Category Archives: Politics

Update on M&Ms

While all this was going on I was wondering where Jason Rosenhouse would stand on all of this. He is back from a break and has two posts on the issue here and here.
Update: Chris Rowan wrote an intriguing analysis and a huge thread on the topic is still ongoing on Panda’s Thumb

National Science Teachers of America Exxon

Laurie David, one of the producers of An Inconvenient Truth, wrote a piece for today’s Washington Post describing her efforts to make 50,000 DVD copies of that movie available to America’s science teachers through NSTA. They said no. And, more weirdly, they explained why.

Read the rest here. Horrifying. Go here to tell them what you think.

Being Poor All The Way To The Bank

Being Poor All The Way To The BankOn poverty, personal, national and global, and why it makes sense not to have a bank account when you are poor (October 04, 2005). Espcially in light of recent news about the way big banks rip off people by depositing big checks first – placing accounts into the red – then depositing multiple small checks which otherwise would have cleared but now incur fees which, added over many customers, add up to billions in profit for the banks. This practice kills me every month. I pay the biggest things (rent) by MoneyOrder so I am not afraid of that bouncing, but I’d like to minimize the number of penalty fees I get hit with. Can anyone tell me more about the Harrington Bank since I want to leave Wachovia?

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I Like M&Ms

I am still sleepy from all that tryptophan in turkey meat and the Evolution wine, so I don’t think I have the energy to write a big post now – I’ll leave much of my thoughts on the matter for a post-weekend post reviewing Dawkins’ The God Delusion.
But I have to chime in briefly by sending you to the relevant links and copying some of the comments I wrote on those comment threads. Brace yourself for a lot of reading as there are several posts and many comments on each of the posts. Sorry, the links are not neccessarly in order, but you’ll get the gist of the argument anyway.
Ed Brayton starts out here and responds to criticisms here.
Larry Moran fires the first salvo here and responds here.
Pat Hayes pitches in here and here.
John Lynch has three posts on the topic: here, here and here.
Buridan clears up some definitions here.
John Pieret takes his side here and here.
John Wilkins just in with this.
PZ Myers (and a gazillion commenters) responds to the whole brouhaha here.
[Update: Josh Rosenau and Mike Dunford have some thoughts on the issue as well.]
[Update 2: Ed Brayton, John Pieret and John Lynch have added further responses.]
[Update 3: Razib, John and Ed have more…and now Josh again! And a good one from Tyler again. And now also Daniel Rhoads. And also Paul Decelles.]
Whoa! What an internecine war! By now, you know that “M&M” stands for Myers&Moran and my title of this post tells you where I stand.
First, let me copy a little quote from my review of Ken Miller’s talk:

“A few years ago, I was of the mind that something like theistic evolution is a good idea to spread the message that evolution is not evil. I thought that people like Ken Miller are great messengers to soften up the people (step 1) and prepare them for eventual compIete abandonment of the Creator (step 2). And even those who never get to Step 2 are less dangerous than straight-out creationists.
I certainly have no problems with anyone personally believing whatever they want. But I am more and more moving to the opinion that this is not a good strategy. It is just providing the apologia for the believers who have a problem with being perceived as medieval, and allowing them to, then, provide apologia for their more extreme brethren. They – the moderates and the fundies – flock together when the going gets tough and it really counts – the political battles between 15th and 21st centuries.
The moderates are no friends of reason when it counts the most, outside of comfortable chats on panels on campuses. Evolution battle is not a battle of science, it is a battle of mindsets and worldviews: medieval vs. modern. Giving a helping hand to those who give their helping hand to the medieval bigots and authoritarians is not a good strategy. They need to be made uncomfortable – Dawkins-style – and forced to choose and come clear with which side they are on. Otherwise, they’ll play nice with us when it does not matter, and stick their fingers in their ears and sing “la-la-la” when real action is required.”

