Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.
Published on January 22, 2009 By Draginol In Politics

Disclaimer: If you are one of those people who determine who they like based on esoteric political views you should probably not read further and moreover, might want to reconsider your priorities.

For everyone else...

It seems like I'm constantly hearing from liberals how Fox News is just so right wing.  They almost never give examples of what they mean by that.  Is Hannity right wing? Definitely. How about O'Reilly? He's certainly not liberal but 50 years ago he would have been a Democrat in all likelihood.  And besides, neither of them are hosting NEWS shows. They are commentators -- analysts. They're the equivalent of the editorial page.

If you then point out that CNN, MSNBC, ABC, NBC, CBS, NY Times, Washington Post, Time and Newsweek are as left of center as Fox is conservative they'll deny it.

So today, I'm going to walk you through the current issue of Time Magazine from the perspective of a conservative.

image

Let's start with the cover...

The first thing you notice is, of course, the headline: Why Israel can't win.  It has long been a charge by conservatives that liberals tend to be anti-Israel.  Usually, we don't get an example quite this blatant.  For conservatives, the issue is actually pretty black and white. Israel = good guys, Palestinians = bad guys. To liberals, such lack of nuance drives them crazy. We're just being simplistic, ignorant or worse: Racist.

What's next on the cover?

Jeffrey Sachs: How more government can save America.  Conservatives, of course, don't like big government.  We're against it.  That was why Bush lost our support. He was practically a socialist.

The other two articles are medical and about Steve Jobs.

...Turning the page...

First page: To our readers, Covering the Holy Land by Richard Stengel, Managing Editor.

This article essentially insists that Time is being objective in its treatment of Israel. Sort of preemptive defense against the obvious charge that no, they're not being objective. 

So what is his proof that they are being objective? They get equal complaints and compliments from both sides.  What? That's not proof of anything other than proof they've decided to have moral equivalence.

Let's say you have good and evil (for the sake of argument) and you say you're being objective because you get equal compliments and complaints from both sides. That's not being objective. It just means you succeeded in providing moral equivalence between good and evil.

So let's look at the Palestinian mess. One side wants the other side to die. The other side wants to live. If you're trying to draw moral equivalence here, there's a problem.  Before someone points this out, I know that Richard Stengel is Jewish. I don't know whose being ironic - me or him?

...Turning the page...

(skipping past letters to the editor, etc.)

News stories:

  • Coverage of Roland Burris (objective)
  • Protecting Pacific Gems (surprisingly positive of Bush even if it's a tiny mention)
  • Other stories non political

...turning the page...

Pop Chart

This is an interesting feature that has events that are predictable to shocking. Most are entertainment based but a few political items get in there such as...

  • Poll says Sarah Palin most desirable celebrity neighbor. Listed under "Shocking". [not shocking to conservatives].
  • Ann Coulter is back and she will cut you if you cancel her segment. "Predictable."

...turning the page...

skipping past obits...

We now get to...

In the Arena

"High Crimes. Bush's sanctioning of torture was his most callous, despicable act. It should be his lasting legacy."

That mouthfull is the headliner of the article.  Maybe I'm out of touch but when did Bush sanction torture? Or has the liberal media decided that waterboarding is torture even though we perform it on special forces as part of their training?

This is why so many conservatives think liberals are pussies. They are just constantly whining or just acting like plain sissies.

What torture means to a conservative: Permanent. Physical. Damage.  Example: Having your shoulder blades pulled back until they shatter (ask John McCain about that).  Having your eye poked out with a hot iron.  That's torture.

What torture means to a liberal: Having to stand up straight for 2 hours in a cold room naked on little sleep.  You think I'm kidding? That's what Joe Klein defines it as in his article.

The article finishes with "The  Bush Memorial in Washington: a statue of the hooded Abu Ghraib prisoner in cruciform stress position - the real Bush legacy."

I think if my wife was able to choose between the experience of delivering our first 39cm headed child versus the experience of having to stand naked for 2 hours in the cold, she'd choose the latter. 

You know, I guess I'm a jerk.  I just don't lose sleep about terrorists being humiliated in Iraq or Guantanamo.  And I lose a lot less sleep, thanks to President Bush, worry that my children are going to somehow get killed in some mindless terrorist attack.

