, every priority has given way to the cause of lower taxes on the highest earning taxpayers. The party’s decision now is simply a replication of every decision it has made since then.

Part of the confusion is that Republicans have been saying for months that they really just want to stop tax rates from raising. They’re happy – nay, eager – to make the rich pay more taxes by reducing their tax deductions. Certain conservative economists believe this as well. Since Obama is offering to increase revenue in exactly this way, it might seem inoffensive to Republicans. Republican economist Martin Feldstein proposed a deduction cap that would raise four times as much revenue as Obama is asking! Ezra Klein can’t understand why Republicans won’t accept a deal to reduce the tax deductions they’ve been calling a pollution of the tax code, especially in return for entitlement cuts.

The answer to this piece of the mystery is clear enough: Republicans in Congress never actually wanted to raise revenue by tax reform. The temporary support for tax reform was just a hand-wavy way of deflecting Obama’s popular campaign plan to expire the Bush tax cuts for the rich. Conservative economists in academia may care about the distinction between marginal tax rates and effective tax rates. But Republicans in Congress just want rich people to pay less, period. I can state this rule confidently because there is literally not a single example since 1990 of any meaningful bloc of Republicans defying it.

What has aided the easy reversion to form, with low taxes for the rich dominating all other considerations, is the pent-up rage and betrayal John Boehner has engendered among his most conservative members. Almost nothing Boehner has done since taking over as Speaker has endeared him to his ultras. Every subsequent compromise creates more embitterment, and the last few moves have provoked simmering rage. Conservatives had to swallow a tax hike, and then swallow an increase in the debt ceiling. Boehner has, incredibly, had to promise his members not to enter private negotiations with Obama.

The pressure for confrontation as a method has built up to the point where seemingly no deal Boehner could reach would leave him safe. The reason the parties have avoided negotiating is because they both know this. The Republican crazies have been denied the fight they rave and Boehner has to give it to them, however unwise it may be.

The question, though, is what happens next. Boehner’s Plan A is one everybody in the party can agree to – Obama caves in and offers to replace sequestration with cuts to social spending, without any revenue increase. But Plan A won’t happen, because it’s worse for Obama than even permanent sequestration. Obama won’t fold, and sequestration will begin, its effects taking effect slowly.

The first test will be whether Boehner can continue to hold the allegiance of his defense hawks, who only accepted sequestration in the first place because Boehner promised them it would never happen. They have mostly held their tongue, out of party loyalty, but the longer time goes on, the stronger will be their temptation to cut a side deal with Obama.

A second faction to peel off will be the party’s political realists – members from relatively vulnerable districts, party strategists, and others conscious of the party’s vulnerability to public opinion. For reasons noted above, the battle for public opinion is nearly hopeless, and Republicans will lose it just as they lost the fiscal cliff showdown, the 2010-2011 payroll tax showdown, and the Gingrich-era government shutdown showdowns. The pragmatists will give the ultras their shot to pull off the upset, but after some period of time – a week? A few weeks? – the brand damage will be undeniable and they, too, will sue for peace.

At this point, the question becomes what kind of peace they try to get. Do they try to replace sequestration by taking a version of Obama’s tax deductions-for-entitlement cuts offer? Or do they just try to get rid of sequestration and pretend to replace it, but come up with some kind of phony mechanism – future longer-term cuts, commissions, vague formulas – in an attempt to save the Pentagon budget without making the richies cough up any more taxes?

That eventuality is the hardest thing of all to forecast. The strangest thing about the party’s decision to fight rather than negotiate is that little sign can be found that any decision has actually been made at all, if you define a decision as a balancing of competing actual choices.

Republicans all agree that taxes are bad, defense spending cuts are bad, and some unspecified entitlement cuts would be good. The conservative media offer a window into the thinking of the Republican Party, and I follow it fairly closely. To read conservative pundits, Obama’s demand is higher taxes, full stop. Conservatives are not rejecting Obama’s offer. They are refusing to consider it at all. They will endorse Boehner’s impossible-to-attain goals, and they will denounce Obama’s imaginary all-tax alternative, and they will proclaim themselves ready to accept sequestration rather than submit to the socialist hell Obama would impose on them otherwise.

But consideration of the actual choice at hand – reduce tax deductions and cut Medicare and Social Security in a manner acceptable to Obama, versus seeing if Obama will cancel out sequestration with no replacement, versus accepting sequestration as permanent policy – is getting to hearing at all. I don’t know what Republicans will do, and I’m fairly sure they don’t either.

Read more posts by Jonathan Chait

Filed Under:
the national interest
,politics
,sequestration
,barack obama
,john boehner

via Daily Intelligencer http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/02/republican-sequestration-plan.html

Gay Vatican Blackmail Might Have Pushed the Pope Out

The Italian newspaper La Repubblica isn’t buying that a pope resigned for the first time in more than 600 years simply because he wasn’t feeling so spry anymore. Instead, a new report points to a juicy-sounding secret dossier (“two volumes of almost 300 pages — bound in red”) involving a faction in the Vatican “united by sexual orientation,” according to the Guardian. Those officials were supposedly subject to “external influence” from outsiders with whom they connected in a “worldly nature.” A.k.a. blackmail.

The information is thought to stem from an investigation into the “Vatileaks” scandal, in which Pope Benedict XVI’s butler, Paolo Gabriele, was arrested for stealing and leaking gossipy Vatican documents. The pope reportedly received the information on December 17, the day he decided to step down. According to a La Repubblica source, “Everything revolves around the non-observance of the sixth and seventh commandments,” or “Thou shalt not steal” and “Thou shalt not commit adultery.” Haaretz notes that the Italian paper in question has a history of exposing homosexual happenings in the Vatican.

If the whole thing sounds a bit outlandish, it’s worth noting that the pope’s spokesperson opted to neither confirm nor deny the report. The dossier, which will appear soon in a bunch of bad religious mystery novels, is reportedly being held in a safe and will be delivered to Benedict’s successor, who we imagine will drop it dramatically in a fireplace and whisper, “We shall never speak of this again.”

Read more posts by Joe Coscarelli

Filed Under:
religion
,pope benedict xvi
,scandal
,the pope
,the vatican

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