If ever there was a political event to lay bare the partisan ideologies of the cable news media, the Wisconsin recall was it.
MSNBC was blatantly rooting for Tom Barrett to defeat Gov. Scott Walker, even sending union champion Ed Schultz to cover an event with no apologies for the dog he has in the fight. (Earlier tonight, Chris Matthews even told Schultz that if he wasn't an MSNBC host, he could be head of the AFL-CIO.) When it became clear that Barrett would lose, Schultz looked almost teary eyed. Not long after, the network's contributors immediately began suggesting that this was, in fact, good news for Obama — who, after all, hadn't even set foot in Wisconsin — and began attacking Mitt Romney.
Meanwhile, Fox News was blatantly rooting for Gov. Walker, and the moment it became clear that Walker might win, host Sean Hannity called it "a repudiation of big unions," which did "everything they could do to demonize Scott Walker." Guest Hugh Hewitt then predicted that, five months from now, Romney would follow Walker just "as Reagan followed Thatcher." Fox's Greta Van Susteren later hosted what amounted to a victory celebration for the Republicans.
corplinx wrote:That was a bit of trolling on my part and a commentary on the stupidity of outside interest groups thinking they could unass somebody and that the locals would just let it happen.

Voters in California Appear to Approve Pension Cuts
By IAN LOVETT
Published: June 6, 2012
LOS ANGELES — As Wisconsin residents voted on Tuesday not to recall Gov. Scott Walker — who has become an enemy of labor unions nationwide — two California cities dealt blows of their own to organized labor.
Related
In both San Diego and San Jose, voters appeared to overwhelmingly approve ballot initiatives designed to help balance ailing municipal budgets by cutting retirement benefits for city workers.
Around 70 percent of San Jose voters favored the pension reform measure, with almost 80 percent of precincts reporting. In San Diego, 67 percent had supported a similar pension reform measure, with more than 65 percent of precincts reporting.
“This is really important to our taxpayers,” Chuck Reed, the mayor of San Jose, said Tuesday night. “We’ll get control over these skyrocketing retirement costs and be able to provide the services they are paying for.”
With the recall election less than two days away, federal prosecutors are closing in on Governor Scott Walker, according to veteran political reporter David Shuster, former Attorney General Peg Lautenschlager, and former district attorney Bob Jambois.
In a conference call organized by state Democrats on Saturday evening, June 2, Shuster, Lautenschlager, and Jambois laid out evidence that Walker is a target of a federal investigation.
Wisconsin Democratic Party Communications Director Graeme Zielinski added that there is evidence of wrongdoing after Walker's time as Milwaukee County Executive, and that the investigation includes criminal activity during his time as governor.
Bernadette Gillick was a college freshman in 1988 when she first met Scott Walker. It was spring semester, and she had just transferred to Marquette University. She was assigned a room in O’Donnell Hall (then a women’s dormitory), which she shared with her new roommate, Ruth (not her real name). Ruth was dating Scott Walker, who was 20 at the time, and, according to Bernadette, Ruth was deeply in love with him.
Midway through that spring semester, Bernadette alleges, Ruth found out she was pregnant. She informed her boyfriend, Scott, and initially he was supportive. That support changed to callous indifference for his girlfriend’s predicament after Scott informed his parents of the pregnancy.
Bernadette reports that at this point Scott began denying that he was the father of the baby, and when Ruth said she was considering an abortion, he claimed he didn’t care, as he wasn’t the father anyway
“Governments and unions have an incestuous relationship in this country,” said Libertarian Party Chair Geoffrey J. Neale. “Politicians pass laws forcing millions of government employees to pay union dues while handing out lucrative government employee contracts. The unions pour money into the re-election campaigns of those politicians. Everyday taxpayers and workers are left holding the bag.”
A judge must recuse himself when adjudicating a case where he has a financial interest in one of the parties before him. Libertarians assert that, likewise, a lawmaker who takes campaign donations from contractors, unions or anyone else who profits from taxpayer money should not be allowed to vote for handing out government largesse. Nor should those who profit from government be allowed to donate to political campaigns.
But lawmakers routinely allow this conflict of interest, passing laws to mandate the terms of labor contracts and signing those contracts, rendering them invalid.
A valid contract is one where all interested parties agree to the terms of the contract. When elections can be bought by those who profit from Big Government, the taxpayers have, at best, weak representation. Yet they’re expected to foot the bill.
Anaxagoras wrote:corplinx wrote:That was a bit of trolling on my part and a commentary on the stupidity of outside interest groups thinking they could unass somebody and that the locals would just let it happen.
Just to be clear, there was plenty of outside money on both sides. More of it on Walker's side in fact.
Abdul Alhazred wrote:IMO Walker is a flat out union buster, and I don't consider that a good thing.
Too bad the anti-Walker forces concentrated on name calling and smear tactics rather than making the case for unions.
They didn't merely fail, they didn't even try to win people over.
