Be INFORMED

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Major Doc Drop: All ALEC Model Legislation Leaked

  Between the Koch brothers and ALEC, you and I are getting well f—ked.

Original Post by ManfromMiddletown for Exposing ALEC

Wed Jul 13, 2011

Major news is breaking today out of Wisconsin. And it's not (directly) about the recall elections. The Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) has gone live with a web site containing leaked copies of all ALEC's model legislation.   For those of you who aren't aware what the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) is, a bit of background is helpful.  I particularly enjoy the "definition" that CMD has come up with.

ALEC is not a lobby; it is not a front group. It is much more powerful than that. Through ALEC, behind closed doors, corporations hand state legislators the changes to the law they desire that directly benefit their bottom line. Along with legislators, corporations have full membership standing in ALEC. Corporations sit on all nine ALEC task forces and vote with legislators to approve “model” bills. They have their own corporate governing board, which has a second, final vote on all legislation. They fund almost all of ALEC's operations. Participating legislators, overwhelmingly conservative Republicans, then bring those proposals home and introduce them in statehouses across the land as their own brilliant ideas and important public policy innovations—without disclosing that corporations crafted and voted on the bills. ALEC boasts that it has over 1,000 of these bills introduced by legislative members every year, with one in every five of them enacted into law. ALEC describes itself as a “unique,” “unparalleled” and “unmatched” organization. We agree. It is as if a state legislature had been reconstituted, yet corporations had pushed the people out the door.

ALEC Wants Us Peasants Quiet

ALEC was founded in 1973 by conservative activist Paul Weyrich. A brief clip of a Weyrich speech from 1980 explains a lot about the group's anti-democratic (note the little d) beliefs

 

"Now many of our Christians have what I call the goo-goo syndrome — good government. They want everybody to vote. I don't want everybody to vote. Elections are not won by a majority of people, they never have been from the beginning of our country and they are not now. As a matter of fact, our leverage in the elections quite candidly goes up as the voting populace goes down."

As we all know voting rights have been under attack recently.  Whether it's voter id requirements or attempts to purge valid voters from the rolls, ALEC has led the charge.

On July 17, 2009, ALEC's Public Safety and Elections Task Force approved a piece of model legislation called the "Voter ID Act."  The act calls for ID's required of voters to have both a photo and an expiration date, meaning that most college ids will not fit the bill.  Understand, this isn't about the vague (and utterly baseless) possibility that someone might attempt to commit in person voter fraud.  It's about disenfranchising people of color and lower income folks who move far more often (and often have no car, thus no drivers license) and students.

In case we ever seriously questioned not only the effect, and intent, of these laws, a quick look at Section 4 of the Taxpayer and Citizen Protection Act, adopted May 17, 2008, really seals the bill. This bill enshrines the discredited practice of voter caging into state law. As a 1986 memo between GOP officials in Louisiana demonstrates, they know precisely who this tactic would catch, as evidenced by this choice quote:

I know this race is really important to you. I would guess that this program will eliminate at least 60-80,000 folks from the rolls. . . . If it’s a close race, which I’m assuming it is, this could keep the black vote down considerably

The RNC is actually under a federal consent decree prohibiting the use of this tactic, requiring that any "ballot security" program be pre-approved.

As a Brennan Center report (the quoted memorandum above comes from the same source) outlines, there are multiple reasons why mail sent to newly registered voters may be returned to sender:

1. Voter rolls suffer from typos and other clerical errors
2. A voter may not be listed on the mailbox of her residential voting address
3. A voter may live at a non-traditional residence
4. A voter may be temporarily away from her permanent residence
5. A voters permanent mailing address may differ from her residential voting address
6. Mail may not be properly delivered
7. A voters street name may have changed
8. A voter may refuse to accept certain mail

Why ALEC Wants Us Peasants Quiet

All this effort to disenfranchise voters has to be for some reason.  And it is.  ALEC's claim that it is a non-partisan organization is accurate on at least one count. If they could serve their corporate masters by reeling in Democratic state legislators to do their work, they would. Whether it's privatization, i.e. getting state assets at dimes on the dollar, pushing tax cuts, or deregulation, ALEC's model legislation is all about big money donors getting a leg up on you and I. And as every good dog knows there's only one reason to get a leg up, something's going to get wet.

I've chosen to narrow in on labor issues here. Believe me, if you dig through the files at ALEC Exposed, you'll find that there's all sorts of of other ways they are trying to get a leg up on you and I. But, to keep things short, I'm going to hammer home on my favorite ALEC model bill.  It's Orwellian the shit that's wrapped up in an innocuous enough title: The Full Employment Act.

Sounds good, right?  Think again, it's about eliminating the unemployment insurance safety net while continuing to collect money from workers that will later be used to subsidize business.

As many of you know, unemployment remains high, and long term unemployment (greater than 26 weeks) is at historically high levels as a percentage of the total. As it stands now the BLS reports 14 million Americans as unemployed (reported rate), while only around  4 million of those are receiving unemployment insurance.  Yes, most unemployed folks don't currently receive benefits for one reason or another, even though they paid into the system.

The Full Employment Act would shred what's left of this safety net, and use the scraps to subsidize businesses.

From Section 1 of the bill:

It is the purpose of this Act to reduce the need for welfare and the dependence welfare induces, and to that end, there is hereby created a demonstration
program to be known as the Full Employment Program, hereinafter referred to as the "Program." The Program shall be a three-year test in [insert number of counties] counties of the effects of replacing certain welfare and unemployment insurance benefits with guaranteed paid employment. During the test, normal Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), unemployment compensation, and Food Stamp benefits shall be suspended in [insert name of counties] counties. Persons otherwise eligible for those benefits, and others in need of work, shall be eligible for the Program. The Program shall assign them to wage-paying public and private sector jobs designed to increase their self-sufficiency and improve their competitive position in the work force.

