Friday, December 31, 2004
Representative John Conyers has formally announced that he will object to the counting of Ohio's electors:
As you know," writes Rep. John Conyers in his public letter, "on January 6, 2005, at 1:00 P.M, the electoral votes for the election of the president are to be opened and counted in a joint session of Congress. I and a number of House Members are planning to object to the counting of the Ohio votes, due to numerous unexplained irregularities in the Ohio presidential vote, many of which appear to violate both federal and state law."
In an interview quoted in the following report, which summarizes many of the problems with the 2004 vote, Conyers says he is "confident" that Senators will join in the objection. Stay tuned.
San Francisco Bay View - National Black Newspaper of the Year
More than 80% of the presidential votes in 2004 were made on or counted by machines owned and operated by two companies run by Republicans with strong ties to GW Bush. That's the U.S. presidential election.
Among the conclusions of a new study of exit polling and voting in 2004 conducted by two professors at the Institute of Government and Public Affairs at University of Illinois at Chicago:
"In an accurate count of a free and fair election, the strong likelihood is that Kerry
would have been the winner of the popular vote."
That's the POPULAR vote for the entire country. Details of this study can be found in the daily kos diary linked below:
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
Who is leading the western effort to aid the nations hit by the earthquake and tsunami in the Indian Ocean? Is it Bush? No, he's clearing brush and riding his bike in Texas on vacation. Is it his buddy in Britian, Tony Blair? No, he's on vacation in Egypt.
But there is a president on the job. Name of Clinton. President Bill Clinton. He's in England, and has spoken out on the disaster, and offered concrete plans and leadership on how the rich western countries might respond. The EU leaders are responding to his ideas, and are organizing accordingly.
Eventually Bush got the message. Nothing like Clinton envy to get the heart started. So a little while ago Bush finally made a public announcement and set some wheels turning on organizing aid.
Some observers are pointing out that some of the affected nations are predominately Muslim, and an opportunity to show compassion is being lost, which only reinforces the image of the U.S. as selfish and self-centered. We lose 3,000 on 9-11 and the world shakes, and it affects an election more than three years later. Upwards of 120,000 die because of a single event elsewhere, and our government's response is affectless, stingy and late (though American individuals and even some corporations are responding quickly and generously.)
Guardian Unlimited The Guardian Clinton puts onus on the wealthy
Protests are being organized in several cities in early January to draw attention to the abuses in Ohio and elsewhere of the integrity of the vote.
The one with the most definition at the moment is in Columbus, Ohio on January 3. Jesse Jackson and his Rainbow/PUSH Coalition is behind this one, and a bevy of organizations are signing up, including Moveon.org. It starts at 2p., at the Riffe Center across from the Ohio State Capitol. More info from Rainbow/PUSH.
There's a rally at Fanueil Hall in Boston also on January 3. San Francisco is just starting to organize one for January 4. And Washington, D.C. will hold a noon rally on January 6, the day Congress is scheduled to say yea or nay to the election of GW Bush. Info on these as they develop can be found at ReDefeat Bush, which is organizing a counter-Inaugural in DC on January 20.
If you can't be in DC on the 6th, I'd be hanging around the TV set, tuned into C-Span. There are unconfirmed reports that at least 14 Representatives will refuse to validate the Bush victory, and several Senators have received thousands of emails requesting that they do the same in the Senate. It takes just one member of each house to open debate.
At the moment it seems unlikely it will get any further than that, and the GOPer majority will prevail, but even debate will be an amazing thing. One assumes that as this becomes a serious possibility, elements of both sides are quietly but feverishly strategizing on all that could happen that day.
The likelihood of something significant happening may depend on how many people turn out for these rallies. The media needs faces to take pictures of, and politicians need to know they've got supporters and political cover.
And this younger generation badly needs some new leaders out there, holding their elders' feet to the fire. So far they don't seem to understand that cyberspace isn't visible to TV cameras, let alone the public. Better camera fodder than cannon fodder, boys and girls.
Tuesday, December 28, 2004
The news continues to develop concerning the magnitude 9.0 earthquake in the Indian ocean that generated tsunamis responsible for some 60,000 deaths and counting in several Asian nations. It is a disaster unparalleled in recent times and will test the responsiveness of the world in preventing the death toll from rising due to disease from bad water and lack of healthful food. Already the UN humanitarian aid chief has criticized wealthy nations for being stingy in their first response. But as the news trends towards showing that many victims were American and European tourists, the efforts at rescue and relief are apt to intensify.
In the coming weeks, as the world begins to absorb the dimensions of the effects, there will be some sober assessments of what's needed both to warn populations of danger (the tsunami took several hours to reach shore) and to organize response and relief. It should be a wake up call, though there's no guarantee much will be done about it, once the story is displaced or descends into soap opera about individual victims and the video they left behind.
It may perhaps provide some imagery to the warnings of scientists about the effects of global heating as sea levels rise in some places, and storms become more frequent and violent, and show up where they are not expected, like the rains that would otherwise be making headlines now pummeling central and southern California.
But it will probably be a long time before people begin to wonder why the nations of the world, especially the richest and most powerful, are so intent on pouring resources and expertise into vast armies and armadas and technologies of destruction, when that effort, that organization, that commitment and those resources are needed to provide relief and anticipatory protection from the many kinds of destruction that don't require the direct participation of humanity in causing them, though indirectly we contribute to them or even precipitate them.
Here in the U.S., it might re-focus our attention on what it means to be sending our National Guard troops away from where they are the traditional resource for disaster response, and further what the sharply declining enrollments in the Guard because of Iraqnam will mean to the future, when the tsuanmi hits these shores.
Here's today's link to a blog, which uses the same template as this one so don't be freaked out, that explains the significance of the latest move by the Kerry-Edwards campaign to support court fights to challenge and investigate the vote in Ohio. He does a nice job of putting it all in context, suggesting that while the votes involved are enough to turn the election to Kerry, it's likely that the investigation will extend far beyond the upcoming official awarding of the election to Bush, and become Bush's Watergate. (Unfortunately, that would leave us with Cheney instead of Kerry, if the analogy holds.)
Election Scam-o-rama
There are other intriguing events unfolding in Ohio, including the attempt of the secretary of state in charge of the election there to avoid answering any questions about it, under oath or otherwise.
So what needs to happen next? There's the possibility of something breaking before Congress convenes to validate the results in a few weeks, resulting in some high drama on Capitol Hill. But in the long run, while the Kerry people stay low-key and the major news media do likewise, what's needed is (1) some youthful rabble-rousing, some twentysomething leaders to emerge at the head of vast numbers of demonstrators, to give the media something to take pictures of, and (2) some hungry young journalists eager to make their names by exposing election fraud and corruption in the dark heart of Bushness.
Thursday, December 23, 2004
from Phineas Dash
Here in far northern California it is sunny and warm, the air is like spring. There are birds everywhere, feeding for the oncoming winter.
It is getting warmer and drier here year by year. Short term it's good. An unusually good crab season offshore. But in the longterm the wildlife, the flora and fauna, aren't built for this. The place will change, and there will be traumas.
The effects of global heating, whatever they will be, are now inevitable. There is always the possibility of some mitigation, and though time may clarify the specific problems, its passage may also render possible remedies either impossible or beyond the resources and will of that time.
If global heating were all we faced, if we were a society up to that kind of challenge as it appeared even a few years ago we could be, then the future would be less bleak. But the election last month revealed to at least this observer that America is truly in the grip of something that transcends science and politics, and reason. Not even religious differences explain it. History is being shaped by psychological forces that perhaps only Jung approached understanding. He contended that the apocalypse of this civilization was inevitable, though he could not predict the form. But his dreams towards the end of his life weren't comforting. He was, however, reassured that his dreams told him that at least some members of the human race would survive.
I try to discount the waning of hopes inherent in my advancing age. But of course I cannot. Yet it seems to me the signs are there. The decline of civilization has been going on for some time. At the same time, advances in understanding were being made, and spreading to more people. Europe, the source of so much violence in the 20th century, moves awkwardly yet insistently towards a political unity based on reasonably sound principles, and should be the hope of the world.
