Wednesday, October 19, 2005

SUSA's latest poll

Thanks to Robert Godfrey for the following details from SUSA's latest 50-state Bush poll:
  • Seven states actually gave Bush higher approval ratings than disapproval: Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Alaska, Nebraska, Oklahoma and North Dakota. Two were a wash.
  • Forty-one states are turning against Bush... with thirty-five scoring a double-digit disapproval disparity.
  • Interestingly, Ohio - the BIG Bush Swing State - gives him a 37% approval and a 61% disapproval rating.
  • Also, check out the surprising sudden turnaround in Texas.
Rep. Sherrod Brown (D) Ohio is currently delivering a blistering attack in Congress against Republican efforts to maintain tax cuts for the wealthy while Medicare premiums have doubled over the past few years and Republicans plan further cuts in other benefits. He also recently announced a plan to run for Senate in Ohio... to campaign in the Democratic primary against Paul Hackett, the Iraq war veteran who almost won a seat in the House by running in a very strong Republican district of Ohio. Hackett, a former Marine is asking people to sign this pledge:
I pledge to only support candidates who:
1. Acknowledge that the U.S. was misled into the war in Iraq
2. Advocate for a responsible exit plan with a timeline
3. Support our troops at home and abroad

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Plan Columbia

Bill Anderson sends the following:
I saw an excellent presentation tonight, by a woman from Columbia. She is a human rights lawyer, and native Columbian. She was talking about "Plan Columbia", the drug war supported by the Columbian government, but funded and implemented by the United States government primarily through private corporations.

Military and Para-military operations are everywhere in Columbia. Tens of thousands of people have been "disappeared", assasinated, and murdered, by mercernary and guerrilla forces. Jets built by private corporations, but paid for by US taxpayers, are flown in, which spray herbacidal chemicals that are dangerous to humans, and are run out of airports built by private corporations, also financed by U.S. taxpayers. Native populations are forced to privatize their land, so that it can be bought by international investors and venture capitalists.

It was a very moving presentation, but there is no simple answer to the problems raised. The ultimate goal must be to end the military operations. The problem is, the United States government denies that it is a military action, since it is a part of the "War on Drugs."

An older gentleman also spoke, about his own experiences travelling to Columbia several times in the past few years, to see the situation for himself. When he went, he had to bring two letters from his US Senators telling any potential guerillas, para-military forces, or mercernaries, not to kill him and his wife.

More information can be found at these sites-

www.colombiasupport.net
www.witnessforpeace.org

Peace,
Bill

Friday, October 14, 2005

Catch Arianna on Judy

"So which way will it go? Will the Times save its journalistic soul by coming clean or will it serve up a mushy bowl of Judy-shielding pablum to avoid contradicting its editorial stance so far?" Don't miss this... Catch-22 at the New York Times

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Gas, oil... and pedal power

An energy consultant who's privy to a lot of insider information about the hurricane damage to the US energy infrastructure from Katrina and Rita provides the following report:
21 natural gas processing plants with a total daily capacity of 13.1 billion cubic feet per day are closed. Natural gas prices have doubled. Respective storage injection is down by at least 35% nationally.

15 natural gas pipelines are either completely shut-in (no supply) or are not meeting delivery contracts (force majeure).

2 liquefied natural gas terminals are closed (the US only has 4 or 5 LNG terminals total). One terminal is expected to reopen today, Wed., Oct. 5, 2005.

Katrina destroyed 46 Gulf oil production platforms. Rita destroyed 63 production platforms, newer than those hit by Katrina and having higher average production rates. Therefore, the short term impact of Rita is twice that of Katrina - and the impacts are additive.

45% of ALL US offshore drilling rigs have been sunk, severely damaged, set adrift, or run aground.
  • 8% have been destroyed or sunk.
  • 18% have been severely damaged.
  • 19% are adrift or aground.
  • Backorders for new drilling rigs now extend out over 6 years.
Over 50% of Gulf Coast refinery capacity (25% of US total) is still not running. 35% of Gulf Coast refineries will remain down for a while

6 refined product pipelines are having supply problems, 2 of which are completely shut down and 4 are running at less than 50% capacity.

Release of Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) will have some impact, but it will not help the natural gas situation at all. SPR is crude oil… shortages will still develop because of loss of refinery capacity.

