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by Zoltan Abraham
November 5, 2008
After eight years of government by the
wealthy for the super-wealthy, after eight years of the trampling of
our Constitution underfoot and the gradual establishment of a fascist
dictatorship by a handful of powerful thugs, our nation finally said
"enough!" November 4, 2008, has been described as a national
IQ test. And we passed!
I wanted to say a few words on what I did on
election day to help make the change happen. My contribution was not
great. But a lot of people doing even a little can make a huge
difference. More...
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You really know what you're doing. As
someone pointed out, if the Daily Kos had existed in 2000, Al Gore
would not have lost. So, I might just have to read your book, Taking
on the System. I will remain an avid follower of your website, up to
the day that Bill O'Reilly makes good on his threat to destroy it.
(That should be any day now...)

Jon Stewart and Steven Colbert
You guys are just about the only source of
real TV news left in the country. Too bad real news on TV can only
be found, for the most part, in a couple of comedy shows.
You guys rock! Kept up the good work!

Tina Fey
What can I say? In the screenplay to mean
girls, you wrote: "There are two kinds of evil people. Those
who do evil and those who allow evil to be done." (Or something
like that.) Well, you took on the meanest of Mean Girls, and you
brought her down! Thank you also for defining marriage as a
"sacred institution between two unwilling teenagers." From
now on, I will always dress up like you for Halloween. More...
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September 8, 2007
As you read this article, you might think that I was pretty green and naďve back in 2000. But Dubya has opened my eyes to many things. Let me list some of the words I learned under his reign:
More...
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August 5, 2007
From pet food, to toy trains, to tooth paste, to tires, to Big Bird and
Dora dolls, news of recalls have been in the headlines in recent months.
All of these products have come from China. But don’t just blame the
Chinese – blame our corporations. The problems with these products are
the direct result of the economic policy employed by our corporations
since the 1980’s.
The economic policy in question involves the increasing of profit
margins not through the raising of prices or the establishment of
greater market share, but by the reduction of the true cost of
production. What is the true cost of production? More...
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July 10, 2007
I didn’t want to see SiCKO. My wife suggested it, but I was reluctant. When we got to the parking lot of the movie theater, I didn’t want to get out of the car at first – I needed a little more time to decide. Would I want to spend two hours seeing the horrible things being done to people in our country? I already know the problem. I already know how much better the health care system is in other Western countries. Why depress myself with two hours of horror? My wife suggested going for a walk instead, if I didn’t want to see the movie. But in the end, I decided to give SiCKO a try.
More...
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December 26, 2006
On December 24, I bought three bags of socks
at a Target store close to Seattle. Okay, you didn't need to know
that. But what you might be interested in is that I paid with a check,
I was asked for my driver's license, as usual – and then the clerk
proceeded to scan the barcode on the back of my driver's license.
"I've never seen anyone do that
before," I told her. "Yeah, they just started doing
this," she replied. "Weird!" I thought. Weird. And
creepy. I decided to do a bit of research on all of this. More...
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December 19, 2006
The official narrative of the Iraq War is that our forces are fighting
there in order to defeat global terrorism and to build a shining
example of democracy in the Middle East – the sight of which will
cause every Muslim to want to embrace our system of government. The
truth, however, is that the Iraq War is a case of empire building. We
are in that country in order to secure one of the world's largest oil
reserves, and to bring under our control a geo-politically significant
piece of land.
Our military has constructed fourteen permanent military bases in
Iraq, with the obvious intention of maintaining a long-term military
presence in the region. In fact, the phrase "Iraq War" is
now very much a misnomer. We won the war back in 2003, when our
soldiers captured Baghdad. We are now in a process of occupation. The
question is not whether or not we can win the war, but whether we can
continue to occupy Iraq successfully. More...
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by Zoltan Abraham
December 6, 2006
"The wrong war, at the wrong place, at
the wrong time, and with the wrong enemy," said Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff Omar Bradley famously in 1951, in response to
proposals to escalate the Korean War [1]. Democratic presidential
candidate John Kerry echoed this phrase during his ill-fated 2004 run,
after getting campaign advice from former President Bill Clinton. His
rival, President George W. Bush, attacked him bitterly for those
words, claiming that Kerry was showing bad leadership and a lack of
support for the troops.
Whether his repudiation of the invasion and
occupation of Iraq as "the wrong war, at the wrong place, at the
wrong time" hurt or enhanced Kerry's chances in the 2004 race is
hard to tell, because his statement was far too little, far too late.
Kerry had run a campaign of fundamental acceptance of the war, with
the only objection that the war was not being run well. Incompetence
was the problem. Kerry offered to do it better. He did not challenge
the larger framework of the invasion and occupation until just weeks
before the election, which then left him open to the charge of
flip-flopping.
Kerry's approach was fundamentally flawed
because, throughout most of his campaign, he was operating from within
the right-wing frame for the Iraq War. More...
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November 13, 2006
George Bush said that the Republicans took a
thumping on November 7th, and he's right -- they did, big time.
