REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

The scandals are falling apart

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Sunday, May 19, 2013 10:48
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 1154
PAGE 1 of 1

Saturday, May 18, 2013 7:58 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

To be sure, there are problems with this administration in many areas. But, sadly, those areas like “support” for the Keystone pipeline, support for some sort of austerity, however minimal, and policies in general that are not progressive enough have not been the cause of GOP ire as much as those are the things they actually support.

I have been waiting for a real assessment on the scandals. Lo and behold: The IRS scandal did not occur in this President’s administration. It occurred in 1959.
Quote:

...the so-called IRS scandal is only the consequence of an older and more basic problem with the organization’s reading of the tax code–specifically, with its reading of Section 501(c)(4), which exempts social welfare groups from paying taxes.

The law defines such groups as “civic leagues or organizations not organized for profit but operated exclusively for the promotion of social welfare.” Since 1959, the IRS has been reading “exclusively” as “primarily.”

By doing that they made IRS agents judges of political activity, investigators of political activity. IRS agents were then forced to evaluate just how political a given 501(c)(4) organization might be. And it is very clear that if the words “Tea Party” or the name of any political party at all appears in the title of your 501(c)(4) you absolutely do not qualify for 501(c)(4) status under the law.” http://tv.msnbc.com/2013/05/13/odonnell-the-real-irs-scandal-happened-
in-1959/
]

Quote:

Things go wrong in government. Sometimes it’s just bad luck. Sometimes it’s rank incompetence. Sometimes it’s criminal wrongdoing. Most of the time you never hear about it. Or, if you do hear about it, the media eventually gets bored talking about it.

But every so often an instance of government wrongdoing sprouts wings and becomes something quite exciting: A political scandal.

On Tuesday, it looked like we had three possible political scandals brewing. Two days later, with much more evidence available, it doesn’t look like any of them will pan out. There’ll be more hearings, and more bad press for the Obama administration, and more demands for documents. But — and this is a key qualification — absent more revelations, the scandals that could reach high don’t seem to include any real wrongdoing, whereas the ones that include real wrongdoing don’t reach high enough. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/05/16/the-scandal
s-are-falling-apart/
]
America’s corporate-controlled mainstream media continues to allow the GOP and the right wing to distract Americans. They continue to run stories that are pushed by this faction in order to have Americans dissuaded from looking at real issues that materially affect their lives. They are then able to affect their will with policies that further pilfer the middle class without any political cost. http://www.addictinginfo.org/2013/05/18/all-three-gop-manufactured-sca
ndals-falling-apart/#ixzz2TfSfOTuP



My prediction is the underlined part. I'm happy for our righties that they have THREE whole things to obsess about, and I hope they enjoy it, 'cuz they ain't gonna last or do any serious harm. You can quote me.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 18, 2013 8:09 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


The most obvious sign of the desperation to make any of these a scandal is of course
Quote:

The White House released 100 pages of Benghazi emails this week. The actual emails differ from what the Republicans released. In other words Republicans doctored the emails they released to the mainstream media and used the mainstream media to create a false scandal.
Quote:

WH Benghazi emails have different quotes than earlier reported.

The White House released the real emails late Wednesday. Here's what we found when we compared them to the quotes that had been provided by Republicans.

On Friday, Republicans leaked what they said was a quote from Rhodes: "We must make sure that the talking points reflect all agency equities, including those of the State Department, and we don't want to undermine the FBI investigation."

But it turns out that in the actual email, Rhodes did not mention the State Department.

It read: "We need to resolve this in a way that respects all of the relevant equities, particularly the investigation."

Republicans also provided what they said was a quote from an email written by State Department spokesman Victoria Nuland.

The Republican version quotes Nuland discussing, "The penultimate point is a paragraph talking about all the previous warnings provided by the Agency (CIA) about al-Qaeda's presence and activities of al-Qaeda."

