Be INFORMED

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Saturday Satire: Fun With The GOP

  There is just way to much material out there in Internet/TV land to put up all of the jokes and pictures that I would like for you to view.

    I usually do this post on Friday, but my Internet had a “ stupid seizure “ for most of the day. it seems to be doing that a lot as of late.

Conan O'Brien: "In a new interview, Rick Perry said it was a mistake for him to participate in the presidential debates. Perry said 'I'm not one of these 'word talkers.'''

"Michele Bachmann said she wants her three daughters to learn to shoot a gun. Mostly so they can put her campaign out of its misery."

"Michele Bachmann's campaign is in a lot of trouble. Five staffers quit her campaign, claiming it was because she treated them like second-class citizens. However, Bachmann said, 'That's not true. At no time did I treat them like gays or Latinos.'"

David Letterman; "Rick Perry is now behind in the polls and he's not taking it well. Today he executed his pollster."

"Rick Perry, started out like a ball of fire from Texas and then he started to drop and now he's retooling. He's adding advisers to his campaign team. This guy had advisers? Really?"

Jay Leno: "Michele Bachmann told reporters that she will lead the nation in prayer if she is elected president. You know if she is elected president, we all better be praying. She doesn’t have to lead us."

"According to polls, Rick Perry has now fallen to fifth place. You know who is in fourth place? Carrot Top."

"We had President Obama on the show last night. I think the president enjoys visiting NBC because we're the only place that has lower numbers than he does."

"Rick Perry unveiled his new tax plan. He says he wants a flat tax. He believes that tax should be flat, just like the earth."

rick-perry-church-sign

homescholers-for-perry

bachmann-minimum-wage

bachmann-stupid-statements

sarah-palin-nightmare

 

A Sad GOP Senator Admits GOP Led Congress Is Bad

  By   roseeriter    Fri Oct 28, 2011     Original

So, some GOPpers know they're wrong, why don't they make things right? Like crying Boehner, Linsey Graham sheds a tear also (see video at link).

Sad-Sack Congresscritters Hate Themselves Almost As Much As Everyone Else Hates Them

Sen. Lindsey Graham is so embarrassed about the 9 percent approval rating — released Tuesday night in a New York Times/CBS poll — that he’s going incognito.
“It’s so bad sometimes I tell people I’m a lawyer,” the South Carolina Republican told POLITICO on Wednesday. “I don’t want to be associated with a body that in the eyes of your fellow citizens seems to be dysfunctional. It matters to me.”

“We’re below sharks and contract killers,” added freshman Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.).

--
While Obama has shaped the early part of his presidential campaign around attacking a dysfunctional Congress, his approval numbers aren’t great either, sitting at a glum 46 percent, with 38 percent approving of his handling of the economy.
But 38 percent believe Obama has a clear plan for job creation, compared to just 20 percent for Hill Republicans.

Compared to Congress, “he’s a rock star,” Graham declared.

[...]

“There’s always been a healthy disdain for political institutions,” Graham said. “But when it becomes unhealthy is when 91 percent of the country believes that the Congress is detached from reality.”

Then SHOUT it out from the highest mountain, Hypocrits!!

Unsign those god forsaken cult-like Pledges, Idiots!

Try to remember when you were  real Americans, Assholes!!

Stop being corporate Prostitutes, Jerks!

Try Truth to power. It feels better.

Also republished by Class Warfare Newsletter: WallStreet VS the Working Class Occupy movement..

Friday, October 28, 2011

Conservative Persecution Complex

   I’ve been away for a few days, so I am playing catch-up as far are current events are concerned.  I’m reading my butt off to see what I’ve missed this week.

    I ran across a post dealing with those Tea Party/Conservative cry babies.

 

Conservative Persecution Complex

by sujigu           Wed Oct 26, 2011

I am the type of person that really likes to understand where the other person is coming from.  I try to figure out other people's world views and try to get a construct of their belief system and how they relate to their outside culture.  It's just a natural inclination.  After hearing about the recent Tea Party threat to not hire new people, and possibly close their own businesses, I reacted as many on the left do, with derisive laughter.  No, it's not nice.  But you have to admit, the irony of your opponent threatening to boycott themselves to spite you is delicious.  Does that make me a big bad liberal elite who thinks his own world view is the only viable one?  Well, to be honest, I've never made that assertion.  I just think that people saying stupid things is funny.  But, it gave me pause to consider what I like to call "Conservative Persecution Complex."  Let's begin our discussion with a quote:

"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

Great piece of liberalism here.  You can write or say whatever you like without fear that some tyrant is going to throw you in jail or create some law to otherwise damage you for saying/writing something he/she doesn't like.  In fact, to be honest, our country has an excellent track record, all things considered, with maintaining this ideal.  The ACLU has defended the constitutional rights of Neo-Nazis, White Supremacists, and the rest of their ilk.  We have long, drawn-out court battles when this tenet of our society is threatened, even if we might abhor the people we are defending. 

It seems that conservatives like this idea too, but they don't seem to understand that when they say/write whatever they like, other people are completely free to criticize them.  The local Tea Party chapter that put this out were up in arms at how liberals were close minded and hateful.  Liberals only have a single world view that they deem correct, and they destroy all others.  Obama, the evil Kenyan Muslim tyrant that he is, was impinging on their right to free speech.  What I wish they would get is that they say whatever they want on their blogs, in their mailers, on their forums, etc.  They pretty much say some of the most harsh, vitriolic things against the leader of the free world, and they are not throw in jail.  Congress has passed no law that curtails their right to do that.  There are no government troops rapelling through their windows, carting them away to FEMA camps.  They got criticized for their remarks, but in their minds, verbal dissent is equivalent to being waterboarded, at least according to Gov. Brewer.  The act of hearing something that they don't agree with is somehow tyranny. 

This factors into such much I hear from the conservative side of the aisle.  They live in a world of oppression, where all outlets of information, and society itself, is somehow out to get them.  I sometimes hear about Christian persecution.  How are you persecuted?  Churches have millions of dollars, are organized and efficient, and they have charismatic leaders that reach across the entire country.  They have sway over large swathes of the population, are allowed to pray even at legislative hearings, and are free to break off into denominations however they please.  When someone says that you cannot use passages from Leviticus to prevent other people from marrying, that's an "all out assault" on your religious liberty?  What?  Reminding you that the government cannot favor your religion is akin to persecution?  There was a time when Christians were persecuted, but it involved throwing them to the lions. 

