Be INFORMED

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Our Denial Of Reality..

    in this country has grown into a major problem with us as we continue to be led astray,quite willingly,by our news media and our so-called leaders in both government and industry. We spend way to much time sitting in front of the television set watching garbage which is better left unviewed because we have gotten to lazy to pick up a book or a magazine to read. We wonder why our kids as so pathetic and lazy, and fat.

   I threw that last sentence in there for no particular reason as this post is a 2010 election subject about how the Republicans (Tea Party) is brain washing the voters once again into believing some things which are not true.

ConsortiumNews

America's Decoupling from Reality

By Robert Parry     September 15, 2010

As Election Day 2010 approaches – as the United States wallows in the swamps of war, recession and environmental degradation – the consequences of the nation’s three-decade-old decoupling from reality are becoming painfully obvious.

Yet, despite the danger, the nation can’t seem to move in a positive direction, as if the suctioning effect of endless spin, half-truths and lies holds the populace in place, a force that grows ever more powerful like quicksand sucking the country deeper into the muck – to waist deep, then neck deep.

Trapped in the mud, millions of Americans are complaining about their loss of economic status, their sense of powerlessness, their nation’s decline. But instead of examining how the country stumbled into this morass, many still choose not to face reality.

Instead of seeking paths to the firmer ground of a reality-based world, people from different parts of the political spectrum have decided to embrace unreality even more, either cynically as a way to delegitimize a political opponent or because they’ve simply become addicted to the crazy.

The latest manifestation of the wackiness can be found in the rise of the Tea Party, a movement of supposedly grassroots, mad-as-hell regular Americans that is subsidized by wealthy corporate donors (such as the billionaire Koch brothers) seeking to ensure deregulation of their industries and to consolidate their elite control over the political process.

The Tea Party madness is aided and abetted by a now fully formed right-wing media apparatus that can popularize any false narrative (like Islam planning to conquer Christian America as represented by the building of an Islamic community center near Ground Zero).

The Right sees an advantage in spreading even the nuttiest of smears against President Barack Obama. So you have right-wing author Dinesh D’Souza and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich concocting a toxic brew of racist nonsense about Obama somehow channeling the anti-colonialism of his late Kenyan father.

“Incredibly, the U.S. is being ruled according to the dreams of a Luo tribesman of the 1950s,” D’Souza wrote in Forbes. “This philandering, inebriated African socialist, who raged against the world for denying him the realization of his anticolonial ambitions, is now setting the nation’s agenda through the reincarnation of his dreams in his son.”

Incredibly, indeed.

The “factual” basis of this “analysis” apparently is that Obama entitled his touching story about his youth, Dreams of My Father, which was a book that focused on the absence of his father from his life.

In a less crazy time, one might have expected D’Souza’s claptrap to be denounced by politicians across the political spectrum, but that is not the time we live in.

Instead, Gingrich, a leading figure in the Republican Party and a potential candidate for president in 2012, praised D’Souza’s racist psycho-babble as the “most profound insight I have read in the last six years about Barack Obama,” adding that D’Souza unlocked the mystery of who Obama is by addressing his “Kenyan, anticolonial behavior.”

Gingrich also pretended that he and D’Souza were the truth-tellers here, not just propagandists spreading a smear. Gingrich said they simply were unmasking Obama who has “played a wonderful con, as a result of which he is now president.”

How It Happened

But how did the United States of America get here? How could the most powerful nation on earth with a sophisticated media that is constitutionally protected from government censorship have stumbled into today’s dreary place filled with such up-is-down commentary?

As a journalist in Washington since 1977, I have had a front-row seat to this sad devolution of American reason. As the process advanced, I have at times felt like a Cassandra trying to warn others about the risks of abandoning fact and rationality in favor of propaganda of whatever stripe.

I also have watched Newt Gingrich since he was a freshman congressman in 1979, when I was a congressional correspondent for the Associated Press. Though I have met many politicians in my career and know they can be an egotistical bunch, Gingrich’s burning ambition – his readiness to do whatever was necessary – stood out even then.

Unlike many other congressional Republicans of the time, Gingrich cared little for constructive governance but a great deal for political gamesmanship. He was already plotting his route to national power and was ready to use whatever tactics would advance his personal and ideological cause.

However, America’s decoupling from reality – and its disappearance into the swamp of unreality – began in earnest with the rise of actor and ad pitchman Ronald Reagan, who crafted a host of get-something-for-nothing policies that appealed to a nation that was struggling to adjust to a more complex world.

Reagan promised that tax cuts tilted to the rich would generate more revenue and eliminate the federal debt; that this money also could finance a massive military buildup which would frighten America’s enemies and restore national prestige; that freeing corporations from government regulations and from powerful unions would herald a new day of prosperity; that the country could turn its back on alternative energy and simply drill for more oil; that whites no longer had to feel guilty about the plight of blacks; that traditional “values” – i.e. rejection of the “counter-culture” – would bring back the good old days when men were men and women were women.

Despite the appeal of Reagan’s message to many Americans, it was essentially an invitation to repudiate reality. Before joining Reagan’s ticket as his vice presidential nominee, George H.W. Bush had famously denounced the tax-cut plan as “voodoo economics.” Early in Reagan’s presidency, his budget director David Stockman acknowledged that the tax cuts would flood the government in red ink.

But tax policy wasn’t Reagan’s only ignore-the-future policy. While rejecting President Jimmy Carter’s warnings about the need for renewable energy sources, Reagan removed Carter’s solar panels from the White House roof and left the nation dependent on oil. Reagan also led campaigns to break unions and to free corporations from many government regulations.

Scaring the Public

In foreign policy – although the Soviet Union was in rapid decline – Reagan put ideological blinders on the CIA’s analysts to make sure they exaggerated the Soviet menace and justified his military buildup.

Reagan achieved this “politicization” of the CIA by placing in charge his campaign chief William Casey, who, in turn, picked a young CIA careerist named Robert Gates to purge the analytical division of its long tradition of objectivity. Gates arranged the scariest intelligence estimates possible.

Reagan also credentialed a group of young intellectuals who became known as the neoconservatives – the likes of Elliott Abrams, Richard Perle and Robert Kagan – who emerged from an elitist tradition (advocated by philosopher Leo Strauss) that it was their proper role to manipulate the less-educated masses and guide them in certain directions.

After Reagan gave the neocons oversight of his Central American policies, the neocons worked with seasoned CIA propagandists, like Walter Raymond Jr. who was moved over to the National Security Council, to develop what they called “perception management” strategies for controlling how the American people would see and understand things.

The neocons used fear, exaggeration and outright lying to get the American people behind Reagan’s support for brutal military regimes in El Salvador and Guatemala and the contra rebels seeking to overthrow Nicaragua’s leftist Sandinista government. Truth was subordinated to policy.

Perception management operatives targeted honest journalists, human rights activists and congressional investigators who dug up unwanted facts that challenged Reagan’s propaganda. To discredit truthful messages, the neocons “controversialized” the messengers.

These techniques proved very successful, in large part, because many senior executives at leading news outlets – from the AP where general manager Keith Fuller was a Reagan enthusiast to the New York Times where executive editor Abe Rosenthal was himself a neocon – sided with the propagandists against their own journalists. [For details on “perception management,” see Robert Parry’s Lost History.]

Meanwhile, the American Right began building its own media infrastructure with wealthy foundations footing the bills for a host of political magazines. Far-right religious cult leader Sun Myung Moon poured billions of mysterious dollars into the Washington Times and other media operations. [See Secrecy & Privilege.]

By contrast, the American Left mostly under-funded or even de-funded its scattered media outlets. Some, like Ramparts, were shuttered, while other formerly left-of-center publications, such as The New Republic and The Atlantic, changed hands to neocon and conservative owners. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “The Left’s Media Miscalculation.”]

Whatever the long-term costs, Reagan made many Americans feel good in the short run. They liked the idea of not having to pay for government services (by simply putting the bill on the government’s credit card) and many bought into Reagan’s notion that “government is the problem.”

So, in 1984, Reagan’s gauzy “Morning in America” vision won big over Walter Mondale’s appeal for fiscal responsibility.

