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Tag Archives: dave Helling

21st Century American Exceptionalism

17 Friday Sep 2021

Posted by Michael Bersin in social media

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Afghanistan, Congress, dave Helling, Matt Rosendale, Montana, social media, Tony Messenger, Twitter

Yesterday, from a member (r) of Congress:

Matt Rosendale @RepRosendale
Today I learned that 75 refugees from Afghanistan will be arriving in Montana. I strongly oppose the resettlement of these Afghan nationals in Montana.
12:25 PM · Sep 16, 2021

Montana definitely has the empty space.

Tony Messenger @tonymess
This is so incredibly unAmerican.
[….]
8:32 PM · Sep 16, 2021

Dave Helling @dhellingkc
Replying to @tonymess
Aug. 16: “We can’t leave our Afghan partners behind!!”
Sept 16: “Not in my backyard!!”
9:00 PM · Sep 16, 2021

Anything to agitate the right wingnut republican base.

212° in the shade

29 Thursday Oct 2020

Posted by Michael Bersin in Josh Hawley, social media, US Senate

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

dave Helling, Josh Hawley, missouri, shade, social media, Trump, Turkey, Twitter

Josh Hawley (r) [2016 file photo].

This morning:

Dave Helling @dhellingkc
A link to this story must be posted on @HawleyMO’s Senate website. Otherwise, he’s censoring the news.

Turkish Bank Case Showed Erdogan’s Influence With Trump
[….]

8:29 AM · Oct 29, 2020

Bad combover. Check. Too long red tie. Check. Orange spray tan. Check. Tiny hands. Check. Cluelessness. Check…

“The most dangerous place to stand in Washington D.C. is any place between Senator Josh Hawley and a live microphone” – Charles P. Pierce

Not today, Dave. Not today.

Do your damn homework, Dave

10 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by Michael Bersin in media criticism

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

al gore, dave Helling, Internet, Kansas City Star, our failed media experiment

A throw away line in a “both sides do it” article from Dave Helling in the Kansas City Star:

December 9, 2015
Misleading politics may hit an unprecedented high in 2016, pundits say

….Republicans also point to Hillary Clinton’s statements about her role in the killings in Benghazi, her emails or Al Gore’s claims about his involvement in the early Internet as evidence that Democratic candidates routinely lie and exaggerate too….

Really, citing republican political spin as evidence?

This is what then Vice President Al Gore (D) actually said about the Internet in 1999:

Transcript: Vice President Gore on CNN’s ‘Late Edition’
March 9, 1999 Web posted at: 5:06 p.m. EST (2206 GMT)

[….] BLITZER: I want to get to some of the substance of domestic and international issues in a minute, but let’s just wrap up a little bit of the politics right now.

Why should Democrats, looking at the Democratic nomination process, support you instead of Bill Bradley, a friend of yours, a former colleague in the Senate? What do you have to bring to this that he doesn’t necessarily bring to this process?

GORE: Well, I will be offering — I’ll be offering my vision when my campaign begins. And it will be comprehensive and sweeping. And I hope that it will be compelling enough to draw people toward it. I feel that it will be.

But it will emerge from my dialogue with the American people. I’ve traveled to every part of this country during the last six years. During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet. I took the initiative in moving forward a whole range of initiatives that have proven to be important to our country’s economic growth and environmental protection, improvements in our educational system.

During a quarter century of public service, including most of it long before I came into my current job, I have worked to try to improve the quality of life in our country and in our world. And what I’ve seen during that experience is an emerging future that’s very exciting, about which I’m very optimistic, and toward which I want to lead. [….]

[emphasis added]

Over a year later:

Thursday, Oct 5, 2000 02:33 PM CDT
Did Gore invent the Internet?
Actually, the vice president never claimed to have done so — but he did help the Net along. Some people would rather forget that.
Scott Rosenberg

….It took social engineers as well as software engineers to build the Net. And that may be why the response to Gore’s original statement was so savage: Not because his claim was a lie, but because it was a truth that a lot of people today are trying to forget or bury….

From The Internets Gods (in 2000):

Al Gore and the Internet
By Robert Kahn and Vinton Cerf

Al Gore was the first political leader to recognize the importance of the Internet and to promote and support its development.

No one person or even small group of persons exclusively “invented” the Internet. It is the result of many years of ongoing collaboration among people in government and the university community. But as the two people who designed the basic architecture and the core protocols that make the Internet work, we would like to acknowledge VP Gore’s contributions as a Congressman, Senator and as Vice President. No other elected official, to our knowledge, has made a greater contribution over a longer period of time.