Nyarlathotep wrote:Abdul Alhazred wrote:IMO Walker is a flat out union buster, and I don't consider that a good thing.
Too bad the anti-Walker forces concentrated on name calling and smear tactics rather than making the case for unions.
They didn't merely fail, they didn't even try to win people over.
No one ever tries to win people over anymore. You win elections these days by getting more of your tribe to the polls than the other guy gets of his tribe.
pillory wrote:jokes aren't funny....seriously thinking......
seriously thinking might be funny....but it's not joke
Abdul Alhazred wrote:IMO Walker is a flat out union buster
corplinx wrote:People saw Walker trying to make public sector workers pay a tiny fraction of their pension contributions
corplinx wrote:Turned out to be democrats wasting government money on unproductive efforts, true to form.
corplinx wrote:It depends on whether you define collective bargaining as the duty for the other party to not be able to say "here's the deal, take it or collectively leave it".
THATS UNION BUSTING, YOU ARENT SUPPSOED TO SAY NO
Nyarlathotep wrote:Abdul Alhazred wrote:IMO Walker is a flat out union buster, and I don't consider that a good thing.
Too bad the anti-Walker forces concentrated on name calling and smear tactics rather than making the case for unions.
They didn't merely fail, they didn't even try to win people over.
No one ever tries to win people over anymore. You win elections these days by getting more of your tribe to the polls than the other guy gets of his tribe. That is accomplished more effectively by smearing the other guys (which, really, is more for the benefit of getting your own tribe pissed off over what those other guys are doing, than getting anyone to turn against the other guys. Because, realistically, people just don't do the latter) than by saying "Vote for us, here are some good reasons why?"
Not the way it should be, but its the way it is.
Abdul Alhazred wrote:If that were not true, there would be no unions in the first place
corplinx wrote:Being able to assemble as a group
.. yadda ...
Abdul Alhazred wrote:corplinx wrote:Being able to assemble as a group
.. yadda ...
The issue of whether the unions in effect have a right to bargain ...
corplinx wrote:democrats wasting government money on unproductive efforts, true to form
DrMatt wrote:If the recall had been successful, would it no longer have beencorplinx wrote:democrats wasting government money on unproductive efforts, true to form
?
Rob Lister wrote:DrMatt wrote:If the recall had been successful, would it no longer have beencorplinx wrote:democrats wasting government money on unproductive efforts, true to form
?
Yes.
DrMatt wrote:Rob Lister wrote:DrMatt wrote:If the recall had been successful, would it no longer have beencorplinx wrote:democrats wasting government money on unproductive efforts, true to form
?
Yes.
So the sincerity of an effort is measured directly by its success, regardless of other circumstances. Got it. A new one for the books...
Rob Lister wrote:DrMatt wrote:Rob Lister wrote:DrMatt wrote:If the recall had been successful, would it no longer have beencorplinx wrote:democrats wasting government money on unproductive efforts, true to form
?
Yes.
So the sincerity of an effort is measured directly by its success, regardless of other circumstances. Got it. A new one for the books...
Who said it was measured by its success? Who said circumstances were notwithstanding?
Let's see, the dems spent money to further a dem agenda and ended up not only wasting the money, but--it would appear--furthering the hindrance of their agenda.
If they had won, would the public money expended-- $-4-$ --be to the benefit of the public? I don't think so, but opinions vary.
DrMatt wrote:Rob Lister wrote:DrMatt wrote:Rob Lister wrote:DrMatt wrote:If the recall had been successful, would it no longer have beencorplinx wrote:democrats wasting government money on unproductive efforts, true to form
?
Yes.
So the sincerity of an effort is measured directly by its success, regardless of other circumstances. Got it. A new one for the books...
Who said it was measured by its success? Who said circumstances were notwithstanding?
Let's see, the dems spent money to further a dem agenda and ended up not only wasting the money, but--it would appear--furthering the hindrance of their agenda.
If they had won, would the public money expended-- $-4-$ --be to the benefit of the public? I don't think so, but opinions vary.
But as quoted by you in directly above, if the effort had been successful, it would not have been democrats wasting public money etc. Which is it?
Rob Lister wrote: Maybe it's the whole negating the negative thing.
DrMatt wrote:Rob Lister wrote: Maybe it's the whole negating the negative thing.
Ah.
A hastily ignored "no longer", I reckon.
Abdul Alhazred wrote:corplinx wrote:Being able to assemble as a group
.. yadda ...
The issue of whether the unions in effect have a right to bargain is separable from whether the particular demands are reasonable in this case. I won't bother about trying to defend the latter, because the present case involves the former.
Governor: You demands are unreasonable SO WE WILL DESTROY YOU.
Unions: OH YEAH?
The Republican anti-union rhetoric is the same collection of half truths as always, and unions used to have a better answer to those than trying to dig up old sexual scandals etc.
Abdul Alhazred wrote:There is no final battle (or solution), corplinx.
Perhaps next time the unions will do a better job of defending their case.
Return to Politics & Social Issues
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 0 guests