But America's fall may trump that force. There have been many periods of crisis and troubles in human history, but there are a few things different now. First, the power over life is much greater, and is in a small set of uncertain but arrogant human hands. That's the life of individuals, of groups, of human civilization and of at least the "higher" forms of animal and vegetable life on the planet. Second, we are as individuals more dependent on interlocking phenomena that we don't understand. The grid. The system of food distribution. Water. Few Americans or citizens of other westernized countries are close to basic resources, or have any experience in obtaining them directly. Societal breakdown does not have to be very large to be incredibly extensive and costly in human suffering and human life. A house of cards is far too simple an analogy, yet it is apt in the sense it gives of a precarious interconnection.
What are we to do? Perhaps we will have time to work on the answers. In preparation, I'd say, tend to your psyche, learn to help each other---and this is perhaps the greatest threat to us as individuals, that we are so separate---and keep representing what you believe in. Perhaps our convictions and actions will help. Perhaps they will be remembered as an example to those who survive.
In my generation we've been expecting sudden apocalypse, instant karma, since the late 1960s. In a sense the last 30 years or so have been a bonus, and we may have 30 more, who knows? But the fact that some have cried wolf before doesn't mean the wolf won't finally come. The signs are here. It may be more of a slow motion apocalypse, though things do bend before they suddenly break. Hope is a committment, so we work in hope. But for those who are enjoying this Christmas in relative prosperity and peace, it's worth taking a moment to appreciate it more fully, more sharply. Because next year may be very different.
Wednesday, December 22, 2004
as told by Theron Dash
In case you missed it, here's a heartchilling tale to contemplate, as we Wal-Mart our way to the bottom.
There are 3,066 counties in America; just about all of us live in one. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, an American who works full time at the federal minimum wage cannot afford to rent a one-bedroom apartment in 3,062 of those counties.
So except for three counties in Illinois and one in Florida, a minimum wage worker, on his or her own, with or without a family to support, will likely be homeless.
That's assuming that 70% of the income goes to trivialities like food, clothing, transportation, medicines, etc. The rule of thumb used to be that housing should take no more than 25% of total income, but the government figures that 30% is good enough.
This is the United States of America. Not just the country where social justice became a political principle. But the richest nation in the world. The richest nation the world has ever seen.
And it only gets worse. Rent and utilities for a two-bedroom apartment---crowded, but enough for a mother and father and a couple of kids---requires three fulltime incomes at minimum wage. Which is probably how many families do afford it: one parent works 80 hours, the other 40.
We aren't talking here about the unemployed. Or the underemployed. We are talking about the overemployed, the dead on their feet. And with two people working, that's even more for transportation, and then there's daycare.
As for the single person, good luck. Sleep in a ditch and dream of being one of that glorious top 1% that has seen its income rise by 200% since Reagan's election. Die without health care. We don't actually care. Come back as an "unborn child", then we'll talk.
Our evangelical moralists apparently don't believe in Darwinism when it comes to nature, but they sure seem to believe in it fervently when it comes to their fellow Americans.
This story would make Scrooge cry. But not our Republican rulers and their rich and morally bankrupt friends. For them it is the best of times.
May they and their bankers meet the ghosts of Christmas Past (say, the Great Depression) and Future (the Bush Apocalypse). Not that the threat of a sparsely attended funeral cuts any ice with them. They'll be Raptured by then, right?
It's a far, far righter thing we do than we have ever done before.
In the meantime, everybody enjoy The Little Match Girl on Christmas night. Just be sure you're looking at the TV set, and not out the window.
Cause next year you might be looking in the window, and into the mirror.
The Seattle Times: Nation & World: Report cites scarcity of low-income housing
Monday, December 20, 2004
After a brief boost after the "election," GW Bush's approval rating is once again below 50%, according to GOP-favoring Gallup.For the first time, more than half of Americans surveyed say the Iraq invasion was a mistake. Most disapprove of how the Bushies are mishandling Iraqnam now.
Now the Civil Liberties Union has uncovered FBI emails referring to an Executive Order that suggests our moral values prez ordered "inhumane interrogation techniques"--i.e. torture, of prisoners in Iraq.
American Civil Liberties Union : FBI E-Mail Refers to Presidential Order Authorizing Inhumane Interrogation Techniques
Saturday, December 18, 2004
"The epic legal battle over Ohio's presidential vote count is back in the state Supreme Court, with an election challenge claiming George W. Bush was wrongly declared the winner on Nov. 2 and seeking a court-ordered reversal of that victory. "
"Meanwhile, efforts to recount Ohio's vote may have been fatally tainted by the Republican Party, raising questions of what the GOP has to hide, and prompting demands for criminal prosecution. "
The Free Press -- Independent News Media - Election 2004
Neat photo, too.
In case you missed the SF Chronicle review of James Hillman's A Terrible Love of War, selected as a Best Book of 2004 by the SF Chronicle, you can find it along with many other fine reviews at Books In Heat. Neat photos, too.
Friday, December 17, 2004
by Phineas Dash
The Ohio recount is proceeding, and reports are that the bureaucrats are doing their best to subvert it. I learned the ways of petty bureaucrats while serving on the faculty committee on student affairs as a token student representative. They wear you down. They use technicalities when it suits them, and ignore the rules when it suits their purposes. If there is a hue and cry and something gets passed they don’t like, they accept it quietly, and when everybody is exhausted after the fight, they subvert it, then change it back at the next opportunity.
So it goes in Ohio. You expect that from bureaucrats. But there has to be some countervailing power. There are activists there. Apparently some of the Democrats are gaining respect for the sheer stubbornness of the Greens. Greens certainly can be stubborn.
But the activists have lives and eventually they have to earn livings, take finals, feed the baby. The bureaucrats are forever, especially when the Republican fat cats finance them.
Where are the leaders? You might well ask. They are arguing over whether Ohio is worth it. Some say Ohio is the past. It’s time to organize for the future. The real fight is over the party chairperson. Reform in the state parties. The election is so over, so last month. Time to get serious about the nitty gritty, the block chairperson, the state blog.
The conflict is in some ways just the usual reflexive either/or. Some people are appropriately concentrating on organizing for the next elections. They're obsessed with who the next chair of the Democratic party will be. Other people are fighting it out in Ohio, with many supporters obsessed with what's going on there. There's plenty of people to go around.
But there's a more crucial point, and it has many facets. It is this: Ohio is the future.
As someone said in a daily kos diary comment, what's the point of party reform if the votes aren't counted?
There is nothing more important in American politics than the integrity of the vote. It all starts there, it all ends there.
It is a question of justice. It is specifically a question of civil rights, and even more specifically a question of voting rights for African Americans.
At this point I mention for those who don't know it, that although Republican crimes may have been very widespread, at the moment it is particularly clear that it was concentrated in the African American neighborhoods and precincts in Ohio and in Florida, and other less publicized states. That's why you're seeing a black congressman, John Conyers, leading the fight there, and one of the last of the 1960s Civil Rights leaders, Jesse Jackson, who still speaks with the authority of someone who was at Selma, when he says this is the same as Selma.
The Democratic party committed itself to fighting for voting rights for African Americans many years ago, certainly in 1963. It was a political decision, and it was a principled decision. The Kennedys knew that if they supported voting rights, the Democrats would lose the South for a generation or more. They did it anyway.
But if the effort stopped there, it was in vain. If Democrats don't fight for voting rights in 2004, in Ohio, in Florida and elsewhere, then we dishonor our past, we dishonor ourselves, and incidentally, we throttle the future of our party.
I say this as a non-African American Democrat, who as a teenager marched behind Martin Luther King in Washington in 1963. One reason I marched was so that my President would know he had political support to do the right thing. He did.
We keep a focus on Ohio because justice demands it. Injustice in the recent past becomes the cause of the present, and if we don't rise to this occasion, we subvert the future.
We subvert the future in another, very practical way, for those of you who are concerned with the nuts and bolts of the Democratic Party's future. Here in California we begin to see the future that the rest of the country will soon see. There used to be a majority called white. But today there is no majority. And there will be no majority race in America pretty soon.
We are a multiracial society, with a growing number of people who are themselves multiracial. If we can't consciously commit to a common cause of justice regarding African Americans, who have been subject to injustice for most of our history, we aren't going to be ready for that future.
Moreover, if the Democratic party does not aggressively recruit more leaders of many racial backgrounds, we will be a party of only the past.
