USA Today pokes Dems in the eye over health care

On health care reform, the choice between the Democratic and Republican candidates is crystal clear.  The two leading Democratic candidates tell the American people the truth about the American health care system – it is too expensive, leaves out 50 million people, and burdens employers.  One can argue that the Clinton and Obama plans do not go far enough toward creating universal single-payer coverage that citizens of other developed countries take for granted, but at least the Democrats are talking about steps toward solution.  By contrast, McCain and the Republicans offer nothing but tired rhetoric and more tax breaks for people that do not need them.  If you cannot afford health insurance, then putting aside money into a medical savings account is a cynical, if not blatantly cruel “solution” to the problem.  

This recent editorial in USA Today highlights the uphill battle we face as the media seek to muddy the waters and muddle the public.

The editorial notes that health care costs per person in the United States are double the per-capita rates in other countries, including Canada and the members of the European Union.  It grudgingly admits that many Americans lack health insurance and therefore access to quality care.  However, the rest is nothing but disinformation.

First, the editorial dismisses the proposals offered by Obama and Clinton as ineffective and deceptive.

More important, both might be low-balling the cost of their plans, and neither proposes the kind of tough-but-necessary measures needed to control surging health care costs. If there is anything to be learned from state experiments to expand coverage, it is that they cost more than expected. Massachusetts now says that subsidizing the poor will cost $1.35 billion per year, about twice the estimate just two years ago. An effort to provide universal coverage in California died recently when its estimated cost soared.

It is ironic that the editorial uses plans created or proposed by Republican governors as a way to discredit the ideas of the Democrats.  There is no attempt by the editorial to justify the charge that the Democratic plans are underestimating the costs beyond the example of mandated coverage plans in Massachusetts and California, which lacked an existing government-sponsored alternative to private insurance and were forced to subsidize individual insurance payments to private insurers.  Instead, the Democrats are blithely accused of “low-balling costs,” a charge certain to create antipathy among an ill-informed populace.

The bias is further reinforced when the editorial contrasts the Democratic and Republican plans.

Both Democrats’ health care plans are more ambitious than that of presumptive Republican presidential nominee John McCain, who proposes much more modest adjustments to the health care system, centered on tax changes to encourage consumers to take a more active role in choosing, and paying for, their health coverage. Even so, Clinton and Obama are heavy on promises about making insurance affordable and available, and light on the more painful details.

The reader is presented a false-dichotomy.  Do you want an ambitious plan that will likely increase your federal taxes or tax-breaks to cover your out-of-pocket expenses?  So how is it medical savings accounts will help people that cannot afford private insurance?  How will medical savings accounts contain costs, particularly of health insurance premiums rising at 2-3 times the core inflation rate?  The Republicans get to wave a tax break that fixes nothing and increases disparities in access to health care without nary an objection or critical analysis.  

The editorial veers into pure fantasy when describing their prescription for curing the ills of the American health care system.

Costs are rising largely because health care providers and consumers lack incentives to economize. With third-party insurers paying most of their bills, consumers don’t make the kind of tough choices they do when shopping for other goods and services. Similarly, makers of medicines, medical devices, hospital equipment and other products operate in a world with few restrictions or attempts to set priorities. Insuring more people doesn’t address those issues.

The abject dishonesty in this assessment centers around the idea of consumer choice – another Republican talking point that does not exist in the real world.  Most health insurance plans limit choice.  They provide specifically tiered reimbursement schedules.  If you get care from providers in their network, the plan will cover between 80-90% of costs.  If you get care from out-of-network providers, covered costs drop to 60%.  These restrictions do not permit flexibility and comparison shopping, but the editorial prefers the fantasy that health care is a free market to the reality of a system controlled and distorted by insurance companies.  Insurance companies negotiate discounted rates from providers to determine network inclusion.  Provider choices within a network are particularly few in rural areas, often forcing consumers to travel hundreds of miles to get care if they do not like the provider options in their area. The consumer has no meaningful choice in the process, but is ultimately blamed for not making tough choices.

Not once in this editorial did the issue of overhead costs of insurance companies enter the discussion. Those overhead costs include profit, advertising, and bloated executive compensation.  One might ask what choice consumers have in containing the 30-40% of health insurance premium costs unrelated to medical care.

The editorial also saw fit to ignore the consequences of forcing employers to shoulder most of the costs of medical care in the United States.  Companies have a disincentive to locate businesses in America because of the health insurance tax, putting America at a competitive disadvantage and American jobs at risk.

Republicanism protection of health insurance control over the American medical care system will not solve the problem of rising costs, decreasing access, and employer burden. In fact, a strong case can be that McCain and friends will guarantee the collapse of the American medical care system by 2012 by doing nothing for four more years.

Any country that can afford to spend 10 billion a month on a senseless war in Iraq and 500 billion a year on the Department of Defense can make sure its citizens have access to affordable health care.  It would take 6 attacks on the scale of 9/11 to equal the 18,000 Americans that die each year because they lack health insurance and access to quality health care.  Who needs to worry about terrorists when we have forced euthanasia?  If fact, we can do a better job of protecting Americans and American jobs by ending the war in Iraq and slashing the Pentagon budget to pay for universal health care.  Why do Republicans complain that government run health care reimbursement would be inefficient while actively promoting the most inefficient and bloated government-run agencies (Defense and Homeland Security) in existence?  The answer is simple – because they have no fear that media will point out the contradiction.  

One only need to peruse the comments to the editorial to see the reach of republican talking points. The 52 comments are dominated by three basic themes.  First, the costs of medical care in America are inflated by litigation for malpractice and illegal immigrants rather than bloated overhead costs for insurance and pharmaceutical companies.  Second, Americans are at fault because we are overweight, inactive, and smoke.  You mean like Limbaugh?  Third, health care is not a basic right, so let charities pay for the poor.  

You have to wonder what it will take to push reform forward and nail the coffin of republican talking points.  Will it take number of uninsured reaching 100 million?  Will it take more outsourcing of jobs as companies look to avoid paying the health insurance tax?  It is hard to imagine change when too many still believe in republican myths such as this gem from the comments section.

Why do people keep saying fix the health care industry? Our health care is better than anywhere in the world.

I lost count of the number of times the myth of American superiority in health care was repeated during the Republican party debates.  It looks like we will need to fix the education system before we can fix health care.  

Pony Party, Lunar Eclipse

Tonight a total eclipse of the full moon will be visible from most of North America.  According to NASA, the total eclipse will begin at 10:01 pm est, and end at 10:51 pm est.  The linked website also contains a map indicating what areas of North and South America, Europe, Africa, and western Asia will be able to see the eclipsed satellite (Feb 21st in the Eastern Hemisphere).

Sonnet of the Moon

by Charles Best

Look how the pale Queen of the silent night

doth cause the ocean to attend upon her,

and he, as long as she is in sight,

with his full tide is ready here to honor;

But when the silver waggon of the Moon

is mounted up so high he cannot follow,

the sea calls home his crystal waves to morn,

and with low ebb doth manifest his sorrow.

So you that are sovereign of my heart

have all my joys attending on your will,

when you return, their tide my heart doth fill.

So as you come and as you depart,

joys ebb and flow within my tender heart.

