Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Restricting the Vote
Sunday, July 20, 2014--The concerted national effort to restrict Americans' voting rights in 2012 was met with an equally dramatic pushback by courts, the press, and engaged citizens.
By Election Day, the worst laws had been blocked, blunted, postponed, or repealed.
At New York University School of Law, Brennan Center For Justice was instrumental in leading this fight.
Representing civil rights groups, Center attorneys helped win court rulings to block harsh voter ID laws in South Carolina and Texas that could have made it harder for hundreds of thousands to cast ballots.
The Center’s suit on behalf of the League of Women Voters and Rock the Vote blocked Florida’s new law, which had forced nonpartisan groups to end voter registration in the Sunshine State.
Thousands of voters were registered after the federal court ruled.
The Center led an extensive public opinion research project on attitudes toward voting.
Over 300 organizations used this cutting edge research to help win victories in Colorado, Minnesota, and elsewhere.
Overall in 2012, restrictive voting laws in 14 states were blocked, diluted, repealed, or postponed, which helped protect millions of votes.
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Boy, these conservatives are really something, aren't they?
They're all in favor of the unborn.
They will do anything for the unborn.
But once you're born, you're on your own.
Pro-life conservatives are obsessed with the fetus from conception to nine months.
After that, they don't want to know about you.
They don't want to hear from you.
No nothing.
No neonatal care, no day care, no head start,
no school lunch, no food stamps, no welfare,
no nothing.
If you're preborn, you're fine;
if you're preschool, you're f**ked.
Boy, these conservatives are really something, aren't they?
They're all in favor of the unborn.
They will do anything for the unborn.
But once you're born, you're on your own.
Pro-life conservatives are obsessed with the fetus from conception to nine months.
After that, they don't want to know about you.
They don't want to hear from you.
No nothing.
No neonatal care, no day care, no head start,
no school lunch, no food stamps, no welfare,
no nothing.
If you're preborn, you're fine;
if you're preschool, you're f**ked.
George Carlin
********************************************I was poor but a GOP die-hard:
How I finally left the politics of shame
By Anonymous in Las Vegas
Wednesday, Jul 16--I was a 20-year-old college dropout with no more than $100 in the bank the day my son was born in 1994.I’d been in the Coast Guard just over six months.
Joining the service was my solution to a lot of problems, not the least of which was being married to a pregnant, 19-year-old fellow dropout.
We were poor, and my overwhelming response to poverty was a profound shame that drove me into the arms of the people least willing to help―conservatives.
Just before our first baby arrived, my wife and I walked into the social services office near the base where I was stationed in rural North Carolina.
“You qualify for WIC and food stamps,” the middle-aged woman said.
I don’t know whether she disapproved of us or if all social services workers in the South oozed an understated unpleasantness.
We took the Women, Infants, Children vouchers for free peanut butter, cheese, and baby formula and got into the food stamp line.
Looking around, I saw no other young servicemen.
Coming from the white working class, I’d always been taught that food stamps were for the “other”―failures, drug addicts, or immigrants, maybe―not for real Americans like me.
I could not bear the stigma, so we walked out before our number was called.
Even though we didn’t take the food stamps, we lived in the warm embrace of the federal government with subsidized housing and utilities, courtesy of Uncle Sam.
Yet I blamed all of my considerable problems on the government, the only institution that was actively working to alleviate my suffering.
I railed against government spending (i.e., raising my own salary).
At the same time, the earned income tax credit was the only way I could balance my budget at the end of the year.
I felt my own poverty was a moral failure.
To support my feelings of inadequacy, every move I made only pushed me deeper into poverty.
I bought a car and got screwed on the financing.
The credit I could get, I overused and was overpriced to start with.
My wife couldn’t get or keep a job, and we could not afford reliable day care in any case.
I was naive, broke, and uneducated but still felt entitled to a middle-class existence.
If you had taken WIC and the EITC away from me, my son would still have eaten, but my life would have been much more miserable.
Without government help, I would have had to borrow money from my family more often.
I borrowed money from my parents less than a handful of times, but I remember every single instance with a burning shame.
To ask for money was to admit defeat, to be a de facto loser.