Hurricane Ivan (last year) had a minor impact on the markets for 6 months. Katrina and Rita will have a major impact for about 6 years!
PEDAL [Pedal Energy Development Alternatives] develops and promotes the use of pedal powered technology - including Maya Pedal, a new organization in Guatemala that recycles used bicycles to build pedal-powered machines, bicimáquinas.

Pedal Power - recycled bike-machines give new life to Guatemalan farmers

Monday, October 03, 2005

I Love Paris in the Fall

"I love pink, I love Barbies, and pink's the favorite color of my whole life," Paris Hilton is saying at a shutterbug press conference. "I think every girl loves pink." Through it all, Paris is sporting a limited-edition watch from her new luxury collection. Only 100 watches are being made, retailing for $100,000 each! The Paris Hilton watch has not been released to the public yet bt will launch in December 2005.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Charts and more charts

The following charts, based mostly on data from the Office of Management and Budget, display the growth of the federal government since the 1960–1963 period.

Sea Ice Decline Intensifies
Summer Arctic sea ice falls far below average for fourth year, winter ice sees sharp decline, spring melt starts earlier

Saturday, September 24, 2005

Throngs tell Bush and Co. where to go...

The poet Sharon Olds, winner of a National Book Critics Circle Award and professor of creative writing at New York University, was invited along with a number of other writers by First Lady Laura Bush to read from their works. She responded with the letter below... Three years ago artist Jules Feiffer also declined to attend the festival's White House breakfast as a protest against the Iraq War in "Mr. Feiffer Regrets."
Dear Mrs. Bush,

I am writing to let you know why I am not able to accept your kind invitation to give a presentation at the National Book Festival on September 24, or to attend your dinner at the Library of Congress or the breakfast at the White House... Read the entire letter in the Nation's "No Place for a Poet at a Banquet of Shame."
OpEdNews.com invites you to...
"Get to Know Ben Marble, an Interview with the Guy Who Told Dick Cheney to Go Fuc* Himself."

Military Families Speak Out is an organization of people who are opposed to war in Iraq and who speak out for relatives or loved ones in the military.

C-SPAN will cover some of the hundreds of thousands of people around the world and in Washington DC who are also speaking out - live today, beginning at 10:30 AM Central Time.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

Google reacts to google-bombing

Christian Exodus has a mission... Founder, Cory Burnell (who remains in California) is, "...coordinating the move of thousands of Christians to South Carolina for the express purpose of re-establishing Godly, constitutional government." Google Bombers are also on a mission... regarding Intelligent Design, making sure it likns to an an intelligent resource.

And it works... just see what happens when you type that phrase or the phrase "miserable failure" into Google's search box, or even just the single word "failure." Today Google decided to explain the results with a new entry at the top right hand column of the results page, right where the sponsored ads usually appear you will now see the following: "Why these results? These results may seem politically slanted. Here's what happened."

Mathew Ingram reports the details in Google reacts to google-bombing.

Monday, September 19, 2005

Kelo v. New London

My apologies to any regular readers for failing to post anything at all lately... 'nuf said, here's today's thread:

Joan Claybrook is president of Public Citizen. Previously, she was head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) in the Carter administration from 1977 to 1981.

Wikipedia says "Public Citizen is a Washington, DC-based left-wing non-governmental organization, founded by Ralph Nader in 1971. Their activities span across a diverse range of issues, including campaign finance reform and accountability, consumer protection, public health and trade policy."

Public Citizen provides one of the best way to find critical, independent, expert information on prescription drugs at WorstPills.org. Search by drug, disease or condition, drug family, drug-induced disease or policy issue.

More by and about Public Citizen:
What recent judicial ruling could possibly bring together Maxine Waters, Tom DeLay, Molly Ivins, George Will, Rush Limbaugh and Ralph Nader in solid opposition... while exposing the darker side of one of the nation's reputedly liberal newspapers? Mat Welch explains Why The New York Times ♥s Eminent Domain.

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Hurricane Links...

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Hurricane Exit Strategy

On 8/31/2005 the Rude One posted the following...
The Hurricane Exit Strategy:
"At some point here, some wise, ambitious, and none-too-cynical member of Congress, perhaps Chuck Hagel, perhaps Russ Feingold, needs to say the obvious: Hurricane Katrina offers the ultimate exit strategy from Iraq. What other excuse need there be to pull vast numbers of troops and billions of dollars out of our overseas failure?"