February’s full moon is known as the Full Snow Moon or Full Hunger Moon in Native American Lore, and in other traditions as the Storm Moon, Fasting Moon, or Weaning Moon.  

as always, wikipedia has more info…

Moonlight Sonata, thanks to Beethoven…

CCR, Bad Moon Rising

The Morning News

The Morning News is an Open Thread

From Yahoo News Top Stories

1 Pakistan’s Musharraf urged to quit after poll rout

by Sami Zubeiri, AFP

2 hours, 15 minutes ago

ISLAMABAD (AFP) – Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf faced mounting calls to quit Tuesday as opposition parties moved towards a coalition government in the wake of a sweeping election victory over his allies.

The widower of slain former premier Benazir Bhutto said he had no interest in working with Musharraf’s defeated backers, but said he would join forces with other groups opposed to the key figure in US anti-terror efforts.

“We will form a government of national consensus which will take along every democratic force,” Asif Ali Zardari told a news conference a day after the parliamentary elections.

2 NATO shuts torched Kosovo border posts as tensions fume

by Robert MacPherson, AFP

1 hour, 42 minutes ago

PRISTINA (AFP) – NATO peacekeepers Tuesday sealed two Kosovo border crossings with Serbia for 24 hours after they were torched by angry Serbs as international tensions simmered over Kosovo’s independence.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned the United States that Kosovo’s break from Serbia was “dangerous” for the world, but US President George W. Bush insisted the move would bring peace.

Kosovo lawmakers took the split further by passing their first legislation since Sunday’s declaration of independence, including the creation of Kosovo citizenship, passports and a foreign ministry.

3 US warships positioning for satellite shoot down

by Jim Mannion, AFP

57 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – A US warship is moving into position to try to shoot down a defunct US spy satellite as early as Wednesday before it tumbles into the Earth’s atmosphere, Pentagon officials said Tuesday.

Armed with two specially modified interceptor missiles, the USS Lake Erie has been tasked to intercept the satellite over the Pacific and shoot it down into the ocean, the officials said, adding that the Aegis cruiser is already in waters off Hawaii.

The USS Decatur, a guided missile destroyer, is carrying a third interceptor missile in case the first two attempts fail, defense officials said. Another destroyer, the USS Russell, was still in port on Tuesday.

4 Fidel Castro steps down after 49-year rule

By Anthony Boadle, Reuters

Tue Feb 19, 3:34 PM ET

HAVANA (Reuters) – Ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro stepped down on Tuesday 49 years after taking power in an armed revolution, closing the book on a Cold War career that made him an icon to leftists and a tyrant to his foes.

Castro, 81, who has not appeared in public since undergoing stomach surgery almost 19 months ago, said he would not seek a new term as president or leader of Cuba’s armed forces when the National Assembly meets on Sunday.

His retirement raised expectations for change on the communist island, and calls by Castro’s arch-enemy, the United States, for democracy, but Cuba experts said limited economic reforms were more likely than swift political transformation.

5 U.S. military stretched dangerously thin by war: poll

Reuters

1 hour, 20 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. military has been stretched dangerously thin by the Iraq war, according to almost 90 percent of retired and current military officers polled on the state of America’s armed forces.

Eighty percent said it would be unreasonable to expect the U.S. military to wage another major war successfully at this time, according to the poll by the Center for a New American Security think tank and Foreign Policy magazine.

More than 3,400 serving and retired officers took part in the poll, organizers said. Around 90 percent were retired officers, a large majority had combat experience and about 10 percent had served in Iraq or Afghanistan.

6 US soldiers likely to see shorter tours

By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Writer

12 minutes ago

WASHINGTON – Soldiers heading to war this summer are likely to see their tours shortened from 15 months to 12 months, even if troop cuts in Iraq are suspended in July as expected, the Army’s top general said Tuesday.

Gen. George Casey said that while his forces are strained by nearly seven years at war, the Army can maintain 15 combat brigades in battle for at least a couple of months after July while military commanders assess the situation in Iraq.

“Fifteen deployed brigades, for us, is sustainable for a bit longer, certainly enough to cover what I would think the length of this pause might be,” said Casey, the Army’s chief of staff.

From Yahoo News Most Popular, Most Recommended

7 Musharraf’s days could be numbered

By MATTHEW PENNINGTON, Associated Press Writer

49 minutes ago

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – Pervez Musharraf has survived combat as a career soldier and assassination attempts as president. Now the will of his own people has pushed him to the precipice.

A sweeping opposition win in elections has diminished the U.S.-backed leader’s political standing as never before and many predict his days in power are numbered.

Musharraf has already given up his command of the army, and his rock-bottom popularity at home has diminished his effectiveness to his Western allies in the fight against Islamic extremism.

8 Judge threatens contempt in anthrax case

By HOPE YEN, Associated Press Writer

1 hour, 20 minutes ago

WASHINGTON – A federal judge said Tuesday he will hold a former USA Today reporter in contempt if she continues refusing to identify sources for stories about a former Army scientist under scrutiny in the 2001 anthrax attacks.

U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton said reporter Toni Locy defied his order last August that she cooperate with Steven J. Hatfill in his lawsuit against the government. Walton indicated he would impose a fine until she divulged her sources, but that he would take a few more days to decide whether to postpone the penalty as she pursues an appeal.

The judge is also considering whether to find former CBS reporter James Stewart in contempt.

9 Lunar eclipse to occur Wednesday night

By ALICIA CHANG, AP Science Writer

1 hour, 42 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES – The last total lunar eclipse until 2010 occurs Wednesday night, with cameo appearances by Saturn and the bright star Regulus on either side of the veiled full moon.

Skywatchers viewing through a telescope will have the added treat of seeing Saturn’s handsome rings.

Weather permitting, the total eclipse can be seen from North and South America. People in Europe and Africa will be able to see it high in the sky before dawn on Thursday.

From Yahoo News Most Popular, Most Viewed

10 Oil jumps above Oil jumps above $100 on refinery outage00 on refinery outage

By JOHN WILEN, AP Business Writer

2 hours, 14 minutes ago

NEW YORK – Oil futures shot higher Tuesday, closing above $100 for the first time as investors bet that crude prices will keep climbing despite evidence of plentiful supplies and falling demand. At the pump, gas prices rose further above $3 a gallon.

There was no single driver behind oil’s sharp price jump; investors seized on an explosion at a 67,000 barrel per day refinery in Texas, the falling dollar, the possibility that OPEC may cut production next month, the threat of new violence in Nigeria and continuing tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela.

The fact that there was no overriding reason for such a price spike could be a bad omen for consumers already bearing the burdens of high heating costs and falling real estate values. Many recent forecasts have said oil demand growth this year will be less than initially expected, yet prices continue to rise. That suggests they may continue rising as the weakening dollar attracts new investors to the futures market.

From Yahoo News World

11 Castro legacy holds despite resignation

By JOHN RICE, Associated Press Writer

38 minutes ago

Fidel Castro may have resigned as Cuba’s president, but he remains a towering figure, loved and hated across continents. Long after he ditched his cigar and traded military fatigues for tracksuits, Castro remains both a Cold War icon and a model of resistance to the world’s lone superpower.