Last year the Vice President made a straightforward statement on his role. He said: “During my service in the United States Congress I took the initiative in creating the Internet.” We don’t think, as some people have argued, that Gore intended to claim he “invented” the Internet. Moreover, there is no question in our minds that while serving as Senator, Gore’s initiatives had a significant and beneficial effect on the still-evolving Internet. The fact of the matter is that Gore was talking about and promoting the Internet long before most people were listening. We feel it is timely to offer our perspective.

As far back as the 1970s Congressman Gore promoted the idea of high speed telecommunications as an engine for both economic growth and the improvement of our educational system. He was the first elected official to grasp the potential of computer communications to have a broader impact than just improving the conduct of science and scholarship. Though easily forgotten, now, at the time this was an unproven and controversial concept. Our work on the Internet started in 1973 and was based on even earlier work that took place in the mid-late 1960s. But the Internet, as we know it today, was not deployed until 1983. When the Internet was still in the early stages of its deployment, Congressman Gore provided intellectual leadership by helping create the vision of the potential benefits of high speed computing and communication. As an example, he sponsored hearings on how advanced technologies might be put to use in areas like coordinating the response of government agencies to natural disasters and other crises.

As a Senator in the 1980s Gore urged government agencies to consolidate what at the time were several dozen different and unconnected networks into an “Interagency Network.” Working in a bi-partisan manner with officials in Ronald Reagan and George Bush’s administrations, Gore secured the passage of the High Performance Computing and Communications Act in 1991. This “Gore Act” supported the National Research and Education Network (NREN) initiative that became one of the major vehicles for the spread of the Internet beyond the field of computer science.

As Vice President Gore promoted building the Internet both up and out, as well as releasing the Internet from the control of the government agencies that spawned it. He served as the major administration proponent for continued investment in advanced computing and networking and private sector initiatives such as Net Day. He was and is a strong proponent of extending access to the network to schools and libraries. Today, approximately 95% of our nation’s schools are on the Internet. Gore provided much-needed political support for the speedy privatization of the
Internet when the time arrived for it to become a commercially-driven operation.

There are many factors that have contributed to the Internet’s rapid growth since the later 1980s, not the least of which has been political support for its privatization and continued support for research in advanced networking technology. No one in public life has been more intellectually engaged in helping to create the climate for a thriving Internet than the Vice President. Gore has been a clear champion of this effort, both in the councils of government and with the public at large.

The Vice President deserves credit for his early recognition of the value of high speed computing and communication and for his long-term and consistent articulation of the potential value of the Internet to American citizens and industry and, indeed, to the rest of the world.

So, a Libertarian (they don’t believe government does anything, even though it does) writer posted a story (you can look it up) and subsequently republican politicians and operatives spun the media to create a convenient narrative that our lazy old media bought hook, line and sinker in 2000. Dave Helling shows us that the zombie lie still lives today.

These things are easy enough to check out. We understand you can even use the Internet. It took us less than five minutes.

* In the interest of full disclosure, I was a delegate from Missouri for Al Gore at the 2000 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles. As if that makes any difference.

In the dark, all diplomats are gray

22 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

dave Helling, Kansas City Star, missouri, polarization

In today’s Kansas City Star:

Posted on Tue, Aug. 21, 2012 11:13 PM

In politics, there is no black and white

By DAVE HELLING

The Kansas City Star

….Issues once considered relative, and subject to discussion and debate, are now considered absolute, such as abortion, and not subject to compromise. In this approach, Medicare isn’t insurance for the elderly, it’s socialism. Critics of President Barack Obama aren’t misguided, they’re racists. Taxes aren’t a way to raise money, they’re theft.

Finding compromise with socialists, racists, and thieves is pretty much as hard as compromising on abortion….

[emphasis in original]

The thing is, when it comes to abortion in Missouri, those militant absolutists are a small number, even smaller than the crazification factor (from Monday’s PPP poll):

[….]

Q6 Generally speaking, do you identify as prochoice or pro-life on the issue of abortion?

Pro-choice 40%

Pro-life 52%

Not sure 7%

Q7 Which of the following statements comes closest to your position on abortion: it should be legal in all cases; it should generally be  illegal with exception for rape, incest, or protection of the mother’s life; or should it be completely illegal?

Legal in all cases 33%

Illegal except for rape, incest, or the mother’s life 47%

Completely illegal 14%

Not sure 5%

[….]