"The patently absurd waste of billions of dollars will be brought to light by the suffering along the Gulf Coast. A couple of months from now, whenever some worthless, stupid right-wing .... puppet declares that the U.S. has built schools in Basra, it'll simply be a reminder of how much faster things could have been done in Biloxi if all those funds and all that personnel were readily available." and more...
Meanwhile Hugo Chavez offers help from Venezuela... food, water and fuel.

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Politics for Children

"115 million people are not voting because they are not hearing anything authentic about issues of genuine concern. "We have a hunger for authenticity... we are ready to hear so much more," says author Jeff Golden.

"We always vote our self-interests... as we see it," he explains in "As If We Were Grownups" speaking as a recent guest on CNN's Book TV. "In this last election both parties put more money than ever before into grassroots action. There's some kind of resurgence in the value of face-to-face contact."

In his book he delineates 10 speeches you will never haer from a politician, filled with topics that politicians refuse to touch... and posts some key value tests like, "How will this decision affect my kids and grandkids?"

"We need to absolutely demand that costs and consequences of decisions be discussed... We need to demand election reforms, there's no reason for us to trust any politician that does not endorse a bill for verifiable election results."

"The guy who is not in the White House spent a year disguising his true feelings about the war because pollsters advised him against it. They say 'Don't get complicated, keep it simple'."

"I submit that you could write a speech that says I'm for democracy and then talk about what that means."

"In 1992 Ross Perot went from this rich kook to a guy that lots of people thought could be president - in about 30 days" - because he was talking about relevant issues.

Les AuCoin, nine-term U.S. Congressman, Oregon’s First District says the following about Golden's new book:
“I’m delighted to find in these pages a prescription that could stanch the bleeding of public confidence. Here’s a compelling case for politicians of all stripes to stop selling cotton candy - giving it away, really - and to start trusting that we voters are adults who can cope with what we need to hear. This book helps pave the way to a new national political ethic.“

Thursday, July 14, 2005

Milwaukee Community Journal

Live and learn... this country mouse just discovered another great bit of cheese! The Milwaukee Community Journal, touting themselves as "Wisconsin's Largest African American Newspaper." I discovered it via the backdoor after someone sent me a link to the following great editorial they published at: http://www.communityjournal.net/whicharedemocrat7_6_05.html. Hats off to greater independent media and to Howad Dean as well.


Joe Biden or Howard Dean: Which Democrat are you?

by Ron Walters, NNPA Columnist

I have to say this up front: I have had it with the likes of Joe Biden. The man whose confused politics as chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee led to the approval of Clarence Thomas is still confused.

On a recent edition of Meet the Press, Howard Dean challenged the Republicans, saying that they were members of a largely ''White Christian party,'' as well as being people who ''never worked an honest day in their lives'' and that Tom Delay ought to go back to Texas where he could serve his jail sentence.

In other words, Dean did something that few other Democrats have had the guts to do - stand up to the Republicans on their own terms.

But Joe Biden and other ''moderate'' Democrats have, once again, caved in to the presumed popularity of conservatives and chastised their own party chair in public. This something Republicans would never do.

Where has Biden been for the last decade? Republicans have taken out after Democrats and ''liberals'' in the meanest, nastiest rhetoric possible on the floor of the House and Senate, in the media, and even in church.

They have repeatedly berated Senator Ted Kennedy, virtually making him a symbol of a left-wing kook, often with few of his colleagues in the Senate fighting back for him.

Tom Delay said recently that religious people who followed Democratic Party views on the issue of life during the Terri Schaivo event would suffer retaliation. Not one of his own colleagues took to the floor to oppose him.

Most important the voices of minority politicians were added to the public spanking of Dean. Senator Barak Obama said that he was ''using religion to divide'' when he referred to Republicans as being in a ''White Christian Party.''

Where has he been in the debates on the floor when elected officials and their political counterparts in the think tanks have tried to suggest that the founders of this country consciously created a Christian nation?

This position was supposed to privilege the role of Christians in politics and public policy, especially the radical Right-wing born-again that have taken over much of the Republican Party. Dean was not talking about all Christians. So, why were they not willing to give him the benefit of the doubt?