Castro made clear in his resignation announcement Tuesday that he has no plans to disappear – he’ll keep writing his columns as “Comrade Fidel,” doing his best to guide the revolution.

“This is not my farewell to you,” he wrote. “My only wish is to fight as a soldier in the battle of ideas… Perhaps my voice will be heard.”

12 Hunt for stolen art leads to parked car

By ERNST E. ABEGG, Associated Press Writer

Tue Feb 19, 2:51 PM ET

ZURICH, Switzerland – A frantic search for four stolen Impressionist paintings led to a most unlikely place: the parking lot of a mental hospital just a few hundred yards from the scene of the crime.

There, in the back seat of an unlocked car, a painting by Claude Monet and another by Vincent van Gogh were found Monday in perfect condition, authorities said Tuesday.

The paintings, worth $64 million combined, were still under the display glass used by the private museum from which they were stolen in a Feb. 10 armed robbery, museum director Lukas Gloor said.

13 Iraq orders police to round up beggars

By KIM GAMEL, Associated Press Writer

2 hours, 12 minutes ago

BAGHDAD – The Iraqi Interior Ministry ordered police on Tuesday to begin rounding up beggars, homeless and mentally disabled people from the streets of Baghdad and other cities to prevent insurgents from using them as suicide bombers.

The decision, which elicited concern from advocates for the mentally disabled, came nearly three weeks after twin suicide bombings against pet markets. Officials said those blasts were carried out by mentally disabled women who may have been unwitting attackers.

The U.S. military and the Iraqi government have claimed that Sunni insurgents led by al-Qaida in Iraq are increasingly trying to use Iraq’s most vulnerable populations as suicide bombers to avoid raising suspicions or being searched at checkpoints that guard access to many markets, neighborhoods and bridges in the capital.

14 Car bomb kills one in Afghanistan’s Kandahar

Reuters

Tue Feb 19, 3:28 PM ET

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (Reuters) – A remote-controlled car bomb blast on Tuesday shook the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, still reeling from attacks in the area which have killed scores of people in the past two days.

The blast was aimed at a police vehicle but missed it, witnesses and police said. One civilian was killed and three more were wounded in the explosion, police said.

The attack came as many people in the city observed general mourning for more than 140 people killed in two suspected suicide raids in the past two days in other parts of Kandahar province, a stronghold of Taliban insurgents fighting the Afghan government and its Western backers.

15 Baghdad hospital staff feels wronged by suicide bombing charges

By Steve Lannen and Hussein Khadim, McClatchy Newspapers

2 hours, 38 minutes ago

BAGHDAD – Inside the low-slung, brown stucco building that is the al Rashad psychiatric teaching hospital in a Baghdad neighborhood of the same name, employees wonder what will happen next.

Already they’ve seen an administrator resign after his son was kidnapped. In December, the hospital’s director was gunned down. Then, 10 days ago, U.S. troops arrested the acting director on the suspicion that he supplied female mental patients to insurgents to become suicide bombers.

A siege mentality has set in among the eight doctors and nearly 20 staff members at the hospital, which treats about 1,200 mental patients and is one of only two institutions of its kind in Iraq . They no longer allow their patients to leave the hospital grounds for fear of how they’ll be treated outside. They won’t give their names to a reporter for fear that they’ll be targeted next.

16 Rice offers U.S. funds to Kenyan leaders to force compromise

By Shashank Bengali, McClatchy Newspapers

Mon Feb 18, 2:42 PM ET

NAIROBI, Kenya – Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Monday that Kenya’s feuding political parties must share power in a coalition government, increasing the pressure for a speedy resolution to the country’s political crisis.

After separate meetings with President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga , Rice said that both men needed to make concessions to end a seven-week stalemate after Kibaki was declared the winner of a questionable election. She indicated that the U.S. government would provide additional funding to rebuild the country once there’s an agreement.

“We are prepared to do more for reconstruction, resettlement of people, rehabilitation of infrastructure,” Rice said. “The current stalemate…(is) not going to permit business as usual with the United States.”

17 Why Kosovo Divides Europe

By JEFF ISRAELY, Time Magazine

1 hour, 27 minutes ago

Don’t make the mistake, when in Barcelona, of assuming you’re in Spain: The locals in the enchanting Mediterranean coastal city, and the triangle-shaped territory around it, cite Catalan as their national identity. In conversations across the spectrum – young and old, leftist and right-wing, gay and straight, a retired couple near Tarragona and a Moroccan immigrant in Vic – the upcoming Spanish elections are discussed as if they’re taking place in a foreign country. “For Catalonia, it is better if…” was how the typical response began. Here, road signs and restaurant menus are written in Catalan. It’s also the language of public education, in schools where the national history of Catalonia is central to the curriculum, while Spanish is taught for two hours a week as a foreign language. The region, officially called an “autonomous community,” has broad leeway in establishing political and social policy. But polls show that some 35% want full independence from Madrid.
From Yahoo News U.S. News

18 12 years for contractor in bribery case

By ELLIOT SPAGAT, Associated Press Writer

1 hour, 41 minutes ago

SAN DIEGO – A defense contractor was sentenced to 12 years in federal prison Tuesday for bribing former Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham with cash, trips, the services of prostitutes and other gifts in exchange for nearly $90 million in Pentagon work.

Brent Wilkes was labeled “a predatory wolf (in) self-styled patriot’s clothing” and a “poster boy for war profiteering” by prosecutor Phillip Halpern. U.S. District Judge Larry Burns said he was troubled that Wilkes continued to maintain his innocence.

“If you were to do the right thing about this, today is the day to own up,” Burns told Wilkes at the sentencing hearing.

19 Castro’s departure is a letdown in Miami

By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ, Associated Press Writer

Tue Feb 19, 3:40 PM ET

MIAMI – It was the cherished dream Cuban exiles carried in their hearts for decades: Fidel Castro would die in power, freedom would return to their homeland, and there would be dancing in the streets of Miami.

But when the dictator’s departure from office finally came to pass Tuesday, it wasn’t the way the exiles imagined it at all. Reality was far less exciting.

In Miami’s Little Havana and the heavily Cuban suburb of Hialeah, there was little celebration – and little hope that democracy is at hand in Cuba – after the ailing, 81-year-old president resigned as part of a measured withdrawal from power that began a year and a half ago.

20 Safety chief urges toymakers to get the lead out

By Karey Wutkowski, Reuters

2 hours, 25 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The top U.S. product safety regulator on Tuesday urged manufacturers to remove lead from children’s products now and not wait for congressional action that would essentially ban the toxic substance from toys.

“It just makes good sense to act now to remove lead from these products,” Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) Acting Chairman Nancy Nord told an international product safety conference.

The U.S. Congress is debating legislation to revamp product safety regulation after millions of Chinese-made children’s toys and products were recalled for excessive levels of lead.

From Yahoo News Politics

21 The long road ahead for John McCain

By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer

1 hour, 27 minutes ago

BROOKFIELD, Wis. – John McCain locked up the Republican presidential nomination after a yearlong slog. Now the hard work begins.

Senior aides to the GOP’s likely nominee emerged from a weekend strategy session with McCain in Arizona acknowledging they have a mound of work ahead of them as they seek to turn a slimmed-down primary operation into a general election behemoth. And McCain said the meeting was just the beginning of discussions over the next few weeks to lay the groundwork for the fall race.