Ohio is crucial to our credibility as a party, with the African American community and with other communities outside the usual power structures.
It is crucial to the party's credibility with voters of all races who cared so much about this election. I made phone calls as a volunteer for the Kerry campaign, and talked to people in battleground states in every region. People were passionate. They were doing everything they could. They were absolutely determined to have their vote count.
We pay attention to the 2004 vote for the people who stood for five hours in the rain in Florida to vote early. We pay attention to Ohio for the people who stood for ten hours and still didn't get to vote on election day.
We do it for the people who were told at the polls by men in dark suits that Democrats vote on Wednesday, come back then.
We do it for people who don't speak or read English well, but who have the same right to vote, but who were either badly served or more likely, taken advantage of.
We do it because America deserves better than the scandal of a banana republic, where the voting machines are owned and operated by a partisan of the party in power.
We do it because all of this was wrong. And we do it because the people who were determined to vote and were denied, are the future.
And we must do it. I don't know why more prominent Democrats aren't visibly in this fight. I do know the impression it is leaving with people: that the Democrats must have committed just as much fraud as the Republicans, so they are afraid of being exposed if they question what Republicans did.
But as important as celebrity voices these days in capturing media attention, we should not depend on them. We are a little too dependent on daddy. If it's not Daddy Clinton then it's Daddy Kerry. Sometimes I think so many people voted for Bush, not for President (because they would have had to consider competence) but for Daddy.
We don't have any daddy. I admire John Kerry, and I wish he was more visible on this issue, but he seems to feel it isn’t appropriate, or at least not yet. He’s done some things, but some things are never enough. Because one problem with depending on daddy is that daddy can never do enough. If he issues statements of support, then daddy should go to court. If he goes to court, then daddy should go on television.
When we marched on Washington in 1963, JFK and RFK could look out the window and see 300,000 people, and they knew that the world could see them, too. When we marched on the Pentagon in 1968, LBJ ignored us. When we marched on Washington in 1971 behind John Kerry, Nixon circled the school buses around the White House. But in 1963, JFK invited the leaders of the March on Washington into the White House. That was the difference. That was the leadership.
Of course we hope that the efforts in Ohio would lead to a just change in the outcome, because our country's future would immediately be brighter if John Kerry were President. But if this election wasn't stolen, there were serious attempts made to steal it. The crime is in the commission, not in its success.
In 2000 we left it up to daddy to fix the problems before 2004. But our quiet only enticed our cynical adversaries whose only morality is that their side wins.
There’s a march scheduled in New York this weekend. I hope people show up for it, and there are many more. Maybe we should all march to Ohio. Kent State would be a good place to meet.
We have to let them know, we won't be fooled again. That's about the present, and the future.
Thursday, December 16, 2004
While global heating threatens the world, and Homeland Security can't even agree on a list of places to protect from terrorism, at least we've got a missile defense system.
Apart from no missiles it can defend against, the system has another notable flaw:
It don't work.
Yesterday there was yet another test of our Star Wars shield missile. It failed.
What's new about that? You might well ask, since every test has failed.
Well, those were tests of missiles in development. This was a test of a missile like the ones that are already in the ground. Yes, there are seven of them. It's part of the new strategy, probably learned from those friendly pharamaceutical companies, of putting the stuff on the market before it's tested for effectiveness and safety.
The Bushies have poured $15 billion into this so far. That's a lot of armor some guys and gals didn't get over in Iraqnam.
The test alone cost $85 million. That's your Social Security right there; yours and all your relatives.
The world's most expensive scarecrows. And they're buried in the ground.
A whole other meaning to faith-based.
$85-million U.S. missile test goes nowhere
Wednesday, December 15, 2004
With evidence mounting that global heating is leading to disasters even faster than predicted, with costs in disaster relief, reconstruction, etc. mounting rapidly as well, the latest climate conference seems poised to do...not so much. (As Jon Stewart would say.)
The conference is divided into two camps, this report says, the U.S., and everybody else. But among everybody else are those loathe to offend the nation with most of the bombs and missiles, which is also a big greedy customer for oil. So the world burns.
Science News Article | Reuters.com
Rep. John Conyers has requested an FBI investigation into possible tampering with voting machines prior to the Ohio recount.
This link is to a dubious site but the letter is reproduced in full.
The Blue Lemur - Progressive Politics and Media News ? Conyers? letter to FBI in response to allegations of Triad tampering
Tuesday, December 14, 2004
It's who counts the votes.
This link is to a diary on the daily Kos blog site which summarizes the main suit filed in Ohio alleging purposeful fraud, and maintaining that Kerry won the state by nearly 150,000 votes.
Further down in the comments you'll find several people involved in the suit or even tangentially in support of it who have been threatened by right wing goons, and in one case, apparently followed and forced off the road by well-heeled goons who seem to have sophisticated survelliance equipment and skills.
The establishment politicians and media ignoring it, evidence of serious wrongdoing and efforts to expose it championed by marginal figures, threats and intimidation...it has all the earmarks of the kind of scandal that eventually will define this time. It's Love Canal, Karen Silkwood and Watergate rolled into one.
Daily Kos :: Arnebeck Lawsuit: Summary, Explanation
Star Trek fans may want to check out the review of the first episodes of Enterprise this season, plus an account of a visit to the Enterprise set, and further down (below the June 30, 2004 entry) an essay on the first Star Trek feature film, which begins the Trekalog of all 10 Star Trek features. It's all at Soul of Star Trek.
(Brother Morgan Dash works on that site, under a pseudonym. Don't tell anybody.)
The last great trees hundreds of years old, the anchors of one of the last great forests in northwest America, "one of the richest terrestrial ecosystems in the hemisphere," are to be cut down for the short-term gain of some big company? Trees that cannot be replaced for many centuries, especially if the forest that sustains them dies, all for money and politcal gain? All made possible by the Bush administration's deliberate changes in environmental and forest management policy.
This is the new moral order, bringing God back into policy making? This is what your God wants?
New sales reignite timber battles / Bush allows harvest of larger, older trees in northern counties
And while other nations are working to stop harming the last whales with loud noises used for military sonar devices--these creatures, the closest species to humans in the ocean, who depend on sound like we depend on sight--- when there is no war on any ocean, nor any active ocean-going enemies, but the U.S. refuses to cooperate or to stop its own damaging practices---this is what your God wants? Trees don't matter, forests don't matter, ecosystems don't matter, whales don't matter, the oceans don't matter, Iraqi children don't matter, not even American soldiers matter---Republican fat cats are the only species that matter. This is what your God says?
At the very least, this account deserves thorough investigation, and reporting by our alleged Fourth Estate.
Cobb Testifies Before Congressional Forum in Ohio: Reveals Shocking Allegation of New Evidence of Intentional Tampering with Voting Machines
Or are "dissident groups" of African Americans and progressives the only ones who care about the integrity of voting in America?
Monday, December 13, 2004
The Free Press -- Independent News Media - Election 2004
We were perhaps giving the American media too much credit. The 2004 election was stolen in Ohio, but that's not important enough to cover today. Not when the Scott Peterson verdict is in.
If and when these facts become recognized, it will perhaps also be remembered that GW Bush made one last campaign stop, on election day itself (a rarity for any candidate, if not unique), and that was to campaign headquarters in Columbus, Ohio.
If there is any justice left, there will be indictments of election officials in Columbus, at the very least.
It's just after midnight, and this is the first story coming out of Ohio, but this is likely to be making news all day: Through his lawyers, today John Kerry will request of the election officials in Ohio that they investigate a total of 11 separate kinds and instances of possible voting irregularities, questions and procedures involving the 2004 election. Though the statement says the outcome is not expected to change, the total number of votes in question is sufficient to change the outcome.
ONN. Ohio News Now: Kerry lawyer asks for visual inspection of some Ohio ballots
Sunday, December 12, 2004
Four articles in the Sunday San Francisco Chronicle illustrate different points worth making on the difficult subject of morality in relation to political decision-making.
The first is an Insight piece which lays out the evidence behind a point of view that's well known in certain places (like San Francisco) but which may come as a surprise elsewhere. I first heard it from a gay man who was a Biblical scholar: it disputes the interpretation that many accept that the Bible specifically forbids homosexuality, or calls it immoral; and further, it points out many other injunctions in the same book of the Bible that fundamentalists often cite, that are clearly not considered moral, such as slavery.
