James Keady (foreground) confronts New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) at a public appearance on Oct. 29, 2014 [MSNBC]
A New Jersey activist and Hurricane Sandy survivor filmed during a
confrontation with Gov. Chris Christie (R) on Wednesday accused his
administration of short-changing a $1.1 billion federal relief package
meant to help residents.
“Only 20 percent of those dollars have gotten to the people,” James
Keady told MSNBC host Chris Hayes. “Of the $1.1 billion, $219 million
has gone out. That means that the governor and his staff in Trenton are
sitting on $800 million.”
According to Keady’s advocacy group, Finish The Job,
Christie’s administration has mismanaged the Rehabilitation,
Reconstruction, Elevation and Mitigation (RREM) while boasting about its
success in the public eye.
“Photo ops, Christie, President Obama, everybody walking on the beach, kumbaya, giving the hugs,” he said.
Keady faced off with Christie as the governor gave a speech in Belmar
commemorating two years since the hurricane devastated New Jersey.
Video of the encounter shows Keady standing in front of Christie bearing
a sign saying, “Get Sandy families back in their homes,” prompting
Christie to berate him from the stage.
“I’m glad you had your day to show off, but we’re the ones who are
here to actually do the work,” Christie told him. “So turn around and
get your 15 minutes of fame and then maybe take your jacket off and roll
up your sleeves and do something for the people of this state.”
Christie later added that if he had 1,000 things to do during the
day, dinner with Keady “would be 1,001,” and told him to “sit down and
shut up.”
But Keady, who grew up in Belmar, rebuked Christie’s accusation that he did not “do the work” in his community.
“When the hurricane happened, I actually took a month off from work,
dropped everything and volunteered to help clean out peoples’ homes,”
James Keady told MSNBC host Chris Hayes. “It actually reached the point
within a day or two [that] the borough gave me a borough dump truck
running all the clean-up crews all over town.”
Keady also insisted his information was accurate as of Oct. 24.
“Unless $800 million went out the door in the last four days, it’s still sitting there,” he said of the RREM funds.
The Philadelphia Police Department said over the weekend that it
would discipline an officer who was caught on video threatening to “beat
the shit” out of a teen.
In a video uploaded to Facebook earlier this month by Damaris Abercrombie, an officer is seen walking beside a group of teens.
“Hey, big man, you got a problem?” the officer asks one of the teens. “Because I notice you keep trying to make eye contact.”
“Keep fucking walking, and next time you look at me in my fucking
eye, I’m going to beat the shit out of you,” the officer adds.
The video had been viewed over 85,000 times since being shared on Oct. 17.
A law enforcement source confirmed to WCAU that the officer was assigned to the 19th District.
“The video does not reflect well on the officer,” a police official
who did not wish do be identified explained. “I have no doubt he had
good reason to be exasperated but you have to maintain your professional
demeanor.”
It was not immediately clear what disciplinary actions the officer would face.
Watch the video below from WCAU, broadcast Oct. 27, 2014.
[Note for TomDispatch Readers:Today’s
piece is out of the ordinary, the sort of thing that’s largely
untouchable in the mainstream. A former Army Ranger writes about why
the endless “thank you"s for service in America’s wars ring hollow.
And that Ranger-turned-conscientious-objector, Rory Fanning, has quite
an all-American odyssey to tell, which is exactly what he’s done in his
new book Worth Fighting For: An Army Ranger’s Journey Out of the Military and Across America.
As far as I’m concerned, it’s a must read and, as it happens, for a
$100 contribution to this site, you can be the first on your block to
get a signed, personalized copy of it.
More than a few times I’ve found myself in a crowd of Vietnam
veterans, and more than a few times at least one of them was wearing a
curious blue or yellow t-shirt. Once that shirt undoubtedly fit a lean
physique of the late 1970's or early 1980's, but by the time I saw it
modeled, in the 2000's, it was getting mighty snug. Still, they refused
to part with it. On it was some variation of the outline of a map of
Vietnam with bit of grim humor superimposed: “Participant, Southeast Asia War Games, 1961-1975: Second Place.”
I was always struck by it. These men of the “Me Generation” had come home to the sneers and backhanded comments of the men of the “Greatest Generation,” their fathers’ era. They had supposedly been the first Americans to lose a war. However, instead of the defensive apparel donned by some vets (“We were winning when I left”), they wore their loss for all to see, pride mingling with a sardonic sense of humor.
Today’s military is made up of still another generation, the
Millennials, representatives of the 80 million Americans born between
1980 and 2000. In fact, with nearly 43% of the active duty force age 25
or younger and roughly 66% of it 30 or under, it’s one of the most
Millennial-centric organizations around.
As a whole, the Millennials have been regularly pilloried in the press for being the “Participation Trophy Generation.” Coddled, self-centered, with delusions of grandeur, they’re inveterate narcissists with outlandish expectations and a runaway sense of entitlement. They demand everything, they’re addicted to social media, fast Wi-Fi, and phablets, they cry when criticized, they want praise on tap, and refuse to wear anything but their hoodies and “fuck you flip-flops” like the face of their generation, the Ur-millennial: Mark Zuckerberg!
At least that’s the knock on them. Then again, when didn’t prior generations knock the current one?
The National Institutes of Health did determine people in their 20's have Narcissistic Personality Disorder three times more often than those 65 or older and a recent survey by Reason
and pollster Rupe did find that those 18-24 are indeed in favor of
participation trophies unlike older Americans who overwhelmingly favor
winners-only prizes. Still, it’s a little early to
pass blanket judgment on an entire generation of whom the youngest
members are only on the cusp of high school. The Millennials may yet
surprise even the most cantankerous coots. Time will tell.
The Millennial military, however, isn’t doing the generation any favors. Despite its dismal record when it comes to winning wars and a recent magnification
of its repeated failures in Iraq, today’s military seems to crave and
demand that its soldiers, sailors, marines, and airmen be thanked and
lauded at every turn. As a result, the Pentagon is involved in
stage-managing all manner of participation-trophy spectacles to make
certain they are -- from the ballpark to the NASCAR track to the Academy of Country Music's “An All-Star Salute to the Troops” concert at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas earlier this year.