The Iran-Contra Window

Perhaps the last best hope to reassert reality came with the Iran-Contra scandal, which played out from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s. Reagan’s secret arms-for-hostages deals with Iran had the potential to unravel an interconnected series of national security cover-ups and scandals, including cocaine smuggling by Reagan’s contras and creation of the “perception management” operation itself.

However, again, truth about these complex scandals was not considered that important, either in Congress or within the Washington news media. The governing Democrats, the likes of Rep. Lee Hamilton and later President Bill Clinton, chose to sweep the scandals under the rug in the hope that the Republicans would reciprocate through a renewed bipartisanship. [See Secrecy & Privilege.]

Not only were those hopes unrequited, the Republicans actually grew more emboldened and more partisan. The GOP and its allies ramped up personal attacks on Clinton by turning loose its powerful new media infrastructure, which by the 1990s featured the Right’s domination of AM talk radio.

A typical example of the Right’s propaganda was to distribute lists of “mysterious deaths” of people somehow connected to President Clinton. Though there was no evidence that Clinton was implicated in any of the deaths, the sophistry of the argument rested simply on the number of cases.

When I checked out some of the cases and relayed my findings of Clinton’s innocence to one right-wing source, he told me that maybe I could show that Clinton wasn’t responsible for some of the deaths but I couldn’t account for all and that it would be “a big story” if the President was responsible for even a few deaths.

I responded that it would be a “big story” if the President were responsible for even one, but the problem was that there was no evidence of that, just the insidious impression created by a long list of vague suspicions.

What the Right learned was that it could achieve political gain by circulating an endless supply of baseless or wildly exaggerated allegations. Many Americans would believe them just because of the repetition over right-wing talk radio, especially by the most prominent talker Rush Limbaugh.

On Election Night 1994, Democrats were stunned by how effective the tactic of using bogus and hyped anti-Clinton charges proved to be. Between the smearing of Bill and Hillary Clinton and the voters desire to punish Democrats for raising taxes to close the Reagan-Bush-41-era deficits, the Republicans swept to control of the House and Senate.

Newt Gingrich achieved his long-held goal of becoming House Speaker, and Rush Limbaugh was made an honorary member of the Republican congressional caucus.

In the years that have followed – especially with the emergence of Fox News in the mid-to-late 1990s – the dominance of right-wing propaganda over non-ideological reality moved to the center of the American political process.

As in the 1980s, much of the blame should fall on the mainstream news media. Rather than push for difficult truths, many journalists in the corporate media protected their careers by going with the flow or turned their attention to trivial and tabloid stories.

The Bush-43 Era

During Campaign 2000, journalists from publications such as the New York Times and the Washington Post ganged up on Al Gore. They even made up quotations to put in his mouth so they could haze him as if they were the cool kids on campus and he was the goofy nerd.

By contrast, journalists knew to fawn all over the ultimate big man on campus, George W. Bush, as he made them feel important by giving them nicknames. [For details, see Neck Deep.]

When Gore still narrowly defeated Bush in Election 2000, the major news media stood aside as Bush and the Republicans stole the White House.

After Bush’s allies on the U.S. Supreme Court stopped the counting of votes in Florida to give him the “victory,” some executives at major publications felt that pointing out the fact that Gore actually won – if all votes legal under Florida law had been counted – would undermine Bush’s “legitimacy” and thus it was better not to let the public know. In other words, ignorance had become bliss.

Some columnists, like the Washington Post’s Richard Cohen, went so far as to hail the overturning of the popular will under the theory that Bush would be a uniter, while Gore would be a divisive figure.

The see-no-evil attitude hardened after the 9/11 attacks when mainstream outlets, including the New York Times, the Washington Post and CNN, consciously misreported their own findings of a Gore victory in Florida, based on an unofficial media recount. Instead of leading with that remarkable fact, they buried the lede and highlighted that Bush would still have won some partial, hypothetical recounts. [See Neck Deep.]

The media mood after 9/11 – a combination of misguided patriotism and fear of right-wing retaliation – caused the mainstream press to retreat further into self-censorship and even collaboration. Key journalists, such as the Times’ reporter Judy Miller and the Post’s editorial page editor Fred Hiatt, became handmaidens to Bush’s propaganda about Iraq.

With only a few exceptions, the U.S. news media let itself become silly putty in the hands of the neocons, who had returned to power under Bush-43 with a much broader foreign policy portfolio than Reagan had ever given them. Whereas Reagan confined them mostly to Central America, Bush-43 gave them the strategically vital Middle East.

Not surprisingly, the neocons reprised their old strategy of perception management, stoking excessive fears of Iraq’s mythical WMD programs and stomping out any counter embers of doubt. For millions of Americans, the WMD lies became truth as they were repeated everywhere, from Fox News and Rush Limbaugh to the pages of the Washington Post and the New York Times.

Aping the Right

After watching the success of the Bush administration’s propaganda, some on the Left decided that their only hope was to give the neocons a taste of their own disinformation medicine.

Though the 9/11 evidence pointed to Bush’s incompetence in ignoring warnings and failing to stop al-Qaeda’s terrorist operation, some American leftists felt that it wasn’t enough to convince the people that Bush was simply a bonehead. The feeling was that Bush had so bamboozled the people that they needed to be shocked out of their trances by something bigger.

So, this small group brushed aside the evidence-backed narrative of Bush’s incompetence and even a competing interpretation of that factual framework, claiming that Bush had “let 9/11 happen.” Instead, this group insisted that the only way to wake up America was to make a case that Bush “made it happen,” that he was behind the 9/11 attacks.

To accomplish this feat, these activists, who became known as “9/11 truthers,” threw out all the evidence of al-Qaeda’s involvement, from contemporaneous calls from hijack victims on the planes to confessions from al-Qaeda leaders both in and out of captivity that they indeed had done it. The "truthers" then cherry-picked a few supposed “anomalies” to build an “inside-job” story line.

The “truthers” even recycled many of the Right’s sophistry techniques, such as using long lists of supposed evidence to overcome the lack of any real evidence. These sleight-of-hand techniques obscured the glaring fact that not a single witness has emerged to describe the alleged “inside job,” either the supposed “controlled demolition” of the Twin Towers or the alleged “missile” attack on the Pentagon.

Some supporters of the “inside-job” theory may have simply been destabilized by all the years of right-wing disinformation. Reality and real evidence may have lost all currency, replaced by a deep and understandable distrust of the nation's leaders and the news media.

Other "truthers" whom I’ve talked with view their anti-Bush propaganda campaign as a success because it injected some doubts among the American people about Bush. One told me that this was the only attack line against Bush that had gained any “traction.”

However, after President Obama’s election in 2008, the Right again demonstrated its mastery of the disinformation techniques. Unlike the Left, the Right could roll out the heavy artillery of a multi-layered media apparatus that pounded the public with barrage after barrage of conspiracy theories.

Falsehoods took on the color of truth simply by their endless retelling. For instance, the canard that Obama was born in Kenya, not Hawaii as his birth certificate shows, has gained credibility with large numbers of Americans including about half of Republicans, some polls show. Similarly, the Right has convinced tens of millions that Obama is a Muslim, though he is Christian.

The Right’s media power has enabled the Republicans to portray Obama as some un-American “other,” while the GOP has little fear that its spreading of racist-tinged conspiracy theories will hurt the party’s election chances.

The latest example is Dinesh D’Souza’s bizarre theorizing about Obama’s channeling his late father’s opposition to British colonialism in Kenya, a reincarnated dream which somehow has morphed into Obama's "socialist" agenda which is "alien" to American values.

Instead of roundly condemning D’Souza for this strange and racist article, Gingrich – one of the supposed intellectuals of the Republican Party – went out of his way to praise the nonsense as “profound.”

As former Bush-43 speechwriter David Frum noted in a blog post, “With the Forbes story and now the Gingrich endorsement, the argument that Obama is an infiltrating alien, a deceiving foreigner – and not just any kind of alien, but specifically a Third World alien – has been absorbed almost to the very core of the Republican platform for November 2010.”

Despite some internal GOP critics like Frum, the Republican Party clearly feels that it has a winning formula, using such psychological warfare to exploit a confused and embittered electorate. That confidence will be tested on Nov. 2, although if most prognosticators are correct, the Republicans have good reason to feel confident.