Oftentimes when I talk to conservative friends and point out a flaw in their logic, they act like I've killed their parents.  I mean seriously, you get knicked on the arm and you wail that someone's lopped the entire thing off.  It's like a built-in slippery slope.

Another good example is Hollywood.  I was reading about this book that was a "tell all" about the liberal bias of Hollywood.  Did I miss something, or isn't Hollywood a private venture?  I understand not wanting bias in NPR, or publically funded broadcasting stations.  Yet conservatives rail against Hollywood.  I guess because of its stature, it has some sort of responsibility in terms of representing multiple sides of an issue?  However, since it's private, the executives and scriptwriters don't really have to do any of that.  It's their movie, it's their distribution system, it's their business. You don't like it, go form your own Hollywood (which the Tea Party has attempted, only to find out that colonial America based dramas aren't that exciting.)  The fact that this guy "revealed" their bias was meaningless. 

Does anyone else have experience in this regard?  Is my analysis flawed?  Do they not get to say and do whatever they want, however they want, and the only negativity they face is perfectly natural criticism from people that don't agree with them?  Do they not understand the flip-side of free speech, and the responsibilities that come with freedom?  Am I missing something?

Originally posted to sujigu on Wed Oct 26, 2011
Also republished by Community Spotlight.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Eric Cantor Has No Clue

Sourced From Daily Kos

Eric Cantor on House Republicans: We're not lazy!

by Jed Lewison       Thu Oct 27, 2011

Eric Cantor

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (center) is working hard—on all the wrong things

If this pushback is any indication of what's going on inside House Majority Leader Eric Cantor's mind, then he doesn't have a clue about why public approval of Congress has fallen to an all-time low of 9% since Republicans took control of the House:

In a 1-page “Dear Colleague” letter, Cantor pointed to several numbers that he said indicated a more deliberative and productive House due to the new schedule. For example, through Oct. 14 of this year, the House has taken 800 roll call votes so far, compared to 565 votes by the same time in 2010.

“I believe this year’s calendar, because of its new design, helped improve the legislative culture of the House,” Cantor wrote in the letter released Thursday.

In his letter, Cantor also noted a “boom of activity” in House committees, with 1,276 hearings and 194 mark-ups held so far in 2011. Like this year, votes in the House in 2012 will be held later in the day between 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. – largely to allow committees sufficient time to do their work in the mornings.

Cantor seems to think that the public is pissed off because they don't think Congress is keeping itself busy. But that's not the problem—nobody keeps themselves up at night worrying how many hours per day members of Congress are on the job. What they care about is whether Congress is actually getting something done. And by that measure, Congress has been an absolute failure, and the blame falls squarely on Republicans.

Nobody doubts that Paul Ryan worked very hard to pass his budget plan that called for the end of Medicare as we know it. Nobody doubts that tea partiers spent countless hours plotting the debt ceiling debacle. Nobody questions whether John Boehner and Mitch McConnell have burned the midnight oil to figure out how to block President Obama's jobs agenda.

The problem isn't how hard House Republicans are working. It's that they are working for the wrong things. They've got their priorities upside down. And the only way to solve the problem is to throw them out next November.

Originally posted to The Jed Report on Thu Oct 27, 2011
Also republished by Daily Kos.

Murphy’s Law Strikes Again

   You are all old enough to know what “ Murphy’s Law “ means so I am not going to explain it. I am just going to present the latest incident in order to show you just how crappy things can get in the snap of a finger.

   Here in Tampa, Florida, the jobs prospects are pretty bleak and it does not look as if things will get better any time soon, so I have taken to posting my own ad on Craigslist seeking work. Sometimes this work out pretty good and at other times there are weeks with no work.

   One issue that I have against me is the fact that I have lost my birth certificate so it is impossible for me to get a current Florida driver license, making it impossible for me to fill out any job applications. To make matters even worse, I was born in Germany.

   My father was an American and my mother was German, and I was adopted by both and brought to the United States when I was 3 months old, from what I understand. Trying to wade through all of the red tape for a certificate has been a 3 year pain in the ass, as I have to provide information that I do not have, and am not sure how to get.

   Back to work. I placed an ad on the net seeking work for this past weekend, and I got lucky. A gentleman called needing someone to help with some yard work, such as mowing, weed eating, and some cleanup. I took this job for $8 an hour because I needed the money.

   So, I worked the weekend, which did not include any of the work listed above, and was brought home Sunday night, returning the the job site on Tuesday morning with a $1 an hour raise. That was all well and good and it made my day, as this work was going to continue into the 1st week of November and then other later dates throughout the winter. Things were looking good for a change.  

    Ahhhh, but not so fast!

    I was supposed to work this week from Tuesday through Friday and then be home by 8 or on Friday night.

   My girlfriend, who is an idiot alcoholic, sends me a text on my phone telling me to call her because she has something important to tell me.  When the day is over, I call her only to here that we have an  3-day eviction notice, with the 3 days being up on Friday. Well shit! I can’t work and be in the managers office before he leaves on Friday ( 6 pm ) because I do not get off and back into Tampa before then. The boss gets pissed, I’m already pissed, that I have to leave 2 days early, and I do not drive, so I have to pay to get back to my place. I lose 2.5 days of work, and it costs me $40 to get back into town. All of this over being not even 1 week behind with the rent. I pay by the week ( $100 ) because of the loss of work here, and the thing is that I have been up to 6 weeks behind, one time, and managed to pay the rent all in full. Been living in the same place for a year and a half and up until July of this year, paid by the month and was never late, and now they want to pull this crap?

  My boss did not say as much, but since I was told not to worry about work until next week, it’s a sure bet that the job is lost.

  Probably back to square 1! Murphy’s Law at work.

