Top Ny Times News

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 10 May 2013

Rick Perry Goes To The Head Of The Class To Help Set Right-Wing Anti-Intellectual Higher Education Policy

Posted on 14:00 by Ashish Chaturvedi

It's been a very sad thing for any state that winds up with a GOP/Tea Party-controled legislature, especially when they also have the governor's mansion. Most of them are the states with the worst economic results, worst education results, worst health results and worst environmental results. I don't want to get into a chicken or egg debate about it now. I just want to go beyond the discussion we started last night about the North Carolina Republicans'-- both the Tea Party legislature and Puppet Pat the Governor-- War Against Education... and beyond Alison Brito's useful list yesterday of the the 5 worst teabagger ideas coming out of the North Carolina legislature. Other states are in just as bad shape.

Take Texas... please. We all know more than anyone needs to about their crackpot drugged-up governor, Rick Perry-- a walking wounded, deranged closet case. One of the most severely gerrymandered states in the country, Texas has a House with 95 Republicans and 55 Democrats and a Senate with 19 Republicans and 12 Democrats. Rick Perry and some cronies from Texas A&M have come up with a 7-step program to turn higher education in that state into a corporate joke. They want to gear universities-- not just the crap schools like Texas A&M and Southwest Baptist Theological Seminary but serious universities like the University of Texas in Austin-- to serve the needs of Big Business. Perry and his rabidly anti-intellectual Board of Regents would like to turn the state higher education system into a giant low-budget trade school.

This isn't going over all that well, not even in the state legislature, where many of the members are proud of Texas' higher education system and are responsive to Texans who are up in arms over Perry's proposals. Machree Gibson, chairman of the Texas Exes, UT's mammoth alumni association: "I just don't understand why they want to dumb down a public institution of this magnitude." What Perry's brand of "reformers" have done is to divide up all professors based on how much money they bring into the school. The categories sound like the way Republicans rate campaign donors. If professors are setting up costly research labs that don't result in quarterly returns, they're considered laggards. Only hucksters can thrive in this kind of atmosphere.

Justin Pope put together a lot of valuable background material for HuffPo back in February:
Public research universities, with a mission of both teaching and research, date back 150 years. They produce 70 percent of scientists, engineers and physicians, and two-thirds of U.S. campus research-- the value of which isn't always obvious in advance. "During the Second World War, it was radar and atomic energy that came off of these campuses that saved us," said James Duderstadt, the former University of Michigan president who helped lead a recent National Research Council study of the sector. Before the war, those technologies "looked like the most abstract, frill research."

But lately these globally ambitious institutions have strained against the reins of what some call an anachronistic system of state control and funding. Duderstadt calls them "critically endangered." Another recent report, by the National Science Foundation, found state support for the 101 major public research universities fell 20 percent between 2002 and 2010.

Those institutions are "the backbone of this nation's knowledge economy," Duderstadt said. "If the states turn their back on them, they're committing a grievous act against the national interest."


UT-Austin, the flagship of the 216,000-student UT system, is among the biggest With more than 52,000 students, the university has 3,166 faculty, plus more than 10,000 professional staff. About 10,000 students also have jobs in labs, classrooms, libraries and elsewhere on campus. Recent discoveries range from lithium-ion batteries to the two largest black holes in the universe. It's also spun off hundreds companies and helped make Austin a tech hub, which in turn benefits the university. On Thursday, UT announced a $50 million gift to establish a medical school from the family foundation of Michael Dell and his wife. Dell dropped out of UT-Austin to start his namesake computer company in Austin.

Thirty years ago, Texas taxpayers funded more than half the university budget. This year, the state contributes about 13 percent, or $295 million.

In-state tuition at public research universities has increased 43 percent beyond inflation over the last decade, to more than $15,000. UT-Austin remains considerably less-- around $10,000 per year.

Yet while state funding cuts have been devastating, Duderstadt says universities and their growing legions of well-paid administrators haven't always helped their cause with the public. "They're just totally deaf, dumb and blind on how the crazy things they do on campuses convince the American people that they don't have any ability to control costs," he said.

In Texas, an ascendant group of critics with Perry's ear thinks the flagship university has lost sight of a key mission: affordable and efficient undergraduate education.

"We've gone too far in the direction of research at the expense of our students," said Thomas Lindsay, director of the Center for Higher Education at the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a think-tank with ties to several of Perry's regents. He cites a (much-disputed) study arguing the research of most UT-Austin faculty isn't top quality, and that reassigning some research-focused faculty to teach more could halve tuition. That, he says, could also decrease class sizes and boost completion rates.

In fact, most of UT-Austin's endeavors beyond basic teaching are supported by non-state sources-- $700 million annually in outside research funding and $300 million in philanthropy.

Still, in spots on campus one could wonder if this isn't more car than Texas taxpayers need. The law school's faculty is highly regarded in academia-- and very well paid. But could it use fewer theorists, and more practitioners? What about the seven museums, like The Harry Ransom Center, which has spent millions buying literary collections like Jack Kerouac's notebooks, and recently spent $30,000 to preserve dresses worn by Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind?

Powell, the regents chairman, insists he supports UT-Austin's research mission and values its reputation.

But "we are a public institution that (is) paid for by the citizens of the state of Texas," Powell said. Texas has "a lot of students who cannot afford an institution that is a very high-priced, Ivy League-type institution."

