Showing posts with label States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label States. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Michael Lewis: ‘United States stock market is rigged’

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Michael Lewis: ‘United States stock market is rigged’

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Charlie Rangel: Tea Party is made up of “mean, racist people” from former “slave-holding” states

The NYC congressman still can’t figure out why Obama thought he could cut a deal with the Tea Party




    








Salon.com



Charlie Rangel: Tea Party is made up of “mean, racist people” from former “slave-holding” states

Illinois Residents Fight Back Against The State’s Coal Industry

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Illinois Residents Fight Back Against The State’s Coal Industry

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Green diary rescue: Fracktivists across several states, #Up4Climate talkathon, climate storytelling



Every week Daily Kos diarists write dozens of environmentally related posts. Many don’t get the readership they deserve. Helping improve the odds is the motivation behind the Green Diary Rescue. In the past seven years, there have been 266 of these spotlighting more than 16,367 eco-diaries. Below are categorized links and excerpts to 83 more that appeared in the past seven days. That makes for lots of good reading during the spare moments of your weekend. [Disclaimer: Inclusion of a diary in the rescue does not necessarily indicate my agreement with or endorsement of it.]

Climate Change – Now For The Real Challenge—by xaxnar: “The science debate about Global Warming and Climate Change is over. The science is conclusive. The problem now isn’t the science; it’s the politics and we need to engage on that basis. We have the facts on our side: every day brings more evidence. Every day it gets harder for the deniers to pretend nothing is happening. Their excuses are increasingly threadbare and their desperation is increasingly frantic. If anything they’re becoming more blatant about their obstructionism as the stakes increase. What we need to do now is more than just communicate the facts of Climate Change to people. We have to inspire them in ways that engage their emotions as well as their minds, give them true stories they can understand in terms of their own lives and daily routines, find ways for them to engage on the issue to force action while there is still time, and give them hope for a better future. It’s not rocket science—it’s political science.”


green dots

Dawn Chorus: Birding the Great Indoors (Part 1)—by Eddie C: “This is a Bronx Tale from an ersatz birder. As most real bird watchers are all excited about the spring arrival of those funny colored sparrows, my birding season is coming to an end. I’m like one of those old winter mall walkers but since I don’t care much for shopping, I go all ‘Animal House’ each winter. You know what they say ‘You never know who you’ll run into in the Bronx.’ Actually this is part one in the story of three exotic bird buildings in the Bronx Zoo. For you wild birders, the 265 acres of the Bronx Zoo is ‘an important rest stop along the mid-Atlantic flyway and a green oasis in the midst of the big city.’ In the wintertime when the pickings are slim you can always learn a thing or two about and try your hand at capturing some images of birds from very far away neighborhoods.”

Inca terns at the Bronx Zoo
Inca terns


green dots

From peddling cigarettes to youth to peddling fracking to Californians—by TXsharon: “David Quast worked for Philip Morris from 1997 to 1998 as manager of media affairs. He still brags about writing their Youth Smoking Prevention program that was designed to subtly lure youth to smoke. [...] Quast has a new job now. He goes by Dave Quast and is senior director in the Strategic Communications segment at FTI Consulting, the same consulting firm that promoted destabilization and violence in Venezuela. He is Director of Energy In Depth’s California division, where he does the same tasks he did at Philip Morris. Quast made his presence known in California at public comments sessions, as he berated environmentalists looking to strengthen the states scientific study on fracking. Calling them extremists, and out of touch, he proceeded to reassure Californians that fracking is a safe practice that has been done in California for decades with full transparency. The fact is that is that California regulators didn’t even know fracking was happening in the state, and didn’t acknowledge its full existence until 2012.”

green dots

Why I am not (much) here any more.—by RLMiller: “I set foot in the real world of California Democratic Party politics—’tis a scary and dangerous place. I injected myself into a party resolution, originally calling for a moratorium on fracking, to keep it from being watered down to calling for a wait-and-see-about-regulations. I networked with party activists and trusted smart people to get the strong moratorium passed through the party—it was, last year. At the same time, I ran for chair of the party’s environmental caucus, and won, thanks in large part to the netroots. We had a nice meeting last Friday night at my caucus before going on to the general session on Saturday. UnfrackCal at CDP. Fracking has shot up to the top of California Democrats’ environmental concerns. Water use worries us—we’re in a drought. Earthquakes related to wastewater injection concern us—our state’s messy geologic beds don’t need to be the site of an uncontrolled scientific experiment. Worst of all for a state priding itself on climate leadership, California is being fracked for dirty oil, not natural gas—the most carbon-intensive oil in the world, dirtier than the Canadian tar sands, are found just off the 101 freeway. If we could stop fracking anywhere, we could stop it in California…or could we?”

