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On Getting A Warning, Or, For Just One Day, I'll Be The CIA

by: fake consultant

Mon Feb 07, 2011 at 01:43:59 AM EST

We are in day whatever it is of the Crisis In Egypt, and we have now reached the part where, in the USA, we begin pointing fingers and ducking and dodging as we begin to address the question of why no one saw this coming.

Now, as Thomas Barnett would say, the race will be on inside the Pentagon and around the intelligence community to have the best explanation-and to turn that explanation into the greatest PowerPoint slide the world has ever seen.

And we all know it's going to be the same old story: "Nobody could have anticipated this event...but if you would just give us a few billion more to develop some program or another, we, along with our contractor partners, will get a handle on this."

Well I'm here today to break that cycle: with no PowerPoint, no contractor partners...and no fat consulting fee required...I will give the US Government all the forseeing they could ever need; that way, when the next uprising happens, no one can say "we never saw it coming."

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 1679 words in story)

Social Security: Where's Our Tahrir Square?

by: fake consultant

Thu Feb 03, 2011 at 10:02:19 AM EST

We have seen some amazing days in Egypt, and it's provided a better lesson than anyone could have ever wanted for how taking action, against long odds, can really get something done.

A secret police mechanism has been pushed aside, an Army has chosen not to attack The People, and a President who was backed by the "full faith and credit" of the US Government on Friday was being told by that same US Government on Tuesday that it's time to go.

The People, in fact, spoke so loudly that Mr. Mubarak has informed Egyptians that he's going to "pursue corruption", which, if taken literally, could eventually look like a puppy chasing its own tail.

The People, however, are unhappy with his answer, and they're speaking even louder yet...even to the point of being willing to take beatings, gunfire, and, believe it or not...camel charges...to make their voices heard.

And that got me to thinking about Social Security.

You know, we are facing the potential for a great big Social Security fight for pretty much the entire term of the 112th Congress-and it seems to me that a series of great big "Cairo-style" marches might be the way to make our voices heard, so that this Congress understands that great big benefit cuts are something that we will not tolerate.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 702 words in story)

On Contradiction, Or, Will Obama Lose An Argument With Himself?

by: fake consultant

Sun Jan 16, 2011 at 14:11:09 PM EST

There have been many unlikely things that have happened this past month or so: some of them appearing as legislation, some of them appearing in the form of Republicans who set new records for running away from the words they used to get elected-and some of them appearing in the markets, where, believe it or not, many Europeans finds themselves wishing for our economic situation right about now.

There are even improbable sports stories: our frequently hapless Seattle Seahawks, the only team to ever make the NFL Playoffs with a losing record, are today preparing to knock the Chicago Bears out of their bid to play in the Super Bowl, having crushed the defending holders of the Lombardi Trophy just last week before the 12th Man in Seattle.

But as improbable as all that is, the one thing I never thought I would see is Barack Obama getting into a political argument with himself over Social Security-and then losing the argument.

Even more improbably, it looks like there's just about a week left for him to come to a decision...and it looks like you're going to have to help him make up his mind.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 935 words in story)

On Rugged Individualism, Or, Meet The Ghost Of Government Past

by: fake consultant

Sat Jan 15, 2011 at 12:23:20 PM EST

It is about time for the 112th House to come back into session, and the first thing on the agenda appears to be an effort to take away any healthcare reform that have been passed by this Administration.

Next comes an effort to slash Social Security and Medicare, an effort to reverse financial reforms, and proposals to "slash" spending-but only on domestic discretionary items.

If the House majority had its way there would be no restrictions on offshore drilling, no rules designed to prevent climate change-in fact, few if any environmental protections at all...and all of this is intended to bring to life the philosophy that government, for all intents and purposes, should just go away and leave us all alone.

I don't buy into that kind of thinking-not even a little bit-and today we're going to look around the world and see if we can't figure out why.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 918 words in story)

On Shame As A Tactic, Or, Betsie Gallardo: She Won...And So Can You!`

by: fake consultant

Thu Jan 06, 2011 at 12:35:21 PM EST

We have been following the story of Betsie Gallardo lately, she being the woman that, due to a medical decision, was being starved to death in a Florida prison.

She has inoperable cancer, her death is imminent, and her mother was working hard to make it possible for Betsie to die at home with some dignity.

As we reported just a couple days ago, half the battle was already won, as the Florida Department of Corrections had agreed to place her in a hospital so that she could again go back on nutritional support.

On January 5th, the Florida Parole Commission voted to allow her to end her life at home-and that means you spoke out, made a difference, and achieved a complete victory for the effort.

