Daily Kos

Email: jefashley at gmail.com

Name Rachel Maddow's show on MSNBC Part III - WITH POLL

Tue Aug 19, 2008 at 09:11:15 PM PDT

As everyone must know by now - if you don't, see Keith Olbermann's diary at the top of the Rec List right now, right here - Rachel Maddow is getting the 9 PM Eastern time slot on MSNBC starting 8 September (her grandmother's 93rd birthday: advance Happy Birthday to Grams!)

Poll

No doubt about it, Rachel should name her show

9%24 votes
3%8 votes
3%10 votes
6%16 votes
5%14 votes
3%9 votes
15%38 votes
6%17 votes
6%16 votes
0%2 votes
2%6 votes
1%4 votes
18%48 votes
13%33 votes
3%8 votes

| 253 votes | Vote | Results

Name Rachel Maddow's new MSNBC show and win ... UPDATED

Tue Aug 19, 2008 at 06:03:26 PM PDT

satisfaction!

Rachel Maddow has just said on Countdown with Keith Olbermann that she has not chosen a name for her show and

welcomes suggestions

[See the top of the rec list for Keith's announcement from this afternoon that Rachel will start her own daily show at 9 PM Eastern on 09/08/08 - or 08/09/08 for Europeans, Aussies, Cannucks etc.]

Poll

Rachel Maddow will be

55%118 votes
44%96 votes

| 214 votes | Vote | Results

The Grapes of Surge

Thu Jul 24, 2008 at 08:07:35 AM PDT

You've probably read how John McCain explained yesterday that he wasn't wrong about the timing in Iraq, because

"First of all, a surge is really a counterinsurgency strategy," Mr. McCain said in Bethlehem, Pa. "And it’s made up of a number of components. And this counterinsurgency was initiated to some degree by Colonel MacFarland in Anbar Province, relatively on his own. And I visited with him in December of 2006. He had already initiated that strategy in Ramadi by going in, and clearing and holding in certain places. That is a counterinsurgency. And he told me at that time that he believed that that strategy, which is quote ‘the surge,’ part of the surge, would be, would be, successful."

Implied, of course, is that the Surge would have been the Surge even if it had involved no increase (what the uninformed would call a 'surge') in troops.

The importance of being Earnest (if opinionated)

Thu Jun 12, 2008 at 05:49:11 PM PDT

Vanity Fair has produced a Blogopticon classifying blogs on two dimensions:

  1.  Earnest v Scurrilous, and
  1.  News v Opinion.
Poll

Would you rather be seen as

60%9 votes
0%0 votes
6%1 votes
13%2 votes
20%3 votes

| 15 votes | Vote | Results

It's time. Put Gore on the remaining ballots.

Fri Mar 07, 2008 at 07:14:26 AM PDT

It's time.

Our beloved Democratic Party is in trouble.  

The train-wreck is before us.

"Vote for me or the kitten dies" has become the mantra of both campaigns. "Her voters will vote for me but mine won't vote for her" versus "He hasn't crossed the commander-in-chief threshold".

I don't know if or how it can be done, but hey, aren't we the "Yes we can!" party?

Poll

In a three-way race

4%5 votes
15%16 votes
0%1 votes
27%28 votes
44%46 votes
0%1 votes
5%6 votes

| 103 votes | Vote | Results

The only solution: Bring back the two-thirds rule

Sun Feb 10, 2008 at 11:39:54 AM PDT

Friends, our Democratic Party has trouble.  That's Trouble, with a capital T and that rhymes with D and that stands for Deadlock.

Could Richard Lugar have made Obama president yesterday?

Tue Jan 29, 2008 at 04:30:41 AM PDT

We've all heard about post-partisan politics and that we should support Senator Obama because he knows how to persuade people over to his point of view, haven't we? End the divisiveness and all will be well; there's a top-rated diary on the Recommended List right now making that case. There are, I've been told, 'reasonable Republicans' in the Senate and the House of Representatives willing to enact a progressive agenda if the Democrats would work with them.

Is that true?

San Diego Chargers MUST withdraw from playoffs NOW

Fri Jan 11, 2008 at 05:07:21 PM PDT

As many of you know, the San Diego Chargers have stumbled into the AFC playoffs of the NFL and have 'earned' the right to play the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday.

Yes, I know this may sound peculiar, but the NFL uses antiquated and very undemocratic rules that result in absurdities like this.

By showing up on Sunday, though, the Chargers are selfishly and thoughtlessly endangering the rematch all American waits for next week: Indianapolis at New England.

I have analyzed this game in breathtaking depth and can only conclude:

San Diego MUST withdraw TODAY.

Follow me below the fold for an exhaustingly boring explanation  ...

Poll

When the odds are somewhat against you, you should

29%33 votes
20%23 votes
50%56 votes

| 112 votes | Vote | Results

Sorry, John, Hillary, Barack. I'm voting for DENNIS!

Mon Oct 15, 2007 at 08:55:22 PM PDT

Following his brilliant appearance on The Colbert Report, I have no choice but to announce my support for the one, the only

Lindsey Graham calls for regime change in Iraq

Sun Oct 14, 2007 at 08:15:42 AM PDT

This has to be short, but I think it is very important.

