28 April 2006

"Our Anthem": Translating the Star Spangled Banner

My first question is: "They JUST NOW translated the Star Spangled Banner" into Spanish! I actually cannot believe that. But for the sake of argument, let's consider the ramifications.
First there is the whole issue of translating important documents. Mistakes can occur and cause major problems. When the Christian Bible was translated from its original into Latin, the "sins" of Sodom and Gomorrah changed from being bad hosts (not properly welcoming travelers is a cardinal sin across the middle east) to being sexually "deviant". Generations of homosexuals have been beaten, imprisoned and tortured due to a faulty translation. Likewise Mary, mother of Jesus and wife of Joseph was originally described as "young" - NOT a virgin. Then when King James got HIS hands on it... Well, enough said. We must be careful translating important documents.
I CAN understand why some people are opposed to translating the Star Spangled Banner into any other language, ESPECIALLY Spanish. First, it sets a bad precedent. Next some do-gooder liberal will translate the Bill of Rights into Spanish and when all those Mexicans find out they have RIGHTS, well, we'll ALL be in trouble. And then OTHER things might be translated into Spanish. For instance, the Bible. If English is good enough for God its good enough for immigrants. And if someone translated the ORIGINAL books of the Bible, so that immigrants knew what the authors really wanted to say while we all only have a medieval king's version of God's word's translated from a translation of a translation- WE SIMPLY CANNOT ALLOW A "TRANSLATION GAP" in favor of immigrants. They need to learn the same flawed translations WE use.
Secondly translating the Star Spangled Banner into other languages may give a little too much away. The US has a bad reputation worldwide right now because we are seen as violent and warmongers. Once it becomes common knowledge that our national anthem is about war - and that the only other war themed national anthem was that sung by the Germans as they marched to conquer the world in WWII- our problem can only get worse.
SERIOUSLY, I am grateful to anyone who sincerely tries to honor our nation, our traditions and our history. If singing "Our Anthem" in Spanish makes Hispanic immigrants feel the same sense of pride in America that I feel when I sing "the Land of the Free, and the Home of the Brave" this can only be a good thing. Yes, they should learn it in English. But until they can, lets ALL sing together regardless of language.

26 April 2006

Replacing the Single Business tax by doubling the sales tax- No, Really. Ask Dick DeVos!

A new report by Fair Economy shows that multimillion-dollar lobbying effort to repeal the federal estate tax has been aggressively led by 18 super-wealthy families, INCLUDING THE DeVOS FAMILY and the families behind Wal-Mart, Gallo wine, Campbell's soup, and Mars Inc., maker of M&Ms. Collectively, the list includes the first- and third-largest privately held companies in the United States, the richest family in Alabama and the world's largest retailer. (report)

The report reveals how 18 families worth a total of $185.5 billion have financed and coordinated a 10-year effort to repeal the estate tax, a move that would collectively net them a windfall of $71.6 billion.

These same people are also behind the move to repeal Michigan's Single Business Tax (SBT). This tax, like the estate tax, ONLY AFFECTS THE HIGHEST INCOME BRACKET. To even qualify to be considered for the SBT a business needs to make over $100,0000.00 in a given year. Like the estate tax this only affects a very small percentage of Michigan residents. What WILL affect us all is the repercussions of these tax breaks for the wealthy. Nationally the loss of the Estate tax will result in even more cuts in programs NECESSARY for average people- drug & medical benefits, roads, fire & safety. Within Michigan the Republican Senate has a plan to make up for the loss of the SBT- DOUBLING the sales tax (or at least raising it to 10%). This would spread the cost among all of us while once again saving the very rich, who often purchase everything they own through tax-sheltered corporations and foundations. Like the Bush tax giveaways, these will benefit ONLY the super rich and everyone else will pay the cost.

