Showing posts with label national affairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label national affairs. Show all posts

April 23, 2007

Equal pay for equal work?

American women make only 80 percent of the salaries their male peers do one year after college; after 10 years in the work force, the gap between their pay widens further, according to a study released Monday.

The study, by the American Association of University Women Educational Foundation, found that 10 years after college, women earn only 69 percent of what men earn.

Even after controlling for hours, occupation, parenthood, and other factors known to affect earnings, the study found that one-quarter of the pay gap remains unexplained. The group said that portion of the gap is "likely due to sex discrimination." - AP

PAY ME MY MONEY DOWN by Bruce Springsteen

I thought I heard the captain say
Pay me my money down
Tomorrow is our sailing day
Pay me my money down

Pay me, pay me
Pay me my money down
Pay me or go to jail
Pay me my money down

Soon as the boat was clear of the bar
Pay me money down
He knocked me down with a spar
Pay me my money down

Pay me, pay me
Pay me my money down
Pay me or go to jail
Pay me my money down

Com'on!

Well if I'd been a rich man's son
Pay me my money down
I'd sit on the river and watch 'er run
Pay me my money down

Pay me, pay me
Pay me my money down
Pay me or go to jail
Pay me my money down

Horn!

Lets hear the trumpet!

Alright everybody,
Let's bring it up to B flat
A one two three!

Well I wish I was Mr Gates
Pay me my money down
They'd haul my money in in crates
Pay me my money down

Pay me, pay me
Pay me my money down
Pay me or go to jail
Pay me my money down

Alright somebody
Yello!
Yip!
Woha!
Go!
Come on!

Trumpet!
Once more trumpet!
Woah!

Alright now!
Back to G
A one two, a one two three
Yeah!

Well fourty nights, nights at sea
Pay me my money down
Captain worked every last dollar out of me
Pay me my money down

Pay me, pay me
Pay me my money down
Pay me or go to jail
Pay me my money down

Pay me, pay me
Pay me my money down
Pay me or go to jail
Pay me my money down

Pay me, pay me
Pay me my money down
Pay me or go to jail
Pay me my money down

Everybody solo!

Woah!
Woah!
Woah!

April 13, 2007

Change Is In The Air

In today's LA times there is an editorial about possible changes to the cell phone industry. If we are lucky, prices will drop.

What's the deal with cell phones? Well you see, right now there is nothing you can really do if your cell phone sucks. All the problems with your cell phone which should be fixed by competition, such as
dropped calls, high hidden charges, bad phones, poor and costly wireless Internet and roaming costs, aren't being taken care of due to the current system.

Verizon and AT&T run a digital plantation where they don't let phones and features they can't control onto their network. It's an exclusive system; if you want to use your phone on a Verizon network, you have to get permission, so you couldn't get an iPhone even if you wanted to. In Europe and Japan you can pay for sodas with your phone but you can't do that here. This permission system is also why roaming charges are so high.

It's possible that if the FCC policy on selling or renting the new broadband spectrum is fair, we could get a wireless broadband wholesaler, which would simply rent their network to whomever wants it for whatever purpose they want it. You'd be able to plug your phone into your computer and get broadband. Cell phone and broadband service would be instantly cheap and universal, getting around redlining that denies broadband to poor and rural areas. There would be fewer dropped calls. Roaming charges would drop dramatically. You could pay for things with your phone (or any mobile device you can invent). You could use any phone for any network, and download ringtones more easily. And the big national telecom companies would actually have to compete with all of this.

This would make life better for anyone.

April 12, 2007

Talking Truth to Power

When will the media accept that people don't like President Bush and that they want to hear about politics on t.v.?

Pink is STILL being prevented from performing or talking about her anti-Bush song by most of the American media:

Are Pink’s anti-Bush views being censored?

The outspoken rocker — who recently went after her singing sex-symbol peers in her song "Stupid Girls" — is now taking aim at the commander-in-chief, in her controversial song, "Dear Mr. President." But she says that she’s not allowed to discuss her political views on the radio.

Pink appeared on "Jimmy Kimmel Live," and thanked him for letting her sing and discuss the song, which she says the hasn’t been able to do on the radio or other TV shows.

What is the song that she can't play? This:

The Lyrics

Dear Mr. President,
Come take a walk with me.
Let's pretend we're just two people and
You're not better than me.
I'd like to ask you some questions if we can speak honestly.

What do you feel when you see all the homeless on the street?
Who do you pray for at night before you go to sleep?
What do you feel when you look in the mirror?
Are you proud?

How do you sleep while the rest of us cry?
How do you dream when a mother has no chance to say goodbye?
How do you walk with your head held high?
Can you even look me in the eye
And tell me why?

Dear Mr. President,
Were you a lonely boy?
Are you a lonely boy?
Are you a lonely boy?
How can you say
No child is left behind?
We're not dumb and we're not blind.
They're all sitting in your cells
While you pave the road to hell.

What kind of father would take his own daughter's rights away?
And what kind of father might hate his own daughter if she were gay?
I can only imagine what the first lady has to say
You've come a long way from whiskey and cocaine.

How do you sleep while the rest of us cry?
How do you dream when a mother has no chance to say goodbye?
How do you walk with your head held high?
Can you even look me in the eye?

Let me tell you 'bout hard work
Minimum wage with a baby on the way
Let me tell you 'bout hard work
Rebuilding your house after the bombs took them away
Let me tell you 'bout hard work
Building a bed out of a cardboard box
Let me tell you 'bout hard work
Hard work
Hard work
You don't know nothing 'bout hard work
Hard work
Hard work
Oh

How do you sleep at night?
How do you walk with your head held high?
Dear Mr. President,
You'd never take a walk with me.
Would you?