And like those great enablers of the Millennial trophy kids, so-called helicopter parents, the American public regularlyprovides cheap praise and empty valorization for veterans, writes Rory Fanning
in TomDispatch debut. A veteran of the war in Afghanistan -- having
served two tours with the 2nd Army Ranger Battalion before becoming a
conscientious objector -- Fanning explores America’s
thank-you-for-your-service culture, what vets are actually being thanked
for, and why Rihanna’s hollow patriotism left him depressed. His
moving new book, Worth Fighting For: An Army Ranger’s Journey Out of the Military and Across America,
captures his 3,000-mile trek through and encounter with this country,
an unforced march meant to honor Pat Tillman and question the nature of
our recent wars.
I don’t get to hang out with Vietnam vets as much as I used to, but
late one night a year or two ago I found myself with a few of them in an
almost deserted bar. Having ducked out of the annual meeting of a
veterans’ group, we ordered some beers from a Millennial-age waiter. He
asked if my 60-something compatriots were attending the nearby
conference and they mumbled that they indeed were. The waiter seemed to
momentarily straighten up. “Thank you for your service,” he solemnly
intoned before bounding off to get the beers. One of veterans -- a
Marine who had seen his fair share of combat -- commented on how much he
hated that phrase. “They do it reflexively. That’s how they’ve been
raised,” I replied. “I hope they wise up,” said another of the vets.
Time -- as with all things Millennial -- will tell. Nick Turse
Thank You for Your Valor, Thank You for Your Service, Thank You, Thank You, Thank You… Still on the Thank-You Tour-of-Duty Circuit, 13 Years Later By Rory Fanning
Last week, in a quiet indie bookstore on the north side of Chicago, I saw the latest issue of Rolling Stone
resting on a chrome-colored plastic table a few feet from a barista
brewing a vanilla latte. A cold October rain fell outside. A friend of
mine grabbed the issue and began flipping through it. Knowing that I
was a veteran, he said, "Hey, did you see this?" pointing to a news
story that seemed more like an ad. It read in part:
"This Veterans Day,
Bruce Springsteen, Eminem, Rihanna, Dave Grohl, and Metallica will be
among numerous artists who will head to the National Mall in Washington
D.C. on November 11th for 'The Concert For Valor,' an all-star event
that will pay tribute to armed services."
"Concert For Valor? That sounds like something the North Korean
government would organize," I said as I typed Concertforvalor.com into
my MacBook Pro looking for more information.
The sucking sound from the espresso maker was drowning out a
10 year old Shins song. As I read, my heart sank, my shoulders slumped.
Special guests at the Concert for Valor were to include: Meryl
Streep, Tom Hanks, and Steven Spielberg. The mission of the concert,
according to a press release,
was to “raise awareness” of veterans issues and “provide a national
stage for ensuring that veterans and their families know that their
fellow Americans’ gratitude is genuine.”
Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and former Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs Admiral Michael Mullen were to serve in an advisory
capacity, and Starbucks, HBO, and JPMorgan Chase were to pay for it all.
"We are honored to play a small role to help raise awareness and
support for our service men and women,” said HBO chairman Richard
Plepler.
Though I couldn’t quite say why, that Concert for Valor ad felt tired
and sad, despite the images of Rihanna singing full-throated into a
gold microphone and James Hetfield and Kirk Hammett of Metallica wailing
away on their guitars. I had gotten my own share of “thanks” from
civilians when I was still a U.S. Army Ranger. Who hadn’t? It had been
the endless theme of the post-9/11 era, how thankful other Americans
were that we would do... well, what exactly, for them? And here it was
again. I couldn’t help wondering: Would veterans somewhere actually
feel the gratitude that Starbucks and HBO hoped to convey?
I went home and cooked dinner for my wife and little girl in a
semi-depressed state, thinking about that word “valor” which was to be
at the heart of the event and wondering about the Hall of Fame line-up
of twenty-first century liberalism that was promoting it or planning to
turn out to hail it: Rolling Stone, the magazine of Hunter S.
Thompson and all things rock and roll; Bruce Springsteen, the
billion-dollar working-class hero; Eminem, the white rapper who has sold
more records than Elvis; Metallica, the crew who sued Napster and the
metal band of choice for so many longhaired, disenfranchised youth of
the 1980's and 1990's. They were all going to say “thank you” - again.
Raising (Whose?) Awareness
Later that night, I sat down and Googled “vets honored.” Dozens and
dozens of stories promptly queued up on my screen. (Try it yourself.)
One of the first items I clicked on was the 50th anniversary celebration
in Bangor, Maine,
of the Gulf of Tonkin incident, the alleged Pearl Harbor of the Vietnam
War. Governor Paul LePage had spoken ringingly of the veterans of that
war: “These men were just asked to go to a foreign land and protect our
freedoms. And they weren’t treated with respect when they returned
home. Now it’s time to acknowledge it.”
Vietnam, he insisted, was all about protecting freedom - such a
simple and innocent explanation for such a long and horrific war. Lest
you forget, the governor and those gathered in Bangor that day were
celebrating a still-murky “incident” that touched off a massive American
escalation of the war. It was claimed that North Vietnamese patrol
boats had twice attacked an American destroyer, though President Lyndon
Johnson later suggested that the incident might even have involved
shooting at "flying fish" or "whales." As for protecting freedom in Vietnam, tell the dead Vietnamese in America’s “free fire zones” about that.
No one, however, cared about such details. The point was that
eternal “thank you.” If only, I thought, some inquisitive and valorous
local reporter had asked the governor, “Treated with disrespect by
whom?” And pointed out the mythology
behind the idea that American civilians had mistreated GIs returning
from Vietnam. (Unfortunately, the same can’t be said for the Veterans
Administration, which denied returning soldiers proper healthcare, or
the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion, organizations that
weren’t eager to claim the country’s defeated veterans of a disastrous war as their own.)
When it came to thanks and “awareness raising,” no American war with a
still living veteran seemed too distant to be ignored. Google told me,
for example, that Upper Gwynedd,
Pennsylvania, had recently celebrated its 12th annual “Multi-Cultural
Day” by thanking its “forgotten Korean War Veterans.” According to a
local newspaper report, included in the festivities were martial arts
demonstrations and traditional Korean folk dancing.
The Korean War was the precursor to Vietnam, with similar results. As
with the Gulf of Tonkin incident, the precipitating event of the war
that North Korea ignited on June 25, 1950, remains open to question.