Whatever happens on Election Day, the longer-term challenge will be to rebuild an old-fashioned commitment to fact and reason within both American journalism and the broader political system.

Though lying is not foreign to U.S. politics and media, telling the truth has always been a fundamental American value, one that is vital to democracy.

The great task of restoring the Republic must include honest efforts to dig out recent history's ground truth, which can then be used to build a path out of the disinformation swamp and onto the dry land of rational political discourse.

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek.

Consortiumnews.com is a product of The Consortium for Independent Journalism, Inc., a non-profit organization that relies on donations from its readers to produce these stories and keep alive this Web publication.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Latest Senate Polling

    Washington State

    Senator Patty Murray (D) has a slight lead (51%) over Dino Rossi,the Republican challenger who has 46%.

In 10 previous surveys conducted since January, the candidates have been within two points of each other seven times. Murray's support has ranged from 45% to 50%, while Rossi has picked up 46% to 49%.      RasmussenReports

    Over in the state of Delaware, Chris Coons (D) has a pretty good edge (53%) over his Republican challenger (Christine O’Donnell)(42%).

4% of those polled say that they are undecided at this point while 1% would like to have someone else to vote for.

Harry Reid is having a pretty tough time of it out in Nevada as those polled have Reid and his Republican challenger (Sharron Angle) tied at 48% each. 2% would like another candidate and 3% are undecided.

   Hate to say it (not really) but this might be a career ender for Senator Reid. I’d like to see him retired,only not by a Republican.

   Oh well, can’t have everything.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Investigators Say That Egg Farm Knew Of Salmonella…

…which is not a surprise, is it? With the lax government over-site of our food industry in the past few decades, would you worry about a little food poisoning if it were going to maybe cost you a lot of money to fix the problem? Wouldn’t you also try to avoid what could be massive fines and lawsuits ?

Congressional investigators say the Iowa egg farm at the center of a massive salmonella outbreak received hundreds of positive results for salmonella in the two years before its eggs sickened more than 1,500 people.

In a letter Tuesday to the company's owner, the House Energy and Commerce Committee says that investigators have obtained records showing that Wright County Egg received 426 positive results for salmonella between 2008 and 2010.

    Next week, the owner of the company is due to testify before the same committee.

Obama’s Suggested Next Steps For The Economy

    First off, Obama needs to let those Bush tax cuts expire,period. The government needs the money. I’m not sure about you, but I have not seen to many rich folks down at the unemployment office or feeding at a soup kitchen.have you? I have not seen them sleeping out on curbs and in cardboard boxes either. The wealthy can afford to pay the taxes that they should be paying. More tax cuts equals more budget cuts which will give you and I less services from our local governments.

A Plan B for Obama; Education Bubble     Edited:Complete Post at Dollars & Sense Blog                                       

(1) What we would like Obama to do: From Thomas Palley’s contribution to Martin Wolf’s Economists’ Forum at FT.com:

Plan B for Obama on the economy

September 6, 2010 4:54pm

By Thomas I. Palley

TO: President Obama
FROM: Thomas I. Palley
RE: How to avoid stagnation and restore shared prosperity
DATE: Labor Day, 2010

Mr President,

With hopes of a V- or U-shaped recovery fading, there is the increasing prospect of an L-shaped future of long stagnation, or even a W-shaped future in which W stands for something worse.

The reason for this dismal outlook is economic policy is trapped by failed conventional thinking that can only deliver wage stagnation and prolonged mass unemployment.

Your administration’s current economic recovery programme has been marked by four major failings:

1. Inadequate fiscal stimulus.
2. Failure to cauterise the housing market
3. Failure to neutralise the trade deficit
4. Failure to restore the link between wage and productivity growth

If your policy team remedies these four failings our economy will quickly begin robust recovery. However, the longer you wait the greater the challenge, because recession creates new facts in the form of bankruptcies, foreclosures, destroyed credit histories, job losses and factory closures.

Suggested remedies:

1. Let the Bush administration tax cuts expire and use the savings for additional targeted stimulus

The economy needs a further demand boost to establish recovery momentum. The majority of the Bush tax cuts were an income redistribution program favoring the wealthy rather than a stimulus or growth program. That makes extending them bad policy.

The Bush 10 per cent bracket and marriage provisions should be retained, while everything else should be allowed to expire with the savings used to fund new temporary fiscal stimulus.

Half the funds should be directed to state and local governments to help avoid another round of job losses, this time in state and local government. The other half should fund an immediate lump sum non-taxable payment to all individuals earning less than $50,000 ($100,000 for married couples). This means 80 per cent of households will continue benefiting and the total paid to these households will actually increase.

Moreover, the lump-sum design will increase the benefit going to those at the bottom, which will further stimulate demand and also lower income inequality. This temporary stimulus should be repealed once self-sustaining recovery is underway.

2. Cauterise the housing market

The second critical measure is to cauterise the housing market. Throughout the crisis, policy has disproportionately benefited banks and corporations. It has largely failed to help households directly and has instead relied on hopes of trickle-down effects from banks, combined with expensive tax subsidies to attract new home buyers.

The failure to directly help households has been a grievous policy error. Along with banks and corporations, households have needed debt relief but this has not been forthcoming. Banks have resisted meaningful loan modifications, while many households have been unable to refinance mortgages at lower interest rates because of zero or negative home equity. Consequently, the household sector has remained distressed and trapped in a foreclosure tsunami that has traumatised the economy.

Policy must immediately put a floor under existing homeowners. The solution is to use the Federal Housing Administration to refinance Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages with low or even negative equity and then have Fannie and Freddie repay some of their federal government borrowings. The test criteria should be whether the mortgage is viable once refinanced at low rates.

Additionally, the Federal Reserve must continue with purchases of mortgage-backed securities to ensure that mortgage rates stay low until the housing market has stabilised.

Refinancing such mortgages will yield a huge boost to the distressed corner of the household sector that is currently unable to refinance. It would reduce foreclosures; boost consumer demand by lowering mortgage payments; and it is urgent because adjustable rate mortgages issued late in the bubble are still resetting upward.

The problem has always been inability to service interest costs, and the foreclosure wave could have been avoided if lower interest servicing had been made immediately available to households. Policy did this for the business sector via the TARP and various Federal Reserve rescue facilities but failed to do so for households.

3. Neutralise the trade deficit

The third critical measure is to neutralise the trade deficit. The adverse effects of the trade deficit can be understood through the metaphor of a bathtub. Fiscal and monetary stimulus is being poured into the tub but that demand is leaking out through the plughole of the trade deficit. Moreover, it is not just demand that leaks out, but also jobs and investment due to off-shoring.

The trade deficit and off-shoring are significantly attributable to China’s under-valued exchange rate, which also forces other countries to under-value their exchange rates to stay competitive. This has resulted in an over-valued dollar which makes the US economy internationally uncompetitive.

As China refuses to correct its under-valued exchange rate, it is long past time for the US to take protective action. That can be done via administrative interventions and legislation to make countries with under-valued exchange rates subject to countervailing duties.

There may be trade disruption and retaliation, but the costs of inaction and appeasement are far worse. The problem of under-valued exchange rates was visible a decade ago yet policymakers have failed to take action with devastating consequences.

The choice has always been pay now or pay more later. Inaction means working families have already paid enormously and continued inaction will compound their devastation.

4. Restore the wage – productivity growth link

Finally, policy must address the central problem of the last 30 years: the destruction of the income generating process and severing of the wage – productivity growth link.

Rebuilding that link is critical to recovery and shared prosperity, and it requires rebuilding worker bargaining power. One immediate measure is passage of the Employee Free Choice Act that will enable unions to organise on a level playing field.

A second measure is to index the minimum wage to the median wage. That will create a real wage floor and limit wage inequality because the minimum wage will automatically increase as median wages rise with productivity.

5. Do it all

It is important these measures are enacted as a comprehensive package. Implemented alone they will be far less successful.

Without tackling the trade deficit, fiscal stimulus and the benefits from cauterising the housing market will leak out of the economy. Similarly, increasing union membership and wages will result in an acceleration of job and investment off-shoring.