...turning the page...

The next page is entitled "Can Israel Survive?"

I'll spare you the details with a general summary. It essentially blames Israel and Hamas equally for the warfare and says that both sides need to agree to what Israel has already agreed to.  It completely ignores that Hamas's goal isn't to live next to Israel but to exterminate it.

...turning the page...

Next page is "Obama's options" which basically argues that Obama should push for a cease fire and use his charm to get the two sides talking again.  Not biased as much as vapid.

...turning the page...

Profile: Jim Jones

This is a good article on the new National Security Advisor.  No partisan politics.

...turning the page...

Here's an article I absolutely detest.

The Case for Bigger government.

Now, this is commentary.  But remember, Fox News gets tarred with being right wing because it has two conservative/quasi-conservative prime time commentary shows on out of its entire line-up.  This article would make Keith Olbermann blush.

It starts with:

"THIRTY TEARS AGO, AMERICA was told that government was part of the problem, not the solution.We bet on the magic of the marketplace, but the magic proved illusory."

WOW.  Really? Illusory?  That whole massive economic boom we experienced from 1983 to 1999 with a slight interruption in 1992 was illusory? I still remember paying through the nose for "zone calls", airline flights, cable. Not to mention all the innovations we've seen since 1983 largely thanks to a reduction in regulation combined with much lower income taxes.

image

So let's look at his charge of "illusory". He provides a chart. His chart doesn't seem to agree.  We cut taxes and we got growth.  We had a sharp downturn in 2000 which jumped up pretty quickly after Bush's "tax cuts for the rich."

Also, look at the spending on the right.  Don't liberals always complain about defense spending? Bush is spending less than that war monger Jimmy Carter was in terms of GDP.

It continues:

Even as our economy worsened, many Americans consoled themselves with the belief that at least we were better off than people in other rich nations. No more. When you compare the U.S. with Canada, Western Europe and Japan, the news is sobering. Our child-poverty and infant-mortality rates are the highest, our life expectancy is the lowest, our budget..

God I get tired of this strawman argument.  Why not compare apples and apples.  How are Japanese Americans doing compared to the Japanese still in Japan in terms of infant mortality, child-poverty, and life expectancy? Oh yea, it's the same.  How about when you compare the say 1st or 2nd generation Germans to people in Germany? Oh yea, it's the same. Can't we just for a moment stop ignoring the elephant in the room that the United States has a massive population that is essentially living like they're in a third world country? Move those people to Europe and Japan and guess what? Their stats would go down too.

A big difference between the U.S. and the rest of the rich world is that for the past 30 years or so, Americans consistently rejected "government solutions" to the problems of health, poverty, education and the environment. We've kept our taxes as a share of national income lower than Europe's by focusing on the private sector. Butwe're getting much less for our money. Markets are great at providing consumer goods and services. We don t want the government running our restaurants, movie houses, bookstores and manufacturers. Markets a¡e not so good, though, at some very important things. A pressing example: our mostly private health system, at $8,ooo per American, is twice the cost of Europe's mostly public system, yet with worse outcomes. And nearly 5o million Americans lack health insurance.

Oh yummy strawmen.  Look how he neatly cherry picks statistics mixing and matching to imply relations that aren't there.  50 million Americans? I didn't realize illegal aliens counted now as Americans (they make up the bulk of the 50 million figure).

He says our mostly private system has worse results.  How does he know? Is there a study showing that the life expectancy of Americans on private (i.e. non-Medicare, non-Medicaid) insurance is lower? I follow this stuff and haven't seen any studies.

As for the cost, well DUH it costs more here. If the government ran it, it could just lower it to $0 by rejecting all claims. Saying something "costs more" without context is pointless. In the US, there is competition between insurance providers which results in employers, such as myself, choosing the ones that we think will benefit us the most. Not just in terms of cost but in care as well. 

In the US, it means if my wife wants to go see an OBGYN specialist tomorrow, she can do so, get in, get tests right away and if treatment is needed, she's going to get it quickly.  And you know what? If I'm 70 years old and suffering from an illness that will cause me to die in a year without extremely expensive treatment that will only prolong my life another 3 years, I can get that treatment too and covered which is the #1 reason our insurance is so expensive (myth: American insurance is so expensive because of compliance and bureaucracy).