Evidence suggests that, with U.S. approval, South Korea initiated
a bombardment of North Korean villages in the days leading up to the
invasion.
As in Vietnam, there, too, the U.S. supported a corrupt
autocrat and used napalm on a mass scale. Millions died, including
staggering numbers of civilians, and North Korea was left in rubble by
war’s end. Folk dancing was surely in short supply. As for protecting
our freedoms in Korea, enough said.
These two ceremonies seemed to catch a particular mood (reflected in
so many similar, if more up-to-date versions of the same). They might
have benefited from a little “awareness raising” when it came to what
the American military has actually been doing these last years, not to
say decades, beyond our borders. They certainly summed up much of the
frustration I was feeling with the Concert for Valor. Plenty of thank
yous, for sure, but no history when it came to what the thanks were
being offered for in, say, Iraq orAfghanistan, no statistics on taxpayer dollars spent or where they went, or on innocent lives lost and why.
Will the “Concert for Valor” mention the trillions of dollars rung up terrorizing Muslim countries for oil, the ratcheting up of the police and surveillance state in this country since 9/11, the hundreds of thousands of lives lost thanks to the wars of George W. Bush and Barack Obama? Is anyone going to dedicate a song to Chelsea Manning, or John Kiriakou, or Edward Snowden
- two of them languishing in prison and one in exile - for their
service to the American people? Will the Concert for Valor raise
anyone’s awareness when it comes to the fact that, to this day, veterans lack proper medical attention, particularly for mental health issues, or that there is a veteran suicide every 80 minutes in this country? Let’s hope they find time in between drum solos, but myself, I’m not counting on it.
Thank Yous
While Googling around, I noticed an allied story about President Obama christening a poetic sounding “American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial” on October 5th. There, he wisely noted that “the U.S. should never rush into war.” As he spoke, however, the Air Force, the Navy, and Special Forces personnel (who wear boots that do touch the ground, even in Iraq), as well as the headquarters
of “the Big Red One,” the Army’s 1st Infantry Division, were already
involved in the latest war he had personally ordered in Iraq and Syria,
while, of course, bypassing Congress.
Thank
you, thank you, thank you, thank you! Damn, I voted for Obama because
he said he’d end our overseas wars. At least it’s not Bush sending the
planes, drones, missiles, and troops back there, because if it were, I’d
be mad.
Then there were the numerous stories about “Honor Flights” sponsored
by Southwest Airlines that offered all World War II veterans and the
terminally ill veterans of more recent wars a free trip to Washington to
“reflect at their memorials” before they died. Honor flights turn out
to be a particularly popular way to honor veterans. Local papers in Richfield, Utah, Des Moines, Iowa, Elgin, Illinois, Austin, Texas, Miami, Florida,
and so on place by place across significant swaths of the country have
run stories about dying hometown “heroes” who have participated in these
flights, a kind of nothing-but-the-best-in-corporate-sponsorship for
the last of the “Greatest Generation.”
“Welcome home” ceremonies, with flags, marching bands, heartfelt
embraces, much weeping, and the usual babies and small children missed
during tours of duty in our war zones are also easy to find. In the
first couple of screens Google offered in response to the phrase
“welcome home ceremony,” I found the usual thank-you celebrations for
veterans returning from Afghanistan in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Ft. Sill, Oklahoma, and Saint Albans, Vermont,
among other places. "We don't do enough for our veterans, for what they
do for us, we hear the news, but to be up there in a field, and be shot
at, and sometimes coming home disabled, we don't realize how lucky we
are sometimes to have the people who have served their country," one of
the Saint Albans attendees was typically quoted as saying.
“Do enough...?” In America, isn’t thank you plenty?
Oddly, it’s harder to find thank-you ceremonies for living vets
involved in America’s numerous smaller interventions in places like the
Dominican Republic, Lebanon, Grenada, Kosovo, Somalia, Libya, and
various CIA-organized coups and proxy wars around the world, but I won’t
be surprised if they, too, exist. I was wondering, though: What about
all those foreign soldiers we’ve trained to fight our wars for us in
places like South Vietnam, Iraq,
and Afghanistan? Shouldn’t they be thanked as well? And how about
members of the Afghan Mujahedeen that we armed and funded in the 1980's
while they gave the Soviet Union its own “Vietnam” (and who are now
fighting for al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or other extreme Islamist outfits)?
Or what about the Indonesian troops we armed under the presidency of
Gerald Ford, who committed possibly genocidal acts in East Timor in
1975? Or has our capacity for thanks been used up in the service of
American vets?
Since 9/11, those thank yous have been aimed at veterans with the
regularity of the machine gun fire that may still haunt their dreams.
Veterans have also been offered special consideration when it comes to
applications for mostly menial jobs
so that they can “utilize the skills” they learned in the military.
While they continue to march in those welcome home parades and have
concerts organized in their honor, the thank yous are in no short
supply. The only question that never seems to come up is: What exactly
are they being thanked for?
Heroes Who Afford Us Freedom
Starbucks Chairman Howard Schultz has said of the upcoming Concert for Valor:
“The post-9/11 years
have brought us the longest period of sustained warfare in our nation’s
history. The less than one percent of Americans who volunteered to
serve during this time have afforded the rest of us remarkable freedoms
- but that freedom comes with a responsibility to understand their
sacrifice, to honor them, and to appreciate the skills and experience
they offer when they return home.”
It was crafty of Schultz to redirect that famed 1% label from the
ultra rich, represented by CEOs like him, onto our “heroes.” At the
concert, I hope Schultz has a chance to get more specific about those
“remarkable freedoms.” Will he mention that the U.S. has the highest per capitaprison
population on the planet? Does he include among those remarkable
freedoms the guarantee that dogs, Tasers, tear gas, and riot police will
be sent after you if you stay out past dark protesting the killing of an unarmed Black teenager by a representative of this country’s increasingly militarized police? Will the freedom to be too big to fail and so to have the right to melt down the economy and walk away without going to prison -- as Jamie Dimon, the CEO of Chase, did -- be mentioned? Do these remarkable freedoms include having every American phone call and email recorded and stored away by the NSA?