Not all rich sign on to this. George Soros, a billionaire, has donated his own money to stop these unfair proposals. "The estate tax should be regarded as just paying back to the country for all the wonderful things it's made possible for the people who have that wealth," said Bill Gates Sr. in an audio statement played at a press conference relating to the report. "I don't think there's any great societal goal being served by inherited wealth. And certainly there's no sensible argument that I can think of for insisting on being able to pass the last penny of $100 million on to your three kids" said Elizabeth Letzler, an investment manager from New York who will be subject to the estate tax, "The current estate tax structure should permit any wealthy household to pass on a legacy of financial security, education and family heirlooms to the next generations." She challenged the families showcased in the report: "Do something spectacular during your life-time investing in the social welfare and well-being of the children and grandchildren at the bottom of the pyramid." Her daughter Stephanie, also in attendance, said, "If keeping the estate tax means a step closer to a debt-free treasury, a step closer to improved health care, Social Security, education, and every other program that makes me proud to be an American, show me where to sign the check." Paul Newman, actor and founder of Newman's Own food company, agreed in a separate statement: "For those of us lucky enough to be born in this country and to have flourished here, the estate tax is a reasonable and appropriate way to return something to the common good. I'm proud to be among those supporting preservation of this tax, which is one of the fairest taxes we have." There ARE still good, patriotic, WEALTHY Americans, but not in the GOP, apparently.

Lastly, let's dispose of the myths used to support these proposals: 1. MICHIGAN DOES NOT HAVE A SMALL BUSINESS TAX. There is no such thing. THE SBT is the Single Busines Tax, a simplified tax structure that replaces the myriad of confusing business taxes that used to exist. This was done at the request of businesses, who said they wanted to simplify the rules but it now looks like they wanted to have only 1 tax so it would be easier to remove ALL taxation from businesses. Without the SBT businesses will pay NO STATE TAX AT ALL. 2. There have been NO- zero- family farms sold due to the SBT. No business lost whatsoever has ever been proven. 3. Michigan ranks far down in the bottom half of states when ranked by tax burden on business.

The SBT is used only to make sure that large companies with major profits do not use tax loopholes to pay absolutely no tax. It sets an alternative- minimum (and minimal) tax that cannot be avoided through accounting trickery. Ask around ---- see if ANYONE you know is unfairly affected by this tax. And while you are at it, ask if ANYONE you know will EVER be affected by the Estate Tax. Being as I doubt any multimillionaire will read this blog, I will confidently predict that no one reading this will have ANY ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE of anyone who will be paying estate tax. And if you are- Congratulations to you. The American Dream sure paid off for one of your ancestors- are you really claiming you have no moral need to help make it real for everyone else?

25 April 2006

There are leaks, and then there are LEAKS.

So SOMEONE in the White House leaked Valerie Plame's name to Robert Novak. In doing so a covert agent (Plame), WHO WORKED IN NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION AND SPECIALIZED IN IRANIAN POLITICS was rendered ineffective, the cover company she worked for was made useless and anyone else working for that company was labeled as a potential CIA agent. We suffered a MAJOR intelligence disaster in a crucial area (Iranian nuclear development) and YEARS LATER we do not know who leaked.
Someone leaked that the CIA is setting up "gulag"-type black-hole prisons in eastern Europe using old Soviet-era facilities. No loss to our legitimate intelligence operations was caused, in fact it can only HELP in the long run to curtail illegal and improper operations before they cause major problems. Within WEEKS a CIA agent, Ms. McCarthy, who just happens to be one of the few Bush critics still in management positions, is singled out as the leaker, fired weeks before retirement, and threatened with prosecution. This in spite of the fact that her job did not present her with any opportunity to learn about the prisons and that the article about the prisons referenced "several" sources, none of which correspond to Ms. McCarthy. She has CATEGORICALLY denied the accusations. EVEN WORSE THE AUTHOR OF THE article A PULITZER PRIZE WINNING JOURNALIST, IS ALSO THREATENED WITH PROSECUTION! Now you must remember that the CIA prisons have been common knowledge and widely-publicized in Europe for months. http://www.euractiv.com/Article?tcmuri=tcm:29-151357-16&type=News

Does ANYONE believe this? No matter HOW right-wing you might be DOES THIS NOT STINK? The leak which harms us immensely in a very current way is covered up; the writing of an "whistle-blower" article about an already known and very improper administration program is attacked full force and a scapegoat immediately obtained.
It is clear that the REAL purpose here is to further intimidate ANYONE who might disagree with the Bush Administration's actions. This is a watershed moment, folks: Anyone who even TRIES to justify this action is making it clear that they have NO boundaries left at all, they have completely surrendered their morals, judgment and reasoning powers into the hands of Big Brother. Any member of the GOP who does not stand up and scream with rage about what the Bush Administration has done in their name is, at this point, no different than the millions of Germans who stood quietly by as the NSDAP took unconditional control of their government. To them I ask: "If THIS does not make you see the truth, WHAT WILL? Is there ANYTHING that will wake you up? Is there ANYTHING you will not allow? At long last, do you have no shame?"

