Schreiner’s Media Landscape

July 20, 2010

Sarah Palin’s “Language” Proves the Only People More Stupid are Her Supporters; Searching for the Rover Back

Filed under: Bush, Cheney, Education, Internet, journalism, politics, sports, television — Ken Schreiner @ 8:02 am

English is a living language. Shakespeare liked to coin new words too. Got to celebrate it!

- Sarah Palin

The impossible-yet-probable standard bearer of the Republican Party continues to astound the world by being even more ignorant than her predecessor, George W. I-thought-I’d-forgotten-but-keeps-coming-back-to-haunt-me. By inventing then defending fake words like “refudiate” in a recent series of inane Tweets, Palin not only shows us her Bush-like disrespect for reality. She keeps showing us why she’s not even qualified to be an elementary school principal much less president of anything. I wouldn’t have hired her to be a TV sportscaster- her original career path- though her vocabulary appears to qualify her for the job.

However, as we saw with Bush and even Ronald Reagan, Republicans prefer their presidents to be idiots so the REAL smart people- the Ed Meeses, Karl Roves, and other puppet-mastering Rasputins- can do their handiwork without any interference from the “boss” or public scrutiny. It’s about time the American corporate news media woke up to the repetition of history going on with the Palin “campaign for something” and look behind the scenes to find out who her Rove is.

Whoever it is, I bet they know refudiate isn’t a word and Sarah Palin is nothing but a meal ticket.

June 21, 2010

Breaking Irony: FCC Media Ownership Rules No Longer Needed Because Those Rules Destroyed Media Ownership

Filed under: Bush, Cheney, Hollywood, dualism, media, television — Ken Schreiner @ 8:10 am

Media companies are struggling and the government is standing in their way. But even if the FCC got rid of the rules, would it matter anyway? That’s the $64,000 question.

- Kenneth Ferree,  former FCC official

When people say right-wingers have no sense of humor, this statement is exactly what they’re talking about. Here’s a “conservative”, former big shot with the Federal Communications Commission under Bush II (the REALLY stupid one) blaming the government for corporate media’s financial crises when it was the government (the Bush, Clinton, and the other Bush administrations) who relaxed media ownership regulations to accomodate the ridiculously costly mergers and other cannibalism the industry vigorously lobbied for.

Continuing his “thought”, Ferree wonders aloud whether getting rid of those rules would matter, instead of understanding what the rules are there for in the first place and developing a solution worth considering. The punch line to this comic irony is a tired, outdated metaphor in which he references a 1950s game show, “$64,000 Question”, that was revealed to be rigged, resulting in a government investigation and crackdown, as in REGULATIONS (watch the fantastic film “Game Show”) that became the enduring  symbol of greed, corruption, and moral ambiguity that the television industry is to this day.

Now that’s sad AND funny. Just like any good TV show.

June 15, 2010

Breaking Irony: Eco-Terrorism, Green Conspiracy Theorists Help Environmentalists in BP Gulf, Chevron Red Butte Oil Disasters

Filed under: America, Bush, Cheney, Environment, Obama, Oil, Salt Lake, Utah, conservation, dualism, politics, pollution, renewable, water, wind — Ken Schreiner @ 8:17 am

When Rush Limbaugh vomited his “speculation” that eco-terrorists were responsible for the BP Deepwater oil rig nightmare, I was amused yet annoyed. First of all, Rush has NO CREDIBILITY on any subject (he is, like Glenn Beck, an “entertainer” by his own description). I find his rants and those of the paranoiac groupthink sect known nominally only as “conservatives” comical and often pathetic. But in spectacularly ironic fashion, what Rush and other green conspiracy theorists have done during the BP mess is give new strength, credibility and urgency to the environmental movement, particularly renewable energy.

Similarly, the recent oil pipeline leak on Red Butte Creek in Salt Lake City caused speculation here in the reddest of the red states that bands of long-haired, hippie hooligans were spending their Friday night driving spikes into Chevron’s hardware. But alas, it appears a tree branch blown off during a wind storm caused a power line to contact a metal fence that caused an arc that blew a hole in the pipe. The only consolation for the Republinoids is that it was an act of God.

The radical Gaia worship theorists were also radically wrong about the BP oil rig too. BP’s own incompetence, greed and arrogance led to the accident. Worse than the accident itself, BP obviously had no idea what to do if and when their operations caused trouble and still doesn’t. But again, there is consolation for the Right. Despite BP’s obvious responsibility, they blame the Obama administration for not reacting fast enough, though one of their mantras is less government involvement in anything.

So I’d like to personally thank Rush Limbaugh, BP, Chevron, the Tea Party, the Republican Party, and the rest of the wacky gang for hanging themselves from the wreckage of the Deepwater rig. If America’s real conservatives were smart, they’d stop pointing fingers and start looking at themselves as the source of the “trouble” our country’s in and even come up with a few constructive ideas for getting us out of it. But that’s probably too much to ask. What recent history shows us is America’s right-wing is interested in only talking- and blaming anyone who’s actually trying to do something.

May 25, 2010

Limbaugh Book, Rand Paul: Right Wingnuts Abandon Ideas, Send in the Clowns

Filed under: America, Bush, Cheney, Congress, Environment, Oil, dualism, media, politics — Ken Schreiner @ 9:41 am

Limbaugh has skillfully conjured for his listeners a world in which they are disdained and despised by mysterious elites – a world in which Limbaugh’s $4,000 bottles of wine do not exclude him from the life of the common man.

- David Frum on Zev Chafets’ new book about Rush Limbaugh

Sarah Palin’s definition of a “gotcha” interview is one in which actual questions are asked.

- Eugene Robinson, Washington Post columnist

I’ve avoided politics the past few months but recent events in Kentucky, Arizona, the Gulf oil spill and the ongoing tragicomedy of Sarah Palin (I just watched “Elmer Gantry” again) make me wonder what America’s right wing is thinking. Answer: they aren’t thinking at all.

Columnist Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post puts Senate candidate/racist apologist Rand Paul on the spot for past statements about race, the environment and immigration and, in the process, boils down this lunatic’s “politics” to the paranoiac ravings they truly are (check out his comments on the BP oil rig screw-up). More than coincidentally, renegade thinking-conservative David Frum also uses the Washington Post to critique Zev Chafets’ new book about Rush Limbaugh. There’s not a lot of love lost between the Canadian-Republican and Limbaugh which informs Frum’s analysis of America’s favorite Mussolini impersonator. Frum and Chafets expose Rush’s signficant posterior to the reality that he is exactly the type of elitist poseur he purports to detest.

As for Palin, her magical mystery tour on the Road to Whatever continues. Is she a presidential candidate, TV reporter, comedienne, or just another bozo cashing in on the stupidity of her borderline literate fan base? To think that someone marginally functional as a mother and human much less a mega-celebrity could also be THE standard-bearer of America’s other white meat is perplexing more than enraging, given what we went through with Bush-Cheney. But as she fumbles and insults her way across our once-proud nation, we can only draw one conclusion: America’s right-wingers not only have no ideas. They have no idea what they’re doing or where they’re going. But they’re fighting like hell to take us all with them.

May 12, 2010

BP Oil Rig Similar to 9/11: The Question Is Why It Wasn’t Prevented

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Cheney, Congress, Earth, Environment, Iraq, Oil, dualism, politics, pollution, water — Ken Schreiner @ 4:50 pm

“How can a device that has 260 failure modes be considered fail-safe?”

- Rep. Bart Stupak on the catastrophic failure of spill prevention equipment

The oil industry, Republican Party and other radical right-wingers openly express their hatred for environmentalists, calling us “wackos”, “treehuggers”, and most inaccurate and reckless, “terrorists.” Terrorists are normally considered bad people so why someone who wants to save the planet and its inhabitants, including members of the Tea Party,  is bad I don’t quite understand.

It turns out Rush and the radical right were wrong- SURPRISE!- about the BP oil rig being sabotaged by eco-terrorists. It was massive equipment and policy failure by the companies involved- the “drill, baby, drill” team. But with ten per cent of America still believing environmentalists are responsible and environmentalism still being “bad”, this delusion needs to be analyzed for its self-destructive origins and utter uselessness as a “policy”, and the outrage directed more accurately and constructively.

First of all, environmentalists are not going to hurt the planet or people to PREVENT hurting the planet or people. No one can compete with right-wingers for violence against the planet and killing people. Which brings us back to 9/11 and BP. The 9/11 terrorists were bad people.  But al-Qaeda’s and Saudi Arabia’s attack on America is less perplexing and outrageous than why we didn’t stop it when we had a previous attack, advance intelligence, and information indicating not only what was going to happen but when, how, by whom.