This provides an opportunity for those who believe homosexuality is ipso facto immoral to examine the text, so here's a chance for this evidence to get beyond San Francisco.
That being said, the accompanying picture---of two big, pretty ugly men kissing---is the kind of in-your-face assertion that may sell papers in San Francisco but is precisely what alienates people who might be willing to concede the point that in today's world, in Red states as well as Blue, homosexuals are thoroughly integrated into society, and are in most respects just like everybody else. They might then be willing to concede that the Biblical evidence on the morality of homosexuality is at least unclear. But what they understandably react against is being forced to see behavior that is essentially private, and they'd rather not see; so they regard those pictures, with some justification, as having their noses rubbed in it.
And let's not pretend the Chronicle's motives in running this picture are entirely noble and idealistic. Like other media, they do it to mollify some readers and provoke others. It may well be that the Democrats lost this election when the first pictures of same-sex couples kissing after their marriage ceremonies in San Francisco were endlessly repeated on network and cable news, not because of news value but for sensationalism sake.
In some ways the support for gay rights as a Civil Rights issue is akin to the decisions of Kennedy and others to support Civil Rights and the Voting Rights act in the 60s, knowing full well that Democrats would lose the South for generations. But in other ways, it was just bad timing. However, let's both sides face the reality. It's the pictures that did it. The rest we might actually be able to reason about.
The Bible tells me so / Religion in the Heartland is more complex than those of us in the blue states sometimes think
The indefensibility of both positions is what has provided an opening for the Intelligent Design theorists. For example, in this article the I.D. proponent turns the tables on the scientists and says they are the dogmatists, not those who cite the Bible. He has a point, which many scientists acknowledge, though they'd never admit it in this particular debate. The neo-Darwinists have been attacked by other biologists for a number of dogmatic statements. It appears, for instance, that strict Darwinian natural selection may not apply below a certain threshhold of lifeform: to bacteria, for instance, or molds. And even in more apparently complex lifeforms, there may be other factors involved in what gets passed down, what is selected, and on what basis. The dogma of the so-called "selfish gene" is questioned by reputable scientists, for example.
On the other hand, the idea that the earth is 4,000 or 6,000 years old, as somebody says the Bible says, or that humans didn't evolve from other animal forms, is so antithetical to everything science says and does, that anyone who believes this will find themselves unqualified to get into a non-fundamentalist college or get a job even remotely having to do with science. This is the true tragedy of extending this debate into the schools.
There's more to be said on this subject at another time, but for now let's use this article to illustrate that it's not dogma versus the scientific method every time. That this person cites the Bible in defense of his intelligent design theory is not in itself non-reality based, if he cites it as evidence of past observations (as one cites an indigenous legend) or point of view. But citing it as Divine Truth makes it religion, and not in the realm of knowledge. So while he says the scientists are defending a religion (and metaphorically, this is accurate---though fundamentalists are not big on metaphor), he is trying to pass off faith-based theory---religion---as science.
That's how tricky this all gets, partly because both sides insist on extreme and oversimplified positions. It's the Crossfire of consciousness, our substitute for informed debate.
Teaching evolution as theory not fact / Intelligent design booster speaks out
Recent so-called revelations (stories based on alleged Grand Jury testimony still under seal) started a firestorm, more or less led by the less than Red State advocate, the San Francisco Chronicle. Talk about leaping to conclusions and making a broad accusation of immorality, either out of sincere outrage, or to sell papers or get votes.
Does anybody actually know what steroids are, what the substances involved actually do, what the health risks actually are, etc.? Why do people go balllistic over some substances they call Drugs but not others which are also potent drugs, but which are advertised on TV as miracle cures, though most of the commercials consist of recitations of awful side effects---drugs that may be really unsafe when used as directed, even more unsafe when used as a cure-all, and are basically untested by anybody outside the employ of the company that profits from their sale? Why is marijuana the devil's weed and people go to jail for it, and even known medicinal purposes are outlawed, and to make it even more absurd, the entire substance known as hemp, which for centuries provided paper and fiber that nobody got high from, is also outlawed? While alcohol and cigarettes are legal, when they kill hundeds of thousands of people a year, including people entirely innocent of using them, and we all know this?
Let's get a little sane on the subject of steroids. In the very same newspaper on the same day as its editor defends its anti-steroids in baseball crusade, a column by Joan Ryan gives another point of view which ought to be considered. Perhaps a truly informed debate on steroids and health would be in order?
Let's get real about sports and steroids
So while one thing may not be "more moral" than another, we do set priorities. Those priorities are often the first thing we forget in the emotional firestorm of controversies. Suddenly the issue of the day seems the most important. Other priorities, even higher ones, are forgotten, much to the joy of those exploiting these controversies for their personal gain or political agenda, or both.
So the move currently underway among some progressives to redefine their issues in terms of values and morality is not some radical idea, or even some cynical re-branding technique. It is an attempt to remind us of the moral dimensions of issues, so we can decide which we value, and in something like what order.
For example, this story on the morality of poverty. There are political questions involved---unregulated capitalism vs. government support---which may be pertinent, but may be smokescreens, or simply not as relevant as they appear. Because the question might well be, what is more important as a moral issue? Somebody's sexual behavior? Or poverty that could be allievated fairly easily, with a little attention and commitment? How often, for example, did Christ talk about helping the poor, versus condemning any sexual practices? In fact, the term "bleeding heart liberal" comes from the bleeding heart of Christ, bleeding for the poor and the sick and the suffering. What kind of a morality ignores that, and in fact makes fun of it, makes it into a curse? Some of us who voted Blue would like to know.
Pushing poverty into 'moral-values' debate / Some religious leaders trying to broaden discussion beyond abortion and marriage
Saturday, December 11, 2004
What happens to conspiracy theory when there may be an actual conspiracy? You have to start taking each theory separately and seriously. Here's a very interesting theory as to why the assault on Fallujah began just after the election. Not to keep casualities off the news on election day (keeping casualities off the news has never been a problem for the Bushies) but to forestall questioning of election results as unpatriotic when Americans were going into battle. Well, maybe. But apart from the theory there is the welcome evidence that the Kerry people are aggressively investigating the vote steal in Ohio.
Inside The Election Fraud Battle - Think Kerry Is Not Involved In This Fight?
Rumors are also floating that a number of lawsuits will be filed in Ohio on Monday, and claims are being made of dramatic news to come from them. The mainstream press does seem to be paying a tiny bit more attention to the story. Clearly the effort must achieve results and a high profile before early January when Congress makes the election results official.
Right now it seems certain that when the time comes, black members of the House will object to Bush's legitimacy, as they did in 2000 (actually 2001.) But then they lacked even a single Senator to also object, which they needed to be effective (as we all saw---most of us for the first time---in Michael Moore's F 9/11.) There has to be enough evidence and enough outrage to inspire a Senator to take the political risk. Of course the highest possible drama would be if that were to be Senator John Kerry. But if this all gets that far that fast, there will be more than one Senator speaking out.
Friday, December 10, 2004
The "forum" held by Rep. John Conyers on voting fraud in Ohio got very little coverage, either in the press or the political blogs. Yet there is nothing more important happening in America than exposing the fraud that gave George Bush the presidency, again.
But it's not over. Conyers is holding hearings in Ohio, and there are demonstrations scheduled in the state. The heat on the Ohio official in charge of the election (and shades of Katherine Harris, co-chair of the Bush campaign) is becoming intense, and there are reports that a former member of Congress, Dan Greenberg, and his wife were arrested for tresspassing while attempting to present a letter to this official.
Two organizations, People for the American Way and Common Cause, have jumped into the voting issue, and they present their own research and point of view on their web sites.
This link is to an AP report, the clearest we've seen so far on the outlines of what's going on. A couple of other links follow in separate posts.
Northwest Indiana News: nwitimes.com
truthout, Conyers Hearings on Ohio Vote Fraud Coverage
Jackson considers this a civil rights issue, as important to deal with as Selma and voting rights for blacks in the 60s. In this he is not alone. Members of the Congressional Black Caucus were virtually alone in protesting the Florida swindle in 2000 on the floor of Congress. Minority precincts were targeted for abuses in Ohio, and so this is becoming the central political issue for African Americans, while the press and everyone else dozes.