Watching Wolf Blitzer just now, Sen Lindsey Graham has said that if the Iraqi government does not resolve the issues before it within 90 days, it will be 'a failed state' and the U.S. will have to consider 'political change'.

Can you re-invade a country you are already occupying?

What happened to the myth of Iraqi sovereignty?

Can you spell P.U.P.P.E.T.?

NYT: Army Officers Debate, What if it Happens Again?

Sat Oct 13, 2007 at 09:35:09 AM PDT

The New York Times has just put up an article by Elizabeth Bumiller At Army Base, Officers Are Split Over War, describing interviews she was permitted to conduct at Fort Leavenworth, the 'intellectual center' of the United States Army.

Are these field-grade officers (majors and colonels) debating whether mistakes were made in Iraq? Hardly! As Bumiller puts it, the question is

[W]ho bore more responsibility for mistakes in Iraq — the former defense secretary, Donald H. Rumsfeld, or the generals who acquiesced to him[?]

But wait! It is even more significant, I think, that

Discussions ... focused on where young officers might draw a "red line," the point at which they would defy a command from the civilians — the president and the defense secretary — who lead the military.

Savor that, then join me below the fold ...

Poll

How will the Army respond to orders to invade Iran?

10%14 votes
58%77 votes
18%25 votes
12%16 votes

| 132 votes | Vote | Results

750,000 men a month. Every month. For 6 months.

Tue Oct 02, 2007 at 09:27:47 PM PDT

Ken Burns's The War is ending this hour, and it's been a heckuva ride.  George Bush has recently alluded to the illusion that the current generation is 'The New Greatest Generation' - since I have heard nobody accept this designation, I will just assume that everyone realizes how bizarre and ridiculous that comment is and how it tells much more about the buffoon in the White House than about any generation.

[Note: I found that citation at www.whitehouse.gov a week ago, from a talk given in the last month, but it doesn't show up in a search at that site now and Google doesn't find it, and I feel silly even looking for it. It happened, he said it, that's all I know.]

Update: deben in the comments provides this link to Countdown referencing Gen. Petraeus's describing 'a new greatest generation'. Thanks, deben!

LA Times distributes BLOWBACK by Jay Rosen over Skube op-ed!

Wed Aug 22, 2007 at 05:55:41 PM PDT

There is a long back-story here, but I'll try to be succinct:

On Sunday 8/19 a journalism professor named Michael Skube from Elon U in North Carolina had published in the LA Times an op-ed piece titled Blogs: All the noise that fits.  It can only be described as a very very silly bit of fluff and might easily have fallen into the obscurity it richly deserved. But, no doubt to his regret now, Skube included the following

[H]ere are people, whole brigades of them, happy to write for free. And not just write. Many of the most active bloggers -- Andrew Sullivan, Matthew Yglesias, Joshua Micah Marshall and the contributors to the Huffington Post -- are insistent partisans in political debate.

I'm sure you are laughing already, so stay with me below the fold ...

Of alphas and epsilons, and some are more equal than others

Tue Jul 31, 2007 at 04:21:57 AM PDT

ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL.

It's cited every 4th of July, but it is scarcely uniquely ours; it is the inevitable product of the Enlightenment of Europe. Still, since the idea was formulated in these 5 uncompromising words (in English) by 'our' Thomas Jefferson, we Americans take it to be especially ours.  

ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL.

What could be simpler? What could be less ambiguous?

Poll

Which is the best reason for JG not to be in Iraq?

0%0 votes
3%1 votes
0%0 votes
13%4 votes
36%11 votes
46%14 votes

| 30 votes | Vote | Results

Cockroaches? COCKROACHES? NO, LA Times editors, NO!

Mon Jul 30, 2007 at 06:34:16 AM PDT

The Los Angeles Times has an editorial today titled Bush's Folly excoriating the President for his Iraq policy.

"His fixation on Al Qaeda's role in Iraq reveals the shallowness of his thinking"

they aver.  Hurrah! Yes! They get it! They're on our side!

Or ... not?

NOT TO MISS: Bill Moyers 7/27/7 on al Qaeda and Iraq

Sat Jul 28, 2007 at 10:54:26 AM PDT

I found this program to be stunningly informative as to both fact and analysis.

Disclaimer: I cannot do this program justice here.

Here are the links: the video and the transcript.

Go watch it. Go now. You will not be sorry. It runs nearly 30 minutes, but it's the best 30 minutes you will spend today.

If they can't stand up to YouTube, how can the Rs stand up to AQ?

Thu Jul 26, 2007 at 09:50:10 PM PDT

Josh Marshall over at Talking Points Memo is reporting here that the Republican CNN/YouTube debate will probably not take place as scheduled, because Rudy Giuliani is indicating he will not participate and Mitt Romney appears inclined to follow his example.

Imagine that!

Bill O'Reilly has been scathing about the Democratic candidates declining an invitation to a debate on Faux, contending in his smarmy way

If they can't stand up to Fox, how will they stand up to Al Qaeda?

Well, isn't that just special!

David Brooks: 100s of Americans must die to punish Harry Reid

Fri Jul 20, 2007 at 04:58:33 PM PDT

I am furious.  I am dismayed.  I am irate.

On the NewsHour (PBS) just now, David Brooks has made the point that many Republican Senators want to vote for withdrawal from Iraq, but could not and cannot because of the way Harry Reid is managing the Senate schedule.


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