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FOCUS: Bill O'Reilly, Ronald Reagan, and the History We'd Rather Not Know Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Wednesday, 21 October 2015 10:34

Pierce writes: "In Bill O'Reilly's latest book, Killing Reagan - which obviously didn't happen, but go with it - O'Reilly inadvertently (and without proper attribution, as we shall see) stumbled into that shadowland that lies between the history that we believe, and the history that we'd rather not know."

Bill O'Reilly on ABC's
Bill O'Reilly on ABC's "The View." (photo: Carolyn Cole/LA Times)


Bill O'Reilly, Ronald Reagan, and the History We'd Rather Not Know

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

21 October 15

 

Dispatches from the shadowland.

ill O'Reilly has taken to styling himself as something of an expert on historical murders. This has not been an easy process. For example, his book on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln was so flawed that the museum bookstore at Ford's Theater refused to sell it. His book on the assassination of John F. Kennedy contained self-aggrandizing fabulism of how O'Reilly, hot on the trail of the killers, arrived at the home of George de Mohrenschildt just as that old friend of Lee Harvey Oswald killed himself. And, as for Killing Jesus, let's just say O'Reilly's gifts for scripture history are on a par with his gifts for romantic small talk. As I said, it's hard out there for a hard-boiled historian. But in his latest, Killing Reagan—which obviously didn't happen, but go with it—O'Reilly inadvertently (and without proper attribution, as we shall see) stumbled into that shadowland that lies between the history that we believe, and the history that we'd rather not know.

The folks at Media Matters have been on this for a few days. O'Reilly says the "linchpin" of his latest book is a 1987 meeting between senior advisers to President Reagan at which they agreed to watch him to see if they could detect signs that the president was slipping into the Alzheimer's disease that eventually would overtake him. As MM correctly points out, this meeting was described for the first time in Landslide, the essential book by Jane Mayer and Doyle McManue on the second Reagan administration. But that is as far as MM takes the story. Also in Landslide is an account of how that meeting came about. A veteran Washington lawyer named James Cannon had been tasked by then-White House Chief-of-Staff Howard Baker to analyze the functioning of the White House in the wake of the dismissal of Baker's predecessor, Donald Regan. What Cannon found out about the staff was bad enough. What he found out about Reagan's approach to the job of being president was worse. According to Mayer and McManus, Cannon wrote a memo to Baker that suggested he consider invoking the presidential succession provisions of the 25th Amendment. Then, as O'Reilly says, and as Mayer and McManus said first, they held that meeting and Reagan seemed fine and that was pretty much that.

I can say this with absolute certainty. There is a consensus among many Alzheimer's researchers of my acquaintance that, for at least four years, the country was presided over by a symptomatic Alzheimer's patient. One of them cited Reagan's baffling performance in the first debate against Walter Mondale in which the president seemed unclear about what was going on around him. "I watched him," said this researcher, "and I saw what I see every day in my clinic." I believe that, had one of the panelists in Louisville asked the president where he was, he would have been stumped for the answer. But, in the second debate, he made a joke about his age, so everyone decided that they should be reassured. The story of Reagan's infirmity became part of the history we'd rather not know.

There's been a lot of that over the past few weeks. We have been asked in several distinct areas to confront the fact that America breeds its own distinctive kind of horror stories that it then decides not to discuss in polite society. It began with the revelation that Exxon knew about the dangers of climate change as long ago as 1981, but that the company funded the climate-change denial movement for almost three decades anyway. Then, we obtained even more evidence that the Iraq debacle was in the works long before C-Plus Augustus used the deaths of 3000 Americans as a marketing tool—and that Tony Blair was every bit the poodle his critics said he was. And, finally, in a similar vein, we have the remarkable re-litigation of the greatest national security failure in American history, courtesy of Donald Trump's instinctive ability to find Jeb (!) Bush's last nerve and jump up and down on it.

"Okay, I think I have a bigger heart than all of them. I think I'm much more competent than all of them. When you talk about George Bush, I mean, say what you want, the World Trade Center came down during his time…He was President, okay? Don't blame him or don't blame him, but he was President. The World Trade Center came down during his reign."