Gov. Bill Richardson put some distance between himself and Dean with his remarks, agreeing with others that he doesn't speak for the Party, ''its governors, it's senators, its party leaders.''

Well, what is Dean if he is not a Party leader? In fact, part of the problem with many Democratic Party leaders is that they have confused the rank-and-file with a wishy-washy politics that has resulted in following George Bush, rather than being the loyal opposition.

The fact is that there has repeatedly been a one-way attempt at consensus politics by Democrats, which has worked to their disadvantage.

A Black Senator and Hispanic governor should be the last people to shut up a straight-talking Democratic Party chair, when Republicans have fostered public policies that have pulverized their constituencies.

It is not only un-politic, but something lacking in logic when Democratic Party leaders join with Republicans to make Howard Dean an issue, when their political strategy should be to keep the heat on Bush and his policies.

While this was going on, the Senate approved the appointment of two of the most conservative judges in recent years, an ACLU Report was issued charging that Guantanamo was the ''American Gulag,'' the Downing Memorandum surfaced suggesting the Bush fixed intelligence to support his early intention to invade Iraq.
Why divert the heat from the administration to cuss out your own party chair, especially for saying things that are essentially true.

Well, here we go. Many of the Democratic elected officials Richardson talked about are cautious about roughing up Republicans because they are running for something and might make potential voters angry.

These are the Democrats who have adopted a cautious ''third-way'' politics to appeal to conservatives, while retaining their base. They can't appeal to conservatives however, if Dean makes them mad, so they oppose Dean in essence for pulling the covers off of this politics.

He is doing what should have been done a long time ago, by helping Democratic voters decide just who the progressives are: Who will oppose the unconscionable waste of resources being spent in an illegal war?

Who will approve of radical Christians taking over American politics and policy? Who will oppose policies that hurt people rather than seek some less hurtful consensus? And just who will stand up and be a member of ''the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party?''

The public opposition of some Democratic officials to Dean is sickening. It must not continue if Democrats are to know who they are and where they are really going.

Ron Walters is the Distinguished Leadership Scholar, director of the African American Leadership Institute in the Academy of Leadership and professor of government and politics at the University of Maryland-College Park. His latest book is "White Nationalism, Black Interests" (Wayne State University Press).

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Watch Dog Milwaukee

Just discovered the news hounds at WatchDogMilwaukee.com - a great source for alternative local news under the editorial control of John-david Morgan. He covered police, courts, schools and politics under five different editorial regimes at Milwaukee’s newsweekly Shepherd Express from 1994-2000. JDM also spent a year writing for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

I discovered it after I stumbled upob one of their stories about a Port Washington homeowner's respectful shrine that is eliciting threats and reactionary disrespect from “patriotic” conservatives and peace offerings from others.

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Hikers, bikers and ATVs

"Southeast Wisconsin loses 87 square miles of farmland and forested areas each year to road building and sprawl," says the Sierra Club. In Places in Danger they name the Wisconsin Ice Age National Scenic Trail as a target for support, "...working with local groups to permanently protect the Trail corridor and promote smart growth planning by local governments to preserve farmland, forests, wildlife habitat and the Ice Age Trail."

At the same time trail access in a much broader sense is also the target of advocates from the Wisconsin ATV Association and pressure from enthusiasts, equipment dealers and a growing number of local ATV clubs around the state.
In a February 2004 advisory referendum, Vilas County voters rejected a proposal by local ATV clubs to build a trail system that would link it and other counties to trails in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

More recently, ATVs have been at the center of controversy over a new, 15-year master plan for the Northern Highland American Legion State Forest, which attracts 2 million visitors a year and covers a large part of Vilas County. The DNR is proposing an eight- to 10-mile loop. The trail would accommodate a burgeoning sport in a part of the state where there are no public trails.

Jim Knuth of Presque Isle, a self-described Republican who owns a snowmobile, is active among a group of residents who oppose ATVs in the state forest because they believe it will mean more noise and destruction of the land.

More significantly, "it's the toe in the door they want so badly," Knuth said of ATV proponents. "They want Vilas County, period."
"For better or worse, all-terrain vehicles are quickly passing the snowmobile in popularity," says Milwaukee Journal reporter Lee Berquist. "Recent attempts to add trails in Wisconsin have been controversial. State, county and federal land managers are finding themselves in the middle of pitched battles over how best to include - or exclude - the machines from land because of the damage they cause."

