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2005 Wasn't All Bad

By Katha Pollitt, The Nation. Posted January 3, 2006.


Bush is on the defensive. The GOP is mired in corruption. The media are waking up. Here are 14 good things that happened in 2005.

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All year long it's been one piece of bad news after another, but now it's time to put on the rose-colored glasses and list some of the good things that happened in 2005. I had to e-mail about fifty people to come up with these items, but that's OK. Keeping you cheerful is part of my job. I mean, the war could be wrong, but the Iraqi elections could still be good. So fill that glass half full with whatever and … and … well, just drink it.

1. The Bush Administration is on the defensive. The President's poll numbers rival Nixon's at his nadir, most voters say they don't believe him on Iraq, he's had to admit that the prewar intelligence was wrong, Plamegate stalks the White House. Social Security reform is off the table. Hurricane Katrina proved the grown-ups were definitely not in charge -- "You're doing a heckuva job" enters the lexicon as Bushese for "You have screwed up totally but I don't care."

2. The Republican Party is mired in corruption and cronyism. DeLay's on trial, Randy Cunningham's going to jail, Frist's AIDS charity ladled nearly half a million to his friends, Jack Abramoff seems to have the whole party on his payroll. The Supreme Court is looking into that mid-Census redistricting in Texas that gave them five new seats in 2004. David Brooks openly wonders why working-class people should vote for the GOP. Good question!

3. The media are waking up. In The New Yorker, Jane Mayer revealed the shocking role of doctors and psychologists in torturous goings-on at Guantánamo and the CIA's role in the killing of a detainee at Abu Ghraib. In the Washington Post Dana Priest exposed the existence of secret CIA prisons in Eastern Europe. The LA Times's Mark Mazzetti and Borzou Daragahi reported that the Pentagon paid the Iraqi press to publish pro-U.S. stories. The New York Times finally got rid of Judith Miller and just this December revealed that Bush authorized the National Security Agency to spy on American citizens without a warrant. Too bad the Times didn't break the story when they got it, before the 2004 election.

4. The Christian Taliban is going too far. Terri Schiavo, pharmacists denying women birth control and emergency contraception, creationism in the public schools -- oh, excuse me, "intelligent design," just bounced from the Dover, Pennsylvania, school system by federal court Judge John Jones III as, well, creationism. When your claim to be victims of secularism rests on Wal-Mart greeters wishing shoppers Happy Holidays, you are clearly a bunch of great big babies.

5. Civil liberties are making a comeback. ACLU membership is at an all-time high of more than a half-million. The Senate failed to reauthorize the Patriot Act, at least for now. The House banned "cruel, inhuman and degrading" treatment of detainees (but it also voted to deprive them of habeas corpus).

6. The world is becoming more gay-friendly. Really! Gay marriage was legalized in Spain, South Africa and Canada (it's already legal in Belgium and the Netherlands), and Britain and Connecticut now permit civil unions, joining Denmark, France, Germany, Norway, Iceland, Luxembourg and Sweden. Capote and Brokeback Mountain, with Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger as lovelorn gay cowboys, are huge successes. Basketball star Sheryl Swoopes came out and kept her Nike contract. Gay studies classes have started up in China.


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Katha Pollitt is a columnist for The Nation.

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FINALLY!!!
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jan 3, 2006 1:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article makes a few excellent points: Yes, people, as horrifically depressing as 2005 was, there were some positive developments.

Finally the American people are starting to awaken from this right wing coma that they've been sleeping under for the last twenty five years (Do the arithmetic. Twenty five years ago was January of 1981. That was the month that this country stupidly sent a brain-dead, failed B movie actor to the White House. "Can it get any worse than this"? I thought at the time. Well, yes. Twenty years later they sent a half-witted cowboy to the White House).

Finally, the "liberal media" (doesn't that just make ya giggle?) are starting to show a little courage and are reporting things that have been available to readers of books for many years now. Molly Ivins, Lou DuBois, David Corn, Amy Goodman, Craig Unger, Thomas Frank, Michael Moore, James Moore, Wayne Slater, Sander Hicks, Noam Chomsky, James Carville, Kevin Phillips, Robert Greenwald....STAND UP AND TAKE A BOW!!

Finally (I think) the people of this country are starting to realize the tragedy that, at the dawn of the twentieth century, so huge a segment of the American electorate were so jaw-droppingly ill informed they actually believed that sending this idiot to the oval office - TO THE WHITE HOUSE - was a good idea; Not once - twice.

Yes, finally, I'm beginning to see the light at the end of the tunnel. In December of 2000, a full month before the inauguration, I predicted that this administration would end in impeachment. I made this prediction on the radio so if you'd like to hear the tape, I'd be more than happy to provide it to you. It's going to take a year and a half - don't count on this congress to do the right thing - but once the democrats take back control of the House and Senate next year, it will happen.

