Ok. Let’s start with the top.
Reince Priebus, the Chair of the Republican National
Committee thinks
“it’s
ridiculous” that 63 percent of the American public thinks presumptive
Republican Presidential nominee Mitt Romney should release more tax returns.
So now, the likes of me are “ridiculous” and to be simply dismissed.
No room for discussion.
No room for disagreement.
No room for intellectual debate.
Sixty-three percent of us are simply, “ridiculous.”
“It’s
individuals and their entrepreneurship which have driven America,” said Romney.
“What America is, is not a collective where we all work in a Kibbutz or we all
in some little entity, instead it’s individuals pursuing their dreams and
building successful enterprises which employ others and they become inspired as
they see what has happened in the place they work and go off and start their
own enterprises.”
Next up, he reminded us
we
are not Japan.
During
his speech at a Thursday fund-raiser, the Republican candidate remarked,
"We are not Japan. We are not going to be a nation that suffers in decline
and distress for a decade or a century."
Who is next to insult, on the not-ready-for-prime-time tour?
Oh, and just call Senator Republican Leader Mitch McConnell
– obstructionist. From Greg Sargent over at
Plum
Line, in the Washington Post,
quoting Michael Grunwald’s new book on the making of the stimulus:
Grunwald has
Joe Biden on the record making a striking charge. Biden says that during the
transition, a number of Republican Senators privately confided to him that
Mitch McConnell had given them the directive that there was to be no
cooperation with the new administration — because he had decided that “we can’t
let you succeed.”
Here’s the
relevant passage, from page 207:
Biden says that
during the transition, he was warned not to expect any cooperation on many
votes. “I spoke to seven different Republican Senators, who said, `Joe, I’m
not going to be able to help you on anything,’ he recalls. His informants said
McConnell had demanded unified resistance. “The way it was characterized to me
was: `For the next two years, we can’t let you succeed in anything. That’s our
ticket to coming back,’” Biden says. The vice president
says he hasn’t even told Obama who his sources were, but Bob Bennett of Utah
and Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania both confirmed they had conversations with
Biden along these lines.
Now, on to the VP
sweepstakes…
Thanks to
a new law
privatizing public education in Louisiana, Bible-based curriculum can now
indoctrinate young, pliant minds with the good news of the Lord—all on the
state taxpayers' dime.
Under Gov.
Bobby Jindal's voucher program, considered the most sweeping
in the country, Louisiana is poised to spend tens of millions of dollars to
help poor and middle-class students from the state's notoriously
terrible public schools receive a private education. While the
governor's plan sounds great in the glittery
parlance of the state's PR machine, the program is rife with accountability
problems that actually
haven't been solved by the new standards
the Louisiana Department of Education adopted two weeks ago.
For one, of the
119 (mostly Christian) participating schools, Zack Kopplin, a gutsy college
sophomore who's taken to Change.org
to stonewall the program, has identified at least 19
that teach or champion creationist nonscience and will rake in nearly $4
million in public funding from the initial round of voucher
designations.
And please, please, please make it Wisconsin Representative
(and House Budget Chair) Paul Ryan.
For
one, conservatives seem to really think they can manipulate Romney into making
the pick – which says a lot about Romney’s relationship with ALL sectors of the
Republican Party.
No one seems to
believe he stands for ANYTHING.
From the
opinion pages of the
Wall
Street Journal:
The case for Mr. Ryan is that he
best exemplifies the nature and stakes of this election. More than any other
politician, the House Budget Chairman has defined those stakes well as a
generational choice about the role of government and whether America will once
again become a growth economy or sink into interest group dominated decline.
Against the advice of every
Beltway bedwetter, he has put entitlement reform at the center of the public
agenda—before it becomes a crisis that requires savage cuts. And he has done so
as part of a larger vision that stresses tax reform for faster growth, spending
restraint to prevent a Greek-like budget fate, and a Jack Kemp-like belief in
opportunity for all. He represents the GOP's new generation of reformers that
includes such Governors as Louisiana's Bobby Jindal and New Jersey's Chris
Christie.
As important, Mr.
Ryan can make his case in a reasonable and unthreatening way. He doesn't get
mad, or at least he doesn't show it. Like Reagan, he has a basic cheerfulness
and Midwestern equanimity.
And the Wall Street Journal isn’t the only
conservative mouthpiece on board with Paul Ryan. The National Review, here.
For a long time
now, I have thought for sure it would be Ohio Senator Rob Portman. Now, I am not so sure. I am starting to think Mitt Romney really
wants someone he likes and gets along well with, on the ticket. And yes, someone who is a lot like him. Alike.
Sort of like Clinton-Gore.
That just might be
former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty.