I recently had the pleasure of carrying on a one sided conversation with one of the more colorful, lunatic fringe in my county. One sided in that this overbearing imbecile did all the talking and I was forced to listen. Forced to listen only because this village idiot, with his “don’t tread on me” t-shirt and his rebel flag bandana would not stop talking long enough to take a breath, let alone allow me to reply.
And, as I was listening, I kept hearing Abe Lincoln’s words in my head… “Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt.” I wanted to blurt this out so this blundering troglodyte would get the memo. And, then I thought to myself, what the hell, if this guy wants to make a complete ass of himself, who am I to deny him the illustrious privilege.
After what seemed like an eternity, he wrapped up his diatribe with one word; One word spoken in a tone so loathsome that it shook me to the core—“SOCIALIST!” Since I have been involved in politics/activism that advocates fair & just treatment of society, I’ve been stalked, I’ve had death threats, I’ve had my personal information posted on open threads , and I’ve received harassing telephone calls on my personal cell phone.
This, my friends, is the terrifying reality of the radical right wing world we live in. Corporations are people, War is thought to be the only solution to a failing economy, and there are only two classes of people: rich and poor. Women do not have the final say over their bodies, yet the death penalty is promoted (even cheered); millions of people go without food, water, shelter, and life sustaining health care, while millions of dollars are being wasted on WARS, Political campaigns, and materialistic gluttony.
And, you have the nerve to call me a socialist- you, evil bastard…
Warren J. Blumenfeld, summed it up quite nicely in his December Huffington Post article:
…..As destructive and as freedom-killing as the Right would have us believe, according to the World English Dictionary, Socialism involves “a theory or system of social organization that advocates the vesting of the ownership and control of the means of production and distribution, of capital, land, etc., in the community as a whole,” where each of us has a stake and advances in the success of our collective economy.
I, therefore, would say to those who thrust the term “Socialist” as an epithet, if a Socialist is one who advocates for a governmental single-payer quality universal health care system, which includes safe and reasonably-priced prescription and over-the-counter drug therapies, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who demands that our country protects and enhances our Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid safety nets, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who advocates for the further nationalization of our parks, forests, mountains, rivers, streams, shores, and off-shore waters, rather than allocating increased corporate mining, drilling, and timber rights, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who advocates for free and quality education, not only through grade 12, but throughout higher education and after for everyone who desires and works to achieve their fullest potential, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who advocates for a government-sponsored program that guarantees our seniors a retirement system that ensures a high quality of life free from economic burdens, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who advocates for the rights of workers to organize and to collectively bargain for better wages and working conditions, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who battles to eliminate workplace and larger societal inequalities based on race, nationality, citizenship status, age, sex, sexual identity, gender expression, disability, socioeconomic standing, religion, and other social identities, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who works to ensure that everyone is guaranteed a comfortable and secure place to live, and one who fights against a banking system that forecloses people’s homes through scurrilous business practices, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who supports effective governmental regulations on food producers to safeguard our food supply and protect against the maltreatment of animals, and on corporations, companies, and individuals to defend our environment, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who supports severe restrictions on the political process to prevent mammoth contributions by individuals and corporations to buy and own politicians to influence public policy, while locking out individuals and groups unable to amass large political funds, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who challenges a military industrial complex that marches to the beat of industry, and a prison industrial complex that perpetuates the racial and socioeconomic class inequities pervasive throughout the society, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who contests and advocates for effective restrictions on the so-called “free market” economic system that enables the creation and enhancement of mega monopolies, outsourcing of jobs, manufacture of defective products, and inhibition in the development of clean renewable energy technologies, then I am a proud Socialist!
If a Socialist is one who demands a true progressive tax structure where everyone pays their fair share, one that inhibits massive inequities in the overwhelming accumulation of wealth by the top one percent of the nation as is currently the case, then I am a VERY proud Socialist!
So, I will never again allow those who wish to continue the economic and social status quo to use the term “Socialist” as a means of intimidation flung as an epithet, but, rather, I welcome and embrace the term as a declaration of empowerment, pride, and hope for a better social structure in a better tomorrow.
Beware the Snake Oil Salesman, Pundits, and Bullshit Peddlers
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‘Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth’ (Wilde) If it were only that simple, Oscar.