To make up for my own failures, I voted to give rich people tax cuts, because somewhere deep inside, I knew they were better than me.
They earned it.
My support for conservative politics was atonement for the original sin of being white trash.
In my second tour of duty, I grew in rank and my circumstances improved.
I voted for George W. Bush.
I sent him campaign money, even though I had little to spare.
During the Bush v. Gore recount, I grabbed a sign and walked the streets of San Francisco to protest, carrying my toddler on my shoulders.
I got emotional, thinking of “freedom.”
Sometime after he took office, I watched Bush speak at an event.
He talked of tax cuts.
“It’s the people’s money,” he said.
By then I was making even better money, but I didn’t care about tax cuts for myself.
I was still paying little if any income tax, but I believed in “fairness.”
The “death tax” (aka the estate tax) was unfair and rich people paid more taxes so they should get more of a tax break.
I ignored my own personal struggles when I made political decisions.
By the financial meltdown of 2008, I was out of the military and living in Reno, Nevada―a state hard hit by the downturn.
I voted libertarian that election year, even though the utter failure of the free market was obvious.
The financial crisis proved that rich people are no better than me, and, in fact, are often inferior to average people.
They crash companies, loot pensions and destroy banks, and when they hit a snag, they scream to be rescued by government largess.
By contrast, I continued to pay my oversize mortgage for years, even as my home lost more than half its value.
I viewed my bad investment as yet another moral failure.
When it comes to voting and investing, rich people make calculated decisions, while regular people make “emotional” and “moral” ones.
Despite growing self-awareness, I pushed away reality for another election cycle.
In 2010, I couldn’t support my own Tea Party candidate for Senate because Sharron Angle was an obvious lunatic.
I instead sent money to the Rand Paul campaign.
Immediately the Tea Party-led Congress pushed drastic cuts in government spending that prolonged the economic pain.
The jobs crisis in my own city was exacerbated by the needless gutting of government employment.
The people who crashed the economy―bankers and business people―screamed about government spending and exploited Tea Party outrage to get their own taxes lowered.
Just months after the Tea Party victory, I realized my mistake, but I could only watch as the people I supported inflicted massive, unnecessary pain on the economy through government shutdowns, spending cuts, and gleeful cruelty.
I finally “got it.”
In 2012, I shunned my self-destructive voting habits and supported Obama.
I only wished there were a major party more liberal than the Democrats for whom I could vote.
Even as I saw the folly of my own lifelong voting record, many of my friends and family moved further into the Tea Party embrace, even as conservative policies made their lives worse.
I have a close friend on permanent disability.
He votes reliably for the most extreme conservative in every election.
Although he’s a Nevadan, he lives just across the border in California, because that progressive state provides better social safety nets for its disabled.
He always votes for the person most likely to slash the program he depends on daily for his own survival.
It’s like clinging to the end of a thin rope and voting for the rope-cutting razor party.
The people who most support the Republicans and the Tea Party carry a secret burden.
Many know that they are one medical emergency or broken down car away from ruin, and they blame the government.
They vote against their own interests, often hurting themselves in concrete ways, in a vain attempt to deal with their own, misguided shame about being poor.
They believe “freedom” is the answer, even though they live a form of wage indenture in a rigged system.
I didn’t become a liberal until I was nearly 40.
By the time I came around, I was an educated professional, married to another professional.
We’re “making it,” whatever that means these days.
I gladly pay taxes now, but this attitude is also rooted in self-interest.
I have relatives who are poor, and, without government services, I might have to support them.
We can all go back to living in clans, like cavemen, or we can build institutions and programs that help people who need it.
It seems like a great bargain to me.
I’m angry at my younger self, not for being poor, but for supporting politicians who would have kept me poor if they were able.
Despite my personal attempts to destroy the safety net, those benefits helped me.
I earned a bachelor’s degree for free courtesy of a federal program, and after my military service I used the GI Bill to get two graduate degrees, all while making ends meet with the earned income tax credit.
The GI Bill not only helped me, it also created much of the American middle class after World War II.
Conservatives often crow about “supporting the military,” but imagine how much better America would be if the government used just 10 percent of the military budget to pay for universal higher education, rather than saddling 20-year-olds with mortgage-like debt.