And what about that term “hero”? Many veterans reject it, and not
just out of Gary Cooperesque modesty either. Most veterans who have seen
combat, watched babies get torn apart, or their comrades die in their
arms, or the most powerful army on Earth spend trillions of dollars
fighting some of the poorest people in the world for 13 years feel
anything but heroic. But that certainly doesn’t stop the use of the
term. So why do we use it? As journalist Cara Hoffman points out at Salon:
“‘[H]ero’ refers to a
character, a protagonist, something in fiction, not to a person, and
using this word can hurt the very people it’s meant to laud. While meant
to create a sense of honor, it can also buy silence, prevent discourse,
and benefit those in power more than those navigating the new terrain
of home after combat. If you are a hero, part of your character is stoic
sacrifice, silence. This makes it difficult for others to see you as
flawed, human, vulnerable, or exploited.”
We use the term hero in part because it makes us feel good and in
part because it shuts soldiers up (which, believe me, makes the rest of
us feel better). Labeled as a hero, it’s also hard to think twice about
putting your weapons down. Thank yous to heroes discourage dissent,
which is one reason military bureaucrats feed off the term.
There are American soldiers stationed around the globe who think
about filing conscientious objector status (as I once did), and I
sometimes hear from some of them.
They often grasp the way in which the
militarized acts of imperial America are helping to create
the very enemies they are then being told to kill. They understand that
the trillions of dollars being wasted on war will never be spent on
education, health care, or the development of clean energy here at
home. They know that they are fighting for American control over the
flow of fossil fuels on this planet, the burning of which is warming our
world and threatening human existence.
Then you have Bruce Springsteen and Metallica telling them “thank
you” for wearing that uniform, that they are heroes, that whatever it is
they’re doing in distant lands while we go about our lives here isn’t
an issue. There is even the possibility that, one day, you, the
veteran, might be ushered onto that stage during a concert or onto the
field during a ballgame for a very public thank you. The conflicted soldier thinks twice.
Valor
I’m back at that indie bookstore sitting at the same chrome-colored
table trying to hash all this out, including my own experiences in the
Army Rangers, and end on a positive note. The latest issue of Rolling Stone appears
to have sold out. Out the window, the sun is peeking through a thick
web of clouds. They sell wine here, too. The sooner I finish this, the
sooner I can start drinking.
There is no question that we should honor people who fight for
justice and liberty. Many veterans enlisted in the military thinking
that they were indeed serving a noble cause, and it’s no lie to say that
they fought with valor for their brothers and sisters to their left and
right. Unfortunately, good intentions at this stage are no substitute
for good politics. The war on terror is going into its 14th year. If
you really want to talk about “awareness raising,” it’s years past the
time when anyone here should be able to pretend that our 18-year-olds
are going off to kill and die for good reason. How about a couple of
concerts to make that point?
Until then, I’m going to drink wine and try to enjoy the music over the sound of the espresso machine.
Rory Fanning walked across the United States for the Pat Tillman
Foundation in 2008-2009, following two deployments to Afghanistan with
the 2nd Army Ranger Battalion. Fanning became a conscientious objector
after his second tour. He is the author of the new book Worth Fighting For: An Army Ranger’s Journey Out of the Military and Across America (Haymarket, 2014).
Way to help the GOP with that minority outreach program Herman.
Former grifter presidential candidate turned right wing radio host
Herman Cain did his best to piss off minority voters in his state of
Georgia this week during an interview with Fox Business' Stuart Varney.
On today’s Varney & Co, host Stuart Varney asked
Herman Cain whether playing the “Ferguson” card would be “likely to
increase the black vote in Georgia.” He was referring to a Georgia
Democratic Party flyer invoking Ferguson
to encourage voters to turn out. Varney was concerned, of course, that a
big turnout of African American voters could be the deciding factor in
electing Democrat Michelle Nunn, currently in a very tight Senate race.
Cain replied, “I don’t think so and here’s why. Many of my listeners
are from Georgia, and I do have a lot of black listeners to my radio
show. The good news is, a lot of black people are not that stupid, or
they are not that ignorant to respond to something like that. It’s not 40 or 50% of the black population, because 40 or 50% probably are clueless other than party name and candidate.”
That’s quite an insult to African Americans. But Varney replied,
“Herman Cain, always a pleasure, thanks for joining us today sir,
appreciate it.”
See? It really isn't that hard to be decent. Support the companies who support their employees.
Geez,
Walmart. What's your excuse? If Costco can absorb the hit for letting
all its employees have Thanksgiving Day off to be with their families,
why can't you?
And why can't the other retailers who feed the insanity we call Black
Friday? For many years now I've made a point of avoiding all of those
nutty sales and only patronizing stores that are decent to their
employees. I won't shop Walmart on general principles anyway, but there
are many other retailers whose door will not be darkened by the likes of
me on the Friday after Thanksgiving or any time during the holiday
season, for that matter.
Costco is among the companies that will choose to remain
closed on Thanksgiving Day, a spokesperson confirmed to ThinkProgress.
None of the nearly 127,000 people who work for the company will have to come in on the holiday.
In explaining why it decided to stay closed, the spokesperson said,
“Our employees work especially hard during the holiday season and we
simply believe that they deserve the opportunity to spend Thanksgiving
with their families. Nothing more complicated than that.”
That makes at least five chain stores
that have decided to resist the new trend of beginning Black Friday
sales a day early, thus ensuring that a large number of employees will
have to come to work.
Dillard’s, Burlington, REI, and American Girl all
told ThinkProgress they will remain closed on the holiday, and Dillard’s
explained that its decision was part of its “longstanding tradition of
honoring of our customers’ and associates’ time with family.”
Other stores have let the holiday shopping craze creep into workers’ Thanksgiving meal time. Macy’s announced this year that it will open at 6 p.m. on the holiday, while Walmart will be open all day, requiring nearly 1 million people to show up to work. The trend really took off last year, with at least 12 major brands deciding to open on Thanksgiving itself and thus require at least some people to be at work during mealtime.
Last week, the Supreme Court upheld a law that could disenfranchise 600,000 Texans. But the effects of
the law won’t fall equally: African-Americans and Latinos are 305
percent and 195 percent less likely (respectively) to have the necessary
forms of identification than whites. The Republican party is
increasingly unpopular, and relies almost exclusively on white voters.
The charts below show the 2008 if only white men voted and if only
people of color voted (source).