In the broader debate, the two sides are separated by a common language-- terms all agree are worthwhile in the abstract, but which carry associations that delineate a cultural divide.

Does "academic research" call first to mind tweedy professors expounding on poetry in journals nobody reads? Or scientists curing diseases and spinning off businesses?

Is "productivity" common-sense practices for cutting through academic inefficiency and lowering costs? Or code for replacing the nuanced work of nurturing young minds with crude, assembly-line widget-making?

In "affordability," some hear a self-evident, primary mission for any university. Others hear "cheap."

Affordability is a top Perry priority, and he's pushed Texas universities to offer a complete four-year degree for just $10,000-- about what UT-Austin currently charges per year.

Re-elected with strong Tea Party support to a third term in 2010, Perry has appointed all 60 regents of Texas' six public higher education systems, including UT and Texas A&M. He and his regents have encouraged Texas public universities to expand enrollment and online offerings.

But critics say they're destroying quality for quantity. Early alarm bells rang with a push from Perry's Texas A&M regents for business-like metrics for faculty productivity, reporting how much they "made" or "lost" for the university. Worries grew when the UT board briefly hired a consultant with ties to the Texas Public Policy Foundation who was openly skeptical of academic research's value.

So when Powell made his "Chevy Bel Air" comments, shortly after becoming chairman in February, 2011, the car metaphor struck a nerve.


The Texas Exes president e-mailed alumni warning "the mission and core values of our beloved University are under attack." A high-profile group of state business and political leaders called the Texas Coalition for Excellence in Higher Education was launched, roiled by a study from another conservative group arguing that UT-Austin could get by with one-third its current faculty if they taught more efficiently.

Last spring, a fight over tuition became a litmus test for competing visions of the university-- and even higher education itself.

Perry let it be known that despite sharp state funding cuts, UT-Austin shouldn't ask to increase tuition the coming year. On campus, many saw the move as a first step toward imposing a $10,000 degree.

The feeling was a university offering a $10,000 degree couldn't be great. It couldn't be a Cadillac.

Powers breached protocol, requesting a 2.6 percent in-state increase anyway. The board turned him down.

"It was viewed as a personal attack on the campus," said Alan Friedman, a longtime faculty senate leader. More than a swipe at the faculty's job performance, he said, "it's that they don't like the job at all. It's a right-wing backlash against higher education, especially the notion that campuses like this one are controlled by liberals."

But the defeat was an Alamo moment-- a tactical loss that galvanized supporters. Even students saw a tuition freeze as a threat to the prestige of their degrees. When reports surfaced the board wanted Powers out, a Facebook group called "I Stand With Bill Powers" surged past five-figure membership.

Then, the University of Virginia fiasco unfolded. Powers declined to comment, and Powell said he hadn't closely followed what happened there. But by every other account, events in Charlottesville were followed breathlessly in Austin. Virginian's Sullivan was a longtime UT professor and administrator, and widely admired.

If the board wanted Powers out, it reconsidered the PR ramifications. His job now appears safe, though many here still think UT-Austin's reputation remains threatened.

Many observers share Friedman's view that the debates over tuition and research are really about something broader.

"There seems to be a political move, and it's not just in Texas, away from the classical mission of the university-- cultivation of the mind and pursuit of knowledge-- to a concept of a public university as sort of a job corps or a trade school," said Peter Flawn, who came to Texas more than a half-century ago and was UT-Austin's president from 1979 to 1985, then again in 1997-98.

In an interview in his office in the geological sciences building, Flawn, now 86, recounted UT's efforts to build a world-class university in a state with little history of generously supporting education.

Far-thinking governors, like John Connally and Bill Clements, working with UT loyalists in the Texas legislature, grasped the potential of a great research university to diversify Texas away from a boom-and-bust commodities economy, Flawn said. Donors like Dallas investor Peter O'Donnell, who has given more than $135 million to the university, helped retain world-class researchers who would otherwise have been poached away.

"It takes a long time to build a first-class university," Flawn said. "You wonder, how long would it take to destroy one?"


Campus liberals aren't the only critics. Neither the Texas Exes nor the Texas Coalition lacks Republicans. O'Donnell, a state GOP stalwart, has publicly criticized Perry's higher education priorities. Republican former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who previously headed Texas A&M, seemed to do the same in a speech in November, calling the contention that research comes at the expense of teaching "a profound misunderstanding of how universities become great and stay great, and a profound misunderstanding of the higher education enterprise as a whole."

Southern Methodist University political scientist Calvin Jillson says UT grads of both parties occupy an "urban elite" who see UT-Austin's benefits in their communities. But Perry's base among Texas' rural residents sees more "value in a `3Rs' preparation for the job market."

Recent events follow a pattern of "anti-intellectual populism that has assaulted UT regularly over the school's history," Jillson said.

"Political authorities find the faculty and their research interests to be counter to the political culture of the state and therefore dangerous," he said. "The question is always: `Is this what we're paying for with our tax money?'"

Gibson, the first black woman to head the Texas Exes alumni group, sees the dispute through the lens of a growing and diversifying Texas.


"There are a lot of alumni that are upset that their kids can't get in," she said. "They've been coming here for generations. But there are so many more people in the state of Texas now." She also sees a racial element, with some resenting the university's diversity efforts, notably its recent defense of racial preferences in admissions before the U.S. Supreme Court.