The actual email from Nuland says: "The penultimate point could be abused by members to beat the State Department for not paying attention to Agency warnings."

The CIA agreed with the concerns raised by the State Department and revised the talking points. There is no evidence that the White House orchestrated the changes. http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18563_162-57584947/wh-benghazi-emails-have
-different-quotes-than-earlier-reported/



When you're desperate enough to deliberately fake quotes, it's says all that needs saying.


NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 18, 2013 8:13 AM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!



There's at least 5 things, if you count Fast and Furious ( which Holder remains in contempt of Congress, for failure to release requested documents ) and HHR problem Ms Sebelius has , which is starting to come to light.

That the IRS needs to be deep sixed, I think most Americans can agree. A flat tax, or the FAIRTax, would be preferable, and hopefully, this scandal can hurry such reforms along.

But to spin this as not an Obama problem... wishful thinking.

The dude is in deep. Don't kid yourself.

Fathom the hypocrisy of a government that requires every citizen to prove they are insured... but not everyone must prove they are a citizen

Resident USA Freedom Fundie

" AU, that was great, LOL!! " - Chrisisall

NOTIFY: N   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 18, 2013 8:26 AM

NEWOLDBROWNCOAT


Quote:

Originally posted by AURaptor:

A flat tax, or the FAIRTax, would be preferable, and hopefully, this scandal can hurry such reforms along.



Oh, yah, fer shure, you betcha. Bill Gates should pay the same amount I do. He probably spends more on postage stamps than my entire tax bill. I should pay the same amount he does. Yeah, and after I spend every nickle I've ever made, and robbed a bank to try to make up the difference, I should starve to death naked and homeless because I can't afford food to eat or a place to live.

NOBC

Type slower. It's hard for me to read STOOPID.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 18, 2013 8:27 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


...and I will counter Rap's fantasies with some realities, which I realize will no doubt not interest some here at all, but which are nonetheless realities, and which might interest some who actually want to THINK about this mess:
Quote:

There’s so much that’s upside-down and ill-informed about the "IRS scandal" unfolding in Washington, starting with the fact that no one has pointed a finger at the people who created these abuses in the first place: senior political consultants and lawyers. And doesn’t anyone see the hypocrisy of the GOP for calling out the IRS for targeting groups (that lied about being charities) when that party has been targeting black and brown voters for years via every imaginable "voter-fraud" law?

It would be stunning if the current "scandal" led to an informed discussion about the lies and loopholes and campaign law-evading tactics used by both parties in the post- Citizens United era, where lawyers exploited legal ambiguities to run campaigns with little or no accountability. However, that’s not going to happen when too many of the politicians screaming scandal were elected using these dark money deceits.

Let’s go through some of the craziest aspects of this evolving episode, with an eye to identifying the real scandal and the real culprits.

1. The IRS made mistakes with both parties. The scandal mongers have said that the IRS went too far in pressing Tea Party groups for information when applying for federal non-profit tax status. Lost in this fine print is a critical fact. As Bloomberg.com reported, IRS staffers sent the same questionaire to Democratic groups suspected of not being charities but political as well. So it’s not just an "attack" on Republicans.

2. The real issue is the IRS isn’t doing its job. On Wednesday, Rhode Island Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse gave a speech in the Senate where he laid out the fictions used by political groups to masquarade as charities. He pointed out that industry groups—like PhRMA, the drug company lobby—file reports to IRS and Federal Election Commission filled with contradictory information about their political activities. “Making a material false statement to a federal agency is not just bad behavior, it’s a crime,” he said. But “the Department of Justice won’t prosecute false statements… unless the case has been referred by the IRS… [and] the IRS never makes a referral.”

“So it is very wrong that the IRS required additional information from a number of organizations based on a screen incorporating their Tea Party orientation,” Whitehouse said. “Picking on the little guy is a pretty lousy thing to do; rolling over for the powerful and letting them file false statements is pretty lousy too.”