It’s that time again. The time when politicking becomes a free-for-all where the richest and (perceived) most powerful deviants reign supreme. This election cycle (not unlike years past) resembles a traveling, three-ring circus, where the clowns are plentiful, the ringmasters unrelenting, and the crowds often leave the arenas demanding a refund. Consequently, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to determine which group is the greater threat: the Snake Oil Salesmen (candidates) or the self-proclaimed pundits who make a living by reducing the snake oil muck into digestible (30 second) sound bites.
The bullshit peddlers are not alone atop the totem pole of madness. Radicals are capitalizing on the residual effect/disgusting consequence of the sanctimonious bullshit of corporate personhood. Campaign messages (and I use that term very loosely) litter our airwaves with the best (more like the worst) sound bites money can buy (Thank you, SCOTUS ala Citizen’s United for making this possible.)
Corporations can now make it rain on their preferred candidates like lonely billionaires at a pole dance extravaganza. The campaign messages, although well rehearsed, often lead to retractions/clarifications depending on which deep pocketed donor groups the candidates manage to piss off.
Thomas Jefferson once said, “Fix reason firmly in her seat, and call to her tribunal every fact, every opinion. Question with boldness even the existence of a God because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason, than that of the blindfold of fear.”
Do not fear the truth. It is our moral imperative as socially conscious, politically active, wisdom seekers hold fast to ferreting out the truth. We may not be able to match corporate campaign contributions but we can challenge every lie big money buys.
Truth hides in obscurity to the point where it becomes paralyzed by fear. Truth is lost in the dark, wilderness of rhetoric waiting to be liberated. So I call upon the masses to raise your voices, less the unsuspecting sheeple be influenced by lethal propaganda. Seek the truth, find it, and expose it.Humanity depends on it.
“All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered—the point is to discover them.” – Galileo
If Texas is going to hold primary elections on April 3, the federal courts will have to pick up the pace.
A panel of federal judges in Washington, D.C., is deciding whether congressional and legislative district maps drawn by the Legislature last year give proper protection to minority voters under the federal Voting Rights Act. At the same time, the U.S. Supreme Court is deciding whether an interim map drawn by federal judges in San Antonio is legal.
In the meanwhile, there are no maps in place for the impending Texas elections.
A panel of federal judges in San Antonio has the job of deciding whether the maps legislators drew last year properly account for population growth and representation, and that court will also finally approve maps to be used for this year’s elections. But since the D.C. judges moved slowly in deciding whether the maps follow the Voting Rights Act, and the election season was almost under way, the San Antonio judges drew interim maps to be used in the meantime.
Instead of starting with the Legislature’s maps, the San Antonio court started with the maps currently in use. As a result, their maps weren’t as strongly Republican as the ones that lawmakers drew.
The state objected and took its case to the U.S. Supreme Court, which put everything on ice and scheduled hearings for next week. The high court will let the lower courts know how to get legal maps in place for the elections, either by letting the court-drawn maps go into effect or by setting some other remedy in motion.
The Supreme Court will decide whether the San Antonio judges should have deferred to the state plan. One argument against the state plan is that it hadn’t won preclearance from the Washington, D.C., panel and thus wasn’t a “legal” map; the only map to go from, by that reasoning, was the one used in the 2010 elections. That’s what the Texas judges used. The attorney general argues that the state plan hadn’t been found illegal and that it was the latest product of a political body that is more accountable to the public than a trio of federal judges. So, the state argues that the San Antonio court should have used the legislators’ map.
Several other states — Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, Arizona, Georgia, Michigan and Louisiana — filed friend-of-the-court briefs supporting the state’s argument. “The common sense solution is to defer to the state’s plan except to the extent it needs to be modified for violations of federal law,” they wrote.
The Texas case probably doesn’t have huge, overarching implications. There are a couple of serious challenges to the Voting Rights Act itself — a voter ID lawsuit from South Carolina, and redistricting cases from Alabama and North Carolina — but that’s not a central issue in the Texas case. This is more a matter of which map ought to have precedence if the elections come up before the courts are finished vetting and correcting new maps drawn by the state.