[emphasis added]

So, in a statewide poll (with a sample that could be interpreted as skewing republican), 33% of the respondents believe abortion should be legal in all circumstances, 47% believe abortion should be legal in some circumstances, and 14% are militant absolutists (like Todd Akin) who believe that abortion should be illegal in all circumstances. 80% and 14%. And exactly who is driving political polarization?

The questions that Dave Helling should be asking is, how and why does 14% of the population, militant absolutists that they are, so drive the current (and long time past) political environment? An environment which Helling now laments in his opinion piece. “All sides do it” doesn’t cut it, especially when a small single issue minority is so far out of the main stream.

The answer is simple. The republican party, a political institution which endeavors to attain and hold on to political power at all costs, can rely on that single wedge issue portion of the electorate to keep them in power. And everybody else in the republican establishment club goes along until it bites them in the ass.  

* The headline is from a line in John Adams’ opera, Nixon in China (1987).

 

The stenographer speaks! (briefly)

10 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Claire McCaskill, Dave Catanese, dave Helling, missouri, Steve Kraske, Tony Messenger

Senator Claire McCaskill “Turns the Tables on Reporters”:

“…I learned that Claire McCaskill has better technology than I have…”

Ouch.

“…it’s cheaper, they don’t have to pay for a photographer…”

Double ouch.

And the stenographer speaks! (ever so briefly)

Douchebag Dave strikes again!

01 Sunday Feb 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, dave Helling

(Sometimes we have more than one blogger get irritated by the same thing, and this is one of those times.  I, too, was irritated as hell at the false equivalency Dave Helling tried to make between Claire’s family income and the idiots on Wall Street who spent billions on bonuses rewarding failure.  I was meaner about it tho, because Helling and I have history.  I can’t stand the guy.  But I’m civilized.  On no less than three occasions as we both covered events for our respective outlets, he has literally bent over in front of me and offered that ample target, and I have seen sheer terror on Michael’s face as I wrestled my demons.  So far, I have resisted temptation and not kicked him square in the ass – hence my tenuous grip on a claim to being a ‘civilized’ human being.)  

Dave Helling used to be a pretty decent journalist, but those days are so far in the past they aren’t even visible in the rear-view mirror.  Now, he’s just a tool.  It’s like he reread some of his early J-school course materials, and all those things a journalist isn’t supposed to employ – elision, innuendo, false equivalencies and faulty logic – he seems to have adopted as a how-to manual in recent years.  

Readers of this site may recall that he and I had a public spat a while back, when I filed the amicus brief arguing that the letters in support of the traitor Scooter Libby should be released to the public.   First he thought that I didn’t know what an amicus brief even is.  (Yes,  I certainly do, as my husbands former boss  General Richard Myers, one of the sleazebags who supported that traitor, found out in stark relief when his fawning obsequiousness toward the Bushies and lack of character was made part of the public record.)  So he changed tactics – he attacked me for writing under a pseudonym .   I responded with a history lesson, and the matter dropped.    

Now, he is getting his yellow journalist on and gumming Claire’s ankle with false equivalencies and elisions to hypocrisy because her family income was more than $400,000 last year.  

  Sen. Claire McCaskill’s last financial disclosure statement showed income of at least $2.27 million in 2007, not counting her Senate salary.

McCaskill — who called Friday for limiting pay at companies bailed out by the government to $400,000, what the president makes — could have earned, at the top end, more than $9.4 million in 2007, the disclosure shows.

The disclosure lists a range of incomes from dozens of investments, most of them involving McCaskill’s husband, Joe Shepard.

O noes!  Her husband is rich!  He made a lot of money last year!

Except – Joe Shepard isn’t going to the feds, hat in hand, and asking for TARP funds.  

Claire’s husband is a shrewd businessman who has made a lot of money providing a vital service to residents of our state.  He is in the business of constructing nursing homes and low-income apartments.  His business takes advantage of tax breaks and low-interest government backed loans that were put in place as incentives for people to provide the services for that niche of society.  

He has never been accused of any wrongdoing or malfeasance.  There has never been an allegation of wrongdoing, padded invoices, kickbacks, patronage, shoddy workmanship, nothing of the sort.

Instead, he provides a service that is needed, takes advantage of the incentives that were put in place to encourage the free market to fill that niche, and makes money doing it.  Good on him.  That’s the American dream, after all.  

