“For all it’s tough talk, the Bush Administration has never been serious about national security.”Lends a lot of credibility to Naomi Klein’s argument — these clowns are just waiting for disaster to strike so they can[...]
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http://www.firedoglake.com/2007/09/25/five-fs-12-ds-and-2-incompletes/
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Add to myYahoo!Andrew Sullivan criticizes an advertisement by San Francisco's Folsom Street Fair recreating the[...]
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A lot of people say I'm confusing, and at least one reason is easy problems are no fun... once it's easy, why bother. Well, I do know reasons to bother with them, so here are some easy things:
Health Care: we should have nationalized health care.
Drug War: There is no drug war... drugs should be legal along with medical care.
Abortion: Abortion is a serious and grave personal decision, as is the decision to have open heart surgery. Its also a medical decision for a person to ultimately make for themselves on consultation with a doctor.
Guns, War and the Military: I will not say that military is necessary in the world, but right now, the power of the world is still in GUNS. That's just a fact of life. As for war, all war involves war crimes, which are some of the most horrific crimes known to humanity, and should only be undertaken fully realizing the crime one has willfully endeavored to engage in. The "noble purpose" is soiled, at best, and better be very important... in short the enemy really better be a hitler.
Libraries: are good things, lets have lots of them and fund them really well...
Education: I think it is good for parents to have choices about schooling, what school their child attends. I also think that school districts should have to support home schoolers... yes this is simple.
Socialism: We all support socialism to some degree... a catch all often being police, most people understand why we should not have a privatized police force, but instead have a socialized one (well, on paper).
Borders: We need a world where there are borders, to enable regulation, e.g. regulating the bringing of fruit into California, but the borders ought to be super permeable, like, "sign this guest book" permeable.
Free Trade: This would be good except that it's not so much about freedom at the moment, but about treating parts of the world like slaves. Still, in the long run I imagine a freely traveled world, and that would include trade. However, when the world is normalized with respect to labor costs a bit more, it won't make sense to ship cheap goods from halfway around the world, and we will have by then a return of local production.
Government: There isn't any government. Government is dead. No one governs us. The shadow plays on the cave wall still, but Government is dead. What there really is, is Common Infrastructure, and an organization to manage it using democratic input from the members of the common.
Technology and the Environment: Technology can be green. The use of poisonous technology is primarily a problem due to people that actually want to harm the environment... other than that, we can always green our technology. Biology is an evolution driven technology, and it is, obviously, "green"... so I take it as clear enough that the rest of our technology can be clean... it can clean our water, it can make healthy food. The fact that we don't use such technologies is a choice... and amazingly enough, due to a desire to control, oppress, and ultimately harm the environment as a misguided display of power.
What's difficult is how are a bunch of dogmatists in this world going to make it to the liberating reflection which exemplifies our future
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http://www.myleftwing.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=19003
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Add to myYahoo!And watch even more Republicans lose next year as a result of the idiot we have leading our country. More from AP.
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Add to myYahoo!Now this augurs well for a thorough inquiry into Blackwater's recent behavior in Iraq. Just three days after Rep. Henry Waxman announced his House Oversight and Government Reform Committee would hold...
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This tells us that, 50 years ago today, Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower stood up to Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus and resolved the case of the ?Little Rock Nine? (much of this post will come from this Wikipedia article).
Schools in that state had to desegregate as a result of the Brown vs. Board of Education ruling in 1954. However, segregationists refused to allow nine black students into Central High, with the support of Faubus, who ordered the Arkansas national guard to support the segregationists by blocking the black students from entering the school.
Eisenhower warned Faubus to allow the nine students to enter, but when he didn?t, the U.S. Justice Department requested an injunction against the governor's deployment of the National Guard from the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas in Little Rock. Judge Ronald Davies granted the injunction and ordered the governor to withdraw the National Guard on September 20.
The governor backed down and withdrew the National Guard, and the Little Rock Police Department took their place. Hundreds of protesters, mostly parents of the white students attending Central High, remained entrenched in front of the school. On Monday, September 23, the police quietly slipped the nine students into the school.
When the protesters learned that the nine black students were inside, they began confronting the outnumbered line of policemen. Under threat of a near riot, the nine students were escorted out of the school.