Yes, they want to eliminate unemployment insurance.  Instead, you will be assigned to an employer, and made to work if you want benefits. Think about it, if you are trying to work full time at a job assigned to you, do you really think that you are going to be able to actively look for a position that actually matches your skills?  No, you'll be trapped.  It's not only the unemployed that this impacts, the idea is to disempower workers, using their own taxes against them.

Section 6 of the bill diverts the unemployment insurance revenue into a "Program Special Fund." Section 7 both sets the rate of pay at 90% of the minimum wage, or the federal rate if higher, and uses the funds gathered in the "Program Special Fund" to pay the employer portion of worker's comp and Social Security taxes.

Now let me ask you.  Do you think that employers are going to hire a machine operator at $14.50/hr if they can get someone in from this state program and pay them $7.25/hr, and get the extra 8-9% that normally goes to the employer portion of FICA paid for them.  That alone saves the employer $1100-$1200 a year, at taxpayer expense.

This is what the ALEC agenda looks like,  it's part of a broader agenda of repealing the 20th century.

What's a Peasant to do?

It's not hopeless.  The release of ALEC's model legislation exposes this people for what they are.  And it's just the beginning.

ALEC will be holding it's annual meeting on August 1-6 in New Orleans.  After the success of our protest at their Cincinnati event this spring, we plan to carry the fight forward to New Orleans.

Please join us, and/or, make a donation.

We will not be silent.  Will you stand with us?

Originally posted to Exposing ALEC on Wed Jul 13, 2011 at 10:01 AM PDT.
Also republished by Frustrati, Class Warfare Newsletter: The Plutocracy VS the Working Class, and Earthship Koch.

Fun with The Bachman Clinic

  It has been reported that the clinic which the Bachman’s own, Bachman and Associates, has been using an un-scientific therapy method to turn gays away from their lifestyle. In that regard The Daily Show host Jon Stewart decided to get some comedic therapy along the lines that the Bachman clinic has used. The  “ cure “ is hilarious.

 

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

I Almost Feel Bad for the Teabaggers

Original Post    by BooMan23 at DKos    Tue Jul 12, 2011

It's kind of interesting to wade into the fetid waters of Lunaticville to see how they're reacting to the news that real Republicans represent Wall Street, and Tea Baggers are merely their (mostly) useful idiots.  Look, this isn't complicated.  There are a few very wealthy people in this country and there are hundreds of millions of...well...everyone else.  Very wealthy people have a particular set of concerns.  They would like to keep the money they have and they'd like to set the optimal conditions for them to make much more money.  In this, they're not really much different than the rest of us, but their behavior can have an outsized impact on all kinds of things, like the integrity of investments or the quality and safety of products or the healthiness of the air and water or the kind of compensation we receive as their employees.

Very frequently, our interests conflict with their interests.  They're badly outnumbered, so they should expect to lose political arguments pretty much all the time.  But they have money.  Lots and lots of money.  And they use that money to create political speech and political outcomes.  But speech isn't enough.  They need votes.  And the only way for them to get enough votes to have their interests reach parity with ours is to align themselves with some other large segment of the population.  In our recent history, this has been religious conservatives and, especially, Southerners who still retain an unhealthy contempt for the Federal government that beat them in the Civil War.  There's also another group of people, usually called libertarians, who are basically cheerleaders for rich fat cats not out of any particular self-interest but probably as a result of some quirky protein produced by their DNA in utero.  Who knows what is wrong with these people?  Most of them were born on third base, think they hit a triple, and are really pissed that they haven't yet scored.   They blame empathy.  And Al Sharpton.

Now, you can believe political rhetoric or you can believe your lying eyes.  Republicans run up huge deficits whenever they have the power to do so, and they loot the treasury to enrich themselves and their political donors.  That is literally what real Republicans live to do.  That's the party's entire purpose.  The deficits are not really the primary goal.  They're a byproduct of their desire to pay the lowest possible taxes while steering the maximum amount of the government's money to their rich pals.  The deficits do serve a purpose however. Once bounced from power, the Republicans behave as though it was the Democrats who produced those deficits.  And they pound the Democrats to cut social programs that steer government money away from their rich pals to people who are in need of some assistance. 

This is how American politics work in our two-party system.  Anyone who rallied to the Republican Party because they wanted to see them fix the deficit problem is not paying attention to how our system operates.  Mitch McConnell doesn't want to do away with earmarks.  He doesn't want a balanced budget amendment.  Those things would interfere with his ability to steer our tax money where he wants it to go.  A Republican Party that couldn't run up massive deficits would have no real reason to exist anymore. 

If you joined the Tea Party because you want to see lower taxes on millionaires and less regulation of business, then good; you're on solid ground.  But if you joined because you want smaller government and a balanced budget, you made a grave mistake.  The thing about greedheads is that they have no moral qualms about ripping you off and selling you out.  They're almost sociopathic by definition.  I mean, who attacks empathy?  That should be your first clue that you're on your own. 

If you are getting well paid to be an idiot, more power to you.  This is America.  But if you actually believed that John Boehner and Mitch McConnell want to transform the government into some Galtian paradise, you're just a sucker.  Plain and simple. 

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Hey John Boehner

  You continue to tell Americans, and the Obama administration that you and the House will not raise taxes on corporations and the wealthy because to do so would hurt those “ job creators “ that you love so much. Then you say that Americans do not want higher taxes on the wealthy and corporations? What polls are you reading, sir. Can you even read?

HEY MISTER SPEAKER

....profits are up, where are THE JOBS?

Show us the jobs! Where are those jobs?