Monday, October 24, 2011

The Objective End of Republican Anti-Tax Orthodoxy

By    Dante Atkins for Daily Kos      Sun Oct 23, 2011

It's an old adage often used to compare Republican discipline with Democratic disarray: when you ask a million people what Democrats stand for, you'll get a million different answers. But if you ask those same million people what Republicans stand for, you'll often hear the same three things: small government, low taxes and a strong national defense. For anyone who has been paying attention, however, the Republican commitment to these principles has been waning at best. The Republican commitment to small government and local control was swept aside under President George W. Bush's unprecedented arrogation of executive power and evaporated completely when Gov. Rick Snyder of Michigan decided to eliminate the local autonomy of cities in pursuit of his union-busting agenda. The Party's one-time monopoly on issues of national defense has been crushed under the weight of the costly misadventure in Iraq and the increasing lack of success in Afghanistan; President Obama, meanwhile, has more than done his part in eliminating that narrative through his risky decision to strike at Osama bin Laden and his steady hand in navigating the U.S. and NATO through the revolutions of the Arab Spring.

Taxes, however? This was the Republican Party's signature agenda: the idea that tax rates should be low across the board. That it's your money, and you should keep it. The idea that people know how to spend money better than the government goes. Historically, this has been a winning message: most voters will always appreciate the thought of more money in their pockets, especially when they keep on being told that the tax cuts they're getting will actually pay for themselves. But just like their messages on limited government and a strong defense, the Republican commitment to low taxes is beginning to slip—just, not in the area that a decent respect for the opinion of mankind might cause one to expect.

This week's news on Republican perceptions of taxes shows nothing out of the ordinary. It comes as no surprise that the economic injustice that is fueling the Occupy Wall Street movement is also making President Obama's populist policy on tax increases very popular. Obama is pushing aggressively for tax increases on the wealthiest Americans to fund a jobs program that will rebuild American infrastructure and put unemployed Americans back to work. Karl Rove, pursuing his party's rigid anti-tax orthodoxy, is spinning furiously to undermine it.

This is the Republican Party we have all come to expect: the party that will fight against any tax increases, no matter how sensible, no matter how fiscally constrained the budget is, simply as a matter of orthodoxy. But you might have heard another number being bandied about recently: the "fact" that 47 percent of Americans pay no taxes. Now, if we ignored payroll taxes, sales taxes, excise taxes and all other forms of taxes besides federal income taxes, that would be true. But for an anti-tax Republican, the idea that nearly half of all Americans pay no income taxes should be a welcome statistic; it would mean, after all, that we're nearly halfway toward ensuring that no Americans pay federal income taxes at all.

But no. Far from being a source of pride for the party of low taxes and limited government, this is a source of consternation, and the Republican presidential field will not tolerate this sort of injustice. Here's erstwhile frontrunner Gov. Rick Perry:

“We’re approaching nearly half of the United States population that doesn’t pay any income taxes,” he responded. “And I think one of the ways is to let everybody, as many people as possible, let me put it that way, to be able to be helping pay for the government that we have in this country.”

The now-imploded Rep. Michele Bachmann struck up a similar theme:

“Part of the problem is today, only 53% pay any federal income tax at all; 47% pay nothing.” She added, “We need to broaden the base so that everybody pays something, even if it’s a dollar.”

And the likeliest of the Republican presidential candidates, Gov. Mitt Romney, is not exempt from this sudden urge to raise taxes on middle- and lower-class Americans:

“We want to make sure people do pay their fair share. Half the people in this country pay no income tax at all."

The difference with Romney, of course, is that in his next breath, he added that he does not want to raise taxes on the middle class, leading to the inevitable conclusion that either Romney wants to raise taxes on the poor, or he is contradicting himself. But by far the most egregious example of the GOP's breach on taxes comes from pizza mogul Herman Cain.

If any newspaper reporting on the GOP presidential race were looking to fill extra column inches, they would need to look no further than this obscenely long graph that demonstrates the difference in average household tax liability by income bracket under Cain's proposal. The visual from the Tax Policy Center estimates that the bottom 80 percent of Americans would see significant increases in their household tax liability under Cain's plan, while the top tenth of a percent would see decreases in the same that are beyond belief. Cain's proposal, in a nutshell, is to cut taxes for the rich and make the poor pay for it—a plan that falls right in line with his fellow candidates' agreement that more people need to pay taxes, as well as Karl Rove's position that it most certainly won't be the wealthiest who do.

When all four of a party's presidential candidates who have held leads in national polls advocate for raising taxes on the poor and middle class, that party can no longer call itself opposed to taxes, no matter how fervently they try to oppose President Obama's popular proposal to ask more from those who are best off. The Republican Party is no longer the party of lower taxes. Instead, it has transformed itself into a cult of Ayn Rand's objectivism, where so-called "producers" are rewarded with favorable policy outcomes and the "parasites" are punished for their lack of work ethic. In Herman Cain's America, after all, you only have yourself to blame if you're unemployed. And in Mitt Romney's America, the best way to solve the foreclosure crisis is to turn people out of their homes faster so investors can make a quicker profit off of buying them.

Who is John Galt? And more importantly, what has he done with the Republican Party?

A Day In The Life

  I have been pretty quiet over the past 2 days only because I managed to get some much needed work, which in the Tampa Bay area can be a difficult task.

   So, I’ve missed out on the political news and now I am playing catch up, which will take maybe half of this day to do. I will be posting only today because I am off to work for the remainder of the week as this 2 day job has turned into the whole week, with a raise included. Lucky me. I am out in the middle of nowhere when working, so I have no Internet or television. I will be back on Friday evening, if things go according to schedule.

  Right now, it is time to go see what that Republican pizza man ( Herman Cain ) has been up to. I’m pretty sure that he is up to nothing that real humans would like.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Friday Funnies: Herman Cain and Occupy Wall Street Edition

   So the Republican Party’s token black man ( Herman Cain ) is on top in the Republican race for the nomination to do battle with President Obama for the White House in 2012.

Conan O'Brien: "Herman Cain is out there, he says a lot of provocative things. He said America should build its own Great Wall of China. Cain says it's a great idea because if there's one thing you don't see in China, it's Mexicans."

"Earlier this week, a protester at Occupy Wall Street proposed to his girlfriend. His exact words were, 'Will you occupy my parents' basement with me until I get a job?'"

Yesterday, President Obama's teleprompter was stolen. Police are on the lookout for a thief that's eloquent and spreading a message of hope."

Stephen Colbert: ‎"Herman Cain is ahead with 27%, as opposed to Newt Gingrich, who is 27% head."

 

Wall-Street-Response

Demonstrators

Protests-Are-Growing

Wall-Street-Bull

Republican Herman Cain: Godfather of Bulls*^t

   As if we have come to expect anything less from those Republican candidates running for the GOP nomination.