Let's continue..

President-elect Obama inherits the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression: the financial sector is in ruins; the budget is hemorrhaging red ink; debt-ridden households have clamped down on spending, thereby pulling the rug out from under the economy; unemployment is soaring; the country is in two wars; and the unmet social and environmental needs are vast. These conditions demand a fundamental realignment in strategy that ultimateþ comes back to taxation: Will we pay for the government we need?

WOW. Such drama.  Worst since the great depression eh?  Budget is hemorrhaging red ink. Easy solution: Quit bailing out failing companies. Unemployment is soaring? It's 7.2%.  That's less than it was in 1992 and a lot less than it was in 1981.  We're in two wars. Okay, sure, technically.  But personally, comparing a deployment of about 200,000 volunteer soldiers in what amounts to mostly peace keeping duties (don't get me wrong, it's not that peaceful) hardly compares to the 500+ soldiers dying each week during the Vietnam war, which I might point out was made up mostly of people forced into the service against their will.

But hey, we obviously need a "fundamental realignment in strategy". And what is that realignment? Cut spending? Increase efficiency? Distribute more to the states? Nope. Same as always: Raise taxes.

Which brings us to the old standard: Make the rich pay for it.

There are certainly some straightforward ways to start closing the budget gap. The Bush tax cuts for the rich should be rolled back this year, not next, to start collecting about 0.5% of GDP in extra revenues from those who can most easily pay.

Have you ever noticed, when looking back on history, that when it comes to freedom in all its forms that Democrats tend to be always on the side of taking it away from people.  Hear me out on this before you liberals start frothing:

  • Slavery. The Democrats were the party of slavery. There's no debate on that. 
  • They were the party of Jim Crowe. They were the party that fought against giving women the right to vote. 
  • They were the party that got the income tax amendment in the constitution that allowed the federal government to confiscate a percentage of someone's earnings.
  • They were the party that introduced conscription at a massive level (Wilson). 
  • They were the party that threw people in prison if they didn't agree with war policies (Woodrow Wilson, World War I),
  • they were the party to again, institute conscription in 1940 (if you want to talk about taking away real live liberty, I would say drafting people into the military has to rank up there as one of the most egregious examples there is).
  • They did it again (Truman) for the Korean War, again
  • for the Vietnam war (Johnson).
  • And of course, Democrats lead the way in forcing Americans to work nearly half their year for the government -- while still wanting ever more of your labor to go into their pockets.

And yet you'll hear people piss and moan about Bush and Guantanamo Bay? Or, egads, lowering taxes for everyone across the board?  Talk about a jaded view of the world.  How can anyone remotely compare, say NSA wiretapping with the draft?

Another thing about this article is that it keeps assuming that the federal government is the solution.  Roads? Obama. Bridges? Obama. Schools? Obama.  Is it really necessary for a resident of Michigan to pay for a bridge in Florida? Really? Is that really the most efficient use of our resources? Why do these guys always want power concentrated?

Going on:

Voters are still willing to permit the government to expand its share of GDP, particularly in the face of a crises-and we are certainly in the middle of one. Tax revenues jumped from just 5% of GDP in 1936 To 18% during and after World War II, creating our modern tax system.

Oh you see? We "created" our modern tax system when the government increased its taxation of its citizens from 5% to 18% of the GDP. I.e. It more than tripled its burden on us.

What has changed is the way we spend that 18%. In the 1950s, during the Korean War and at the height of the Cold 'War, about 10% of GDP was devoted to defense. Over time, that share of spending on defense declined, making room for proportionally more spending on things like health care, education and infrastructure. By the late 1970s, as defense spending declined to 4% to 5% of GDP, there wasn't a lot more room to squeeze defense for higher domestic spending.

Read what he says here carefully. Even if you totally believe in bigger government spending, read what he writes above very carefully. He's either willfully ignorant or intentionally misleading. 

