Keith Olbermann

Dan Savage’s victory lap

The sex columnist sounds off on Rick Santorum's Iowa performance, as well as his lingering Google problem VIDEO

Rick Santorum surely hopes to parlay his upset near-victory in Iowa Tuesday night into a fighting chance at the Republican nomination. Problem is, he still faces at least one big obstacle: The first thing that many people have learned about the former senator from Pennsylvania this past week is his lingering, embarrassing Google problem.

The architect of said problem, sex columnist Dan Savage, was on “Countdown with Keith Olbermann” last night to take a victory lap of his own, and explained how SpreadingSantorum.com might have hurt the conservative candidate at the caucuses:

I’m getting letters from people who think the neologism came first — that this is actually what Santorum meant, and that Santorum is burdened with this unfortunate last name. And why didn’t he change his name before he ran for president? Which is pretty hilarious if you think about it … hilarious if you’re not Rick Santorum.

(The Google portion of the interview starts around the video’s 2:15 mark.)

Olbermann calls Bloomberg a “tinpot tyrant”

The Current TV host links the Zuccotti Park fiasco to a history of state overreaction to legitimate social protest VIDEO

Keith Olbermann’s editorial on the Zuccotti Park fiasco was an incendiary piece of writing even by his standards. But extraordinary times call for extraordinary rhetoric. The Current TV host’s screed against New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg was one of the most quotable rants he’s delivered — not merely a bracing attack on a public official who instantly turned himself into this generation’s Richard J. Daley circa 1968, but a valuable reminder of the historical big picture of yesterday morning’s police action.

“For the entirety of the life of our nation, democracy has been protected, not merely by the strenuous efforts of those of us who cherished it, but mostly — and most profoundly — by the limitless stupidity of those who would ration it, keep it for themselves and themselves alone, or destroy it,” Olbermann said.

The piece started by noting points in recent history when politicians who tried to defend the status quo miscalculated so flagrantly and savagely that public opinion turned against them, and ensured the triumph of whatever values their enemies espoused. Olbermann cited the thrashing of demonstrators by cops at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Daley’s Chicago and the vicious treatment of anti-Jim Crow protesters in the years following Alabama Gov. George Wallace’s “segregation forever” speech. For good measure, he folded in red-hunting Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s overreaching, which eventually turned off even mainstream conservatives — no small feat in Commie-crazed 1950s America.

“Pick any moment in our history — our history as a country founded by and invigorated by and reinvigorated by protest — and you will find … that American freedom has not flourished in spite of these morons of history, it has flourished because of them: because they overreacted, because they under-thought, overreached, under-understood,” Olbermann said. “We owe them our traditions of freedom, we owe them our protests, we owe them our very independence. None of them has ever understood that — not around these parts, anyway. Suppression always creates the opposite of the effect desired.”

All of which eventually led him to Michael Bloomberg, “the most valiant, the most essential, the most irreplaceable man in the Occupy movement. Who else but a cliche like Bloomberg could take a protest beginning to grow a little stale around the edges, and vault it back into the headlines, complete with mortifying scenes of police dressed up as storm-troopers, carrying military weapons, using figurative bazookas to kill figurative mosquitoes?” he asked. “Who else but an archetype like Bloomberg could claim a group of protesters were making too much noise in a residential area, and then choose to try to disperse them by bringing out LRAD Audio Cannons, machines that send painful waves of sound indiscriminately over the very same residential area? Who else but a cartoon like Bloomberg could have become rich creating a multibillion-dollar media company, and then authorize illegally preventing reporters from witnessing police actions he claims were utterly legal — and then authorize the arrest of four reporters at a church?”

The piece has many incidental pleasures as well — especially the part where Olbermann skewers Bloomberg for shutting down an entire sector of the city during production of the new Batman film, while complaining that the recent Occupy Wall Street action on the Brooklyn Bridge was disruptive. (His contemptuous “Goddamned Batman” is a cellphone ringtone waiting to happen.) This was a first-rate example of righteous eloquence — one for the ages.

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Olbermann to Oakland mayor: repent or resign

The Current TV host VIDEO

(Credit: Current TV)

All eyes are on Oakland, where police violently cracked down against mostly peaceful protesters Tuesday night, seriously injuring Scott Olsen — a 24-year-old Marine, and Iraq War veteran — in the process. Much of the blame for the incident has found itself resting squarely on the shoulders of Mayor Jean Quan.