22 April 2006

And Now some words from Our President, Dick Cheney:

1. "[I] would have obviously been happy to serve had I been called." —March 1989 Senate Confirmation Hearing for Secretary of Defense
Truth: Stating that he had "other priorities", Dick Cheney did everything he could to avoid serving, including applying for five deferments. It worked. He never served any time in the military.


2. "[Iraq is] the geographic base for the terrorists who have had us under assault now for many years, but most especially on 9/11." —September 14, 2003, Meet the Press
Truth: The September 21, 2001, Presidents Daily Briefing (PDB), which Dick Cheney received, said there was no link between the Iraqi government and the 9/11 attacks, a finding confirmed by every major investigation of the attacks since.

3. "I continue to believe—I think there's overwhelming evidence that there was a connection between al-Qaeda and the Iraqi government. . . . I'm very confident that there was an established relationship there." —January 22, 2004, NPR's Morning Edition
Truth: The same PDB said there was no Iraqi link to al-Qaeda, a finding also confirmed by every major investigation since.

4. "My belief is we will, in fact, be greeted as liberators." —March 16, 2003, NEC's Meet the Press
Truth: The U.S. military personnel who entered Iraq have not been greeted as liberators. Instead, they have been the victims of an increasingly bloody insurgency that has already killed more than 2,300 U.S. soldiers and wounded an additional 17,000.

5. "I can say that we, in fact, are consistent with the commitments of the United States that we don't engage in torture. And we don't." —December 18, 2005, ABC News Nightline
Truth: Retired U.S. Army Colonel Larry Wilkerson, who served as Colin Powell's chief of staff, told CNN on November 20, 2005, "There's no question in my mind that we did [torture]. There's no question in my mind that we may be still doing it. There's no question in my mind where the philosophical guidance and the flexibility in order to do so originated—in the vice president of the United States' office. His implementer in this case was Donald Rumsfeld and the Defense Department."

6. "I have no financial interest in Halliburton of any kind and haven't had, now, for over three years." —September 21, 2003, NEC's Meet the Press
Truth: During his tenure as vice president, Dick Cheney has been receiving deferred compensation from Halliburton and holds company stock options valued at nearly $8 million. Although the Cheneys have assigned future profits from their stock options to charity, the deferred compensation creates a potential conflict of interest because if the company goes bankrupt, it will be unable to pay.

7. "I had a firm policy that we wouldn't do anything in Iraq, even arrangements that were supposedly legal." (Of his time as Halliburton CEO.) —July 30, 2000, This Week, ABC News
Truth: The Washington Post reported on June 23, 2001: "According to oil industry executives and confidential United Nations records, however, Halliburton held stakes in two firms that signed contracts to sell more than $73 million in oil production equipment and spare parts to Iraq while Dick Cheney was chairman and chief executive officer of the Dallas-based company."

8. "I don't have anything to do with the contracting process, and I wouldn't know how to manipulate the process if I wanted to." —Fox News Radio, January 2004
Truth: On June 14, 2004, the Los Angeles Times reported that the vice president's office helped overrule an army lawyer's blocking of a $7 billion no-bid contract to Halliburton in March 2003. Regarding a $1.9 billion contract in 2002, The New York Times wrote on July 14, 2004: "The Pentagon sought and received the assents of senior Bush administration officials, including the vice president's chief of staff, before hiring the Halliburton Company to develop secret plans for restoring Iraq's oil facilities."

9. "The first time I ever met you was when you walked on the stage tonight." (Of his opponent, Senator John Edwards.) —October 5, 2004, Vice-Presidential Debates
Truth: As video footage and photographs that played endlessly in the days following the debate showed, Dick Cheney had met Edwards at least three times prior—at a prayer breakfast in 2001, at Elizabeth Dole's swearing-in ceremony in 2003, and backstage at Meet the Press—and, the odds are, many other times that weren't caught on camera.

10. "I think they're in the last throes, if you will, of the insurgency." —June 20, 2005, Larry King Live
Truth: In the months that have followed, the insurgency in Iraq has flared to bloodier, more violent heights.