Guardian Unlimited US elections 2004 Jesse Jackson: In Cleveland as in Kiev
Thursday, December 09, 2004
Hey, I wouldn't have signed on for another term if I thought I was going to be held accountable.
Donald Rumsfeld didn't exactly say that, but it might have crossed his mind as his feel-good "town meeting" with soldiers in Iraq turned into actual questions about their equipment, their pay and the stop-loss policy that's keeping some of them there beyond their tour or even enlistment.
It's not Rummie's fault, of course. Those damn nuisance insurgents, and Iraqi citizens who love freedom but would like to have the electricity and water they used to get. Besides, even though the Colonel there supported his soldiers and said that 95% of their vehicles don't have the proper armor, Rummie's generals protested they knew nothing about it.
Maybe they should limit the town meetings to Republican soldiers who sign a loyalty oath to George Bush, Dick Cheney and Rummie. You know, like during the free election campaign over here.
Here's the New YorkTimes/Washington Post story linked from the SF Chronicle:
Troops confront Rumsfeld, ask for better battle gear / Challenges from National Guardsmen bound for combat unnerve Pentagon chief
Other stories are even grimmer. Like veterans of Iraq already showing up at homeless shelters. More complaints about inadequate medical care for the injured when they return. And some soldiers ordered to Iraqnam with what John Kerry called the backdoor draft are suing the government. Army recruitment is at about half its targeted level, and nobody is real eager to join the National Guard anymore. There's some suggestion that medical personnel are already in short supply.
So who can Rummie go to? The reality-based problems are coming home to roost, and the faith-and-PR-based Bushies have got nothing. Except faith in their immoral war---immoral for the destruction of Iraq, the killing, maiming and stunting of Iraqi men, women and children; immoral for sending young people into crazy violence without the proper equipment and apparently with inadequate training and leadership (it's hard to read the new revelations about the horrific fate of Pat Tillman any other way), and with heartless treatment for them and their families when they're back.
Wednesday, December 08, 2004
Over the next several months we're going to be hearing a lot about the Crisis of Social Security, as the Bushies push their latest privatization scheme for soaking the anxious middle class to benefit the rich and incompetent. We'll hear scary numbers and complex sounding analyses. But just about all we need to know about all of it is contained in a handy few hundred words of Paul Krugman's column in the New York Times linked below.
It turns out to be quite simple. There's a problem but...
"But it's a problem of modest size. The report finds that extending the life of the trust fund into the 22nd century, with no change in benefits, would require additional revenues equal to only 0.54 percent of G.D.P. That's less than 3 percent of federal spending - less than we're currently spending in Iraq. And it's only about one-quarter of the revenue lost each year because of President Bush's tax cuts - roughly equal to the fraction of those cuts that goes to people with incomes over $500,000 a year."
The Social Security scare has much less to do with economics and more to do with the Rabid Right agenda. Nor is there really an issue of fairness here: the media drones feed the perception that younger people are going to get hit up for the retirement of self-indulgent baby boomers. The truth is that middle class baby boomers have been paying higher payroll taxes for twenty years, so their retirement funds are paid for, despite the fact that the wealthy got their first round of tax cuts at about the same time---you know, in the 80s, the first time that Supply Side Economics failed horribly.
Why is sowing fear and making Social Security the domestic equivalent of Osama bin Laden so important to the Bushheads? Here's Krugman's conclusion:
"For Social Security is a government program that works, a demonstration that a modest amount of taxing and spending can make people's lives better and more secure. And that's why the right wants to destroy it."
Link to this column, copy it, and refer to it many times over the next year. It'll keep you sane. (The NY Times requires registration, but it's free and doesn't take long, and it's worth it just for Krugman's columns.)
The New York Times > Opinion > Op-Ed Columnist: Inventing a Crisis
Tuesday, December 07, 2004
Documents reveal that the abuses continued at Abu Ghraib after the photographs of tortures stunned the country, scandalized U.S. allies and confirmed what U.S. adversaries said about American morality. In the throes of Hypocracy in America, we're about to see one of the architects of the torture policy be nominated for Attorney General.
Senator Patrick Leahy says he will make this an issue during the confirmation hearings of Albert Gonzales:
''The Bush administration circled the wagons long ago and has continually maintained that the abuses were the work of 'a few bad apples,' " Leahy said. ''But we know that the photos from Abu Ghraib do not depict an isolated incident. Abuses have occurred in many locations, including Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay, and in a number of other facilities within Iraq. I have long said that somewhere in the upper reaches of the executive branch a process was set in motion that rolled forward until it produced this scandal."
This story in the Boston Globe details the revelations, which come principally from the FBI:
Boston.com / News / Nation / Interrogators objected to tactics
There are some major charges zipping around the Internet, of major GOPer malfeasance in multiple kinds of vote fraud and voter suppression, in charges made by an unidentified and unconfirmed RNC employee, and an indentified man in Florida with specific charges of soliciting ways to con the computerized voting system in Florida, made, he said, by a FLA Member of Congress of GOPer persuasion.
But all that is in the realm of let's see how it plays out. What's happening now is that the Ohio vote is now official, and Bush still leads but by approximately 20,000 fewer votes. (It's now about 119,000.) So now the official recount can begin, and it's going to.
Meanwhile there are stirrings in Washington: Congressman John Conyers is holding what would be congressional hearings to investigate the vote, if the Democrats had a majority, which they don't. And current DNC chair Terry Mc is committing the Democratic party to support investigating the 2004 election, with all necessary funding. The details are here in the Keith Olbermann blog, which is essentially his script on the subject for last night's show.
MSNBC -
In this connection, I'll impart a thought that I awoke with today. It's not exactly the strangest dream, but it did come out of that land of sleep thought. I woke up thinking of Nixon.
I woke up thinking of 1973, less than a year after Nixon's re-election. The first stories on Watergate had been published before the November election, but Americans choose to ignore them, and really did give Tricky a mandate---to the tune of 49 out of 50 states. (Hence the bumper sticker I pasted onto my guitar case which read: "Don't Blame Me, I'm From Massachusetts.") But after his re-inaugural, and in all his imperial presidential glory, the whole sorry mess started unraveling and by 1974, he and his entire administration were gone in disgrace.
So I wonder what we will be waking up to in 2005 and 2006.
Monday, December 06, 2004
Note: This list will be continually updated until Christmas at Shopopolis.
What do you get if you buy your Christmas treats and decorations at Costco, shop for gift books at Barnes & Noble, get your fashion-conscious sister her gift from Anne Klein and the kids clothes from Ralph Lauren Childrenwear, send your Christmas cards from Blue Mountain Arts, toast the season with Cuervo at the Hard Rock Café, get your tickets on Expedia to fly home for the holidays on Jet Blue, take the kids to see "Shark Tale," then chill out and watch "Enterprise" on TV while rooting for the Pittsburgh Steelers to make it to the Super Bowl?
A Blue Christmas, that's what.
According to the website "Choose the Blue" at www.choosetheblue.com, these companies gave most of their reported political donations to Democrats.
Choose the Blue lists companies by categories. Their lists appear slim, but they are using information in the public domain, including figures from another website, www.opensecrets.org. Depending on your assumptions, there may be some surprises here.
Even though their nickname is Big Blue, you might not figure IBM for a Blue company, but they are---with 70% of their donations going to Democrats. And Blue Mountain Arts is 100% blue. But even though they're in a blue state and they are called the Dodger Blue, the LA Dodgers are deep in the Red, to the tune of 98% for Republicans.
The site states its premise: "If each American who voted for John Kerry spends $100 in 2005 on a Blue company instead of a Red company, we can move $5 billion away from the Republican companies and add $5 billion to the income of companies who donate to Democrats. This will be noticed!"
But why wait until 2005? Start this holiday season! But buyer beware: this is just a summary, and a company not appearing doesn't mean they aren't Blue. The following information is based also on lists provided by freenortheast.com.
Where to shop Blue: Costco (98%), Barnes & Noble (98%), Borders (100%), Trader Joe's (100) the Gap (61%) and Nordstroms are among the top choices.
Blues give raspberries to: Wal-Mart, Sam's Club (81% Red), Saks (95% Red) and Target (72% Red.)
