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Vale

Greetings Feministe readers!

My guest-blogging time has come to an end, and so I’d would like to thank everyone - and especially Jill -  for allowing me to guest blog here for the past two weeks.  I hope that my presence wasn’t too intrusive, and that I added at least a little something to the dialogue here.  In the past, I’ve been something of a lurker in the comment threads, but from here on, you can probably expect to find me around here every once in awhile, commenting on the horserace.  Of course, you can also find me at my own pad - The United States of Jamerica - as well as PostBourgie, and the soon to be launched (in like a week or so) “Commentariat.net”

Again, thank you for the opportunity to guest blog at Feministe!

Vale,

Jamelle

Liar liar in a fiery, smolding pair of pants

This is a fucking joke, right?  Barack Obama uses a terribly cliche’ analogy - “You can put lipstick on a pig, but it’s still a pig” - to describe McCain’s strategy, and in response, the McCain campaign* turns around and accuses Obama of making a sexist attack on Gov. Palin.  Check out the ad they put out today:

watch?v=yZd_Y_D-RaA

McCain has yet to apply any of his much-vaunted “honor” to his presidential campaign.  Indeed, his campaign is everything but honorable.  But, you know, I’m not really shouldn’t be surprised by McCain’s willingness to use breathtakingly dishonest tactics.  McCain has an almost preternatural belief in his inate goodness and incorruptability (his “maverickness,” if you will).  In his mind, he’s allowed to run a ridiculously dishonest campaign, since his shameless lying is “in service” of his country, and thus doesn’t really “count.” And so we see McCain repeatedly distort and lie about every aspect of Obama’s record:

  • Obama supported sensible legislation allowings schools to teach kindergardeners how to identify sexual predators, and McCain attacks him for promoting “sex” to children**.
  • Obama supports slowing the Pentagon’s Future Combat Systems program, a major (and very, very expensive) effort to upgrade existing military technology and implement advances in computer technology and robotics.  Considering that it’s largely designed for set-piece warfare, and we’re currently focused on fighting an insurgency, slowing it’s development seems like a sensible thing to do.  So sensible in fact, that McCain supported it.  But now that he’s running for president, he’s entirely willing to radically distort Obama’s statement, and portray him as being against general military funding*** (which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, frankly).
  • The McCain campaign has been telling middle class audiences that Obama’s fiscal plan will raise their taxes.  Which is funny, because the general consensus thus far is that Obama’s plan will lower taxes for the middle class.  Moreover, while Obama’s plan will add 3.5 trillion dollars to the national debt, McCain’s will add a staggering 5 trillion dollars to our national debt.  But, of course, McCain is a Republican, which means he’s a “fiscal conservative.”
As many others have pointed out however, none of this would be possible without a complicit media.  The media, instead of calling out lies and presenting the truth, has been content to treat this election like a game: McCain’s/Palin’s distortions and lies are just part of the “horserace.”  Michael Tomasky’s take on this is pretty on point:
McCain and Palin are engaged in serial total fabrications. And almost no one calls them on it. The New York Times, which found the space to run a puffy piece on Palin’s family on its front page the other day, hasn’t found similar space to run a story under a headline like, “McCain-Palin Claims Stretch Credulity, Some Say.”

CBS and CNN have finally gotten around to running reports that pretty much state outright that Palin is lying about the bridge. ABC’s Jake Tapper plainly called out the “truth squad” on the lipstick story. McClatchy did a strong fact-check of the McCain education ad. But for the most part, the media treats it all as entertainment, a matter of which side has seized the offensive. 

The McCain team knows all this. So they consciously promote lies, knowing that no real mechanism exists to stop them from doing so. [...]

Once again, the media is completely abdicating it’s responsibility to be an honest broker in our political process, and once again, that abdication might result in another manifestly unfit Republican ascending to higher office.

But this race is now a test of the media too. You’d think after being told in the run-up to the Iraq war a bushel of things that didn’t end up being true that they printed anyway, they’d have given some thought to the question of how not to let themselves be manipulated like that again. But it is happening again, and the media are getting played in exactly the same way.