People who focus narrowly on preventing IDC form entering schools do not see the big picture, i.e., that Creationism Is Just One Symptom Of Conservative Pathology (go read that post now!). Thus, people like Dawkins, Myers (or me) are fighting against the bad politics of the church.
While Lennonnesque Imaginings of a world without religion are cute fantasies, we are a little bit more realistic. We know that religion is here to stay no matter what we do and we know that even organized religion can be and has been harnessed for change for good (as in Civil Rights movement). So, we want to fight against the political (added clarification: conservative) aggressiveness of churches in all spheres – creationism being just one of the prongs of their multi-prong strategy to roll back Enlightement.
While evolutionary biologists and philosophers of science are best suited to counteract creationism (and reproductive and developmental biologists to counteract abstinence-only education, opposition to abortion, stem-cell research and cloning, and psychologists and others should use their knowledge to counteract other prongs of their strategy), we need to all be aware that there is a big picture and that we need to work on it all together.
Part of the battle is to force the mealy-mouthed “moderates” to choose sides. ‘Mealy-mouthed’ moderates are, for instance, “liberal Christians” who believe in evolution and are generally on right side of issues but do not raise any voices against their fundie brethren and, when push comes to shove, side with them (as they are all Christians) against us. [added: this group also includes closet atheists/agnostics too afraid to speak up]
Different targets will respond to different tactics. Dawkins/Harris/Dennett tactic WILL work as one part of the strategy, targeting particular groups, and moreover changing the environment in which the debate is fought (a little bit of niche-construction). Ken Miller and those folks have their roles and can move over other types of people to choose sides.
The M&M approach is only going to push the true fundies away and they are already as far away as can be. The moderates – those who are culturally religious but on the right side on most scientific, moral and social issues – are unlikely to be pushed away by M&M rhetoric, and may even get a validation from it and get pushed in the opposite direction.
Dawkins, Harris and Dennett are changing the landscape of the discourse, forming an environment in which it is possible to talk about atheism and religion on a level field. Without them, we’d be forced to hide our atheism even more than before and allow the fundies to define us as amoral.
In other words, focusing only on preventing creationism from entering schools is missing the forest for the trees. We have managed to win a bunch of court cases, the latest one in Dover. But we have not won in the court of public opinion. And, if the entire religious plan succeeds, the courts of the future will be filled with clones of Priscilla Owen and all our victories against Creationism (and the Pledge of Allegiance, prayer in school, ten commandments in courthouses…) will be reversed.
Thus, in order to win the war, we have to engage the enemy at all fronts, not just the one where we feel like it. Let’s look at some previous success stories.
Women did not gain equality by being quiet and not rocking the boat. African-Amercans did not gain equality by being quiet and not rocking the boat. Gays did not gain equality by being quiet and not rocking the boat.
What those three groups did, and are still doing, is changing the discourse by being darn loud! A hundred years ago, a woman was a man’s property – not any more, and it is deemed extremely vile to suggest so in this day and age. Fifty years ago, stating that Blacks and Whites should be separated because Blacks are stupid and dangerous was a mainstream position – try saying that today and see what happens to you! Ten years ago, saying you are gay invited getting beaten up. See what just a decade of loud agitation has done – some kind of movement towards the right direction (gay marriage of civil unions) in several US states, Canada, Spain, UK, South Africa, now even Israel!
The first, loud pioneers set the stage for the debate and move the goalposts. They often endanger themselves initially, but their example prompts many others to come out of the closet. There are always those who are too afraid to speak out, to rock the boat. They try to talk the enemy out of destroying them instead of exposing the enemy for the brute it is. Being moderate, playing nice, and appeasing the fundies hellbent on destroying you is not a working strategy. Building a large, loud, uncompromising and powerful movement is. Ridiculing the enemy in the public sphere and changing the discourse – what is mainstream and what is not – gradually wins our wars against the anti-Enlightement forces.
If you go to feminist, Black and LGTB blogs, you’ll see that it is easy for them to make fun of latest rantings by white, rich males, like Brooks, Tierney and Derbyshire. But they have particular ire against people of their own who either side with the enemy or allow to be manipulated by the enemy – the antifeminist women, the Blacks who push (as Republican officials, usually) the anti-Black agenda, the Mehlmans and other gays in the GOP who actively work on anti-gay legislation. Why is it suprising that such a thing would not happen in the, much newer and younger, atheist movement?
The silent reverence for religion is something quite American. You need to read this to understand where I come from. In Yugoslavia, in 1941 everyone was officially religious, in 1951 some people were religious but were too afraid to say so because they feared persecution, in 1961, some people were still religious (although getting older), they went to church on Sunday but did not tout their religiosity in fear of ridicule. By the time I was aware of my surroundings in the 1970s and 1980s, only very few people were religious, those were very old and mostly in the countryside and nobody my age believed in God:

“The resurgence of religion in the area in the 1990s is fascinating to me. I do not believe that most of those people are really religious i.e., believe in God. It is purely a political instrument, as well as a way to use easily recognizable signals to differentiate between ethnic groups that are otherwise indistinguishable. Thus Serbs started sporting Orthodox paraphernalia, Croats Catholic stuff, and Bosnians Islamic symbols.”

The Western pundits, steeped in their own culture, quite erroneously labeled the Balkan conflict a “religious war”. It was more a war between the fans of Red Star, Dinamo and Zeljeznicar soccer clubs. And while the decade of wars and economic sanctions, coupled with migrations of the best-educated abroad and the country-folks into cities, made public religiosity by Right-wing extremists OK, the country is still predominantly atheist and secular. See this if you don’t believe.
Here in the USA, we cannot institute a top-down government-sponsored ridicule of religion. The system works differently here. Big societal changes, including changes in how we think about issues, are brought about by large, loud movements. But if atheists form such a movement – and this looks like a great time for a backlash against the fundamentalist overreaching – the discourse will change. Nobody in the next generation will fall for the idiotic notion that atheists are immoral. And, just like the communist government in the old Yugoslavia realized, there is no need for any kind of legislation banning religion and religious activities – public ridicule does the job marvelously on itself.
In this post (another must-read) I wrote:

Thus, we need to see the battle over evolution not as a separate battle, but as a part of a bigger war between Enlightement and Anti-Enlightement. One cannot be won without the other. And while some battles in this war can be and should be fought at the level of national politics, the battle over education, including the battle over evolution, requires us to get at their kids. For that, we need to go local. Winning cases in court works only for the short term – they will come again and again and, with conservative activist judges being appointed left and right, they will start winning soon. Getting elected to school-boards, teaching in schools, teaching the teachers, pushing for non-test-based educational systems, pushing for tests of critical thinking (including evolutionary thinking) in schools as well as for home-schooled children, …those are the ways to fight them long term, thus the only way to win this battle. Winning this battle – the battle over childrearing and education – will be the key for winning the whole war long term. Without new recruits from the new generations of children, the forces of Anti-Enlightement will dwindle in numbers, lose power, and finally die out. As a liberal, I am an optimist, a believer in progress, and cannot see how, in the long term they can win and we can lose. But in the meantime we need to fight to prevent them from incurring too much damage while they still have the power. Explaining evolution over and over again is not the way to do it.

But the project I describe here can only be succesful if the social and political environment allows it. And to change the discourse, to start getting taken seriously, and to change what is mainstream and what is not we need more M&Ms. If reason prevails and fundamentalism looses, then nobody will ever overturn our legal victories against Creationists. If we keep winning anti-IDC cases but ignore the environment in which it all happens, we will soon start loosing in courts as well. It’s fine if Ken Millers of the world want to help out in IDC cases and to move some minds on their lecture circuits, but in the long run, they’ll have to decide are they on the side of reason or on the side of their religion which also includes the most politically active fundies.
Dawkins is correct:

I tell Dawkins what he already knows: He is making life harder for his friends. He barely shrugs. “Well, it’s a cogent point, and I have to face that. My answer is that the big war is not between evolution and creationism, but between naturalism and supernaturalism. The sensible” – and here he pauses to indicate that sensible should be in quotes – “the ‘sensible’ religious people are really on the side of the fundamentalists, because they believe in supernaturalism. That puts me on the other side.”

It’s all connected, if you are smart enough to see it

Al Gore’s big issue is the environment. He says he is not running for President. Maybe he will, maybe he won’t. But no matter what happens, it is obvious that the environment is Gore’s passion and that he will spend the rest of his life fighting for it. His passion is what drives so many people to push him to run for office again.
John Edwards’ big issue is poverty. He is likely to run for President again. Maybe he will win, maybe he won’t. But no matter what happens, it is obvious that eradication of poverty is Edwards’ passion and that he will spend the rest of his life fighting for it. His passion is what drives so many people to full-heartedly support him in his bid for Presidency even before he has officially announced.
On the other hand, Newt Gingrich’ big issue is getting power for himself. So, he promises big ideas (again!? Please no more Contracts On America!) because he thinks it is hip these days to have a passion:

I’m going to tell you something, and whether or not it’s plausible given the world you come out of is your problem’ …. ‘I am not ‘running’ for president. I am seeking to create a movement to win the future by offering a series of solutions so compelling that if the American people say I have to be president, it will happen.’