Of greater public concern should be the fact that tax dollars collected from the sale of ATV registrations and gasoline sales are "donated" by the Wisconsin legislature to help grow the sport. Berquist explains...
Since 2001, about $1 million has been paid in state contracts to the National Off-Highway Vehicle Insurance & Services Group Inc. to promote safety and ethical riding. The group, which has an insurance consulting arm as well, is a non-profit organization aligned with the Wisconsin ATV Association. Both are based in Sheboygan.

The two groups are headed by Randy Harden, a missionary of sorts, who put 40,000 miles on his car last year to promote the sport and champion ATV safety.

"I want to change the industry," Harden said. "We have made some gains, but the infrastructure has got to be there."

The national group recruits and trains safety instructors and so-called trail ambassadors with the aid of public dollars. The ambassadors are volunteers who have attended safety training instruction and are willing to stand guard on trails to warn riders of illegal riding or report transgressions to authorities. About 600 ambassadors have been trained, but only about 10% to 15% actively work the trails at busy times such as weekends, Harden said.

Harden and his wife, Ann, split one job for the national group and share a $68,688 annual salary. Their son Adam and another employee split another job and are paid $73,308 a year, according to DNR records. Five regional coordinators are paid $1,000 to $2,200 per month, plus travel expenses.

The payments to the national group are unprecedented - there is no similar program for snowmobiles, mountain bikes or personal watercraft.

Harden acknowledged he gets complaints from some ATV riders who don't like the meddling, and from advocates of quiet sports who question the propriety of doling out money to a single user group.
As of June 1, 2005 there were 220,171 ATVs publicly registered, according to the Wisconsin ATV Association, up from about 215,000 registrations in 2004. An additional 61,908 private and agricultural ATVs, used on private properties and farms, were registered by June 1.

Approximately 1,000 miles of mountain bike trails in Wisconsin state parks, forests, recreation areas, and unsurfaced trails on former rail lines are available. Brigit Brown, state trails coordinator for the DNR, says there are about 4,000 miles of ATV trails available at different times of the year throughout Wisconsin - far short of the 22,000 to 24,000 miles of snowmobile trails in Wisconsin.

Today the Baraboo News Republic reports, "Plans for ATV trails on 580 acres of county land near Highway 14 between Spring Green and Lone Rock stalled last spring after the Sauk County Board voted not to pursue a state-level grant until more public input had surfaced, said Steve Koenig, county parks director."

The Wisconsin Vehicle Safety Enhancement Grant includes the "Ride Smart - Get Involved -Tell Others" program, all about maintaining and increasing ATV riding opportunities in Wisconsin. Back in 2003 WATVA began pressing for more money... "In the previous two year period the ATV grant requests exceeded available program revenue by close to 1.3 million dollars! There is no doubt whatsoever that Wisconsin needs additional miles of new ATV trails at the same time managing and maintaining the existing ones in a sustainable and environmental responsible manner."

I don't doubt that the need for new trails will continue to grow as long as we keep spending tax dollars to fuel the expansion of this so-called sport. Meanwhile... A 49-year-old Kenosha man died Saturday in Lac du Flambeau after an ATV rolled onto him. A 5-year-old girl died Sunday at Saint Michael's Hospital in Stevens Point after the ATV she was riding on with another girl and a 34-year-old Pine Grove man flipped over on them.

Instead of legislators seeking to promote greater ATV use and expand trail access the public would be better served with firmer restrictions on ATV use. Let's start with age-appropriate restrictions - much like cigarettes. Llmit the false advertising that beckons potential riders to undertake what amounts to destructive off-trail excursions and require additional warnings that ATVs are a threat to human health. With obesity, ozone and oil dependency plaguing the nation motorsports are a fuelish waste of energy.

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Gadzooks! New Nukes

Thanks to Guy Wolf for the following alert...

Do you want new nuclear reactors in Wisconsin?

Our local clueless leader, Assembly Leader Mike Huebsch, thinks its a great idea. He and local Republicans are about to introduce new legislation to create more reactors in Wisconsin. Why is this a bad idea?

1) There is still no safe place to store nuclear waste---little do many of you know that WI is about to face the battle of the century. In 2007, the Federal Government has decreed that the search is on for the nation's second nuclear waste dump. Remember the battle in the 70's and 80's? Wisconsin came out number 2 on the list for the nation's dump.