Once again, the media is completely abdicating it’s responsibility to be an honest broker in our political process, and once again, that abdication might result in another manifestly unfit Republican ascending to higher office.
* David Sirota notes that McCain used the “lipstick” analogy in reference to Hillary Clinton earlier this year.
** Here’s the Obama campaign’s response to McCain’s “education” attack:
It is shameful and downright perverse for the McCain campaign to use a bill that was written to protect young children from sexual predators as a recycled and discredited political attack against a father of two young girls - a position that his friend Mitt Romney also holds. Last week, John McCain told Time magazine he couldn’t define what honor was. Now we know why.
*** It’s telling that McCain omits the word “wasted” from Obama’s statement.  To me at least, it signals that McCain doesn’t believe in “wasteful military spending.”  Which isn’t really surprising, but still very worrying.
(h/t to Adam Serwer for the post title)
cross-posted at my blog

There is no racism in the Republican Party

The last time I mentioned Republicans’ problem with racism, I was talking politics with a couple Republican friends of mine.  They denied up and down that racism is a problem in the Republican Party, and that the Bush-led GOP has been welcoming to minorities.  Well, it doesn’t seems like everyone got the memo:

ALLENTOWN, Pa. - The leader of a statewide group of college Republicans has been forced to resign after posting racially insensitive comments about Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama on the Internet.

Adam LaDuca, 21, the former executive director of the Pennsylvania Federation of College Republicans, wrote on hisFacebook page in late July that Obama has “a pair of lips so large he could float half of Cuba to the shores of Miami (and probably would.)”

LaDuca, who previously had calledMartin Luther King Jr. a “pariah” and a “fraud,” also wrote: “And man, if sayin’ someone has large lips is a racial slur, then we’re ALL in trouble.”

The College Republicans asked LaDuca to resign after his remarks were publicized by the Pennsylvania Progressive, a blog written by a Democratic committeeman from Berks County. The group announced LaDuca’s resignation on its Web site Friday.

“The comments were completely uncalled for and very offensive,” said Anthony Pugliese, 22, a senior at West Chester University and chairman of the College Republicans, an umbrella group with more than 50 chapters statewide. “The P-A College Republicans do not accept or tolerate racism in any way.”

Let’s be honest folks: the GOP might not be a racist party, but it almost certainly is the party of racists, bigots, and assorted haters.  Republicans built their party on a foundation of racial resentment, and now - with few exceptions - refuse to acknowledge it.  The whole thing would be pretty hilarious if it’s effect on our politics weren’t so damn pernicious.

cross-posted at my blog

Sarah Palin: Objectively pro-sexual assault

Op-Edna finds that during Sarah Palin’s two terms as mayor, the town of Wasilla charged victims of sexual assault the cost of their rape kits:

ANCHORAGE - Gov. Tony Knowles recently signed legislation protecting victims of sexual assault from being billed for tests to collect evidence of the crime, but one local police chief said the new law will further burden taxpayers.

The governor signed House Bill 270, sponsored by Rep. Eric Croft, D-Anchorage, outside the Sexual Assault Response Team (SART) exam room at Alaska Regional Hospital. In attendance at the signing were members of victims advocate groups, law enforcement agencies and legislators. [...]

 

While the Alaska State Troopers and most municipal police agencies have covered the cost of exams, which cost between $300 to $1,200 apiece, the Wasilla police department does charge the victims of sexual assault for the tests.

Wasilla Police Chief Charlie Fannon does not agree with the new legislation, saying the law will require the city and communities to come up with more funds to cover the costs of the forensic exams.

In the past weve charged the cost of exams to the victims insurance company when possible. I just dont want to see any more burden put on the taxpayer, Fannon said.

According to Fannon, the new law will cost the Wasilla Police Department approximately $5,000 to $14,000 a year to collect evidence for sexual assault cases.

 

This is, to say the least, pretty fucking despicable.  Both for the reasons you’d expect - it’s cruel, emblematic of the negative treatment survivors of sexual assault often receive - and for somewhat more systemic reasons: sexual assault is chronically underreported as it is, and requiring victims to pay the cost of their own rape kit incentivizes staying quiet over reporting the assault.  So yeah, fuck you Sarah Palin for not having the decency to lift this ridiculous burden on survivors of sexual assault.  Especially when you were more than willing to sink a few million dollars (and leave your town debt-ridden) into building an ill-thought “athletic center.”

