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Isaiah J. Poole's picture

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Don't Let Anyone Question Your Patriotism

Our political disagreements over the direction of the country and who is best qualified to lead it in the right direction should never be used as a weapon to question our love for this country. In fact, the willingness to be intensely engaged in the struggle to being this nation closer to its ideals is the very mark of a patriot. That's why we're telling Fox News and the right in general: Stop attacking patriotic Americans simply because you don't agree with them. read more »

Rick Perlstein's picture

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All Aboard the McCain Express

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thenation.com — The most important glue binding conservatism together is a shared sense that someone, somewhere is looking down their noses at them with a condescending sneer. And to conservatives, McCain has been too often one of the sneerers. That helps explain the strange McCain contortions Republicans have been forcing themselves into in recent weeks.

Bill Scher's picture

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Take Back America: Podcast Preview

Take Back America 2008Listen as our communications director, Toby Chaudhuri, offers a preview of "the progressive convention," Take Back America 2008, on my "LiberalOasis Radio Show."

Links to the complete schedule and more on the main conference page. read more »

Progressives Rising

2008: A Sea-Change Election

Progressives-rising-240px.gifThe 2008 election has the potential to be not simply one of change, as conventional wisdom suggests, but of sea-change—an election that marks the end of the conservative era that has dominated our politics for the past three decades.

"Progressives Rising—2008: A Sea-Change Election" details the signs of the emergence of that era, and cautions that progressives will not only have to continue to drive the debate in the election season, but will also have to define, expand and claim the mandate after the election.

Also see:

read more »

Isaiah J. Poole's picture

CAF STAFF

Obstruction Alert: Renewable Energy Stalled in Senate

Take Back America: New Power, New Vision for New EnergyAs oil prices hit record highs, all indications are that a stubborn conservative minority in the U.S. Senate will stand in the way of sensible energy legislation that would shift tax breaks away from Big Oil, which doesn't need them, and toward renewable energy companies that do. read more »

Rick Perlstein's picture

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Parting the Red Sea

Take Back America 2008Why should you take a progressive politics vacation in Washington D.C. March 17-19? Thinks of it as a Nation cruise, only without Alexander Cockburn in beachwear. Plus, in one of the first sessions of the conference, we will be parting George Bush's Red Sea. read more »

Terrance Heath's picture

CAF STAFF

Weekend Watchdog Wrapup

Well, it looks like another 0-for-3 weekend for the watchdog, as most of the questions focused less on the economy and more on the presidential race and campaign tactics. read more »

Isaiah J. Poole's picture

CAF STAFF

Our Sinking Economy

On Monday morning, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell below 9,900. It was the latest sign that that the $700 billion bailout bill passed by Congress last week at the behest of the Bush administration will do little, if anything, to address the fundamentals of the economic crisis.

Nonetheless, last week Senate Republicans used a filibuster to kill a modest stimulus bill that would have pumped needed money into Main Street. We need help for the real economy, not just for the mess on Wall Street.

But that's not all. Conservatives promise to continue and expand the Bush trade policies that are costing Americans their jobs.Conservatives also continue to push another huge tax cut for corporations, while rejecting direct job creation and new economic stimulus proposals. One analyst estimates that the major components of a so-called "jobs plan" proposed by Sen. John McCain would cost $280 billion and create fewer than half a million jobs in 2009—a drop in the bucket when compared to the jobs that are expected to be lost if this recession unfolds with the ferocity of recessions of the past 30 years. (More details in this Making Sense alert, "What About Our Sinking Economy?")

Here's the alternative: public investment in renewable energy and rebuilding projects for schools and infrastructure, expanded unemployment benefits, and aid to cities and states to avoid layoffs of teachers and cops. In the long term, we need a national strategy in the global economy that works for working people, while supporting workers with universal health care coverage, union-organizing rights, and fair wages.

Bad Medicine

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washingtonpost.com — The unblinkable fact is that Americans own too much house. We overpaid and overborrowed, and many of us are "upside down," as the car dealers say. What to do? Recognize the losses and write them off. What not to do? Inflate the currency and debase accounting standards.

9/11 Was Big. This Is Bigger.

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washingtonpost.com — Two September shocks will define the presidency of George W. Bush. Stunningly enough, it already seems clear that the second may well have far greater and more lasting ramifications than the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. That's because while 9/11 changed the way we view the world, the current financial crisis has changed the way the world views us. And it will also change, in some very fundamental ways, the way the world works.

Stocks Sink in Early Trading

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washingtonpost.com — U.S. stocks plummeted in early trading today as economic turmoil rippled through Europe and investors questioned whether a bailout of the financial sector would be enough to prevent a global recession. The Dow fell more 500 points mid morning but then retreated to more than 400 points lower by 11:18 a.m. It was the first time since October 2004 that the Dow fell below 10,000. The Nasdaq and Standard & Poor's 500-stock index were both down by 6 percent and by 11:18 a.m. had come back slightly, down 5 percent and 4.7 percent, respectively.