green dots

What’s an Oil Spill Between Friends?—by Liberty Equality Fraternity and Trees: “In response to the Deepwater Horizon disaster in 2010, when BP spilled five million barrels of oil into the Gulf and caused lasting, far-reaching economic damage to region as well as the deaths of 11 people, the EPA suspended and debarred 25 BP entities from obtaining new federal contracts in a November 2012 settlement. Until now, that is. The EPA just announced a new deal that allows the oil-drenched corporate criminal to start bidding for and receiving new federal contracts. Federal contracts have been a major source of revenue for BP. At the time of the ban, BP held at least $ 1.34 billion in federal contracts. The five-year agreement will require BP to retain an independent auditor approved by the EPA to conduct an annual review and report on the company’s compliance. BP will also drop a lawsuit filed against the EPA in federal court in Texas tied to the suspension. The deal conveniently comes just in time for the Interior Department’s scheduled lease sale for 40 million acres in the Gulf.”

You can find more rescued green diaries below the sustainable squiggle.




Daily Kos



Green diary rescue: Fracktivists across several states, #Up4Climate talkathon, climate storytelling

Scientists Quantify & Graphically Chart Energy Of Human Chakras In Various Emotional States

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Scientists Quantify & Graphically Chart Energy Of Human Chakras In Various Emotional States

Rep. Bridenstine: Obama Wants to "Bully" States into Common Core

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Rep. Bridenstine: Obama Wants to "Bully" States into Common Core

Friday, March 14, 2014

John Boehner"s ready to pop an orange aneurysm over states "cheating" to preserve food stamps

Speaker of the House John Boehner speaking at the Values Voter Summit in Washington, DC.
Careful there, John—don’t wanna burst a blood vessel


By now, you’re probably familiar with the brilliant move that at least half a dozen states have taken to preserve food stamp coverage, despite Republican attempts to cut the program under the recently passed farm bill. The new law requires that certain food stamp recipients receive at least $ 20 in home heating assistance per year in order to still qualify for food aid. Previously, as little as $ 1 a year in heating help was enough to make many people eligible for food stamps.

So a number of states, including New York, Pennsylvania, and Montana, had a very simple response: bump up everyone’s heating aid to $ 20 a year. That cost New York, for instance, just $ 6 million in state funds but allowed $ 457 million in federal benefits to keep flowing to 300,000 families. Conservatives, predictably, are outraged, and Republican House John Boehner looks like he’s about to pop an orange aneurysm:


“Since the passage of the farm bill, states have found ways to cheat, once again, on signing up people for food stamps. And so I would hope that the House would act to try to stop this cheating and this fraud from continuing.”


It’s a fascinating world we live in, where following the letter of the law is now considered “cheating” and “fraud” by Republicans (as long as you’re helping the disadvantaged, of course). And note that it’s not just Democrats who’ve increased heating assistance—Pennsylvania’s Republican governor has signed on as well.

Of course, Boehner is full of crap, because the law’s the law and it’s not getting changed any time soon. But there are nine other states that make use of the “heat and eat” program that haven’t yet followed suit, and Boehner may just be trying to intimidate them into inaction. There’s no reason for anyone to listen to him, though, because following the law is both perfectly legal and absolutely the right thing to do.


If you live in one of the nine remaining states where low-income Americans are still facing the threat of food stamp cuts—California, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Vermont, Washington, or Wisconsin—then click here to sign and send a petition directly to your governor, urging him to take the appropriate action to restore food stamp funding.




Daily Kos



John Boehner"s ready to pop an orange aneurysm over states "cheating" to preserve food stamps

Thursday, March 13, 2014

House GOP passes bill to force Obama to crack down on legal weed in states that allow it

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House GOP passes bill to force Obama to crack down on legal weed in states that allow it

Monday, March 10, 2014

19 States Join Lawsuit Against NJ Gun Law

Support is mounting for a lawsuit that challenges New Jersey’s tight restrictions on handgun ownership and its high standard of “justifiable need” for carrying a weapon outside the home.

Nineteen states as well as the powerful National Rifle Association have joined the case’s plaintiff John Drake, who in his lawsuit claims he was denied a permit following a thwarted robbery attempt on his Sussex County business.