3. Team Obama’s hysterical overreactions. The adminstration’s reactions, from the president to Attorney General Eric Holder, have fed the hysteria and given the GOP a green light to turn the Tea Party into victims. Not only did the firing of the IRS acting director come prematurely, but Obama’s overreaction cements the notion that many local Tea Party groups—frequently funded by the Koch brothers—were entitled to be treated the same under tax law as the March of Dimes. Moreover, Holder’s statement that he was recusing himself while announcing the FBI investigation just picks another fight between the administration and congressional Republicans. What Obama could have done was take the risk of explaining how the system really works—what’s broken—and the solutions, even though he has been a beneficiary of it.

4. Charities are not political front groups. The question of who turned charities into political front groups has barely been discussed. The answer, of course, is the same as it always has been: election lawyers and campaign consultants who look for loopholes in the law so clients can run for office using any tactic with little or no accountability.

Media coverage of this scandal has had the wrong starting line. It wasn’t the IRS that deluged its staff with thousands of applications from political groups pretending to be charities. It was groups following the advice or example of campaign consultants such as Karl Rove. He was the first to use this ruse on a large scale in order to run a shadow presidential campaign where he could hide his donors’ identities.

The way this works is simple. After the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling deregulated campaign finances, political operators looked for ambiguities to exploit and turned to non-profit tax law—knowing the agency's primary focus has nothing to do with electioneering. One of the legal ambiguities is the fiction that "public education" and "lobbying" activities by non-profits groups are not political (and thus subject to election law) if they comprise more than 50 percent of that group’s activities.

So that’s what Karl Rove ginned up with his non-profit Crossroads GPS, which spent $123 million for the 2012 federal elections, according to the Sunlight Foundation, with 70 percent raised from secret donors. The IRS still has not issued a ruling on whether Rove’s group violated non-profit tax law.

5. The IRS’s top GOP critics were elected this way. Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Pat Toomey might be the GOP frontman on federal gun controls, but on this issue he has compared the IRS scrutiny to President Richard Nixon’s infamous enemies list. Of course, two political non-profits, Rove’s Crossroads GPS and the Republican Jewish Coalition spent $17.6 million on his behalf by the time Election Day rolled around last fall. He’s hardly the only member of Congress whose rise to power was helped by political front groups masquerading as tax-exempt charities.

One of the unwritten but enduring Washington rules is that both political parties will not tinker with the tactics that helped them gain power—because they mastered the system to get elected. But that is not even the biggest GOP hypocrisy surrounding this "scandal."

6. Lies are so big they hide in plain sight. The party known for voter suppression and intimidation now feels targeted? The spectacle of Republicans protesting that its groups were targeted by the IRS, when the only business of some of these groups was to lead the GOP’s 2012 voter suppression efforts, is just unbelievable. The GOP has spent years trying to discourage and suppress voting blocks that it perceives will back Democrats, such as black and brown voters, and students. Its entire "voter fraud" canard is based on policing the polls in myriad ways targeting millions of voters.

But now the GOP is upset—with Speaker of the House John Boehner saying he wants the guilty put in jail—because groups like True The Vote were not given the same tax status as the Girl Scouts? They have spent years in state after state imposing tougher ID laws, criminalizing voter registration drives, curtailing early voting, and on and on.

There are so many reasons why this "scandal" reflects what’s really wrong in our political culture. But watching it unfold literally is like watching the blind leading the blind—and the rest of us have to live with the results of these political subterfuges. This scandal is about the perpetuation of lies and deceits in modern campaigns and politics. Meanwhile, the solution, more transparency and disclosure, is going nowhere. http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/6-key-takeaways-stupidity-an
d-reality-irs-scandal?page=0%2C0




NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 18, 2013 8:57 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Note, Brit Hume (who thinks the country may be ready for "another Bush" Presidency ( http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/04/28/brit-hume-the-country-may-be-rea
dy-for-another-bush-presidency
/) on FOX News:
Quote:

Fox’s Brit Hume: ‘Stupid’ For GOP To Think Of Impeaching Obama Over Recent ScandalsAppearing on Laura Ingraham‘s radio show this afternoon, Fox News senior political analyst Brit Hume suggested some Republicans were “stupid” to consider impeachment of President Obama a viable response to the ongoing scandals regarding the Benghazi attacks, the IRS targeting of conservative groups, and the Justice Department secret seizure of AP phone records.

