All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
From the Readers
- Oxy Mora 20 hours ago
- acanuck 1 day ago
- Flavius 3 days ago
- tmccarthy0 3 days ago
- Oxy Mora 3 days ago
- ironboltbruce 3 days ago
- Flavius 4 days ago
- Another Trope 4 days ago
- Dan Kervick 4 days ago
- SleepinJeezus 4 days ago
Creative corner
- Verified Atheist 19 hours ago
- Richard Day 3 days ago
- MrSmith1 3 days ago
- ironboltbruce 1 week ago
- Wattree 1 week ago
From the Dagbloggers
- Donal 1 day 10 hours ago
- Articleman 2 days 11 hours ago
- Donal 3 days 5 hours ago
- Genghis 3 days 14 hours ago
- Genghis 4 days 11 hours ago
- Doctor Cleveland 4 days 21 hours ago
- Articleman 6 days 5 hours ago
- Ramona 6 days 9 hours ago
- Donal 1 week 14 hours ago
- Donal 1 week 1 day ago
Personal Information
- Biography
- Genghis (Michael Wolraich) is a non-fiction writer in New York City. He's a co-founder of dagblog, a regular contributor to CNN.com, and the author of Blowing Smoke: Why the Right Keeps Serving Up Whack-Job Fantasies about the Plot to Euthanize Grandma, Outlaw Christmas, and Turn Junior into a Raging Homosexual. Wolraich has been a guest on C-SPAN's BookTV, The John Batchelor Show, Culture Shocks, and various radio shows across the country.
Wolraich is also the computer genius who maintains dagblog's state-of-the-art software, but he denies responsibility for technical glitches and advises users to "quit sniveling." In his spare time, Wolraich raises peach mold and performs live impressions of the law of gravity. - Website
- http://blowingsmokebook.com
History
- Member for
- 3 years 19 weeks
- Blog
- View recent blog entries
Blog Posts
-
- Genghis's blog
- 11 comments
- 414 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 57 comments
- 2254 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 133 comments
- 3863 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 13 comments
- 986 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 17 comments
- 815 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 120 comments
- 525 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 34 comments
- 474 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 53 comments
- 783 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 108 comments
- 1324 reads
-
- Genghis's blog
- 11 comments
- 347 reads
Lies My Pastor Told Me
The Christian Anti-Defamation Commission (CADC) is a not-for-profit 501(c) (3) Education Corporation whose purpose it is to become the first-in-mind champion of Christian religious liberty, domestically and internationally, and a national clearing house and first line of response to anti-Christian defamation, bigotry, and discrimination.
As America slides down the slippery slope into secular abyss, Christianity itself has come under attack. Nowhere is the assault on religious liberty more ruthless than in our schools. Just last month, a malicious little atheist forced a Rhode Island high school to remove its students' inspirational prayer from the wall of the gymnasium.
But one brave man refuses to stand by as the secular state annihilates our childrens' religious liberties. Rev. Gary L. Cass, president of the celebrated Christian Anti-Defamation Commission, has recently launched a new organization called DefendStudents.org, which is dedicated to defending religious liberty in our schools. [Read more]
Panetta: Iran to Enter "Immunity Zone"; Israeli Attack Imminent
When will the Israelis attack? That's what the world has wondered ever since 1984, when an anonymous source predicted that Iran would develop a nuclear bomb within two years.
Twenty-eight years later, Israeli may have finally set a date for its long-awaited assault according to United States Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.
Panetta reportedly told David Ignatius of the Washington Post that Israel is likely to strike Iran sometime in April, May, or June of this year.
According to Panetta, the Israelis believe that Iran will soon enter what they call the "zone of immunity," which sounds like either a science fiction episode or a game of tag. Soon after the Post reported Panetta's remarks, the Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak confirmed that the Israelis were very concerned about Iran's imminent arrival in the Immunity Zone.
But the report raises an intriguing question:
Why did Leon Panetta announce the schedule for Israeli's surprise attack? [Read more]
What's the Matter With Mormons?
Last week, blogger MuddyPolitics wrote a piece that took a swipe at Mitt Romney for his Mormon faith. The article provoked a passionate debate, one that is likely being repeated in various forms across the country this election season.