But even as we celebrate that victory, I think we should take a moment to realize that there is a bigger lesson here: the lesson that the fights over "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" (DADT), benefits for 9/11 first responders (the Zadroga Bill), and Betsie Gallardo's imminent release are all actually pointing us to a political strategy that works, over and over, if we are willing to understand the wisdom that's been laid before us.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 721 words in story)

On How To Honor The Brave, Or, Why We Hate Republicans

by: fake consultant

Wed Dec 22, 2010 at 06:10:36 AM EST

We are coming down to the end of the 111th Congress, and we are all surprised that a number of things actually got done: a nuclear arms reduction treaty appears to be on the verge of approval, "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" was repealed; we have new health care and financial reforms (admittedly, they're imperfect solutions, but...), food safety reform, a better way to do student loans, and a credit card reform act that's forcing issuers to spend thousands of labor hours to develop new and better ways to work over consumers.

And yet there is one important bit of legislation that is still being blocked by Republicans, and, amazingly enough, it's a bill that would provide health care and compensation for those people who ran down to the World Trade Center site on September 11th, and for months thereafter, in the effort to rescue and recover victims, and to restore normal operations in the city after the attack.

Yes, folks, you heard me correctly: the Party of waving flags and "Second Amendment solutions" and tri-cornered hats and Rudy ("noun, verb, 9/11") Giuliani is now engaged in a desperate battle to screw over the very 9/11 first responders that you would think they would be...well, putting up on a stage somewhere next to Rudy Giuliani.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 1231 words in story)

On Pushing The Unwilling, Or, Laughter: A Tool Of Asymmetric Warfare?

by: fake consultant

Thu Dec 09, 2010 at 05:58:51 AM EST

So here it is, almost halfway through this President's first term, and it's starting to become abundantly clear that there is no way Obama is going to pursue the same agenda that he ran on in 2008.

In fact, as the President announces a deal that even he agrees the majority of the American people do not support, and he prepares the Nation for the news that we're going to have to borrow money for the very tax cuts he said we couldn't afford a few weeks ago, it's starting to look like Obama isn't even going to pursue the same agenda he campaigned for in October.

Now it is true that a lot of the problem here is the President's-but it's also fair to say that we Progressives have failed to force the President, and certain reluctant Members of Congress, to govern in a way that promotes that agenda.

That's a real problem, and it needs a real solution; before we get done today I'll offer a suggestion that could be not only highly effective, and a lot of fun besides, but a great chance to release your artistic muse as well.  

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 1426 words in story)

On Asking And Telling, Or, 115,000 LBGT Troops? How Many Is That, Exactly?

by: fake consultant

Thu Dec 02, 2010 at 01:18:15 AM EST

I took a couple of weeks off, as Thanksgiving and snow came around (a subject we'll address in a day or so), but we are all again occupied as lots of things we've been talking about  either will or won't come to pass, and it seems like all that's happening all at once.

Today we'll take on "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" (DADT); this because the Pentagon's top leadership just came out and reported that revocation of the policy, following a period of preparation, would be their preferred way to go.

There will be lots of others who will take on the question of what's right and wrong here, and exactly how implementation might occur; my interest is, instead, to focus on one little fact that makes all teh rest of the conversation a lot more relevant.

That is the fact that about 70,000 LBGT troops serve in the military today, DADT notwithstanding, and, that if it wasn't for DADT, almost 45,000 more troops would be serving that aren't today.

And that one little fact leads to today's Great Big Question: exactly how much military would 115,000 troops be, exactly?

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 865 words in story)

Social Security: If The Rich Paid Taxes Like You And Me...Problem Solved

by: fake consultant

Tue Nov 16, 2010 at 11:03:58 AM EST

Over the course of the past couple of weeks we've been talking about how the War On Social Security was about to get under way and what happens when countries choose to privatize their systems.

Today we take on another bite-sized chunk of economic analysis: how can you get to a situation where Social Security is financially stable for the next 75 years?

We'll describe some proposals that are out there-but the big focus of this conversation will be to look at one change that, all by itself, could not only solve the entire funding problem, but could actually allow us to lower the Social Security tax rate, immediately, and still achieve fiscal balance.

"Well, if that's such a bright idea" you might ask, "why haven't we adopted it already?"

That's a great question-and after you hear the proposal, you may well have explanations of your own.

There's More... :: (8 Comments, 1835 words in story)

Social Security: They Want To Cut, We Plan To Fight

by: fake consultant

Wed Nov 10, 2010 at 08:11:51 AM EST

So if you've been following my work lately, you know that there is a renewed effort underway to change Social Security, and that the fight officially began just this very morning.

Now what's supposed to happen is that a television ad buy sponsored by a Wall Street billionaire is supposed to get you enthused about cutting your own Social Security benefits in the future; this is the tip of a "disinformation iceberg" that is trying to get you to act, right now, because if you don't you will never, ever, ever, ever, see a single dime of Social Security when you get older.