Drake lost his appeal before a three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year and now a growing number of states, led by Wyoming, are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case, claiming New Jersey was wrong when it determined that the business owner failed to prove “justifiable need” to carry a gun under state statute.


Drake’s suit also claims that his right to bear arms under the Second Amendment has been violated.


Wyoming’s Republican Gov. Matt Mead said: “If the current decision stands, states providing greater protections than New Jersey under the Second Amendment may be pre-empted by future federal action.”


Drake runs an ATM servicing business and carries large amounts of cash, making him vulnerable to robbery attempts, and wants to carry a weapon as protection.


Drake joined in an existing lawsuit filed by a New Jersey pet shop owner who was kidnapped and savagely beaten, yet also had been denied a gun-carry permit. That man dropped out of the case when his permit for a weapon was approved.


“It seems unreasonable to me to have to wait until you’re beaten up or shot at to get a permit,” Drake told New Jersey’s Star-Ledger.


Other gun-rights supporters agree.


“Americans should not have to ask their government for a permission slip to own a gun,” Dudley Brown, executive director of the National Association for Gun Rights, told Newsmax.


“The Second Amendment is a protected right, not a privilege,” Brown said. “New Jersey officials have overstepped their authority and New Jersey residents should have their right to self-defense upheld.”


The NRA announced in February that it will join the states in filing an amicus brief in the case.


“Law-abiding citizens have a constitutional right to defend themselves beyond their front doorstep,” Chris W. Cox, the executive director of the NRA’s Institute for Legislative Action, said in a statement. “New Jersey law unconstitutionally forces lawful gun owners to prove ‘justifiable need’ in order to carry a handgun for self-defense, showing specific threats or prior attacks. This is absurd. Our fundamental, individual Right to Keep and Bear Arms is not limited to the home.”


Wyoming, a deeply pro-gun state, has taken the lead in the case, spurred by Gov. Mead, who called the New Jersey law a threat to citizens’ freedom everywhere.


“This decision out of New Jersey impacts the right to keep and bear arms outside the home,” Mead said. “So I felt it was necessary to have the [state] attorney general support a petition to the Supreme Court to hear this case.”


Some in New Jersey are pushing back on the intervention from outsiders. A Feb. 18 editorial published by the website NJ.com called on them to “butt out.”


“States have broad powers to set gun policy, and in ours, a strong majority supports strict laws,” the editorial noted. “Most New Jerseyans don’t want to have to worry that the guy they’re fighting with over a parking spot might be packing heat. That’s why you need to show justifiable need to carry a handgun here.”


The editorial called out Wyoming for having the highest rate of gun deaths per capita in 2010. It continued: “Other states complain that if our policy is upheld, it could threaten their laxer standards. Please. Do they want us meddling in their gun laws? Because they actually do threaten our citizens by making it easier for dangerous people to acquire guns and bring them back East.”


New Jersey is asking the Supreme Court not to take the case, while at least three dozen members of Congress are urging the high court to take it up, according to the conservative website GOPUSA.com.


The case is not only being watched by gun rights proponents but also political observers who see an opportunity for New Jersey Republican Gov. Chris Christie, a possible 2016 presidential contender, to take a bold stand on the issue and shore up relations with the right.


Christie in the past has defended his state’s gun laws as “sensible” even as they have been described as among the nation’s most restrictive.


“Gov. Christie can burnish some important right-of-center credentials for a GOP presidential primary by supporting revisiting the requirement to prove ‘justifiable need’ to carry one’s handgun outside the home,” Republican strategist Cheri Jacobus told Newsmax.


“With 19 states joining in the lawsuit, this could be an important opportunity for him,” Jacobus said.


Jacobus said it might be easier to gather broad support against the law than against other gun-control measures.


“That New Jersey’s ‘justifiable need’ requirement prohibits people who have or carry large sums of money on them as part of their jobs from also carrying a handgun for protection is something even many who favor some gun restrictions can understand,” Jacobus said. “It is a mainstream concept that is not polarizing in the way the debates on assault rifle bans or waiting periods are.”


The coalition of states joining Wyoming in support of Drake includes: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, and West Virginia.


