Impending Doom

I am a historian of the 20th Century.

Lately I have had the overwhelming sense of impending doom. I often feel as if the entire world is undergoing either a complete nervous break-down, or human society is in its death throws. I feel as if something big is about to happen, something transformative.

As for the United States of America: we are finished. This is my judgement as a historian. I am afraid of what will happen in the next five years or so. I feel that we are close to civil war, or revolution, or dissolution.

I hope I’m wrong – unless we can arrange a peaceful dissolution of the union, which I believe is (most likely) the best outcome.

Wise Words

“Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'” — Isaac Asimov

I Was Wrong – I Love The Teabaggers

Wow. The Republican Party is headed for extinction! Thank God. This is a self-inflicted wound by a desperate and rather evil party. I grew up a Republican, and I don’t recognize this party any more.

From Newser:

Tea Party Candidate Thinks He’s the Messiah
TIM D’ANNUNZIO BELIEVES GOD WILL DROP A PYRAMID ON GREENLAND

(NEWSER) – Republican leaders have declared open war on Tim D’Annunzio, a Tea Party-backed North Carolina congressional candidate who they fear may be insane. They’re publicizing documents from D’Annunzio’s divorce, in which his wife testifies that he called himself the messiah, predicted God would drop a 1,000-mile high pyramid on Greenland, and claimed to have found the Ark of the Covenant in Arizona. A doctor also revealed that he smokes pot almost every day, reports the AP

Years later, a judge ruled that he had willfully skipped child support payments, adding that he’d described himself as a “religious zealot” who considered the government the “Antichrist.” The chairman of the North Carolina GOP says D’Annunzio “has disqualified himself by his background, his record and his behavior.” But he might actually win; he got more votes in initial primary voting than anyone else, and has plenty of cash for his runoff with local sportscaster Harold Johnson.

The Secret Life of Star Wars Toys

Evolution of the Alphabet

I found this ••here••, via reddit.com.

Top Five Moral Hypocrites

An excerpt from ••here••:

    Souder joins line of family-values backers gone astray

There was something shy of nationwide shock when Indiana Republican Rep. Mark Souder, a staunch advocate of family values and abstinence education, announced Tuesday that he was resigning because he’d been having an affair with a staffer. That’s because it seems like every other week brings news that another conservative culture warrior has been caught engaging in the kind of behavior that he (and, yes, they’re almost always men) spends his working hours inveighing against. Since it can be hard to keep the players straight over time, we thought we’d present our ranking of the Top Five moral hypocrites since the social-conservative right came into power during the 1980s. The list is followed by a lengthy (dis)honor roll.

Ted Haggard
Haggard, a minister and onetime head of the powerful National Association of Evangelicals opposed gay marriage and “sexual libertinism.” He was forced to resign after a male prostitute came forward to claim that Haggard had paid him for sex and methamphetimine.

George Alan Rekers
As a co-founder of the Family Research Council, which believes homosexuality is “unnatural” and “can never be affirmed,” Rekers was one of the pillars of the anti-gay movement until earlier this month, when the Miami New Times reported that he hired a stud from rentboy.com to accompany him on a 10-day European vacation.

Mark Sanford
The Republican governor of South Carolina and one-time presidential hopeful captivated a nation when he disappeared to Argentina to visit his “soul mate” Maria Belen Chapur last year. As someone who opposed gay marriage and had castigated Bill Clinton for adultery and dishonesty—”the issue of lying is probably the biggest harm to the democratic system of government,” he said at the time,” he said at the time—Sanford’s decision to lie to the citizens of his state about where he was while carrying on an adulterous affair came as a something of a surprise to his conservative supporters. But at least Sanford has shown a romantic streak worthy of a soul-mate-smitten suitor: Now divorced, he recently hit the Appalachian Trail again to see if there’s still a spark with Maria.

Robert Bauman
Bauman, a GOP congressman from Maryland, was a founder of the arch-conservative Young Americans for Freedom and sponsor of the Family Protection Act, which sought to legalize discrimination against gay people. He was arrested in 1980 for soliciting sex from a 16-year-old boy just weeks from Election Day. Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority stood by Bauman, but he dropped his reelection bid and eventually came out of the closet to write a memoir subtitled “The Conscience of a Gay Conservative.”