The word "landslide" comes to mind. Nevertheless, the
Democrats went out of their way to be gracious in victory, and there
were some signs that the Republicans would finally try to play nice
with the D's, given the GOP's sudden fall to minority status.
As Nancy Pelosi was having lunch with the President, the media could
not get enough of the sweet talk between the two arch-adversaries.
Reconciliation. Bipartisanship. Looking to the future, rather than
the past. These seemed to be the buzzwords of the moment.
But barely had the lunchtime calories traveled
down to the respective political thighs, before Dubya was already
showing his true colors again, with his customary style of
take-no-prisoners kind of stubbornness. More...
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by Zoltan Abraham
November 9, 2006
The Democrats have truly swept the nation,
from Congress, to governorships, to local legislative races. Karl Rove
has failed. For the first time in twelve years, the conservative
machinery could not deliver.
The Democrats have two years now to make good
on the trust they have been given by the voters. They must not merely
relish their sweep - they must continue sweeping; that is to say,
undoing the evil brought about the GOP, and building an equitable
nation for all. How? Here are my suggestions: More...
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November 8, 2006
I must confess that the 2004 election demoralized
me deeply. Three election cycles had been stolen by the GOP, with full
media collaboration. The Republicans were consolidating their hold on
voter fraud, and I was sure that in the next cycle, 2006, they would
merely tighten their control of Congress. I started to withdraw from
politics and to focus on other attention-worthy aspects of life.
As Election Day 2006 was approaching, I feared
the worst. But I had the nagging feeling that I should volunteer so that
at least I could say that I tried, in my own small way, to oppose the
unstoppable Republican juggernaut. So I found myself at the local
Democratic headquarters at 7:00am on November 7th. More...
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September 28, 2005
Liberals keep saying that the Iraq War is a
disaster, that the US has already lost. But the reality is that the
Iraq War is going just fine. That is to say, fine for the Neocons who
have orchestrated it. They are getting exactly what they want from
this war.
What is that? Let’s take a look. More...
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September 2, 2005
In the old days of empire building, the conquering race often resorted
to genocide. Kill, kill, kill – until the recalcitrant population
was eliminated, or reduced to manageable proportions. But such crude
tactics are no longer appealing in today’s PR-conscious,
TV-image-driven world. Pictures of slaughter tend to disquiet the
otherwise sufficiently programmed middle-class consumers. Just look at
what happened to the Serbs who engaged in ethnic cleansing. Court
dates, the Hague... Not good.
No. Today’s empire builders are much more refined when it comes to
killing on a large scale. The key, as with any attempt at the perfect
crime, is not to appear to be the culprit. The empire builders of our
age have, indeed, gotten good at covering their tracks. More...
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Satire
July 15, 2005
The Harry Potter saga continues, and the anger of
the American Right is aroused once more. They hate Harry Potter. But
why? More...
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July 9, 2005
Last November I wrote an article called “Domestic Violence and
Our National Policy,” in which I drew a point-by-point comparison
between the traits of a wife-batterer and the behavior of the Bush
administration. If we look at recent political events in light of this
comparison, we will see that the United States, indeed the entire
planet, is in greater danger right now than ever before. More...
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July 4, 2005
The Fourth is here, which means that French kissing is out, at
least for today. Couples should Freedom-kiss instead. Or, to be more
accurate, we should be kissing our freedoms good-bye.
In 1776, a bunch of wealthy white guys got together to tell King
George III to take a hike because he was trampling on their rights. On
July 4th, they published the Declaration of Independence,
in which they listed the ways in which the King had violated human
rights. Eventually, after a bloody war (and significant assistance
from the French), the Declaration of Independence led to the creation
of the United States – a country whose Constitution shows a profound
commitment to upholding the rights of all people (well, only white
males at first, but in time the definition of human was expanded to
include minorities, and even women).
Perhaps we should be concerned when we find that our own government
today is perpetrating some of the same abuses that the writers of the
Declaration of Independence had ascribed to King George. More...
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May 12, 2005
I thought I was unshockable by now. But no. The Bush Fish has
shocked me. The Bush Fish, as you might guess, is a bumper sticker
with the word Bush written inside the fish. Above are the words “One
nation,” and below, “under God.” As a Christian, I could not be
more offended. More...
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February 28, 2005
I am a Christian. My faith is an important part of my life. However, I do not
want the government of my country to get entangled with religion. Why not? For
five reasons. More...
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February 22, 2005
The word "berserker" has been used to describe a soldier who fights
merely to kill – to satiate his own bloodlust. Soldiers can succumb to this
condition especially after experiencing sustained military conflict.
Some would claim that in the closing phase of World War II, the United State
military entered the berserker state of mind. More...
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February 19, 2005
By the 1980’s, sex scandals involving the abuse of minors by Roman
Catholic priests had entered the consciousness of the American public.
The image of the Church was tarnished by these scandals, to be sure.