Related Stories:


© 2014 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



19 States Join Lawsuit Against NJ Gun Law

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Hedges: Jeremy Hammond Exposed State"s Plan to Criminalize Democratic Dissent

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Hedges: Jeremy Hammond Exposed State"s Plan to Criminalize Democratic Dissent

JFK conspiracy theories still grip Dallas and the United States, 50 years on - #Focus

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JFK conspiracy theories still grip Dallas and the United States, 50 years on - #Focus

Monday, February 17, 2014

The United States of Decline


America is unraveling at a stunning speed and to a staggering degree. This decline is breathtaking, and the prognosis is dim.


For starters, Obama now rules by decree. Reportedly for the 27th time, he has changed the rules of Obamacare singlehandedly, with neither congressional approval nor even ceremonial resolutions to limit his actions. Obama needs no such frivolities.


“That’s the good thing about being president,” Obama joked on February 10. “I can do whatever I want.” In an especially bitter irony, Obama uttered these despicable words while guiding French president François Hollande through Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson — a key architect of America’s foundation of limited government.



That very day, Obama decreed that the Obamacare mandate for employers with 50 to 99 workers would be postponed until 2016 (beyond an earlier extension to 2015), well past the November 2014 midterm elections. This eases the pressure on Democrats, whose campaigns would suffer if voters saw their company health plans canceled due to Obamacare’s unnecessary, expensive, mandatory benefits — e.g. maternity coverage for men.


So, by fiat, Obama has postponed the employer mandate. When Senator Ted Cruz (R., Texas) effectively tried to do this through legislation last fall, Democrats virtually lassoed and branded him.


Also by decree last week, Obama decided unilaterally to soften political-asylum rules. Refugees and other immigrants who provide terrorists “limited material support” now can come to America. So what if someone merely clothed and fed Mohamed Atta or Khalid Sheikh Mohammed? After all, garments and meals don’t blow up. Welcome to America, Mustafa!


Meanwhile, the Justice Department is working hard to revoke the asylum of and deport the Romeikes. This evangelical-Christian family was granted refuge in America to escape prosecution for homeschooling their children, which German law forbids.


So, Obama believes, those who are only somewhat helpful to deadly, anti-U.S. terrorists may become Americans, while religiously oppressed homeschoolers who face prison should get the hell out.


The transparent electoral motive that fuels so many of Obama’s executive orders seems unprecedented. The tone is also brand new. Obama’s predecessors have signed executive orders and, more or less, left it at that. But Obama pounds his chest as he does so. As he told Congress at last month’s State of the Union address: “America does not stand still — and neither will I. So wherever and whenever I can take steps without legislation to expand opportunity for more American families, that’s what I’m going to do.”


While appalled Republicans sat on their hands, Democrats stood up and shouted like equatorial, rubber-stamp parliamentarians: “Hooray! We are irrelevant!”


Chilling.


Meanwhile, as the American Enterprise Institute’s Marc Thiessen wrote in the February 10 Washington Post, new Congressional Budget Office figures show that Obamacare will reduce U.S. incomes by $ 70 billion annually between 2017 and 2024. The CBO also estimated that by 2021, Obamacare’s disincentives to hire and incentives not to work would slash labor hours by the equivalent of 2.3 million jobs.


Rather than dispute these figures, key Democrats embraced them.


“We want people to have the freedom to be a writer, to be a photographer, to make music, to paint,” said House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California. She added that “people would no longer be job-locked by their [health] policies, but have the freedom to follow their passion.”


So, rather than expand economic growth and jobs, Democrats applaud as Americans stop working — to do watercolors, draft poetry, and take naps — while exhausted taxpayers foot the bill.


Clearly unafraid of Obama, Iranian warships for the first time are steaming toward America’s Atlantic maritime borders. Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps navy commander Ali Fadayi said, “The Americans can sense by all means how their warships will be sunk with 5,000 crews and forces in combat against Iran and how they should find its hulk in the depths of the sea.” Tehran last week also aired fantasy videos of drones blasting a U.S. warship and bombing Tel Aviv. This is how Iran behaves while it negotiates with U.S. diplomats over “peaceful” uranium enrichment?


Nearby, embattled Syrians flee the city of Homs while they and their United Nations protectors dodge incoming mortar shells. This sorry spectacle has exposed Obama’s Syrian policy as a miserable flop. So does the fact that Syrian president Bashar Assad has handed over only 4 percent of the chemical weapons that his deal last September with Obama and Vladimir Putin was supposed to neutralize. According to GOP senators John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Secretary of State John Kerry privately conceded to them that Obama’s approach in Syria has failed.