So, what exactly is this passion of his, what ideas, apart from wanting to live in the White House?
What Newt does not understand, and both Gore and Edwards do, is that one cannot fake passion. Also, passion for dismantling the edifice of the state is not something that one can sell to the American people any more. After Katrina, everyone figured out what railing against Big Government really means.
Another thing that Newt thinks, in his immense reaches of egotism, is that suggesting a complex, all-encompassing program of reform will paint him as sophisticated as opposed to single-issue Gore and single-issue Edwards. If his monumental plan is anything like Contract On America, it is a laundry list of policies that the rich would like to see implemented so they do not have to worry about their money any more.
On the other hand, people who have watched Gore’s movie (or speeches, or read his books), as well as people who are paying close attention to Edwards’ activities, speeches and writings, understand that both of them are much more sophisticated thinkers than Newt can ever hope of becoming. For each, the main issue, the one they are passionate about (environment and poverty), is just the focal point of a much broader reform.
Taking money from the rich and giving it to the poor is not a long-term strategy that can eliminate poverty. Short term, it is good for the poor – they can buy houses, cars, food, health insurance, etc. As they buy those things, where does that money go? Back to the rich, the people who sold them the houses, cars, food and health insurance. And we are back to where we started…
For poverty to be eradicated, the structure of America has to change. We need to rethink and reform the structure of our economic and financial system. The tax code needs to be given a good, long look. Universal health care is a must. The way we produce food is in a need of some radical restructuring. Energy independence, apart from eliminating the need for further Middle-East adventures as well as obvious positive environmental consequences, is also neccessary for the elimination of poverty. Environment itself is an important determinant of poverty. Breaking down the power of megacompanies to influence the lawmakers to enact legislation that protects the Big Fish from the dangers of competition from midsize and small businesses, in other words allowing the free market to freely operate, is also neccessary for elimination of poverty. Changing the infrastructure – the sprawling cities built for cars, the faceless suburbs and exurbs, the little hamlets and hollers isolated from civilization, millions of people living in mobile-home tenements, the lack of trains and cable internet – all of that needs to be adressed in order to address the problem of poverty. Education and science are neccessary for long-term plans for eradication of poverty. For any of those reforms to happen, the way government operates needs to change, and this can happen only if the election rules change. And election rules can change only if the media gets a few electroshocks. So, everything is intertwined.
Gore knows this – the environment is his litmus test. If the environment is improving, this means that everything else is also functioning properly. Edwards knows this – the poverty is his litmus test. If poverty is going away, this means that everything else is also functioning properly. Voters can sense this sophistication. Many other leading Democrats do not “get it” just as well yet and campaign either on a laundry-list of policy proposals (many of which sound quite recycled) or on an anti-Iraq-war sentiment, not realizing that Iraq is just one of many symptoms of a much bigger problem. I have yet to meet a Republican who has any idea what I am talking about in the above paragraph. Certainly not Newt.

Darwin in Serbia

Darwin in SerbiaTwo years ago, there was quite a brouhaha in the media when Serbian minister for education decided to kick Darwin out of schools. The whole affair lasted only a few days – the public outrage was swift and loud and the minister was forced to resign immediately. I blogged about it profusely back then and below the fold are those old posts:

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Rise of the Effectiveness of the Political Blogosphere

Mahablog has two excellent posts analyzing (and linking to other good analyses) of the changes the Left and Right blogosphere experienced over the last several years and explains why the Right blogs were more powerful in the beginning and why the Left is much more effective today:
Under the Radar
Old Dogs

John and Elizabeth Edwards…

…liveblogging on DailyKos right now. Go say Hi and ask questions.