11. "No. I never said that." —June 17, 2004, CNBC (About whether he ever said that it was "pretty well confirmed" that a meeting took place between 9/11 hijacker Mohamed Atta and Iraqi intelligence.)
Truth: On Meet the Press, December 9, 2001, Dick Cheney told Tim Russert, "It's been pretty well confirmed that [Mohamed Atta] did go to Prague and he did meet with a senior official of the Iraqi intelligence service in Czechoslovakia last April."

12. "Conservation may be a sign of personal virtue, but it is not a sufficient basis for a sound, comprehensive energy policy." —April 30, 2001, Annual Meeting of the Associated Press
Truth: On the heels of the large bulk of scientific research, government scientists used the results of a three-year study to show that a conservation program sponsored by the White House could accomplish both a decrease in dependency on fossil fuels and a reduction in pollution.

13. "The amount of land affected by oil production [in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge] would be two thousand acres, less than one-fifth the size of Dulles International Airport." —April 30, 2001, Annual Meeting of the Associated Press
Truth: Drilling for oil isn't a surgical activity that damages only the land upon which drilling takes place. Dick Cheney ignores the fact that most of the damage comes from creating the miles of roads and pipelines that will run through the protected lands to serve the drilling. The vice president is also being deceptive when he implies that all of the drilling will take place in one concentrated spot. In fact, the U.S. Geological Survey predicts the ANWR drilling is "expected to occur as several accumulations rather than a single large accumulation."

14. "I can tell you that the government had absolutely nothing to do with it." (In response to Senator Joseph Lieberman's comment "I'm pleased to see, Dick, that you're better off than you were eight years ago.") —October 5, 2000, Vice-Presidential Debate
Truth: As Jane Mayer's February 16, 2004, piece in The New Yorker details: "In fact, despite having spent years championing the private sector and disparaging big government, Dick Cheney devoted himself at Halliburton to securing government funds. In the five years before Dick Cheney joined Halliburton, the company received a hundred million dollars in government credit guarantees. During Dick Cheney's tenure, this amount jumped to $1.5 billion."

15. "Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction." —August 26, 2002, Veterans of Foreign Wars National Convention
Truth: Despite years of searching since the invasion Dick Cheney advocated, no weapons of mass destruction have ever been found in Iraq.

20 April 2006

A Bad Law is Much Worse than NO Law

There are simply WAY TOO MANY laws. Period. Once a Legislature starts meeting "full time" (meaning getting paid for the whole year even if only 4 or 5 months of work gets done) there are bound to be too many laws. Each incumbent needs to show their name on a bill to get re-elected. (In Academia it is called "publish or perish.) In addition you have corporate and big money sponsors who expect a return on their investment, so there need to be laws protecting or exempting them, as necessary. Then there is the need to be "tougher on crime" than everyone else. Add to this an ongoing and ever increasing need for money and you get laws, laws and more laws.

All laws should have sunset provisions. Thus it would no longer be necessary to remember that the last Sunday each June is Log Cabin day (MCL 435.241 reads: "Log cabin day. Sec.1. The last Sunday in June of each year shall be known as 'log cabin day'. History: 1989, Act 60, Imd. Eff. June 16, 1989").
Likewise women could cut their hair without their husband's permission. (more laws) Barring that we should at least stop passing BAD laws.

There are several really bad laws we need to repeal. Laws which restrict a Judge's discretion in sentencing are really bad- that is what APPEALS are for- bad rulings by judges. Much of our law regarding drug use needs to be updated, and the laws on CSC (Criminal sexual Conduct)- once a model for the nation- has ballooned grotesquely. Right now I would like to address Michigan's Drivers Responsibility Law.

The following is from a presentation by the Honorable William C. Buhl, Van Buren County Circuit Court Judge. (Reprinted by permission.) It is quite detailed so I add a link to the full text below.

In 2003 the Legislature, in addition to passing PA 152 increasing fees for operators licenses from $13 to $25 along with all other licensing and registration fees, added PA 165 (Attachment B), promoting it as a highway safety measure. It was just a coincidence that it came along while the State of Michigan was in a fiscal crisis, and existing fees went up.
PA 165 imposed monetary sanctions upon posting of certain convictions, and/or upon the accumulation of 7 or more points in 2 years. After October 1, 2003, a yearly check is made to ascertain if a driver has 7 or more points. $100 is assessed each year plus $50 for each additional point, for each year the point total is over 7.
Specified offenses also carry assessments for 2 years in the following amounts:

$1,000 a year for 2 years for:
1. All OWI/UBAL crimes, or any drinking-driving or driving with controlled substance causing death or serious bodily injury.
2. Fail to stop and identify after P.I. or P.D. accident.
3. Manslaughter or negligent homicide with vehicle.
4. Felonious driving.
5. Fleeing and eluding cases.
6. Auto theft.
7. Due care cases causing construction worker injury or death.
8. DWLS/revoked causing serious injury or death.
9. All the above when operating ORV or snowmobiles.
10. Allowing anyone to drive when OWI/suspended causing injury/death.