Now like 9/11, the question in the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico is not so much what went wrong and how but why the systems we had in place to prevent it failed so cataclysmically. Sadly, the answers are different but quite simple: in 9/11, the Bush Administration was stupid or complicit. But it’s obvious they cared because they spent the next eight years struggling to make up for their mistakes on 9/11. However, with the BP oil disaster, the oil industry showed again they just don’t care. Their leaders’ peformance at the current congressional hearings indicates no interest in changing that position.

If they did care, the blowout preventer’s battery wouldn’t have been dead. Nor would there have been leaks, outages and a shutdown of a crucial “fail-safe” system as was revealed at today’s hearing. Ironically, BP had just spent millions repairing the rig to pump more oil, but just couldn’t find a few thousand bucks to maintain their blowout preventer. So who are the real “environmental wackos” here?

America’s security industry claims to have learned much from 9/11. Certainly, the advances in security changed life in America. And if no 9/11s since then was the objective, we have succeeded. Maybe the oil industry will learn something too and spend the right amount to make sure this never happens again. But all that knowledge and money spent protecting the planet will be wasted if they don’t first learn to care about it.

May 9, 2010

Sen. Bennett Thrown Overboard by Utah Tea Party: Keep on Tossing!

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Cheney, China, Congress, Iraq, Jazz, Salt Lake, Utah, dualism, politics, religion — Ken Schreiner @ 8:29 am

The Republican Party may have finally found something they can do correctly: destroy themselves. The developments at Saturday’s Utah state Republican Party convention were more exciting than the Jazz-Lakers game- and it was a good game. With three-term U.S. Senator Bob Bennett being voted off the ticket by the growing number of delegates claiming affiliation with the so-called Tea Party, it’s obvious that America’s right-wing is well on the way to the extinction it has sought so vigorously and deserves so completely.

Given their fiscal irresponsibility, total mishandling of 9/11, Iraq, the subprime meltdown, China, Katrina (name your favorite disaster here), and misguided, angry vengeance at anything non-white and non-Christian, the Republicans are saving the rest of the country (the MAJORITY) a lot of trouble by spanking themselves and putting each other out of work.

April 30, 2010

BP Gulf Oil Rig, Massey Coal Disasters Show We Don’t Understand Energy Independence or Security

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Oil, Power Grid, Solar, coal, dualism, geothermal, mining, nuclear, politics, pollution, renewable, wind — Ken Schreiner @ 4:23 pm

The latest oil-coal-nuclear-or-whatever in the Gulf of Mexico is just another headline unless you understand this:

OUR LACK OF ENERGY INDEPENDENCE AND SECURITY IS MORE FRIGHTENING THAN GETTING ATTACKED IN A SKYSCRAPER.

But Americans spend more time trying to discredit innovative, job-creating, decentralized, cleaner and renewable energy sources than finding and using alternatives to the crap we’re addicted to. We can’t get past the idea that fossil fuels are the only thing that works when the reality is that fossil fuels are perhaps the worst thing humans could possibly come up with to provide electricity, heat, etc. Even manure is cleaner.

If one oil rig, one power plant, or just one feeder cable goes out and you are crippled, that’s wrong. If you have viable, sustainable and affordable energy sources like solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, soy diesel and a myriad of other fuels available and affordable and you’re still dependent on fossil fuels, you’re stupid. If we trust the future of our entire country to companies like BP, Exxon-Mobil, Enron, and Massey Energy, we’re doomed.

America could be the world’s leader in renewable energy development. Instead our captains of industry and so-called “leaders” have lashed us to the oil rig and coal bin and we’re getting- well, drilled by the rest of the world because of it. Regardless of the cause of the Deepwater oil rig calamity, it exposes the Achilles Heel that America’s current energy “policy” is. And if we don’t break the chains of enslavement that Saudi Arabia, Russia, Massey and other fossil fuel masters have around our necks, we have no right to complain or expect improvement.

April 23, 2010

Politico Study Confirms Tea Party Disillusioned, Self-Absorbed “Victims”

Filed under: America, Bush, Cheney, dualism, gun, politics — Ken Schreiner @ 8:44 am

“…there is a word for what poll after poll depicts as a class of largely white, middle-class, middle-aged voters who are aggrieved: Republicans.”