Since
2008, people of color become a growing share of the voting population
while the GOP has, if anything, moved further to the right. It has
further alienated voters of color with racist attacks and laws. But as
they say: if you can’t beat ‘em, make sure they don’t vote. Over the
last four years the Republicans have gone through elaborate attempts to
make sure populations that don’t support them don’t get a chance to
vote.
Since 2006, Republicans have pushed through voter ID laws in 34 states. Such laws did not exist before 2006, when Indiana passed the first voter ID law. The laws were ostensibly aimed at preventing voter fraud, but a News21 investigation finds only
2,068 instance of alleged fraud since 2000 (that is out of over 146
million voters). They estimate that there is one accusation of voter
fraud for every 15 million voters. As Mother Jones notes,
instances of voter fraud are more rare than UFO sightings. There have
been only 13 instances of in-person voter fraud (the sorts that a voter
ID law would reduce), while 47,000 people claim to have seen a UFO.
On the other hand, research by the Brennan Center for Justice finds that,
“as many as 11 percent of eligible voters do not have government-issued
photo ID.” Those who do not have ID are most likely to be “ seniors,
people of color, people with disabilities, low-income voters, and
students” — i.e.. people who vote Democratic (chart source).
There is now a large literature studying the effects of voter ID laws. James Avery and Mark Peffley find, “states with restrictive voter registration laws are much more likely to be biased toward upper-class turnout.” The GAO finds that voter ID laws reduce turnout among those between ages 18-23 and African-Americans (two key Democratic constituencies). A 2013 study finds that
the proposal and passage of voter ID laws are “highly partisan,
strategic, and racialized affairs.”
They write, “Our findings confirm
that Democrats are justified in their concern that restrictive voter
legislation takes aim along racial lines with strategic partisan intent.”
[Italics in original] The authors also find that increases in
low-income voter turnout triggered voter ID laws. A more recent study finds,
“where elections are competitive, the furtherance of restrictive voter
ID laws is a means of maintaining Republican support while curtailing
Democratic electoral gains.”
That is, not all Republican legislatures
propose voter ID laws — only those that face strong competition from
Democrats. If Republicans are concerned about election integrity, why do
they only pass voter ID laws when they’re about to lose an election?
Because they’re cheaters.
Voter ID laws are also racially motivated. A recent study finds that
voters are significantly more likely to support a voter ID law when
they are shown pictures of black people voting than when shown white
people voting. One voter ID group had a picture on their website showing a black inmate voting and a man wearing a mariachi outfit — clearly playing off racial stereotypes.
But
this isn’t the only time Republicans have tried to leverage state-level
advantages into federal gains. After the 2010 walloping, Republicans
decided they would need to tilt the odds in their favor.
Using their
control of state legislatures, they gerrymandered districts to ensure
their victory. In 2012, Democrats actually had a larger share of the
popular vote for the House of Representatives, while Republicans gained their largest House majority in 60 years. Cook Political Report noted, “House GOP Won 49 Percent of Votes, 54 Percent of Seats.”
Karl Rove came out and said it in an Op-Ed,writing,
“He who controls redistricting can control Congress.” They won in
districts that were drawn specifically to allow them to win. There were
certainly other factors at play, but it’s hard to image Republicans
winning as many seats without their nifty swindle.
In
a project with the explicit blessing of Republican National Committee
Chairman Reince Priebus, a half-dozen Republican-dominated legislatures
in states that swing blue in presidential elections have advanced
proposals to abandon the winner-take-all standard in the Electoral
College…Thanks to the GOP’s gerrymandering, such a change would all but
guarantee that a Democratic presidential candidate in a big, diverse
state like Michigan would lose the split of electoral votes even if he
or she won in a popular landslide.
If Republicans
have their way, we’ll eventually be back to the days of the poll tax and
the literacy test, where the votes of blacks, youth and the poor simply
don’t count. We’re already halfway there.
The Senate, with its
antiquated system of two senators per state means that the largely
rural, old, white and conservative Midwest and South have far more sway
than liberal metropolitan areas. This gives Republicans a strong advantage in the Senate, something to remember if they win it this election.
Republicans have also made use of felony disenfranchisement to boost their electoral success. Some 5.85 million Americans are denied the vote due to felony disenfranchisement. Because of the racial bias in our criminal justice system and the war on drugs, a disproportionate share of these voters are black. One study finds that
because felons are more likely to be poor and people of color,
disenfranchisement benefits Republicans. The authors estimate that,
“at least one Republican presidential victory would have been reversed
if former felons had been allowed to vote.”
Further, they find that such
laws may have impacted control of the Senate, and even more state and
local elections. It’s no surprise that in Florida, a state where 10
percent of voters can’t vote because of a felony conviction, one of Rick
Scott’s first moves as governor was to tighten rules for felons trying to gain voting rights.
To
a large extent, the radicalism of the Tea Party and the Republican
Party at-large is due to the fact that they don’t represent the
population at large; they represent a primarily white and middle- to
high-income voting bloc. And that’s how Republicans want to keep it;
they know they can’t win in a fair race, so like Dick Dasterdly and Muttley,
they set all sorts of obstacles in their opponents’ way.
Hopefully,
much like Dick Dasterdly and Muttley, their plan will blow up in their
faces: Voters will be so angry about Republican attempts to suppress the
vote that they’ll turn out in even higher numbers. Sadly, convicted
felons, undocumented immigrants and many citizens without ID will still
be denied the vote.
In the movies, cheaters never win, for Republicans
it’s been a successful electoral strategy for threedecadesrunning.
Sean McElwee is a writer and researcher of public policy. He blogs atseanamcelwee.com. Follow him on Twitter @seanmcelwee.
Ghosts of Rick Scott’s past returns to haunt him, after Charlie Crist
reminds the public of his shady financial past. Ed Schultz, Joy Reid,
and Mike Papantonio discuss.
Hardball Roundtable—Jay Newton Small, David Corn and John Stanton—join
Chris Matthews to discuss Chris Christie’s latest comments on not
raising the minimum wage.
Big Media has run rampant with hearsay and false reports on who ISIS is,
so Jesse Ventura gets to the truth of Islamic State's origins, money
trail, and the real threat they pose to the United States.
As the battle against the terrorist group the Islamic State, or ISIS,
continues, many wonder if the fight will turn into another Iraq war.