Lindsay, from the Texas Public Policy Foundation, says lower-income students get grants, and high-income kids can afford to pay. But "it's the middle class that's being squeezed." He adds, "none of us wants to compromise one bit" on UT's research mission. But he doesn't think making some faculty teach one extra class does so.

"To somehow say if we do that, we're somehow not going to discover a cure for cancer, I think they get a little hyperbolic about it," Lindsay said.
Rick Scott (R-FL) and Scott Walker (R-WI)-- not to mention Puppet Pat (R-NC)-- are also driven by the same intense hatred of students and professors that drives Rick Perry, and are also eager to wreck their states' higher education systems. Conservatives, of course, have never seen any sense in teaching the children of the working class liberal arts-- just stuff that makes them better cogs in the corporate wheel. The idea of teaching the masses to think for themselves is nothing short of horrifying to a conservative. In fact, to conservatives this kind of thing is positively anathema to their world view of what public universities should be doing:



Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in higher education, public education, Rick Perry, Texas | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Another Manifestation Of The GOP Civil War: Utah's 2 Republicans Parted Ways On Immigration Reform
    Mike Lee & Orrin Hatch What's a Republicano to do? The racist, hate-filled base they've nurtured equates comprehensive immigrat...
  • How Badly Will Obama's Chained CPI Error Hurt Democrats In The Midterms?
    Social Security has long been the third rail of American politics. It has generally kept Republican predators, fearful of losing their caree...
  • Sunday Classics (double) preview: Enter the bird-catcher; exit Sir Colin Davis
    Colin Davis (1927-2013) at home by Ken As I must have mentioned, one of my core LPs in the early getting-to-know-music stage was a budget Se...
  • New York GOP: Cruzin' For A Bruisin'
    I know that the New York State Republican Party had a golden age... but it wasn't during the 20 years I lived in New York-- nor in the d...
  • New Dems Vs Actual Democrats-- Chained CPI
    The Blue Dogs are a discredited, spent force, essentially wiped out in the Great Blue Dog Apocalypse of 2010 when Democratic voters in their...
  • Mark Smith, Democratic Candidate For Pennsylvania Lt Governor, Rocks... In More Ways Than One
    I've only been to the Bahamas once; it was to visit the legendary, now shuttered, Compass Point Studios in Nassau, where one of our band...
  • EMILY's List Up It Its Old Tricks Again... Trying To Slip In A Corrupt Conservative Over A Progressive Because They Like The Plumbing's Better
    Except when it's bad women candidates like Michele Bachmann, Colleen Hanbusa or Katherine Clark  I got into a friendly Twitter argument ...
  • "Free" Trade-- Another Way For Conservatives To Undermine Democracy
    In the closing to his brilliant book, The Fifteen Biggest Lies About The Economy , Joshua Holland takes on the misleading notion of 'fre...
  • Will Hanabusa's Political Cowardice on LGBT Issues Come Into Play In The Hawai'i Senate Race?
    Last week we took a look at a contentious Senate race shaping up in Hawai'i between progressive incumbent Brian Schatz and more conserv...
  • The new Men's Wearhouse slogan: "You're going to look like crap probably, but now that the old guy's history, see if we care"
    "You're going to like the way you look. I guarantee it." by Ken Ah, so that's what it was. It seems that in the three mont...