“We haven’t secured the nomination,” the Arizona senator reminded reporters traveling with him this week as he campaigned in the Midwest. He seemed to punt every question about the weekend meetings and, in effect, buy time before he has to answer for his general election strategy.

22 New Jersey civil union law fails to protect

By Jon Hurdle, Reuters

Tue Feb 19, 12:06 PM ET

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) – A new state civil unions law has failed to ensure that same-sex couples in New Jersey enjoy the same rights as married heterosexuals, an official report said on Tuesday.

On the first anniversary of the law’s implementation, the Civil Union Review Commission said some employers in New Jersey have refused to provide benefits to the partner of employees in a civil union.

New Jersey last year became the third state to pass a civil unions law after its Supreme Court affirmed that same-sex couples have the same rights as heterosexual couples, but left the state legislature to decide whether to enshrine those rights in an institution called marriage.

23 US military holding Afghan journalist for ‘Taliban contacts’

AFP

Tue Feb 19, 11:42 AM ET

KABUL (AFP) – The US military has been holding an Afghan journalist working with Canadian Television (CTV) for three months because of his professional contacts with Taliban militants, media watchdogs alleged Tuesday.

A US military officer at the largest military base at Bagram, north of Kabul, confirmed that the reporter, identified as Jawad Ahmad, was in detention.

However, “He is not being detained because he is a journalist,” Lieutenant Colonel David Accetta told AFP, refusing to give details of charges.

From Yahoo News Business

24 Stocks end lower amid inflation fears

By MADLEN READ, AP Business Writer

1 hour, 9 minutes ago

NEW YORK – Wall Street gave up a big early advance and closed mixed Tuesday after oil prices closed above $100 for the first time and stoked fears that inflation will stymie an already troubled economy.

Soaring oil prices could bring more problems for consumers, having already made many Americans shy about spending in recent months. Consumer spending, a key driver of U.S. economic growth, has also been shaken by falling home prices and the volatile stock market.

The market was also concerned that rising inflation might make the Federal Reserve reconsider its bias toward lowering interest rates to help the economy. The central bank, which next meets March 18, last month slashed rates by 1.25 percent.

25 Credit Suisse catches subprime virus

By FRANK JORDANS, Associated Press Writer

Tue Feb 19, 1:21 PM ET

GENEVA – After seeming to have skirted the worst of the mortgage issues plaguing the financial sector, Credit Suisse revealed Tuesday that it had suspended a “handful” of traders for overvaluing assets and would take a $1 billion hit to its first-quarter results.

Switzerland’s second-largest bank said it would still post a profit for the period, but the mispricing of asset-backed securities led to an overvaluation of about $2.85 billion.

Traders didn’t update their figures to keep up with the market downturn, and this tardiness resulted in assets being marked higher than their actual value, Credit Suisse Chief Executive Brady Dougan said during a conference call.

26 British government takes first steps for bank nationalisation

by Prashant Rao, AFP

32 minutes ago

LONDON (AFP) – The British government has taken the first steps in parliament towards nationalising troubled mortgage lender Northern Rock, the troubled bank rocked by the global credit crunch six months ago.

A bill that allows for the lender to be taken into temporary public ownership was given a second reading in the lower House of Commons Tuesday by a vote of 367 to 164.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown has been heavily criticised for his decision to nationalise the bank, with observers questioning his economic competence.

27 Microsoft reportedly taking aim at Yahoo’s board

AFP

2 hours, 20 minutes ago

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – Microsoft is crafting a plan to oust Yahoo’s board of directors after it rejected the software giant’s unsolicited 44.6-billion-dollar takeover offer, according to a US media report Tuesday.

In what could be negotiation through the media or a sign that Microsoft plans to take Yahoo by force, The New York Times on Tuesday quoted people close to the matter as saying Microsoft is taking aim at the Internet giant’s board.

If Yahoo does not swiftly enter into takeover talks, Microsoft will try to nominate replacements for Yahoo’s board of directors, all 10 of which are up for reelection in at Yahoo’s annual meeting in June, the newspaper reported.

28 Thomson set to close deal for Reuters in April

AFP

Tue Feb 19, 1:54 PM ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Thomson Corporation said Tuesday it expected to close its 17-billion-dollar takeover of British media group Reuters in April after regulatory approval in the US, Canada and European Union.

The US Justice Department said it would require Thomson to sell financial data and related assets in three markets for financial data in order to proceed with the Canadian company’s proposed 17-billion-dollar acquisition of Reuters Group PLC.

The conditional approval, taking into account antitrust concerns, paves the way for the creation of the world’s biggest financial information group.

29 Liechtenstein accuses Germany of attacking its sovereignty

by Fabrice Coffrini, AFP

Tue Feb 19, 4:09 PM ET

VADUZ, Liechtenstein (AFP) – Liechtenstein on Tuesday launched a withering attack on the German government for paying an informer in the Alpine state for bank secrets to launch a tax probe targeting hundreds of wealthy Germans.

Liechtenstein’s Crown Prince Alois said Berlin had violated the sovereignty of the tiny principality and broken the law by buying secret data and sending in spies to uncover the scandal.

“We are a small country and we want good relations with our neighbours but we are also a sovereign state. Germany will not solve its problems with its taxpayers by attacking Liechtenstein,” the prince said in Vaduz.

From Yahoo News Science

30 Mysterious creatures found in Antarctica

Associated Press

36 minutes ago

SYDNEY, Australia – Scientists investigating the icy waters of Antarctica said Tuesday they have collected mysterious creatures including giant sea spiders and huge worms in the murky depths.

Australian experts taking part in an international program to take a census of marine life in the ocean at the far south of the world collected specimens from up to 6,500 feet beneath the surface, and said many may never have been seen before.

Some of the animals far under the sea grow to unusually large sizes, a phenomenon called gigantism that scientists still do not fully understand.

31 Danish scientists find way to tell age through eyes

Reuters

Tue Feb 19, 1:09 PM ET

LONDON (Reuters) – A new way to decipher a person’s age by looking into the lens of the eye could help forensic scientists identify bodies, Danish researchers said on Tuesday.

Their new technique uses radiocarbon dating to measure special proteins known as lens crystallines that develop around birth and remain unchanged for the rest of our lives. They are the only part of the body apart from teeth that do so.

The researchers correctly identified the ages of 13 people within one-and-a-half years by analyzing a carbon isotope called carbon 14 trapped inside the crystallines, they reported in the journal PLoS One.

32 Florida will teach evolution but only as theory

By Michael Peltier, Reuters

1 hour, 36 minutes ago

TALLAHASSEE, Florida (Reuters) – Florida education officials voted on Tuesday to add evolution to required course work in public schools but only after a last-minute change depicting Charles Darwin’s seminal work as merely a theory.

Bending to pressure from religious conservatives, the State Board of Education on a 4-3 vote included the “theory” language as part of a retooling of the state’s science standards for public school education.

The compromise would require teaching that Darwin’s proposal — that natural selection has driven the evolution of many species from a few common ancestors over billions of years — has yet to be conclusively proven.