Fixing the trade deficit without fixing the income generation process and lightening households’ debt burden will leave the economy permanently short of demand.

Escaping the Great Recession requires jumpstarting the economy by increasing demand. Preventing the economy falling back into stagnation requires rebuilding the income and demand generating process. That is why success needs the full policy package.

Thomas Palley is a Schwartz Economic Growth Fellow at the New America Foundation.

(2) What Obama is proposing to do:  From yesterday’s Financial Times:

Obama unveils new stimulus plans

By Anna Fifield in Washington

Published: September 8 2010 13:03

President Barack Obama on Wednesday took Republicans to task over their economic “values” as he promotes an $180bn package of proposals to stimulate the anaemic US economy and show the American public he is working to boost the recovery.

At a speech in Cleveland, Ohio, Mr Obama made a strong case for permanently extending Bush-era tax cuts for the middle class. But he made clear that he opposes the Republican plan to extend tax cuts for the richest two per cent of Americans, which the White House says would add $700bn to the deficit over the next decade.

“The president will be talking about the values and the diverging paths of the two parties,” a senior administration official said ahead of the president’s speech, part of a week of economic announcements geared towards the November Congressional elections.

Mr Obama deliberately gave the speech in Cleveland to provide a contrast between Democrats’ policies and those laid out in the Ohio city last month by John Boehner, the minority leader in the House, who stands to become speaker if the Republicans take control, as forecast by many analysts.

“It’s propitious that we should be in Cleveland where Mr Boehner was a few weeks ago outlining the Republican plans,” the official said.

Mr Obama has tried to make the midterm elections a choice between going back to the ways of the Republicans – who he has repeatedly said drove the economy “into a ditch” – and Democrats, portrayed as getting the car back on the road again.

The Bush tax cuts are a contentious issue as the midterms approach. Republicans argue that no one should face what would amount to a tax increase while the economy remains in such bad shape, whereas the White House says giving tax cuts to “millionaires and billionaires” does nothing to stimulate growth.

The White House wants the top-tax cuts – which reduced the tax rate for individuals earning more than $200,000 and couples earning more than $250,000 from 39 to 35 per cent – to expire at the end of the year. But some Democrats, facing tough re-election battles, are nervous about letting them lapse.

Read the rest of the article. The Obama is also promoting a plan “to allow companies to write off capital investments”, plus a business tax credit for R&D, plus an infrastructure investment initiative.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Immigration:What To Do About It

  For my part, I think that we should close the border to our south and post signs along the way,in Spanish, that if you are caught illegally coming into the United States a second time then you will be shot on sight. That would curb that problem a little bit.

   I know, that would be just a little harsh.

   Here is a much less violent solution to the problem from a guest commentator which was printed in the online version of  The Tampa Tribune. This is only part of the story, so hit the link and go read all of it, okay? The writer thinks that citizenship is the answer.

First, close the borders, enforce immigration laws and set strict conditions reflecting national needs for new immigrants.

To show the absurdity that such measures are motivated by racism, just consider that perhaps one-third of the world would like to be economic migrants to our shores. Mexicans simply have the advantage of being able to walk across the border. Is this not discriminatory to Guatemalans and Hondurans, Peruvians and Paraguayans living so much farther away? People from Benin, Belarus, Bosnia, Borneo and Bulgaria don't show up much at all, do they? Simple geography debunks arguments about racism.

Second, we should enable as many as possible of the 10 million lacking legal status to become full citizens, on the condition that they earn it.

   He suggest such things as having immigrants join the military for a period of time or to either do some sort of community service if the military is not an option.  Good start, I think.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Saturday Satire

    This post used to be called the “Friday Funnies” but as you can tell, I am running a day behind so we have a name change for at least one week.

From PoliticalHumor:

Jay Leno

"President Obama was in Cleveland pitching his latest economic plan. He picked Cleveland because those are the Browns fans, and in September, they'll believe anything."
"There was one awkward moment when the speech ended at lunch time. 9.6 percent of the people had no job to go back to."

 

Craig Ferguson

"The new taxes are going to put rich people in a very tough spot. Paris Hilton may have to carry her own cocaine. Trump may have to fire the guy who trims that thing on his head. Warren Buffet may have to move in with his cousin Jimmy Buffet."

 

Thursday, September 09, 2010

Florida Pastor Suspends Koran Burning…

…probably only because he cannot get a large enough crowd to come and watch his play.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – The anti-Muslim leader of a tiny Florida church says he was lied to and is rethinking his decision to cancel burning Qurans to mark 9/11.

Pastor Terry Jones earlier Thursday had backed off his threat to burn the Quran after he said he was promised that a planned Islamic center and mosque would be moved away from New York's ground zero. Muslim leaders denied there was such a deal.

   And if this pastor actually believed that the mosque would be cancelled, then I’ve got some serious swampland out in southern Arizona that I would like to sell to him. It is humorous that a thief would get upset over being lied to, isn’t it?

Jones and Imam Muhammad Musri stood side by side in a news conference where the pastor said he would cancel Saturday's event.

Musri later told The Associated Press there was only an agreement for him and Jones to travel to New York and meet Saturday with the imam overseeing plans to build a mosque near ground zero.                            Source

Redneck Preacher Also A Thief

   Of course, that would be no surprise since I consider most of those so-called “Christian” leaders a group of thieves. It is Christian leaders like Rev. Terry Jones  who bring much of the scorn upon Christians, and in this case, it does not help that this piece of shit is from the state of Florida.  You know how I feel about a majority of the residents in the state.  Those feelings are not going to change as long as you have people like this chump running around around.

    I’ve said that Floridians are dumb,stupid and ignorant, and Reverend Jones is just another one of the many examples.

    He is also a thief. It seems that Jones had a few problems with church money over in Germany at a church that he had founded back in the 80’s.

    However, Jones was ousted from the church in 2008 over financial irregularities and personality clashes, according to the report. The church now has between 60 and 80 members.

  But wait! There’s more!

Dpa cited church members who said Jones tried to run the Cologne church like a sect leader and applied psychological pressure on its members, subordinating all activities to his will.

"He wasn't the kind of pastor who did everything and took care of everyone," said Breuel.

Baar added: "He didn't project the biblical values and Christianity, but always made himself the center of everything."

In 2002, Jones was fined 3,000 euros by a German court for using the title of "doctor" under false pretenses. Members also said he was at the center of some financial irregularities. Since his departure in 2008, the congregation has had no contact to Jones.            HuffingtonPost

Monday, September 06, 2010

A Labor Day Thought:Republicans Are The Enemy Of The State

  Posted at DailyKos

A partisan holiday

by Laurence Lewis   Mon Sep 06, 2010

Labor Day shames Republicans. They campaign against unions. Their media propagandists rail against unions. Their policies consistently favor corporatists over workers.

If the Republicans had their way, minimum wage would be kept to a minimum. Regulations that protect workers would be slashed or eliminated. Consumer protections would be slashed or eliminated. Environmental protections would be slashed or eliminated.

Republicans like to claim they are about less government, but they are really about less government protection of people and workers from corporate abuses. Republicans want to regulate our personal lives, telling us who we can and cannot love and marry, what women are allowed to do with their own bodies, and how we all are to respond to our bodies' natural rhythms. But they want corporations to have complete freedom.

Unions and union workers played a huge role in creating the best of what America has been for the past century. They built our national infrastructure and our national security. They taught us and fed us. They protect us in our homes. They protect us from natural disasters. Republicans love to stoke fear and hatred based on the 9/11 attacks, but they have opposed helping that day's first responders who saw friends and colleagues die, who risked their own lives, and who continue to suffer the after-effects from those attacks.

Those who fought and died to create the labor movement helped end child labor and legal employment discrimination, and they helped create the forty hour work week, paid overtime, workplace safety, workers' comp, unemployment protections, pensions, guaranteed health insurance, sick leave and guaranteed vacations. When Republicans criticize unions and talk of reducing government, they are talking about ending all of that progress.