- Politico Tea Party poll

The squeaky wheel making the noise on the American political scene lately is the so-called “Tea Party”. While the name is an homage to the drunken folks who dumped a shipment of tea into Boston Harbor to protest pre-revolutionary taxation by their British masters, the reality is that these Tea Partiers are more like 75-year-old suburban white women sitting and sipping a nice cup of Earl Grey complaining about the weather- and everything else.

A new study by Politico shows while this “movement” appears to be sweeping the nation, it’s actually the same old people doing the same old thing only with a makeover. The ascent of Sarah Palin to spokesmodel is more an indication of her desperate and directionless ambitions than a seachange in the political landscape. Most telling is that virtually all Tea Partiers are merely Republicans in revolutionary costumes with the “revolution” in them washed clean out of the fabric.

Also telling is that most Tea Partiers come from newly-developed “boom town” areas hard-hit by the recession caused, ironically, by the people they pushed into office ten years ago. They are essentially restless, disillusioned, white people who’ve run as far as they can to get away from America and now purport themselves as the ones who must save it. They are self-cornered animals who have nowhere to run and blame everyone else- especially the usual suspect, the federal government- for their trouble.

The real problem is while they are clearly a marginal bunch, they are heavily armed with ideology and AK-47s and a lot of time and space on their hands to rehearse their school play. Knowing how the anti-Clinton forces a.k.a. the same people produced similar marginal but ultimately effective killers like Timothy McVeigh in the 1990s, we must pay close attention to the Tea Party- not because of their political power but because of how much ammunition they have and their growing impatience to use it.

April 13, 2010

Smart Electric Meters Not So Smart After All; Distributive Energy is Still Essential to Homeland Security

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Cheney, Internet, Obama, Oil, Power Grid, Solar, coal, conservation, geothermal, nuclear, renewable, wind — Ken Schreiner @ 4:58 pm
“…an attacker may be able to force control messages to perform such tasks as turning off the power
latch, updating firmware, or attacking HAN devices. Potential ways of successfully executing such an attack may include stealing symmetric keys from a meter, private/public keys from a legitimate collector, or any other such authentication information.”
- Security firm InGuardians’ report on the vulnerability of centralized power systems caused by “smart meters”

Of all the so-called “successes” of America’s anti-terrorist campaign since 9/11, one that’s not talked about is our power grid. That’s because nothing’s changed. If anything, it’s worse. Even the invention of so-called “smart meters” has created yet another way for would-be terrorists to not only take over a home or business’ electricity system, but gain access to the grid and cripple it remotely.

As the Bush regime did with its 9/11 intel, you can expect the industry-friendly Obamanoids to ignore or bury this valuable intelligence and encourage an attack by terrorists whom you KNOW are reading it. The only total answer to this problem is distributed energy: requiring  every home and business to own and maintain its own power system: solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, even nuclear. As long as America is run by corporations though, you can expect not only an increased terrorist threat, but more power outages, shortages of coal, oil and other disappearing fossil fuel resources and, as Bush-Cheney showed us, lots of posterior-protection.

April 9, 2010

Breaking Irony: Rupert Murdoch Doesn’t Watch Fox News- Only Owns It

Filed under: America, Bush, Cheney, China, Obama, dualism, journalism, media, politics, television — Ken Schreiner @ 7:53 am

“I have great respect for the (New York) Times, except it does have very clearly an agenda.”

- Rupert Murdoch, owner of Fox News

The world’s foremost corporate media collector’s comments from the National Press Club last night are so bloody rich with irony that they almost run past you. Everybody’s a media critic these days, and everybody, even the right-wing nut cases and snake oil salesmen who reap the benefits, knows that Fox News is the most biased TV news operation outside of China or the Arab world. But not everyone would suspect that the supposed-smartest-man-in-media is posturing as a defender of independent-thinking journalism while throwing stones from the rotted balcony of his huge glass house.

This is consistent with the continued effort by “conservative” puppet masters and their clueless minions to make real “independent thinkers” believe that Jesus is coming next Thursday, the world is flat, white is black, and wrong is right. We’ve seen propaganda work before: Hitler, the Bush administration, any major corporate advertising firm or political party. And as long as this deception is bought by a growing number of Americans, wealthy and self-serving corporate dictators like Murdoch can say anything they want and get away with it.

And if you believe everything Fox News, Limbaugh, Beck and the other clowns say, guess what that makes you.

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