Rick Hasen, a professor at the University of California at Irvine School of Law, says there are some allusions to a VRA challenge in the briefs in the Texas case, but nothing that directly challenges that law’s Section 5 preclearance provisions.
That section prohibits changes in election law or procedures in states with histories of voter discrimination — including Texas — until those changes have been approved by the U.S. Department of Justice or the federal district courts in Washington, D.C.
The Supreme Court signaled its frustration with that provision in a 2009 Texas case, but other pending cases appear to be aimed at that. This year’s case from Texas is more about interpreting the law than challenging it.
“I would be shocked if the court used this emergency stay expedited case as a vehicle to strike down Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. However, I think the constitutional question lurks in the background,” Hasen said.
The U.S. Supreme Court set oral arguments for next Monday, Jan. 9. The panel of federal judges in Washington, D.C., scheduled hearings for Jan. 17 through 26, with final arguments on Feb. 3.
That leaves the three federal judges in San Antonio to put together a final map based in part on its own rulings and in part on what the other courts decide after the hearings this month and next. That court set a deadline of Feb. 1 for candidates to file for legislative and congressional races, assuming they’d have a map by that time. And they moved the primaries to April 3 from March 6. That could easily move again, though. Even if the maps are ready by the end of this month, county election administrators in Texas told the courts that doesn’t give them enough time. And if the high court tells the Texas court to wait for the Washington court, they’ll be waiting for a decision after those Feb. 3 final arguments, making April 3 elections impossible.
The Texas case is really about who’s in the drivers’ seat when the maps are redone. Hasen puts it like this: “How much deference do you give to a legislative plan that has not been precleared, but where the state has sought preclearance?”
The Supremes could give the San Antonio court an answer on which map to use for this year’s elections — the one drawn by the Legislature, the interim map drawn by the San Antonio court itself, or something else. And the Washington district court could give the Texas judges some guidance on which districts, if any, should be changed to protect existing minority voters’ ability to elect their candidates of choice. The San Antonio court will still have to decide for itself whether the state’s maps properly account for growth in minority populations that fueled 89 percent of the overall growth in state population during the last decade.
“The case still has to be tried on the merits no matter what happens in the Supreme Court,” said Jose Garza, an attorney representing the Mexican American Legislative Caucus. He’ll lead the arguments against the state in the U.S. Supreme Court next week.
Garza said he still thinks there is “a possibility” that the Texas primaries will be held on April 3. But it would require fast action from the courts. Texas counties went to court during the holidays to let the judges know that they would be hard-pressed to hold primaries in April if they don’t have maps until the end of January. On the other side of that is an argument from the Democratic and Republican parties, which won’t have time to pick delegates to the national political conventions if the primaries are any later than April.
It’s possible — and it’s happened before — that the state will use one set of maps for the 2012 elections and the courts will then approve a different set of maps for use in 2014 and later. And, as the state Legislature proved in 2003, they’re fully capable of coming back into session in mid-decade and drawing new maps from scratch.
Politicians have been selling out to the highest bidder for years. Who are the benefactors? It doesn’t take a Rhodes Scholar to figure it out. The GOP represents Wall Street; Democrats represent Main Street. Republicans may reign supreme from time to time. But, for many, many years–Democrats controlled congress…
Democrats controlled the House of Representatives for 60 years between 1933-1995 (in all but four years); and, they controlled the Senate in all but ten years. If you wanted something done, you needed the support of the Democrats. Those were the good ol’ days- a time when Congressional leaders upheld public interest. Somewhere, along the way, things changed:
Republicans seized power in 1994 by raising massive amounts of campaign cash. Between 1994-1998, Republican candidates raised a record breaking $1 BILLION+ dollars (Kaiser, 2009. So Damn Much Money, p. 272).
In 1994 (for the first time since 1954), Republicans gained control of both houses. The power shift gave the Neo-Cons a taste of how much power they stood to lose, if they didn’t keep their sponsors happy. Perhaps, this could explain why the power hungry Neo-Cons turned their collective focus away from public interest, to their corporate bedfellows. After all, they had $1 billion+ favors to repay. But, the Democrats would not go quietly- between 1995 and 2010, congressional power shifted as many times in fifteen years as it had in the past forty-five years (Lessig,L. 2011. Republic Lost, p.94).