April 11, 2007

Big Win For Progressives in New Jersey

Today it was announced on politicsnj.com:

Bergen County Democratic Chairman Joseph Ferriero will endorse State Sen. Loretta Weinberg tomorrow, ending a civil war in the 37th district. Englewood Mayor Michael Wildes will drop his challenge to Weinberg in the Democratic primary, as will Assembly candidates Ken Zisa and Cid Wilson.

This is a huge win for the progressive movement in New Jersey.

State Senator Lorreta Weinberg is the godmother of progressive politics in New Jersey. She won a highly contested election at the party convention two years ago, which involved going to court to open uncounted ballots. Democratic Boss Joe Ferriero want to place his buddy, Ken Zisa, as the next senator and the people stood in his way. He tried to get revenge this year by backing challengers to Weinberg and her running mates.

Weinberg and her running mates Gordon Johnson and Valerie Huttle received almost every single endorsement a Jersey progressive wants.

Democracy For America
EMILY’s List
Bergen County Central Trades and Labor Council, AFL-CIO
Englewood Democratic Club
NARAL Pro-Choice New Jersey
SEIU New Jersey State Council
NOW – NJ
New Jersey Crime Victims’ Law Center
PAM’s List
Bergen County Black Caucus
Communication Workers of America
Garden State Equality
Health Professionals and Allied Employees/AFT/AFL-CIO
New Jersey Funeral Directors
Latin American Society of New Jersey
New Jersey Citizen Action
New Jersey Environmental Federation
New Jersey Stonewall Democrats
Women’s Political Caucus of New Jersey
Bergenfield Councilman Bruce Carlson
Englewood Council President Charlotte Bennett Schoen
Englewood Councilman Scott Reddin
Englewood Cliffs Council President Ilan Plawker
Leonia Council President Mary Heveran
Leonia Councilman Tony Puzzo
Maywood Councilman Timothy Eustace
Maywood Councilman John E. Savage
Maywood Councilman Nancy Jengo
Teaneck Mayor Elie Y. Katz
Teaneck Deputy Mayor Lizette Parker
Teaneck Councilwoman Monica Honis
Teaneck Councilwoman Jacqueline Kates
Tenafly Council President Patrick Rouse
Tenafly Councilman Michael Lattif
Tenafly Councilwoman Carol Hoernlein
Tenafly Councilwoman Nadia LaMastra
Tenafly Councilman Jon Warms

The progressives in Bergen County are trying to pry the Democratic party away from Boss Ferriero and this is a huge step in the right direction. Ferriero runs pay-to-play to perfection and has the ability to raise enormous amounts of money with no qualms about spending it. He doesn’t always use it for campaigns, but has spent thousands on a party at the Borgada Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City.

We have a ways to go, but we are making progress.

April 8, 2007

Near Death of the President



Ford President Alan Mulally, right, had to be quick on his feet to make sure President Bush plugged a power cord into the right socket on a Ford hydrogen-electric plug-in hybrid.

http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070407/AUTO01/704070338/1148

We nearly lost the leader of this country because of self immolation.


Credit Ford Motor Co. CEO Alan Mulally with saving the leader of the free world from self-immolation. Mulally told journalists at the New York auto show that he intervened to prevent President Bush from plugging an electrical cord into the hydrogen tank of Ford's hydrogen-electric plug-in hybrid at the White House last week.


As Mulally told reporters:

"I just thought, 'Oh my goodness!' So, I started walking faster, and the President walked faster and he got to the cord before I did. I violated all the protocols. I touched the President. I grabbed his arm and I moved him up to the front," Mulally said. "I wanted the president to make sure he plugged into the electricity, not into the hydrogen.

March 24, 2007

The Case for Impeachment

The case for impeachment brought by Eternal Hope from Daily Kos:

We are not ready to Impeach yet! As the Investigations continue and the evidence mounts, we move closer everyday, but we are NOT there yet...it is NOT time for Congress to file Articles of Impeachment. We need to uncover, expose and marshal clear and damning evidence first and have all of our Ducks in a row.

1. Leaking classified information by disclosing the identity of Valerie Plame to reporters.

The President and Vice President unlawfully leaked classified information, the identity of a Non-official Cover, Valerie (Wilson) Plame, to a person or persons not authorized to receive such information, namely, Robert Novak, a reporter for the Chicago Tribune, and Matt Cooper, a reporter for Time Magazine.

Law violated:

National Security Act of 1947.

Whoever, having or having had authorized access to classified information that identifies a covert agent, intentionally discloses any information identifying such covert agent to any individual not authorized to receive classified information, knowing that the information disclosed so identifies such covert agent and that the United States is taking affirmative measures to conceal such covert agent’s intelligence relationship to the United States, shall be fined under title 18, United States Code, or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both.
(b) Whoever, as a result of having authorized access to classified information, learns the identity of a covert agent and intentionally discloses any information identifying such covert agent to any individual not authorized to receive classified information, knowing that the information disclosed so identifies such covert agent and that the United States is taking affirmative measures to conceal such covert agent’s intelligence relationship to the United States, shall be fined under title 18, United States Code, or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.

(c) Whoever, in the course of a pattern of activities intended to identify and expose covert agents and with reason to believe that such activities would impair or impede the foreign intelligence activities of the United States, discloses any information that identifies an individual as a covert agent to any individual not authorized to receive classified information, knowing that the information disclosed so identifies such individual and that the United States is taking affirmative measures to conceal such individual’s classified intelligence relationship to the United States, shall be fined under title 18, United States Code, or imprisoned not more than three years, or both.