The next day, Woodrow Mann, the Mayor of Little Rock, asked President Eisenhower to send federal troops to enforce integration and protect the nine students. On September 24, the President ordered the 101st Airborne Division of the United States Army to Little Rock and federalized the entire 10,000 member Arkansas National Guard, taking it out of the hands of Governor Faubus. The 101st took positions immediately, and the nine students successfully entered the school on the next day, Wednesday, September 25, 1957. After some time, each African-American student was given an individual escort inside Central High, to prevent harassment by other students.
Eisenhower took bold action to do the right thing by the students in compliance with the Supreme Court?s ruling in Brown, and somehow I really don?t think he cared about the subtleties of ?the states rights question? as he did so.
Now, we have the story of the Jena 6 (a full Wikipedia chronology is noted here), and after a recent demonstration in which a huge number came out in support of Mychal Bell, Carwin Jones, Bryant Purvis, Theo Shaw, Robert Bailey, and Jesse Ray Beard (Bell is the only one currently incarcerated while the District Attorney considers whether to appeal the verdict overturning Bell?s conviction or try Bell as a juvenile), it now appears that a large number of white supremacists are going to rally in support of the actions of Murphy McMillin, the mayor of Jena, and Justin Barker, the white student beaten at Jena High School allegedly by the six, as well as others decrying what they perceive as injustice against whites.
This story tells us the following?
First a neo-Nazi Web site posted the names, addresses and phone numbers of some of the six black teenagers and their families at the center of the Jena 6 case and urged followers to find them and "drag them out of the house," prompting an investigation by the FBI.And today, the following column by the Rev. Jesse Jackson appeared in the Chicago Sun Times, notably this excerpt about the threat from the white supremacists (say what you want about him, but at times like this, he speaks from experience).
Then the leader of a white supremacist group in Mississippi published interviews that he conducted with the mayor of Jena and the white teenager who was attacked and beaten, allegedly by the six black youths. In those interviews, (Mayor McMillin) praised efforts by pro-white groups to organize counterdemonstrations; the teenager (Barker) urged white readers to "realize what is going on, speak up and speak their mind."
Over the weekend, white extremist Web sites and blogs across the Internet filled with invective about the Jena 6 case, which has drawn scrutiny from civil rights leaders, three leading Democratic presidential candidates and hundreds of African-American Internet bloggers. They are concerned about allegations that blacks have been treated more harshly than whites in the criminal justice system of the town of 3,000, which is 85 percent white.
Threats by neo-Nazi white-supremacy groups need to be taken seriously. These groups are heavily armed and dangerous.Indeed it is.
The governor and attorney general of Louisiana are silent. The local prosecutor remains belligerent. This is a time for federal intervention. The federal government intervened in Little Rock and Selma. Local authorities refuse to discharge their duty. The government must act now. I urge President Bush to intervene.
The presidential candidates in both parties should also exercise leadership here, speaking clearly about the need for reconciliation and justice. Republican candidates particularly should demonstrate that they can rise above racial divides to demand fairness and justice in America. Thus far, Republicans have been campaigning as if all America were a white suburb. They cited "scheduling conflicts" to avoid a debate sponsored by a historically black college. Other than John McCain, they ducked the Univision Latino debate. This disdain for reaching out caused former Republican vice presidential nominee Jack Kemp to complain, "What are we going to do -- meet in a country club in the suburbs one day?"
But the Democratic nominees should not assume that they can inherit minority votes. They have to earn them. Standing up for justice and against this kind of hatred is an essential measure of leadership.These threats are serious. The FBI should be investigating; the Justice Department intervening. The civil rights laws were passed to empower the federal government to act.
It is time for George W. Bush to stand up.
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Add to myYahoo!United Autoworkers Pickets in Flint, MichiganFreedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose,Nothing don’t mean nothing honey if it ain’t free, now now.And feeling good was easy, Lord, when he sang the blues,You know feeling good was good enough for me,Good enough for me and my Bobby McGee.Strike. It is a word that has [...]
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ill-walk-in-our-shoes-the-uaw-strike.html
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Add to myYahoo!I just got off the phone with Caroline Fredrickson from the ACLU, and the news is about what you'd[...]
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http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/OpenLeft-FrontPage/~3/161261984/showDiary.do
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Add to myYahoo!If Rudy is elected president, then every year we can sing 9/11 carols around the 9/11 tree.
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Add to myYahoo!Our high-school-aged readers (or the high-school-aged children of our middle-aged readers) are[...]
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