America liberated Afghanistan from a regime that hosted al-Qaeda, banned kites and recorded music, and built a bridge to the seventh century. And what thanks does the U.S. get? Over American objections, Afghan president Hamid Karzai last week released 65 Taliban warriors from Bagram prison, where they were being held on suspicion of killing American troops, murdering Afghan civilians, deploying roadside bombs, and otherwise perpetrating mayhem. When U.S. officials complained that these killers could return to the fight — as have other Taliban thugs, once freed — Karzai exploded: “If the Afghan judicial authorities decide to release a prisoner, it is of no concern to the U.S. I hope that the U.S. will stop harassing Afghanistan’s procedures and judicial authority, and I hope the U.S. will now begin to respect Afghan sovereignty.”


For these and many other reasons, Democrats are fleeing Obama.


“I don’t care to have him campaign for me,” said Senator Mark Begich (D., Alaska).


A reelection ad for Representative Joe Garcia (D., Fla.) boasts that “he voted to let you keep your existing health plan, and he took the White House to task for the disastrous healthcare website.”


“He [Obama] is hurting the Democratic brand right now,” veteran Democratic campaign strategist Joe Trippi told Fox News Channel’s Megyn Kelly on February 12. “The Obamacare snafus, his approval rating is declining, and his credibility problems all drag the Democratic brand down.”


Rather than resist an increasingly weak — yet ever more assertive — Obama, GOP congressional leaders hand him whatever he wants. Thus, House speaker John Boehner and Senate GOP chief Mitch McConnell of Kentucky pushed through a $ 1.012 trillion budget with, at best, minuscule and illusory spending cuts. A $ 956 billion farm bill includes $ 3 million to promote Christmas trees (who on Earth would buy them without federal assistance?), $ 100 million for maple-syrup market research, and $ 170 million for catfish protectionism. Boehner and McConnell sent Obama this gift-wrapped monstrosity, which was $ 56 billion higher than Obamacare’s original price tag. And in exchange, Obama gave them . . . zippo!


On February 12, Boehner and McConnell helped send Obama a measure to suspend the debt limit until March 15, 2015. (The debt ceiling was not raised from $ 17.2 trillion to a higher level; it simply was removed. The gas pedal remains in Obama’s Little Red Cor-debt, but the brakes are gone.) This passed the GOP House with Boehner and only 27 Republicans voting yes. The other 194 votes were from Democrats. When McConnell surrendered on cloture, 11 other Republican senators helped Democrats advance their dirty work. The debt ceiling is now a debt sunroof.


And what did Washington’s top two Republicans get for giving Obama 13 months to shop till America drops? Nothing! No repeal of Obamacare’s $ 47 billion bailout of health insurers. No approval of the Keystone XL Pipeline. No termination of the cure-killing medical-device tax. No votes on these matters, which would have forced Democrats to choose. This could have helped Republican candidates in November.


Steely resolve could stymie the unpopular and untrustworthy Obama. Sadly, Boehner, McConnell, and other GOP leaders are as firm as foil.



Happy Valentine’s Day! The Senate Conservatives Fund has broken up with House Speaker John Boehner.


“Republicans are giving up because they know that winning is impossible when their leaders are determined to lose,” the Senate Conservatives Fund stated. “These leaders have telegraphed weakness to the Democrats and sabotaged conservative efforts so many times that Republicans now have no leverage.” The group concluded: “John Boehner must be replaced as Speaker of the House. . . . Unless we install a new leader who will actually go on offense, Democrats will never fear us and we will never have any leverage.”


Also, Earth’s sole superpower is sagging where it should be No. 1. America has slouched to No. 12 on the 2014 Heritage Foundation/Wall Street Journal Index of Economic Freedom.


“Now considered only a ‘mostly free’ economy, the U.S. has earned the dubious distinction of having recorded one of the longest sustained declines in economic freedom, second only to Argentina, of any country in the [20-year] history of the Index,” the report states. “The U.S. is the only country to have recorded a loss of economic freedom each of the past seven years.”


Regarding graft, America has stayed stable in Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index. Unfortunately, and as recently as 2013, the U.S. has remained Earth’s 19th most honest country.


Thanks, in part, to Team Obama’s surveillance of journalists from Fox News Channel and the Associated Press, America tumbled 13 spots down Reporters Without Borders’ 2014 World Press Freedom Index. The U.S. dropped this year from No. 33 to No. 46. Hence, 45 nations now have freer journalists than does America. RWB calls America “satisfactory” rather than the top-rated “good.” As the report states: “Amid an all-out hunt for leaks and sources, 2013 will also be the year of the Associated Press scandal, which came to light when the Department of Justice acknowledged that it had seized the news agency’s phone records.”