   Herman Cain is another one of those GOP hypocrites claiming that he’s for the small business owner and for the normal American. Cutting taxes for the wealthy is his ultimate goal, make no mistake about it.

   As it turns out, Mr. Clean ain’t so clean after all. He is close friends with groups who would like to do away with workers rights and fair wages. Can you say the Koch brothers? Americans for Prosperity? ALEC? He is cahoots with all of the right-wing masters.

                        Koch raising Cain

By jamess     Sun Oct 16, 2011          Original

The News-feeds are all a twitter ... someone has been doing some digging ...

Long Ties to Koch Brothers Key to Cain's Campaign
by Ryan J. Foley, Associated Press -- IOWA CITY, Iowa October 16, 2011 (AP)

Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain has cast himself as the outsider, the pizza magnate with real-world experience who will bring fresh ideas to the nation's capital. But Cain's economic ideas, support and organization have close ties to two billionaire brothers who bankroll right-leaning causes through their group Americans for Prosperity.

Cain's campaign manager and a number of aides have worked for Americans for Prosperity, or AFP, the advocacy group founded with support from billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch, which lobbies for lower taxes and less government regulation and spending. Cain credits a businessman who served on an AFP advisory board with helping devise his "9-9-9" plan to rewrite the nation's tax code. And his years of speaking at AFP events have given the businessman and radio host a network of loyal grassroots fans.
[...]

Through his AFP work he met Mark Block, a longtime Wisconsin Republican operative hired to lead that state's AFP chapter in 2005 as he rebounded from an earlier campaign scandal that derailed his career.

Block and Cain sometimes traveled together as they built up AFP: Cain was the charismatic speaker preaching the ills of big government; Block was the operative helping with nuts and bolts.
[...]

[Mark] Block is now Cain's campaign manager.

It's nice to have friends in high places, right Herb?

Herman Cain and the Koch Brothers - political bedmates?
by Nancy Houser, digitaljournal -- Oct 11, 2011

Herman Cain's new political allies

Nobody speaks more loudly in support of the loyalty of the Koch brothers toward America than the 2012 Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, an Atlanta radio host and past chairman and CEO of Godfather's Pizza, who has topped Republican polls in Virginia and South Carolina while winning the Florida GOP straw poll.
[...]

And obviously, candidate Cain supports and trusts the Koch brothers. But why do the wealthy and powerful Koch brothers want Herman Cain? Watch the video:

Herman Cain calls the Koch Brothers "True Patroits"
http://www.youtube.com/...

Herman Cain:

I think David Koch is a Patriot. Because David Koch cares about the future of this Country. His brother Charles Koch is also a Patriot. They care about the future of this Country.

On MTP this morning, Cain gives a "shout out" to Clarence Thomas (another Koch alumni);  and in the above clip, we also find out Cain has been a longtime paid speaker at AFP events -- including speaking out against the Science of Climate Change.  Anything for a buck, right Herb?

intro link

And Cain has credited Rich Lowrie, a Cleveland businessman who served on AFP's board of advisors from 2005 to 2008, with being a key economic adviser and with helping to develop his plan to cut the corporate tax rate to 9 percent, impose a national sales tax of 9 percent and set a flat income tax rate of 9 percent.

Rich Who? No wonder mum was the 9-9-9 word, regarding the geniuses behind this regressive tax plan.  Touting a Koch funded-plan could hurt Cain's astro-turf cred.

Debate shout-out brings national attention to Cleveland's Rich Lowrie, economic adviser to Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain
by Henry J. Gomez, The Plain Dealer, cleveland.com  October 12, 2011

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Overnight, Cleveland-area moneyman Richard Lowrie became America's most famous financial planner.

[...Cain:]
"One of my experts that helped me to develop this is a gentleman by the name of Rich Lowrie out of Cleveland, Ohio," Cain said in response to a question about his economic advisers. "He is an economist, and he has worked in the business of wealth creation most of his career."

So who is Rich Lowrie? The Gates Mills resident has a bachelor's degree in accountancy from Cleveland's Case Western Reserve University. He is a wealth-management consultant and a managing director at a Wells Fargo branch in Pepper Pike. He is a licensed stockbroker.
[...]

Even in Cleveland, Lowrie's name rang few bells among industry insiders, one of whom thought Cain was name-checking Rich Lowry, editor of the conservative National Review.

Been surprised by Cain's meteoric rise in the polls in recent weeks?

Don't be.  Given enough money, you can buy almost anything

-- maybe even a very regressive Tax Planmaybe even the U.S. Presidency ???

If all else fails, you're kind of set for life, working for Americans for Prosperity, isn't that right Herb? ... just ask Sarah-Lee.

Originally posted to Digging up those Facts ... for over 4 years. on Sun Oct 16, 2011
Also republished by Earthship Koch.

No Religion In Politics

  As a Christian, I find it rather offensive that one of our political parties ( Republican ) and their election candidates ( Perry, Bachmann,etc. )  has been attempting to co-op their brand of Christianity onto the rest of America when they have no idea what true Christians are.  In fact, as a Christian, I would rather see an Atheist in the White House over anyone from either party, as these so-called Christians have not exactly been living up to standards. That would be those “ conservative “ Christians in particular.Let’s face it. This country could do no worse than it is at the present time if we had an Atheist government running the show. In fact, this country might even do better. At least an Atheist won’t make the claim of being a Christian when they are nothing near being one.

   That being said.

It's 2011 -- Why Is God Still Involved In American Politics?

Amanda Marcotte

The Mormon-bashing directed at Mitt Romney should concern everyone for what it reveals about the undue influence of religion in American elections.       October 12, 2011

As an atheist and a liberal, it’s been tempting for me to simply laugh at Republicans fighting each other over the issue of whether or not Mitt Romney, a Mormon, gets to consider himself a Christian. From the non-believer point of view, it’s like watching a bunch of grown adults work themselves into a frenzy over the differences between leprechauns and fairies. But watching the debate unfold, I’ve become concerned about what it means to make someone’s religious beliefs such a big campaign issue, because it’s indicative of a larger eroding of the separation of church and state, which concerns not just atheists but all people who understand the importance of maintaining a secular government. 