(d) A term of imprisonment imposed under this section shall be consecutive to any other sentence of imprisonment.

2. Lying to Congress -- passing false information about Iraq's WMD capacities.

George Bush and Dick Cheney passed false information to Congress about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction capabilities, to wit, their possession of chemical weapons, biological weapons, and delivery systems. Furthermore, George Bush and Dick Cheney passed false information to Congress by falsely stating that Iraq was an imminent threat to the United States and that military action was therefore necessary.

Law violated:

18 USC 1001.

Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact, or makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any false, fictitious or fraudulent statement or entry, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.

3. Extraordinary Renditions.

George Bush and Dick Cheney authorized the arrest and transporting of prisoners to secret jails in Morocco, Syria, Jordan, Egypt, and Eastern Europe for detention and torture without trial.

Law violated:

6th Amendment of the Constitution.

In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.

4. Detentions without Trial.

George Bush and Dick Cheney detained thousands of people at Guantanamo Bay without the possibility of trial and without access to effective counsel.

Law violated:

6th Amendment (see above).

5. Torture.

George Bush and Dick Cheney either ordered or caused other foreign countries to perform torture on suspects illegally detained under sections 3 and 4 of these articles.

Law violated:

8th Amendment.

Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.

6. Misappropriation of Funds.

George Bush and Dick Cheney diverted funds from Afghanistan to Iraq as documented in Bob Woodward's "Plan of Attack" and failed to notify Congress of such appropriations.

Law violated:

Iraq Liberation Act of 1998.

The President shall notify the congressional committees specified in section 634A of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 at least 15 days in advance of each obligation of assistance under this section in accordance with the procedures applicable to reprogramming notifications under section 634A.

7. Bombing Iraq without Congressional Approval.

George Bush and Dick Cheney authorized over 21,000 bombing missions on Iraq without Congressional approval before passage of the Iraq War Resolution in October 11th, 2002.

Law violated:

Article I, US Constitution.

To declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water;

8. Conspiracy to pass false information.

George Bush and Dick Cheney conspired to pass false information about the nature of the intelligence on Iraq to the US Congress in conjunction with British Prime Minister Tony Blair for the purposes of triggering a war with Iraq as documented in the Downing Street Minutes.

Law violated:

18 USC 1001 (see above).

9. Lying about Niger connection.

George Bush and Dick Cheney lied to Congress at the State of the Union and elsewhere by falsely stating that Iraq had procured Uranium from Niger.

Law violated:

18 USC 1001 (see above).

10. Contempt of Congress.

George Bush and Dick Cheney showed a contempt of Congress by stating their intentions to violate laws passed by Congress or cause others to do so over 750 times.

11. Illegal wiretaps.

George Bush and Dick Cheney repeatedly bypassed the court system by ordering wiretaps without authorization from judges and without obtaining a warrant.

Law violated:

4th Amendment

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

12. Concealment of the existance or nature of Domestic Intelligence Programs.

George Bush and Dick Cheney concealed the nature and extent of the JPEN program, used for the purpose of domestic intelligence.

Law violated:

18 USC 1505

Whoever, with intent to avoid, evade, prevent, or obstruct compliance, in whole or in part, with any civil investigative demand duly and properly made under the Antitrust Civil Process Act, willfully withholds, misrepresents, removes from any place, conceals, covers up, destroys, mutilates, alters, or by other means falsifies any documentary material, answers to written interrogatories, or oral testimony, which is the subject of such demand; or attempts to do so or solicits another to do so; or
Whoever corruptly, or by threats or force, or by any threatening letter or communication influences, obstructs, or impedes or endeavors to influence, obstruct, or impede the due and proper administration of the law under which any pending proceeding is being had before any department or agency of the United States, or the due and proper exercise of the power of inquiry under which any inquiry or investigation is being had by either House, or any committee of either House or any joint committee of the Congress—
Shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 5 years or, if the offense involves international or domestic terrorism (as defined in section 2331), imprisoned not more than 8 years, or both.

13. Destruction of Evidence.

George Bush and Dick Cheney destroyed evidence in conjunction with Plamegate.

Law violated:

18 USC 1505 (see above).

14. The use of White Phosphorus in Iraq.

George Bush and Dick Cheney authorized the use of White Phosphorus in Iraq in November 2004 during the Fallujah offensive.

Law violated:

US Army Field Manual, Chapter 5, section 3.

(4) Burster Type White phosphorus (WP M110A2) rounds burn with intense heat and emit dense white smoke. They may be used as the initial rounds in the smokescreen to rapidly create smoke or against material targets, such as Class V sites or logistic sites. It is against the law of land warfare to employ WP against personnel targets.
Again, I am not pushing for impeachment, I am asking for a discussion on the topic. We have a long way to go and the journey won't end until we cover every inch so we might as well start.

March 21, 2007

Wha?

NASA says it has no money to track most of the giant rocks in outer space that have the potential to pay us a whopper of a visit someday (say, next Tuesday). Eric Effron at The Week magazine says the money was apparently needed elsewhere:

[W]hile there may not be enough money in the budget to monitor hurtling space rocks the size of football stadiums, we can rest easy knowing that federal funding has been secured for (I’m not making this up): the Sparta Teapot Museum in Sparta, N.C.; the Waterfree Urinal Conservation Initiative; the National Wild Turkey Federation; a tattoo-removal program in San Luis Obispo County, Calif.; and a campaign to combat "goth culture" in Blue Springs, Mo. All these efforts, and thousands like them, no doubt have their virtues. But more to the point, they have a local congressman who managed to slip them into multibillion-dollar appropriation bills. Earth, alas, has no congressman. As for those asteroids, wouldn’t it be ironic if one of them landed on, say, the Sparta Teapot Museum?