Mayor Quan, as Keith Olbermann pointed out on his program last night, has devoted herself to progressive causes throughout her career — oftentimes putting her at odds with police. However, she was in Washington, D.C., at the time of the protests, and wound up downplaying the severity of the crackdown for lack of information, a misstep that has her at the receiving end of an Olbermann screed.

Mayor Quan is left with two choices. She can dismiss the acting police chief, Howard Jordan, and use her mayoral powers to authorize Occupy Oakland to protest again without harassment. Or, having betrayed everything she supported and all those who have supported her, she must resign.

Quan, for her part, seems eager to make amends.

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Spitzer: Protests could force Obama to change tune on Wall St.

"Maybe this will finally push the president to speak with a new, more aggressive, dynamic voice" VIDEO

(Credit: Current)

As the Occupy Wall Street protests were beginning to take a sour turn in New York last night, Elliot Spitzer was discussing how the movement might force President Obama to change his posture on the financial industry:

This is organic, it is genuine, it is amassing more and more support by the day. It has touched a nerve, and I think this could really begin to say to the Obama administration, “Hey, you don’t understand what we, the public, are saying to you.” He has been so flat on this issue — Wall Street and the economy — maybe this will finally push the president to speak with a new, more aggressive, dynamic voice.

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Ryan Lizza on covering Michele Bachmann

The New Yorker writer tells Keith Olbermann about the presidential candidate's "transition"

Ryan Lizza, "The New Yorker" Washington correspondent, on "Countdown"

Ryan Lizza’s new profile of Michele Bachmann in the New Yorker reveals the extent of her radically conservative, Evangelical roots.

Appearing on “Countdown” Monday, Lizza told Keith Olbermann that he witnessed Bachmann “being a politician” as he joined her on her campaign launch.

The Minnesota Republican, he explained, made her name in state politics touting social conservatism, notably a staunch opposition to gay marriage. Lizza noted that Bachmann is now under the guidance of a highly professional campaign team, steering her away from such talking points.

She now cuts off interviews when gay marriage is brought up, according to Lizza, because she understands that “there’s no percentage in talking about this issue in this race.” (Republicans who share Bachmann’s stance on gay rights are, for the most part, already in her corner.)

Lizza emphasized, however, that Bachmann’s “transition” to focusing on mainstream issues is simply politically expedient. “I don’t think we should confuse that with a change in philosophy, a change in who she is,” he told Olbermann.

Watch the clip below, via Current TV:

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Natasha Lennard covers the Occupy movement for Salon. A British-born, Brooklyn-based journalist, she has been covering Occupy Wall Street since before the first sleeping bag was unrolled in Zuccotti Park. One of the first journalists arrested at an Occupy action, she has managed to enrage Andrew Breitbart, Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck. You can follow her on Twitter (@natashalennard), and email her any Occupy updates/videos/ideas to natasha.lennard@gmail.com

New “sick details” emerge about water torture

On "Countdown," Jeremy Scahill discusses how the DOD hid behind waterboarding while using other water tortures

Jeremy Scahill on "Countdown"

The official government narrative, as defended by Donald Rumsfeld, is that no prisoners were waterboarded at Guantanamo Bay; the CIA did use waterboarding as an interrogation technique, but only at so-called “black sites”; and only three prisoners were subjected to this treatment.

However, new evidence is emerging to the contrary, largely in anecdotal form. As Truthout reported this week, a number of stories have come out about forced water choking and other uses of water for torture at sites including Gitmo.

Investigative reporter Jeremy Scahill discussed the issue with Keith Olbermann Thursday. He recalled an incident he had investigated (which would not be classified as waterboarding) of a former Guantanamo detainee having a high pressure water hose fixed up a nostril. Water would be forced up his head until suffocation.

Scahill noted President Obama’s “extremely poor record” at holding people accountable for torturous acts and expressed concern that little has changed at Guantanamo.

Rumsfeld currently faces a lawsuit over the alleged use of torture, bought by a former military translator held in Iraq for nine months, but Scahill emphasized that the U.S. administration always tends to get its people off the hook.

Watch the clip for “Countdown” below:

 

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Natasha Lennard covers the Occupy movement for Salon. A British-born, Brooklyn-based journalist, she has been covering Occupy Wall Street since before the first sleeping bag was unrolled in Zuccotti Park. One of the first journalists arrested at an Occupy action, she has managed to enrage Andrew Breitbart, Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck. You can follow her on Twitter (@natashalennard), and email her any Occupy updates/videos/ideas to natasha.lennard@gmail.com

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