Robert Jeffress, an influential pastor who is the senior pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, went on "Focal Point" with Bryan Fischer and declared that one shouldn’t support Mitt Romney for president because Romney, a Mormon, isn’t a real Christian. This created a media dustup that was silly even by the usual standards of ever-sillier mainstream media campaign coverage. John King of CNN interviewed Jeffress, focusing strictly on the question of who Jeffress believes deserves to be called a Christian, and how firmly he believes that only people he calls Christians should hold public office. Candy Crowley of CNN dogged both Herman Cain and Michele Bachmann on the question of whether or not they believe Romney is a Christian, and then she got irate with the candidates when they refused to answer the question, claiming that it’s irrelevant. 

These interviews are remarkable for what the CNN anchors didn’t discuss, which was the most important question of all: the separation of church and state. Even though our nation has a tradition of pastors staying out of partisan politics -- in fact, it is illegal for ministers to endorse candidates from the pulpit -- it seemingly never occurred to King to challenge Jeffress for overstepping his bounds by telling people that God wants an evangelical Christian who is a Republican for president. By making the story about whether or not Mormons are Christians, CNN left the viewer with the impression that only Christians deserve to hold public office, and that the only thing left to debate is whether or not someone “counts” as a Christian, making him or her eligible for office. 

We’re a long way from the days when John Kennedy assured the public that he respected the separation of church and state and would keep his faith separate from his policy-making decisions. Now, even mainstream reporters take it as a given that politicians will let religion govern their actions, and the only thing left to debate on theology is how many angels any single politician believes dance on the head of a pin. Things that used to be considered beyond the pale in politics, such as religious intolerance or ministers blatantly claiming they know who God supports in an election, have become normalized to the point where someone like Mitt Romney, who is odious in most respects but has never really made much of a fuss over his faith, is seeing religious tests becoming a major issue in his campaign.

The ramifications for this shift affect more than conservative Mormons trying to win as Republicans. By not challenging the assertion that only Christians should hold office, mainstream journalists encourage bigotry against all religious minorities, including atheists. Atheists already face discrimination when it comes to running for public office. A number of states ban atheists from holding public office, even though the U.S. Constitution explicitly forbids religious tests for office. Of course, it’s difficult for an atheist to win enough votes to get office, so this conflict hasn’t been tested much, although one atheist city council member found himself under fire by religious bigots who wanted to use North Carolina’s ban on atheists holding office to push him out for not swearing his oath of office on the Bible. 

There’s a reason the Founding Fathers wrote a national constitution that forbade religious tests for office and required the separation of church and state. It’s not just protection against the escalating religious bigotry we're seeing lately, but also because religion should have no place in politics in the first place. Neither atheists nor believers benefit when leaders are guided more by religious dogma than by rationality. Angels and demons might be a fine thing to worry about when you’re in church on Sunday, but when you’re trying to govern real people in the real world, it’s far better to rely on evidence and empirical facts, interpreted through reason and not through the guesswork of faith. This is why Kennedy defended himself against questions about his faith by saying, “I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute, where no Catholic prelate would tell the president (should he be Catholic) how to act, and no Protestant minister would tell his parishioners for whom to vote.” 

People like Robert Jeffress, when they propose religious tests for office--even ones held privately by voters--should face more challenges than reporters simply asking if they consider Mormons “real” Christians. They should be confronted with Kennedy’s words and asked directly why they disagree with our former president about the separation of church and state. They should be asked why they believe only a certain breed of Christians should hold office, and asked why they think it’s appropriate to demand that politicians put religious dogma before evidence-based and rational approaches to policy. Anything less than that is aiding the religious right in its mission to remake our secular democracy into a theocracy. It shouldn’t be tolerated.

Amanda Marcotte co-writes the blog Pandagon. She is the author of It's a Jungle Out There: The Feminist Survival Guide to Politically Inhospitable Environments.

 

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Bank of America Corp. Has No Shame and Obama's Moment of Truth

By barry s        Tue Oct 18, 2011

The venal incompetents at Bank of America are shamelessly attempting to foist but literally tens of trillions in derivatives exposure onto the back of the taxpayer.

Like A Thief in the Night

Bank of America Corp. (BAC), hit by a credit downgrade last month, has moved derivatives from its Merrill Lynch unit to a subsidiary flush with insured deposits, according to people with direct knowledge of the situation.

The FDIC is opposing the move while the FED favors the move. The brain trust at BAC simply says that we don't need no stinkin' approval.

No doubt Erin Burnett, Rush Limbaugh will claim this a boon for the taxpayers. Cain, Mitts, Bachman will say this is bad and blame Jimmy Carter for not anticipating this in in 1979.

This is President Obama's Inchon, his Battle of Britain, his Emancipation Proclamation, his Louisiana Purchase.

The President should order his Secretary of Treasury to announce that the FDIC will seize control of BAC forthwith if the derivatives are moved to the backs of the taxpayer from the bank holding company. Further, the  FDIC will use all resources of the United States of America to recoup any loss to the taxpayer from the assets of any officer with rank of Senior Vice President or above or any director or board member. And to protect the interests of the USA, the assets of all board members and executive officers of BAC are hereby frozen pending further review.

BAC can avoid these steps by immediately certifying to the FDIC that no derivatives positions have been transferred from the bank holding company to the bank.

This one action will send a signal that were are a nation of laws and forever eliminate the shameful 'too big to fail' that has hung like a sword of damocles over the taxpayer.

Originally posted to barry s on Tue Oct 18, 2011
Also republished by Class Warfare Newsletter: WallStreet VS the Working Class Occupy movement..

Dictator Gadhafi Dead

  Major party going on in Libya as word has spread that Moammar Gadhafi was killed in a major battle.

Yahoo News

Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi, the most wanted man in the world, has been killed, Libyan Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril said today.

The flamboyant tyrant who terrorized his country and much of the world during his 42 years of despotic rule was reportedly cornered by insurgents in the town of Sirte, where Gadhafi had been born and a stronghold of his supporters.

"We have been waiting for this moment for a long time. Moammar Gadhafi has been killed," Jibril said at a news conference in Tripoli.

He added that the rebel government will wait until later today or Friday to officially declare what it calls a state of liberation.

The National Transition Council earlier today said that its fighters found and shot Gadhafi in Sirte, which finally fell to the rebels today after weeks of tough fighting. Rebels now control the entire country.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

A 1%er That’s Human

OCCUPY YOUR CITY

 

     Original Article

I am the 1%. I'm with the 99%. If the boat sinks, we all drown.