33 London mayor launches blitz on bottled water

AFP

31 minutes ago

LONDON (AFP) – London Mayor Ken Livingstone on Tuesday launched a blitz against bottled mineral water, urging restaurant customers in the British capital to ask for tap water to help the environment.

Livingstone said tap water was not only cheaper but also comes without the heavy carbon footprint of transporting bottled varieties by road and often vast distances by air from countries as far away as Fiji and New Zealand.

“People should be encouraged to ask and feel confident they can ask in restaurants for tap water, rather than have to pay through the nose for bottled water,” he told his weekly news conference.

The Other Shoe Dropping in Iraq?

As bad as Iraq was and is, it soon could become worse than the very recent past nfew months and they haven’t been a sunday afternoon picnic!

markthshark posted this Diary last night: Moqtada al-Sadr Ends Four Month Pact with Rival Shi’ite Council.

Amazingly this Extremely Important bit of Reality made it up to the recommend list disappointing, I’ll bet, at least one diarist posting either a slam post against or a love thy one for the favorite candidate ‘Who’s Gonna Save The World’. Folks, just abit of another reality. Only You, together with many many many others can right the course of this Ship of State, but I degress.

Could the other shoe hit the floor in Iraq?

The purpose of ‘The Surge’ has not come to the reality wanted, a functioning Iraqi Government { and it won’t as long as control is coming from Washington}. But with the Blastwalls in Baghdad, alliances and  paying those who were formally fighting us, and Most Important, Ceasefire agreements with the main Insurgent Iraqi Groups has quieted, at least abit, the Violence, but still Innocent Iraqi’s and Occupation Forces have been Killed and Maimed, and this month already seems to be heading back towards Escalation.

Al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army is among the most powerful militias in Iraq. The crux of the message being sent by the organization was that al-Sadr followers would be free to resume their activities if no message was sent by the cleric on Feb. 23.

And so add to the diary link subject above, which is bad enough, and watch for any news on the date directly above for Al-Sadr threatens to lift cease-fire, and the robins may be starting to show up in the north, for spring time here, but the Violence in Iraq could be heading, once again, into the Abis of the Extreme for Our Troops and the Iraqi People, who’s Lives and Country have already been Destroyed by Us!

According to al-Obeidi, this “has been conveyed to all Mahdi Army members nationwide.”

Got that, all Mahdi Army members Nationwide.

The U.S. military has welcomed the cease-fire, saying it is a major factor in the estimated 60 percent decline in violence in the country in the second half of 2007.

What will the War Profitteers and War Mongers, in  Washington, do. Offer Al-Sadr Billions to hold his supporters back, and what will they do, even small factions of?

As this Debacle continues!!

” Every war, when viewed from the undistorted perspective of life’s sanctity, is a “civil war” waged by humanity against itself.”

Daisaku Ikeda

Muse in the Morning

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Muse in the Morning

The muses are ancient.  The inspirations for our stories were said to be born from them.  Muses of song and dance, or poetry and prose, of comedy and tragedy, of the inward and the outward.  In one version they are Calliope, Euterpe and Terpsichore, Erato and Clio, Thalia and Melpomene, Polyhymnia and Urania.

It has also been traditional to name a tenth muse.  Plato declared Sappho to be the tenth muse, the muse of women poets.  Others have been suggested throughout the centuries.  I don’t have a name for one, but I do think there should be a muse for the graphical arts.  And maybe there should be many more.

Please join us inside to celebrate our various muses…

I started working on something that includes the subject of supreme beings.  It’s not done yet.  So here’s a poem that is almost two years old and may shed light on how hard it is going to be to not post a Teacher’s Lounge this Saturday morning for the first weekend since October 29, 2005.  Compulsions are made to be broken.

Art Link

Insanity

OCD

The longest

one-syllable

word

in the English

language

is strengths

or straights

if you play poker

or broughams

in the UK

The eight-letter

word

from which

the most words

four to eight

letters long

can be produced

is entrails

I know these things

because I read

my dictionary

which had

1658 pages

cover to cover

three times

A paper match

can be divided

into six

attached layers

without

a razor blade

if you are

very careful

and extremely patient

Traversing

my staircase

was always

one-two-three

one-two

one-two

one-two-three

one-two

steps

Am I cured?

10 8 7 9 9

Maybe so

Or not

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–March 2, 2006

I know you have talent.  What sometimes is forgotten is that being practical is a talent.  I have a paucity for that sort of talent in many situations, though it turns out that I’m a pretty darn good cook.  ðŸ™‚  

Let your talent bloom.  You can share it here.  Encourage others to let it bloom inside them as well.

Won’t you share your words or art, your sounds or visions, your thoughts scientific or philosophic, the comedy or tragedy of your days, the stories of doing and making?  And be excellent to one another!

Iglesia ……………………………………… Episode 34

(Iglesia is a serialized novel, published on Tuesdays and Saturdays at midnight ET, you can read all of the episodes by clicking on the tag.)

Previous episode and previous pertinent episode

.

He had never been much for tea….but he had to admit, as he sat beneath the cottonwood canopy next to the pretty little pond, at a ridiculously fragile looking ornate tea table, on a wire chair….that this was delicious. Beneath the bold flavors it was very delicate and, what was the word….dainty. When he picked up a cucumber sandwich and took a small bite, he noticed in disgust that his pinkie was sticking out.

“So, whose throat do you want me to slit?”

It was nice to see Rogers flinch a little.

“I am afraid what we have in mind is a bit more involved than simple …vivisection, Abraham.”

“Ah….multiple targets. How many of them are there? Are they in a central location? Do you have information on their protection? Body guards, alarms, dogs? What kind of weapons do you have access to? Is there any reason not to use explosives?” He said it like he was rattling off a grocery list. He was back on familiar ground. This is what he did best.

“Unfortunately, it is quite a bit more complicated than that as well. This is not a short term endeavor with discreet specific individual targets that can be eliminated quickly and simply. For the most part. There will be no body guards, dogs or alarms, at least in the manner in which I suppose you are imagining them. Explosives and conventional weapons will do you no good…..in the traditional sense. You may find it expedient for your mental and emotional processes to think of your assignment as something more along the lines of a…. campaign.” He lowered his head and sipped his tea and looked at Abe over both the rim of his tea cup and the top of his glasses.

“Oh”

He was about to ask how long it would take….when it struck him like a blow between the eyes that….it didn’t really matter. He had managed to forget he was dead, for a moment there.

“oh”

“So ……………….forever?”

His heart was beating a little harder.

“Or……does it end?”

“I think it is very safe indeed to say that it will, at some point end.” Rogers got an odd look in his eye,…for him. “One way or the other.”

And then…he flickered in and out of existence for a split second. He was gone…..and when he came back, his head was cocked to one side, like a dog listening to something humans couldn’t hear.

“I am afraid that we must be going. If you will please follow me, I am afraid we must hasten by foot, as you are not yet fit for any other means of locomocution.” He did a quick 360 degree scan, spinning in place, and it looked like his ears actually distended a tiny bit and cupped, reminding Abe of a radar dish. A short, slim, brown radar dish in a bad, slightly floppy, tweed suit of indeterminate age and styling. At the end of his pirouette, he pointed.

“Please begin running towards that sandstone outcropping at the maximum speed that you are capable of achieving.”