For the handyman on your list, choose Ace Hardware (87% blue) over Home Depot (93% Red.) Black and Decker tools are a solid blue choice (100%).
Blue Fashions: Anne Klein (100%), Ralph Lauren Childrenwear (100%), J. Crew (100%),Liz Claiborne (76%),the Estee Lauder companies (Donna Karan, Kate Spade, Tommy Hilfiger---all 91%), S Schwab (100%), Capital Mercury Apparel (98%).
Not Blue in any color: Fruit of the Loom (100% Red)Pendleton (91% Red), Guess (83% Red.)
Want Blue Feet? The Footlocker (100%) and Sketchers (100%). Nike is "weak blue."
For Blue Toys, it's Mattel, and for a blue night's sleep, Serta.
Blue electronics: This is a heavily Blue sector. IBM leads the pack at 71%, followed by Sun (69%), Hewlett Packard (61%) and Intel (53%).Software companies are led by Real Networks (100%), Adobe Systems (100) and include Microsoft (61%) and Oracle (58%).
Wireless is another story: of those listed, only T-Mobile (at 52%) is in the Blue. The Reddest is Edge (100%). Your blue long distance provider is Working Assets (100%), but MCI is sorta blue, too.
Books: You can't judge a book by its cover, but the publisher might help. Notable among the Blues are Chronicle Books (100%), Random House (86%) and Simon and Schuster (78%).
Online and Catalog Blues: L.L. Bean (100%), Overstock.com and Sharper Image (93%),
Entertainment Blues: In movies, Dreamworks SKG (makers of "Shark Tale") is 92% Blue, the Walt Disney group (Walt Disney,Miramax , Hollywood Pictures, Touchstone) is 71% Blue. On the other hand, Metro-Goldwyn Mayer and 20th Century Fox are slightly more Red (above 50%).
In television, Viacom (CBS, Showtime, MTV, BET, UPN, Spike TV, Nickelodeon,Comedy Channel, Movie Channel, Sundance Channel, etc.) is 78% Blue, Walt Disney TV (ABC, ESPN) is 71% Blue, while General Electric (NBC, CNBC, MSNBC, Bravo) is 67% Red. No surprise that Fox is Red, but only at 57%, but Starz at 96% Red? And Univision (including Telefutura) is 100% Red.
TV station chains: The notorious Sinclair Group is 95% Red, and TDS Telecommunications is 62% Red. But Granite Broadcasting, with stations in Detroit, Fresno, Buffalo, San Francisco and elsewhere, is 60% Blue.
Satellite: DISH Network (Echostar) is 55% Blue, while Direct TV is a News Corp. outfit (parent of Fox) and is 57% Red.
Big Radio: Surprised that it's mostly Red? Led by Clear Channel at 70% Red. But Emmis Communications (Power 106 in LA, plus other radio and TV stations) is 92% Blue.
Ticketmaster (which owns Expedia.com) is 95% Blue. Netflix is 100% blue.
Martha Stewart Living is 100% Blue.
Shipping those Christmas gifts? No good Blue choices here at all---the major carriers are mostly Red. The U.S. Post Office is the default.
All that shopping may take some gas. You can fuel Blue at Shell Oil (57%) and that's about it, except for Costco customers where they sell gas. For car insurance, it's the aptly named Progressive (91% Blue). (But names can also be deceiving, when an outfit called Clean Energy Vehicle Natural Gas is 100% in the Red.)
For eating out at national chains, it's not easy being blue. Hard Rock Café is the top choice at 100% Blue, and sadly (or not) you want to avoid Olive Garden, Chilis and Hooters, all above 90% Red. Whatever else they may represent to you, Starbuck's is 100% Blue. So you latte liberals can stick it to the Reds.
In fast food, the top Blue is Arby's (100%), while McDonalds, KFC, Wendy's and A& W are all above 80% Red. Why not try a local restaurant?
Shopping for food is also a challenge, unless you can find a Whole Foods Market (100% blue.) But in your local and hopefully unionized grocery, you can buy Campbell soups (92%), Ben & Jerry's products (100), Green Mountain Coffee(100), and Tom's of Maine products with a Blue conscience.
Hoisting a cold one may mean a Guiness (which actually should be room temperature); Coors and Anheuser-Busch are mostly Red. You could just ask for a Blue (made by Labatt) which at least is Canadian. Or even a Red Bull, which is blue.
Your wine can be red as long as it's from Gallo (93% Blue). Diageo North America may not be a household name, but it is a Blue company (62%) that makes Cuervo, Johnnie Walker, J&B, Baileys, Smirnoff and Tanqueray brands, among others.
If you've got no other interest, the sports teams to root for are the NBA's Charlotte Bobcats (100% Blue), MLB's Arizona Cardinals (56% Blue) and the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers (58% Blue.) Prepare to boo the New Orleans Saints (100% Red), LA Dodgers (98% Red), New York Jets (92% Red) and Phoenix Suns (97% Red).
Does travel make you Blue? Not much of it does. Jet Blue is Blue (by 88%), as is Aloha and Alaska Airlines. But with most airlines and car rental companies listed, you'll be seeing red.
The Blue Hotels: Loews (99% blue), Hyatt (87% B), and Diamond Resorts (90%).
But you won't find a Blue room at the inns of Mariott or Omni, with Ramada and Super 8 chains just over the 50% Red.
Some of this information appears not to be entirely up-to-date, and certainly there are a lot of companies not named in either Blue or Red. In many categories, remember, you have locally-owned or locally made choices. But it's something to consider. Happy Blue Christmas everyone!
Choose The Blue
The Rabid Right has successfully created political controversy over issues that have a reality-based consensus, even among GOP supporters. Global heating is becoming such an issue (with a significant number of corporations in the energy business very aware of the science and its implications), but probably the example of the greatest consensus that's the biggest secret is health care. For example, today's New York Times story which begins:
"IN Washington, the phrase "universal coverage" is rarely mentioned as the way to provide health insurance for the 45 million uninsured Americans. It evokes memories of the Clinton administration's sobering failure to forge a national health care plan. Yet among health care experts there is a surprising consensus that the United States must inevitably adopt some kind of universal coverage."
And ends...
"IT will take political will and some hard choices about what path to take, but the United States certainly has the means to provide health insurance to everyone, health experts say. Neelam Sekhri, a health policy and finance expert at the World Health Organization, illustrates it this way: American government spending on Medicare and Medicaid alone, which covers about 40 percent of the population, if spread across the nation's entire population, would equal on a per capita basis total spending by most European countries.
From a strictly financial standpoint, Ms. Sekhri said, "Given the amount of money that the United States spends on health, there is no reason why it should not be able to provide a very good system of universal health coverage.""
Part of the problem, besides widespread denial among GOPer voters who don't believe that Bushies positions could possibly be as extreme as they in fact are, involves companies and universities dealing in big bucks who don't want to make political waves.
The New York Times > Business > Business Special > The Disparate Consensus on Health Care for All
Saturday, December 04, 2004
by Theron Dash
It's in the news again---a high school south of Harrisburg, PA must teach "intelligent design" along with Darwinian evolution. Evolution texts in Georgia now carry a warning label. Polls are quoted showing that 45% (or is it 55%) of Americans believe God created man in his present form, no evolution needed, thank you very much, the Bible told me so.
As you know, Charles Darwin, a card-carrying secular humanist who speaks with an affected English accent, invented his "theory" of evolution in 1957, which was just before the 60s, and we all know what happened then.
It's a known fact that J. Edgar Hoover had exposed him as an atheistic Communist, but the Kennedys hid him in their compound until Hoover died. It was during the Clinton administration that his theory was forced into textbooks across America, as part of the scheme hatched at a meeting of Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein, held in Iran by Yassar Arafat.
Darwin, who lives in Hollywood now but is so afraid of the truth that he has refused to be a guest on Rush Limbaugh or Bill O'Reilly, says that humans descended from apes billions of years ago, and that the Divine Word of God is just a myth. Or maybe that last part was Joseph Campbell, in a meeting with Darwin on the Bill Moyers show.
When God created the world six thousand years ago, he showed forth his goodness and his devilish sense of humor, strike that, his godly sense of humor, by burying old bones and rocks that appeared to the ungodly to be millions and billions of years old, as if anybody could count that high. Same thing with this DNA, which is a liberal plot to spring killers from prison so they can start a race war.