Repeat this mantra every day: McCain is not a moderate maverick

As John said right after the last election:

Besides picking our candidates and races, I think the most valuable thing most of could do is to help shape the conventional wisdom. We blog, we write letters to the editor, we talk up our relatives, neighbors, and co-workers. We should try to take down the straight talking St. McCain and the weak-on-defense Democrats narratives. It’s never too soon to start casting doubt on the Republicans we plan to target; broken promises are the most effective critique. And, of course it’s never too soon to start talking up the candidates we support.(bolding mine)

Yes, explaining that McCain is just as nutty wingnut as the rest of them is important because many liberals still believe that he is somehow a “moderate”.
Amanda agrees this is an important media construct to demolish and gets started:

So, here’s the action item on McCain, because, as Marc points out, spreading the truth about McCain is the big task for the next two years for genuine progressives. Find out who you know that is generally liberal and still has some weird affection for John McCain. And here’s the three things to tell them to clarify what a nightmare he is:
1. John McCain is to the right of all Democrats in Congress and many of the Republicans.
2. He is an anti-choice extremist with a 0% rating from NARAL.
3. His campaign finance “reform” amounted to banning the money the parties get for raising awareness of issues, getting out the vote, and registering people to vote. In other words, McCain banned the money that made elections about the issues while protecting the right of lobbyists to buy individual politicians.
Three simple talking points that make is super-clear that John McCain’s reputation as a “maverick” is a media myth that has no basis in reality. We’ve got two years to spread the word. (Read the whole excellent post for more detailed information)

Start spreading the word!

Pelosi

Of all the coverage of the Murtha-Hoyer duel and what it means for Pelosi, the only one that put into words the way I felt about the episode is Mary Beth. Of course the Kewl Kidz of the media got it upside down (but they have their own sinister motivations for it). I am not worried for her at all.

Obligatory readings of the day – on the Media

Glenn and Dave on eliminationist rhetoric and the complicity of the media in it. So, what to do with the media? Glenn describes, Sara prescribes.

The Public Park Parable of Political Psychology

The Public Park Parable of Political PsychologyAnother one on psychology of political ideology (form April 08, 2005):

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Tell your kids that medieval history is useful knowledge in the real world

For instance, you can work as a campaign manager and use your knowledge and insight to help a complete unknown win a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives (and yes, I watched that Dean press conference in which he could not even remember her name).

Is he going to do it again?

Back in 2003, John Edwards announced his presidential candidacy on The Daily Show with John Stewart. Well, he’ll be there again tonight – watch it! Will he do the same thing again?
Update: No, he didn’t. But he said to watch his website over the next few weeks.
Update 2: Apparently, the appearance on the show moved some people to like him more and pay more attention to him. Shakespeare’s Sister is one, which makes me very happy. Read what she said.

Home: The Blueprints of Our Lives

Home: The Blueprints of Our Lives, new book by Sen.John Edwards hit the bookstores today (I can’t afford it right now but it is on my wish list for later). You can read an excerpt here, check the dates and places for his booksigning tour, see the schedule for his media appearances (lots of them, including The Daily Show and Letterman) here and discuss it here.

Aftershocks of Feingold decision

Pam, Lindsay, Scott, Glen and Melissa and all of their commenters passionatelly discuss the effects of Feingold’s decision not to run. I suggest you read what Neil wrote (as well as some of his commenters). I only had a couple of words about it (and my commenters as well) here and here.

2008

Media is already handicapping the Presidential election. As you may expect, I really like this article. Now that Feingold is out of the race, Edwards is the leftest candidate (since Gore said he’s not running).

Zell Miller?

An interesting piece of alternative history.

Russ Feingold…

…is not going to run for President in 2008. A fine man. I am sure he will keep fighting in the Senate for what is good and what is right for the American people.

The Plan

What do you think about David Brin’s ideas:
OKAY, SO NOW WHAT?
What can the House of Representatives do, all by itself? – Step#1
What can the House of Representatives do, all by itself? – Step#2
What can the House of Representatives do, all by itself? – Step#3

Who should run against Elizabeth Dole in 2008?

Chairman of the NC Democratic Party wants to know who would you like to see run against her.