When the readers at PrimeBuzz took Helling to task for his shoddy, lazy, “gotcha” post, he posted an update:

(UPDATE:   It’s clear from some of the responses below that not everyone is familiar with Shepard’s businesses.  For many years he used state-issued tax credits and other assistance to build and maintain housing in the state and across the country.  

Those tax breaks and credits were a cost to the state treasury — taxpayers.  Here’s how the Post-Dispatch reported in 2006:  “The picture of Shepard that emerges from public records and interviews reveals a shrewd businessman who has aggressively sought public subsidies and made millions, mainly in rural, low-income housing.”  Or the AP, in 2004: “Joseph Shepard has built millions of dollars worth of low-income housing projects with the help of low interest loans and tax credits from the Missouri Housing Development Commission.”)

It is not possible, using the disclosure, to set a firm top end on McCaskill’s family income, since one investment (Missouri Tax Credit Fund LP)  provided income of “$1,000,001 /Over”.

Dave, Dave Dave…

You are grasping at straws, and looking even more ridiculous in the process.  

Without those incentives, the segment of the population served by Mr. Shepard might not be served at all.  That is why we pay taxes, you know.  We like living in a civilized society, and taxes are what we pay to buy that ticket.  Duh.  Taxes that are used to benefit the greater good and strengthen the social safety net- like construction of safe, efficient housing for poor people and nursing homes for the elderly – I pay willingly, cheerfully and happily.  

And once more…Mr. Shepard has not asked for any bailout funds to keep his business afloat.  He has built a business that fills a need, managed it competently, grown rich, and done quite well in the process.  

Of course, if he hadn’t I have no doubt that Douchebag Dave would be all over that, too.

Dept. of False Equivalence

01 Sunday Feb 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Claire McCaskill, dave Helling, executive pay, Kansas City Star, missouri

Dave Helling tried to catch McCaskill in a bit of double talk. You see, Claire McCaskill wants to cap executive compensation at the same level as the President of the US. But wait! McCaskill and her husband are multimillionaires! Shouldn’t she cap her own pay as well?

Well, no. McCaskill’s proposal only applied to executives of companies that are accepting bailout money. And as far as I know, neither McCaskill nor her husband have accepted any money from TARP, money that was lent to banks to unfreeze credit and keep loans available to small businesses, not for bonuses for ultrarich (and failed) executives.

…Oh dear, I see that Helling updated the post with a lame defense. Her husband’s businesses benefit from tax credits, so therefore she’s a hypocrite. I claim tax credits, as do many Americans – are we all hypocrites for believing that Wall Street executives shouldn’t get bonuses for shoddy work out of taxpayer coffers?* In retrospect, voting to give TARP money out in the first place was probably a bad idea, but McCaskill’s proposal is a good one for the situation we find ourselves in now.

…Aargh! I see that Dan Ryan is blinded by his hatred of McCaskill and all too eager to accept Helling’s argument.

One of his commenters put it very well:

I’m not sure I understand why wealthy people should not criticise wall street firms who use tax dollars to fund exec bonuses.

I think everybody has a license to criticise wall street firms for behaving in that manner.

*I edited this sentence after the fact for clarity’s sake.

What’s yer motivation?

14 Sunday Oct 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

2008 election, dave Helling, Kansas City Star, media criticism, political consultants

There’s only one thing worse in partisan politics than public hand wringing: anonymous public hand wringing. Not by much, though.

Some Democrats fear a Clinton nomination could hurt other party candidates [tiny URL]

….”There’s only one person capable of uniting the Republicans, and that’s Hillary,” said longtime Democratic operative Jim Bergfalk. Unlike the others working their worry beads in the party, he was willing to be quoted by name in this article….

So, what’s the motivation for this public display of angst?

Dave Helling goes on in the same Kansas City Star article:

….But polls suggest Clinton’s margin for error here isn’t large. A recent Survey USA poll, conducted for KCTV in Kansas City, showed Clinton losing Missouri to Rudy Giuliani by three points – the only Democratic front-runner to lose the state to any Republican candidate….

Yes, Dave, let’s talk about Rudy Giuliani in Missouri – as I wrote on MyDD:

…Especially since Rudy Giuliani doesn’t have any family values problems, or “controversial” business associate problems, or hasn’t ever flip-flopped on any major wedge issues important to the republican base….

That’ll all go over really well in Missouri, eh?

And still, we have consultants who talk to reporters who then report what the consultants say (sometimes “anonymously”, sometimes not). A consultocracy as it where.

If you’re really in the know you shouldn’t be telling all to the media, should you? Unless you’ve got an agenda.

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