Midnight Cowboy: Prelude to a Fiasco

When I got thrown out of Naranjastan, I hung out in a meta cantina for awhile. I’ll probably still visit on the weekends. Good group over there, a wide swath of people. Some whose very behavior reveals they are in character.

Some, unfortunately, are just born that way, God love them. Finding their own way across the cyber, emotional nomads floating across the sea of this shared world wide hallucination.

This multi-user shared hallucination, known as a MUSH ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MUSH ) , is just an extension of the collective unconscious. The MUSH won out for the format of the internet, though its brother the MUD ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MUD ) destroys lives today. It goes by the name of World of Warcraft. Do not buy this game, for you or anyone. Imagine bumping up your blog addiction on the par of  with a backwoods trailer living meth addict. Back where it’s so dark, they have to pipe in the sunlight.

The Global MUSH is nothing but win. If you pause for a second and realize just twenty years ago we were using card catalogs at libraries. And the book was never in. The global library at your finger tips is historical. This has never happened before.

For the first time in recorded history, the flow of information is no longer centralized. The MUSH filled out into empty space, expanding at the will and direction of humanity. Volumes of data filled searchable storehouses of infinite knowledge. And you had unlimited access. The Gutenberg Press doesn’t have shit on the Internet.

Of course, now the central powers want to close off parts of the MUSH, which is their want. The counterwant of the collective unconscious is complete access to all information. This is true internationally. This is a whole earth affair. At the end of the day, we are all the same monkey. We just come in all kinds of fun and exciting shapes and sizes. And the monkeys love their intertubez on the river of wisdom.

A seemingly out of control machine, there is order in the chaos. One aspect of the way the internet works is its information traffic control system. This beautifully couples with the term “ingress traffic.” If one could understand the modes and facets of the initial points of entry for all data as ingress traffic to entire internet, one could hack the MUSH.

One could hack a part of the collective unconscious.

I decided to give it a try.

Tomorrow:

Why I supported Ron Paul

Stick around, it’s the Ron Paul Quartet, they will be playing all the week.  

The Supreme Court did the right thing…

( – promoted by buhdydharma )

in rejecting ACLU vs. NSA today.

A number of good folks in the blogosphere are huffing and puffing over the Supreme Court’s rejection of the ACLU’s Petition for Certiori in the case of ACLU v. NSA.  They don’t need to.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court today dismissed the first legal challenge to President Bush’s warrantless wiretapping order, but without ruling on any of the key issues.

It is traditional and expected in our Federal system that the Supreme Court wait until a controversial legal issue is litigated in more than one of the lower Circuits before creating a binding precedent.  This way, the Supreme Court both allows for a broader range of opinion and ensures that a greater number of arguments and issues are considered before the Court decides the final law.  

In ACLU vs. NSA, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals had the first bite at the apple on unwarranted wiretapping, and spit out a Bushie worm. Yet the sour 6th is not the only Circuit with a say about whether our government can secretly spy on us.  

Most of the other domestic spying law suits have since been consolidated into the 9th Circuit’s Hepting v. AT&T, initially brought by Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).  The 9th is where the real action is, not only because of the consolidation but also because, unlike the ACLU, EFF has tangible evidence (in the form of schematics and eye witness testimony) of the actual wire tapping apparatus and procedures the government and AT&T are using to spy on us (click on the link to see the evidence for yourself).

So while the unfortunate 6th Circuit decision still technically stands as legal precedent, the Supreme Court’s rejection of the case signals to the 9th that is not compelled to accept, as mandatory or even persuasive authority, the 6th’s cramped interpretation of the 4th Amendment.

In short, the Supreme Court’s rejection of the 6th Circuit’s ACLU v NSA decision means that the case will have little, if any, practical affect on the decisions of the 9th Circuit – where most of the big legal issues about domestic spying are now likely to be decided. (Assuming, of course, we can keep Jay R and George W from shutting the case down.)

Bottom line: for those of us who value our Liberty, it’s better that the Supreme Court stayed out of this one.   NSA v. ACLU was a very bad decision for our side, and we would likely not have been happy with the outcome had the Supreme Court decided to feature this case as the leading precedent on this extremely important Constitutional issue.

By rejecting the 6th Circuit case, the Supreme Court is telling the 9th to carry on unimpeded with its own case, which, given the facts and the makeup of the 9th Circuit, leaves us on far more favorable ground than we probably would have been had the Supreme Court accepted the 6th Circuit case today.

Update: Thanks for the bump buhdy!

IN A COUNTRY WITH STRANGE TABOOS

  For rusty1776 in gratitude for his “Writing in the Raw: Valentine Confessions”

I remember when you brought me hyacinths

We walked the path under pepper trees

Laughed our way to the beach

To play in the surf like yearling seals

And when you kissed me, your salt wet curls

Dripped ocean on my face

I was a virgin then, and you a married man

In a country with strange taboos

I remember when you came again

We were older then, and you had tasted

The bite of war on your golden flesh

You brought me only your body then

And took me, coldly unwilling

On the stone cold floor

Eyes wild, body strawberry ripe

Your virgin rape bride

In a country with strange taboos

When you took me over my protests

I heard the voice inside me say

Yes to the Universe

Yes to God

Yes to you

Yes in concentric circles swirling out

Thought forms in an expanding universe

Orgasm of matter in an ocean of space

Meeting each other face to face

 forgetting your wife

Waves from a meteor plunged in the sea

 at her desk a mile away

Rippling into the universe like a psalm

I remember when you brought me your wound

Placing it in the palm of my hand

The night you, dreaming of the war

Took the remington you kept by the bed

And shot your reflection in the mirror

Thinking it a jap

Killing on instinct

In a country with strange taboos

I remember when you said you could not love me

Although you loved me

We played like Hindu deities

Entwined like spiral galaxies

You brought me so many images then

Mother and Priestess

Virgin and Whore

I had ruined your life you said

Because I wasn’t a virgin when we met, you said

In this country with strange taboos

And I remember when you brought me spider mums

Naming me Circe

She of the beautiful hair

Naming me an illusion and your fear

Saying we had to live celibately

That only in god was there ecstacy

You the torero, killer of bulls

You the marine, killer of men

You the man, killer of me

The killer in Circe’s lair

In this country with stange taboos

You brought your wound and your war and your fear

Home to me here in our bed

Taught me the thorn in the flesh wound of sex

Gradually I learned to live

According to these strange taboos

I learned to go on living and

Sometimes only fucked and judged and fucked and judged

But wanted always only to love

Even with galactic distances between our souls

In recreational sex till the messiah comes

I sought love on the beach and love in the bar

I sought love in the eyes of a stranger

Who looked for all the world like a friend

To help the wound to mend

The gap in the heart of the soul

Till the wound heals and we are whole

Meanwhile

I write confessional poetry

  shadows of

  what should I blame

  a catholic girlhood

  a father’s vice

Some strain across a fault zone in the planet’s heart

Some original sin in my soul

Meanwhile

I write recreational poetry

Kill the messiah every time he comes

  from what

  from fear, from habit

  ego, lack of trust

Some geo-centric allergy to dust

While in my heart I know we must

Love one another body heart and mind and soul

Till the wounds heal and we are whole

And kill these strange tabboos.