David Vitter
The married Louisiana senator is staunchly pro-family, anti-gay-rights, and was an enthusiastic patron of prostitutes. After his phone number turned up in D.C madam Deborah Jeane Palfrey’s phone records, Vitter admitted to a “very serious sin” in his past, but refused to step down.

Maine Tea Party: Worse than you think – Tea Parties | Tea Party Movement, Tax Day Tea Party – Salon.com

Maine Tea Party: Worse than you think – Tea Parties | Tea Party Movement, Tax Day Tea Party – Salon.com.

You can read more about this ••here••….

Friday, May 14, 2010 23:15 ET
Joan Walsh
Maine Tea Party: Worse than you think
State GOP apologizes after conventioneers vandalize an eighth grade classroom
By Joan Walsh

*

Tea Party defenders like to accuse Tea Party critics of focusing on a tiny minority of racist, crazy or potentially violent freaks, and ignoring the vast majority of sensible, respectful law abiding folk who just support smaller government. Why, just the other day, James Taranto of the Wall Street Journal pointed to the Tea Party group that played by the rules and took over the Maine GOP’s convention, to push lovely and constructive Tea Party ideas into the party’s platform, as an example of the productive role the movement plays.

Of course, a day later I wrote about how many crackpot ideas they got into Maine’s constitution. But hey, one person’s crackpot ideas are another person’s political brilliance. I get that.

Is vandalism likewise in the eye of the beholder? I’m not so sure.

Thanks to Think Progress, I learned Friday that their ideas weren’t all that was crazy about the Maine Tea Partiers. The state GOP just apologized to Portland’s King Middle School, because conventioneers – who gathered at the Expo, but used the middle school for caucusing – unbelievably, vandalized an eighth-grade classroom. Relying on reports in the Portland Press Herald, Think Progress describes what the Tea Party caucusers did to eighth-grade teacher Paul Clifford’s class:

– For seven years, Clifford has had “a collage-type poster depicting the history of the U.S. labor movement” on his classroom door. He uses it “to teach his students how to incorporate collages into their annual project on Norman Rockwell’s historic ‘Four Freedoms’ illustrations.” When Clifford returned to his classroom on Monday, after the GOP caucuses, the poster was gone; in its place was a sticker reading, “Working People Vote Republican.”

– Republicans opened a “closed cardboard box they found near Clifford’s desk” and later objected to the fact that it contained copies of the U.S. Constitution donated to the school by the American Civil Liberties Union.

– After the caucuses, “rank-and-file Republicans who were upset by what they said they had seen in Clifford’s classroom” began calling the school, objecting to student art they had seen and a sticker on a filing cabinet reading “People for the American Way — Fight the Right.”

* Continue reading

When Clifford got to work and saw the poster had been replaced by the “Working People Vote Republican” sticker, at first he laughed, he told the Portland Press Herald, thinking, “‘All right, that’s funny, But then I go inside my room thinking the poster will be on my desk – and it isn’t. And so now I’m like, ‘You know what? This is baloney!”‘

Clifford started trying to get his poster back, but meanwhile, Tea Partiers were calling the school to protest what they found in Clifford’s classroom. Never mind that Norman Rockwell was once synonymous with mainstream American values. Never mind that the “Four Freedoms,” as articulated by Franklin D. Roosevelt in his 1941 State of the Union speech (as what became known as World War II raged on) are enshrined on a cherished monument in Washington D.C.

Here’s what Roosevelt actually said in his famous speech:

In the future days, which we seek to make secure, we look forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedoms.

The first is freedom of speech and expression–everywhere in the world.

The second is freedom of every person to worship God in his own way–everywhere in the world.

The third is freedom from want–which, translated into world terms, means economic understandings which will secure to every nation a healthy peacetime life for its inhabitants–everywhere in the world.

The fourth is freedom from fear–which, translated into world terms, means a world-wide reduction of armaments to such a point and in such a thorough fashion that no nation will be in a position to commit an act of physical aggression against any neighbor–anywhere in the world.