Now it can be argued—and I certainly would argue—that Jeb (!) asked for this when he tried to use The Great Mulligan as a talking point in the last Republican debate. But, subsequently, under Trump's relentless prodding, Jeb (!) has been having an attack of public apoplexy on the topic. Most recently, he's taken the advice proposed by, among other people, Fox and Friends meatstick Brian Kilmeade and tried to blame the 9/11 attacks on Bill Clinton.

"One is a threat that has to be taken out, as it relates to creating a strategy that calls it a war. Or we view it as a law enforcement operation, where people have rights. I think the Clinton administration made a mistake, of thinking bin Laden had to be viewed from a law enforcement perspective. Similarly, President Obama's policies seem to be focused on that as well."

This is such arrant bullshit that its only value to the public debate is as a measure of how badly Jeb (!) is floundering under pressure. (If the Obama administration treated Osama bin Laden as a law-enforcement problem, why is his body at the bottom of the ocean instead of in SuperMax?) This, of course, delights the Libidinous Visitor no end. Now he's saying that C-Plus Augustus and the lads "knew it was coming." Jeb (!) may die of a brain bubble before Christmas.

Of course, The Great Mulligan always was a creature formed in the gap between the history we believe and the history we'd rather not know. It is how we allowed the last administration to stonewall an independent investigation into their failures. It is how we allowed Condoleezza Rice, the worst national-security advisor in the country's history, to get promoted and not fired. It is how we allowed the predominant image of those awful days to be C-Plus Augustus on a pile of rubble with a bullhorn, instead of its being him on his hellhole of a Potemkin Ranch, pretending to work and blowing off CIA briefings while the plot went on in the summer of 2001. If all those issues are re-litigated now, the people who did their damnedest to keep them from being litigated at all have only themselves to blame.

Long ago, Harry Truman warned us that, "The only thing new in the world is the history that you do not know." History is the most important tool that we have in the never-ending work of building a self-governing political commonwealth. It is also the most dangerous tool we have if it is not used wisely, or if it is converted into an anesthetic that deadens us to the horrors and neglect of which the country is capable. It is best suited as a defense behind which we can bravely look at our shortcomings and the terrible things done in our name, and make sure that they do not happen again. History, in the long run, should be nothing more or less than justice.

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The Banking Industry's Transparent Attempt to Weaken a Regulatory Agency Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7122"><span class="small">Elizabeth Warren, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Wednesday, 21 October 2015 08:49

Warren writes: "After years of trying to kill, then delay, and then defang the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the banking industry and their Republican friends in Congress have launched a new effort to attract Democratic support for their latest attack by claiming that they just want to help the agency and the consumers it protects."

Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Getty Images)
Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Getty Images)


The Banking Industry's Transparent Attempt to Weaken a Regulatory Agency

By Elizabeth Warren, Reader Supported News

21 October 15

 

ou'll never guess who's going around Washington, trolling the halls of Congress, talking about the importance of protecting the long-term health of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The banking industry.

That's right: After years of trying to kill, then delay, and then defang the agency, the banking industry and their Republican friends in Congress have launched a new effort to attract Democratic support for their latest attack by claiming that they just want to help the agency and the consumers it protects. Surely Democrats will not be taken in by yet another attempt to weaken the CFPB.

The latest industry-sponsored bill would fundamentally change the structure of the CFPB by replacing the agency's single, independent director with a commission of political appointees.

The banks can't point to any difficulties with the agency's operations. In fact, the CFPB has been operating for only four years, but the success of the single-director structure is already apparent. Under the leadership of Director Richard Cordray, the CFPB already has:

  • returned more than $11 billion to over 25 million consumers who were cheated on their credit cards, checking accounts or other financial products;

  • built a complaint hotline that has exceeded all expectations, handling more than 700,000 complaints and building an information database that is beginning to level the playing field for consumers; and

  • issued new, common sense rules on mortgages and other financial products and services that have helped consumers compare costs and understand risks -- all while making markets safer and more resilient.

Part of the reason the agency has succeeded is the current single-director structure makes it easier for Congress to hold someone accountable for the agency's core mission -- concentrating the mind in a way that does not occur with multi-person boards.

The single-director structure also allows the agency to be more nimble in responding to new and emerging threats to consumers, to move faster and more definitively. And the structure permits the head of the agency to stay focused on protecting consumers, rather than burning time managing partisan sniping and bickering among the political appointees on a commission.