$500 a year for 2 years for:
1. Driving while impaired by alcohol or drugs.
2. Minor zero tolerance alcohol driving cases.
3. Reckless driving.
4. Child endangerment.
5. DWLS/revoked or denied.
6. Driving CMV while disqualified.

$150 a year for 2 years for:
1. Driving unlicensed or not valid or without proper endorsement
2. No insurance or no proof of insurance.
3. Driving with expired license.

In 2004 PA 52 (Attachment B) made the following changes:
1. No proof of insurance was raised to $200 a year.
2. Proof of insurance shown to the court for the time period when the ticket was issued avoids the assessment.

When the Michigan Legislature enacted 2003 Public Act 165 it must have been clueless, or, in an effort to generate funds at all costs, heartless towards the residents of the state. Public Act 165 of 2003 (MCL 257.732a), known as the Driver Responsibility Fee, has so many negative ramifications that only a heartless legislature would knowingly foist this tax on the people.
This fee is an added layer of cost assessed on top of all other fines, costs, fees, and assessments accompanying findings of responsibility and guilt for traffic offenses. It is in addition to increased insurance rates that accompany drunk driving convictions, speeding tickets and the like.
To be sure, this legislation will generate some additional revenues. Those who can afford it will pay to keep their driving privilege. Well off drunk drivers will pony up the $2,000 fee and stay on the road legally, as will the many careless drivers who accumulate 7 or more points within 2 years. New Jersey, Texas and New York have all raked in large sums from this type of legislation.
So what's the down side of this money machine? Plenty.
First and foremost, these programs guarantee the creation of a large pool of uninsured, unlicensed drivers. Over time this will have a disastrous effect on many people. An excellent article was written by William L. Cataldo for the State Bar of Michigan publication The General Practitioner shortly after Act 165 was passed, entitled A New Class of Criminal. He recognized what all of us familiar with the criminal justice system immediately perceived the economically challenged citizen will pay a dear price.
Many offenses are economically based. For example, a violation of MCL 500.3101 and 500.3103, requiring insurance on motor vehicles, is punishable by a fine of at least $200 to $500 or up to 1 year in jail or both. So not having money to buy insurance is punished by a large minimum fine. Now, getting a conviction for not having insurance also requires a $1,000 driver reinstatement fee. Should the person chance to drive to work in spite of his suspension for non-payment of the fee, that driver can be arrested and convicted of driving while suspended. That will carry another $1,000 fee. In Michigan, even though driving while suspended or revoked is defined as a misdemeanor with possible jail, jail sentences have become rare. In reality we have decriminalized this offense, because chronic jail overcrowding all over Michigan makes this non-violent offense low priority. Seeing persons with 6, 7 or 8 convictions not get any jail for the latest arrest is not uncommon. So the law in unenforced. However, that person with 7 driving while suspended convictions will need to pay the State of Michigan $7,000 if a license is ever returned, plus a reinstatement fee! Taking away the privilege does not remove the driver from behind the wheel and keep that driver off the road.
These fees will hopelessly bury many of the economically challenged. One legislator actually wrote a letter to a daily publication stating that the Driver Responsibility Fee legislation was a public safety measure! It isn't about public safety, its about money.
Hopelessness is a dangerous condition. But being suspended and driving carries many more risks of serious incarceration than it once did. Being unlucky is the key. Although just driving while suspended won't get you locked up, bad luck will. For example, if a person causes death or serious impairment of a body function while driving while suspended, they commit felonies carrying up to 15 and 5 years in prison respectively. Those who knowingly permit a person to operate their vehicle, and that person causes death or serious impairment of a body function commits a 5 and 2 year felony, respectively.
The same economic hard times that caused the enactment of this tax will cause the damage to the poor driver. And as time goes on, we will all pay dearly when more and more people have no hope, no license and no insurance.
When the original act passed and inadvertently included a fee for those who had insurance but forgot to carry proof of insurance, it caused a public outcry, and the legislature quickly amended the law, removing the fee from that section, but increasing the fee on another violation. Too bad they didn't revisit the whole concept. The longer it remains on the books, the harder the fix.