 

Tag Project I: Cleanup & Rules

When I began this project we had 3,622 tags, of which more than two-thirds are singletons (2,666).  In sorting through our existing list to see what’s what, I have already pared it down to about 3,560.  

I make a living working with databases and am somewhat fanatic about having a clean dataset.  The banes of my existence are duplicates and ambiguous or incomplete information. Keeping database size down is also a concern. Size can affect speed and performance.     The first phase of the Tag project will be to clean up duplicates and ambiguous info.  The second phase we’ll look at the singletons and see where we can consolidate tags to keep the numbers and size down.    

Before we go any further, meet our Official Tag Team mascots:  

I did some research at the Daily Kos tag cleanup project.   They are trying to pare 40,000 tags down to a list of 5,000.    They have a nice Standard Tags page with 1500 of the most popular tags.  I hope to have something similar available here.  In the meantime, use theirs as a reference.   I relied on their expertise to make decisions about how to handle issues with our tags on things such as punctuation, abbreviations and proper names.  

Thus, I have drafted the following rules:  

None of these are set in stone.  They are guidelines, more than rules.   And there are always exceptions.  

1. Every essay should have at least one tag.

There is a Diary Topic pick list in the Essay editor.  If nothing else, use this as your first tag – or if none apply, put something else in the tag field.  I will put a note in the “rules” to alert people to choose a topic.  This list could still use some refinement.  

Exception:  I know of at least one member here that does not want their essays tagged.   A solution to this is to use the “No Tags” tag if you don’t want tags and also to be sure that no one else adds them inadvertently.

2. Tags should be single words, first & last names, or short phrases.

3.  Maximum characters for a tag is 45.  There is probably a limit to the total tags you can fit in the box but I’m not sure what it is.  

4.  Proper names.

Use first and last names.

Use initials only to disambiguate individuals, e.g. George W. Bush and George H.W. Bush

Use periods after intials or a prefix/suffix, e.g. Robert F. Kennedy Jr.    

No nicknames  – unless that is the most common usage, e.g. Dick Cheney instead of Richard Cheney.

Spelling variations – if there are multiple variants, check the existing tags and select the most frequently used form. e.g. Al-Qaeda / al-Qaida  

Don’t include titles or ranks with names.  Rep. John Conyers or Gen. Wesley Clark.

5. Use the plural form of nouns, e.g. dogs, movies, candidates.

6.  Punctuation –

Do not use periods, hyphens, quotes, question marks, exclamation points or any other non-alphanumeric characters.  

Remove extra spaces between words.  

Exceptions:

Congressional bills and resolutions, e.g. H.R. 1221, H.Res 333 and S. 2323  

Proper Names with initials or Jr.

URLs www.123.com

Congressional Districts CA-42

U.S. and U.N.  (for United States and United Nations)

7. Abbreviations –

Avoid abbreviations or acronyms unless it is a commonly used reference, e.g. ACLU, FISA.

If you use acronyms, make sure the full name is also spelled out in a tag.  (be aware, char. limit is 45)  

Do not abbreviate states.

8. Duplication –

To avoid duplicate tags, check the current tag list.  Here is the tag list in Alphabetical Order.  Right now it is fairly quick to load this list.  The fewer tags the better.     When you are on the page, you can search it in your browser… press Ctrl+F keys to Find.  Sorry this is a clunky way to search but that’s the best we can do right now.

9. Profanity?  Preferable that it not be put in tags but it’s not like we would ban people for it.

10. Recommended and Promoted tags?   I am ambivalent about these.  However, some essays here are already being tagged as such.    I will leave this up for discussion.  

What is the point of all this?

Things we can do with tags…

Soapblox has a couple of built-in bloxes that make use of the tags:  HotTags, Subjects, and Feeds.  In the right column (on the front page) these are sections called Hot Tags, Topics, and Action Alert.      The Hot Tags show the top tags in use over a given period of time (the number of tags and time length are set by the admin).  I dislike the Hot Tags because it overemphasizes the Pony Parties and Open Thread.  That’s not the most important thing happening here.   Curiously, while the Pony Party is supposed to be an Open Thread, none of the PP’s use the Open Thread tag.  But this is a meta discussion for another time.  

One alternative to the HotTags is the Topics blox.   This is a much better index of our most popular tags.  Interestingly, it is the same list of topics that I have added to the drop-down list in the Essay editor.  Do people like these tags?  Should there be more/fewer?    As another alternative, it is possible for us to ditch the Hot Tags and Topics and create our own custom Tags blox – with whatever subjects we want.

Feeds

The Action Alert blox is a feed of the most recent essays on our site that are tagged “Action”.  As you can see, I have tagged this Essay with Action – so that it will stay visible for our tag crew.    We could create other mini-feeds for Environment, Elections, or whatever, from our own site or pulling feeds from other sites.  For example, the ACLU has an Action Alert feed too.  I could put their feed right below the Take Action feed for our site.   Unfortunately, they don’t seem to keep their alerts up-to-date; the last posted was in 2007.   Note – for the feeds we control how many articles are listed.  I have the Action list set to 4 right now.  

The dharmazine.  This is notlightnessofbeing’s project.  It is a very cool way to aggregate our topics into more of a news format, allowing one to scan the headlines at-a-glance.  As we get more organized, and nlob gets some breathing room from settling into his new place, this “zine” can be revisited.

Widgets – there are a lot of sexy widgets out there that can be hooked up to Docudharma feeds and placed on our site or shared around the web.    nlob and News Corpse know a lot more about this than I do.  It looks like the wave of the future to me.  

Speaking of the future – Soapblox will soon be open source.  We should be able to construct a Tag Search function (which is not available right now) and do lots of cool things we haven’t even imagined yet.    

Tag Cleanup Project

Tags may be modified or corrected (based on the rules above) for misspellings, duplicates, ambiguous abbreviations, incomplete names, consolidation of topics,  incorrect punctuation, or wordiness.  

I have identified sets of tags based on: abbreviations, plurals, groupings, proper names, spelling errors, multiple words, and others that I have never heard of or don’t know what they mean.   For the latter, I just want someone to verify they are valid and spelled correctly.  

Clean-up lists will be posted in the comments below.   For those that want to help out, reply to the list that you want to work on.  Come back and and post another comment  when you are finished.   When all that is done I can re-analyze the list to work on consolidating the one-of-a-kind tags where possible.  Going forward just keep an eye on tags in the essays you read and make corrections or suggestions where warranted.    

Brief instructions:

The best way to find the errant tags is to use the alphabetized tag list and scroll through.  

Click on the tag and it will bring up all the essays with that tag.  

Go into the Essay, click the Add/Edit tags button.  

Make changes or do what you need to do.  

Click the Add/Edit tag button again to save the changes.  

Click the back button a couple times to return to the Essay list or go all the way back to the alphabetized tag list.  

Choosing to be inspired, a candidate’s wife and a grassroots campaign

That’s right, I’m a candidate’s wife, it happened rather quickly too.  Well, I’ve been married to the guy for almost ten years, but the candidate part has unfolded in just a few days.

