By Cam Cardow, Cagle Cartoons, The Ottawa Citizen Related Entries December 22, 2010 Obama Makes DADT Repeal Official December 19, 2010 ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Repeal
Continue reading …How would you like to win a car? Wait, let me rephrase. How would you like to win a Smart Car by pledging an “Act of Green” and sharing it with your friends via social media? Let me explain. I am working with the Earth Day Network (the group that organizes Earth Day every year) to do my small part in joining millions of Americans–minus Jim Inhofe, of course–in moving us towards a more clean, efficient and sustainable-energy economy. Just for going to the Earth Day Network site , and doing what most readers of this blog likely already do in their own lives, pledging to perform an “Act of Green,” you can win a Smart Car. This act can be almost anything to support improving our environment, from pledging to plant a tree to just washing your clothes in cold water. One of the suggested acts can be selected, or you can get all creative on us and come up with your own Act of Green. Doing this will make you automatically eligible to win one of two available “smart fortwo” cars, as they’re called. They are not only 100% recyclable, but are the most fuel efficient, non-hybrid gasoline-powered cars in the United States today, according to the EPA. What I like about this contest is this puts the responsibility for creating a better society in our hands. We’ve all be disappointed by those in Washington who pay lip service to what many of us consider a defining issue of our time, so why not take it upon ourselves to participate in and inspire a Billion Acts of Green. Maybe those living in the Beltway will actually take notice, as We The People, take the lead. The contest ends on December 31, 2010 and the winners will be announced on January 10, 2011. So go get yourself a car . And in the process, make this a better planet for our kids to inherit. Follow me on Twitter @cliffschecter
Continue reading …Click here to view this media John McCain showed us yet again this week that he’s happy for his legacy to be the angry old man that goes down shaking his fist at the clouds when it comes down to looking out for our soldiers suffering from PTSD — or any other measure that the Democrats would like to get passed that might make President Obama look good. MSNBC’s The Last Word’s Lawrence O’Donnell talked to Rep. Rush Holt about this exchange he had with Sen. John McCain over getting his legislation named after the late soldier Coleman S. Bean, meant to provide more resources for suicide prevention to Reserve members passed. Rep. Holt: Sen. McCain Objected To My Military Suicide Prevention Bill : In 2008, a young sergeant named Coleman S. Bean took his life. After completing his first tour of duty in Iraq, he had come home and been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Nevertheless, he was deployed to Iraq a second time . Bean had sought treatment for PTSD but as a member of the Individual Ready Reserve (IRR), he found fewer resources available to him than to veterans and active-duty members. In April, Rep. Rush Holt (D-N.J.) introduced legislation named after the late soldier meant to provide more resources for suicide prevention to Reserve members. The House in May incorporated it into the National Defense Authorization Act for 2011, but it was stripped from the final version, and Holt is pointing the finger at the lead Republican negotiator on the Senate legislation, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). “Twice now, the Senate has stripped this legislation from our defense bill,” Holt told The Huffington Post Tuesday. “It’s hard to understand why. I know for a fact, because he told me, that Sen. McCain doesn’t support it. Whether he’s the only one, I don’t know. But there was no effort to try to improve the language or negotiate changes; it was just rejected, and I think that is not only bad policy, but it’s cruel. It’s cruel to the families that are struggling with catastrophic mental health problems.” “He [McCain] said having these counselors check in with the Reservists every few months this way overreaching,” continued Holt, relaying a phone conversation he had had with the senator. “I asked him in what sense it was overreaching. Surely he didn’t think there wasn’t a problem, did he? I must say I don’t understand it.” The major piece of Holt’s amendment would require the Defense Department to ensure that every member of the Reserves who completes at least one tour of duty in either Iraq or Afghanistan receives ” a counseling call from properly trained personnel not less than once every 90 days so long as the servicemember remains a member of the IRR.” If they were determined to be at risk, they would receive counseling or mental health treatment. Go read the rest, but the good news is that Holt plans to continue to resubmit the legislation as a stand-alone measure. The bad news is that McCain, who looks like he’s gone off the rails with his anger, might continue to oppose it.
Continue reading …The congressman tackles what appears to be a vexing implication of gays in the military for some conservatives. As Frank puts it, “We don’t get ourselves drycleaned. We tend to take showers.” and “Do you think that gyms should have separate showers for gay and straight people?” Related Entries December 23, 2010 Sept. 11 Heroes Disdained on the Right December 22, 2010 Family Tragedy
Continue reading …By Nora Eisenberg A new take on an old song to help make Christmas and all our days bright with what’s right. Related Entries December 23, 2010 Sept. 11 Heroes Disdained on the Right December 22, 2010 Family Tragedy
Continue reading …Two years into the Obama administration, the Bureau of Land Management has decided to reverse a Bush-era policy and get back to the business of protecting wilderness on its 256 million acres of public land. The New York Times: The Bureau of Land Management this afternoon is expected to overturn a George W. Bush administration policy barring the agency from temporarily protecting lands with wilderness qualities. The scheduled 2 p.m. Eastern Standard Time announcement by Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and BLM Director Bob Abbey in Denver could upend part or all of a 2003 settlement by then-Interior Secretary Gale Norton and the state of Utah and allow BLM to once again preserve roadless landscapes until Congress decides whether to pass permanent protections. Read more
Continue reading …This is the best video ever. After seeing Harry Reid accept Dan Choi’s West Point ring at Netroots Nation last summer, it is just poignant to see it returned. I got up at 6 am yesterday to watch the signing ceremony for the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, and it was sweet. I especially appreciated this declaration from the president: “For we are not a nation that says, ‘don’t ask, don’t tell.’ We are a nation that says, ‘Out of many, we are one.’” It’s not over. There is much more to do, especially with Proposition 8 moving through the courts and DOMA still on the books. But it is a step forward — an important one, and one to celebrate. Lt. Dan Choi’s most recent tweet is one I’m keeping to remind of what is yet left to do: The next time I get a ring from a man, I expect it to be for full, equal, American marriage. You betcha, Lt. Choi.
Continue reading …By Ruth Marcus START was the finish of a great few weeks for Joe Biden. A great few weeks for President Obama, too, but in a sense even better for Biden because so many of the successful initiatives were on the vice presidential to-do list. Related Entries December 23, 2010 GOP Gets Ready to Rumble in 2011 December 22, 2010 The Pride of ‘Obama’s Orphans’
Continue reading …enlarge Writing in Salon, Rick Perlstein examines ” what Haley Barbour’s amnesia tells us ” about Southern conservatives’ historical revisionism. But largely lost in the imbroglio over Barbour’s literal white-washing of the Jim Crow era is that the Mississippi Governor and would-have-been 2012 White House hopeful has plenty of company among the leading lights of the Republican Party. From flying the Confederate flag to talking up secession and nullification, Republicans for years have been casually trafficking in antebellum nostalgia. In May, Texas conservatives approved an overhaul of the state’s textbooks which would remove the word “slave” from the term “slave trade.” Of course, that omission was in keeping with two others, as Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell and Mississippi’s Barbour celebrated Confederate History Month in their respective states, each without mentioning slavery. As Barbour put it: “To me it’s a sort of feeling that it’s just a nit. That it is not significant. It’s trying to make a big deal out of something that doesn’t matter for diddly.” As for Michael Steele and the Republican National Committee , they apparently considered “nits” like the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to Constitution unnecessary, at least judging from the RNC’s May memo attacking Obama Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan: “Does Kagan Still View Constitution ‘As Originally Drafted And Conceived’ As ‘Defective’?” As the health care reform debate reached its climax in March, Rep. Paul Broun of Georgia was among those longing for the days of the ante bellum South. Missing the irony that health care is worst in those reddest of Southern states where Republicans poll best, Broun took to the House floor to show that he was still fighting the Civil War: “If ObamaCare passes, that free insurance card that’s in people’s pockets is gonna be as worthless as a Confederate dollar after the War Between The States — the Great War of Yankee Aggression.” If you thought you had heard that outdated term of Dixie revisionist history recently, you did. In February 2009, Missouri Republican Bryan Stevenson took exception to President Obama’s support for the Freedom of Choice Act, legislation which would codify the reproductive rights protections of Roe v. Wade nationwide: “What we are dealing with today is the greatest power grab by the federal government since the war of northern aggression.” That expression was also a favorite of former Senate Majority Leader and later Minority Whip (really, you can’t make this up) Trent Lott . Lott was a speaker in 1992 at an event of the Council of Conservative Citizens, a successor to the White Citizens’ Councils of Jim Crow days. Among its offerings in seething racial hatred is a “Wanted” poster of Abraham Lincoln. Lott’s also offered