Let's spell it out: We had a BIG war. So taxes went up. WAY up. When the war ended, the federal government was awash with cash and power. Rather than deciding to quit taking so much money when the war was over, the federal government instead came up with a whole bunch of rationales for keeping the taxes so high under the guise of "domestic spending". Sure, the states could have done all this too if the people had a demand for a bunch of government services but that would require the federal government to give up POWER.

Let's remember: Before World War II, federal taxes were 5% of the GDP. We're a representative republic, if the people of say New York wanted a bunch of government services, they could have easily have done so. If it was something that was popular, other states would have then followed suit or found citizens moving to New York. 

But that's not what happened. The federal government was able to massively raise taxes because of World War II. When the war was over, they had a ton of money. The politicians, particularly the Democrats, discovered groups of people who would vote for them in exchange for government money taken by other people.  Keep in mind, that 5% included Social Security.

So now the government is eating nearly 20% of our GDP and still running massive deficits.  So what is his idea? Increase taxes more and have the government eating 25% of our GDP! And what happens when the government is still running massive deficits? Why I think we know the answer. The federal government has boundless appetite for tax dollars. Even with a huge jump from 5% to 18% and then stripping down the military spending to a fraction of what it was, the government has managed to eat all of that money and now needs even more.  It's not about helping "the people", it's about power.  If it was about helping people, it would be left more locally where different programs could compete and were more responsible to the population being served.

....and so on...

Well, that's enough for this issue. I think the point is made.  Every single remotely political editorial article in Time is very liberal. What's more, unlike Fox, where the audience knows Sean Hannity is a conservative (because he identifies himself as a conservative Republican), the columnists at Time Magazine (and elsewhere) never identify themselves as being partisan. Their articles always read as if they were simply neutral observers giving educated, informed opinions which they are not.

If someone wants to argue that I'm making much todo about nothing, I will grant you that this isn't something I'm losing sleep over. But I wish people would stop trying to argue that Time and the other media outlets are somehow objective, middle of the road, publications.  And lastly, remember how much and how often Fox News is used as the whipping boy, the boogey man by the left while denying any such bias in publications and outlets that are significantly  more biased.


Comments (Page 3)
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on Jan 25, 2009

Republicans against slavery in 1860. Still against slavery now. Democrats: favored slavery in 1860, still favor it today (I call working half my year for the government whether I like it or not slavery)

Both the republicans and democrats are in favor of keeping taxes. Hence if you say democrats favor slavery due to taxation (that effectively causes you to face a 50% tax rate), then the republicans must as well. Unless you're arguing something such as that 'forcing' people to working for 50% of the year for the government is slavery but working for 45% of the year for the government isn't. Similarly both parties favor at least some form of redistribution effect via the tax system, so if you defined slavery that way they'd both be in favor of it.

 

As to whether waterboarding is torture, just having a quick look at the definition of torture it's described as (the infliction of) severe physical or mental pain. From all that I've read about waterboarding, I'd say it fits that definition.

 

when you had to pay more taxes, you didn't suffer, you just didn't hire as much.  Wouldn't it make more sense to suffer and still hire people you thought might increase your market value and recognition?  Because even if you keep your same paycheck, if nobody has the money to buy your shitty games and inferior Windows software...suddenly you become the boss of nobody

Not hiring additional staff for the future would presumably mean stardock wouldn't produce as many games+software, in turn leading to lower recognition than if they had (all else equal). Similarly firing current staff would lead to fewer games+software. However you'd still have some recognition from the remaining games+software being produced. Presumably the most profitable games+software projects (for the given risk) would be undertaken, while the riskier or likely lower profit making ones would be scrapped. Hence the company would still survive, it would still have some market recognition, and would likely still be making good games+software. If however the staff were cut but the same number of projects undertaken, just with fewer staff to manage them, then yes you'd expect the quality to suffer. However you'd only expect that option to be undertaken if it was thought to be more profitable - in other words if say the after sales support was decreased, it might put a few people off, but not enough to offset the cost savings, still leaving plenty of paying customers.