(READ Judge Buhl's entire presentation)

Abortion

I thought of several cute and catchy titles for this entry and then decided this isn't a cute and catchy type of issue. One of the reasons we cannot settle this is because of people using catchy little phrases instead of facing up to reality. "Pro-Life", "Pro-Choice", "Reproductive Freedom", "Baby Killers"- NONE OF THESE TRULY DESCRIBE ANYTHING ABOUT ABORTION!

We are all- unless we are a serial killer- PRO-LIFE. In fact, since Liberals are usually against the death penalty and wars-of-choice, while many Conservatives vie to see who can execute the broadest range of people (the cutting edge now being "how young can you go", the "how slow [mentally challenged] can you go" race having been won by Texas) and who can come up with the most creative reason for starting a war, Liberals should claim the label Pro-Life. Well, there is that sticky assisted suicide issue. Perhaps only Buddhist monks should earn the title Pro-Life.

Likewise all of us are Pro-Choice. The disagreement is simply as to "Whose choice?". For example, if some woman in Bangor Township, Michigan, finds she is pregnant Liberals would say that after consulting her family, partner, clergy, Doctor or whomever may be appropiate, the choice is hers. Conservatives say that after consulting themselves, the choice belongs to some politician in Lansing or Washington. Liberals support their position saying that no one knows the facts surrounding the pregnancy and the woman's life better than she does; Conservatives say that no one knows the will of God better than they do.

It should be clear from above that I firmly believe that the right to decide resides with the pregnant woman. And I do believe that. Of course I do not have to LIKE it. Just as I am against unnecessary wars and capital punishment (more on this some other day)- I am firmly against abortion. However, like wars, abortion is sometimes necessary. Our goal should NOT be controlling a woman's choices- our goal MUST be to give her BETTER choices.

It is SO VERY WRONG that so many Conservatives seem to quit caring about a child as soon as it starts breathing on its own. Health care, education, even food and shelter are given less value that tax breaks for the wealthy and giant corporations. (And you KNOW you will read more on THIS topic!) Very few women "use abortion as birth control", usually the planned birth control has failed and the woman now faces either a child conceived from rape or incest, one with some terrible heredity disease, or one SHE KNOWS will suffer from lack of food, shelter and medical care. The infant mortality rate- and life expectancy- in the United States clearly shows the negative effect that a lack of universal health care and public support of food and shelter continues to have. Since the United States ranks 36th- behind every other major modern country we MUST be failing in this area.

On the other hand many Liberals want to ensure a woman has a right to choose abortion, but they fight offering her other choices. We need a "no fault" system of adoption, where the parent making the already difficult decision to have a child and then let it be adopted does not face an adversarial process. In Michigan, for instance, if a woman has had her parental rights to one child terminated by a court then that becomes a specific prima facie reason to terminate her rights to any children she might have in the future! There should be a clear, safe and repercussion-free system in place to allow women to make this choice without fear of future problems. Likewise NO AMERICAN should ever have to choose abortion because they cannot feed, clothe or shelter a child. No American should choose abortion because they cannot afford pre- peri- or post-natal care. No American should choose abortion because they know the child will never have a chance at a good future- a decent job, college or a trade. This is where our effort should go.

No, we SHOULD NOT make a woman's choice for her- We SHOULD offer her better choices!