By plf515              Tue Oct 18, 2011

By any rational standard, I am the 1%.

I'm with the 99%.

But there's a rhetoric out there, among some. There's a rhetoric saying that it's the rich versus the poor. Or the 1% vs. the 99%.  It's not. Not everyone who is rich is a jerk; and some people who are poor are jerks. I'm guessing that the guy holding up the sign "keep government out of my medicare!" was not part of any elite.

But the 1%. Well, I'm not close to the top of that 1%. Alan Grayson is a lot closer. He's worth tens of millions, and he's a BIG OccupyWallStreet supporter. 

Ever hear of Mohammed El-Erian? He's Wall Street if anyone is. He's CEO of an asset management company called PIMCO. He wrote an Op-Ed for Huffington post in support of OWS.

Because some of us 1% are smart enough to realize that if the boat sinks, we all drown. 

And some of us are decent enough to know that people everywhere deserve a certain standard of living, that no one should be hungry and no one should be homeless and no one should die because they don't have health insurance and you shouldn't be able to deny someone water because they don't have the right papers.

Some of us know that the class warfare was started by the conservatives, and that they are mad because we're demanding a ceasefire.

It's not the 99% vs. the 1%.  It's the 99% vs. the portion of the 1% that are shmucks.

India Losing Call-Centers Due To High Wages?

     Laura Clawson for Daily Kos Labor     Tue Oct 18, 2011

Call centers leave India as American companies look for cheaper labor

Congratulations to India, where labor and business costs have risen enough that American companies are transferring their call-center work elsewhere:

Some Indian companies have tried to adjust by hiring less-expensive workers from small Indian towns or switching to high-end back-office work, including paralegal services, accounting and education.

But in the past three years, 13 Indian call-center companies have set up large offices in the Philippines and have trained and hired local workers, according to the National Association of Software and Service Companies.

“The growth in the Philippines is also being driven, to a large extent, by Indian outsourcing companies that are setting up operations there,” said Sangeeta Gupta, the association’s senior vice president.

Call-center work for Indian companies, like that "high-end back-office work," is still located in India. At least until the never-ending race to the bottom sends much of that to the Philippines, too. But when that happens, India should take heart in the fact that the U.S., after losing so many jobs to cheaper labor elsewhere, eventually itself became a source of cheap labor and got some jobs back.

Originally posted to Daily Kos Labor on Tue Oct 18, 2011
Also republished by Class Warfare Newsletter: WallStreet VS the Working Class Occupy movement. and Daily Kos.

“We the People Are Here”

  I get a real kick out of reading the various reporting that is done by the journalist from across the ocean, because they don’t make their stories up, they go to them.

Resourced From Watching America

die Tageszeitung, Germany
“Oh, Sh*t. We the People Are Here”

By Dorothea Hahn
Translated By Ron Argentati
16 October 2011

Edited by Gillian Palmer

Germany - die Tageszeitung - Original Article (German)
It is day 27 of the occupation, and thousands again demonstrate in New York. To stay within the law, they stay on the sidewalks, but the police arrest 80 of them anyway.
The skies are a brilliant blue, the banners beyond imagination. The Occupy Wall Street demonstrators play by the rules and stay on the sidewalk, never venturing into the street. They stop for red lights, but the New York police can't leave well enough alone: On the day of international solidarity, they arrest over 80 demonstrators, including 24 of them at CitiBank. At noon, they had protested against CitiBank's evictions and other fraudulent practices.
Most of the other protesters end up that evening at Times Square, sitting in police vehicles with their hands cuffed behind their backs. Outside, others shout “Who does the park belong to?” and “The whole world is watching.” Meanwhile, more and more police in uniform arrive on horses and motorcycles. More shouts of “Who are you protecting, anyway?” Late that night, new tensions between police and the demonstrators develop.
According to the Occupy Wall Street movement's calendar, it is day 27. The protesters moved from their campgrounds to Liberty Plaza in the financial sector earlier that morning. They stopped at several banks, then moved on to Washington Square to join with thousands of students from the nearby university for a mass demonstration in the open.
“I'm Lorraine and I'm glad to be here,” says one young woman to the “human microphone” — her words are repeated from one demonstrator to the next until they reach the farthest edges of the crowd. Then Lorraine continues, “I've waited 20 years for this. Since Reagan.” Again, her words flow like an acoustic wave through the crowd.
A few meters further on, physicians and nurses from New York clinics assemble in their white uniforms. Using the human microphone, Doctor Steve Auerbach says that 45,000 people die each year “in the world's richest country” from lack of health insurance and that Obama's attempts moving healthcare away from a profit-based system and the Western world's most expensive medicines haven't improved the situation.
These medical personnel have been advocating for a basic reform of healthcare based on their motto, “Everybody In. Nobody Out.” They demand a unified public insurance program for all modeled on the systems in Canada and Taiwan. They have steadily gained an audience in the midst of occasional interruptions and noise from a diminishing tea party movement on the right.
In the late afternoon, several demonstration parades course through Manhattan. The goal is Times Square, a location with theaters and military recruiting offices, home of the bright neon lights. No parade route has been announced, but true to the letter of the law, the demonstrators stay on the sidewalks. The police form an impenetrable human chain separating the marchers from the street traffic. The dense crowds of marchers on both sides of the street raise their battle cry: “We are the 99 percent.” It's occasionally interspersed with shouts of "The banks got bailed out and we got sold out.”
In the midst of all the tumult, a guitar teacher protesting for the first time with the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators says that this is a slogan competition. Walking along, one sees further signs: “Stop socialism for the rich.” A man in his underpants carries a sign saying, “Unemployed naked cowboy.” Then someone holds a new sign aloft saying, “Welcome to reality.” How does that make him feel? “Happy,” the young man, a student from New Jersey, replies.