Categories

  • 1848 (1)
  • 1896 presidential election (1)
  • 2012 congressional races (2)
  • 2014 congressional races (34)
  • 2014 gubernatorial races (8)
  • 2016 presidential race (6)
  • 9/11 (1)
  • Aaron Schock (1)
  • abortions (1)
  • accountability (1)
  • ACLU (1)
  • Adam Schiff (3)
  • affirmative action (3)
  • Afghanistan (3)
  • Afghanistan War spending (2)
  • Agriculture Committee (2)
  • Al Kamen (3)
  • Alabama (1)
  • Alan Grayson (19)
  • Alaska (4)
  • Alito (3)
  • Allen West (1)
  • Allyson Schwartz (3)
  • Amnesty International (1)
  • Andrew Hounshell (10)
  • Andrew Maguire (1)
  • Andy Borowitz (2)
  • Ann Callis (1)
  • Ann Coulter (2)
  • Ann Kirkpatrick (1)
  • Ann McLane Kuster (3)
  • Anthony Kennedy (1)
  • Anthony Weiner (1)
  • anti-Semitism (2)
  • Antonin Scalia (2)
  • Appalachian Trail (1)
  • Apple (2)
  • Arizona (6)
  • Arkansas (2)
  • arms trade (1)
  • Army Wives (1)
  • Art Pope (2)
  • Asa Hutchinson (1)
  • Ashburn (3)
  • Asheville (2)
  • austerity (7)
  • Ayatollah Khamanei (1)
  • Ayotte (1)
  • Baca (2)
  • bankruptcy (1)
  • banks (1)
  • banksters (5)
  • Barack Obama (2)
  • Barbara Buono (5)
  • Barney Frank (1)
  • Barrow (6)
  • Bartiromo (1)
  • Beethoven (5)
  • Beltway Dems (1)
  • Beltway journalism (1)
  • Berlioz (1)
  • Bernie Sanders (12)
  • Beyonce (1)
  • Big Oil (7)
  • Big Pharma (1)
  • bigotry (7)
  • Bill Johnson (1)
  • Bill McKibben (2)
  • Bill Moyers (1)
  • bipartisanship (3)
  • Blanche Lincoln (1)
  • bloggers (1)
  • Blue America (1)
  • Blue Dogs (5)
  • Bob Graham (1)
  • Bob Lord (1)
  • Bob Mankoff (3)
  • Bob Scheer (1)
  • Boehner (4)
  • Boehnerland (1)
  • Boston Marathon (6)
  • Brian Schatz (7)
  • bribery (3)
  • Brownback (1)
  • Bruno Walter (3)
  • Bryan Fischer (1)
  • Buck McKeon (11)
  • budget cuts (3)
  • budget deficits (1)
  • Burgess (1)
  • Bush library (1)
  • Bush Regime law-breaking (2)
  • Bush trade policies (1)
  • Bush v. Gore (1)
  • CA-25 (2)
  • CA-45 (1)
  • Calhoun (1)
  • California (7)
  • campaign finance reform (1)
  • Canada (1)
  • Cantor (3)
  • Carl Levin (1)
  • Carl Sciortino (4)
  • Carol Shea-Porter (1)
  • Catholic Church (1)
  • CDC (1)
  • Cecil Bothwell (1)
  • certifiably insane Republicans (2)
  • Chaffetz (1)
  • Chamber of Commerce (1)
  • Charlie Crist (3)
  • Chellie Pingree (1)
  • Cheri Bustos (1)
  • Chicago (2)
  • Chile (1)
  • Chimpy the Prez (1)
  • China (4)
  • Chocola (1)
  • Choice (3)
  • Chris Christie (8)
  • Chris Hayes (7)
  • Chris Matthews (1)
  • Chris Van Hollen (1)
  • CISPA (5)
  • civil rights (4)
  • Clarence Thomas (1)
  • class war (1)
  • clean energy (1)
  • climate (1)
  • climate change (5)
  • Club for Growth (1)
  • Coal (1)
  • Coffman (1)
  • Colbert (6)
  • Collin Peterson (1)
  • Colorado (1)
  • comedy (1)
  • Congress (1)
  • Congressional Budget Office (1)
  • congressional ethics (1)
  • conservadems (5)
  • Conservative Consensus (2)
  • conspiracy theories (1)
  • Constitution of the U.S. (1)
  • contest (3)
  • Corey Robin (1)
  • corporate governance (1)
  • corporate welfare (2)
  • corrupt Democrats (1)
  • Cory Booker (3)
  • Cory Gardner (1)
  • cost of Iraq war (1)
  • courageousness (2)
  • cowardly Dems (1)
  • crack use by Republicans (1)
  • crazy extremists (3)
  • crime and punishment (1)
  • Cuba (1)
  • Culture of Corruption (13)
  • Cyprus (4)
  • DADT (1)
  • Dan Maffei (1)
  • Dana Milbank (4)
  • Darrell Issa (7)
  • David Bowie (1)
  • David Cameron (1)
  • David Chase (1)
  • David Cicilline (2)
  • David Frum (1)
  • David Gill (1)
  • David Neiwert (2)
  • David Vitter (1)
  • Daylin Leach (13)
  • DC (1)
  • DCCC (24)
  • DEA (1)
  • Dean Baker (1)
  • Debbie Wasserman Schultz (6)
  • DEBKA (1)
  • debt ceiling (1)
  • Dede Scozzafava (1)
  • deficits (1)
  • DeMint (2)
  • Democrats (1)
  • derivatives (2)
  • DesJarlais (1)
  • Dianne Feinstein (1)
  • Diaz-Balart (1)
  • Dick Armey (2)
  • Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (1)
  • Difference between 2 parties (1)
  • digital dementia (1)
  • disappointment with Obama (1)
  • Dolce & Gabbana (1)
  • DOMA (5)
  • domestic spying (8)
  • domestic terrorism (1)
  • Don Young (1)
  • Donna Edwards (1)
  • DREAM Act (1)
  • drones (4)
  • DSCC (4)
  • E. J. Dionne Jr. (2)
  • E.W. Jackson (1)
  • economic bubbles (1)
  • economic inequality (4)