America is a total mess.


The Land of the Free is governed by an out-of-control egomaniac, neither bolstered by managerial competence nor hindered by the legislature’s institutional prerogatives. In the Home of the Brave, half of Congress cheers Obama’s unconstitutional behavior, while the other half grumbles and then meekly carpet-bombs his path with white flags.


The American people have been betrayed — both by Obama and the Democrats, whose lust for control intensifies daily, and by Republican leaders in Washington, whose cowardice and defeatism have turned their guts and spines into tapioca.


America, as Paul Simon sings, is slip-slidin’ away. And the worst part hasn’t happened yet.


— Deroy Murdock is a Manhattan-based Fox News contributor and a media fellow with the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace at Stanford University.




WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



The United States of Decline

Thursday, February 13, 2014

California Lawmakers Want To Protect Rape Victims By Updating The State’s Definition Of ‘Consent’

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California Lawmakers Want To Protect Rape Victims By Updating The State’s Definition Of ‘Consent’

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Arizona: Committee will be voting on the Convention of States Project application

Arizona: Committee will be voting on the Convention of States Project application
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There will be a crucial vote in Arizona tomorrow. The Federalism and Fiscal Responsibility Committee will be voting on the Convention of States Project application HCR 2027 tomorrow at 2:00pm MST at the Arizona State Legislature in Phoenix.


The application was proposed by Rep. Kelly Townsend, R-Mesa.


“Our federal representatives have created a national debt that threatens our most basic freedoms,” Townsend said, “and threatens the liberty of generations to come. The states must act now to forestall further damage to our economic and personal liberties.”


The purpose of the Convention of States is to propose amendments to the U.S. Constitution; the gathering is also known as an Article V Convention. It was founded to stop the out of control spending by the federal government, stop them from taking power from the states and taking liberty from the people.


This vote is the first step that at least 34 states must take in order to set into motion the call for a convention of states. Article V of the U.S. Constitution says that if two-thirds of state legislatures request a convention of states, the federal government must call for a convention.


Article V allows the states to propose and ratify amendments to the U.S. Constitution without the votes of federal representatives and signature of the president.


In order for an amendment to take effect, it must receive support from three-fourths of the 50 state legislatures, or 38 states. How each state ratifies an amendment is to be decided by the U.S. Congress. The convention itself will only propose amendments; it will not ratify them.


Townsend has posted a wealth of information on her Facebook page. She lays out all of the facts and arguments. She has also posted which elected officials are on board with her proposal and the national policy institutes that endorse the Convention of States.


Mark Meckler of the Arizona COS Project Team has called upon all supporters to attend the hearing at the State Legislature. In an email today he wrote, “Your voice could be the deciding factor in the success of the COS application.”


The vote will take place in Room HHR 1 at the Arizona State Capitol, 1700 West Washington Street.





Jared Day


Jared is a Citizen Journalist that supports grassroots organizations that stand for individual liberty, free market and limited government. He is a Writer/Contributor/Social Media Admin at RedKnucklePolitics.com and Red Nation Rising NFP.


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Read more about Arizona: Committee will be voting on the Convention of States Project application and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, February 3, 2014

The United States vs. Bolivian democracy: Part 2; the USAID-NED-Opposition Nexus

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The United States vs. Bolivian democracy: Part 2; the USAID-NED-Opposition Nexus

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

States consider reviving old-fashioned executions



ST. LOUIS (AP) — With lethal-injection drugs in short supply and new questions looming about their effectiveness, lawmakers in some death penalty states are considering bringing back relics of a more gruesome past: firing squads, electrocutions and gas chambers.


Most states abandoned those execution methods more than a generation ago in a bid to make capital punishment more palatable to the public and to a judicial system worried about inflicting cruel and unusual punishments that violate the Constitution.


But to some elected officials, the drug shortages and recent legal challenges are beginning to make lethal injection seem too vulnerable to complications.


“This isn’t an attempt to time-warp back into the 1850s or the wild, wild West or anything like that,” said Missouri state Rep. Rick Brattin, who this month proposed making firing squads an option for executions. “It’s just that I foresee a problem, and I’m trying to come up with a solution that will be the most humane yet most economical for our state.”


Brattin, a Republican, said questions about the injection drugs are sure to end up in court, delaying executions and forcing states to examine alternatives. It’s not fair, he said, for relatives of murder victims to wait years, even decades, to see justice served while lawmakers and judges debate execution methods.