Government often fails because the moneyed interests don’t want it to succeed.
They hate government and most especially activist government (aka government that does something useful).
Their hatred for government is really disdain for Americans, except as consumers or underpaid labor.
Sadly, it took me years―decades―to see the logic of supporting people who disdain me.
But I’m a super-slow learner.
I wish I could take the poorest, struggling conservatives and shake them.
I would scream that their circumstances or failures or joblessness are not all their fault.
They should wise up and vote themselves a break.
Rich people vote their self-interest in every single election.
Why don’t poor people?
Remember Jethro on The Beverly Hillbillies?
Doesn't Rick Perry remind you of him?
But Perry sports horned-rimmed glasses now so we're supposed to think he's no longer the moron he showed us on national TV.
Remember? He phucken forgot the third Department he’d eliminate?
He doesn't change from his Superman costume into Clark Kent with his studious look.
There are no longer phone booths...besides, he'd probably get arrested for fumbling with his shorts!
Sorry, Grover, you’re gonna have to come up with something better than glasses for this moron...Hillary’s gonna chew him up and spit him out like cheap chaw!
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We're in a time where corporations are treated like people and people are treated like things.
We're in a time where corporations are treated like people and people are treated like things.
Rev. William Barber
********************************************Rev. Barber is president of the North Carolina Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and he spoke these profound words of truth regarding the shutting of water to Detroit residents.
AlterNet / By Joe Conason
July 14, 2014
US Speaker of the House
John Boehner speaks during his weekly news conference on February 6,
2014 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC
Listening to Republicans in Washington (and Texas and Arizona)
scream about the "crisis" of migrant children arriving from Central
America on our southern border, it is puzzling to realize they don't
actually want to do anything to solve the problem. Nor do these
hysterical politicians -- led by that down-home diva Rick Perry, the
governor of Texas -- want to let President Barack Obama do anything,
either.
Understandably, the president is skeptical. "This isn't theater," he responded tartly. "This is a problem. I'm not interested in photo ops. I'm interested in solving a problem." As he knows, this episode is only the latest in a long sequence of similar clown shows, with Republicans citing ridiculous reasons to delay or prevent government action. His irritation is fully justified.
But perhaps Obama should have gone down to the border anyway, stood in the blazing sunlight with the dim governor for as long as Perry wished -- and allowed the television cameras to show that their presence had accomplished exactly nothing. Of course, if Obama showed up at the border, the Republicans assuredly would criticize him for wasting time on a photo op. They have become the party of perpetual whining.
When they aren't bleating about Obama, they're concocting weird theories about his secret plans to destroy America. Only last week, Perry coyly hinted -- although he said he didn't want to be "conspiratorial" -- that the White House must be "in on" the border crossings, because migrant kids couldn't have showed up en masse without "a highly coordinated effort."
Later, he tried to persuade CNN's Kate Bolduan that he didn't really mean what his idiotic words said -- an explanation everyone has heard from him before.
While Perry has taken the lead, he isn't the only elected official whose mouth spews absurdities on this subject. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., offered a policy approach that would please any simpleton, when he explained why the president's request for $3.7 billion in emergency funding looks far too big to him. "I've gone online and have taken a look on Orbitz and taken a look at what does it cost to fly people to El Salvador and Guatemala and Honduras. You have fares as low as $207. There's nonstop flights at $450. You take those numbers and it costs somewhere between $11 million and $30 million to return people in a very humane fashion," he opined.
Evidently nobody informed the Wisconsin senator about the myriad other costs involved in rounding up and caring for these terrified children, who are entitled to a court hearing and other consideration under an anti-trafficking law signed by former President George W. Bush. Anyone who wants to expedite their removal -- a disturbingly inhumane and unnecessary policy -- must first provide more courts, judges and lawyers. And anyone who wants a decent policy, which includes action against the drug warlords who are threatening and killing these innocents, must be prepared to spend more than the cost of an Orbitz ticket.
Some Republicans, notably Sen. Marco Rubio,
R-Fla., are urging the president to include their pet projects, such as
electronic verification requirements for employers and at border
crossings, in his spending bill. And many GOP lawmakers, having demanded
action on the border issue from Obama, are equally adamant that the
funding must be "offset" by cuts in other programs.