More than any other holiday, Labor Day is partisan in nature. Republican presidents and Republican elected officials may pay it lip service, but they rarely mean what they say. Their actions speak their true intentions, and they rarely act to the benefit of workers or unions. The only surprise is that they haven't attempted to abolish the holiday altogether. Perhaps someday they will seek a balance by attempting to establish a holiday that equally reflects their values and their agenda. But Corporate Plutocracy Day just doesn't have the same ring to it.

Sunday, September 05, 2010

Tax Cuts Kill Police Departments

    Down here in Tampa I am always joking that one of these days the police department is going to have to cut back on personnel because of the “tax cuts” brought on by all of those Republican politicians in the land. Of course, they call them budget cuts cause the American people can stomach that much better.

    Here in Tampa, we have our libraries closing on one Friday every month. We have had our city council get furlough days also.

   Back to the police. Hasn’t happened in Tampa yet, but here is a story that is fucked up. This is your tax dollars at work.

Associated Press

CLARKSTON, Mich. - A small town in Michigan has eliminated its police department as a way to save money.

The Oakland County sheriff's department began patrolling the village of Clarkston on Friday night.

Clarkston previously had a police chief, one full-time officer, eight part-time officers and some reservists. WDIV-TV and the Detroit Free Press report the community about 30 miles northwest of Detroit eliminated the positions as a part of budget cuts.

The Clarkston Area Chamber of Commerce says about 1,000 people live in the community.

In California, the city of Maywood eliminated its police department earlier this year because of budget problems. Maywood is southeast of Los Angeles and has about 45,000 residents.

  

Saturday, September 04, 2010

Dems Messing Up Chances In November…

…which is not anything surprising, is it? I think that those idiots up in Washington,D.C. have been shooting themselves in the foot from day one. President Obama has no control over his group and he has not attempted to reign his troops in, which is not good. The Democrats, I think, are going to eat the dust come November and they have no-one to blame but themselves.

    At stake nationally is the balance of power in Washington, the tone for the remainder of Obama's first term and his likely 2012 re-election bid. All 435 House seats as well as 37 Senate seats are on the ballot. The country also will elect 37 governors in races that will determine who oversees the once-a-decade redrawing of political districts.

    Republicans are hoping to capitalize on voters' economic disillusionment, frustration with Obama and tea party-generated enthusiasm.

   Democrats are relying on a financial advantage, a robust get-out-the-vote operation and, mostly, the ghost of George W. Bush to curb an expected Nov. 2 shellacking.   Source

Thursday, September 02, 2010

Are The Power Companies Ripping You Off?

   Of course they are, you and I both know that. My problem is not with what I am paying for the power usage, but with the other “ add-ons “ tacked to the bill.

    We here in Tampa are serviced by only one power company and that would be TECO (Tampa Electric). Guess that it is pretty nice to be a monopoly here in this area.

   In the bill which arrived in the mail today was one of those forgettable little pamphlets that outfits are always throwing in with the bill itself. Usually, I toss the thing into the trash,but I decided to take a look at it this time around. Surprise! $104.90  power bill. No big deal there right? I think that that is pretty cheap for this time of year. My attention was directed to the extra fees and such.

  Gross Receipts Tax: $1.78

  Franchise Fee: $3.52

Those are nothing to be concerned with, but, this one got me!

   Customer Charge: $10.50

   Just what is this charge? According to this little pamphlet:

      “ The monthly customer charge covers the cost of maintaining your electric meter and the wires that bring electrical service to your home or business. “

    It also covers their cost to send someone out to read my meter,and maintain my customer records.

    So, in a nutshell, I am paying them an extra $10.50 for services that should be coming out of my power bill itself. Are they now charging me extra for their costs of doing business?

   I’ll have more on this after I get a chance to speak with someone at the company.

 

 

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

A Little Bit Of Polling

   Well now, to give you just a little bit of what the country thinks of President Obama, I went to one of my favorite polling sites, Rasmussen to check out their latest info.

    The latest polling index shows that only 29% of the countries voters Strongly Approve of the way Barack Obama is handling his job as president. Those who Strongly  make up some 41%. Those are not good numbers by any means,

    While we are at it, you should know that 75% of those polled think that our Congress should cut their own pay until the budget gets balanced. Don’t hold your breath waiting for that one to happen.

Overall, 48% of voters say they at least somewhat approve of the president's performance. Fifty-one percent (51%) disapprove.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Glenn Beck and The Christian Right

“Something beyond imagination is happening. America today begins to turn back to God.”        Glenn Beck

 

    That was FoxNews Channel's own pundit Glenn Beck while he was speaking at a rally up in Washington,D.C. on this past Saturday in which 10,000’s of thousands (100’s if you ask Beck) of people attended.  Just what you and I need, another Republican rally, which is exactly what this event was.

   It was not to long ago that the Republican diehards where out touting about how godly they were and that the GOP would be turning America back towards God and that this country would once again become a great nation.

   The Republicans might have actually pulled it off if it wasn’t for all of that greed,graft,and criminal activity that they perpetrated getting in the way of things.

    Of course, the Obama administration has not been all that great either. They haven’t gotten to the corruption and crime part yet. Not that we know of yet. Give it time, the game isn’t over.

   The Democrats cannot seem to get anything accomplished in the Senate or the House for that matter. Nobody likes anyone else's idea’s because they didn’t think of it. Then of course, those darned Republicans keep sticking nails in any idea from the Liberal side of the isle. Lest you forget, there are many Republican politicians whose sole purpose is to see to it that President Obama goes down hard with as many other Democrats as possible.

   The Republicans are winning this war against you and I. Mr. Beck does his best to disparage the President at every chance that he gets.

    Sara Palin also got her shot at running her mouth at this gathering.

    When Sarah Palin, the Republican populist and former vice presidential candidate, launches into her speech, the crowd chants “USA, USA, USA.” “We must restore America and restore her honor,” demands Palin. She addresses the people as “patriots.” In recent months, Palin has emerged as the leader of the “tea party” movement and is mentioned as a possible 2012 presidential candidate. But she says she is speaking in front of the Lincoln Memorial not as a politician, but rather as the mother of a soldier. For this, too, there is warm applause.

   This is the stuff that the GOP has always been great at and I see no reason for that group to fail this time around either.

   The Dems are in deep shit and they are going down a little bit deeper if they do not get it together.

   Then there is also the influence of the Tea Party movement, another group supporting the Republicans. Easy to do since they are mostly GOPer’s in the first place.

Windows Live Writer Beta 2011…

    … is on my list of blogging software as a must have.

    Over the past few days I’ve been having problems with getting “Live writer” to work properly on my computer. I did uninstall and reinstall it at least 5 times. After the last take out, the

Windows Live Essentials installer kept telling me that I already had “Live writer” installed, which was not correct. Hell! I deleted all of the files that had anything to do with the program and still I could not install another one.

   At my wits end, I went  and Goggled the “Live Essentials'” and I was led to the newer 2011 version. Got a new “live writer” and it looks pretty darned sleek!

    I posted this in order to see how it works.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Class Warfare: Up The Stakes

It has been my thought that this country has been involved in class warfare for a very long time. It seems that I am not the only one who thinks so, and maybe the war should be fought in a different manner because the working class are getting hammered by the well off.