  • economic sabotage (1)
  • Ed Markey (4)
  • Ed Marksberry (1)
  • Education (2)
  • Edward Snowden (4)
  • Egypt (5)
  • Eisenhower (1)
  • election integrity (1)
  • election theft (1)
  • electronic surveillance (2)
  • Elijah Cummings (1)
  • Eliot Engel (1)
  • elites (2)
  • Elizabeth Warren (8)
  • Ellen Corbett (1)
  • Elvis Costello (1)
  • EMILY's List (5)
  • eminent domain (1)
  • energy policy (1)
  • Enron (1)
  • environment (7)
  • EPA (2)
  • Eric Garcetti (3)
  • estate tax (1)
  • Etzioni (1)
  • European Union (3)
  • Evangelicals (1)
  • evolution (2)
  • extraterrestrials (1)
  • Ezra Klein (2)
  • FAA (1)
  • fake moderates (1)
  • Far Right (1)
  • Farm Bill (3)
  • fascism (5)
  • fast food (1)
  • FDR (1)
  • FEC (1)
  • federal regulatory agencies (3)
  • filibuster (2)
  • financial reform (1)
  • financial-services industry (1)
  • Fincher (2)
  • firefighters (1)
  • Florida (15)
  • Food Network (2)
  • food safety (1)
  • food stamps (3)
  • Fox Noise (2)
  • fracking (1)
  • France (1)
  • Frank Lautenberg (2)
  • Frank Luntz (1)
  • Frank Pallone (2)
  • Fred Upton (2)
  • free trade (3)
  • freedom (1)
  • FreedomWorks (1)
  • freshmen (1)
  • fundraising (2)
  • Gabby Giffords (1)
  • Gail Collins (1)
  • Gallego (1)
  • Garamendi (2)
  • Garrett (3)
  • Gary Miller (2)
  • Gatsby (1)
  • gay equality (5)
  • gay Republicans (10)
  • gender gap (1)
  • genocide (1)
  • Georg Solti (2)
  • George Carlin (1)
  • George Steinbrenner (1)
  • George Szell (1)
  • Georgia (6)
  • Germany (1)
  • Glenn Beck (1)
  • Glenn Greenwald (3)
  • Global Peace Index (1)
  • global warming (2)
  • Gloria Negrete McLeod (2)
  • GOP homophobia (5)
  • GOP racism (4)
  • Grassley (1)
  • Greece (2)
  • Greed and Selfishness (1)
  • Greg Sargent (1)
  • Greg Walden (2)
  • Guantanamo (2)
  • Guatemala (1)
  • gun control (15)
  • Haaretz (1)
  • Hanabusa (5)
  • Handel (2)
  • Harry Reid (1)
  • Hate Talk Radio (1)
  • Hawaii (5)
  • HBO (1)
  • health care (3)
  • health care reform (1)
  • health insurance (1)
  • healthy food (2)
  • Heather Mizeur (1)
  • Heidi Heitkamp (1)
  • Heritage Foundation (2)
  • higher education (3)
  • Hill (The) (1)
  • Hillary Clinton (3)
  • Hispanic voters (3)
  • History Channel (1)
  • homophobia (8)
  • Hong Kong (1)
  • hospitals (1)
  • House Agriculture Committee (1)
  • House Financial Services Committee (3)
  • House of Lords (1)
  • Howard Ahmanson (1)
  • Howard Dean (1)
  • Huffington Post (1)
  • hunger (1)
  • Hypocrisy (2)
  • Ian Welsh (1)
  • Iceland (1)
  • IL-13 (1)
  • IL-17 (1)
  • Illinois (3)
  • immigration (34)
  • income disparity (1)
  • infrastructure (1)
  • Inhofe (1)
  • Inland Empire (1)
  • internalized homophobia (1)
  • Internet (2)
  • Iowa (1)
  • IQ (1)
  • Ira Glass (1)
  • Iran (4)
  • Iraq War (1)
  • IRS (3)
  • Israel (4)
  • Italy (3)
  • Jack Eichenbaum (1)
  • Jack Kingston (2)
  • James Dobson (1)
  • James Surowiecki (1)
  • Jamie Oliver (1)
  • Jane Jacobs (1)
  • Japan (1)
  • Jared Huffman (1)
  • Jay Stamper (9)
  • Jay-Z (1)
  • Jeanne Shaheen (1)
  • Jeff Flake (4)
  • Jeff Merkley (1)
  • Jeff Sessions (2)
  • Jeffrey Sachs (1)
  • Jeffrey Toobin (2)
  • Jennifer Brunner (1)
  • Jennifer Garrison (1)
  • Jerry Nadler (2)
  • Jim Cooper (1)
  • Jim DeMint (1)
  • Jim Graves (5)
  • Jim Himes (2)
  • Jim McDermott (1)
  • Jimmy Carter (1)
  • Jindal (1)
  • Jobs Bill (1)
  • Joe Barton (3)
  • Joe Conason (2)
  • Joe Manchin (1)
  • Joe McNamara (1)
  • Joe Miller (2)
  • Joe Sestak (1)
  • John Aravosis (1)
  • John Barrow (2)
  • John Birch Society (1)
  • John Campbell (1)
  • John Conyers (1)
  • John Cornyn (1)
  • John Delaney (1)
  • John Fleming (2)
  • John Hanger (2)
  • John Kline (3)
  • John Nichols (1)
  • John Paul Stevens (1)
  • John Roberts (2)
  • John Shimkus (1)
  • Jon Vickers (2)
  • Jordan (1)
  • Josef Krips (3)
  • Joseph Crowley (2)
  • Joseph E. Stiglitz (1)
  • Joshua Holland (3)
  • Julian Assange (1)
  • Justin Amash (2)
  • Kansas (1)
  • Karl Boehm (2)
  • Keith Ellison (5)
  • Ken Calvert (1)
  • Ken Cuccinelli (5)
  • Ken Sanders (1)
  • Kentucky (2)
  • Kevin McCarthy (1)
  • Kevin Strouse (1)
  • Keystone XL Pipeline (6)
  • Kibbe (1)
  • Kirsten Gillibrand (1)
  • Klaus Tennstedt (1)
  • Kobach (1)
  • Koch (3)
  • Koch Industries (2)
  • Kolbe (2)
  • Korea (1)
  • Kyrsten Sinema (3)