As to the 'luxury' point (i.e. in times of economic hardship people will cut down on luxuries such as games, presumably what you meant by 'noone having the money to buy them'), it will probably have a negative impact on sales, but it doesn't mean that the sales will vanish. You will still have plenty of people willing to pay for such programs, and you could even argue that games would be much less affected by this, because on an hourly basis they are much better value for money than DVDs or the cinema - i.e. you could pick up a game that will entertain you for ~20+ hours for say $40, or you could pick up ~3 DVDs for a similar amount which will entertain you for maybe 6 hours. Meanwhile if people are made redundent, they may well cut back on luxuries like games, but they may also increase spending if they can afford it, since they'll have a lot more time on their hands!

on Jan 26, 2009

If you want to look at the people who pay most of the bills, give the most to charity (have you ever seen any of those surveys of the VOLUNTEERS who went down to New Orleans to help people? Obviously not) they're very much on the right.

I would really like to see a liberal reply to that point.

 

on Jan 26, 2009

but we Democrats are kinda glad we changed. That's why we call ourselves "progressives."

True, instead of owning slaves, they just keep the "poor" on the government "cheese". Just enough to keep the light of prosperity out of their eyes. It's been pretty successful, as many minorities fall for it with each entitlement package offered. But every year more and more minorities are moving away from the check for a vote "modern day slavery" tactic. I would call that progressive.

John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson really put paid to your argument. Despite BOTH of their faults (we can talk about Vietnam later), both Democratic Presidents supported the growing civil rights movement -- negating years of support by the Democratic party for Jim Crowe and other racist laws.

Check your records and really see who supported LBJ's civil rights push in congress. You might be surprised. A lot of folks on the left seem to forget there is a congress when decisions are made. They forget during the civil rights movement and they totally forgot the last two years.

By 1972, the Equal Rights Ammendment was a part of the Democratic Party platform

And in 2008, they slipped back to the 1800's, first with Hillary Clinton (iron my shirt), then full on with Sara Pailin. I believe the argument (among others) she can't be a good mom if she holds office. I must admit the Democratic party has women and minorities fooled pretty well, empathy when they need a vote and indifference when they are in the way. But hey they keep buying it right? Go with what works.

on Jan 26, 2009

I would really like to see a liberal reply to that point.

I don't think there is one cut-and-dried talking point that all liberals can use to defend ourselves -- the study results seem pretty robust, the implications are pretty serious, and the criticism hurts.  I've always been kind of vexed by it (because it criticizes my tribe, not because I'm a slack giver myself).  I went specially looking for an answer just for you and I found one that kind of works in a George Will column:

The single biggest predictor of someone's altruism, Willett says, is religion. It increasingly correlates with conservative political affiliations because, as Brooks's book says, "the percentage of self-described Democrats who say they have 'no religion' has more than quadrupled since the early 1970s." America is largely divided between religious givers and secular nongivers, and the former are disproportionately conservative. One demonstration that religion is a strong determinant of charitable behavior is that the least charitable cohort is a relatively small one -- secular conservatives.

This is a nice way for liberals to duck the question -- it's not that we're not altruistic, it's just that we're not religious.  You certainly can't ask us to become religious just because it will make us better people.  (Would you become a Mormon for that reason?)

p.s.  Brad, your rich text box has improved quite a bit since the days when I had to go into Internet Explorer to even type in it.  It's really nice now, the pop-ups work, and it even picked up the formatting in my Will quote!  Kudos to whoever on your team or the Firefox 3 team put the effort in to get it working.

on Jan 26, 2009

The single biggest predictor of someone's altruism, Willett says, is religion.

Should be interesting to see statistics on Jewish charities. Typically Jews are religiously organised (but not necessarily religious) and affiliated with the Democrats.

It wouldn't surprise me to learn that American Jews on average give to charities (most likely Jewish such) just as much per person as religious Christians. But I don't have any data to back this up.

I would also be curious regarding what charities people support. For example, a Christian charity that attempts to convert people to Christianity and does little else is not a "charity" as such. Similarly giving money to your own synagogue or church is not really more selfless than giving money to your favourite Tennis club (which is likely to have youth programs as well).

 

on Jan 26, 2009

BTW, anyone reading the comments here can hopefully observe that rather than the liberals commenting arguing whether Time is biased or not they try to redirect the conversation into other areas.

on Jan 26, 2009

BTW, anyone reading the comments here can hopefully observe that rather than the liberals commenting arguing whether Time is biased or not they try to redirect the conversation into other areas.