Now, why am I not the candidate?  Oh, it’s a long story and I’ve not been as good of a Democrat as my husband has been, really.  I am still registered as Decline to State.  Yes, how is that for a confession?  But Gary, my husband, has been registered as a Democrat for many years and he unabashedly calls himself a party loyalist.

So how did this come about?  Let me tell you…

We live in Orange County, Ca.  It is a red County to many but emerging to be more purple than anything else.  I started my political blogging last year when I decided to get involved in the Presidential Primaries.  I chose my candidate and I was off and running.  I found my voice during this time and was and still am a proud contributor to EENR.  It made me sane.

I also decided to get involved in local politics because in order to make real change we need to be aware of the political atmosphere closest to home.  It’s the sort of change we can have more influence over and it also can lead to a more involved community and electorate.  And, it was time to let Orange County know that there were many more proud Democrats than ever thought of before.  

Gary and I live in the California State Senate district number 33.  When a call to run was sent out last week I thought, well why not? Oh, that’s right I was ineligible.  But to think that no one was going to run as a Democrat seemed unimaginable to me. If a Democrat doesn’t run then how can a Democrat win?

That’s when I asked my husband if he had any interest in running.  Yes, that was it.  He said he’d think about it and I got him to talk to my contact in the Orange County Democratic Party Friday morning.  The next thing I know, he’s putting on a suit jacket and filing paperwork at the County’s registrar office! (How is this for a moment, Gary wanted to purchase some information from the Registrar but he didn’t have fifty cents in change on him.  He went to his car and a Republican running for another position in the County said he would have given him the money!  Gary got the change from his car and purchased the information on his own though.)

Okay, some of you know me, but who is this Gary guy?  What makes him think he can run for office?  Why not I say?  Gary has a Ph.d (UCI in Ethnomusicology) a Masters (Claremont College in Conducting) and a Bachelors (Chapman College in Conducting also) and is a tenured Professor at Cerritos College.  He’s great with people and one of the smartest people I know.  It’s a little annoying at times but he’s also smart enough to know not to make others feel dumb.  I’m hoping I can get him to come by and tell you more about himself, but for now, that’s just a little bit.

Most importantly, I’m really proud of him for taking this leap.  It’s a leap in my in my mind because it’s intimidating, especially when the last Republican took this district by almost 22%!  It also doesn’t help that there are 20% more registered Republicans than Democrats, but who lets things like pesky numbers stop them?  If a Democrat doesn’t run then how can a Democrat win?

My understanding is that there are two Republicans running in the Primary and both have raised half a million dollars each.  It seems like I’ve heard this one before but instead of 100 million dollar candidates, we have 500 thousand dollar candidates.  It’s still a half million more than what we have. (Mimi Walters is the Republican that is expected to win the nomination).

So what is next?  I have a stack of paperwork, forms and handouts and I set up our ActBlue page and it went active today!  I just had to fax over the applications Gary submitted to the Registrar to show that we are, indeed running for office. Wow, just typing that out is rather bizarre.

Both Gary and I have decided that we will run the best campaign possible even though getting that “D” on the ballot is an important first step.  The next thing to do?  Yes, raise money.  Grassroots is an understatement here but I also hope we can hire a Campaign Manager and a Treasurer so we can do it right.  If a Democrat doesn’t run then how can a Democrat win?

So, Gary’s politics?  I can’t speak for him directly, but I can tell you he’s a progressive and I’ve actually witnessed his “progress” over the last ten years.  Being a teacher has made education a priority for him, not only higher education my primary as well.  When we have more details on an actual platform (I can promise you this, it will be more detailed than Ms. Walters and it won’t simplify the issues either, there are complex and varied issues facing not just Southern California, but the entire State), you will be the first to know.  Well, maybe the second or third.  We don’t even have a website yet!  I couldn’t wait to share the news and I really wanted to talk about this, if a Democrat doesn’t run then how can a Democrat win?

Gary was impressed with Edwards and as far as I know, he was going to vote for him, but when John suspended his campaign he voted Obama.  

Gary’s ActBlue Page.

And, the candidate and his daughter Charlotte…

Photobucket

Cross posted everywhere 🙂

http://www.dailykos.com/story/…

http://www.calitics.com/showDi…

Let’s March 4th Together for Obama

Over three weeks ago in a posting on DailyKos and other political blogs I launched the Obamathon. A drive to help Barack Obama win on February 5th. Twenty-two states voted that day so it is hard to firmly say who won and who lost but when this campaign started over a year ago I never would have dreamed that we would do so well. Since then eight states have voted and every single one has handed Obama a victory. Now we are hearing that Obama will win Wisconsin, we will see how that plays out. Later tonight the polls will close in Hawai’i and we will see how Obama does there.

But no matter what the final results of those states are one thing is clear. We must March 4th Together for Barack Obama. What does this mean? It means on March 4th four states will vote. Rhode Island, Vermont, Ohio and Texas. It means whatever happens tonight and until then we must keep it going, we must March 4th. And we must do it together. That’s why I’m relaunching the Obamathon as the March 4th Together for Obama fundraising drive.

But this can not just be my drive. This has to be our drive. We must March 4th Together. Not only donate but spread the word, tell us why you donated, track the progress of it here. We start this campaign with $46,430 from 842 people. Everyone from college students to bestselling authors, retirees to Senate candidates, people of all walks have life have taken part in this campaign so far. How far can we take it? Can we hit $50,000? $75,000? $100,000? The sky is the limit.

But what’s the point? Why donate? Why the urgency? I can only speak for myself but I am doing this because of what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called the “the fierce urgency of now.”

Because for me, a 14 year old kid, the problems we face are urgent.

The climate crisis is urgent for me.

The war is urgent for me.

The economy is urgent for me.

The healthcare crisis is urgent for me.

The education system is urgent for me.

I have listed just a few problems that we face. But our challenges are numerous and many of them are urgent.

However, we can tackle these great problems together. As Barack says “Yes we can!”

Yes we can to justice and equality. Yes we can to opportunity and

prosperity. Yes we can heal this nation. Yes we can repair this

world. Yes we can.

So let us do this. Let us March 4th Together for Obama. Let us March 4th Together for the future. Yes. We. Can.

So if you can spare any change for change please send it in now. It doesn’t matter if it’s $5 or $2,300 or something in between. Take ownership of this campaign, help change the party, help change the world.

And if you want to help out even more consider taking more action. First of all, call people in March 4th states. Also last Sunday I wrote a diary about 5 easy ways to get active. Check it out. Also one more thing. My fellow blogger snout launched the Obama Action Network, it is a group for all Obama supporters who are taking action. It will be a great resource to help you take action and have fun while you’re doing it. Action, fun and change. Does it get better? There are so many ways you can get involved, so pick one and try.

Now let us begin. Now let us rededicate ourselves to the long and bitter, but beautiful, struggle for a new world. This is the calling of the sons of God, and our brothers wait eagerly for our response. Shall we say the odds are too great? Shall we tell them the struggle is too hard? Will our message be that the forces of American life militate against their arrival as full men, and we send our deepest regrets? Or will there be another message-of longing, of hope, of solidarity with their yearnings, of commitment to their cause, whatever the cost? The choice is ours, and though we might prefer it otherwise, we must choose in this crucial moment of human history.

-Dr. Martin Luther King Jr

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