Daily Kos


I run a small metaphysical bookstore in San Francisco. A life-long Democrat, I've been recently energized & actively engaged by two things -- the disastrous policies of George W Bush, and the positive leadership of Howard Dean.

Meet with McNerney, Tauscher, Miller, and Garamendi this Saturday

Sun Aug 19, 2007 at 06:11:02 PM PDT

Coming up is an excellent opportunity to meet with three of the East Bay's Representatives in Congress -- Jerry McNerney, Ellen Tauscher, and George Miller.

This coming Saturday afternoon (Aug 25 from 11-3), the Contra Costa Democratic Party and the Contra Costa County Central Labor Council are hosting a "Spirit of 76" BBQ in Danville.

Come and speak with your Representatives about issues important to you and the progressive cause. It should be well  worthwhile and a fun day out.

Details on the flip side...

Poll

If you're in CA-7, CA-10, or CA-11, are you going?

83%5 votes
16%1 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes

| 6 votes | Vote | Results

Howard Dean's Challenge to all of us

Sun Aug 12, 2007 at 12:43:15 PM PDT

Howard Dean met with a small group of Democracy Bond holders at YearlyKos in a special meeting before his keynote.  He is looking to get 500,000 grassroots stakeholders in the Democratic Party and begin to displace the influence of corporate investors. He's asked each of us who hold Democracy Bonds to get five others to participate. My personal goal is 500 more Democracy Bond holders from DailyKos. Thank you to the 42 people who have said yes so far.


To win in the South and the West we've got to build our locally-based field organizations on the ground, and that takes a commitment of funds. It's known as "The Fifty-State Strategy".

I'd like to invite you all to invest in a Democracy Bond via my page.

More about what you can do to meet the challenge below the fold:

Poll

Are you a Democracy Bond holder?

22%10 votes
33%15 votes
33%15 votes
6%3 votes
4%2 votes

| 45 votes | Vote | Results

Ellen Tauscher co-sponsors Inslee's impeachment bill. Where's YOUR Rep?

Thu Aug 02, 2007 at 06:03:59 AM PDT

Apologies for the short diary, but no open thread available, and as this was such a prominent issue in the last few days that got everyone so worked up, I wanted to post on it here.

As of yesterday, Rep Ellen Tauscher (CA-10) is one of 20 co-sponsors to Jay Inslee's bill, H.RES.589 recommending impeachment of Alberto Gonzales.

To put this in perspective, she is one of the first co-sponsors of this bill. Based on that, I suspect that someone in her office screwed up on the "unimpeachable office" quote.  For all the brickbats thrown at Rep Tauscher on this, there should be an equal number of kudos and thank yous. She did the right thing here and should be recognized for doing so.
 

Poll

Have you called YOUR rep to co-sponsor?

36%8 votes
27%6 votes
36%8 votes

| 22 votes | Vote | Results

My letter to my parents on values and voting

Sat Oct 07, 2006 at 11:28:44 AM PDT

Not sure how much good it will do, but I felt compelled to do it, and thought I'd share it with you all.

Subj: This I believe: including some Garrison Keillor and some background

Dear Mom & Dad,

E and I really enjoyed seeing you all this last weekend. Sorry it was so short what with classes and all. Thank you so much for your hospitality - it was greatly appreciated. I love you all very much and it was very good to see you and long over-due.

One thing I did want to give you some background on. You may have noticed that I arrived very upset, and on the phone to my Senators. What was going on was this:  I was trying to stop our government from doing away with the nearly 800-year old right of habeas corpus (as enshrined in the Magna Carta, signed on my birthday in the year 1215), and from stepping officially further along on the path to torture. I was not successful, and the Republican Party (and a number of Democrats) has demonstrated once again that fear and power are more important than the basic American ideals of our inalienable human rights ("endowed by our Creator", I might add).

(more after the fold)

Is Venezuela the October surprise? (with poll!)

Tue Oct 03, 2006 at 01:07:50 AM PDT

It looks like Rumsfeld is starting saber-rattling about a potential invasion of Venezuela.

I never fully believed that there was enough key support to initiate a suicidal attack on Iran to try to rally people behind the disintegrating Republican Party, though I do believe there are people in this regime crazy enough to try it.

Hugo Chavez and Venezuela seem made to order for fulfilling a key role in the Ledeen Doctrine: "Every ten years or so, the United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean business."