Trust me on this one, kiddies. Help is on the way!

Pray for peace

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
tomdegan@frontiernet.net

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» RE: FINALLY!!! Posted by: Tom Degan
» Actor-politicians Posted by: Samantha Vimes
» RE: FINALLY!!! Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Lincoln fan Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: Lincoln fan Posted by: Ellie1
» RE: Lincoln fan Posted by: amycrawford
» RE: Lincoln fan Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: FINALLY!!! Posted by: ericn613
» johngary66 Posted by: johngary66
» RE: "Pray for Peace" Posted by: smuney
Quibble...
Posted by: Samantha Vimes on Jan 3, 2006 3:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That leaves opinion journalism as the single remaining field in which conventional wisdom says women just can't cut the mustard -- and women believe it.

Do they? Or have women-- and the readers who trust them-- gone to blogs? What's the ratio of female to male opinion journalists online as opposed to the mainstream media? If it is higher, and I think it is, what women believe is that MSM editors and publishers don't give women equal opportunity.

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Time for housecleaning
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jan 3, 2006 4:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't rejoice at the failures of the Bush administration. I live in this country. It doesn't make me happy that the policies of this administration have cost the lives of 2000 soldiers, that they have squandered a surplus and run up a debt that my great-grand children will shoulder. I am both sad and angry. So get rid of the Republicans and put in the Democrats; what have you gained? Both parties are bought and paid for by the corporatocracy. Both parties represent the establishment not the ordinary taxpayer. I seem to remember from my elementary school history book that "taxation without representation is tyranny". It is time for patriots to clean house. Click on rebel

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» RE: Time for housecleaning Posted by: Lincoln fan
Most of the points are valid but on the election stuff
Posted by: maxpayne on Jan 3, 2006 6:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
She forgot to mention that a Democrat soundly defeated a hardcore "conservative" in "conservative" VA. When will these authors start showing some respect for moderate to liberal Democrats in the south such as Tim Kaine? I mean, yes he's a member of the DLC and no he's not perfect but if we're going to take back America, we can't just keep looking at Latin America and crying over their successes or for that matter only playing schadenfreude with Arnold. Don't forget that all year round Jerry KILgore kept on trying to pull another "Kansas" on one culture issue after another be it guns, abortion, illegal aliens, death penalty where even that Hitler ad made national headlines, etc ... And even with all that, Kaine hung in there and even started acting less like a DLCer and more like a real Democrat, not to mention the way he beautifully reframed the issues such as pointing out that the NRA gives letter grades based on who will promote the most gun sales rather than who's not afraid to put Project Exile to work where gun theives can actually be held accountable. Start talking about Democrats who put forth populist efforts that have proven successful even in red states like Colorado, New Mexico, Montana, Wyoming, etc ... There are plenty of successes there to talk about. If you want to help take back America from the rightwing lunatics and put real success first, let's focus on building our abilities to focus on real issues like the economy, environment, affordable healthcare and education, etc ... rather than allowing the "right" to distract us with hot button culture issues.

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Re Intelligent Design in Pennsylvania
Posted by: randyf on Jan 3, 2006 7:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe I missed it in your list, but don't forget, Katha, that the good citizens of Dover, Pa., also bounced the ENTIRE ID school board that caused the mess in the first place.

I frequently wonder whether voters did that because of their beliefs of their irritation with the lawsuit, but it's good news either way.

Randy Fritz

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The reason that "grass roots" are still imaginary for the ultra-hard left Fringies.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jan 3, 2006 8:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"4. The Christian Taliban is going too far."

Duh. That's obvious. When you're arrogant enough to lump people of the predominant faith (80%) in a country together with a bunch of folks who run around lopping folks heads off...well, people shake their heads and wonder which wing of the asylum you're from.

"5. Civil liberties are making a comeback. The ACLU" WHOA! Stop right there.

That's just a little trickier--the ACLU (with it's history squarely rooted in communism) HAS, indeed, taken up a few Constitutionally responsible causes in its checkered past. How odd, however, that the ACLU's former lead counsel (now Ass. Justice Ginsburger) would write the majority opinion on Kelo v. City of New London--a case in which the hard-to-moderate lefties on the court banded together and allowed Pfizer (or, by extension, Wal-Wart) to defy the intent of the writers of our Constitution and tear down your home to erect a great monument to America: a parking lot.

--Solely because said parking lot will generate more tax dollars than your bungalow.

Your home and land: out of your hands, into Corporate America's via the Hard Left. Now there's a bumper sticker.

Of course, you could go into how selective the ACLU is with our liberties--they only support the ones that the--I don't know, Imperial Communist Mothership?--tells them to support:

"First Ammendment, we're ok with that. Second Ammendment? Sheesh, why isn't somebody doing something to get rid of that?"

