Tag Archives: Democrats

No-Tax Pledgers Have Preemptively Broken the Oath of Office

Democrats and liberal candidates, take off the frigging gloves!

When the Republicans running against us for Congress—or the presidency—pledge themselves to Grover Norquist’s “No-Tax” pledge, they have preemptively disqualified themselves from taking the federal oath of office.

That oath states [emphasis added]:

“I do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter: So help me God.”

By binding themselves Norquist’s pledge, Republican (or Democratic or Independent) candidates cannot bear “true faith and allegiance” to the Constitution, especially Article I, Section 8, which states:

The Congress shall have Power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States…”

Nor can they swear that they take their oath freely, without mental reservation or purpose of evasion. Fidelity to the Norquist pledge creates—by definition—a mental reservation. Failing to confess it is an evasion.

The point is this: candidates who cannot truthfully take the federal oath, are in effect stating that they have a higher allegiance to a special interest over and above their country and their Constitution. They can’t of course legally be barred from office, but progressives can use this as a political cudgel to keep them out of office.

It’s time stop being hand-wringing, weepy finger pointers and start using muscular patriotism to attack Norquist right-wingers as beholden not to country—but to moneyed interests who pay for their vote. When we do this, we win. When we don’t, we lose.


How Political ‘Framing’ Can Screw With Your Mind

Two blogs ago, I discussed political framing, and how adroitly the Far Right has used it on the USA. Here’s a chilling example of exactly how framing can manipulate minds toward outcomes the framer seeks:

I quote from a chapter I wrote in Wildfire: A Century of Failed Forest Policy, (Island Press, 2006):

Cognitive psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amous Tversky told a group of subjects to imagine that an unusual disease was expected to kill 600 people. Then they asked the group to choose between medical treatment A, which was expected to save two hundred, and treatment B, which offered a one third probability of saving all 600 and a two thirds probability of saving none of them. By 72 to 28 percent, the subjects preferred treatment A.

A matched group of subjects was provided the same information about the disease and asked to choose between treatment A, under which 400 were expected to die, and treatment B, which offered a one third probability that nobody would die and a two-thirds probability that all 600 would die. Here, treatment B was favored 78 to 22 percent.

In each case, the choice was identical, but one was framed in terms of the number of people who would live and the other by the number who would die. By altering the way in which the choice was framed, the framers spun people’s preferences 180 degrees.

To be fair, framing can be an honest way to express a point. In the hands of ideologues, oligarchs, domestic ayatollahs, and other polecats, it can be sinister as hell, manipulating people to act completely against their best interests.

An election is coming, people. Be prepared!


I’ve Sexed Up My Blog

Readers will notice that my blog has undergone a facelift. OK, maybe it’s not “sexier.” But it’s a little less pastoral, a bit more edgy. That seems to fit better with its content. (And hey, what is “edgy” if not these times!) If you have a mind to, tell me what you think.

After a hiatus of more than a year, I’ll be posting more often, while continuing my other writing projects. I hope you will enjoy the result here. If you do, please become a subscriber. You’ll get an email notice when I put up a new post. I won’t overload your inbox, promise!

With the corporate mass media concentrated more and more in conservative hands, we need more outlets for liberal and progressive thought. I hope to not disappoint. You’re are a part of this too!  I welcome your contributions.


Why ‘Facts’ Don’t Work in Politics–But What You Can Do About It

Have you ever debated someone who is, say, a swell person in almost all things–perhaps a good neighbor–but in politics inexplicably hews to the far right? Is perhaps sympathetic to the Tea Party?

And when you trump their argument with documented facts, they dig in or grow even more obnoxiously adamant?

Well, it’s because one’s beliefs trump facts. In other words, facts that don’t bolster one’s argument are dismissed because they don’t square with one’s preconceived beliefs.

Mother Jones recently ran an article on this behavioral dysfunction: “The Science Of Why We Don’t Believe Science.” Its focus is on rejection of empirical scientific evidence but the phenomenon applies to other spheres of human discourse and understanding, too. A key excerpt:

In America new discoveries in psychology and neuroscience have further demonstrated how our preexisting beliefs, far more than any new facts, can skew our thoughts and even color what we consider our most dispassionate and logical conclusions. This tendency toward so-called ‘motivated reasoning’ helps explain why we find groups so polarized over matters where the evidence is so unequivocal: climate change, vaccines, ‘death panels,’ the birthplace and religion of the president, and much else. It would seem that expecting people to be convinced by the facts flies in the face of, you know, the facts.”

So we’re doomed to ignorance and superstition? No, but the article holds that the antidote lies in how we “frame” our issues. In this skill, The Right, frankly, consistently clobbers Democrats. It’s a big reason why Democrats lost the House in 2008 and Obama looks to be in trouble in 2012. I write this in hopes the Ds, for the sake of the nation and its posterity, will wise up.

What is framing? I taught about it in my government classes at Southern Oregon University and wrote about it in a 2006 book, Wildfire: A Century of Failed Forest Management. I used as my example, Dubya’s phrase, “healthy forests” to characterize his administration’s effort to increase logging in the public’s national forests:

It was a masterpiece of political framing—the art of creating a central organizing idea or context for an issue through use of selection, emphasis, exclusion, and elaboration. ‘Healthy forests’ evokes a sense of environmental stewardship and personal safety at a time of deep fear of wildland fire.

Okay, are you ready to go out and win the day for right against wrong? Here’s your manual: George Lakoff, Howard Dean and Don Hazen’s excellent book, Don’t Think of an Elephant/ How Democrats and Progressives Can Win: Know Your Values and Frame the Debate.

If you want to make a difference in 2012, this may be the most important tract you’ll ever read.



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