Question is: Will they try it?

Poll

Will BushCo invade Venezuela?

3%2 votes
20%12 votes
48%29 votes
28%17 votes

| 60 votes | Vote | Results

House Admin chair Ehlers (R) stifles Paper-Trail voting

Mon Oct 02, 2006 at 09:24:41 AM PDT

Once again, just before Congress adjourned, the Republican Party has stifled any progress into reform of the flaws of HAVA, and are desperately clinging to electronic voting as their only hope to stay in power. (Interestingly, the two states that ban or restrict "exit polling" are Ohio and Florida.)

Rep Vern Ehlers (R-MI), the new head of the House Administration Committee (replacing the corrupt Bob Ney who recently resigned), felt forced to convene a kangaroo court on the issue, now that a majority of the House has co-sponsored Rush Holt's H.R. 550.

Check out the detailed report on the hearing in "Misinformation and Missed Opportunities".
Then contact your Congressperson and get them signed on as a co-sponsor of H.R. 550 if they aren't already.

Please call Zoe Lofgren (CA-16) on Verified Voting

Sat Jul 15, 2006 at 11:56:50 AM PDT

One of the most important issues facing our country is confidence in our voting system, and knowing that our votes count.  Rush Holt (NJ-D) had re-introduced his bill H.R. 550.  As of today, the bill has 199 co-sponsors. It needs 218 co-sponsors (over 50% of the House) to force it out of the committee by discharge petition to the floor (thanks AlanF).

As I was going through the list to spot some names that should be on there, I noticed a conspicuous absence -- Rep Zoe Lofgren (Dem CA - San Jose). Let's get her signed on ASAP and push the co-sponsor numbers over the top. It's especially important for her to hear from her constituents on this.

Please fax her, email her, phone her, and write her. Since it's the weekend, try letter, email, and fax. Put it on your  "to do" list to call her on Monday morning. (contact info and bill summary after the fold.) I'll post reminders as well. Thanks! We can do this!

Poll

Is your Rep on the co-sponsor list?

25%2 votes
75%6 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes

| 8 votes | Vote | Results

L Patrick Gray just died (Watergate FBI head)

Wed Jul 06, 2005 at 10:57:58 PM PDT

I just found the story that L. Patrick Gray died today.  

For those of you who have been asleep during the last few weeks of "Deep Throat" mania, Gray was named to replace J. Edgar Hoover as acting director of the FBI following Hoover's death, just in time for Watergate.  

There was lots of speculation and accusations (mostly by the right wing) that W. Mark Felt leaked info on the Watergate crimes because of bitterness about being passed over for the office. (If Felt had read the FBI Promotion Manual, he would have known that FBI heads are chosen alphabetically by their first initial, so it should have been obvious that W. Mark Felt would have been trumped by L. Patrick Gray in succeeding J. Edgar Hoover.)

L. Patrick Gray III, the former acting director of the F.B.I., whose misplaced trust in Richard M. Nixon and early missteps in handling the Watergate investigation made him a lasting victim of a scandal he ultimately helped to expose, died today at his home in Atlantic Beach, Fla. He was 88.

The cause was complications of pancreatic cancer, his family said.

More after the fold...

The filibuster *is* an up-or-down vote on nominees

Fri Apr 29, 2005 at 09:37:04 AM PDT

This is one of those things that seems patently obvious to me (perhaps because I'm missing something). It would go a long way to defusing the Republican "reasonable" argument for removing the filibuster on the ground that "Every nominee deserves an up-or-down vote".

The Democrats should be making the point that "The filibuster is an up-or-down vote on the nominee."

Poll

Would this argument?

40%4 votes
50%5 votes
10%1 votes

| 10 votes | Vote | Results

Help stop torture - support Markey's bill

Mon Feb 28, 2005 at 11:21:28 AM PDT

We have an opportunity to apply pressure to stop a horrendous practice - the continued normalization of torture through the practice of "extraordinary rendition" (or use of off-shore torturers).

Here's Bob Herbert in today's NYT:

As a nation, does the United States have a conscience? Or is anything and everything O.K. in post-9/11 America? If torture and the denial of due process are O.K., why not murder? When the government can just make people vanish - which it can, and which it does - where is the line that we, as a nation, dare not cross?