With the American people weary of combat troops on the ground, the
former governor of Minnesota looks at the root of the problem and who is
really to blame for the rise of ISIS.
Jesse Ventura says that if Bush never invaded Iraq, there would be no ISIS
youtube.com
Over the last few months, ISIS has taken over parts of Iraq and
Syria. The U.S. trained Iraqi army has failed on multiple levels,
leaving behind American military weapons and supplies that have been
captured by ISIS. Since then, the Obama administration has authorized
airstrikes in Iraq and Syria, which have been challenged as unconstitutional,
as well as Congress authorizing a White House request of $500 million
to train and arm rebels in Syria. The media often questions the actions
of the White House, but during Friday's episode of "Off the Grid" on Ora.TV, host Jesse Ventura went to origins of ISIS and put the blame on the doorstep of the Bush Administration.
"If Saddam Hussein had been left in charge of Iraq and
the United States had never done what they did, I don't think there
would be any ISIS at this level because the border between Syria and
Iraq would have still been very distinct. I'm trying to figure out why
this is so very important to us, except for monetary reasons. Is that
the only reason that we care? You are not going to convince me that our
powerful people care about their people."
Ventura also warned about how the United States will be perceived if
they continue down the same path of the previous administrations.
Ventura quoted former Vice President Dick Cheney, when he claimed that the United States would be greeted as "liberators" during the Iraq war.
"Dick Cheney told us we would be greeted as liberators
when we went in there. Well we were hardly treated as liberates, unless
IEDs are greetings of liberation. We were greeted as invaders and we've
been greeted as that every since that awful war took place."
Ventura didn't stop at his criticism of Bush and Cheney, also putting
blame on the mainstream media. Highlighting the lack of depth of their
reporting, the former Navy frogman accused many media outlets of either
covering up or simply not doing their job.
"I watch mainstream media, when I do, and they don't say
one word about the origins of all of this, which goes back to us
invading Iraq, and overthrowing Saddam's stable government. We turned
everything into chaos over there."
Ventura has been, if nothing else, consistent on his views when it
comes to war. "This is us at perennial war, we are a war based economy
now, they created that." Ventura said. "They have to keep feeding the
machine and the only way you keep feeding the machine is having wars in
these third world places were we can supply the weapons, the machinery
and a few troops here or there, that keep the war machine going." the
former governor stated, shaking his head in disgust.
President Obama has repeated that there will be no American "boots on the ground" in Iraq or Syria
as the United States attempts to curb the violence and help stabilize
the region. The president did note that combat troops on the ground
might be necessary, but that they wont come from the U.S. military. If
Obama has a change of heart, Ventura has previously stated that Bush and Cheney should be put on the front lines.
It is a superior virus that has evolved and
fine-tuned its mechanism of transmission to be near-perfect. That's why
we're all so terrified. We know we can't destroy it. All we can do is
try to divert it, outrun it.
I've worked in health care for a few
years now. One of the first things I took advantage of was training to
become FEMA-certified for hazmat ops in a hospital setting. My rationale
for this was that, in my home state of Maine, natural disasters are
almost a given. We're also, though you may not know it, a state that has
many major ports that receive hazardous liquids from ships and
transport them inland. In the back of my mind, of course, I was aware
that any hospital in the world could potentially find itself at the
epicenter of a scene from The Hot Zone. That was several years ago.
Today I'm thinking, by God, I might actually have to use this training.
Mostly, though, I'm aware of just that -- that I did receive training.
Lots of it. Because you can't just expect any nurse or any doctor or any
health care worker or layperson to understand the deconning procedures
by way of some kind of pamphlet or 10-minute training video. Not only is
it mentally rigorous, but it's physically exhausting.
PPE, or,
personal protective equipment, is sort of a catch-all phrase for the
suits, booties, gloves, hoods and in many cases respirators worn by
individuals who are entering a hot zone. These suits are incredibly
difficult to move in. You are wearing several layers of gloves, which
limits your dexterity to basically nil, the hoods limit the scope of
your vision -- especially your peripheral vision, which all but
disappears. The suits are hot -- almost unbearably so. The respirator
gives you clean air, but not cool air. These suits are for protection,
not comfort. Before you even suit up, your vitals need to be taken. You
can't perform in the suit for more than about a half hour at a time --
if you make it that long. Heat stroke is almost a given at that point.
You have to be fully hydrated and calm before you even step into the
suit. By the time you come out of it, and your vitals are taken again,
you're likely to be feeling the impact -- you may not have taken more
than a few steps in the suit, but you'll feel like you've run a marathon
on a 90-degree day.
Getting the suit on is easy enough, but it
requires team work. Your gloves, all layers of them, are taped to your
suit. This provides an extra layer of protection and also limits your
movement. There is a very specific way to tape all the way around so
that there are no gaps or "tenting" of the tape. If you don't do this
properly, there ends up being more than enough open pockets for
contamination to seep in.
If you're wearing a
respirator, it needs to be tested prior to donning to make sure it is in
good condition and that the filter has been changed recently, so that
it will do its job. Ebola is not airborne. It is not like influenza,
which spreads on particles that you sneeze or cough. However, Ebola
lives in vomit, diarrhea and saliva -- and these avenues for infection
can travel. Projectile vomiting is called so for a reason. Particles
that are in vomit may aerosolize at the moment the patient vomits. This
is why if the nurses in Dallas were in the room when the first patient,
Thomas Duncan, was actively vomiting, it would be fairly easy for them
to become infected. Especially if they were not utilizing their PPE
correctly.
The other consideration is this: The "doffing"
procedure, that is, the removal of PPE, is the most crucial part. It is
also the point at which the majority of mistakes are made, and my guess
is that this is what happened in Dallas.
The PPE, if worn
correctly, does an excellent job of protecting you while you are wearing
it. But eventually you'll need to take it off. Before you begin, you
need to decon the outside of the PPE. That's the first thing. This is
often done in the field with hoses or mobile showers/tents. Once this
crucial step has occurred, the removal of PPE needs to be done in pairs.
You cannot safely remove it by yourself. One reason you are wearing
several sets of gloves is so that you have sterile gloves beneath your
exterior gloves that will help you to get out of your suit. The
procedure for this is taught in FEMA courses, and you run drills with a
buddy over and over again until you get it right. You remove the tape
and discard it. You throw it away from you. You step out of your boots
-- careful not to let your body touch the sides. Your partner helps
you to slither out of the suit, again, not touching the outside of it.