March 16, 2007

Young Americans for Freedom Actually a Hate Group

A guest post from Sid Wood


The Michigan State University chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom will be listed by the Southern Poverty Law Center on its annual list of hate groups next month. The investigation began last year following the group's much-publicized attempts to stage a "Catch an Illegal Immigrant Day" event and an anti-gay rally featuring signs reading "Straight Power" and "End Faggotry."

(Crossposted at Michigan Liberal)

I am a student at MSU. In my capacity as the political cartoonist for the student newspaper, I have had many run-ins with members of the YAF, and let me tell you — if you've ever wondered who the brownshirts would be if fascism ever came to America, here's your answer.

The group is close-knit, secretive, and prone to authoritarian and eliminationist rhetoric. They claim to be the most active student activism group at MSU, and from all evidence, that's a true if unsettling statement (the College Republicans largely let the YAF do their activism for them, while the College Democrats here are disorganized to a degree that would be comical if it weren't tragic). Led by their smarmy chairman Kyle Bristow (who I will examine below), they have carved out a nice little pulpit for spreading their hateful message here at MSU and across the state.


MSU-YAF's Chairman and some other guy stand in front of MSU's famed "Sparty" statue.

First, some background. The national YAF was founded in 1960 at William F. Buckley Jr.'s estate in Sharon, Connecticut, on a platform of fanatical anti-Communism and opposition to the civil rights movement. In 1962 the group gave its annual "Freedom Award" to Strom Thurmond, and helped lead the movement to draft Barry Goldwater to run for president in 1964. Over the course of the 1960s, the group's numbers exploded, acting as the conservative counterpart to the Students for a Democratic Society (whose 1962 Port Huron Statement has been considered a response to the YAF's Sharon Statement two years earlier).

Though the SDS folded in 1969, the YAF lived on through the 70s and beyond. They ardently supported the Vietnam war, but criticized the draft and demanded expansion into Cambodia and Laos. They opposed Nixon's opening of diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China, bleating that he "sold out" the democratic Republic of China. They opposed SALT I and SALT II, demanding that the United States abandon détente and step up the nuclear arms race.

Their wishes were fulfilled with the election of Ronald Reagan, who incidentally sat on the group's advisory board since 1962. Throughout the 80s, the YAF were Reagan's foot soldiers on campus, aggressively supporting his agenda in almost every instance, but especially in the realm of foreign policy. They, along with other student groups like the College Republicans, were tapped by the Office of Public Diplomacy to disseminate pro-Contra propaganda on college campuses nationwide.

The YAF's numbers declined sharply in the 90s. Perhaps it was because the Soviet Union collapsed, robbing the group of half their platform; perhaps it was a sense of complacency following their string of successes in the Reagan-Bush years; but not matter the reason, the YAF was nearly dead by the end of the century.

It would have probably stayed dead, but certain people saw to it that the organization be revived. The Young America's Foundation and The Leadership Institute, among other right wing organizations and donors big and small, have been funding a YAF revival. The MSU chapter, founded in 2001 as part of this program, has grown to become one of the most active and vocal YAF groups in the country. Other notable chapters include the one at the University of Michigan, which works closely with the MSU-YAF, and the Penn State Chapter.


MSU-YAF's chairman is overcompensating for something. I assume he did this himself, because I found it on his university web space.

The MSU chapter is typical of the new YAF: meaner, more radicalized, and more prone to hateful and even violent rhetoric. The "Catch an Illegal Immigrant Day" and "End Faggotry" stuff only scratches the surface. International Relations junior Kyle Bristow, the group's chairman and public face, was recalled from his position in ASMSU, the university's student government after his views became known to the students of his college when he posted a 13-point agenda to the ASMSU website (they quickly made him remove it, but the damage was done). Here's an excerpt from an article on the MSU-YAF:

Among the items listed were de-funding of all minority organizations, the creation of a men's council, a seat for a Christian organization on ASMSU, a Caucasian caucus, as well as forcing the Planned Parenthood in East Lansing to leave, and hunting down illegal immigrants in Lansing and having them deported.

In a media interview, Bristow confirmed the 13-point memo was the agenda of YAF. When asked if YAF agreed with his memo, Bristow replied "Absolutely."

I could go on forever listing the horrible views and actions of the YAF, but this diary is getting pretty long already, so I'll get back to the hate group status story.

The group won't be officially listed until April, when the SPLC's annual report comes out, but they've already started damage control. So far, all they've got is attacking the messenger:

YAF Chairman Kyle Bristow said the organization "might file a lawsuit for character defamation." He called the SPLC "disgusting" and extremely "left-wing" and said it was simply trying to discourage conservative activism.

And then here's Jeff Wiggins, chairman of the MSU College Republicans:

"I really don't take the SPLC for very much," MSU College Republicans Chairman Jeff Wiggins said.

"I see them as more of a left-wing organization, anyway. They're prone to bias."

In a sidebar, the State News article printed a Bristow email obtained from PrideSource, a local gay issues publication, outlining his damge control startegy (emphasis mine):

  1. All media questions regarding the hate group status go directly to Professor Allen at first until we establish that the media won't spin it.
  1. Prevent all dissent in YAF from appearing in the media. If we are seen as being divided, then the media will argue that I am a whack job, even by YAF standards. This will hurt us more than anything.
  1. I will mention how mainstream YAF is — Ronald Reagan was the honorary chairman, Sen. John Tower was a member, Barry Goldwater's supporters started it and Dan Quayle was a member.
  1. I will mention that we support the ideas of the great majority of America. Most of America believes in the sanctity of marriage, want to secure our borders, oppose affirmative action and believe that abortion is wrong. If these views make me a hateful person, then I am proud of it. People at LI (Leadership Institute) suggest that we make a mockery of the whole thing by pointing this out.
  1. If The State News mentions that you saw the "evil of YAF's ways" or something, all I can do is have you talk to them (only with my permission.) ... You cannot apologize for anything YAF has done, cannot say bad things about me, cannot say that YAF is divided on any issues and cannot say that we need to do things in a better way. Any of these items can be twisted around to make us look bad. Regardless of whether or not The State News takes interest in the Between the Lines or City Pulse article, you must not speak to the media unless you have my permission (not even on your own behalf because it still represents the group). Don't even tell them the time or day of the week without my permission.