But the Church was not subjected to the perfect storm of media
criticism that came to characterize much of the year 2002.
Nothing becomes a media scandal, let alone a major scandal, unless the
media moguls so decide. During the Clinton administration, we saw
gargantuan scandals arising out of relatively minor matters.
Throughout the first term of the Bush administration, we witnessed a
great many potential scandals of great significance come and go,
without the media so much as batting an eye.
So one must wonder why the media movers and shakers decided in 2002
that the Catholic Church must be brought to its knees? More...
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February 13, 2005
George Lakoff, the influential cognitive scientist, has written
extensively about why the Republicans are able to dominate political
discourse in the United States. Republican ideas are in the ascendancy
because the right has mastered the art of framing. They are able to
present the issues and conduct the debates on their terms.
Progressives have not done well in this regard. Instead of creating
their own frames, progressives, says Lakoff, tend simply to argue
against conservatives within the context of the right-wing frames,
which only serves to reinforce the conservative ideas.
But I would contend that progressive thought flounders on an even more
fundamental level. More important even than frames is one’s
narrative – the story that helps to define the identity of a group
of people, giving them a sense of place in history, a sense of
belonging in the present, a sense of hope for the future.
What is our story as progressives? What is our narrative? More...
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Satire
January 23, 2005
Due to the threat of terrorist attacks, the Bush administration has
decided to move the Iraqi elections froward from January 30th to
January 4th. For security reasons, the Iraqi elections were held in
Norfolk, Virginia. Two men, John Smith and Jeff Jones, were handpicked
by the Bush administration to vote on behalf of the Iraqi people,
because of their close cultural ties to that country. Since Mr. Smith
and Mr. Jones voted on Diebold electronic voting machines, they were
able to cast 3 million votes for the candidate selected by President
Bush to lead Iraq into an unprecedented age of democracy and economic
prosperity. Zero votes were registered for the opposition candidates,
an indication of the exuberant zeal with which the Iraqi people have
embraced the benign, humanitarian invasion of their country now
unfolding. More...
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January 23, 2005
Black Tuesday is over. Black Thursday has come and gone. Dubya is King
once more. So now what? Where do liberals go from here? Let’s look
at a few ideas. More...
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January 18, 2005
A new world order is being created today, one that is dividing the
population of our planet into two sections -- a wealthy few, who
control an increasingly larger proportion of the world's wealth and
resources, and the rest of humanity, who have less and less, who live
and labor under conditions increasingly more inhuman, often amounting
to nothing less than slavery.
Nations states are losing their sovereignty to international
corporations, who have risen above legal systems and governmental
structures, emerging as the new Empire, the new rulers of the world.
Through structures, such as the World Trade Organization, their
authority reaches ever further. Their stranglehold over the planet
tightens every year. More...
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Satire
January 17, 2005
Alright, lefties, let’s quit our whining and look at how we can
really recapture the hearts and mind of Red America. But first, who is
Red America? The South vs. the Coasts? Look at some maps that show the
population concentration in the 2004 presidential election. What
you’ll see is that John Kerry won every major city, even in the
South. He lost everywhere in the country-side. The real divide in
America is not between the South and the Coasts, but between the city
and the country. And, as we know, American moral values are cultivated
especially in the country.
So how can the liberals recapture the hearts and minds of the
country-side? More...
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January 15, 2005
What are the basic ingredients of democracy? A lot of things. Among
them is the practice of free and fair elections – which seems to be
in short supply now-a-days in the good old US of A. Another pretty
important element of democracy is the concept of checks and balances.
Among checks and balances is the somewhat significant idea that
government should be limited in its ability to arrest and imprison its
citizens – or anyone it might come in contact with.
The limitation on arrest and imprisonment is called due process. But
what exactly is due process? More...
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November 28, 2004
Back in the 1950’s most of the wealth of our nation was held by the
middle-class, who made up the majority of the population. Sounds
reasonable, right? Well, not if you’re a corporation. Not if
you’re a super-rich guy who wants even more. So how can all that
wealth be transferred from the middle-class to the dirt rich? Let me
count the ways! More...
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November 26, 2004
I have been saying for some time now that the Bush administration is
exhibiting all of the characteristics of a wife-batterer. National policy,
both domestic and foreign, is being formulated with the mindset of a domestic
abuser. Let’s look at some of these traits: More...
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September 28, 2004
The images haunt me. An Iraqi woman wails in front of the rubble of
her home, lamenting the death of her loved ones, crying out for
Allah’s vengeance upon the Americans. Her screams are juxtaposed
with a calm, measured, eloquent Rumsfeld describing the precision, the
humanity with which the Coalition of the Willing hits its targets. A
dead Iraqi baby is placed into a truck full of corpses. Her father
yells at the camera, demanding to know why his daughter had to die. More...
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January, 2001
On Monday, November 30, 1999, I began to awaken. I got home late
from work that night. Only then did I find out what had been happening
all day in Seattle. More...
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"Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and
your government when it deserves it."
-- Mark Twain
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