From Dailykos Daily KosIs It Time For Class Warfare?
by Something the Dog Said
Wed Aug 25, 2010
Those who read my posts (and there are a lot more of you than I ever thought there would be) know that I am not really a fan of divisive politics. This comes from the teachings of my Mom, who spent her political career reaching out to Republicans to get things done in Washtenaw County. Her argument was always that while you might hammer your opponents in today’s fight, you’re probably going to need them to get tomorrows work done. It is generally good advice, but it is predicated on the premise that your opponents want to get things done and really are working for the best solution for everyone.Sadly Mom’s good advice can not be used right now. There has been too big a shift in power in the nation for us to look at the Republicans as any kind of honest partner in anything. The efforts of the folks like the ultra-wealthy Koch brothers have shifted our discourse so far to the right that things which would have had politicians thinking about spending more time with their families in the past can be said with a straight face and taken as serious.At a time when the wealth of this nation is once again concentrated in the hands of a few and the rest of the nation suffers because of it, the idea of class warfare has to be revived and considered. I hate the term "class warfare" mostly because I don’t like the meme of war when it comes to politics, any kind of nod to the acceptance of political violence, even rhetorically is dangerous in my mind. Still, in this case it is accurate.The Koch brothers, Rupert Murdock, the Coors Family, and other old-ish money Right Wing folks have used the power of money to push an agenda that helps them and their fortunes grow but does nothing for the people of this nation over all. They are the source of the deregulatory push that has us recalling more than a quarter million pounds of lunch meat and a quarter billion eggs. They are the folks who helped muddy the water about cigarettes and climate change. All so they would not have to spend some of their incredibly massive profits to make their products and the production of their products less harmful.This kind of power can only be overcome by the power of the people. The thing about the power of the people is it only works when they are united. The old slogan does not read "The people, fractious, will never be defeated", hell, that doesn’t even rhyme.One problem we face is the way the tax code is written. The idea that we are going to increase taxes on folks making more than 250,000 a year just feels too close to home. Almost no one you know makes that kind of money, yet, it is close enough that we many of us can imagine it. In my work life I have made 100,000 one year. I did it selling cars, not working in an office (and yeah there is a giant gaping whole in my soul from it). It was a hell of a lot of money and I can imagine what it would be like to make twice that.Even folks who make somewhere between $50,000 and $75,0000 a year feel like they could get to this level. Even though they are not likely to, even though they don’t know anyone who makes that kind of money, they think about it and feel like it is attainable.This makes it hard for us to talk about making the ultra-wealthy pay their fair share. If you think that you are going to be in that group, well you don’t want to do something that would hurt you later. What is needed is to start talking about the top brackets being in the 1 million dollar range and above. Even the most optimistic middle class worker does not see a day when he will be making a million dollars a year from his or her job.Looking at it this way puts the fight in the proper perspective. The other thing we need to start doing is talking about the earnings of the ultra-wealthy in ways that everyone can grasp. A million dollars a year is a lot of money, but really it is hard for many people to intellectualize a million. Take a moment and try to imagine a million pennies or a million cars or even a million slices of bread. Very few things that we deal with in our lives come in million packs so we don’t have a good grasp of what that number means.However, everyone has had a regular pay check, so if we say that we want to raise the taxes of those who make $38,461 every two weeks, 79,000 a month (which is the same as 1 million a year) then it comes into focus just how far away most of us are from being hit by these taxes. It is hard to defend a tax break for people who make more in month than most households make in an entire year.This is the type of number we have to start using and talking about if we want to bring people together. Folks like Joe Wurzelbacher the famous "Joe the Plumber" like to think that letting the tax cuts for the top 2% of earners expire is going to impact them. To get them to wake up we need to throw a little cold water on their day dreams of avarice.The other component of the new class warfare is getting the unemployed to band together. The job situation in this nation makes each person looking for work see all the others as competition. If there are five people for every job opening, then that is four people you have to beat out for that job. This robs us of the cohesion that the unemployed should have. As long as we are fighting each other, we won’t be fighting the very folks who will off shore 10,000 jobs for a .5% increase in revenue.There are 14 million unemployed and under-employed adult citizens in this nation. If they all turned out and voted for one party it would be a wave that would dwarf 2006. These votes can be had, if the Democrats will focus on two things, first that the Radical Republicans will not act to create jobs. They want the "market" to do that. They have voted against every single action that helped the recession so far and would continue to do so if in power. Democrats need to stand up and say if the market won’t create jobs then it is the job of the government to do so.The second thing is to say that the ultra-wealthy are going to help pay for these jobs. They make more two weeks than you make all year, and we are going to make them pay 5% of everything over 79,000 a month to help put the people of this country back to work.This is the win/win the Democrats need. It puts the working folks (better known as 98% of the population) on their side and puts the screws to the folks who have had it so good for so long. It also has the long term affect of reducing some of the power of the ultra-wealthy to influence the debate.As I said before, I don’t like this kind of politics. It has its dangers mostly in stoking anger of one group of Americans against another. But there comes a time when we have to deal with what is not what we would like to believe. There is a line from Young Frankenstein: "A riot is an ugly sink, unt, I think that it is just about time dat ve had vone!"Class warfare is an ugly thing too, but it is just about time that we start to engage in it. The fat cats and ultra-wealthy have been doing so for years, now it has to be our turn.
The floor is yours.

Looks like my newest blogging software has a few tics which need to be worked out. Notice no paragraphs?

Scott Wins Ove McColum

Rick Scott put one past the polsters on Tuesday as the man beat Attorney General Bill McCollum in the Republican primary. Scott was edging out McCollum by only a few points, and McColum would not concede the race until after 12:30 this morning. It's been fun watching these two guys scratch and claw at each other. Scott will be one to watch after this " upset." Next up will be the Rubio/Christ,Meek run for the Senate, which I hope that the polsters are wrong once again with their Christ picks. Wake up Florida! You do not need Christ in the Senate.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

This is a test post. this is it

Software Problem Continues

Still attempting for find a free program that will let me post article links which would be hidden behind a set of words. So far, not such luck. I have 4 more versions of blogging software to try. My current one ( Zoundry Raven ) has an icon for the link but it is inoperable. Haven't figured out why as of yet, but I am working on it.


This is not a good day to be having to mess with this stuff, what with the elections going on down here. I will update the election results sometime today. I Hope!




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Monday, August 23, 2010

New Blogging Software

   which I have used in the past. It'll take me a little time to get used to this one all over again, but, at least I am somewhat up and running once again.


    I really liked using Windows Live Writer but I've been having problems with it in the Windows 7 operating system. Hopefully, I can find a work around to the problem..


   Some of the primary elections here in Florida are coming up on Tuesday, so later today I will posting my thoughts on that whole farce. It has been fun to watch and listen to over the past few months, especially among the Republican candidates.


   See you in a bit!


     Powered by Qumana


Saturday, August 21, 2010

Posting problems with Windows Live Writer…

… have kept me from posting as much as I had wished to over the past few days. That problem has now been corrected and I will be posting about it, and the fix, later in the week.

Another Day In The Life…

… and I’m not to sure that I can take much more of the Tampa, Florida lifestyle. At least, not the kind of life that I am living here. Most hourly workers here in North Tampa would think that I have it made because I can work when I wish to, and I can stay at home when I wish to. All that I hear from my co-workers is that Mike’s got the money and all of that crap. Which I guess that I do, for the most part. The only reason that I live better than most of my friends here is because I chose not to drink my cash away, as they do daily. I do better than they do because I chose not to smoke all of my cash up into crack, or to become one of the many pain medication addicts that are prevalent here.

   Yes, the employment sucks down here. I do not work a forty hour week because there are very few hours like that through the temp services. In fact, I’ve been working only two days at the most for the past month! That sucks up the ass! I’m not broke yet because I do not waste my money on dumb shit.

   Once, when I was living out in the streets, one of my homeless friends asked me how I could be out of doors and not drink or do drugs. I simply told him that it was the drugs and the drinking that was keeping himself and others out in the street. In many cases, a combination of the two had put some of them outdoors in the first place. Some of them work at least 30 to 35 hours per week, and have been for a few years, and they are still living outside! Those bad habits will keep them there for a very long time. A few of them will die there. A of them that I’ve known in the past have died during the six years that I was away from here. Most of them from drinking to much.

    This is not a problem exclusive to Tampa, I know. I think my main hassle with the Tampa area is not  with the city itself, but with the people who live here. I’m sorry to have to say it, but the people here are by far the most ignorant, stupid, and uneducated group of individuals that I have ever run into. You can thank the area government for a lot of that, as well as the state hoods up in  Tallahassee.

    One of the problems that I have with the folks down here is that they seem to think that they have all of the time in the world to do something. They seem to run on two speeds here, “ snail slow “ and “ stop.”

    For instance, just yesterday I sent a woman out to do something pretty simple for both her and myself. Go to an Amscott to have a power deposit and a past bill sent to the local power company. This was so that the power would be turned on at her new place of residence. By public transit, it takes about ten minutes to get there. She also had to fax a copy of her driver license to Equifax in order to verify her identity. Five hours later and she still was not finished. The fax machine would not accept her id card. Well. of course it wouldn’t! So, two days later and that little task still has not been finished. She did manage to get the power deposit and her late bill sent into the power company.