These, however, are the immediate--and most obvious--reasons that the Hard Left only talks about finding its "grass roots". They really aren't interested in grass roots causes at all--whenever the Hard Left encounters grass roots, it either stupidly derides said roots ("Christian Taliban") or it UProots them (Kelo v. New London, courtesy of the former lead counsel of the ACLU).

I really had been looking for a way to understand why it takes an immensely incompetent administration and a WAR to get people to consider becoming democrats, and involved in democrats' causes. This article was the resounding answer--it's the Fringies that behave like WEEDKILLER to any POTENTIAL democrat grass roots efforts. Talk about "abortive rights".

Happy New Year, please resolve to apply a thought process before applying the sticker. You lose people that way, you know?

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Consider these
Posted by: Newtopia on Jan 3, 2006 8:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. The Bush Administration is on the defensive. - They have always been defensive.

2. The Republican Party is mired in corruption and cronyism. - This is news? And you don't think the Democratic Party is mired in the same? I think its safe to say we realize the Govt., as a whole, is totally corrupt. Having elected officials busted for corruption-regardless of Party--is terrible for all of us. Its not good news.

3. The media are waking up. - The media can always be counted on to be the media, which is to say cravenly pursuing profit and ratings. If a certain story...such as the chaos in Iraq...suddenly begins to serve their bottom line, they go after it. This actually disheartens me more than encourages me.

4. The Christian Taliban is going too far. - This is news?

5. Civil liberties are making a comeback. - This is, at best, wishful thinking and, on its surface, a total delusion.

6. The world is becoming more gay-friendly. - Thank god.

7. The left is alive in Latin America. - This is not good news for either them or us in the sense that we are growing closer and closer to a real live confrontation with South America over markets and resources, which is what always leads to war. Remember this thing called the Cold War?

8. DNA evidence exonerated twelve death-row inmates (that makes 168 so far). - This is incredible news.

9. Heroes and whistleblowers spoke truth to power. - All "heroes" and "leaders" get co-opted by the machine, its an inevitability. Case in point, Cindy Sheehan and her celebrity "60s nostalgia" sit-in at the White House, the one where no one actually got arrested and she was caught giggling.

10. Third World women are on the move. - Good.

11. Does anyone actually take these guys seriously? Why give them the exposure?

12. Arnold Schwarzenegger's ballot initiatives went down in flames - So what? There will be others, and not all of them can be "defeated"? This once again is focusing too much on trying to work within a broken system, rather than changing the system altogether. The problem is not "us" and "them" Left and Right, the problem is us and them, have and have not. Until we recognize that, we're going no where.

13. I suppose that's good news...

14.All the awareness in the world is useless without the power or ability to change.

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» RE: Consider these Posted by: liberalibrarian
» RE: Consider these Posted by: Newtopia
» JOHNGARY66 Posted by: johngary66
» RE: JOHNGARY66 Posted by: Newtopia
13 out of 14 aint bad
Posted by: codingguy on Jan 3, 2006 9:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but i diagree that the Larry Summers fiasco was a good thing. The president of harvard simply stated, as one reason out of three for why the percentage of women in the sciences are so few, that men and women are equally represented in the middle of the bell curve for sciences, but that men are more predominant at the extreme high and extreme low end of the curve. Had he said the same thing about why men don't nurture as well as women, there would be no fuss; it doesn't mean men can't nurture or women can't excel at sciences, as the presence of women in sciences and men as nurturers clearly shows, it merely is one factor in explaining the discrepancy in numbers.

For this, as Canadian columnist Robert Fulford has aptly written, Summers has been subjected to treatment -- best exemplified by the gauntlet of "racist sexist anti-gay, larry summers you must pay" he and harvard faculty have had to endure ever since -- worthy of the Red Guards during the cultural revolution.

To interpret his remarks as a putdown of women requires a mindset unwilling to bend from ideological conviction under any circumstances, including ignoring the very science that prompted the hoo-hah in the first place. Not very different from those ideologues on the right who pooh-pooh global warming when those facts are staring them in the face.

well, 13 out of 14 aint bad, i guess.

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» Oh yeah ... just LIKE the Red Guards Posted by: AdamSelene11726
more Preaching to the Choir?
Posted by: Voicedude on Jan 3, 2006 10:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How about some links? This is GREAT, but it's more of a recap of things we already know. A mere list like this wouldn't sway anyone who has been swallowing the bitter Bush pill all this time. Many of those sheep who once would follow that jerk right over the cliff have now been awakened from their slumber. Their minds have finally been pried open by some reality, but we need something more than a list to sway them. Give us some links to articles on these stories, and some facts to support them.