  • L.A. Times (1)
  • Labor (1)
  • Lady Gaga (1)
  • Larry Flynt (1)
  • Lawrence O'Donnell Jr. (4)
  • Lawson (1)
  • Leadership (1)
  • Lee Fang (9)
  • Lee Rogers (5)
  • Leonard Bernstein (2)
  • LePage (2)
  • LGBT community (10)
  • LGBT equality (11)
  • Libya (1)
  • lies (1)
  • Limbaugh (1)
  • Lindsey Graham (13)
  • Lipinksi (1)
  • Liszt (1)
  • lobbyists (6)
  • Long Island (2)
  • Los Angeles (5)
  • Lou Vince (3)
  • Louie Gohmert (4)
  • Louisiana (2)
  • Mac Thornberry (1)
  • Macklemore (1)
  • Mad Men (1)
  • Magic Flute (2)
  • Maher (3)
  • Mahler (2)
  • Maine (2)
  • Malcolm Smith (1)
  • Malek (1)
  • Marc Maron (2)
  • Margaret Thatcher (4)
  • Marijuana (2)
  • Mark Begich (5)
  • Mark Foley (1)
  • Mark Kirk (1)
  • Mark Pocan (1)
  • Mark Pryor (2)
  • Mark Sanford (7)
  • marriage equality (10)
  • Martha Robertson (1)
  • Maryland (1)
  • Massachusetts (4)
  • Masterpiece Classic (1)
  • Matheson (4)
  • Matt Cartwright (1)
  • Matt Salmon (2)
  • Max Baucus (1)
  • Max Blumenthal (1)
  • Maxine Waters (1)
  • Mayors Against Illegal Guns (1)
  • McCain (2)
  • McCain's vindictiveness (1)
  • McCaul (1)
  • McClintock (1)
  • McCranky (1)
  • McCrory (2)
  • McDonnell (2)
  • McKeon (4)
  • media (2)
  • medical-industrial complex (1)
  • Medicare (1)
  • Melissa Harris-Perry (2)
  • Menendez (1)
  • Mica (3)
  • Michael Bennet (1)
  • Michael Bloomberg (5)
  • Michael Froman (1)
  • Michaud (1)
  • Michele Bachmann (9)
  • Michelle Nunn (4)
  • Michigan (2)
  • Middle (The) (1)
  • Mike Honda (4)
  • Mike Lee (1)
  • Mike Lux (2)
  • Mike McIntyre (7)
  • Mike Obermueller (1)
  • Mike Rogers (2)
  • Mike Ross (1)
  • military industrial complex (4)
  • minimum wage (2)
  • Minnesota (3)
  • Minutemen (1)
  • misogyny (2)
  • Mississippi (1)
  • Mitch McConnell (5)
  • Modern Family (1)
  • Molly Ivins (1)
  • Montana (1)
  • moral clarity (1)
  • Morning Sedition (2)
  • Morrissey (1)
  • Mozart (10)
  • Municipal Art Society (1)
  • Musharraf (1)
  • Music Business (1)
  • Muslim Brotherhood (1)
  • NAFTA (1)
  • Nan Rich (3)
  • Nanci Griffith (1)
  • Nancy Pelosi (1)
  • national parks (1)
  • National Security (3)
  • Nationals Park (1)
  • Neocons (1)
  • Nevada (1)
  • New Dems (20)
  • New Hampshire (2)
  • New Jersey (11)
  • New York (6)
  • New York Review of Books (1)
  • New York State (2)
  • New York Transit Museum (1)
  • New Yorker (The) (5)
  • Nick Ruiz (11)
  • Norman Solomon (1)
  • North Carolina (10)
  • NRA (17)
  • Nurse Jackie (1)
  • Obama's cabinet (1)
  • Obama's stimulus package (1)
  • Obamacans (1)
  • obesity (2)
  • obstructionist Republicans (12)
  • OccupyWallStreet (1)
  • offshore drilling (1)
  • OH-08 (2)
  • Ohio (5)
  • oil spill (1)
  • Oklahoma (1)
  • Olympia Snowe (1)
  • Orange County (1)
  • Orlando (2)
  • Orrin Hatch (1)
  • Otto Klemperer (3)
  • oversight (1)
  • PA-13 (3)
  • PA-17 (1)
  • Pakistan (1)
  • Palast (1)
  • Palin (2)
  • Pam's House Blend (1)
  • patent reform (1)
  • Patrick Murphy (5)
  • Patsy Keever (1)
  • Paul Broun (6)
  • Paul Clements (2)
  • Paul Kane (2)
  • Paul Krugman (3)
  • Paul Ryan (7)
  • Pennsylvania (7)
  • Pentagon (2)
  • perfidious Republicans (1)
  • Peter King (3)
  • PFAW (2)
  • Phil Gingrey (2)
  • plutocracy (2)
  • polling (1)
  • pollution (2)
  • Pope Francis (3)
  • post office (1)
  • Priebus (1)
  • primaries (6)
  • Pritzker (2)
  • Prop 8 (1)
  • public education (6)
  • Rachel Maddow (13)
  • racism (4)
  • Rafsanjani (1)
  • Rahm Emanuel (1)
  • Rana Husseini (5)
  • Rand Paul (1)
  • rape (5)
  • Raul Grijalva (4)
  • reactionary Democrats (1)
  • regulation (1)
  • Religionist bigotry (3)
  • religious bigotry (2)
  • religious fanatics (2)
  • renewables (1)
  • Renzi (1)
  • Republican brand (1)
  • Republican civil war (15)
  • Republican governors (1)
  • Republican hypocrisy (3)
  • Republican War on Science (2)
  • Republican War on Women (10)
  • retirements (2)
  • Richard and Mildred Loving (1)
  • Richard Mourdock (1)
  • Rick Perlstein (1)
  • Rick Perry (2)
  • Rick Santorum (1)
  • Rick Scott (2)
  • Rick Weiland (2)
  • right-wing bulllies (1)
  • Right-Wing Noise Machine (3)
  • Rivera (1)
  • Rob Ford (1)
  • Rob Portman (2)
  • Rob Zerban (4)
  • Robert Naiman (1)
  • Robert Reich (5)
  • Roberts Court (1)
  • Rodgers and Hammerstein (1)
  • Rohrabacher (2)
  • Ron Barber (3)