his rebel yell in the virulently neo-Confederate Southern Partisan , where in 1984 he called the Civil War “the war of aggression.” That was years before he lauded the legendary racist and 1948 Dixiecrat presidential candidate, Strom Thurmond: “I want to say this about my state: when Strom Thurmond ran for President, we voted for him. We’re proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn’t have had all these problems over all these years, either.” As Americans learned this week, Trent Lott is not the only Mississippi Republican to support groups like the CCC and honor the Confederate flag. Former Republican National Committee Chairman and now Governor Haley Barbour wore a lapel pin with the image during his 2002 campaigns for the state house – and to keep the CSA emblem flying over it. And as the photographs show, Barbour literally broke bread with CCC racists at a barbeque in 2003. Another neocon (that is, neo-Confederate) is former Attorney General John Ashcroft . Ashcroft granted a long interview with the Southern Partisan , in which he stated: “Your magazine helps set the record straight. You’ve got a heritage of doing that, of defending Southern patriots like [Robert E.] Lee, [Stonewall] Jackson and [Jefferson] Davis. Traditionalists must do more. I’ve got to do more. We’ve all got to stand up and speak in this respect or else we’ll be taught that these people were giving their lives, subscribing their sacred fortunes and their honor to some perverted agenda.” Then there’s Bob McDonnell’s predecessor of “Macaca” fame, George Allen . Long before the YouTube gaffe that derailed his 2006 Senate reelection bid, Allen’s affection for the CSA was as clear as black and white. Allen, who in 2005 co-sponsored a resolution apologizing for the Senate’s past use of the filibuster against anti-lynching legislation in the 1920′s, displayed a Confederate flag and a noose at his home. While governor of Virginia, Allen declared “Confederate Heritage Month” and branded the NAACP an “extremist group.” But while George Allen as a Southern California teenager sported a Confederate flag lapel and “plastered the school with Confederate flags,” former Arkansas Governor and 2012 White House hopeful Mike Huckabee continues to support the banner of the CSA. During the 2008 South Carolina primary, Huckabee announced: “You don’t like people from outside the state coming in and telling you what to do with your flag. In fact, if somebody came to Arkansas and told us what to do with our flag, we’d tell them what to do with the pole, that’s what we’d do.” And so it goes. While Texas Governor Rick Perry spoke of ” secession ” in the wake of the Obama stimulus program, health care reform opponents trot out the long-dead notion of ” nullification .” (Regarding the first of these Confederate talking points from the GOP, even Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia remarked, “If there was any constitutional issue resolved by the Civil War, it is that there is no right to secede.”) Hoping to stand the Civil War on its head, President Obama’s Republican opponents are once again turning to nullification . Suggesting that South Carolina’s effort to nullify federal tariffs starting in 1828 was a blessing, foes of the new health care reform law claiming state sovereignty trumps federal supremacy. The new “Tentherism” is embodied by failed Minnesota gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmer . As TPM recounted earlier this year: He has even proposed a state constitutional amendment that would allow federal laws to operate in Minnesota only if they were consented to by super-majorities of the state legislature. (As TPM also concluded, these Republicans seek to defend the Constitution, just not the one you think .) Emmer’s defeat hasn’t dampened the ardor of the nullification crowd in the GOP. As the New York Times reported, “potential presidential candidates like Mitt Romney and Sarah Palin have tried to appeal to anger at Washington by talking about the importance of the 10th Amendment, which reserves for states any powers not explicitly granted to the federal government in the Constitution.” And now, the Times explains: The same people driving the lawsuits that seek to dismantle the Obama administration’s health care overhaul have set their sights on an even bigger target: a constitutional amendment that would allow a vote of the states to overturn any act of Congress. That quixotic effort has virtually no chance of success. But as South Carolina’s 150th anniversary ” Secession Ball ” showed this week, Southern conservatives’ perpetual project to glorify the Confederacy continues unabated. If only the Republican confederacy of dunces could follow the lead of the general that won the Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant . As President, Ulysses Grant continued to offer not recriminations or retribution but respect to Southern sensibilities, an attitude still not reciprocated. In 1869, several Congressmen sought to add to the Capitol rotunda a huge mural depicting Lee surrendering to Grant at Appomattox. As authors Harold Holzer and Gabor Boritt wrote, Grant would have none of it. “He said he would never take part in producing a picture that commemorated a victory in which his own countrymen were losers.” Grant is said to have remarked: “No, gentlemen, it won’t do. No power on earth will make me agree to your proposal. I will not humiliate General Lee or our Southern friends in depicting their humiliation and then celebrating the event in the nation’s capitol.” As for the evil crusade to preserve slavery that Republican neo-Confederates insist on championing 150 years after the start of Southern treachery, a humbled General Grant remarked at Appomattox : “I felt sad and depressed at the downfall of a foe who had fought so long and valiantly, and had suffered so much for a cause, though their cause was, I believe, one of the worst for which a people ever fought.” And in today’s Party of Lincoln, one for which they continue to fight. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …John Fund is very, very upset over the FCC’s weaksauce Net Neutrality declarations and he’s aiming at ‘wealthy left-wing’ organizations as the culprits. This makes me happy. When a winger can only squirm over something so weak and toothless as to be useless, it’s a good day. But look at who he aims at! Paranoid, much? Free Press and allied groups such as MoveOn.org quickly got funding. Of the eight major foundations that provided the vast bulk of money for campaign-finance reform, six became major funders of the media-reform movement. (They are the Pew Charitable Trusts, Bill Moyers’s Schumann Center for Media and Democracy, the Joyce Foundation, George Soros’s Open Society Institute, the Ford Foundation, and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. ) Free Press today has 40 staffers and an annual budget of $4 million. These wealthy funders pay for more than publicity and conferences. In 2009, Free Press commissioned a poll, released by the Harmony Institute, on net neutrality. Harmony reported that “more than 50% of the public argued that, as a private resource, the Internet should not be regulated by the federal government.” The poll went on to say that since “currently the public likes the way the Internet works . . . messaging should target supporters by asking them to act vigilantly” to prevent a “centrally controlled Internet.” To that end, Free Press and other groups helped manufacture “research” on net neutrality. I n 2009, for example, the FCC commissioned Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society to conduct an “independent review of existing information” for the agency in order to “lay the foundation for enlightened, data-driven decision making.” Considering how openly activist the Berkman Center has been on these issues , it was an odd decision for the FCC to delegate its broadband research to this outfit. Unless, of course, the FCC already knew the answer it wanted to get. Wow. Openly activist? The Berkman Center? Here’s the Berkman Center’s Berkman@10 page, with some of their research projects and discussions posted online. Such terribly activist things. Open innovation, The Dilemma of Games, The Musician and the Scientist, and yes, Network Neutrality (not Internet Neutrality, by the way), as well as one called The Battle for the Web. Hardly activist. Current projects include a Law Library wiki, a discussion of money in politics, and a paper about online political organizing. Again, not activist. Wonky. Educational. But not activist. I confess to zooming in on Fund’s remarks about Berkman because I am a huge fan and avid reader of Doc Searls , who has been a Berkman Fellow for the past 4 years. Berkman aside, the issue of Net Neutrality has always been about a democratic internet, one where everyone has equal access to content and pipes. The organizations Fund villifies in his post are organizations dedicated to the preservation of freedom of speech and free flows of information, so I’m struggling to reconcile the conservative maxim of constitutional freedoms above all with his abuse of organizations who strive to protect it. I didn’t have to struggle too long. A closer reading of his rant reveals a corporate agenda which trumps any speech rights. The net neutrality vision for government regulation of the Internet began with the work of Robert McChesney, a University of Illinois communications professor who founded the liberal lobby Free Press in 2002. Mr. McChesney’s agenda? ” At the moment, the battle over network neutrality is not to completely eliminate the telephone and cable companies,” he told the website SocialistProject in 2009. “But the ultimate goal is to get rid of the media capitalists in the phone and cable companies and to divest them from control.” A year earlier, Mr. McChesney wrote in the Marxist journal Monthly Review that “any serious effort to reform the media system would have to necessarily be part of a revolutionary program to overthrow the capitalist system itself.” Mr. McChesney told me in an interview that some of his comments have been “taken out of context.” He acknowledged that he is a socialist and said he was “hesitant to say I’m not a Marxist.” I am neither a socialist nor a Marxist, but I believe that the Internet should be preserved as something everyone can access equally, and am frustrated on a near-daily basis by the stranglehold providers have on that access. Fund’s suggestion that net neutrality and regulatory authority over access somehow stifles innovation is to believe that the sole innovators are cable and telephone companies. In fact, the opposite is true. The true innovation has come from many different sources, including inhabitants of the Internet itself. Facebook, Twitter, Google and blogs were not the invention of AT&T, after all. The real threat to innovation is handing the keys to all of the Internet gates to the likes of Comcast, AT&T and Verizon. And yet, that is exactly what the FCC did with their weird ruling yesterday.
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