That's all I can write right now, as my hand is starting to cramp and my back is starting to ache. I guarantee that this story will be heading in interesting places over the next few weeks. If you live in the area, or even if you don't, please help spread this story far and wide. It deserves lots of coverage, as it's a perfect case study on the inner workings of the New Right's foot soldiers on college campuses nationwide. As I mentioned earlier, these are the sort of people who become brownshirts when fascism comes to societies. Expose them. Mock them. Stop them.

March 15, 2007

You Wouldn't Like Him When He is Angry

Damn Right, We're Angry

Paul Waldman

March 14, 2007

Paul Waldman is a senior fellow at Media Matters for America and the author of the new book, Being Right is Not Enough: What Progressives Can Learn From Conservative Success. The views expressed here are his own.

We can’t deny it any longer. There’s no point in hiding it, no point in trying to explain it away. Yes, it’s true: We progressives are angry. And we no longer care if the centrist, moderate guardians of the establishment scold us for it.

Our anger is not just some vague feeling whose source we can’t put our finger on. It isn’t based on absurd conspiracy theories and it isn’t illogical.

We’re angry because of what has happened to our country, because of how we’ve been treated, and because of the innumerable crimes the conservatives have committed. We’re angry at the president, we’re angry at the Congress, we’re angry at the news media. And we have every right to be.

Yes, we’re angry at George W. Bush. We’re not angry at him because of who he sleeps with, and we’re not angry at him because we think he represents some socio-cultural movement we didn’t like 40 years ago, or because he hung out with a different crowd than we did in high school. We’re angry at him because of what he’s done.

It’s true, we don’t like the fact that the most powerful human being on the planet is such a ridiculous buffoon that he can’t put two coherent sentences together without beginning to giggle and shimmy his shoulders. But we’re not angry because we think he’s stupid; we’re angry because he treats us as though we’re stupid. We’re angry that he lied to us, and lied to us and lied to us again. We’re angry that when he lies to us it isn’t because he’s caught up in scandal or got caught doing something he shouldn’t have, it’s part of a carefully constructed plan to fool the public.

Yes, we’re angry about Iraq, and we may be for the rest of our lives. We get angry every day when we open our newspapers and see the photo of another young soldier who died for this, another one maimed for life, another one with a tormented and broken soul. We’re angry about the couple of trillion dollars this war will cost. We’re angry about the thousands of young men around the world have been driven into the arms of al Qaeda, who have decided to devote their lives to killing Americans because of this war. We’re angry about the thousands upon thousands of Iraqis who have died in the orgy of bloodshed we unleashed, and the living too, those whom we said we were coming to “liberate,” but who now find themselves in a suffocating, endless miasma of fear and misery and death.

We’re angry that when we talk about ending this monstrous war, the soulless hypocrites who are glad to send more and more men and women to be scarred and maimed and killed in Iraq have the gall to accuse us of not “supporting the troops.” We’re angry that people whose actions exhibit nothing but contempt for freedom and liberty and justice, who wouldn’t know real patriotism if it came up and smacked them across the face, pin a little flag on their lapel and say that we’re the ones who hate America.

We’re angry because people who said the Iraqis would greet us as liberators, who said Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden were good buddies, who said this nightmare of a war would bring a flowering of democracy across the Middle East—this band of idiots, the Kristols and the Krauthammers and the Kagans and the Kondrackes, is treated as “serious” and “credible” on matters of national security, while those of us who were right about the war are dismissed as some sort of fringe whose ideas are too silly to listen to.

We’re angry that America may now be the only country in the world in which torture is an officially sanctioned policy, proclaimed proudly in public. We’re angry that in our name prisoners are subjected to sleep deprivation, water boarding and other forms of psychological torture to the point where they are literally driven mad. We’re angry that the president has decided, over 750 times, that if Congress passes a law and he doesn’t like it, he’ll just ignore it. We’re angry that this administration has argued over and over, in public and in court, that if the president does it, it’s not illegal. We’re angry that they tell us we have to shred our freedoms in order to be safe, and that so many of our fellow citizens shrug their shoulders and think it’s no big deal.

And we’re angry that Bush has made our nation so hated around the world. We’re angry that the next time a Democrat gets elected, most of their time will be spent cleaning up the god-awful mess Bush has made of everything.

We’re angry that we and our children and our grandchildren will have to keep paying off the nation’s debt, which now stands at nearly $9 trillion. We’re angry because every other industrialized country in the world has a single-payer health care system that works, and we pay more for ours than any of them, yet we have 45 million people with no health insurance. We’re angry that the insurance companies have convinced their obedient servants in Congress that the Rube Goldberg perpetual paperwork machine we have now is somehow “the best health care in the world” and preferable to a system in which you go to your doctor, get treated and go home, without having to fill out 10 forms and get down on your knees before the gods of the HMO bureaucracy to get a partial repayment minus your deductible and your co-pay.