The single-director structure has also allowed the agency to respond more efficiently to reasonable requests from the financial services industry. When, for example, community banks asked the agency for more flexibility to issue mortgages to their customers, the agency promptly agreed -- creating broader exemptions in its mortgage rules for smaller lenders and those in rural and underserved areas. Years of delay and partisan bickering among commissioners were easily avoided.

In short, the agency is working, which may be exactly why the big banks and their Republican friends are pushing so hard to tangle it up with a different administrative structure. The arguments they offer for their bill don't even pass the smell test.

The industry and its allies claim that the consumer agency was originally conceived of as a commission -- a point that is both irrelevant and wrong. It's irrelevant because what matters is whether the agency is working now -- not whether it's identical to some initial conception of it.

As Jeffrey Zients, the Director of the President's National Economic Council, wrote last month: "The CFPB has been an incredibly effective watchdog for the American people. If it ain't broke, don't fix it."

But the industry claim is also wrong.

When I first proposed the idea for a federal agency dedicated to protecting the consumers of financial products, I suggested that the agency might resemble the Consumer Product Safety Commission. In making that comparison, I focused on the mission and jurisdiction of the agency -- not its structure.

As the consumer agency went from a theory to a reality, I delved more deeply into the details of how the agency might work, and I took a close look at the successes -- and failures -- of other agencies. I consulted with experts. I read books. I talked with government workers. And it didn't take long before I strongly supported a single-director structure.

Nor was I alone in reaching that conclusion. The architects of the Dodd-Frank Act -- Senator Chris Dodd and Representative Barney Frank -- also personally supported a single-director structure from the start.

In the run up to the financial crisis, the Securities and Exchange Commission's inaction demonstrated the challenges facing a politicized commission. Even now, more than five years after Dodd-Frank was signed into law, the SEC still hasn't finalized more than 30 explicitly-required rules, thanks in part to partisan bickering among commissioners. And the SEC's track record is sparkling compared to some of the other federal commissions -- like the Federal Election Commission -- that barely function at all.

Let's face it: The quickest way to undermine an agency's effectiveness is to make it a commission -- which is why I want a single director and the banking industry doesn't.

The industry also claims that a single-director structure would leave the agency vulnerable in the case of poor leadership. I smile at the thought that the agency's vulnerability is suddenly keeping the industry's lobbyists up at night. But hypocrisy aside, I know some of my Democratic colleagues genuinely worry that the CFPB could go backwards under the leadership of a director appointed by a hostile Republican administration -- and they wonder if a commission might be a good way to hedge against that risk.

They are right to worry about the future of the agency under Republican control. Shoot, I worry too, but that doesn't mean it makes sense to forgo a single director. As Georgetown Law Professor Adam Levitin has argued, the legal checks on the CFPB make it difficult for a new director to move things backwards. There are serious legal protections that restrict an agency's ability to repeal, or even amend, existing rules.

Ultimately, a poor director might cause the agency to bring fewer enforcement actions, ease off its supervisory responsibilities, or take other steps to undermine the agency and its mission -- and that would be very bad. But those risks are balanced off by the opportunity to make real progress under the leadership of a good director who embraces the agency's mission. Progress in good times is better than the perpetual gridlock of a commission.

And that brings us to the last industry argument: a commission is needed to bring accountability to the CFPB. Industry lobbyists have said again, and again, and again for years that the CFPB director is some sort of tyrant, free to rule as he pleases without congressional oversight.

Again, they are just plain wrong. The consumer agency is one of the most accountable agencies in town.

By law, the agency must:

  • submit annual financial reports to Congress;

  • report to Congress twice a year to justify its budget from the previous year;

  • send its director to testify before both houses of Congress twice a year;

  • submit financial operating plans and forecasts and quarterly financial reports to the Office of Management and Budget;

  • subject itself to an annual Government Accountability Office audit of its expenditures;

  • operate under the oversight of the Office of Inspector General for the Federal Reserve

  • subject all rules to careful cost benefit analyses;

  • consider the impact of rules on smaller banks; and

  • consult with federal regulators and consider any objections those regulators raise during that process.