The question is this: Should we consider Romney's religious beliefs when assessing his fitness for the presidency? [Read more]
The Capitalist and the Zombie: Romney's Threat to the GOP
A number of Republican presidential hopefuls and not so hopefuls have attacked Mitt Romney as a heartless capitalist who destroyed jobs while a partner at Bain Capital. Newt Gingrich compared Romney to a looter. Rick Perry called him a vulture. Jon Huntsman suggested that Romney likes firing people.
The anti-Romney offensive has raised the ire of many Republican leaders, who have condemned the charges as disrespectful to heartless capitalism. Their concern is understandable. Heartless capitalism is the very soul of Republican Party. Without it, the party would resemble some toothless decomposing zombie that blunders haplessly into disgusted voters while gurgling about taking back the country. [Read more]
Class Over Race: The New Old Progressive Agenda
In the beginning, racial equality was not a progressive ideal. Early progressives rarely paid much attention to persecuted minorities such as blacks, Jews, American Indians, or Irish and Chinese immigrants. They focused instead on defending an oppressed majority--farmers and workers--from a predatory minority--industry titans and bankers.
When progressives in the early 20th century did address minority rights, their positions tended to reflect party affiliation rather than progressive ideology. In those days, race politics split at the party line with Republicans supporting racial equality and Democrats opposing. Class politics, on the other hand, produced internal divisions within each party.
As a result, Republican progressives tended to be concerned about racial oppression, while Democratic progressives ignored or even condoned it. When the moderately progressive Republican president Teddy Roosevelt shocked the nation by inviting Booker T. Washington to dine at the White House, William Jennings Bryan, a radically progressive Democrat, publicly denounced him. [Read more]
Creative Assistance, Anyone?
Hello dag readers and assorted creative geniuses. I'm under deadline for a title for my new book proposal and struggling to come up with one that "pops" in my agent's words. She offered examples of other non-fiction titles like Founding Brothers, Team of Rivals, The Professor and the Madman, and The Devil in the White City.
Below the fold, please find a blurb that describes the book, a popular history of politics in the early 1900s. I'm looking for something provocative but not overtly partisan. All serious suggestions are welcome (and yes, Quinn, the emphasis is meant for you). [Read more]
Germany's Bold Plan to Rescue Europe
As Italy and Spain go tumbling after Greece into an abyss of insolvency, Germany has at last found the will to act boldly in defense of the European Union.
According to the New York Times, Chancellor Angela Merkel has launched a courageous effort to bail out Germany's struggling neighbors...with the International Monetary Fund's money.
Not that she's shirking responsibility. After all, Germany contributes a full six percent of the IMF pool.
And really, why should Germany be any more responsible for bailing out European debtors than the United States (17 percent) and the other 159 non-European members (60 percent). So Germany and Italy share the same currency, what of it? [Read more]
Rethinking Income Inequality: A New Kind of Payroll Tax
How do you alleviate economic inequality in America? It's easy to complain about greed and extravagance but much more difficult to come up with practical policies that would make a real difference in the long run.
The default proposal these days is to increase tax rates on top income brackets, starting with an elimination of the Bush tax cuts. That may help a bit, but as you can see from the following graph, the trend toward income concentration did not begin with Bush's presidency, and it would take radical tax increases to get back to 1970s levels. The government would have to strip an additional 30 percent from the incomes of the top ten percent and somehow put that money into everyone else's pockets.
A Real, Real Alternative for President(s)
There has been much heated discussion in these pages over whether liberals should support President Obama in the 2012 elections or embrace an independent candidate. In the absence of any credible challenger, these debates have been largely hypothetical. That is about to change.
I am happy to introduce two exciting new candidates who have emerged from the political muck like avenging swamp monsters from outer space. What they lack in experience, charisma, good judgment, and the semblance of any political agenda, they more than make up for in the intangible quality that some call panache, some call chutzpah, and some aren't quite sure what to call. I give you Kat Nove and Jeni Decker. [Read more]
The Trouble with Banks
It's hard out there for a bank. Last year, retail banks lost a major revenue source when the government regulated overdraft charges. This year, they took another hit when the government capped the debit card fees. And amidst an anemic credit market, they're having trouble finding investment opportunities for their deposits.