I think it's perfectly obvious that Time Magazine is biased. Why publish a magazine if not to say something?

The problem is whether or not a given publication admits its bias or lies about it.

Unbiased reporting is reporting of just the facts and all the facts.:

"Jews and Arabs clash in Hevron."

That is not always possible. Biased reporting is reporting some facts but not others:

"Jews attack Arabs in Hevron."

Another form of biased reporting is adding adjectives.

"Arabs and violent Jews clash in Hevron."

Nouns can also be replaced:

"Arabs and violent settlers clash in Hevron."

Finally, the three methods of introducing bias can be combined:

"Violent settlers attack Arabs in Hevron."

All these statements are true (assuming the first one is).

Another form of bias is the spelling of local landmarks. "Hevron" is taken from Hebrew, taking the name from Arabic would be "Hebron". This is my own bias. (This bias simply depends on what languages one is used to.)

Does Time Magazine use selective reporting, adjectives, and noun replacements?

Most journalists do.

 

on Jan 26, 2009

Both the republicans and democrats are in favor of keeping taxes. Hence if you say democrats favor slavery due to taxation (that effectively causes you to face a 50% tax rate), then the republicans must as well.

Actually its about wealth redistribution and socialism, not about taxation.

Wikipedia is certainly not one to define such terms because it is dominated by the left as the talking page for waterboarding makes clear.  The left, as Myrrander makes pretty clear, tend to be utterly hopeless when trying to engage in intellectual debate.

That was my point... I did call wikipedia a bastion of the liberalism. It has a distict single person in power who has total control over every piece of content in it, who is an extreme liberal and a socialist. And he appoints moderators who think in term. They call their point of view "neutral" and ban anyone who is either conservative, or insists on actual neutrality.

on Jan 26, 2009

BTW, anyone reading the comments here can hopefully observe that rather than the liberals commenting arguing whether Time is biased or not they try to redirect the conversation into other areas.

You should be more specific because I'm not sure if you're referring to me or not.  I'm gonna assume not so I don't have to bother defending myself.

I would also be curious regarding what charities people support. For example, a Christian charity that attempts to convert people to Christianity and does little else is not a "charity" as such.

That is one of the things most liberals turn to first when they hear the charity statistic, but it turns out conservatives give more to charities even when you factor out giving to churches entirely.

on Jan 26, 2009

Most journalists do.

Nearly all in the mainstream outlets do.  Sometimes I think it's just inadvertent disclosure of bias but it seems intentional most of the time.  I also love how they frequently cite the beliefs of unnamed 'experts' in support of their assertion or bias: 'Experts say...'  They also have no qualms about quoting anonymous sources 'not authorized to disclose' same.  When your source info is all anonymous or undisclosed, you can say any damn thing you want without challenge.  To call that journalism, however, is a disgrace.

on Jan 26, 2009

Actually its about wealth redistribution and socialism, not about taxation.

We have had this argument before.

Taxation is a means, not an end. Redistribution is an end. Conservatives are not opposed to the means "taxes", they are opposed to the end "redistribution".

And not every taxation is used for redistribution.

The police are paid for by taxation and the moneys paid to fund them is not redistributed to anyone. Instead the (monopoly) services of the police are available to all. Everyone MUST make use of those services since a private police force is unacceptable within a state.

 

on Jan 26, 2009

To call that journalism, however, is a disgrace.

A journalist is someone whose point of view is also his point of sale.

I often (always, really) notice that the headline says one thing and the article then explains, at the end, that the supposed fact announced in the headline was only something claimed by one guy or another who was interviewed.

 

on Jan 26, 2009

I often (always, really) notice that the headline says one thing and the article then explains, at the end, that the supposed fact announced in the headline was only something claimed by one guy or another who was interviewed.

True, true.  Even Drudge.

on Jan 26, 2009

ugh, i hate that, when the article clearly refutes the statement it makes in the headline.

on Jan 26, 2009

I can't remember who said this but someone commented that the only way not to be in favor of slavery would be to abolish the income tax which is nonsense.

Me paying for a public service (whether i use it or not) is a very big difference than having money taken from me to be given to someone else as a cash payment.

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