We’re angry that the federal government is brimming with people fundamentally opposed to the mission of the agencies over which they preside, the anti-environmentalists who run the Interior department, the mining company lobbyists in charge of mine safety and the union-busters in charge of worker safety. We’re still angry about Hurricane Katrina, that our government left thousands of its citizens stranded to suffer and die, while the president thought that the guy presiding over the disastrous failure was doing a heckuva job. We’re angry that our government sends religious fundamentalists around the world to discourage condom use, thus condemning untold numbers of people to unwanted pregnancy, disease and death.

We’re angry that forty years after the Voting Rights Act, the Republican Party continues to exploit racism and do everything in its power to stop black people from voting in each and every election. We’re angry that in the richest country in the world we can’t seem to find our way to a system in which you go to the polls, cast your ballot and know that it will be counted. And yes, we’re still angry about what happened in Florida in 2000, that through lying and cheating and pure luck the Republicans were able to steal a presidential election, and five unprincipled partisans on the Supreme Court helped them do it. We’re angry that every time we look at Al Gore all that pain and frustration and outrage comes bubbling up through our guts no matter how hard we try to “get over it.”

We’re angry that some of the most powerful people in America see nothing wrong with getting down on their knees to kiss the rings of radical clerics espousing a theology as maniacal as any on earth. We’re angry that we have to endure lecture after lecture on “family values” from people who rush from their pulpits, whether in church or in Congress or on cable chat shows, to a motel room to give in to their desires and revel in their transgression before rushing back to those pulpits to wag a finger in all our faces with talk of sin. We’re angry that people whose souls are so twisted by hate and shame they make John Winthrop look like Wavy Gravy have the nerve to tell us how to live “moral” lives.

We’re angry that when some pompous fool who less than a decade ago demanded that Bill Clinton be impeached in order to demonstrate our fealty to the “rule of law” comes on television to explain how I. Scooter Libby’s perjury and obstruction of justice mean nothing and he must immediately be pardoned, Wolf Blitzer doesn’t say, “Get out of this studio, you contemptible hypocrite, and don’t ever come back.”

We’re angry because a repellent ghoul like Ann Coulter can regularly advocate the murder of people with whom she has political differences, yet continue to get invited on NBC's "Today" show. We’re angry that journalists who ought to know better tut-tut progressive bloggers for using dirty words but don’t blink an eye when conservatives spew forth the most abominable hatred and calls for violence that one could imagine.

We’re angry that there is not a single show on cable news in which a progressive is given an hour to spout off his or her opinions, but that privilege is given to the likes of Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck and John Gibson and Tucker Carlson and Joe Scarborough and all the other two-bit electronic hucksters of phony aggrievement.

We’re angry because snake-oil salesmen like William Donohue— despite being an anti-Semitic homophobe —can issue a press release expressing patently phony outrage about something somebody said, and get the mainstream press to jump like trained dogs. We’re angry because a band of liars like the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth can hoodwink the media into doing their dirty work for them. We’re angry because every despicable Republican attack gets recycled as knowing, arched-eyebrow commentary by “mainstream” commentators.

Those are a few of the things we’re angry about, and yes, that’s a lot of anger. But you know what? There’s nothing wrong with being angry. Anger is the appropriate reaction to moral outrages, to crimes against our common humanity, to the actions of those who would turn our country into something twisted and ugly.

March 8, 2007

Andrew Sullivan On the Word "Faggot"

Did you know that Ann Coulter is "pro-gay"? You didn’t? Me neither. That’s what she says, though. As Andrew Sullivan writes

Why would gays care? She is "pro-gay," after all. Apart from backing a party that wants to strip gay couples of all legal rights by amending the federal constitution, kick them out of the military where they are putting their lives on the line, put them into "reparative therapy" to "cure" them, keep it legal to fire them in many states, and refusing to include them in hate crime laws, Coulter is very pro-gay. As evidence of how pro-gay she is, check out all the gay men and women in America now defending her.
Go read his article. http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2007/03/faggots.html
A gay man's reaction to an evil act by an evil woman.

February 21, 2007

More giveaways for billionares

Yesterday I posted a comparison of the tax breaks to the wealthy and cuts to social services. Well, here are some more.

Bush designed a budget that offers $32.7 billion in tax cuts to the Wal-Mart family alone, while cutting $28 billion from Medicaid.

Cox family (of Cox cable TV) receives $9.7 billion tax break while education would get $1.5 billion in cuts

...the family of former Exxon/Mobil CEO Lee Raymond, who received a $400 million retirement package, would receive about $164 million in tax breaks.

Compare that to the Commodity Supplemental Food Program, which Bush proposes be completely eliminated, at a savings of $108 million over ten years.

February 20, 2007

What the fuck?

Matt Taibbi wrote:

On the same day that Britney was shaving her head, a guy I know who works in the office of Senator Bernie Sanders sent me an email. He was trying very hard to get news organizations interested in some research his office had done about George Bush's proposed 2008 budget, which was unveiled two weeks ago and received relatively little press...

Sanders's office came up with some interesting numbers here. If the Estate Tax were to be repealed completely, the estimated savings to just one family -- the Walton family, the heirs to the Wal-Mart fortune -- would be about $32.7 billion dollars over the next ten years.

The proposed reductions to Medicaid over the same time frame? $28 billion.

http://www.alternet.org/columnists/story/48278/

February 19, 2007

Civil Unions in New Jersey

Steve Goldstein is someone who is a pleasure to know. He is the head of Garden State Equality, the largest organization of GLBTI rights advocates in the state of New Jersey, currently studying to be a rabbi, and part of the first gay couple to get a civil union in New Jersey. This is a big step forward, but the battle is not done yet. Oh no, it is far from over. This year we have a big election coming up to keep the people who made sure this could happen stay in office and push for true marriage.