And, of course, Congress can always overrule a CFPB rule that it doesn't like, and the agency's actions are subject to judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act.

That's a list that will measure up against any regulatory agency in Washington. But the CFPB is held down by one additional constraint that sets it apart from other federal agencies: it's the only agency in Washington that is subject to a veto by other regulators.

That's right, the CFPB's rules can be rejected by the Financial Stability Oversight Council. So let's get the record straight here: There is a huge amount of accountability built into the CFPB structure.

The industry push to replace the single director with a commission is not about accountability -- and never was. It's about weakening the agency by making it slower, more political, and more partisan -- leaving the biggest banks more opportunities to boost their profits by cheating American families.

We saw this movie before, when the big banks raked in billions of dollars financing crazy mortgages, deceptive credit cards, and dozens of other tricky products -- and it ended with a crash that cost the economy as much as $14 trillion and a fat bailout for the very people who caused it. It's time to say no to the big banks and no to their lobbyists, their lawyers and their Republican friends in Congress.

The CFPB is starting to make a difference. It's working on the side of people -- not giant banks or shady payday lenders -- holding lawbreakers accountable and helping level the financial playing field. That kind of independence can't be tolerated in some circles. For years, both the industry and the Republicans have made clear -- directly and indirectly, in front of cameras and behind closed doors -- that they want a toothless consumer agency, an agency that waters down rules, settles with lawbreakers on the cheap, and doesn't interfere with industry profit-making even when it means robbing consumers.

Votes over the CFPB present the same choice today that they always have -- a choice between big banks and predatory lenders on one side and families on the other.

Me? I'm with the families.

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GOP Congressman Wants to Impeach Hillary Clinton the 'Day She's Sworn In' Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Tuesday, 20 October 2015 14:30

Pierce writes: "Ron Fournier is going to have to remind me again how the dysfunction of the Congress is the fault of both political parties."

Representative Mo Brooks of Alabama. (photo: The Huntsville Times)
Representative Mo Brooks of Alabama. (photo: The Huntsville Times)


GOP Congressman Wants to Impeach Hillary Clinton the 'Day She's Sworn In'

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

20 October 15

 

These really are the f*cking mole people.

on Fournier is going to have to remind me again how the dysfunction of the Congress is the fault of both political parties.

Brooks told Murphy that he thought Clinton's exclusive use of a private email account as secretary of state violated "all rules of law that are designed to protect America's top-secret and classified information from falling into the hands of our geopolitical foes who then might use that information to result in the deaths of Americans." In my judgement, with respect to Hillary Clinton, she will be a unique president if she is elected by the public next November," he added. "Because the day she's sworn in is the day that she's subject to impeachment because she has committed high crimes and misdemeanors."
?

No, it will never stop. And this is the Republican party telling you that very thing.

These really are the fcking mole people.

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Obama Misled the Public on Drones Print
Tuesday, 20 October 2015 14:28

Sethi writes: "New documents leaked to The Intercept show that Obama's claims on the drone wars were at best misleading and at worst false. In fact, the U.S. drone program is imprecise and arbitrary and a grave risk to civilians everywhere. It is also a program over which the president exercises little control."

Drone graffiti in Yemen. (photo: Khaled Abdullah/Reuters)
Drone graffiti in Yemen. (photo: Khaled Abdullah/Reuters)


Obama Misled the Public on Drones

By Arjun Sethi, Al Jazeera America

20 October 15

 

New documents leaked to The Intercept contradict the president’s claims about US drone strikes

argeted killing by drone is the new frontier of American warfare. The first strike by a remotely piloted aircraft took place in Afghanistan on Oct. 7, 2001, and since then, drone warfare has proliferated. To date, there have been more than 400 U.S. drone strikes in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia, and they are occurring with greater regularity in Syria. By 2019, U.S. drone flights are expected to increase by 50 percent from current levels.

In May 2013, President Barack Obama defended U.S. drone strikes and claimed responsibility for overseeing the program. He further claimed that viable targets were limited to terrorists that posed a “continuing, imminent threat to U.S. persons,” that strikes were executed only when there was “near certainty that the target is present,” “near certainty that noncombatants will not be injured or killed” and “capture is not feasible at the time of the operation.”