2) Right now there is a need for more than 37,000 shipments of nuclear waste if/when they find a site. Lets see. 37,000 shipments...and just about every major, middle sized, and small city in WI is either on the interstate or train lines.

3) Worse yet...the Feds are about to finalize the "temporary" removal of nuclear waste from Genoa, south of La Crosse; the two reactors at Prairie Island across from Hudson and western WI; and the possible removal of waste from Point Beach on the eastern side of the state...and then DUMP IT ON THE INDIANS in Skull Valley Utah--the Goshute People. This would travel up and down the Mississippi on its way westward. And just how many of your communities are ready for nuclear accidents? The point is...nuclear transportation has never been an issue with the siting of a private site in Skull Valley--are your local responders ready?

4) And of course...we are going to pay for it all. Xcel Energy is asking for a $8.18 monthly increase to cover the costs of retrofitting Prairie Island nuclear power plant so we can continue to create more waste!!

WELL HERE IS WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW TO HELP STOP THIS UNBELIEVABLE MESS!! STAY TUNED BECAUSE WE ARE ABOUT READY TO LAUNCH A MAJOR CAMPAIGN TO BRING EVERYONE ON BOARD!!

THREE THINGS YOU CAN DO:

1) Listen/Learn/Participate -- 3 PM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2005

The Bush Push for New Nuclear Power Plants:
Wisconsin Public Radio Ideas Network
1-800-486-8655 (in Milwaukee - 227-2050)

Ben Merens will host a radio call-in show with Jim Riccio of Greenpeace and Scott Peterson of the Nuclear Energy Institute to discuss President Bush's recent speech calling for building a new generation of nuclear reactors in the U.S. With the pending sale of the Kewaunee Nuclear Power Plant in Wisconsin, and the mandate to select a second site for a nuclear waste dump, this discussion is particularly important for Wisconsin residents.

2) Print out and Sign the "No New Nukes" Petition

Visit Wisconsin's Nuclear WatchDog website (www.wnwd.org) and print out the petition posted at (http://www.wnwd.org/WI_Nuclear_Petition.doc). This Fall the Wisconsin legislature will again attempt to remove the 1983 common sense public interest statues regarding new reactor construction in Wisconsin. Sign the petition (and get others to do the same) to protect the
public health of Wisconsin. Here is the text of the petition:
"To the Governor and Legislators of Wisconsin:We the undersigned urge you to maintain the current Wisconsin statutes regarding construction of new nuclear reactors in Wisconsin. The statutes require that there be an operating high level nuclear waste repository which will accept the highly radioactive waste produced by any new Wisconsin nuclear reactors, and that such reactors be economically advantageous to Wisconsin ratepayers. These are common sense public interest provisions. If the statutes cannot be met,then there should be no new reactors built in Wisconsin."
3) Join the E-Mail List to get updates about important nuclear news in Wisconsin.

Sign on to the E-Mail list at: http://www.wnwd.org/participate/join.php Wisconsin's Nuclear WatchDog is a collaborative project of Physicians for Social Responsibility in Wisconsin to provide public education and information about nuclear issues in Wisconsin. Let us know if you would
like to work with us: email info@wnwd.org or phone 608-232-9945.

Is nuclear power really clean and safe?
Is nuclear power the best way to develop sustainable energy for our country?
How many of your tax dollars should subsidize building new reactors and subsidize operating reactors?

Contact:
Alfred Meyer
Physicians for Social Responsibility
mail@psrmadison.org

Steve Burns
WNPJ Network Program Coordinator
122 State Street, #402
Madison, WI 53703

outreach@wnpj.org
608.250.9240

Guy Wolf, League of Rural Voters
N3421 Mohawk Valley Road
Stoddard, WI. 54658
wolfclan2@earthlink.net

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Drawing targets...

With 2006 elections looming, Wisconsin's progressive activists, regardless of party affiliation, need to begin charting where to concentrate their energiy and resources by order of importance. I'd like to invite nominations for a new list, similar to The BEAST of Buffalo's 50 Most Loathsome People in America, 2004. Charting the Wisconsin Bulls' Eye target for 2006 could take premptive negative campaigning to new highs as we the people try to determine the 50 Most Loathsome Legislators in Dairyland.