That is no vision of a distant millennium. It is a definite basis for a kind of world attainable in our own time and generation. That kind of world is the very antithesis of the so-called new order of tyranny which the dictators seek to create with the crash of a bomb.

Sadly, you can see what the Tea Partiers, and too many Republicans, would find objectionable: Freedom from want and freedom from fear. Because most of them believe in want and fear, as necessary to animate the corporate national security regime. (Sadly, too many Democrats seem to support that too.) And of course, the Republican right objects to the “freedom of every person to worship God in his own way,” so a whole lot of the GOP is against three out of four freedoms. So much for the party of freedom and liberty. True patriots would likely rise up against the state propagation of want and fear, but that’s really not what the Tea Party is about.

Whatever. It’s not my cup of tea. This is America, they’re entitled to their beliefs.

What I can’t see is how anyone would defend trashing a public school classroom to symbolize their objections to whatever they believed was going on there. And yet the Press Herald received email from Tea Party activists defending what happened (even as the Maine GOP, to its credit, apologized to the students and teachers of King Middle School.)

Clifford’s students quickly responded. Simon Johnson, a graduate of Clifford’s eighth-grade class blogged:

I am an unapologetic graduate of Paul Clifford’s eighth grade English class at King Middle School. I participated in the “Four Freedoms” expedition, and I made a poster decrying war quite similar to the one with which the Republicans took issue.

I am not brainwashed, I am not a puppet, I am not anti-American or anti-religious, and I am certainly not stupid. Paul Clifford’s class taught me to think critically, to deductively reason and, if anything, to appreciate America for all the freedoms with which I am ensured on a daily basis.

Clearly, the Knox County Republicans — who took a cherished, pro-Labor poster from Clifford’s room and who now are making slanderous and uninformed claims about Clifford — have a different agenda.

Eighth-grader Lilly O’Leary emailed the Press-Herald: “I am not being brainwashed…I am being told that I have the right to my own opinion.” She added, “These people were adults and they were acting very immaturely.”

But hey, the Tea Partiers are the best of American values and the future of the Republican Party, Lilly! James Taranto of Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal vouches for them. Get with the program!

Lilly O’Leary and Simon Johnson are patriots. The Tea Party cowards who vandalized an eighth-grade classroom are not.

100 Best Movie Lines in 3 Minutes

USSR planned nuclear attack on China in 1969

The extraordinary assertion, made in a publication sanctioned by China’s ruling Communist Party, suggests that the world came perilously close to nuclear war just seven years after the Cuban missile crisis.

Liu Chenshan, the author of a series of articles that chronicle the five times China has faced a nuclear threat since 1949, wrote that the most serious threat came in 1969 at the height of a bitter border dispute between Moscow and Beijing that left more than one thousand people dead on both sides.

He said Soviet diplomats warned Washington of Moscow’s plans “to wipe out the Chinese threat and get rid of this modern adventurer,” with a nuclear strike, asking the US to remain neutral.

But, he says, Washington told Moscow the United States would not stand idly by but launch its own nuclear attack against the Soviet Union if it attacked China, loosing nuclear missiles at 130 Soviet cities. The threat worked, he added, and made Moscow think twice, while forcing the two countries to regulate their border dispute at the negotiating table.

He quotes Soviet ministers and diplomats at the time to bolster his claim.

via USSR planned nuclear attack on China in 1969 – Telegraph.

7 Gay Sex Scandals of Career Anti-Gay Crusaders | | AlterNet

7 Gay Sex Scandals of Career Anti-Gay CrusadersFrom white supremacists to right-wing politicians, we have watched an impressive number of vehemently anti-gay folks get caught up in gay sexscapades.

via 7 Gay Sex Scandals of Career Anti-Gay Crusaders | | AlterNet.

What Should A Man Do When A Women Casually Mentions Her Boyfriend? (NSFW)

Conan on 60 Minutes

Click –>here<– to view the entire 15 minute interview of Conan O’Brien on Sunday’s “60 Minutes.” It was a very interesting interview.