My last on the 2006 election

I agree with Publius’ final assessment of the election. Read it.
I spit my coffee (tea, actually) through the nose when I read this today:

“Sadly, it seems that the Party of Reagan has been hijacked by the neocons, the big government crowd and the pragmatists.”

PRAGMATISTS? Heellllooo?
As Deborah noted when she was calling VA voters, this was not about Iraq, it was about “throwing the bums out”. The word “corruption” that is being banded about is misleading. Corruption was not the top reason for kicking the bums out, courrption is just one of inevitable sub-symptoms of the greater sin of pride, self-grandiosity and the false sense of invincibility of the “we make reality” crowd.
Voters kicked out the incompetents who think that campaigning is the same as governing, that talking is the same as working (they do not know how to work), and that wishful thinking is the same as policy. They voted in the members of the reality-based community in hope that someone will start actually working in this government. They threw out the idealists, not pragmatists. Katrina had a much greater impact than Iraq. And Foley was just a recent reminder of the utter incompetence of the Republican leadership.
But it appears that the Democratic beltway aristocrats have themselves bought into the stupid GOP “face-saving” notion that conservative Democrats won and are planning on purging the party of Dean and abandoning the 50-state strategy. The “conservative” candidates Emanuel showered with millions mainly lost (some of them in the primaries). The netroots-supported candidates that Emanuel did not support (and in some cases actively campaigned against) mostly won or came much closer than deemed possible in some very Red districts. Morons! We have to do everything we can to stop them.
Finally, it’s time to start looking at 2008 and working immediately to mold the public opinion (see the Publius link above) and set the stage for a win then. As John says:

“…..I think the most valuable thing most of could do is to help shape the conventional wisdom. We blog, we write letters to the editor, we talk up our relatives, neighbors, and co-workers. We should try to take down the straight talking St. McCain and the weak-on-defense Democrats narratives. It’s never too soon to start casting doubt on the Republicans we plan to target; broken promises are the most effective critique. And, of course it’s never too soon to start talking up the candidates we support.”

New election rules?

New election rules?
Some ideas from two years ago (August 26, 2004):

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Perspective, part II

Some more good post-election analysis:
Amanda
Tristero
Tristero
Digby
Digby
Digby
Publius
Melissa
Paul
Echidne
Echidne
John
Neil
Jonathan

Podesta on the election results – The End of the Grand Conservative Experiment

If you have not received the e-mail from the Center for American Progress, it is here, under the fold:

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2008

Just check the Wikipedia for the information on Senate seats up for (re)election in 2008. Democrats should really make a killing then.
You can also check their pages about House races, gubernatorial races and the Presidential election.

The Onion is the best, as always

Politicians Sweep Midterm Elections
Rumsfeld: ‘My Half-Assed Job Here Is Done’
Republicans Blame Election Losses On Democrats
Write-In Candidate Thought He Had Enough Friends To Win
Voter Turnout Reaches All-Time Low Of 17

Metapolitics

Carnival of the Liberals #25 – the Metapolitical edition – is up on Philosophy, Etc. and Richard has picked some fantastic winners for this week’s carnival.

Now, for 2008.

As easily predicted, the 2008 presidential election is starting today. Apparently, Villsack is announcing today.

Perspective

Some good post-mortems:
Dave
Amanda
Ezra
Mike
Christy
Publius
Echidne
Atrios
Chris
Rick
Kos
Glenn
Glenn
Jason

A Woman’s Place Is In The House!

pelosi.jpeg
(Title shamelessly stolen from Kristine because it is priceless)

It’s official

Webb won

Slick Metaphors

They see visions, of Heaven on Earth, or Armageddon, or whatever.
We study the way world works and identify the problems that need fixing.
They cannot fix a broken toilet – they prey to it to fix itself.
We devise solutions, test them over time, tweak them and change them until the problem is fixed.
They try to wish the world to become as they like it.
We work to change the world.
They are preachers.
We are engineers.
They are poetic speakers.
We are rocket scientists and brain surgeons.
They don’t want to get their hands greasy (though oil money is OK).
We make sure that the machinery of the society runs smoothly by keeping it well oiled and lubricated.
They make sure they are well oiled and lubricated.
Yesterday, even many of those (30% of white evangelicals, for instance) who think the way they do showed they understand that machines need engineers, rockets need rocket scientists and brains need brain surgeons and that eloquent preachers need to go back to church, out of government.
They slipped on their own grease.
We’ll start cleaning up in January.