According to the New York Times' calculations, it costs the banks $200 to $300 a year to maintain a checking account, but they're only earning $85 and $115. So now they're scrambling to find new ways to charge customers, from conspicuous checking fees to sly little charges that sneak into bank statements. [Read more]
In the News
-
Obama Campaign To Court Super PAC Cash They Loathe
TPM 2012 - Within body of text:
The decision was handed out after new FEC filings revealed conservative groups outraised their Democratic counterparts by a four to one ratio. In recent weeks one Republican donor alone, Sheldon Adelson, has given over $10 million to a Super PAC supporting Newt Gingrich. Mitt Romney’s Super PAC raised $30 million in 2011. By contrast, a Democratic Super PAC founded by former Obama aide Bill Burton, Priorities USA, raised only $19 million.
Politico also has interesting piece on this too.
Read the article at http://2012.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/02/obama-campaign-to-court-super-pac-cash-they-loathe.php?ref=fpa- Add new comment
-
Jim Bakker’s Christian amusement park is now a post-...

In 1986, Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker's Heritage USA was the third most-visited amusement park in the US, behind only Disney World and Disneyland. Now the park that once entertained millions of guests is falling to pieces, and looks more like the scene from a post-apocalyptic movie than a place for family fun.
-
Truth, lies and AfghanistanBy LT. COL. DANIEL L. DAVIS
I spent last year in Afghanistan, visiting and talking with U.S. troops and their Afghan partners. My duties with the Army’s Rapid Equipping Force took me into every significant area where our soldiers engage the enemy. Over the course of 12 months, I covered more than 9,000 miles and talked, traveled and patrolled with troops in Kandahar, Kunar, Ghazni, Khost, Paktika, Kunduz, Balkh, Nangarhar and other provinces.
What I saw bore no resemblance to rosy official statements by U.S. military leaders about conditions on the ground.
Read the article at http://armedforcesjournal.com/2012/02/8904030 -
Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein speaks out in support of...
Just when you thought it was safe to hate Goldman Sachs…
-
A Mortgage Tornado Warning, UnheededYEARS before the housing bust — before all those home loans turned sour and millions of Americans faced foreclosure — a wealthy businessman in Florida set out to blow the whistle on the mortgage game.His name is Nye Lavalle, and he first came to attention not in finance but in sports and advertising. He turned heads in marketing circles by correctly predicting that Nascar and figure skating would draw huge followings in the 1990s.But after losing a family home to foreclosure, under what he thought were fishy circumstances, Mr. Lavalle, founder of a consulting firm called the Sports Marketing Group, began a new life as a mortgage sleuth. In 2003, when home prices were flying high, he compiled a dossier of improprieties on one of the giants of the business, Fannie Mae.In hindsight, what he found looks like a blueprint of today’s foreclosure crisis. Even then, Mr. Lavalle discovered, some loan-servicing companies that worked for Fannie Mae routinely filed false foreclosure documents, not unlike the fraudulent paperwork that has since made “robo-signing” a household term. Even then, he found, the nation’s electronic mortgage registry was playing fast and loose with the law — something that courts have belatedly recognized, too.
Latest Comments
-
in If money were speechVerified Atheist
-
in Jim Bakker’s Christian...artappraiser
-
in The year of no Mormon...PeraclesPlease (not verified)
-
in The year of no Mormon...PeraclesPlease (not verified)
-
in The year of no Mormon...PeraclesPlease (not verified)
-
in The year of no Mormon...PeraclesPlease (not verified)
-
in The Dr. Houseman Column...artappraiser
-
in The Dr. Houseman Column...Articleman
-
in The Dr. Houseman Column...Dan Kervick
-
in We Were Wrong About...Aunt Sam
-
in If money were speechMrSmith1
-
in We Were Wrong About...Aunt Sam
-
in We Were Wrong About...tmccarthy0
-
in We Were Wrong About...Flavius
-
in The year of no Mormon...Oxy Mora