  • Ron Paul (2)
  • Ros-Lehtinen (2)
  • Rossini (1)
  • Royce (1)
  • Rubio (11)
  • Rudolf Serkin (1)
  • Rush Holt (2)
  • Russ Feingold (1)
  • Russia (1)
  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg (2)
  • Ryan Lizza (1)
  • same-sex marriage (1)
  • Sandy (2)
  • Sarah Palin- Attack Dog (1)
  • SB 1070 (1)
  • school lunches (1)
  • Schweitzer (1)
  • Science (1)
  • Scott Brown (1)
  • Sean Patrick Maloney (3)
  • secession (1)
  • Seinfeld (1)
  • Senate (1)
  • Senate 2014 (28)
  • Senate 2016 (2)
  • sequester (6)
  • sexism (2)
  • Shameless (1)
  • sheriff (3)
  • Sherrod Brown (1)
  • Simcox (1)
  • Social Security (20)
  • solar energy (2)
  • South Carolina (16)
  • South Dakota (3)
  • Spain (2)
  • special election MA (3)
  • special elections (2)
  • Spitzer (1)
  • Springsteen (1)
  • State Dept (1)
  • Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (2)
  • Stephen Colbert (1)
  • Stephen Lynch (1)
  • Steve Cohen (1)
  • Steve Israel (7)
  • Steve King (5)
  • Steve Stockman (1)
  • stolen valor (1)
  • student loans (6)
  • Sunday Classics (27)
  • Supreme Court (13)
  • Sviatoslav Richter (1)
  • Swalwell (1)
  • Sweden (1)
  • Syria (9)
  • TARP (1)
  • tax havens (1)
  • tax policies (2)
  • tax scofflaws (1)
  • Tea Party (5)
  • teabaggers (5)
  • Ted Cruz (8)
  • Ted Haggard (1)
  • Tennessee (2)
  • terrorism (1)
  • Terry McAuliffe (2)
  • Tesla (1)
  • Texas (4)
  • the nature of conservatism (12)
  • The Sopranos (1)
  • The South (1)
  • ThinkProgress (1)
  • Tim Johnson (2)
  • Tinker (1)
  • tobacco (1)
  • Todd Akin (2)
  • Toledo (1)
  • Tom Coburn (1)
  • Tom Cole (1)
  • Tom Corbett (2)
  • Tom Kean (1)
  • Tony Soprano (1)
  • Toomey (2)
  • Toronto (1)
  • trade policies (4)
  • Trans-Pacific Partnership (1)
  • Trent Franks (1)
  • triangulation (1)
  • Turkey (3)
  • TV Watch (12)
  • twitter (1)
  • U.S. attorneys (1)
  • U.S.-attorney purge (1)
  • UK elections (1)
  • UKIP (1)
  • Umair Haque (1)
  • UN (1)
  • unemployment (3)
  • union-busting (1)
  • unions (1)
  • Urban Gadabout (1)
  • Utah (1)
  • Van Jones (2)
  • violence against women (4)
  • Virginia (5)
  • voter suppression (1)
  • voting records (1)
  • voting rights (7)
  • wacko birds (1)
  • Wagner (4)
  • Wall Street (2)
  • Wall Street bailout (3)
  • Wall Street Journal (1)
  • Wall Street reform (5)
  • war on drugs (1)
  • War on Terror (1)
  • war powers (1)
  • Washington Post (4)
  • water resources (1)
  • Wendy Davis (1)
  • West Virginia (2)
  • Weyrich Lunch (1)
  • WI-1 (4)
  • Wisconsin (4)
  • women's equality (7)
  • work (1)
  • xenophobia (1)
  • Young Republicans (1)
  • youth vote (3)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  July (35)
    • ►  June (150)
    • ▼  May (153)
      • Sunday Classics preview: Colin Davis's surprising ...
      • Israeli pols take the first step toward making the...
      • Joe Manchin-- Best Friend Of King Coal
      • DSCC Getting Its Dream Candidate, Joe Miller, Agai...
      • New Dem Patrick Murphy (FL) Is Asking For A Favor....
      • Back to work
      • A Government Of The Rich, By The Rich And, More Th...
      • Keystone XL Pipeline-- The Coming Catastrophe, Pol...
      • Rob Ford, The Canadian Chris Christie
      • What's Wrong With The Republican Party?
      • "Ballpark bipartisanship," Al Kamen calls it
      • Bronze Age Morals-- Roberto De Mattei Teaches Hatr...
      • Cheri Bustos Wants Help To Fend Off Teabagger Bobb...
      • How The DCCC Is Making Hay Of The GOP Vote To Forc...
      • Obama And Christie Cozy Up To Each Other Again In ...
      • Inequality Grows In Sweden-- And So Do Social Tens...
      • Saluting the president's "star litigatrix"
      • It Wouldn't Be Hard For The NRCC To Defeat A Pack ...
      • Blue America Welcomes Rep. Keith Ellison (D-MN)
      • Lindsey Graham's Homosexuality And... Syria
      • The Woolwich murderer, says Ian Welsh, is "a bad m...
      • Joe Crowley-- Making The Republican Party Look Les...
      • Grassroots Voters Need To Defeat The Wall Street-o...
      • Is Adam Schiff Changing His Tune-- Or Just Playing...
      • What Happens When Voters Just Eliminate The Nihili...
      • Economist Umair Haque Uses Twitter To Dissect Cons...
      • Just hope there's still room to book the Diaper Ma...
      • Buck McKeon's Family Opens A Defense Industry Lobb...
