
Back in the Bush era, we had one progressive radio show – Air America – and it was my link to sanity in an insane time.
Megan was in high school and when I made the drive to pick her up, I was usually listening to Air America, particularly during the 2004 election cycle. It was during this cycle that I really began to understand that the election would probably be stolen because Diebold â which supplied thousands of the voting machines in the election â was owned by Bush supporters, diehard Republicans. And in the election booth that November, I punched out Kerryâs name â and Bushâs name came up. I did it twice more and the same thing happened. But thatâs another story!
Air America was on the air from March 2004 to January 2010, when it declared bankruptcy. It featured an outstanding lineup of talent: author Thom Hartmann, Ed Schultz, Randi Rhodes, Mike Malloy, Al Franken, and Stephanie Miller. All of these people were bright and articulate and politically savvy on the radio. Whatâs interesting about them is where some of them are now, in 2014.
Al Franken, a Minnesota native, is now a U.S. senator â and yes, heâs still outrageously progressive. Ed Schultz hosts nightly The Ed Show on MSNBC, and his focus is on middle class Americans, unions, the working Joes. Thom Hartmann, who should have his own show on MSNBC, continues to write compelling books. Randi Rhodes is on Sirius Radio. Stephanie Miller, who is funny and really knows her politics, has her own show on Sirius Satellite Radio. She should have her own show on MSNBC.
Rachel Maddow is in a class apart. She now hosts the Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC, at the prime time slot â 9 p.m. Maddow holds a doctorate from Oxford. Sheâs openly gay. Sheâs upbeat, has a sense of humor, and sheâs pretty, but not in the way the Fox News anchors are â who all look like Stepford wives.
Unlike Keith Olbermann, who first had her on his show as a guest, she invites people with opposing points of view. Sometimes they show up, most of the time they donât â because they know they canât defend themselves against the kind of investigative journalism that she does. You know, FACTS.
Maddow and her team scour local newspapers and websites for stories that might hold national interest and implications. Recently, she was the only national news person to report on the closure of the George Washington Bridge between New York and New Jersey, the busiest bridge (so they say) in the world.This scandal, which involves Chris Christie, the current New Jersey governor, may crush his shot at the White House in 2016 and could put him in federal prison for a number of crimes.
As Christie told it today in his TWO HOUR press conference, he was basically clueless (sure), and feels betrayed (uh-huh) by the people he trusted, some of whom he has since fired. There are more than 2,000 pages of emails available now on this bridge closure â which  tied up traffic for four days and had human repercussions. Emergency teams couldnât reach a woman in cardiac arrest and investigative teams could delve into the disappearance of a child. Thatâs just for starters.
For the last several nights, Maddowâs show has focused exclusively on the Christie bridge scandal and has uncovered a pattern of Christie bullying and intimidation that smacks of the worst kind of politics: cross me, say something negative about me, and youâll pay the price.
There are several theories about why Christie retaliated against the town of Fort Lee, New Jersey. But the bottom line here is that Christie appears to have used a federal facility â a bridge â for political gain and thatâs a federal offense. I would like to see this blowhard in prison. But because heâs claiming he knew nothing about any of this (really? Youâre that incompetent as a boss?) and because heâs a slick talker who may be the Republican partyâs best hope for a presidential candidate in 2016, he will probably draw the DO NOT GO TO JAIL CARD.
As Rob points out, our governor, Rick Scott, became governor in spite of the fact that he was charged with Medicare fraud and belongs in prison.
So there you have it, American politics on the down and dirty side. Iâm sure there âs a synchro in here somewhere, and eventually it will be found â by us, by you, by someone. And when it surfaces, we’ll post it.
In the mean time, though, we have this thought: everything in life appears to be political, even if you are not.