The world will be what we make it.”
    For many, this global participation day marks their first experience with the movement. 57-year-old John Bird, who had watched it on television over the past few weeks, believes it's an opportunity for change and has written a banner stating “Native Americans for economic, social and ecological justice.” He quotes a Mayan calendar that extends only as far as the year 2012. In it, he sees an obligation. “The world that follows this one,” he says, “will be what we ourselves make it.”
Everyone believes that the Occupy Wall Street movement, threatened with eviction from the financial district yesterday, is something new for the U.S. and that it will continue to grow and develop new goals with each passing day. Paralegal Nathan Riedy from Pennsylvania says, “It's not about handouts, it's about fundamental issues.” He voted for Obama and says he will vote for him again. He won't protest against his president but says he's “part of the system.”
Cameron Kelly, a fitness studio owner from upstate New York, has spent several nights camped out in the park. She took part in anti-Vietnam War protests as a student, later demonstrating against other wars and for environmental issues. But the Occupy Wall Street movement is the first she feels is no longer about single issues nor trying to “educate” members of Congress. This, she says, is about “all or nothing.”
“These people understand something that we didn't realize. This is aimed directly at those who see war as a source of income and profit,” she says. She sees an example in a small, hostile neighboring country. She says Cuba is a poor country, yet education is free and its citizens pay nothing for their health care.

"Oh Sh*t. We the people are here."
    What will become of the Occupy Wall Street movement remains an open question. Four weeks after its inception, it is still in the process of taking stock and organizing its list of concerns and expectations. Becky Herman, a 24-year-old New Yorker, says she doesn't talk of a “lasting success.” Her banner demands a halt to military assistance to Israel and taxpayer funding for education and healthcare instead. Not many address that subject.
In front of the Times Square Chase Bank, a young man waves a banner reading “Banks Steal Homes.” Tourists take snapshots of the demonstrators from the upper levels of double-decker buses. A police officer shouts into a megaphone, “Clear the square!” Postal worker Eric Fernandez, 31, waits. For what? “I want everyone to see that I'm against laissez-faire capitalism,” he answers.
In the hubbub around him, Charlotte Souza watches the advancing line of policemen. The 23-year-old has been living in Liberty Plaza for two weeks. She quit her $5.80 per hour job as a kitchen helper. Her black leather jacket bears the slogan “Eat the rich” as well as a large U.S. flag. She says, “I can't understand how we allowed the gap between rich and poor to grow so ridiculously large.”
The police pushed the Occupy Everything crowd away from Times Square. When the square was again totally in the hands of the usual Saturday night visitors, all that was left was a sign lying on the ground. Its message: “Oh, Sh*t. We the people are here.”
   *Note: The quotes in this article, while accurately translated, could not be verified.

 

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Michelle Malkin: Right-Wing Idiot At Large…

…. has been up to her usual right-wing propaganda, only as of late it has been the usual attack on the Occupy Wall Street protesters. So what’s new, right?

   While browsing the Internet early on Monday morning, I came across a website which had a featured article submitted by Malkin in which she was blasting the  “ protesters “  over the cost to the New York taxpayers for the cleanup of Zuccotti Park.

    According to Michelle, the NYC government officials estimate the cost of the one month visit to the park  to be in the area of $3.2 million in overtime to the police. She also makes it a habit to refer to the  “ protesters “ as “ aimless occupiers.”

   Later on down the line, Malkin makes a comparison between the  “ protesters “ and her favorite wing-nut group, the frauds of the Tea Party, making the claim that at least the Tea Baggers had filed for all of the permits required to be in the areas in which they held their meetings, and that the Tea Baggers paid for their own power.

  First off, Michelle, the Tea Baggers may have paid for their power usage, but do we really consider that as a big deal. Paying a power bill is fairly easy when your Tea Party is created and financed by folks such as the Koch brothers and their subsidiary groups. That would be right-wing groups like the fine politicians, lobbyist , and CEO’s who make up membership in American Legislative Exchange Council  ( ALEC ). Remember them? The ones who wish to take away all worker rights, benefits, and pay if they can make an extra dollar from doing so? You know, that top 1% that the  “ protesters “ are meeting about?

  Michelle Malkin on the protesters:

Their T-shirts and speeches glorify Marxist radicals Che Guevara, Emiliano Zapata and Chairman Mao. They lionize convicted death row cop killer Troy Davis and WikiLeaks collaborator Bradley Manning. They condemn "Nazi Bankers," Jews, Fox News, the American Legislative Exchange Council, Wisconsin GOP Gov. Scott Walker, the Koch family and the New York Police Department ("Pigs!"). They promote the illegal alien DREAM Act and 9/11 Trutherism.

They spout bumper-sticker profanities and inanities: "F**k banks." "Unf**k the world." "Fuuuuu*k." "Free education." "Smash nationalism." "People not profits."

They flash peace signs while celebrity supporter Roseanne Barr calls for beheading financial industry workers and fellow marchers call explicitly for "violent revolution" or for Obama to "Send SEAL Team 6" to Wall Street.

Then they huff and puff (preferably in a creepy uniform chant they call the "human microphone") that we just haven't taken the time to understand what they're all about -- as they hawk $20 "Eat the Rich" polo shirts and license their protest photos to Getty Images.

Viva la revolucion! Up with people! Stop the greed! (Cha-ching. Cha-ching.)

      I spent 3 days at Occupy Wall Street and not once did I hear anyone complaining about the Jews, and the only complaints concerning the NYPD were over their illegal tactics in trying to control the protesters. You remember the pepper spray incidents? Now, there may have been a few rowdy people who got carried away with their rhetoric, but those were the few. As for Fox News,Koch brothers, and Scott Walker, they picked the right people/groups to raise hell about.

   #OWS is selling t-shirts to help pay for the Wall Street visit. So what? At least the group has found ways to support their visit to the titans of fraud and corruption, which you cannot say about Michelle’s beloved Tea Party. #OWS solicits donations of cash and goods on Twitter? They are getting the things which they need by the truck load, so it would seem that they have plenty of support from around the country.

   I’d like to see the Tea Party groups try that tactic without the help of the Koch hoods, and the criminal corporations who pay their bills. The out-come would not be close. The Tea Party would be less than nothing within a week.

  Michelle Malkin, maybe you should try visiting the protesters for a few days at least, in order to get your story straight, if they can stand the smell of you for that long.

   The fact that you posted your article on Glenn Beck’s website ( The Blaze ) tells all that you prefer to live in the universe of the factually challenged right-wingnut commune.