Switching to the war on terror, the pilots who have been flying people to be tortured have been identified, as the LA Times reports.

Relying on the operatives' passport numbers, hotel records, credit card bills and aviation records, German prosecutors are seeking to properly identify the 13 Americans in a high-profile case that has upset relations between Washington and Berlin and caused a political scandal in Germany over whether government officials sanctioned the CIA operation.

Elsewhere in Europe, legal and parliamentary investigations have focused a harsh spotlight on the CIA's program to abduct suspected terrorists and ferry them to secret sites for interrogation, operations known variously as "black renditions" or "extraordinary renditions."

On Friday, an Italian judge issued arrest warrants for 26 suspected CIA operatives for allegedly abducting a radical Muslim cleric outside his mosque in Milan in February 2003 and delivering him to Egypt, where his lawyer says he was tortured. The trial is set for June 8 in Milan.

All the Americans charged, including the top two CIA officers in Italy at the time, have departed the country, but Italian law allows defendants to be tried in absentia.

None of the aliases used in Italy match those in the German case, although one of the pilots may have been involved in both incidents.

One former CIA operation officer who was involved in the Italian case at CIA headquarters, speaking on condition of anonymity because the case is classified, said he and his colleagues were increasingly nervous about traveling in Europe for fear of getting swept up in the investigations. He said he checked with a contact at the Italian intelligence service for reassurance that he would not be arrested.

February 14, 2007

The Real John McCain

The Real John McCain

February 8, 2007

Lists

Here are some lists:

People Running for President:

Republicans
US Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kansas)
Former Governor Jim Gilmore (R-Virginia)
Former US House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Georgia)
Former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (R-New York)
Former Governor Mike Huckabee (R-Arkansas)
Congressman Duncan Hunter (R-California)
US Senator John McCain (R-Arizona)
Former Governor George Pataki (R-New York)
Congressman Ron Paul (R-Texas)
Former Governor Mitt Romney (R-Massachusetts)
Congressman Tom Tancredo (R-Colorado)
Former Governor Tommy Thompson (R-Wisconsin)

Democrats
US Senator Joe Biden (D-Delaware)
Former Army General Wes Clark (D-Arkansas)
US Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-New York)
US Senator Chris Dodd (D-Connecitcut)
Former US Senator John Edwards (D-North Carolina)
Former Alaska US Senator Mike Gravel (D-Virginia)
Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio)
US Senator Barack Obama (D-Illinois)
Governor Bill Richardson (D-New Mexico)
Governor Tom Vilsack (D-Iowa)

Flavors of ice cream
THE 15 MOST POPULAR ICE CREAM FLAVORS

(Flavor, percent preferring)

1. Vanilla, 29%
2. Chocolate, 8.9%
3. Butter pecan, 5.3%
4. Strawberry, 5.3%
5. Neapolitan, 4.2%
6. Chocolate chip, 3.9%
7. French vanilla, 3.8%
8. Cookies and cream, 3.6%
9. Vanilla fudge ripple, 2.6%
10. Praline pecan, 1.7%
11. Cherry, 1.6%
12. Chocolate almond, 1.6%
13. Coffee, 1.6%
14. Rocky road, 1.5%
15. Chocolate marshmallow, 1.3%
All others, 23.7%

Source: International Ice Cream Association, 888 16th St., Washington, D.C., 20006.

February 4, 2007

January 30, 2007

Liberal Chuck Norris

Last Friday, Chuck Norris endorsed someone for president. Sadly, it was Newt Gingrich and because of that, us here at AbovetheDin decided we need to choose a new hero to be an Internet phenomenon. Someone who can combat a man who would choose as a leader a guy who divorced his first wife after her first treatment for breast cancer, while she was in the hospital.

The criteria to be considered:

1. Be able to defeat Chuck Norris in combat

2. Be Liberal

And now the Nominees are:

10. Senator Hillary Clinton

(Wikipedia)
Why she’s number 10: Senator Hillary Clinton would probably not be able to defeat Norris in hand-to-hand combat, but you don’t think she’d let it get that far, do you? She’d have his brakes cut or she’d just shoot him like Indiana Jones. Senator Clinton was able to convince an entire state that hadn’t been living in for long to elect her to the Senate. And she got them to re-elect her and now she is running for president.


9. Brendan Fraser

(Movie promo poster)
Why he’s number 9: Brendan Fraser is a true action star. He has saved the world from a mummy and then again from a mummy. Watch out, he will kick your ass and throw you to a monkey.

8. Matt Damon

(movie promo poster)
Why he’s number 8" He’s been "bourne" again as an action star. He has given some good money to a few Democratic candidates and seems to be a real liberal. He is a Massachusetts liberal who can kick some ass; we always need more of those.

7. Tom Daschle

(Wikipedia)
Why he’s number 7: He needs to do something.

6. Sir Charles Barkley

(NBA.com)
Why he’s number 6: Listen to the man talk
BARKLEY: I hope you sell a lot of books. And I never heard of "The Savage Nation," don't care about "The Savage Nation." I care about this nation.
SAVAGE: What do you do? I don't even know who you are. I have no idea who you are. What are your qualifications?
BARKLEY: That makes two of us.

And
"The only reason most people don't like me is because there [sic] life sucks."