   Like i told her though, we could have taken the id to my office and made a copy of it and faxed it on my fax machine. all in under half an hour! I had something else that I had to do at the time.

    This is not just a problem with her and the way that she does things. this is an outbreak infecting many of the people in the Tampa Bay area. They do things without thinking things through, and then when things don’t work out for them, it becomes someone else's fault. What makes me laugh the hardest though, is that instead of doing things differently, they will do it the same way and then cry when they get the same result as they did the last time. No one here seems to understand that you cannot do the same thing the same way and expect to get different results. It doesn’t work that way!  “ Dumb as a box of rocks “ phrase had its birthplace in Tampa, I’m sure.

    But wait! There’s more!

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Man Almost Hit By Plane..

   and he was lying on his couch at home!

    Steve Yanko, of Bell Township, was on his couch sleeping with his dog when the twin-engine plane crashed into his house. Two people were killed and the house was set on fire.

    According to the F.A.A., the plane ( BE58 Beech Baron ) flew out of the Arnold Palmer Regional Airport in  Latrobe,Pennsylvania at around 9:08 Saturday morning and crashed 11 minutes later.

    Officials think that two men were in the plane but they are still searching the wreckage. they haven’t unearthed the tail section of the plane so the identification numbers of the plane have not yet been verified.

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Another Day In The Life…

… and I’m not to sure that I can take much more of the Tampa, Florida lifestyle. At least, not the kind of life that I am living here. Most hourly workers here in North Tampa would think that I have it made because I can work when I wish to, and I can stay at home when I wish to. All that I hear from my co-workers is that Mike’s got the money and all of that crap. Which I guess that I do, for the most part. The only reason that I live better than most of my friends here is because I chose not to drink my cash away, as they do daily. I do better than they do because I chose not to smoke all of my cash up into crack, or to become one of the many pain medication addicts that are prevalent here.

   Yes, the employment sucks down here. I do not work a forty hour week because there are very few hours like that through the temp services. In fact, I’ve been working only two days at the most for the past month! That sucks up the ass! I’m not broke yet because I do not waste my money on dumb shit.

   Once, when I was living out in the streets, one of my homeless friends asked me how I could be out of doors and not drink or do drugs. I simply told him that it was the drugs and the drinking that was keeping himself and others out in the street. In many cases, a combination of the two had put some of them outdoors in the first place. Some of them work at least 30 to 35 hours per week, and have been for a few years, and they are still living outside! Those bad habits will keep them there for a very long time. A few of them will die there. A of them that I’ve known in the past have died during the six years that I was away from here. Most of them from drinking to much.

    This is not a problem exclusive to Tampa, I know. I think my main hassle with the Tampa area is not  with the city itself, but with the people who live here. I’m sorry to have to say it, but the people here are by far the most ignorant, stupid, and uneducated group of individuals that I have ever run into. You can thank the area government for a lot of that, as well as the state hoods up in  Tallahassee.

    One of the problems that I have with the folks down here is that they seem to think that they have all of the time in the world to do something. They seem to run on two speeds here, “ snail slow “ and “ stop.”

    For instance, just yesterday I sent a woman out to do something pretty simple for both her and myself. Go to an Amscott to have a power deposit and a past bill sent to the local power company. This was so that the power would be turned on at her new place of residence. By public transit, it takes about ten minutes to get there. She also had to fax a copy of her driver license to Equifax in order to verify her identity. Five hours later and she still was not finished. The fax machine would not accept her id card. Well. of course it wouldn’t! So, two days later and that little task still has not been finished. She did manage to get the power deposit and her late bill sent into the power company.

   Like i told her though, we could have taken the id to my office and made a copy of it and faxed it on my fax machine. all in under half an hour! I had something else that I had to do at the time.

    This is not just a problem with her and the way that she does things. this is an outbreak infecting many of the people in the Tampa Bay area. They do things without thinking things through, and then when things don’t work out for them, it becomes someone else's fault. What makes me laugh the hardest though, is that instead of doing things differently, they will do it the same way and then cry when they get the same result as they did the last time. No one here seems to understand that you cannot do the same thing the same way and expect to get different results. It doesn’t work that way!  “ Dumb as a box of rocks “ phrase had its birthplace in Tampa, I’m sure.

    But wait! There’s more!

Monday, July 26, 2010

Gulf Coast Oil Problems…

… are nothing new, but, apparently there have been more than reported.

    According to an article in the St.Petersburg Times,

there have been quite a few that were worse than we thought that they were.

One big spill was 160,638 barrels in 1967 when an anchor tore a hole in a corroded pipeline operated by Humble Oil, a unit of Exxon; it leaked for 13 days. In 1969, a blowout on a Union Oil well spilled 80,000 barrels, killing 4,000 birds and seeping for four years after being plugged. In 1974, a Pennzoil pipeline break spilled 19,833 barrels probably because an anchor was dragged across the submerged line. Another anchor tore open an Amoco pipeline in 1988, spilling 15,576 barrels. A Shell pipeline leak in 1990, discovered when a helicopter noticed a heavy oil slick 25 miles by 15 miles, spilled 14,423 barrels.

    Oil executives and a few of our politicians assert that newer technology has made oil drilling more safer. As proof, they point us to hurricanes Rita and Katrina.

"I think people are reassured that not a drop of oil was spilled during Katrina or Rita," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said in 2008. "Those rigs in the gulf, there was not a single incident of spillage that anyone reported."

But while the overwhelming majority of safety valves did work during the two hurricanes, the MMS reported that there were five modest-sized spills, each between 1,000 and 2,000 barrels. There were also 125 small spills, many from riser pipes or storage tanks on platforms. Altogether, they added up to 16,302 barrels, almost a quarter as big as the 1969 spill off Santa Barbara, Calif., that helped give rise to the modern environmental movement.

    Anyway, the article goes on speaking of some of the less known problems with our wells and the pipelines that run under the Gulf.

    Read it all right here.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Apartment Hunting:Sins Of The Past Will Get You…

… if you live down here in Florida.

   My girlfriend and myself have been in the hunt for an apartment for the past month or so, making more of an effort over the last two weeks. She wants to get out of her place and I am tired of the dump in which I live. She has been the roommate of the lessee so she has not had to go through those background checks and what have you. As for myself? I have never had a criminal background check down on me, so this is all new to me. It isn’t a problem since I’ll pass them anyway. Wish that I could say the same for the girlfriend. Two arrests for cocaine possession, a decade ago, and a few other charges are now coming back to haunt her.

   Needless to say, it is also haunting me, and I have nothing to do with this crap! I’ve had a few managers tell me that they’ve always had to pass a background check when renting a place, but this is the first time that I’ve ever run into this problem.

   The last place that we went to told me that with her record, all that we would be able to rent would more than likely be either apartments on the less desirable areas of town, or mobile homes in those same kinds of areas. Places where management doesn’t care about the past, just your money! Then you get to live next door to the prostitutes, crack heads,pill poppers, and of course, those dreaded alcoholics. I have very little tolerance for drinkers.

   Anyway, we have one more week to find a place, which not going to be an easy thing to do.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Alarm system set to quiet mode on night of rig disaster

 

From Daily Kos

Alarm system set to quiet mode on night of rig disaster

by Jed Lewison
Fri Jul 23, 2010

Here's what happens when you let a dangerous industry regulate itself:

KENNER, La. — The emergency alarm on the Deepwater Horizon was not fully activated on the day the oil rig caught fire and exploded, triggering the massive spill in the Gulf of Mexico, a rig worker on Friday told a government panel investigating the accident.

The worker, Mike Williams, chief electronics technician aboard the Transocean rig, said the general safety alarm was habitually set to “inhibited” to avoid waking up the crew with late-night sirens.

“They did not want people woke up at 3 a.m. from false alarms,” Mr. Williams told the federal panel of investigators in this New Orleans suburb. Consequently, the alarm did not sound during the emergency, leaving workers to relay information through the loudspeaker system.