Like Brattin, a Wyoming lawmaker this month offered a bill allowing the firing squad. Missouri’s attorney general and a state lawmaker have raised the notion of rebuilding the state’s gas chamber. And a Virginia lawmaker wants to make electrocution an option if lethal-injection drugs aren’t available.


If adopted, those measures could return states to the more harrowing imagery of previous decades, when inmates were hanged, electrocuted or shot to death by marksmen.


States began moving to lethal injection in the 1980s in the belief that powerful sedatives and heart-stopping drugs would replace the violent spectacles with a more clinical affair while limiting, if not eliminating, an inmate’s pain.


The total number of U.S. executions has declined in recent years — from a peak of 98 in 1999 to 39 last year. Some states have turned away from the death penalty entirely. Many have cases tied up in court. And those that carry on with executions find them increasingly difficult to conduct because of the scarcity of drugs and doubts about how well they work.


In recent years, European drug makers have stopped selling the lethal chemicals to prisons because they do not want their products used to kill.


At least two recent executions are also raising concerns about the drugs’ effectiveness. Last week, Ohio inmate Dennis McGuire took 26 minutes to die by injection, gasping repeatedly as he lay on a gurney with his mouth opening and closing. And on Jan. 9, Oklahoma inmate Michael Lee Wilson’s final words were, “I feel my whole body burning.”


Missouri threw out its three-drug lethal injection procedure after it could no longer obtain the drugs. State officials altered the method in 2012 to use propofol, which was found in the system of pop star Michael Jackson after he died of an overdose in 2009.


The anti-death penalty European Union threatened to impose export limits on propofol if it were used in an execution, jeopardizing the supply of a common anesthetic needed by hospitals across the nation. In October, Gov. Jay Nixon stayed the execution of serial killer Joseph Paul Franklin and ordered the Missouri Department of Corrections to find a new drug.


Days later, the state announced it had switched to a form of pentobarbital made by a compounding pharmacy. Like other states, Missouri has refused to divulge where the drug comes from or who makes it.


Missouri has carried out two executions using pentobarbital — Franklin in November and Allen Nicklasson in December. Neither inmate showed outward signs of suffering, but the secrecy of the process resulted in a lawsuit and a legislative inquiry.


Michael Campbell, assistant professor of criminal justice at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, said some lawmakers simply don’t believe convicted murderers deserve any mercy.


“Many of these politicians are trying to tap into a more populist theme that those who do terrible things deserve to have terrible things happen to them,” Campbell said.


Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center in Washington, D.C., cautioned that there could be a backlash.


“These ideas would jeopardize the death penalty because, I think, the public reaction would be revulsion, at least from many quarters,” Dieter said.


Some states already provide alternatives to lethal injection. Condemned prisoners may choose the electric chair in eight states: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. An inmate named Robert Gleason Jr. was the most recent to die by electrocution, in Virginia in January 2013.


Arizona, Missouri and Wyoming allow for gas-chamber executions. Missouri no longer has a gas chamber, but Attorney General Chris Koster, a Democrat, and Missouri state Sen. Kurt Schaefer, a Republican, last year suggested possibility rebuilding one. So far, there is no bill to do so.


Delaware, New Hampshire and Washington state still allow inmates to choose hanging. The last hanging in the U.S. was Billy Bailey in Delaware in 1996. Two prisoners in Washington state have chosen to be hanged since the 1990s — Westley Allan Dodd in 1993 and Charles Rodman Campbell in 1994.


Firing squads typically consisting of five sharpshooters with rifles, one of which is loaded with a blank so the shooters do not know for sure who fired the fatal bullet. They have been used mostly for military executions.


Since the end of the Civil War, there have been three civilian firing squad executions in the U.S., all in Utah. Gary Gilmore uttered his famous final words, “Let’s do it” on Jan. 18, 1977, before his execution, which ended what amounted to a 17-year national moratorium on the death penalty. Convicted killers John Albert Taylor in 1996 and Ronnie Lee Gardner in 2010 were also put to death by firing squad.


Utah is phasing out its use, but the firing squad remains an option there for inmates sentenced prior to May 3, 2004.


Oklahoma maintains the firing squad as an option, but only if lethal injection and electrocution are deemed unconstitutional.


In Wyoming, Republican state Sen. Bruce Burns said death by firing squad would be far less expensive than building a gas chamber. Wyoming has only one inmate on death row, 68-year-old convicted killer Dale Wayne Eaton. The state has not executed anyone in 22 years.