I was on a "let's talk strategy" conference call today that laid out some ideas for the "next steps"; we'll be talking about that call over the next couple of stories...but for today, we're going to talk about something you can do that will bring the message right to your favorite Member of Congress.  

There's More... :: (3 Comments, 806 words in story)

Who'd we lose?

by: simonstl

Thu Nov 04, 2010 at 15:25:25 PM EDT

New York didn't have as large a Republican blast as was felt in many states, but I also can't find a great listing of how much changed below the statewide races where Democrats won the field.

In the House, I see us having lost:

NY-1 Tim Bishop (maybe, new)
NY-13 Michael McMahon (Thanks for noticing, GallatinDan)
NY-19 John Hall
NY-20 Scott Murphy
NY-24 Mike Arcuri
NY-25 Dan Maffei (Maybe)
NY-29 was Eric Massa, but empty

In the State Senate, it looks like we picked up Avella and Carlucci, but lost:

3 - Brian Foley
7 - Craig Johnson (Maybe)
37 - Suzi Oppenheimer (Very maybe)
48 - Darrel Aubertine
60 - Antoine Thompson (Maybe)

The closest I can find to an overview of Assembly results is this Times-Union piece, which suggests that the 100-vote veto-proof majority is in question. "The Democrats lost at least seven seats" and the 1st, 89th, 100th, 109th, and 121st were in the absentee range.

Any more detail on which seats changed hands there?

Discuss :: (29 Comments)

On Asking Experts, Part One, Or, Do Democrats Really Understand Their LBGT Problem?

by: fake consultant

Thu Oct 21, 2010 at 21:45:16 PM EDT

Stories begat other stories, or at least they do for me; this two-part conversation came from a comment that was made after I posted a story suggesting that voting matters this time, especially if you don't want environmental disasters like the recent Hungarian "toxic lake" that burst from its containment and polluted the Danube River happening in your neighborhood.  

Long story short, we are going to be moving on to ask what, for some, is a more fundamental question: if you're an LBGT voter, and the Democratic Party hasn't, to put it charitably, "been all they could be" when it comes to issues like repealing "don't ask, don't tell" or the Federal Defense of Marriage Act...what should you do?

Now normally I would be the one trying to develop an answer to the question, but instead, we're going to be posing the question to a group of experts, and we'll be letting them give the answers.

And just because you, The Valued Reader, deserve the extra effort, for Part Two we've trying to get you a "Special Bonus Expert" to add some input to the conversation: a Democratic Member of Congress who represents a large LBGT community.    

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 1147 words in story)

Halliburton Gets $2 Billion Contract For Florida "Cardboard Condos"

by: fake consultant

Mon Oct 18, 2010 at 02:54:37 AM EDT

Miami, Florida, September 13, 2018 (FNS)-Facing pressure from voters to "do something" following the disaster caused by the privatization of Social Security, the White House today announced that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is awarding a $2 billion contract to the Halliburton Company for the purchase of 22,000 "cardboard condos" that will be installed in public parks around the Miami area in an effort to alleviate the problem of homelessness among the impoverished elderly.

"Having homeless senior citizens drag their appliance boxes all over the city reduces the community's aesthetic appeal and leads to complaints", said Halliburton spokesman Tendei Furlough. "The new modular design, combined with our ability to print attractive images on the outside of the boxes, guarantees both increased protection from winter weather and fewer complaints from affected neighborhoods."

FEMA's Director of Emergency Housing Resources Spike Fromula agreed: "We thought we had a real problem with homelessness in a number of our major cities after the Social Security safety net collapsed...but now, we think...well, we think we have a way to wrap the problem up in a neat little package."

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 400 words in story)

On Why Voting Matters, Or, Could You Outrun The Toxic Red Flood?

by: fake consultant

Thu Oct 07, 2010 at 00:52:47 AM EDT

It is about a week before early voting begins for a bunch of us around the country, and that means this may be one of the last times I have to convince you that, frustrated progressive or not, you better get your butt to a ballot box or a mail-in envelope this November, because it really does matter.

Now I could give you a bunch of "what ifs" to make my point, or I could remind you how we spent all summer watching oil gush into the Gulf, and how that came to be...but, instead, it's "Even More Current Event Day", and we're going to visit Hungary for a extremely real-world reminder of what can go wrong when the environmental cops are considered just too much of a burden by the environmental robbers-and if today's story doesn't scare you to death, I don't know what will.