They didn't set the alarm fully because they didn't want to wake people up accidentally? Seriously? What is the point of having safety measures if you aren't going to use them? It's reminiscent of another BP-Transcoean also described by Williams last May. According to Williams, just before the accident BP had ordered Transocean to cut important safety corners, including using water instead of drilling mud in the final stages of attempting to seal the well. And now we know that not only did they order the companies to ignore important safety measures, they didn't even take advantage of the alarm system to alert them if something went wrong.

On the one hand, you'll probably have executives of other oil companies using stories like this to characterize the disaster as an example of individual corporate failure, arguing that BP and Transocean were merely reckless operators within an otherwise safe industry. But while it's true that BP and Transocean failed egregiously, it's also true that BP and Transocean weren't fringe operators. They were -- and continue to be -- two of the biggest companies in the industry. They weren't just tolerated, they were valued. And after this blows over -- if it blows over -- they will once again be welcomed back into the oil industry fold

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Back In Action!…

…or so I hope. After being down here in the state of Florida for slightly more than a year without my blogging software, I am happy to report that almost all things are back to normal.

   We’ve missed most of the shenanigans done by the politicians for both the Governor’s seat and the Senate seat. It has been kind of fun to watch as the Republican candidates go at each other with a vengeance. I will be bringing you up to date on this, and much more, as the days go by.

    We also have the very crappy economy here in Florida to deal with, as well as the Gulf mess brought to you by those fantastic folks at BP.

   Let me not forget to mention life and its twists here in Tampa, which is where I am at at the present time.

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Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Media Enablers

Daily Kos
Shame on the Media
by Dr Teeth Wed Jul 21, 2010

By now everyone knows the story of Shirley Sherrod. The new storyline is whether the Obama administration will restore her status. There is no question they should make this right, but I would prefer it happen behind the scenes.

Still, the question is not what the White House did. It isn't what the NAACP did. It isn't even what the right wing hacks did.

The question is whether the media did their due diligence, before reporting this story.
The tea partier behind this is human garbage, so let's just get that out of the way first. The internet is full of people of his ilk. You simply have to search youtube for a couple minutes, and you'll find a multitude of intellectually dishonest propaganda.

That being said, there is no defense in that fact. Journalism is not a function of populism. Before any news agency touched the story, they should have done the responsible thing. They were about to spur racial tensions, and any producer in television knew the demographic reactions, which would result.

Someone at CNN did actually dig the real story up. They followed the simple process of getting both sides of the story, and are deserving of some admiration. Of course they ran the story like everyone else, before seeking out all sides, so this admiration is tempered.

MSNBC or NBC failed to do this. CBS, ABC and newspapers failed to do this. Every morning show on every network, tapped directly into the race baiting for ratings. I refuse to give Fox News the credential of reviewing their vetting process, as they are simply a right wing blog on TV.

This isn't some complex ruse to debunk. Whenever someone sends me a link to a blog or youtube video, I assume it is bullshit. I've been on the internet as long as the world wide web has existed (and a little before that), and my skepticism is well earned. There isn't really citizen journalism, only citizen propaganda.

I do what ever reasonable person should do. I read something on the internet, then seek a credible source for it elsewhere. This level of skepticism should be the standard for everyone who isn't a political hack.

It certainly should be the standard for the media that unjustly got a good woman fired yesterday.

Friday, July 09, 2010

Those Florida Budget Cuts..

... are really starting to have an effect on the state of the state of Florida.
I see signs on government businesses on an almost daily basis saying that the particular office will be closed on such and such date due to budget cuts. In the county of Hillsborough ( Tampa ), the county commissioners take an occasional furlough due to those lousy budget cuts.
Why am I on this topic? Because of the political bullshit that those candidates for governor (Alex Sink (D), Rick Scott (R),Bill McCollum (R) )are pushing down the throats of the Florida villagers. Not only is the race for the governorship blowing smoke up our asses, but those running for the Senate ( Mark Rubio (R), Charlie Chris (R) are doing the same thing.
My problem with those Republican candidates is that they are still into pushing for more tax cuts for Florida, which will help increase jobs in the state. This crap didn't work under Jeb Bush and it is not going to work this time either.
Who will get these tax cuts? The residents of Florida? Not hardly since there is no income tax on residents. That leaves only businesses which will reap the tax cut benefits. It is reported that Florida business pays only a measly 4% in taxes, if they pay any at all. Some of those running for political office would like to see that tax rate lowered to around 1.5%.
Get real you fucks! Those libraries which close one Friday per month and the furlough which county commissioners and city council members have to take are not due to budget cuts folks. They are due to TAX CUTS brought about by your favorite Republican business lackey.

Monday, June 07, 2010

Life In Tampa...

... just keeps on getting better and better.Not!
Being the "police state" of the United States,the the sheriff's office has decided to put up some new camera equipment in one of our local hotspots for crime.
28 camera's went up in the USF (University of South Florida)area'
You can read more about this at hcso.tampa.fl.us/Articles/Articles/HCSO-Watching-Out-For-You.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

2010: The Battle for who Sucks Less ...

... and this comes from dailykos.com.

2010: The Battle for who Sucks Less
by Dr Teeth Wed May 26, 2010
So yesterday I'm chatting with a Republican friend of mine, I have known since I volunteered on the Clinton campaign. I've been charmed to have lived in swing states, blue states and red states. Nothing beats a swing state (with the exception of maybe being in Wichita during the height of the abortion protests).
Well, I knew this guy before that first election. We actually were on opposite street corners, and I waved at him while others yelled insults at each other. The sight of these run down western PA downtown regions is somewhat surreal. On the only intersection with a few businesses and municipal buildings, groups with signs stake out opposite corners. If one group changes intersections, the other moves as well. It is rather comical.
Well my friend and I realized how silly this election already looks.

The Democratic Platform for 2010
Republicans are bad for America

The Republican Platform for 2010
Democrats are bad for America
Turns out after looking at some polls, Americans have an interesting take on this.
Both Parties are Half Right

It turns out a majority of Americans don't like either Republicans or Democrats on just about anything. On any issue both parties can't seem to find any kind of plurality. If Obama intended to change politics the in Washington, he can at least say that he stopped the ebb and flow of things. Now people just seem to universally hate politics in general.
As far as the hope thing, I'm afraid that ship has sailed. The electorate just seems to be toggling between anger and depression. They honestly just don't believe they can get a square deal economically or politically. There is always another Goldman Sachs or BP, and the story of government collusion that follows.
Now I wasn't alive in the 60s, so I can't speak for all of history. I have never seen an electorate so beat down in my lifetime. I'm not talking about political division either. I'm talking about universal political dismay. If there was an environmental, economic, ethical and political tipping point, people just seem to have accepted our country has gone over that cliff.
So where is 2008 now? The President has seemed fortified in the White House as of late. Congress looks like they are a fighter in the 11th round in a fight they are losing. Republicans seem just as tired and absent. Everyone still talks in their perspective echo chambers, but there is very little back and forth occurring. Everyone seems to be avoiding the biggest ecological disaster in the history of our country.
So what's the plan for 2011? Are the Democrats all governed out?
If I'm not mistaken this country is still facing huge problems.

-A Failing Education System
-Climate Change
-No Energy Policy
-High Unemployment
-Crumbling Infrastructure
-Federal and State Deficits
-Social Security Insolvency
-Trade Deficits
-No Immigration Policy
-Corporate Influence in Government
That is just off the top of my head. None of those I would even call progressive issues. They are national issues that resonate with just about anybody. Neither party as of today has any kind of platform. Is this election really just going to be about who sucks less?

Sad to say, but, I do think that the Democrats are about to get their asses handed back to them in the coming elections, for the most part. I'm not so sure about yourself, but the Democrats haven't done a whole hell of a lot for me since Obama and gang swept into office. Health care reform? I'll believe that when it is actually implemented. If it survives the "party of no" assault. Don't count on that happening.
Have you ever notice that the Republicans have always managed to stick together while coming up with a message to the American people that the people actually buy into? This is what will be going on once again. the Dem's have gotten to weak minded and spineless to fight back in any favorable way.
Sure, we have all become sick and tired of the way in which our government operates, but what is one to do about it? We basically have no good candidate to choose from, so we'll keep on voting for the man,or woman who says the things that we want to hear.
Sad day in America!