When I interviewed Maher Arar in Ottawa last week, it seemed clear that however thoughtful his comments, I was talking with the frightened, shaky successor of a once robust and fully functioning human being. Torture does that to a person. It's an unspeakable crime, an affront to one's humanity that can rob you of a portion of your being as surely as acid can destroy your flesh.

More below the fold on what you can do to help push this issue to the forefront...

Poll

Is it feeling like Germany in the 1930s?

57%11 votes
5%1 votes
36%7 votes

| 19 votes | Vote | Results

Cheney, Enron, and complicity in fraud

Thu Feb 10, 2005 at 01:17:58 AM PDT

David Lazarus, in today's San Francisco Chronicle, has a piece entitled Who Sets Energy Policy?, which examines Dick Cheney's complicity in the California energy fraud committed by Enron.

California ratepayers' worst suspicions were confirmed when audiotapes were released the other day revealing that Enron plotted in January 2001 to take a power plant offline in a deliberate bid to jack up electricity prices during the worst of the energy crisis.

What few people may realize, though, is that just three months after the company's power-plant conspiracy, which resulted in rolling blackouts throughout Northern California, Enron was making its case to the White House for why the government shouldn't cap energy prices.

And Vice President Dick Cheney, who met with then-Enron Chairman Ken Lay in April 2001 and was handed a secret memo stating the company's policy wishes, subsequently echoed Enron's position on why price caps are unnecessary.

More after the fold...

Reframing Lakoff's "nurturant parent"

Mon Dec 06, 2004 at 11:42:28 AM PDT

Lakoff's framing of the models of Republican/conservative versus Democratic/liberal through different parenting models is useful, but I think it is still a bit weak as a frame.

I would just subtly tweak Lakoff's "nurturant parent" phrase to "nurturant parents". This does a number of subtle things which I outline below the fold. I'd be interested in your thoughts.

Elimination of several 2004 presidental primaries

Mon Nov 10, 2003 at 10:56:57 PM PDT

Has anyone else seen this one? I haven't heard much fuss about this despite the potentially dire implications, especially with regard to state-wide races.

States question value of presidential primaries

So far, Kansas, Colorado and Utah -- all with Republican-controlled legislatures -- have canceled their state-run 2004 primaries.

Republican legislatures tried unsuccessfully to drop primaries in Arizona and Missouri, but Democratic governors either vetoed the primary bill or restored the funding.

Some Democrats complain that cutting primaries hurts them especially, with their crowded field of candidates. President Bush has no challenger.

Other Democrats, however, are pushing to get rid of primaries. Maine dropped its presidential primary for next year, and New Mexico effectively did -- it passed a law allowing parties to hold caucuses, and then-Democratic Gov. Bill Richardson set an early Feb. 3 caucus (June primaries will go on for other elections).

While there are some legitimate gripes regarding effectiveness/value of the later primaries in this compressed primary schedule, I would still consider this a "bad thing". Essentially the argument comes down to the states are starved for money so they're eliminating voting for cost reasons. Even the later presidential primaries will influence how a candidate runs in the general, even if they don't influence who runs in the general.

Do none of these states have any state races for which a primary would be justified? For example, Senate seats, or gubernatorial races?

Then there's the question of ulterior motive of cost-cutting-out primaries due to national Republican malfeasance. Protect Bush from a Republican challenger, or force the Democratic party to fund elections out of its own pockets, thus starving out funds for other purposes.

[Massachusetts Secretary of State William] Galvin, a Democrat, worries instead that the anti-primary push in GOP-controlled states is an effort to stop any criticism of Bush from within his party.

"They don't want a president on the ballot when people can come out and make a protest," he said.

But Christine Iverson, a spokeswoman at the Republican National Committee, said the decisions have been made by the states, not the national party, and for them cost is the main concern.

"There's no reason to spend the money when it isn't necessary," she said.

In some states where the government has chosen not to hold the primary, the state Democratic Party has decided to conduct one anyway and bear the cost itself.

South Carolina's Democrats are struggling to raise an estimated $500,000 for their Feb. 3 contest. Utah's Democrats also want their voters to have a say.

"We want to show the Utah Legislature they were wrong and the democratic process is alive in Utah," said state party chairman Donald Dunn.

I haven't yet looked into the implications of this on a state-by-state basis, but there's certainly a lot to think about.


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