CNN Becoming The Next Fox News Channel

The Foxification Of CNN: New Management Pushes The Network Into Crazy Territory

 

In the fiercely competitive world of cable news, the players have been jockeying for position as they battle for viewers and advertisers. Fox News, MSNBC, and CNN, each with their own models of programming, seek to gain scale and influence.

Fox News, we know, has established its place as the leader in right-wing advocacy and Republican PR. MSNBC, while not a full-fledged counter to Fox, has allotted a fair portion of its programming to more liberally leaning fare. But CNN, the innovator and one-time leader in cable news, has wavered between those poles emerging as somewhat of a journalistic mutant - neither left nor right nor neutral.

The past year, however, CNN has been attempting to fashion a more recognizable persona. The shift coincides with the promotion of Ken Jautz, formerly the president of CNN's sister network, HLN. At HLN Jautz successed in raising both ratings and revenue by turning the channel into a trashy TV tabloid reliant on celebrity gossip and characters like Nancy Grace and Glenn Beck (yes, Jautz gave Beck his first job on television).

Now presiding over CNN, Jautz has brought his brash and distinctively commercial style to the network that once aspired to be a model of journalistic integrity. He is employing the same sensationalist philosophy at CNN that brought him success at HLN, along with a decidedly conservative bent. In an interview he gave after his promotion was announced Jautz delivered a tribute to Fox News and a preview of what to expect from his tenure saying that he does not believe that "facts-only" programming will work. True to his word he has endeavored to give CNN a shiny Fox-like hue and assembled a team that shares his aversion to facts.

Here are some examples of the lowlights of the Jautz era at CNN:

First and foremost, Jautz brought Glenn Beck into the CNN family saying that "Glenn's style is self-deprecating, cordial...not confrontational." That sort of delusional analysis ought to have been a red flag that disqualified Jautz from running a news network.
2) Erick Erickson, the RedState blogger who once called Supreme Court Justice David Souter a Goat-f**king child molester, became a CNN political commentator. Since his hiring he has cheered the S&P's downgrading of the U.S. credit rating and agreed with Rick Perry that Social Security is a Ponzi scheme.
3) CNN signed Dana Loesch, the editor of Andrew Breitbart's BigJournalism, to be a contributor. Loesch has alleged that President Obama "sided with terrorists," and she embraced the overt bigotry of notorious Islamaphobe Pamela Geller. Breitbart, of course is famous for promoting deceptively edited videos that smeared ACORN, NPR, Shirley Sherrod and even CNN reporter Abbie Boudreau. Loesch was hired by CNN after these events were widely known.
4) Jautz brought Erin Burnett over from CNBC. In her debut she broadcast a story that portrayed the protesters on Wall Street as unfocused neo-hippies that didn't understand the issues they were protesting. Burnett would have fit in well on the curvy couch of Fox & Friends where they routinely disparage the movement without ever addressing the substance of it.
5) CNN had the distinction of being the only network to air Michele Bachmann's Tea Party response to the State of the Union Address. Even Fox didn't think it was worthy of live coverage. The result is that CNN had two opposing viewpoints to the President's address, one from the GOP and one from the Tea Party which, of course, is just an affiliate of the GOP. We're still waiting for CNN to air a response from the Progressive Caucus or MoveOn.org.
6) Another new CNN political analyst is Will Cain, who CNN acquired from the ultra-conservative National Review. And if that credential isn't far enough out in right field, Cain just announced that he is joining Glenn Beck's web site, The Blaze.
7) CNN locked arms with the Tea Party to co-host a Republican presidential primary debate. By choosing Tea Party Express as their partner they embraced a dubious organization that was booted out of the Tea Party Federation due to the racist commentaries of a spokesman. It was also revealed that most of the funds raised from donations wound up in the coffers of Russo, Marsh, the Republican PR firm that founded Tea Party Express.
8) Former Fox News anchor and Bill O'Reilly fill-in, E.D. Hill, is now a CNN contributor. Hill was dumped by Fox after a segment that showed President Obama giving the First Lady a friendly fist bump and Hill called it a "terrorist fist jab."

So CNN is now employing Fox News rejects, Andrew Breitbart lieutenants, and Glenn Beck associates. They've entered into covenants with unscrupulous Tea Partyers. On the flip side, former CNN reporters Ed Henry and John Roberts are now comfortably ensconced at Fox News. The lines between CNN and Fox News are blurring to the point where the networks are becoming indistinguishable. And most of this occurred since Ken Jautz assumed the helm of CNN.

If there is one thing that American media doesn't need, it's another Fox News. The first one is already doing a stellar job of misinforming the public and advancing the agenda of the Republican Party. What's more, emulating Fox has done nothing for CNN's ratings. Why should it? Viewers who are in the market for dumbed-down histrionics, Democrat bashing, and a steady diet of right-wing falsehoods, already have a proven provider. Fox's audience has shown that they are not the least bit interested in looking for the remote that slipped under the sofa years ago. They don't even change the channel when their heroes are just a click down the dial.

Consequently, if CNN is gaining nothing from reshaping their editorial slant to mirror Fox, the only conclusion is that they are deliberately making a hard right turn because that is the direction they want to go. But this path has only resulted in their dropping to third place behind Fox and MSNBC. If CNN ever hopes to regain some of the luster of their glory days, they will need to differentiate themselves from Fox. They might want to take a stab at journalism. That would be novel in these days of advocacy tabloidism.

One more thing: This Friday News Corp is holding their annual shareholder's meeting in Los Angeles at the Fox Studios in West L.A. Rupert will be there. OccupyLA is planning on being there. It would be great if everyone else in L.A. plans to be there too.

By News Corpse | Sourced from DailyKos

Fox News Corp Annual Shareholder’s Meeting…

…. is scheduled for this Friday, October 21,at the  Fox Studios in West L.A

OccupyLA is planning on being there and it would great if you and your friends in the L.A. area would attend this meeting. Even if you are not in  the area and you are just looking for someplace to be, take a little trip and let your voice be heard. You are one of the 99%.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Those Bush/Obama Tax Cuts Cost Us $11.6 Million An Hour

image

A report from the National Priorities Project - slogan: Bringing the Federal Budget Home - finds that tax cuts to the wealthiest 5 percent of Americans continue to cost the U.S. Treasury - ie: us - $11.6 million every hour of every day. They've installed a rolling counter to see that the total is...well, it's gone up a few hundred thousand since you started reading this.

                    www.commondreams.org