It ain't Texas, but we will surely visit a Red River Valley...and you surely won't like what you're gonna see.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 666 words in story)

NY-17: To the chagrin of GOP bosses, Tea Partier likely pulls off primary upset

by: cliffweathers

Sat Sep 25, 2010 at 12:03:52 PM EDT

While Elections officials are still too skittish to call it, Tea Party poster boy Anthony Melé has pulled off an improbable victory over the GOP blessed York Kleinhandler in their primary for the 17th Congressional District. A full 11 days after the Sept 14 primary, absentee and other miscellaneous uncounted ballots in Westchester were unsealed and Melé has emerged victorious by 84 votes.

Along with parts of Rockland and the Bronx, the 17th District includes thin slivers of several towns and villages in Westchester, and all of Mount Vernon.

Melé and Kleinhandler are both vying to lose to longtime Democratic incumbent Eliot Engel in November.

Kleinhandler remains on the Convservative Party line and said he plans to continue his congressional run on that line in a message to supporters. However, Kleinhandler has not conceded the primary, which is probably the decent thing to do at this point.  Kleinhandler, not Melé, is currently listed as the GOP nominee on the State Party's "Republican Spotlights" page.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 253 words in story)

NY-19: Hayworth's campaign to answer fraud charges

by: cliffweathers

Fri Aug 13, 2010 at 06:53:44 AM EDT


Explosive news comes out of New York's Lower Hudson Valley, where the campaign of a GOP congressional candidate hoping to face Rep. John Hall in November is tainted with allegations of fraud.

Republican candidate Nan Hayworth's campaign manager, John Hicks, will soon appear in New York Supreme Court on charges that notaries used by the campaign engaged in a petition campaign drenched with fraud. Hicks, along with 10 other of Hayworth's notary publics, are currently being served subpoenas.

Hicks, the manager of the GOP hopeful in New York's 19th Congressional District, is scheduled to appear in court on September 25. At question are petitions carried by Hayworth's notaries for the Independence Party, a minor New York party. Petitions must either be carried by members of the party or by notaries, public servants appointed by state government to witness the signing of important documents and administer oaths. Typically, notaries are used for signature gathering because of a scarcity of party members willing to carry petition sheets.  

There's More... :: (5 Comments, 559 words in story)

On Saving 319,000 Jobs, Or, Legislation Keeps Teachers Teaching

by: fake consultant

Tue Aug 10, 2010 at 01:32:00 AM EDT

As I pick up the pace of work again, coming into the midterms, I have to get some stories cleared off the desk in order to make room for some others, and that's what we're about today.

We'll be talking about saving more than 300,000 of this country's most important jobs, and paying for it in a way that is not only good policy, but is a real problem for Republicans who are yelling "no new taxes!" once again while pretending they care about actually paying for actual spending and actually want to cut actual unemployment.

We have a bit of work to do today, but we want to keep it somewhat short...so let's get going.

There's More... :: (3 Comments, 750 words in story)

On Taming The Financial Beast, Or, Sausage Gets Made, You Get To Watch

by: fake consultant

Tue Jun 22, 2010 at 09:43:23 AM EDT

While we've all been busy watching the "oil spill live cam", a similar uncontrolled discharge has been taking place in Washington, DC

In this case, however, it's lobbyists that are spilling all over the landscape as the House and Senate attempt to merge their two visions of financial reform.

They're trying desperately to influence the outcome of the conference in which House and Senate negotiators have been engaged; this to craft the exact language of the reconciled legislation.

There's an additional element of drama hovering over the events as eight House members, including one of the most vocal of the Republican negotiators, face ethics questions related to this very bill.

The best part: if you're enough of a political geek, you can actually watch the events unfold, unedited and unfiltered, from the comfort of your very own computer.

So far, it's been amazing political theater, and if you follow along I'll tell you how you can get in on the fun, too.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 1039 words in story)

On Slicing Pies, Or, Mystery Fees Cause Retirement "Money Spill"

by: fake consultant

Fri Jun 18, 2010 at 22:18:40 PM EDT

It's part two of our "Netroots Nation Goes To Vegas Piano Bar Extravaganza", and in keeping with tradition that means we are again taking a story request.

This time we won't be talking about energy security or "climate security"; instead, we'll discuss retirement security, keeping your money for yourself instead of paying it out in "mystery fees", and how one of the "usual suspects" is at it again.

And if all that wasn't enough...we also have pie.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 751 words in story)

NY-17: Tony Mele's Math Problem (with hilarious UPDATE)

by: cliffweathers

Tue May 04, 2010 at 17:12:42 PM EDT

Oh what a tangled web we weave, when we practise to deceive.-Sir Walter Scott

On the biography page of Anthony Melé's campaign website, the Tea Party/Republican candidate for Congress claims:

Mr. Melé was a political candidate for Ramapo Town Supervisor in 2007, garnering 48% of the vote, winning 9 out of 12 town villages.

(Click here for a screen grab.)

But the official election results from 2007 tell an entirely different story.

There's More... :: (2 Comments, 366 words in story)
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