Update:  It turns out Jill already blogged this; that’s what I get for not paying more attention to the main page.

cross-posted at my blog

A little more about Palin’s religious beliefs

A Daily Kos diarist notes that Palin’s church is well outside of the mainstream:

In light of this New York Times article revealing the central role religion plays in Palin’s life, details about her church are becoming more relevant–and more disturbing. Palin’s church claims that it has been “prophesied” that Alaska is a “refuge state” (along with Wisconsin) for the rapture (Alaska First!). Watch Palin on stage as her pastor proclaims that Alaska will be a refuge for hundreds of thousands of people in “the last days.” Video here (around the 1:37 mark). Oh, and her church also embraces the “pray away the gay” movement.

I would caution liberals against making too much about Palin’s church’s relatively extremist beliefs, since our own presidential nominee was a member of a church whose former pastor - a black liberation theologian - was well outside of the mainstream of most mainline Protestant churches.  Drawing attention to Palin’s church will only resurrect concerns about Obama’s church, and bring us into Jeremiah Wright 2: Electric Boogaloo.  Which, you know, would only serve to alienate an entirely new group of white voters, while activating the racial anxieties of millions more.  Not exactly a winning strategy, if you know what I mean.

cross-posted at my blog

Sarah Palin’s “war prayer”

As sympathetic as I am to AlterNet’s intentions, and as much as I agree with a good deal of the content in the recent article, “Sarah Palin’s 9 Most Disturbing Beliefs,” I’m afraid that I have to call foul on one of their choices:

In June, Palin gave a speech at the Wasilla Assembly of God, her former church, in which she exhorted ministry students to pray for American soldiers in Iraq. “Our national leaders are sending them out on a task that is from God,” she told them. “That’s what we have to make sure that we’re praying for, that there is a plan and that plan is God’s plan.”

The AlterNet staff uses this quote to accuse Gov. Palin of believing that the U.S. Army is on a mission from God.  And reading that quote, it certainly sounds like Palin believes in the inate goodness of the U.S. Army and the United States.  A quick look at the original quote however, reveals that the AlterNet staff omitted a crucial word:

She also told the group that her eldest child, Track, would soon be deployed by the Army to Iraq, and that they should pray “that our national leaders are sending them out on a task that is from God, that’s what we have to make sure we are praying for, that there is a plan, and that plan is God’s plan.” [Emphasis mine]

When you include the “that” in the prayer, it’s meaning is rendered completely opposite from what AlterNet alleges.  Palin - far from claiming that the Army is on a mission from God - is praying, no,hoping that the United States is fulfilling God’s Will by invading Iraq.  Palin’s prayer is, if anything, the humble prayer of an uncertain mother, and not - as AlterNet portrays it - the kind of theologically arrogant prayer that would rest comfortably in the mouth of Pat Robertson or the late Jerry Falwell.  

Make no mistake, there is a ton that’s problematic about Sarah Palin.  But even though she’s so wrong on so, so much, it’s wholly unnecessary (and probably counterproductive) to attack her for things like this.  Especially when it feeds into widespread, pernicious narratives about liberals and their (largely imagined) hostility towards religion.

cross-posted  at my blog

“What’s that word I’m looking for? It’s another word for decision.”

The Daily Show - just in case you’ve forgotten -  is pretty fucking brilliant:

The best part of this segment is when the young girl almost says “choice,” but then catches herself and says “decision.”

(h/t to Amy at Appetite for Equal Rights)

I am shocked, shocked to find a racist Republican

The Republican Party hasn’t come to terms with doesn’t have a problem with racism (via The Hill):

Georgia Republican Rep. Lynn Westmoreland used the racially-tinged term “uppity” to describe Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama Thursday.
 
Westmoreland was discussing vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin’s speech with reporters outside the House chamber and was asked to compare her with Michelle Obama.

“Just from what little I’ve seen of her and Mr. Obama, Sen. Obama, they’re a member of an elitist-class individual that thinks that they’re uppity,” Westmoreland said.

Asked to clarify that he used the word “uppity,” Westmoreland said, “Uppity, yeah.”

Yes, this is only one congressperson, but I have no doubt that many, many other Republicans feel similarly.  Indeed, the GOP’s anti-Obama narrative is driven by the claim that Obama is an “elitist” who can’t understand “regular people.”   Now, this is thrown at any Democrat running for higher office (see John Kerry, 2004), but when applied to Obama, it can’t help but sound like code for “uppity.”  I think the folks on McCain’s campaign realized that, and I think they’re running with it.  One Drop at Too Sense says it best:

Whenever one of Obama’s critics talks about “average Americans” and makes reference to Obama being an “elitist” or a “snob”, this is what they are saying to working-class and lower-class whites:

“That nigger is looking down on you. How dare he look down on you? How dare he think he’s better than you and yours? How dare he talk like he thinks he knows better than you?”