Nomintions are open! Is there anyone worse than...
Sensenbrenner Yells At Constituents (With Audio!) ColdFusion04 says there's hope for the 5th District, "Fortunately, I learned that Shorewood has been redistricted into his district, so maybe there's an outside chance. Please send these clips on to people in his district as an example of how he treats his constituents."

Can't wait to hear George tonight...
In 1999, he criticized President Clinton for not setting a timetable for exiting Kosovo:

THEN
George W. Bush, 4/9/99:
“Victory means exit strategy, and it’s important for the president to explain to us what the exit strategy is.”

George W. Bush, 6/5/99
"I think it’s also important for the president to lay out a timetable as to how long they will be involved and when they will be withdrawn.”

VERSUS NOW

George W. Bush, 6/24/05:
“It doesn’t make any sense to have a timetable. You know, if you give a timetable, you’re — you’re conceding too much to the enemy.”

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Conventions, tactics and resolutions

Madison's WKOW-DT 27 News reports Falk Cites Straw Poll As She Looks To AG Race:
Falk prevailed over Lautenschlager in a straw poll of nearly 100 attendees at the (Wisconsin) state democratic party convention. "That's a place and a base where you would presume the Attorney General would do very well," said Falk. "And I think the results are consistent with what I've been describing as what people are telling me."
Labor's Influence in Trouble in American Politics - Paul M. Weyrich provides some valuable insight on the internal struggles of the labor union movement, noting the declining influence of the AFL-CIO's Committee on Political Education (COPE), which began in the late 1950s under the direction of Wisconsinite, Andrew Biemiller. Weyrich explains the battle to reelect 71 year-old President of the AFL-CIO, John Sweeney.
In 2004 he doubled union dues so he could spend more on the Democratic Presidential and Congressional campaigns... But... the President was re-elected. Republicans increased their margin in the Senate by four seats and increased their margin in the House by three seats.

Sweeney’s opponents charge that he has spent too much time and money on non-productive politics and not enough on organizing...

Currently five unions, consisting of 40% of the AFL-CIO membership, threaten to desert the AFL-CIO if Sweeney, as expected, is re-elected."
But most important is Sweeney's problem with the following wedge issue...

Approximately 144 pro-family organizations sent a letter to Sweeney asking him to reverse the AFL-CIO position on the Federal Marriage Amendment and the various state marriage amendments. In an unreported move, Sweeney formed a coalition with Gays and Lesbians and had the AFL-CIO Executive Committee approve a resolution against traditional marriage. Without coverage in homosexual publications the resolution might have been unnoticed.

The pro-family groups told Sweeney that they would do everything possible to see that rank and file union workers knew about this resolution before the AFL-CIO Annual Convention in Chicago in July. The AFL-CIO resolution concludes with a broad endorsement of homosexuals. It reads, “The AFL-CIO reiterates its long standing support for the full inclusion and equal rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the workplace and in society."

Youthful voters on both sides have upcoming national conventions...
with the YDA meeting in San Francisco August 3 - 7 and the YRs in Las Vegas, July 6-7. Gavin Leonard, 24 year-old co-founder of CONTROL, a Cincinnati Copwatch and director of Elementz, a hip hop youth arts center thinks Democrats need to acknowledge The Political Power of the Midwest.
We need somebody to care more than just once every four years. There are more towns like Cincinnati, Milwaukee, St. Louis, and Detroit than there are San Francisco's and New York's. As increasing amounts of financial and human resources flow to the coasts, the Midwest is falling further behind.

Midwestern progressives continue fleeing to the coasts, and foundation dollars grow scarcer in the heartland. The nearly non-existent non-profit job market here makes it extremely tough to develop leadership and skills in our communities and among our youth.
Nonetheless, teen spirit is alive and well as evidenced by Operation Yellow Elephant... "to recruit College Republicans and Young Republicans to serve as infantry. They demanded this war and now viciously support it. It's only right that they also experience it."

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Feingold, Clinton, Edwards and...

Today Maureen Groppe reports in the Indiana Star:
Bayh didn't break into top of straw poll
Tracking the possible presidential bid of the Democratic senator from Indiana:

It's not that anyone expected Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., to beat Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., in a straw poll asking Wisconsin Democrats to name their preferred 2008 presidential candidate.