Even a dead Democrat…

…is better than a living Republican incumbent. In South Dakota.

Sweet!

Environment and Public Works Committee:
Outgoing Chair: James Inhofe (OK).
Incoming Chair: Barbara Boxer (CA).
Voot!

Election highlights

Big stories of the day:
1 – Democrats sweep the House of Representatives. Many newbies are relatively conservative – we need to start retraining them. Watch out for Lieberman and what he does.
2 – Montana and Missouri races are not over yet, but look good for Dems. Virginia still has to count some regular ballots, the absentee ballots and provisional ballots tomorrow, plus an almost inevitable recount.
3 – South Dakota anti-abortion measure failed. Sigh of relief!
4 – Socialist Saunders wins. Who said moving to the right was neccessary to win?
5 – Repubs had nothing to run on, so they repeated the old slogans and platitudes, irrelevant “cultural” issues, and invested heavily in various types of campaign and voting shenannigans. The biggest suprise of the day is that millions STILL, at this day and age, voted for Republicans. How does one organize and implement re-education and group psychotherapy at such a massive scale to get those people back to Earth?
6 – Do Repubs really want the recount in Virginia? That would, after all, put a spotlight on all the electoral improprietes they performed there – something that otherwise would not be a story of this election. Do they really want people and the press to focus again on the voting machines? Voting supression? Robocalls?
7 – Here in NC, Heath Schuler won and Larry Kissell will probably have a recount and lose.
8 – Personally the most satisfying result – the defeat of Russell Capps in NC House Disctrict 041. Capps spent his legislative career pushing bills focused almost entirely on inserting religion into public schools, from Creationism to the Pledge of Allegiance. Good riddance!
9 – Bush was apparently “surprised and dismayed” with the result! What did he expect? Was nobody delivering the news to his Bubble over the past few months?
10 – The best and most important news of the day – Dems taking LOTS of governorships, thus ensuring fair elections in many more states (including Ohio) in 2008.

Bloggers on CNN

Pam is one of the CNN bloggers tonight. I already saw her on TV a couple of times. Let’s see how much time they give them on TV and how much space online.

One Party

oneparty.png
Fair And Balanced, of course. Can’t insult anyone by naming names, can you?
They, after all, just report and you decide which party it is….

Never Again!

Never Again!I know, I know, Tuesdays are supposed to be for touchy-feely personal posts or navel-gazing posts about blogging, but today is an election, so I decided to go with provocative, hard-hitting stuff instead (originally posted on June 27, 2005, click on the clock-spiderweb to see the original):

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I Have Voted, Have You?

I voted at 9:40am and was voter #299 at our place which is huge! In some years there is less than that whole day.
Even more, earlier today, when I was dropping off my daughter at school around 7:50am, there was a line there with people even standing outside in the cold rain! I have NEVER seen a line there in the last 3.5 years here.
Oh, and if you are so new here that you do not know how I may have voted, I feel like this and this.
There is a judge race (officially non-partisan) in which I did not vote because the self-professed Democrat is bat-shit crazy (and not even endorsed by the Democratic Party) and the Republican…well, they all need to get the message that belonging to a maniacal party does not pay any more. There is another judge (who I think is an old-style Zell-Miller-like Southern Democrat) who is running unopposed for whom I did not vote because I saw his despicable demeanor in the courtroom – but that is personal.

Webb vs. Allen

Lindsay went down to Virginia this morning and is live-blogging (and photoblogging) the last hours of the campaign and the election there.

Voting problems and irregularities

If you go to this page and click on the map, you will see where there are election problems and complaints and what they are (click on the state, then use the pull-down menu to choose the county in order to see a list of the actual complaints).
As expected, there are already many problems in Ohio, especially in Cuyahoga County.
(Via)

Who to vote for in North Carolina

If you are in Chapel Hill (Orange County) NC and want to know how to vote on some races you did not pay much attention to, consult Concerned Citizen and Orange Politics. The debates in the comments at OP are quite informative as the candidates themselves tend to show up often.
For the broader Triangle area, check out the Independent and Exile on Jones Street.
For races across North Carolina, go for info to BlueNC

Tomorrow, go vote and be prepared!