Welcome to Nixonland folks, I hope you enjoy the ride.

cross-posted at my blog

I just can’t get you (the Bradley Effect) out of my head

cross-posted at my blog and PostBourgie

Andrew Hacker’s essay in the latest issue of the New York Review of Books is something of a mixed bag. The piece is an attempt to measure the possible impact of race - specifically voter registration laws, and the “Bradley Effect” - on the election.  And to some extent, Hacker is successful; he does an excellent job at giving an overview of the current state of voter rights in the country. Specifically, he looks at the Supreme Court’s ruling in Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, and the 2002 Help America Vote Act, and shows how the impact of both - whether intentionally or not - has been to suppress voter registration and turn out among African-Americans and other minorities. (This is kind of long, so the rest is after the jump.)

In Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, the Court “upheld a 2005 Indiana law requiring voters in that state to produce a government document with a photograph at the polls.”  Which means that in the state of Indiana, voters need to provide either a driver’s license, passport, or government-issued ID in order to vote. Moreover, by upholding the ruling, the Court opened the door for other states to pass similar regulations. Hacker notes that this could potentially disenfranchise thousands of poor and working-class minorities, particularly African-Americans:

Requiring a driver’s license to vote has a disparate racial impact, a finding that once commanded judicial notice. To apply for the state ID card that Indiana offers as an alternative, moreover, nondrivers must travel to a motor vehicles office, which for many would be a lengthy trip. While licenses do not record race, Justice David Souter cited relevant studies of the race of license-holders in his dissent, which was joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. In one survey, made by the Department of Justice in 1994, black residents of Louisiana were found to be four to five times more likely not to have the official photograph needed for an identifying document. (Not to mention access to a car; recall how many couldn’t leave as Katrina approached.) A Wisconsin survey published in 2005 was more precise. No fewer than 53 percent of black adults in Milwaukee County were not licensed to drive, compared with 15 percent of white adults in the remainder of the state. According to its author, similar disparities will be found across the nation.

The problems, however, don’t stop there.  The 2002 Help America Vote Act mandated that every state must maintainan  ”electronic “statewide voter registration list,” to be linked to every precinct.”  As Hacker points out though, African-American families are more likely to move, and like most people, probably won’t remember to notify election officials.  This, he writes, has already had a detrimental effect on voter registration:

When Ohio purged 35,427 returned names in 2004, a review found that the addresses were in “mostly urban and minority areas.” Here too, getting back on the rolls can be like mending a mistaken credit rating.

Besides the Supreme Court’s ruling and the Help America Vote Act, there’s the recurring concern of felon voter rights:

Among inmates, black men and women outnumber Hispanics by more than two to one and whites by nearly six to one. This is another reason why a much higher ratio of black citizens will be unable to vote this year, because they are among either the 882,300 who are currently incarcerated or the two million who have served sentences but continue to be disenfranchised. According to Restoring the Right to Vote, a report by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, 13 percent of black men cannot cast votes; in three states 20 percent cannot because they are locked up or formerly were.

Hacker correctly deducts that all of these things will impact the number of African-American voters Obama receives, and could hurt him in states where African-Americans could make the margin victory (like Virginia).  To use a fairly recent - and for many, still painful example - analysis’ of the 2000 election found that in Florida, more than 14,000 voters were purged from the rolls, many of whom were African-Americans wrongly identified as felons.  The margin of Bush’s victory in 2000 was a little over five hundred.

As good as the quantative portion of Hacker’s piece is, he begins to stumble when he tries to further draw out the political implications of race in the election.  He begins by noting that - like the gay marriage initatives in 2004 - the various anti-affirmative action initiatives on the ballot this year could trigger racial resentment in white voters, leading them to vote against Obama.  He ties this to the oft-mentioned Bradley (or Wilder) Effect, which for those unaware, is:

an explanation advanced as the possible cause of a phenomenon which has led to frequent inaccurate voter opinion polls in many American political campaigns between a white candidate and a non-white candidate.  Specifically, there were instances in which such elections saw the non-white candidate significantly underperform with respect to the results predicted by pre-election polls.