But given that Bayh was keynote speaker at the Wisconsin Democratic Party's state convention earlier this month, a few thought he'd do better than fourth.

Bayh, however, ranked behind Feingold, Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and former vice presidential nominee John Edwards. He did get 15 more votes than John Kerry, the 2004 Democratic presidential nominee.

Perhaps most people participating in the voluntary survey -- conducted by WisPolitics.com, a political news service that had a table off the convention floor -- voted before listening to Bayh, who spoke at the end of the night and is not as well-known as Clinton or Edwards.
Burythehatchet, a regular on the The Democratic Underground forum, provides an Uplifting sign of the country waking up, as observed outside Atlanta, GA:
I went to go hit a bucket of golf balls today. (Beautiful day, 85 and sunny). The place I go to is inhabited by crusty old men who scratch a lot and talk shit all day long. This is their retirement. I know this place to be pretty conservative so I just go to hit a bucket and not chew the fat.

Today I'm walking in to get my bucket and I hear one dude telling another in his heavy southern drawl "did you see the thing on C-SPAN with this COnyers feller?" That's all I needed. I spent the next 45 minutes telling them about the petition, the work that's been going on for weeks, and so on. They had a lot of questions and I was able to fill in some gaps in their information. There were other people listening and chiming in. Out of the 6 or 7 people there NOT ONE defended Bushit. Not one. Even guys who by looking at them you know are Republicans were piling on. They didn't know how much Halliburton has stolen, as an example of information that they still don't have. When I started to walk away and start hitting golf balls...

...Here it comes.....

The guy I originally started talking to says "I think there's gonna be an impeachment".!!! EVERYONE ELSE WAS NODDING THEIR HEADS IN AGREEMENT.

I was floored...and then I was giddy...then I nailed 80 out of 90 golf swings.

Saturday, June 18, 2005

Another secret memo revealed...

Another secret Osh Kosh memo has just surfaced! Thanks to the Cap Times for revealing more about what Howard Dean might describe as the "Democratic Wing of the Democratic Party..." of Wisconsin. It appears that party leaders are trying to keep the public from learning about the opinions of the grassroots majority. One can only wonder what other interesting resolutions were passed at the recent state party convention.

Capital Times Editorial: Time for an exit strategy
June 17, 2005
When Wisconsin Democrats gathered for their state convention last weekend, they officially joined a growing national movement for ending the U.S. occupation of Iraq.

The resolution passed by the convention was short and to the point:

WHEREAS, the "War of Terror" began with an attack on the bases of Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan and Pakistan; and

WHEREAS, the "War on Terror" transmuted into an illegal, immoral, unnecessary invasion and occupation of Iraq, overthrow of the Iraqi government and attempts to create a new constitutional regime;

THEREFORE, RESOLVED, the Democratic Party of Wisconsin calls for termination of the occupation at the earliest possible time with the withdrawal of American troops, coupled with the creation of an international body that can assist the Iraqi people in freely and peacefully determining their own future, and that we participate in multilateral reconstruction.

Of course, critics of the grass-roots Democrats who passed the resolution would have you believe that this is just partisan carping at a Republican president.

But that's just a political smoke screen developed in an attempt to mute criticism of President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld.

Sixty percent of Americans, according to recent polling, favor a responsible withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. And Democrats aren't the only ones following the will of the people.

In Washington, U.S. Rep. Walter Jones, a North Carolina Republican who was one of the top proponents of the war when he believed President Bush's claims about weapons of mass destruction, joined a group of colleagues Thursday in introducing a House resolution calling for the president to announce by year's end a plan for withdrawal of U.S. troops, and to begin executing that plan by Oct. 1, 2006. Fellow Republican Rep. Ron Paul of Texas is a co-sponsor, along with Democratic Reps. Neil Abercrombie of Hawaii and Dennis Kucinich of Ohio. A number of other House Republicans have indicated that they will support some sort of resolution calling for an exit strategy.

U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., has introduced a Senate bill calling on the administration to identify its goals in Iraq and to offer a plan and timetable for achieving those goals and withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq.

"We owe our brave servicemen and women a concrete timetable for achieving clear goals, not vague, open-ended commitments," says Feingold. "Having a timetable for the transfer of sovereignty and having a timetable for Iraqi elections have resulted in real political and strategic advantages. Having a timetable for the withdrawal of troops should be no different."