New documents leaked to The Intercept show that his claims were at best misleading and at worst false. In fact, the U.S. drone program is imprecise and arbitrary and a grave risk to civilians everywhere. It is also a program over which the president exercises little control.

Although Obama signs off on targets, he generally doesn’t sign off on strikes. He thus cedes execution authority to the military and has little to no knowledge of the potential number of civilians affected by a strike. The documents show that although he sits atop an elaborate chain of command, he has little incentive to question the judgment of those below him. His oversight is merely a rubber stamp.

The leaked documents cast significant doubt on the claim that the U.S. targets only those who pose a “continuing, imminent threat to U.S. persons.” The documents note that the target must be simply “a threat to U.S. interest or personnel,” an apparent contradiction that the government has not explained. The imminence standard is similarly unlikely to be met in countries like Somalia and Yemen, where U.S. forces have a scant presence on the ground.

The documents further reveal that after the president approves a target, the military has 60 days to execute a strike. However, in the theater of war, much can change in 60 days. A target could surrender arms, abandon hostilities or forge a new alliance, only to be exterminated because he posed an imminent threat months or weeks earlier.

The leaked documents demonstrate that the “near certainty” standard offered by Obama is not likely maintained. The drone program, especially in Yemen and Somalia, relies almost exclusively on signals intelligence to identify and kill targets. Unlike human intelligence, which is gathered from local sources, signals intelligence relies on communication intercepts and phone and computer metadata and is far less reliable. The documents describe the technologies being used as imprecise, and one study even acknowledges a “critical shortfall of capabilities” to accurately identify and eliminate targets.

This faulty intelligence culminates in significant civilian loss of life. During Operation Haymaker in Afghanistan, for example, U.S. drone strikes killed 35 targets and 200 civilians. Under U.S. policy, these civilians were presumptively considered “enemies killed in action,” because they were “military-age males” associated with a target. Furthermore, they remained “enemies killed in action” until it could be proved that they were neither terrorists nor unlawful enemy combatants, a near impossible burden to prove posthumously. The likelihood of civilian casualties is even greater in Somalia and Yemen, where the U.S. relies almost exclusively on signals intelligence.

It’s clear that Obama prefers lethal force to capture. Much is made of Bilal el-Berjawi, a British citizen who traveled between the U.K. and East Africa under the watchful eye of American and British intelligence. Yet rather than be captured, he was killed by a drone strike in Somalia.

Nonetheless, the documents reveal that top U.S. intelligence officials see drone strikes as futile and instead prefer a “find, fix, finish, exploit, analyze and disseminate” approach, which calls for the apprehension and interrogation of suspected terrorists.

In light of these revelations, some will call for greater congressional oversight. Others will lament the lack of judicial oversight. Some may even advocate for a special commission to study the use of lethal force under the Obama administration. Any or all of these efforts would be a welcome first step, but they are likely to be shunned by a government intoxicated by secrecy and unnerved by transparency.

In the interim, the U.S. drone complex will deepen and intensify. As an anonymous source told The Intercept, the military sees drone strikes as “a very slick, efficient way to conduct the war, without having to have the massive ground invasion mistakes of Iraq and Afghanistan.”

This institutionalization and bureaucratization is by no means confined to the U.S. military. There is also a CIA drone program that we know much less about. Furthermore, an array of non-American actors, both governmental and civilian, facilitates and contributes to the U.S. assassination complex. Allies help intercept and share intelligence, other nations provide base and airspace access, and military contractors often arm and launch the drones.

Together, these various actors enable the U.S. assassination program and bear only a remote connection to the final outcome of their actions: death.

The vocabulary of the drone program further clouds their moral compass. The documents reveal that dossiers of targets are condensed into “baseball cards,” targets are called “objectives,” objectives killed by drone strike are called “jackpots” and a completed drone strike is consolidated and memorialized in a “story board.” All these terms trivialize drone strikes and dehumanize their victims.

After reading the documents, I couldn’t help remembering Ahmed Mohamed, the 14-year-old Muslim American arrested in Texas last month for building a clock that his teachers suspected was a bomb. The whole world seemingly stood up for Ahmed. But what if he had been in Yemen or Somalia? He wouldn’t have been able to marshal the support of a U.S. president, Fortune 500 companies and the broader American public. All that would have been visible to the soda straw lens of a drone was a military-age male with a passion for engineering. Ahmed would have been reduced to an objective awaiting jackpot.