Well, we've decided that even after they are born our children are worth some sort of attention, so we're going to see that they learn the facts as the Bible teaches and not the theories of some twisted foreigner, who secretly laughs at us and thinks we're ignorant because we don't speak with phony English accents.
Now everybody knows that once we are teaching God's word in biology class, no kid is going to pay much attention to those theories---what high school kid is going to pay attention to stuff he doesn't have to?
So our kids may never get the chance to be doctors or archeologists, anthropologists or geologists, biologists of any kind, or astronomers, historians or any of that stuff, which just suits us fine thank you very much, who needs kids who think they're better than you, looking down their noses at their own parents and church, who do they think they are? Besides, the Wal-Mart is always hiring.
Friday, December 03, 2004
After having dissed a post on Daily Kos earlier, we were surprised and moved when we found this one tonight. A diary that simply reproduced a photograph of John Kerry (and Ted Kennedy) attending the funeral of a Massachusetts soldier killed in Iraq, became a series of emotional tributes from people who expressed not only their admiration for Kerry's presence (whereas Bush hasn't attended a single funeral for a soldier killed in his Bushwar ), but admiration and affection for John Kerry himself.
It was surprising in light of the revisionism and understandable anguish that results in blaming after an apparently lost election. But a month later, there is still a lot of emotion, and a surprising amount of it expressed here indicates feelings that run contrary to the media portrayal of Kerry as a cold fish who people only voted for because they were voting against Bush. These comments strike us as both healing and resolute. This is one of the most remarkable threads we've ever seen on the Internet.
Daily Kos :: This is what John Kerry did today:
Thursday, December 02, 2004
A Washington Post story describes a study by three British scientists based on two computer models that concludes with 90% certainty that human activity has at least doubled, and perhaps quadrupled the likelihood of summer heat waves such as the one that killed 35,000 in Europe in 2003. By the 2040s, half of Europe's summers are likely to be as hot as 2003.
Humans May Double the Risk of Heat Waves (washingtonpost.com)
New Scientist mentions this study in a story about the first court tests of whether a company can be successfully sued for contributing to global heating. It's still up in the air, so to speak.
Over at kos, they're dissing John Kerry for contributing $200,000 to the recount in Washington for the governor's race, while Howard Dean went directly to the people with an appeal for funds. That's old politics v. new politics, apparently.
Well, according to this Seattle newspaper report, Kerry's $200,000 is all they've got so far, and they are stil 500 grand short. "John Kerry really came to our rescue," said the state Dem chair. Same can't yet be said for the new politics.
Kerry backs recount effort in governor's race
The latest on the Ohio recount, and the GOPer state stonewalling:
Stolen Election 2004: Thursday update
This blog maintains that the recount has until the vote is validated in the U.S. Congress in early January to change the outcome. Kerry lawyers are on it. Another report says that so far, with provisional ballots counted, the outcome remains the same. The Ohio vote is to be reported officially on Monday, and then the official recount begins.
By Phineas Dash
It's been a month now since election day. As I turned over the calendar page on the first of December, I remembered turning the page to November with hope and excitement. Tonight I want to put together my current conclusions derived from the campaign and what we've learned in the past month about what may have happened. My purpose is to clear my own mental and emotional air, and maybe help you clear yours, with the main object being the next steps towards the future.
The future may well see the 2004 election, and because GW Bush was returned to office, even more the 2000 election, as the nation's last opportunities to avoid the disasters to come, or at least to mitigate the pain of them. When all is said and done, those disasters could be greater than any of the horrors of the 20th century.
The U.S. may never recover, nor western civilization, nor perhaps, by the end of this century, humanity itself, and life on this planet as we know it. By then, the most notable failures will likely be the failure to confront global heating in time, or to adapt energy and natural resources policy in a timely and intelligent way. But there could be plenty of suffering before then, from the falling dominoes of wars, to economic hardship, the spread of poverty, unnecessary pain and death from untreated diseases and injuries, to growing political oppression and ignorance. And of course, this election ensures that the U.S. will continue to deal out these fates in other nations this very year, this very moment.
But if historians exist in 50 years, they will probably judge 2000 as the more significant, and the failure of the Democratic candidacy as the greater. Al Gore was the vice-president to a popular two-term president who left the country at peace, in prosperity, with huge federal budget surpluses projected into the future. The odds were in Gore's favor. History will probably also know that Gore won the election, but not by much. Not by enough. GW Bush took office, which was the fatal moment.
Now for 2004.
By one point of view, John Kerry had everything going for him, so it's hard to imagine how he would lose. The left was united and energized against Bush in 04, as it had not been in 2000. Bush had approval ratings hovering near 50%, which in the past correlated with an incumbent's defeat. He had started a war that was increasingly unpopular, created massive federal deficits, and was subjected to months of attacks by highly placed renegades from within his administration, as well as from the opposition. In the midst of the campaign, the Iraqi prison abuse scandal broke. He was a draft avoider running against a war hero. The leaders of most American allies, and most of the world's people, loathed him. His vice-president was a polarizing figure, as were several members of his administration. The economy was sluggishly lurching away from a recession, with spots of high unemployment in battleground states. Nearly every important newspaper in the nation, in the world for that matter, was against his re-election.
But from another point of view, it is hard to imagine how anyone could defeat Bush. Bush was president during time of war---in a palpable way, of two wars: the war on terror, begun with the first successful attack on mainland America since the War of 1812; and the war in Iraq, where American soldiers were dying daily. Fear and patriotism don't encourage change. Though the economy wasn't strong, consumers were still spending. He had the support of the wealthiest corporations, and had proven to them that their support would yield direct benefits. He was the incumbent, with an administration set up from its first days to win the next election. His opponent would have to invent a campaign structure in a few weeks. He controlled the leadership of his party, the governments of key states, and his minions were virulent extremists who would stop at nothing to win.
Analyzed from outside, it seems the Kerry campaign developed a set of strategies designed to win a close election. Since Bush's greatest apparent strength in issues terms was on the war on terror, and as Commander in Chief, the first task was to convince Americans to see Kerry as a Commander in Chief and protector of America. That was the imagery through the Democratic convention. Then the argument could be made on Kerry's stronger issues, including Iraq but mostly on the economy, jobs, and especially on health care. Along the way, the environment and energy could be woven into the economic and social justice themes. And of course it all had to be adapted to events and circumstances.
The campaign was hurt by the flip-flop charge, and then again by the Swift Boat liars, both aided and abetted by poor media reporting. But such attacks were expected, and the strategy was to finish strong. Kerry did, winning all three of the debates with Bush (which Gore managed to lose). The polls indicated that he had neutralized the flip-flop and Swift Boat charges, he drew even in the horserace and got his numbers up on leadership and the other essentials. By election day Kerry seemed to have momentum, despite the Osama tape. The strategy almost worked, or perhaps it did work and the election was stolen.
All this is important to remember because even a month later, the distortions have started that will become the official history. Bush may go around saying that it was at some pancake breakfast in September that he knew he was going to win, but there was also a reports that, as of 3 in the afternoon of election day, he was told he was going to lose in a landslide. Nobody knew anything for certain, and arguments on the roads not taken are all theoretical. Karl Rove is now a genius, but a switch of seventy thousand votes in Ohio would have made him a has-been. And if the election is actually investigated, he may yet wind up in a suit with stripes wider than pins. G. Gordon Liddy didn't think it could happen to him, either.
The campaign didn't always work smoothly, but it was a work in progress, as are all campaigns by challengers. The arguments about strategy will probably center on the response to the Swift Boat attacks in August, and that's a legitimate question. Others argued at the time, and will argue again, that liberating the antiwar sentiment at the convention could have galvanized support. I personally believe that much more could have been made of the Iraqi prison scandals: their revelation coincided with the first bumps Kerry got and the beginning of Bush's slide in the poll questions. There will be tactical arguments, and debate over moments in which Kerry screwed up. Had he won, there would be many more moments highlighted in which he performed very well, including moments when he was inspirational, funny and trenchant.