This is difficult, and it cannot be rushed. The respirators need to be
deconned, batteries changed, filters changed. The hoods, once deconnned,
need to be stored properly. If the suits are disposable, they need to
be disposed of properly. If not, they need to be thoroughly deconned and
stored safely. And they always need to be checked for rips, tears,
holes, punctures or any other even tiny, practically invisible openings
that could make the suit vulnerable.
Can anyone tell me if this happened in Dallas?
We
run at least an annual drill at my hospital each year. We are a small
hospital and thus are a small emergency response team. But because we
make a point to review our protocols, train our staff (actually practice
donning/doffing gear), I realized this week that this puts us ahead at
some much larger and more notable hospitals in the United States. Every
hospital should be running these types of emergency response drills
yearly, at least.
To hear that the nurses in Dallas reported that there
were no protocols at their hospital broke my heart. Their health care
system failed them. In the United States we always talk about how the
health care system is failing patients, but the truth is, it has failed
its employees too. Not just doctors and nurses, but allied health
professionals as well. The presence of Ebola on American soil has drawn
out the true vulnerabilities in the health care system, and they are not
fiscally based. We spend trillions of dollars on health care in this
country -- yet the allocation of those funds are grossly
disproportionate to how other countries spend their health care
expenditures. We aren't focused on population health.
Now, with Ebola
threatening our population, the truth is out.
The truth is, in
terms of virology, Ebola should not be a threat to American citizens. We
have clean water. We have information. We have the means to educate
ourselves, practice proper hand-washing procedures, protect ourselves
with hazmat suits. The CDC Disease Detectives were dispatched to Dallas
almost immediately to work on the front lines to identify those who
might be at risk, who could have been exposed. We have the technology,
and we certainly have the money to keep Ebola at bay. What we don't have
is communication.
What we don't have is a health care system that
values preventative care. What we don't have is an equal playing field
between nurses and physicians and allied health
professionals and patients. What we don't have is a culture of health
where we work symbiotically with one another and with the technology
that was created specifically to bridge communication gaps, but has in
so many ways failed. What we don't have is the social culture of
transparency, what we don't have is a stopgap against mounting hysteria
and hypochondria, what we don't have is nation of health literate
individuals. We don't even have health-literate professionals.
Most
doctors are specialists and are well versed only in their field. Ask
your orthopedist a general question about your health -- see if they can
comfortably answer it.
Health care operates in silos -- we can't
properly isolate our patients, but we sure as hell can isolate ourselves
as health care workers.
As we slide into flu season, a time of
year when we are normally braced for winter diseases, colds, flus, sick
days and canceled plans, the American people have been exposed to
another disease entirely: the excruciating truth about our healthcare
system's dysfunction -- and the prognosis doesn't look good.
Note: In
response to some comments, I would like to clarify that I am
FEMA-trained in level 3 hazmat in a hospital setting. I am a student,
health guide and writer, but I am not a nurse.
It's no secret that things haven't always gone
smoothly for Gov. Corbett in his effort to woo minority voters in
Pennsylvania. Most famously, the one-term GOP governor - who's in the
fight of his life for re-election - last year told editors of
Philadelphia-based Al Dia at a roundtable that he didn't have any
Latinos in his cabinet, adding: "If you can find us one, please let us
know."
Now, according to a report going viral tonight on social media,
Corbett's re-election campaign found an African-American woman to stand
next to the governor on his website photos.
Not an actual woman. According to Buzzfeed, the black woman who gazes at Corbett was Photoshopped from a stock picture.
Michael Dunn, the Florida man found guilty earlier this month of
first-degree murder in the shooting death of unarmed teen Jordan Davis
over loud music, has been sentenced to life without parole, according to
NBC News.
Dunn, 47, had previously been convicted on three counts of
second-degree attempted murder after he shot into a vehicle carrying
four teens in November 2012. In January that jury found Dunn guilty of
attempted murder and he was sentenced to 90 years in prison plus another
15 years for firing into an occupied vehicle, NBC reports. The jury
however, declared a mistrial on the first-degree-murder charges he faced
in the shooting death of Jordan, 17.
According to NBC News, Jordan's father read a statement during the
testimony portion of the sentencing, which lasted about an hour. In
total, Dunn will serve life plus 105 years in prison.
"Our justice system works," Judge Russell Healey said at the hearing,
according to NBC News. "This case demonstrates that our justice system
does work."
Many Republican Candidates have run their campaigns as a referendum
against Harry Reid and Pres. Obama. Ed Schultz, Brad Woodhouse and
Harold Cook discuss the feelings of many Americans, especially those in
Iowa.
"Religious scholar Reza Aslan took some serious issue on CNN Monday
night with Bill Maher‘s commentary about Islamic violence and
oppression. Maher ended his show last Friday by going after liberals for
being silent about the violence and oppression that goes on in Muslim
nations. Aslan said on CNN that Maher’s arguments are just very
unsophisticated.
He said these “facile arguments” might sound
good, but not all Muslim nations are the same. Aslan explained that
female mutilation is an African problem, not a Muslim one, and there are
Muslim-majority nations where women are treated better and there are
even female leaders."*
Don't believe the Citizens United pollyannas. Watching money flooding into elections for judges' seat shows how dangerous unregulated campaigns can be.
By
Norm Ornstein
Justice is blind, but not free. (Russell Boyce/Reuters)
Every once in a while, David Brooks writes a column in The New York Times that makes one just cringe. That was the case with his "Don't Worry, Be Happy" treatment last week of the impact of Citizens United
on our politics. By defining the impact narrowly—does either party gain
from the Supreme Court ruling and the new Wild West of campaign
financing?—and by cherry-picking the research on campaign finance, Brooks comes up with a benign conclusion: Citizens United
will actually reduce the influence of money in elections, and, I quote,
"The upshot is that we should all relax about campaign spending."
Without mentioning his good friend's name, E.J. Dionne destroyed that case in his own Washington Post column. But a broader critique is necessary. First, Citizens United—and its progeny, SpeechNow and McCutcheon—are
not really about whether Republicans get a leg up on election outcomes.