Bring your cell-phone with you (if you have one). Bring your camera (if you have one). Bring family or friends along to serve as each others’ witnesses in case something happens.
And if you notice anything wrong with the way elections are going or your vote is counted? What do you do?
You need to respond immediately. Take a picture or a movie of the offense (discreetly if deemed neccessary). Then, you need to respond loudly enough that everyone in the building hears about it. Immediately complain to the election officials and do not back down until the problem is resolved. Inform everyone in the room. Immediately call the NATIONAL CALL-IN NUMBERS:
888-SAV-VOTE for voting machine and legal issues
866-OUR-VOTE for general election questions
866-VEY-VOTA for Spanish
These three numbers will collect reports from voters and include them in a national database of information called the Election Incident Reporting System (EIRS) that will be live and operating in real-time on election day so that these problems and trends can be evaluated as they occur.
Also, find your local contact numbers here:
www.votetrustusa.org
Click on “States” at the top of the page to find an election-integrity group in your state to report to locally.
Inform the local Democratic Party.
Go home and write a summary of the problem you encountered. Post it on your blog and mail it to everyone you know. Send the permalink to (or post it in the comments of, or re-post as a Diary at) prominent blogs and websites like DailyKos, MyDD, Black Box Voting and BradBlog. Edit the post for tone and style (cutting out the F-words) and send it to all the local radio stations, TV news stations and newspapers.
Do not let them steal yet another election! They have hijacked democracy as if it was an airplane. We need to fight the hijackers, even if that means we all together fall to our deaths in the field somewhere.

Elections

From today’s Quotes of the Day:

Tomorrow is election day in the US. At the table where I read, there is a stack of brochures proclaiming that each and every candidate is intelligent, honest, caring, devoted, hard working, well groomed, and straining at the bit to serve me and my community. Plus a few that say that the other guy is lying. My problem is that, with the two-party system, you only get to vote against one candidate in each race.
Our elections are free, it’s in the results where eventually we pay.
– Bill Stern
In politics it is necessary either to betray one’s country or the electorate. I prefer to betray the electorate.
– Charles de Gaulle, 1899 – 1970
The men the American people admire most extravagantly are the most daring liars; the men they detest most violently are those who try to tell them the truth. A Galileo could no more be elected president of the United States than he could be elected Pope of Rome. Both high posts are reserved for men favored by God with an extraordinary genius for swathing the bitter facts of life in bandages of self-illusion.
– Henry Louis Mencken, 1880 – 1956
Californians seem to understand that government’s major function is to entertain. No matter who is elected, the politicos end up swindling us, wasting our tax money on pork-barrel projects. The only way to reclaim at least some of that lost money is to elect politicians who put on a good show.
– Orange County Register
People never lie so much as after a hunt, during a war, or before an election.
– Otto von Bismarck, 1815 – 1898
Ninety-eight percent of the adults in this country are decent, hard-working, honest Americans. It’s the other lousy two percent that get all the publicity. But then, we elected them.
– Lily Tomlin

Another nasty Republican campaign trick

Betsy recorded two sleazy robocalls up in New Hampshire. This should be on every TV and radio station tonight and in the morning!

Music Selections: Americanitis

americanitis.jpgPolitically active and charged music, the “protest music” is live and well. Check out Will Kimbrough and his latest CD called Americanitis. He sang a couple of tunes live in teh studio of local NPR station and I really liked them.

Tripoli 6 on NPR

Starting right now on Talk of the Nation – Science Friday

Ask a ScienceBlogger

This week’s questions in the Ask a ScienceBlogger series:

What’s the most important local political race to you this year (as a citizen, as a scientist)?

There are two places here in which representatives of a reality-based community can replace mysoginist, homophobic cavedwellers:
NC – 8: Larry Kissel (D) vs. Robin Hayes (R)
NC -11: Heath Shuler (D) vs. Charles Taylor (R)
But it is really the sum of all local races that is important this year, and it appears that many voters understand that the Tuesday election is really a national election, much more than local. What is neccessary is to divide the Government again, so the “we make reality” crowd is forced to face reality again.

Aspergers under white hoods

Dave proposes
Sara disposes
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