There are two problems with this argument: first, there’s no real consensus over the impact on the Bradley Effect, and there’s even evidence to suggest that it’s impact isn’t as great as we once thought.  At FiveThirtyEight, Nate Silver - using data from the primary election - suggests that the Bradley Effect didn’t have much, if any impact on the Democratic primary:

On average, Barack Obama overperformed the Pollster.com trendline by 3.3 points on election day.

There are some important differences by region. Using regions as defined by the US Census Bureau, Barack Obama overperformed his polls by an average of 7.2 points in the South. This effect appears to be most substantial in states with larger black populations; I have suggested before that it might stem from a sort of reverse Bradley Effect in which black voters were reluctant to disclose to a (presumed) white interviewer that they were about to vote for a black candidate.

Obama also outperformed his polls in the Midwest and the West (although there is not much data to go on in the latter case). The one region where Hillary Clinton overperformed her numbers was in the Northeast, bettering the pre-election trendline by 1.8 points. Recall that the Bradley Effect phenomenon describescovert rather than overt manifestations of racism. It may be that in the Northeast, which is arguably the most “politically correct” region of the country, expressions of racism are the least socially acceptable, and that therefore some people may misstate their intentions to pollsters. By contrast, in the South and the Midwest, if people are racist they will usually be pretty open about it, and in the West, which is nation’s most multicultural region, there may be relatively little racism, either expressed or implicit.

And second, we can’t necessarily infer decreased support for Barack Obama from opposition to affirmative action, at least not in the same way that we could - in 2004 - infer support for George W. Bush based on opposition to gay marriage.  For one, affirmative action occupies a much different - and recently less contentious - position in the discourse than gay marriage.  The general consensus among Americans concerning affirmative action is that it either needs to be A) changed or B) eliminated.  Moreover, this transcends party lines; you’re just as likely to find anti-affirmative action Democrats as you are Republicans.  Furthermore, you’re far more likely to find a single-issue voter driven by gay marriage than you are a single-issue voter driven by affirmative action.  Whereas in 2004, it was highly likely that a voter who touched the screen (”pull the lever”is such an anachronism) against gay mariage would also touch it for President Bush, it’s no where near as likely that a voter who touches the screen against affirmative action will also touch it against Barack Obama.  Indeed, if you’ll allow me to make some unfounded conjecture (which of course you will, this is a blog), I’d say that the very fact of Barack Obama’s candidacy could even serve to reinforceopinions against affirmative action.  I can imagine a hypothetical white voter saying, “If a black man like Barack Obama can make it to the presidency, then we don’t need preferences for minorities.”

I know that some Democrats are worried about the impact of affirmative-action measures on the election. My advice is not to panic.  It’s not at all clear that they will actually have any impact on Barack Obama’s electoral performance, and if they do, the extent of said impact is still very much up in the air.  My guess is that if there is any impact, it will be slight, and increases in voter registration among all groups, as well as turn out, will more than make up the difference.

As far as Hacker’s essay is concern though, I’d say that on the whole, he does a pretty good job on both shedding light on the various electoral controversies popping across the country, and addressing the recurring issues in voter enfranchisement (like felon’s rights, and such).  Where Hacker stumbles is in tackling the potential electoral impact of race; with just a little bit more data, and some better reasoning, this essay could have made the leap from merely good, to pretty great.


Another sign that Democrats are rediscovering their backbone

At the Politico, Ben Smith reports that in several states - Virginia, Wisconsin, Colorado, and Iowa - Obama is running radio ads criticizing McCain  for his stance on abortion rights.  Noam Scheiber, after commenting on how unusual this is, notes that it’s probably a good move on Obama’s part, since a majority of Americans support abortion rights in one form or another, and pro-choice Republican women are likely to be turned off by McCain/Palin’s strongly pro-life views.  Like Scheiber, I’m a little surprised to see Obama running explicitly on his abortion stance - normally Democrats are either compromising or capitulating - but I’m glad to see it happening.  The steady erosion of reproductive rights over the past twenty or so years has happened in part because Democrats have been unwilling to make the positive case for reproductive rights.  Granted, this ad campaign is somewhat limited, but it is still very heartening to see a Democrat run towards, and not way from, the party’s stance on abortion.

cross-posted at The United States of Jamerica