5. Jon Stewart
BIO
photo by: Norman Jean Roy
Why he’s number 5: This video really sums it up.


http://youtube.com/watch?v=KIrN8rqbqcY

4. Rosario Dawson

(Movie promo photo)
Why she’s number 4: Ms. Dawson runs a great political organization called votelatino.org, which works to get Hispanic Americans registered to vote, and she kicks some major ass. What did she do to research her latest role? Dawson and her co-stars joined the real protests during the RNC, followed by cameramen who looked, of course, just like the real news cameramen. (Crooker, in real life, makes documentaries, so he could shoot his character's own footage.) So effectively was this work done that Dawson was actually arrested, handcuffed, and held in jail for nine hours before convincing the police she was an actress playing an activist.

3. The Rock

(WWE.com)
Why he’s number 9: He is a damn fine cook and an action star. I’m not sure if he’s liberal, though. He walked tall, coached football and beat up other men in shorts; you don’t mess with the Rock.

2 Stephen Colbert


Why he’s number 2: The Man, the Myth, the Legend. A man so powerful he got a bridge in Hungary named after him.


1. Jennifer Garner

(Doanne Gregory)
Why she’s number 1: Have you seen this woman? Garner was the lead role in "Alias," where she played a deadly secret agent. She went toe to toe with Collin Farrell and Ben Affleck in "Daredevil" and then in her own solo role. You don’t mess with her.

January 23, 2007

The Economy

Across the board, indicators show slowing economic growth and declining housing prices.

  • Economic growth fell to 2 percent in the third quarter of last year, following 2.6 percent growth in the second quarter and a surprisingly strong first quarter growth of 5.6 percent.
  • The economy has underperformed relative to other expansions "with respect to both overall economic growth and growth in fixed non-residential investment."
  • Last year, wages "made up a record low share of national income. In the third quarter, wages and salaries made up 51.4 percent of national income, the smallest share since the U.S. government began to collect this data in 1947.
  • 2006 was also the year the housing bubble popped. Nationwide, home prices are down between 4 percent and 5 percent from their levels at the same point in 2005, adjusted for inflation.
  • President Bush has paid only lip service to the problem of reducing the federal budget deficit and record trade deficits.
  • Earlier this month, Bush practiced a bit of "me-tooism" as he promised to submit a plan to "balance the federal budget by 2012," despite the fact that he has "never proposed a balanced budget since it went into deficit, never vetoed a spending bill when Republicans controlled Congress, and offered little sustained objection to earmarks until the issue gained political traction last year."
  • Bush has done little to address record trade deficits. "By the third quarter of 2006, the difference between imports and exports had grown again to over six percent of Gross Domestic product, a feat only accomplished once since the Great Depression (in the fourth quarter of 2005)."
  • 37 million Americans are living in poverty.
  • The percentage of Americans in poverty rose from 11.3 percent in 2000 to 12.6 percent in 2005.
  • The current economic recovery is reinforcing income inequality. A recent Congressional Budget Office (CBO) study found "a greater share of this capital income goes to the richest households than at any time since the CBO began tracking such trends."
  • "Families earning more than $1 million a year saw their federal tax rates drop more sharply than any group in the country as a result of President Bush's tax cuts."
  • The tax cuts, which Bush wants to make permanent, "offered the biggest benefits by far to people at the very top — especially the top 1 percent of income earners."
This information was brought to you with help from The Center for American Progress.

January 22, 2007

Because the president cares about the living

*warning, the following post has images that are graphic*

"Your Flag Decal Won't Get You Into Heaven Anymore," by John Prine, is a song I heard on the radio for the first time yesterday. In a sad way, it was fitting, especially:

But your flag decal won't get you
Into Heaven any more.
They're already overcrowded
From your dirty little war.
Now Jesus don't like killin'
No matter what the reason's for,
And your flag decal won't get you
Into Heaven any more.

As President Bush declared yesterday National Sanctity of Human Life Day, I wrote a response. All of the words are from his message and the photos were first collected by others and added mainly by Plutonium Page. I've changed some of the photos, since I had this idea myself, but Plutonium Page did it much better so I've just added my work to his. The message by the President can be found here.

National Sanctity of human life, a photo essay.


America was founded on the principle that we are all endowed by our Creator with the right to life and that every individual has dignity and worth.


(AP photo)

National Sanctity of Human Life Day helps foster a culture of life and reinforces our commitment to building a compassionate society that respects the value of every human being.


(AP photo)

National Sanctity of Human Life Day serves as a reminder that we must value human life in all forms, not just those considered healthy, wanted, or convenient.


(AP Photo)

I call upon all Americans to recognize this day with appropriate ceremonies and to underscore our commitment to respecting and protecting the life and dignity of every human being.


(AP photo)

Brian Turner
"The Hurt Locker"

Nothing but the hurt left here.
Nothing but bullets and pain
and the bled out slumping
and all the fucks and goddamns
and Jesus Christs of the wounded.
Nothing left here but the hurt.

Caring for the Wounded in Iraq, a photo essay

January 19, 2007

It's the Red Hot Chilli Peppers' world

We are just guests here. It seems that "Californication" has entered mainstream life and has become a great album, song and video. Anthony Keidis talked about how Californication was basically how the world is becoming very superficial and plastic, much like California. However, in the Economist Californication is given a more positive twist.

To sum up this and other affronts, westerners have used a verb. To "Californicate" a state means to turn it into an image of California, with inflated property prices, traffic jams and rampant crime. Occasionally, as in a recent leader in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, a local political shift (in that case, Nevada's vote to ban smoking in restaurants) is described as Californication. And Californians have indeed spread their politics to other states.
According to the article more then 5 million people born in California now live in other states, making it "America's second-biggest domestic diaspora, after New Yorkers, and the most noticeable." And unlike previous mass domestic emigrations this one is not just White people running away from Black people. In fact, the article says that between 1995 and 2000 California suffered the net loss of more Hispanics than whites.

So when people talk about how liberals are losing the demographic war, they are probably wrong.