Likely referring to some GOP lawmakers, including Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK) who has put impeachment on the table as an option for handling the Benghazi fallout, Ingraham asked Hume to comment on how some Republican leaders have “ran to the microphone” to suggest removal of Obama from office.

His response:

“I think it’s stupid for them to say stuff like that. These cases will be driven by the facts, which is what’s happened so far. Information drives these things and big talk about extreme measures — and most people in this country, I think, regard impeachment as extreme measure, necessary in some rare cases — is way premature and only runs the risk of having this appear to be political on their side. The administration’s defense, you hear it all the time, is that this is just a political circus. So what happens next? These guys start running out into the middle of the ring and starting proving that its a political circus.” http://www.mediaite.com/tv/foxs-brit-hume-stupid-for-gop-to-think-of-i
mpeaching-obama-over-recent-scandals/
]


Note he didn't say "MAKING it a political circus", or "making it LOOK LIKE a political circus", he said "PROVING it's a political circus". In other words, it already IS one...



and since it's on Fox News, I'm sure Rap will agree...


NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 18, 2013 10:22 AM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!


Quote:

Originally posted by NewOldBrownCoat:
Quote:

Originally posted by AURaptor:

A flat tax, or the FAIRTax, would be preferable, and hopefully, this scandal can hurry such reforms along.



Oh, yah, fer shure, you betcha. Bill Gates should pay the same amount I do. He probably spends more on postage stamps than my entire tax bill. I should pay the same amount he does. Yeah, and after I spend every nickle I've ever made, and robbed a bank to try to make up the difference, I should starve to death naked and homeless because I can't afford food to eat or a place to live.

NOBC

Type slower. It's hard for me to read STOOPID.



No, you're doing stupid real well there, NOBC. Because nothing you typed had any relation to what I posted.

You literally have no idea what you're saying here.

Nor does Niki, with that inane bullshit about the GOP targeting minorities. But way to dodge one issue by trying to interject another, wholly false one.

Fathom the hypocrisy of a government that requires every citizen to prove they are insured... but not everyone must prove they are a citizen

Resident USA Freedom Fundie

" AU, that was great, LOL!! " - Chrisisall

NOTIFY: N   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Saturday, May 18, 2013 2:46 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Very simple- no tax-exempt groups, period. Not churches, not charities, and especially not groups engaging in political activities.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 19, 2013 5:28 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


AMEN Sig, I love it; in some ways I don't, but so many are getting away with being tax exempt who have no right to, I'd agree with abolishing it completely.

Meanwhile, back to the "scandal":




NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 19, 2013 6:43 AM

NEWOLDBROWNCOAT


Just saw a headline over on CNN.com, was gonna post a thread about it


"After Obama's Really Bad week, his poll numbers remain unchanged."

which ain't exactly true-- his approval number in April was 51 %. Results the other day in May, approval 53 %. CNN says the 2 % increase is within the margin of error.

SO, like with Hillary the other day, Keep it up Republicans.


Never mind, I just saw the thread where YOU posted it. It got knocked off the main page.

NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

Sunday, May 19, 2013 10:48 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Yeah, I posted that very article.

Makes me smile...

Please DO keep it up, guys; when your own party starts saying you look silly, DON'T LISTEN TO THEM! (/snark)


NOTIFY: Y   |  REPLY  |  REPLY WITH QUOTE  |  TOP  |  HOME  

YOUR OPTIONS

NEW POSTS TODAY

USERPOST DATE

FFF.NET SOCIAL