Jackson Miller, a Republican in the Virginia House of Delegates, is sponsoring a bill that would allow for electrocution if lethal injection drugs are not available.


Miller said he would prefer that the state have easy access to the drugs needed for lethal injections. “But I also believe that the process of the justice system needs to be fulfilled.”


Associated Press



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States consider reviving old-fashioned executions

Friday, January 17, 2014

Fear Is Why Workers in Red States Vote Against Their Economic Self-Interest




Last week’s massive spill of the toxic chemical MCHM into West Virginia’s Elk River illustrates another benefit to the business class of high unemployment, economic insecurity, and a safety-net shot through with holes. Not only are employees eager to accept whatever job they can get. They are also also unwilling to demand healthy and safe environments.


The spill was the region’s third major chemical accident in five years, coming after two investigations by the federal Chemical Safety Board in the Kanawha Valley, also known as “Chemical Valley,” and repeated recommendations from federal regulators and environmental advocates that the state embrace tougher rules to better safeguard chemicals.


No action was ever taken. State and local officials turned a deaf ear. The storage tank that leaked, owned by Freedom Industries, hadn’t been inspected for decades.


But nobody complained.


Not even now, with the toxins moving down river toward Cincinnati, can the residents of Charleston and the surrounding area be sure their drinking water is safe — partly because the government’s calculation for safe levels is based on a single study by the manufacturer of the toxic chemical, which was never published, and partly because the West Virginia American Water Company, which supplies the drinking water, is a for-profit corporation that may not want to highlight any lingering danger.


So why wasn’t more done to prevent this, and why isn’t there more of any outcry even now?


The answer isn’t hard to find. As Maya Nye, president of People Concerned About Chemical Safety, a citizen’s group formed after a 2008 explosion and fire killed workers at West Virginia’s Bayer CropScience plant in the state, explained to the New York Times: “We are so desperate for jobs in West Virginia we don’t want to do anything that pushes industry out.”


Exactly.


I often heard the same refrain when I headed the U.S. Department of Labor. When we sought to impose a large fine on the Bridgestone-Firestone Tire Company for flagrantly disregarding workplace safety rules and causing workers at one of its plants in Oklahoma to be maimed and killed, for example, the community was solidly behind us — that is, until Bridgestone-Firestone threatened to close the plant if we didn’t back down.


The threat was enough to ignite a storm of opposition to the proposed penalty from the very workers and families we were trying to protect. (We didn’t back down and Bridgestone-Firestone didn’t carry out its threat, but the political fallout was intense.)


For years political scientists have wondered why so many working class and poor citizens of so-called “red” states vote against their economic self-interest. The usual explanation is that, for these voters, economic issues are trumped by social and cultural issues like guns, abortion, and race.


I’m not so sure. The wages of production workers have been dropping for thirty years, adjusted for inflation, and their economic security has disappeared. Companies can and do shut down, sometimes literally overnight. A smaller share of working-age Americans hold jobs today than at any time in more than three decades.


People are so desperate for jobs they don’t want to rock the boat. They don’t want rules and regulations enforced that might cost them their livelihoods. For them, a job is precious — sometimes even more precious than a safe workplace or safe drinking water.


This is especially true in poorer regions of the country like West Virginia and through much of the South and rural America — so-called “red” states where the old working class has been voting Republican. Guns, abortion, and race are part of the explanation. But don’t overlook economic anxieties that translate into a willingness to vote for whatever it is that industry wants.


This may explain why Republican officials who have been casting their votes against unions, against expanding Medicaid, against raising the minimum wage, against extended unemployment insurance, and against jobs bills that would put people to work, continue to be elected and re-elected. They obviously have the support of corporate patrons who want to keep unemployment high and workers insecure because a pliant working class helps their bottom lines. But they also, paradoxically, get the votes of many workers who are clinging so desperately to their jobs that they’re afraid of change and too cowed to make a ruckus.


The best bulwark against corporate irresponsibility is a strong and growing middle class. But in order to summon the political will to achieve it, we have to overcome the timidity that flows from economic desperation. It’s a diabolical chicken-and-egg conundrum at a the core of American politics today.


Robert Reich’s new movie Inequality for All is now available on iTunes, On Demand and DVD.



Follow Robert Reich on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RBReich




Robert Reich



Fear Is Why Workers in Red States Vote Against Their Economic Self-Interest