      • Sunday Classics: The young Colin Davis gets off to...
      • Mainstream Republican Conservatives Battle Tea Par...
      • TV Watch: A weary nation wonders, "Is 'Mr. Selfrid...
      • Sean Patrick Maloney: Pond Scum Of The Week
      • Someone Needs To Tell Obama There's A Great Democr...
      • Can The Democrats Retake The House Next Year?
      • Kicking Rich Freeloaders Off Agricultural Welfare
      • Sunday Classics preview: Memorable Mozart from the...
      • Re. the Boy Scouts' "compromise": Compromise with ...
      • Tesla-- I wonder What Libertarians Think Of The Au...
      • Republicans In Congress Hike The Cost Of Education...
      • GMO: No One Is Perfect-- Not Even Elizabeth Warren
      • Remember When Rahm Emanuel Was The Worst Thing Abo...
      • Who wouldn't pony up $12 for a beer imported all t...
      • Self-Loathing Closet Case Lindsey Graham Shafts Th...
      • Too Big To Fail Again
      • Does Your Congressman Want To Embroil The U.S. In ...
      • Tobacco Industry Lobbyists And P.R. Hacks Reinvent...
      • The stock-market "boom" may not be a bubble, but t...
      • Which Georgia Extremist Will Out-Extreme All The O...
      • Chris Christie Still Counting On New Jersey Voters...
      • The Ugly Republican Politics Behind Aid For Oklaho...
      • Stolen Valor-- How Will Mark Kirk Vote?
      • Don't cooks who acknowledge their kitchen bloopers...
      • Not Every Vulnerable Candidate Folds And Joins The...
      • Election Day In L.A.: Eric Garcetti Is The Better ...
      • Keystone XL Pipeline Gets It's Big House Vote Tomo...
      • Is America The Healthiest Country? Not By A Long Shot
      • Reliving the fight to stop the Stop Online Piracy ...
      • The New Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment and Train...
      • Daylin Leach Has Been An Asset For Pennsylvania An...
      • Virginia Has A Sociopath Pushing Its Reactionary A...
      • Who Does Wall Street Own In Congress?
      • What are Boehner and his people doing about this "...
      • Midnight Train To Georgia-- Tbilisi Not Safe For T...
      • Sunday Classics: "Good night, thou false world!" -...
      • Have New Jersey Democrats Finally Found The Right ...
      • Republicans Move To Repay Wall Street For All Thos...
      • TV Watch: "Maron" revisited, following an absolute...
      • How Buck McKeon's Mormonism Played Right Into The ...
      • Republicans Led By John Kline (R-MN) Voted Down El...
      • Arizona Republican Jim Kolbe Is Getting Gay-Marrie...
      • Sunday Classics (double) preview: Enter the bird-c...
      • Justice Stevens's grandkids may not care, but he h...
      • Tea Party Crackpots Shouldn't Be Investigated?
      • Corrupt House Agriculture Committee Slashes Food S...
      • Boehnercare Passes The House
      • Paul Ryan Gets A Letter From A Constituent
      • Rob Portman Has A Shovel And He Keeps Digging That...
      • This Post Is Only For Californians-- Unless You Al...
      • Water, Water Everywhere-- And An Obstructionist Se...
      • Mommy, How Did The Tea Party Start?
      • Fired, shmired -- isn't it time we started having ...
      • What Makes A Democrat Turn Bad When He Gets To Con...
      • New Dems Vs Actual Democrats-- Chained CPI
      • Jay Stamper on Lindsey Graham: "There Is Something...
      • Why Is Buck McKeon Gung-ho To Allow Insurance Comp...
      • A public discussion nudged by Joe Sestak would lik...
      • Is Sabotage A Crime Punishable By Something or Other?
      • McConnell Upset By Working Class Guy In The Senato...
      • What If The DCCC Had A Special Category Of Targets...
      • Sometimes cartoonists tackle seemingly trivial sub...
      • The DCCC's Plague Of New Dem Self-Funders... And W...
      • Will Hanabusa's Political Cowardice on LGBT Issues...
      • If The Oceans Rise 40 Meters, Will Your House Be U...
      • The DCCC's Tighty Whities
      • How Would You Feel If Someone Wrote, "We Need Fewe...
      • Whether in Israel or America, is it time to fight ...
      • More On Vetting Candidates
      • Sunday Classics: What comes after Mozart's and Bee...
      • When Former Guatemala President Efrain RĂ­os Montt ...
      • Remember How Much We Hated Bush's Job-Destroying "...
    • ►  April (148)
    • ►  March (14)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Ashish Chaturvedi
View my complete profile