Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

What Matters in Kansas

What’s the Matter With Kansas? is the title of a book by Thomas Frank which argues that working-class voters in the American heartland have been duped into voting against their own financial interests by a clever and tactical appeal to so-called “values” issues.

Well, here’s a straw in the wind, one that suggests the winds have changed. Via Daily Kos, a look at an editorial by Steve Rose in the Johnson County Sun in Overland Park, Kansas:

As we prepare ourselves to make political endorsements in subsequent issues, I can tell you unequivocally that this newspaper has never endorsed so many Democrats. Not even close.

But I could not help but put in perspective a more global phenomenon that has led us to re-evaluate our traditional support for Republicans….

The Republican Party has changed, and it has changed monumentally.

You almost cannot be a victorious traditional Republican candidate with mainstream values in Johnson County or in Kansas anymore, because these candidates never get on the ballot in the general election. They lose in low turnout primaries, where the far right shows up to vote in disproportionate numbers.

To win a Republican primary, the candidate must move to the right.

What does to-the-right mean?

It means anti-public education, though claiming to support it.

It means weak support of our universities, while praising them.

It means anti-stem cell research.

It means ridiculing global warming.

It means gay bashing. Not so much gay marriage, but just bashing gays.

It means immigrant bashing. I’m talking about the viciousness.

It means putting religion in public schools. Not just prayer.

It means mocking evolution and claiming it is not science.

It means denigrating even abstinence-based sex education….

But everything else adds up to priorities that have nothing to do with the Republican Party I once knew.

Abraham Lincoln was right?

Posted in Politics: US: 2006 Election | 1 Comment

Just Sayin’

I miss Fafblog.

Posted in Blogs | 3 Comments

Oops. Pentagon Caught Spying on Harmless Peaceful Protesters

“It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once.”
— David Hume

Now that they got caught, they’re sorry:

A South Florida anti-war group’s peaceful protest of military recruitment during last year’s Fort Lauderdale Air & Sea Show was labeled ”subversive” and was being monitored by the Pentagon, which kept a report on the protest in a database designed to track domestic terrorist threats.

That report in the Defense Department’s Threat and Local Observation Notice database, or TALON, was a mistake, a Defense spokesman said Thursday.

And we won’t do it again until next time, we promise.

What was the dangerous activity the Pentagon had identified as such a terrible threat?

‘BAWC plans to counter military recruitment and the ‘pro-war’ message with ‘guerrilla theater and other forms of subversive propaganda,’ ”

For next few days you can read more about this in the Miami Herald article, Pentagon admits error on ‘threat’. The initial source of the report was a civilian agency, maybe the Miami Police. So there are people — lots of people — in our civilian government and in our military, who think that “subversive propaganda” (read, First Amendment protected activities) are a reason to put you on a list of people to be spied on.

Posted in Civil Liberties | 1 Comment

‘Enemy Combatant’ Goatherd Released

David Markus has the scoop in Southern District of Florida Blog: Federal Defenders secure release of “enemy combatant” shepherd, the story about how two local Florida public defenders (Paul M. Rashkind and Tim Cone) sprang a goatherd from Guantanamo.

The Defenders began representing Taj about a year ago and, after security clearances were approved, Paul Rashkind began to uncover evidence and develop a strategy to obtain his release. Just 14 days ago, Rashkind and Cone filed a set of classified challenges to Taj’s continued detention, explaining why he should be released now. Last night, on the eve of the military hearing, Taj was on a plane back to Afghanistan. He was released to his family earlier today. Rashkind commented, “America was not a safer place while he was detained, but we can certainly feel better about ourselves now that he is home.”

The moral of the story: access to counsel is a critical right.

Posted in Guantanamo | 1 Comment

Planted Questions

Crooks & Liars says that this is a great ad. And boy are they right:

Posted in Politics: US: 2006 Election | Comments Off on Planted Questions

US Still Hasn’t Turned Over Padilla’s Medical Records

TPMmuckraker has some interesting Padilla-related news and speculation regarding his allegation that the government force-fed him hallucinogenic drugs:

Early this year, [Orlando] do Campo, [a public defender representing Jose Padilla] said, Padilla’s legal team asked the Defense Department to turn over Padilla’s medical records from his detention at the brig of the Naval Weapons Station in Charleston, S.C. The government resisted, but the judge ordered them to comply. Several months later, do Campo still has not seen a single page of those records.

If Padilla was given drugs of any kind, one could expect them to be recorded in those files. Is that why the Defense Department is having a hard time turning those documents over?

Posted in Padilla | 1 Comment