They are about a new regime of campaign spending that dramatically
enhances corruption in politics and government by forcing lawmakers to spend more and more of their precious time making fundraising calls,
raising money for their own campaigns and their parties, and getting
insurance against a last-minute blitz of "independent" spending that
trashes them when they have no time to raise money to defend themselves.
It also gives added traction to extreme groups threatening lawmakers
with primary devastation unless they toe the ideological line.
I have told this story before, but it bears repeating. Many
legislators have had an experience something like this: A lobbyist
visits and says, "I am working with Americans for a Better America. They
have more money than God. $10 million in the last two weeks of a
campaign to trash somebody's reputation would be nothing to them. They
really, really want this amendment. I don't know what they would do if
someone opposed them, but …" The result will be more amendments, or more
amendments blocked, without the money being spent and without anyone
even knowing what is going on. And every time the money is spent, and
someone loses, the lesson will not be lost on those still in office.
At the same time,
the desperation to raise money means lawmakers pandering to big donors
or shaking them down—trading access for favors, or threatening
retribution. And it means more vicious ads, done by anonymous groups,
which only enhance the corrosive cynicism voters have toward all
politicians. And it means more sham independence and blockage of
disclosure, without any enforcement of existing laws by the outrageously
lawless Federal Election Commission, led by Caroline Hunter and Lee
Goodman. And we should relax?
But that is not the worst of the new world of campaign finance post-Citizens United.
The worst comes with judicial elections—and that worst could be
worsened by a pending Supreme Court case that may allow sitting judges
actively to solicit campaign funds for their own elections.
Here is what we know. Loads of money—mostly conservative—went into
judicial-retention elections in the last cycle in Florida, following a
similar experience in 2010 in Iowa and Illinois. We saw similar efforts
on a smaller scale in other states, including Wisconsin and Michigan.
All had a ton of attack ads. Those efforts have exploded in the 2014
elections. In North Carolina, where repeal of the state's Judicial
Campaign Reform Act by the right-wing legislature opened the door to a
further explosion of campaign spending, and where the GOP sees retaining
a majority on the court (ostensibly, but risibly, nonpartisan) as a key
to their continued hegemony in politics, the Republican State
Leadership Committee spent $900,000 on an unsuccessful primary campaign
to unseat Justice Robin Hudson, and will target Court of Appeals Judge
Sam Ervin IV in his second attempt to move to the Supreme Court (the
first one, in 2012, cost $4.5 million or more). Much of the spending
will come in the next month, and will total many millions, most of it
from outside groups. The Republican State Leadership Committee is
targeting judges in Ohio, Michigan, Montana, North Carolina, New Mexico,
and Texas.
In Tennessee, Republican Lieutenant Governor Ron Ramsey, working hand
in glove with the RSLC, led a conservative effort to unseat three
justices up for retention. If they had lost, Gary Wade, Cornelia Clark,
and Sharon Lee—all endorsed by a bipartisan evaluation panel—would be
replaced by Republican Governor Bill Haslam. Once again, millions were
spent to defeat them. Thanks to a counter-campaign, led by lawyers who
practice in front of them, all three eked out bare victories in the
August retention elections. Lew Conner, a Republican who served as a
judge appointed by then-Governor Lamar Alexander, has said about Ramsey,
"What he's doing, I think, is just terrible. It's an attack on the
independence of the judicial system."
It is true that the politicization and increasing partisanship of the
courts has paralleled, or followed, the tribalism in the political
process. And it is true that a sharper tone in judicial elections
preceded Citizens United. But the concerted efforts by activist
James Bopp to go state by state and remove all restrictions on how
judicial elections are run—making them just like political
campaigns—combined with the effective elimination of boundaries on
funding and the blockage of disclosure, have dramatically changed
judicial elections. Vicious attacks on the integrity of judges
themselves undermine confidence in the judiciary, but that is not the
major problem.
Here is the reality: If judges fear multimillion-dollar campaigns
against them, they will have to raise millions themselves, or quietly
engineer campaigns by others to do so. Who will contribute, or lead
those efforts? Of course, those who practice in front of the judges
will, creating an unhealthy dynamic of gratitude and dependency. Worse,
imagine what happens when judges are deciding cases in which the stakes
are high, and well-heeled individuals or corporations will be helped or
damaged by the rulings. The judges know that an adverse decision now
will trigger a multimillion-dollar campaign against them the next time,
both for retribution and to replace them with more friendly judges. Will
that affect some rulings? Of course.
I agree with retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor that
judicial elections in general are an abomination. They are no way to
select impartial and high-quality jurists. But judicial elections in the
age of Citizens United make it so much worse. This will
ultimately undermine the whole idea of an independent judiciary, which
is the single most significant bedrock of a functioning democratic
political system. So, David, I do not relax about campaign spending. And
neither should you.
On Tuesday’s Podcast Ed is joined by Chair of the Democratic National Committee Con. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, D-FL, to discuss the get out the vote efforts for the midterm elections. We are also joined by Democratic Strategist Bob Shrum to discuss candidates running from President Obama.
Watch
this video. If this is how you feel about Comcast right now, just
remember one thing: after the Time Warner Cable takeover, it will only
get worse.
On Monday’s Podcast Ed Schultz is joined by Wisconsin State Sen. Lena Taylor
to discuss Scott Walker defending voter ID laws and not having an
answer when it comes to minimum wage in Wisconsin.
We are also joined by
Scott Brennan, Chair of the Iowa Democratic Party, to discuss the Senatorial race between Joni Ernst and Rep. Bruce Braley.
In 1996, Gary Webb of the San Jose Mercury News exposed a
shocking series of facts: that the CIA and the Reagan administration
were covertly funding the Contras in Nicaragua by aiding and abetting
the flow of crack cocaine to America, particularly inflicting terrible
damage on inner-city black communities.
In response, the Washington
Post, New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times all began vicious
campaigns to attack and discredit Webb.
Although Webb was later vindicated
by a CIA Inspector General report among other things, the damage was
done, and the story still has an air of obfuscation and confusion around
it.
Along with the release of a new documentary, Freeway: Crack in the System, as well as a feature film starring Jeremy Renner as Gary Webb, Kill the Messenger, key figures in the CIA-crack cocaine scandal are beginning to come forward.
Could this be the start of a renewed exploration of the government's complicity in the rise of crack in America?