None of these geniuses appears to realize all their barking, carping and moaning are frustrating the president's attempt to address the "crisis" that is agitating them so fiercely. Or more likely, they know exactly what they're doing -- and the point, as usual, is to embarrass Obama.
But not every Republican talks total nonsense about the border and immigration. Alfonso Aguilar, who headed the Office of Citizenship under Bush, recently wrote: "Contrary to the narrative of some opportunistic politicians and pundits, this unfortunate situation is not the result of the Obama administration failing to enforce the law. In reality, most would-be-migrants believe that crossing the border has become much more difficult, and in the last decade, the U.S. government has greatly strengthened border security and interior enforcement."
Meanwhile, the majority of Americans is increasingly repulsed by the primitive nativism and partisan opportunism of Republican leaders on immigration. Democrats, independents and even many rank-and-file Republicans want a more decent and constructive policy. Ultimately, voters must grasp that the GOP is the greatest single obstacle to every vital reform. That day cannot come too soon.
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Have you ever wondered why Republicans are so interested in encouraging people to volunteer in their communities?
It’s because volunteers work for no pay.
Republicans have been trying to get people to work for no pay for a long time.
George Carlin
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Tennessee: Ayn Rand’s vision of paradise
The southern state ranks dead last in per capita tax revenue, and its low-income families are paying the price
This article originally appeared on AlterNet.
If you’re worried about where America is heading, look no further than
Tennessee. Its lush mountains and verdant rolling countryside belie a
mean-spirited public policy that only makes sense if you believe deeply
in the anti-collectivist, anti-altruist philosophy of Ayn Rand. It’s
what you get when you combine hatred for government with disgust for
poor people.Tennessee starves what little government it has, ranking dead last in per capita tax revenue. To fund its minimalist public sector, it makes sure that low-income residents pay as much as possible through heavily regressive sales taxes, which rank 10th highest among all states as a percent of total tax revenues. (For more detailed data see here.)
As you would expect, this translates into hard times for its public school systems, which rank 48th in school revenues per student and 45th in teacher salaries. The failure to invest in education also corresponds with poverty: the state has the 40th worst poverty rate (15%) and the 13th highest state percentage of poor children (26%).
Employment opportunities also are extremely poor for the poor. Only 25% have full-time jobs, 45% are employed part-time, and a whopping 30% have no jobs at all.
So what do you do with all those low-income folks who don’t have decent jobs? You put a good number of them in jail. In fact, only Louisiana, Georgia and New Mexico have higher jail incarceration rates.
From the perspective of Tennessee legislators, it’s all about providing the proper incentives to motivate the poor. For starters, you make sure that no one could possible live on welfare payments (TANF: Temporary Assistance to Needy Families). Although President Clinton’s welfare reform program curtailed how long a family can receive welfare (60 months) and dramatically increased the work requirements, Tennessee set the maximum family welfare payment at only $185 per month.
(That’s how much a top hedge fund manager makes in under one second.) As a result, the Volunteer State ranks 49th in TANF, just above Mississippi ($170).
She's pretty, but she's a misogynist snake...
Typical for FOX Noise--a beautiful blonde woman who tells men it's ok to hate and abuse women is conservative man's wet dream.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/07/11/1313219/-Megyn-Kelly-explains-why-Nancy-Pelosi-is-sexist-and-Hobby-Lobby-is-not?detail=email
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Conservatives say if you don't give the rich more money, they will lose their incentive to invest.
As for the poor, they tell us
they've lost all incentive
because we've given them too much money.
they've lost all incentive
because we've given them too much money.
George Carlin
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Another country heard from...
One of my readers sent me the link below, saying, "I knew that the Bush tax cuts were to blame for the continued tanking of the economy, but, not being an economist, I couldn't put my finger on why except for loss of capital for the gov't to use. Turns out there's a very simple explanation: if your tax rates are higher, you (as industry) have to invest more in your company to keep its economic engine running; if your taxes are lower, there's no disincentive to pull your money out whenever you can."
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/07/13/1313738/-Democrats-struggle-to-understand-how-Bush-Tax-Cuts-wiped-out-6-6-trillion-in-personal-income