Come off as naturally logical as they've been snookered into thinking, present the facts, and many will come back over to the 'right' way of thinking. Present them with nothing more than a list of accusations and they'll ignore it the way they always have. Unless there is SOME kind of verification, it just comes off as more 'Preaching to the Choir'.

I'm just sayin'.........

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Sorry, off-topic but of Alternet interest
Posted by: esactun on Jan 3, 2006 10:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Patient couldn't pay bills, so life support was withdrawn: a new low in the american existence: http://www.slate.com/id/2133518/

(Note the horrifying, GOP-like "to hell with all you 'entitled' poor people" subtext here as the author tries to justify what is clearly murder [and clearly NOT euthanasia]!!)

This, methinks, qualifies as Murder 1. It's premeditated (was preceded my a death threat), had a clear motive (money), an extant body, and an undisputed--indeed, confessed--cause of death.

If swift, merciless prosecution does not follow, ladies and gentlemen, then the few remaining moral underpinnings of our system and society will have been kicked out from under us like a stool under the feet of a noose-wearing man.

No big shock that the hospital is in Texas. Oh how I wish that goddamned place had remained its own separate country.

(will post on this later at blog.myspace.com/metriccheesehead)

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Let's make it count at the 2006 elections!
Posted by: Againstthewindwalking on Jan 3, 2006 10:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a start, but it's not all down hill yet! 2006 is an election year. Let's turn out in mass and turn the bastards out!

Jack Abramoff plead guily today and will aid in the investigations of 200 members of Congress. Don't let them delay this untill after the votes have been counted! Demand heads on a plate and don't let up untill they're served!

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We finally got radio stations
Posted by: Monde on Jan 3, 2006 11:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
2005 = The year Air America started making it.
Now let's get them some advertisers so they don't lose any stations. I heard that a format change lost them one in Arizona. We can't afford to let that happen. The intelligentsia can get it over the net but not everyone works in front of a computer; the important thing is to get our voice to the captive audiences in traffic jams, machine shop radios, and the like.

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Mr. S. B. Gray
Posted by: tap17x on Jan 3, 2006 12:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wish progressives would stop saying that the voters are so stupid that they twice elected George W. (Worthless) Bush to the White House. The voters ARE stupid enough that they ALMOST sent Worthless to the White House, and are also so stupid (with cooperation from the craven press) that they raised no appreciable fuss when the Greedy Old Party stole the Florida and Ohio election results.
Worthless is a fully illegitimate, unelected "president," appointed by five blatantly partisan, oath-violating Supremes.

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What about gay rights in this country
Posted by: bookwoman on Jan 3, 2006 12:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The writer speaks about gay marriage being approved around the world. Aren't we discussing this country. How about the states which have or are about to approve gay marriage in this country.

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Iran
Posted by: deegee on Jan 3, 2006 1:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As pointed out there were some goood things from 2005.I am more worried about 2006.It is generally agreed that Israel,with the support of the USA,will attack Iran's nuclear plants.Some say as early as March.Why has the media not reported it or mentioned the hate/ responce from the Islamic world??

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We still aren't getting anywhere
Posted by: Llama11 on Jan 3, 2006 2:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like somebody else said, awareness isn't enough. It's good, but look what it's got all of us "progressives" here at alternet. Nothing. Except a depressing look at reality.

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Are you kidding?
Posted by: Kneel on Jan 4, 2006 3:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is such a bleak list it only convinces me that it's even worse than I thought.

I don't understand what The Women's Review of Books is doing on the list.

And I don't see how the political stuff means anything. The Republicans were badly screwing up before the last elections, but there being no challenge from any other quarter, it didn't matter much, did it? The "strategy" seemed to be - Let's sit on the sidelines and hope they trip enough times that, while falling down, one of them will accidentally kick the ball into their own goal.

Has that changed?

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» RE: Are you kidding? Posted by: Newtopia
Media Waking Up? Bull...
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Jan 6, 2006 6:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you pay close attention to most news programs you'll notice something. This latest scandal is being painted as a bipartisan issue. It's not. This time around it's a repug scandal. But the media is reinforcing the majority belief that politicians are corrupt. (and of course 90% are.)

This is why only half of America votes. They see no point.

Now if Abramoff was a democrat and 90% of the money went to democrats, you can be sure the media would be using the word "democrat" in every sentence. But for today it's "congress" or "washington" of "politicians" or "culture of corruption".

The corporate media will never change. They are motivated to produce news that is most likely to increase the profits of their parent corporations. In order to do that they must marginalize the population. This is why almost all scandals serve the elite.

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» Disagree. Posted by: Monde
rover
Posted by: Roverton on Jan 11, 2006 2:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What are they selling on cabal news these days?

Which of these, can I manage without?

Gotta get creative to get out of a dark age. Works whenever we do, however - all through history.

Good history can repeat itself too.

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