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FOCUS | Quiz: Are You Qualified to Take John Boehner's Job? Print
Tuesday, 20 October 2015 11:54

Berney writes: "Have you got what it takes to be the next House speaker."

Representatives Paul Ryan, Daniel Webster and Jason Chaffetz are all being considered for the House speaker job. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Representatives Paul Ryan, Daniel Webster and Jason Chaffetz are all being considered for the House speaker job. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Alex Wong/Getty Images)


Quiz: Are You Qualified to Take John Boehner's Job?

By Jesse Berney, Rolling Stone

20 October 15

 

Have you got what it takes to be the next House speaker?

1. You're negotiating a debt ceiling increase with President Obama over lunch when he offers you some of his fries. They look delicious. You:

a. Take a giant handful and shove them in your mouth, never breaking eye contact.

b. Take one fry, spit on it, and put it back on his plate.

c. Instruct your chief of staff to flip the president's plate off the table.

d. Trick question: you would never meet the president to discuss raising the debt ceiling.

2. The purpose of the House Select Committee on Benghazi is to:

a. Hold President Obama accountable for doing Benghazi.

b. Hold Hillary Clinton accountable for doing Benghazi.

c. Win in 2016.

d. [said on camera, with a straight face] Get to the bottom of the terrible September 11, 2012 tragedy that cost the lives of four brave American heroes. We'll thoroughly investigate the facts no matter where they lead and deliver an honest, nonpartisan assessment of what went wrong and how to prevent such tragedies in the future.

3. What step would you take to protect Americans' religious liberties?

a. Ban same-sex marriage.

b. Ban birth control.

c. Ban pornography.

d. Ban Islam.

4. The members of the House Freedom Caucus are:

a. An important voice representing authentic conservative American values.

b. The natural inheritors of our Founding Fathers' legacy.

c. A bulwark against creeping liberalism from all corners.

d. A goddamned nightmare.

5. You're on Fox News when your close personal friend Sean Hannity says "if you think about it, President Obama is worse than Hitler." You say:

a. Nothing, but nod sagely in agreement.

b. "Well they're certainly both liberal extremists."

c. "I'll launch a select committee to look into that."

d. "You know Sean, I have quite a few Jewish friends who would agree with you there."

6. President Obama vows to veto any budget that defunds Planned Parenthood. You:

a. Pass a budget that defunds Planned Parenthood.

b. Pass a budget that defunds Planned Parenthood, and hold a press conference on the east lawn of the Capitol.

c. Pass a budget that defunds Planned Parenthood, hold a press conference on the east lawn of the Capitol, and hold up a giant photo of a dismembered fetus.

d. Pass a budget that defunds Planned Parenthood, hold a press conference on the east lawn of the Capitol, hold up a giant photo of a dismembered fetus and announce your candidacy for the Republican nomination for president.

7. You need just three more votes to pass an extremely important motion to table an amendment to the underlying bill expressing the sentiment of the House concerning a multilateral trade deal. How do you get the votes you need?

a. Fight club.

b. Make a deal with Nancy Pelosi but make her double-super-secret pinkie swear never to tell anyone.

c. Promise recalcitrant Republicans you'll bring up a Constitutional requiring mandatory gun ownership.

d. Send Louie Gohmert a package of loose meats.

8. The prime minister of Japan said something complimentary about President Obama. You take swift action by:

a. Banning sushi from the House cafeteria.

b. Banning chopsticks from the House cafeteria.

c. Renaming soy sauce "Liberty Juice" in the House cafeteria.

d. Doing nothing. The House cafeteria has only served chili since the day you assumed the Speakership.

9. The Dow plunges 6,000 points, the price of gas skyrockets to $4.50 a gallon, and banks start foreclosing on homes en masse. How do you propose addressing this sudden economic crisis?

a. Support job creators by eliminating the estate tax.

b. Support job creators by eliminating corporate taxes.

c. Support job creators by reducing the top income tax rate.

d. Support job creators by eliminating sales tax on yachts, private planes and Cuban cigars.

10. President Obama was born in:

a. Kenya

b. Indonesia

c. Moscow

d. Muslim

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