But all that is hindsight. Choices had to be made at the time, and they were made honorably. They could have worked, and either they almost did or they did work, and we were cheated. The strategy wasn't dishonorable, and the goal was worth it. Getting rid of the Bush administration was worth it. Even beyond that, John Kerry could well have been a great president. There was a stealth revolutionary quality to some of his proposals. What he said about an alternative energy economy is revolutionary. And unfortunately, health care as a right is still a revolutionary position in this country. Whether any president could undo or quickly recover from what Bush has done is an open question. And four years from now may not be too late for the change in direction that America needs, and the world needs America to make. But I will not let my disappointment, even my moments of despair, force me into self-indulgent blame, especially in personal terms. John Kerry fought bravely and well. So did the rest of us.
from now to 2008
While sound analysis is helpful, I make no recriminations whatever. (I'm not really dissing Al Gore, either. He would have made a fine president, and we wouldn't be in Iraq or so hopelessly in debt now.) That doesn't imply that the 2004 campaign, meant to end an incumbent's ruinous rule, should be replicated for 2008, when there will be no incumbent running. We can learn lessons from this campaign for the future, but let's keep our eye on that future, not on blame and attacks just because they might distract us from our pain and fear.
Four years is a very long time now, and so much is likely to happen that meaningful talk about the next presidential election is impossible, and handicapping a candidate is just a game. I believe we need to be doing two things: first, act now. Second, think anew for future elections.
These can be done more or less simultaneously, and they will nourish and form each other. Act now means: a relentless peace and protest movement. Continual focus on this immoral war, as a moral issue as well as a political issue. And committed action on investigating the 04 election and reforming the election system. It means an environmental movement that gets some focus and some intent.
At least according to one report I heard, that famous 40% that voted on moral issues was largely made up of Democrats who voted for Kerry because they saw the war in Iraq as a moral issue. Whether or not that statistic is credible at all, if the other side wants to talk about morality, I say bring it on.
Let's ask what kind of a country do we really want to be. Does Guantanamo really represent us? Is trading American children exposed to Afghani heroin so a few Taliban are chased into Pakistan---is that our American values at work? If this election showed that Americans are much more afraid of change because of terrorism than we believed possible, then let's deal with that fear. Let's not pretend we all understand it, because once it's really exposed, it's not very credible.
We also need to do what many on the political blogs advocate, which is to rethink and re-feel what the Democratic party and the progressive movement should make their main concerns. Let's take a different look at our common dreams and our principles, and see how one applies to the other. Let's open the borders of our political thought. Let's look at not just typical issues, but at different scales that relate to how people live their lives. Instead of talking first about jobs, let's talk about work. What do Americans want from their work? What does work mean to them, and to their lives?
We have the tools to do this as never before, and this is one of them. The Internet links us, inside the Beltway to the outer limits. We'd better use it while we can, because it's something else we dare not take for granted with this administration in power.
The discussion can include those who know strategy, those who ask good questions, and those who begin to explore and form ideas. It doesn't seem especially helpful to spend time figuring out which political tradition or ideological label the party or movement should follow. Let's look at the needs, the realities of now, for people and the planet, with the core assumptions traditionally associated with Democratic Party through leaders like JFK and RFK: that there are appropriate roles for a private and a public sector; that the public sector promotes the general welfare, regulates the private sector to the ultimate benefit of all, protects the rights of all but especially the less powerful, and helps those in need that the private sector cannot or will not help, for the ultimate benefit of all.
And perhaps it is time for Democrats and progressives to recognize again that Americans look to the president for leadership that goes beyond the political. Our leaders can help state the common dreams, the barriers and the solutions, without necessarily offering a solution totally dependent on government. Fairness and compassion aren't just political slogans; they are basic elements of human society, and as inbred as any other, because they help us survive. They don't always dominate, but they are always present. The kind of society that survives is a decent society, that shares the wealth, rewards innovation and artistry, nurtures and educates the young, takes care of the sick and the old, protects the whole, considers the future in every major action, and believes in a mystery larger than humankind. The societies that have survived the longest lived this way, to a greater or lesser degree. And even they needed renewal from time to time.
There are deep differences in this country, perhaps deeper than we thought. The most extreme, those lost in their shadows, or captives of the rush of their illusory power, those with vested economic and psychological interests in the Rabid Right, those whose souls are bought, may be beyond persuasion. But some of those who will never agree on the name of God or the origin of species, and some of those who find shelter in denial, may find enough common ground to actually have a political life again, rather than phantom wars that one side wins, while a smaller number of the losers become paid insurgents, and the rest of us go off bewildered to hide as long as we can.
Wednesday, December 01, 2004
John Kerry's campaign legal team filed papers in an Ohio court to join the Green and Libertarian demand for a statewide recount. This is apparently significant enough to be reported in the Washington Post. (Guess it's not the recount that "nobody wants" anymore.)
Kerry Team Seeks to Join Fight To Get Ohio County to Recount (washingtonpost.com)
There is so much that's deeply immoral about the Iraqnam Bushwar that it's difficult to know where to start. Apart from the underlying outrage, the destruction of the country resulting in daily suffering only made worse by Bush's favorite profiteers and their venal incompetence at "reconstruction," the destruction specifically of medical facilities, and on and on... there are the weapons. The use of depleted uranium is documented, which is nothing less than stealth nuclear war, subjecting that land and its people to radiation essentially forever. Now charges are surfacing of the use of napalm, specifically in Fallujah. It's becoming a political issue in Great Britian, raised on the floor of the House of Commons.
Then there is the continuing story of torture and abuse as policy. The following is from today's New York Times, with a link to the full story. The "charge" referred to is of practices amounting to torture at Guantanamo. This is our Christian government's response:
A report in The New York Times on Tuesday said the International Committee of the Red Cross made the charges after a visit in June by a team of relief workers that included medical personnel. A memorandum based on the report and obtained by The Times said the Red Cross believed that doctors and other medical personnel at Guantánamo were assisting in the planning of interrogations in what was described as "a flagrant violation of medical ethics."
The Pentagon on Tuesday denied that its forces at Guantánamo engaged in torture and said the detainees there, who now number about 550, were treated humanely.
Gen. Richard B. Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in a news conference in Indianapolis on Tuesday, dismissed accusations that the tactics amounted to torture.
"We certainly don't think it's torture," General Myers said before delivering a speech to the Economic Club of Indianapolis, according to the Web site of The Indianapolis Star. "Let's not forget the kind of people we have down there," he said. "These are the people that don't know any moral values."
The New York Times > Washington > Red Cross President Plans Visit to Washington on Question of Detainees' Treatment
Tuesday, November 30, 2004
We asked where moveon.org has been on the voting scandal---here is their online petition calling for Congress to investigate the integrity of the voting process in the 04 election.
MoveOn.org: Investigate the Vote
The Democratic Underground blog has been home to several challenges, mostly on statistical grounds, to the 04 election. In this one, a Miami Herald "recount" of a few counties concluded the election returns were accurate in giving Bush the win. But the small deviations in the recounts in each case were always in favor of Kerry, and this is generally the national pattern in deviations from exit polls. Further, this poster concludes that these small numbers add up big statewide, and actually indicate that Kerry won Florida with an additional 600,000 votes.
This link is to the blog, which also links to the original story.
Democratic Underground Forums - Miami Herald article shows that Kerry may have won Florida!
Monday, November 29, 2004
On Friday's PBS Conventional Wisdom Show, otherwise known as Washington Week in Review, an establishment reporter mentioned the pending Ohio vote recount "which no one wants."
Who is this no one? Not voters, apparently, who are behind these efforts. Here's one of the few press reports on recent events:
Skepticism spawns broad effort to push voting reform
If the electronic voting machines in East Timor or Bangladesh were all owned and their codes controlled by announced political partisans of one candidate, and most of the deviations from exit polls favored that candidate, and nearly all the other "irregularities" potentially did as well, what would they be saying on Washington Week?
But maybe that is the Beltway view. No one must mean the Democratic Party--sure it's officially leaderless, with the DNC chair gone, the Senate leader gone--but somebody is going to have to step up to the plate. John Kerry issued a strong statement, and one hopes things are going on behind the scenes, but again, it's going to have to go public soon. Where's move on. org? After this week or next week it may be too late.
As somebody on a blog discussing this noted, the outcome of 2000 was accepted in the belief that in 4 years the system would be reformed so every vote counts, and no non-votes do. It didn't happen. So it's crucial to turn up the heat now, not only for this election, but for any that might mean something in the future, if any.