In 2008, Republicans were dumping campaign cash at any contender they thought could beat a Democrat (Hillary or Obama). It didn’t take long for Democrats to learn that in order to beat Republicans (and BIG MONEY), you’ve got to raise a lot of cash, too. Presidential Candidates – Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain – together spent more than $1 billion, an unprecedented figure. But, Obama didn’t win because of the massive amounts of campaign cash alone, he had a message. Of course, the cash helped Obama, no doubt, but he inspired Americans at a time when many of us had had a belly full of Bush, Cheney, the Industrial Military Complex, and failed Republican policies.
And, just when we thought we’d be able to loosen the Neo-Con stranglehold on humanity, enter the DRAGON: Citizens United.
The Citizens United ruling in 2010, was the proverbial nail in the coffin of public interest. All hail BIG BUSINESS. The landmark decision allows corporations and unions to throw endless amounts of cash at politicians. (Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U.S.08-205 (2010), 558 U.S., 130 S. Ct. 876 (January 21, 2010)).
“What was true a century ago is as true today: distant corporate interests mean that corporate dominated campaigns will only work ‘in the essential interest of outsiders with local interests a very secondary consideration.”
What does this mean? Time will tell. I can tell you that I now hold a new affection for the Big Sky State. All things considered, it’s still safe to say that Republicans will stop at nothing to defeat Democrats, and especially, President Obama. As the saying goes, “You get what you pay for.” Therefore, I am duty bound to open up my checkbook and throw as much cash as possible toward QUALIFIED Democrats who do not worship at the altar of Wall Street, but work with us folks down here on Main Street. Please feel free to do the same, Main Street depends on it.
OSCEOLA, Iowa — At a town hall meeting tonight, Gov. Rick Perry said he no longer supported abortion in cases of rape and incest.
As he responded to a question from the audience, Perry said he had undergone a “transformation” after viewing the film The Gift of Life, narrated by former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, and talking with Rebecca Kiessling, who was conceived during a rape. “She looked me in the eye and said, ‘I am the product of a rape,’ and she said, ‘My life has worth,'” Perry said.
Joshua Verwers, a Sheraton pastor, asked the governor to reconcile what he had told him in November at the Iowa Faith and Freedom dinner — that he was against abortion, except in cases of rape, incest or when it was necessary to save the life of the mother — with his signature on a pledge from the anti-abortion group Personhood USA that bans abortion under any circumstances.
After the meeting, Verwers said that Perry’s answer was “perfect” and “from the heart.” He said it particularly moved him that the governor had shifted his beliefs after speaking with someone who had been born from rape. Perry’s wife, Anita, has been a fundraiser for the Texas Association Against Sexual Assault since 2003 and has devoted her efforts to supporting other causes that work to prevent violence against women.
During a Personhood USA teleconference tonight, Perry reiterated his change of beliefs and elaborated on why he decided to sign the pledge: “As I signed that document I will suggest to you that, all I can say to you, was that God was working out of my heart.”
Fellow candidates Michele Bachmann, Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich also participated in the call.
The bill would allow a hospital to refuse a woman life-saving, emergency abortion care even if she will die without it. On top of that, it effectively would ban insurance coverage of abortion in state health-insurance exchanges, denying abortion coverage to millions of women (Via NARAL).
The Conservative agenda to deny Abortion services to women (even at their own expense) should be supported by NO-COST Birth Control for all WOMEN (But, alas, it is NOT!).
Whether you are Pro-Choice or Pro-Life, it stands to reason that No-Cost Birth Control for all WOMEN, makes sense (doesn’t it?!)
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) adopted medical experts’ recommendation that newly issued insurance plans cover birth control without copays. Women will feel the magnitude of this decision every time they go to the pharmacy counter and pick up their birth control without paying a copay.
This is such a tremendous leap forward. However, women who work for a religious institution, like a Catholic hospital or university that opposes birth control, are at risk of not being included under this new policy.
Anti-birth-control forces, including the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, are leading the fight. They have launched a massive campaign to allow religious employers to opt out of the new requirement (via NARAL).