jessie

From the Gun Safe of the Well Armed Sheep

Back to one of my favorite subjects: Gun Control. I do not know why so many people cannot agree on this issue. Several things are SO obvious. First- Yes we do have a right to have guns. Second- No, it IS NOT an absolute right- NO rights are absolute. Even though the Constitution says we have the right to "Life, liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" we CAN be jailed or imprisoned.
OK, Third- Taking guns away WILL NOT stop violence. Even inmates in prisons can make their own guns. One inmate became rich making guns from tubing and ammunition from ball bearings and scraped off match heads. And there are ALWAYS knives. HOWEVER, Fourth- Some restrictions are reasonable. A waiting period, as almost all domestic murders are done while in a rage. Planned murders are seldom shootings. Background checks for violence or insanity (or membership in a terrorist group, but as the Bush administration has classed the Society of Friends (the Quakers) as worth watching, this could be a dangerous issue) ARE a good idea. And no one needs machine guns except for shooting up a McDonald's or a schoolyard. If you cannot hit a deer, or a robber, with 5 or 6 shots we'd all be better off if you stopped shooting.
And I LIKE guns. So does Tab. We each have a Concealed Weapons License. Tab would rather leave the house naked than without her favorite revolver (a tiny .22 ankle gun). I have a matched set of military M1911s with molded Pachymar grips which I want to be buried with me. We have several other handguns and long guns as well. But we keep them in a gun safe and have gun safes mounted in our cars. We take gun safety VERY seriously.
One of the few things Republicans have right IS the gun issue- for the most part. Some Republicans are so beholden to NRA money that they have lost all reason, though. The NRA, which I supported for most of my life, has lately gone bonkers. The final straw for me was the rally in Littleton, Colorado (where Columbine High School is ) right after the massacre there and against the parents' pleas for a mourning period. Charlton Heston found a parent who wanted the NRA there and he was paraded out in a really despicable manner. I have found the Michigan Coalition of Gun Owners (MCGRO) to be a much more sensible organization. I strongly suggest you consider joining (or like me, simply supporting) it. Of course some extremists saw Columbine as proof everyone, even children, should be armed at all times. Several right-wingers stated that gun laws created "pools of disarmed victims at U.S. public schools". Personally I think the idea of a dozen or so students and teachers "shooting it out" with Harris and Klebold is the most idiotic idea I have ever heard.
One change in the law I do support concerns the "concealed" nature of the carry laws. The goal of carrying is to be safe, not to shoot someone. Concealed weapons are almost a trap for muggers. ALWAYS the better solution is deterrence. Rather than hiding your weapon until the attacker gives you a chance to draw it- at which point you had better shoot before he/she attacks, takes it or pulls their own weapon, we should carry OPENLY, hoping to discourage attacks in the first place.

This is all so easy- I do not know why so many people have simply "dug into" their positions and refuse to really discuss this issue. Some issues are like that, and I will discuss them all- abortion (legal but rare); same-sex marriage (civil unions for all, let Churches handle marriage); capital punishment (it DOESN'T deter anyone, but maybe if someone started an unnecessary war and killed thousands...). Read on, read on.

jessie

19 April 2006

NEWS FLASH-Proposed Law Would Authorize Execution of Sex Offenders Immediately Upon Being Accused [a Well-Armed Sheep Parody]

NEWS FLASH Lansing, Michigan July 3, 2007- In response to Democratic lawmakers proposing that sex offenders be assumed guilty as soon as they are accused, Republican lawmakers once again broached the subject of capital punishment. "There is no way that Democrats are as hard on crime as we are" said the Republican Leader, Senator N. Z. Stormtrooper. "They would have you think that life without parole at hard labor is a sufficient punishment. I say to them: WIMPS!"

A second bill would lower the age at which the death penalty applied: "We think that as soon as the offender's umbilical cord is cut he or she should face the same penalty as anyone else who commits a serious crime" Senator Stormtrooper said. "Unless, of course, the person WANTS to die." This is a softer version of his earlier proposal, which would make a person eligable for the death penalty anytime after conception. This bill died in committee when exceptions forbidding the death penalty to be used as a form of abortion and exempting any sitting or past Vice President who might shoot someone ended up running into several hundreds of pages.

18 April 2006

The Witless Wisdom of W. Bush

"I've been to war [sic]. I've raised twins. If I had a choice, I'd rather go to war."

"I'm the decider, and I decide what is best. And what's best is for Don Rumsfeld to remain as the secretary of defense."—Washington, D.C., April 18, 2006

"I strongly believe what we're doing is the right thing. If I didn't believe it—I'm going to repeat what I said before—I'd pull the troops out, nor if I believed we could win, I would pull the troops out."—Charlotte, N.C., April 6, 2006

"If the Iranians were to have a nuclear weapon they could proliferate."—Washington D.C., March 21, 2006

"No question that the enemy has tried to spread sectarian violence. They use violence as a tool to do that."—Washington, D.C., March 22, 2006

"And so I'm for medical liability at the federal level."—Discussing his support of medical liability reform, Washington, D.C., March 10, 2006

"After the bombing, most Iraqis saw what the perpetuators of this attack were trying to do."—(On the bombing of the Golden Mosque in Iraq) March 13, 2006, Washington, D.C.

"I think it's really important for this great state of baseball to reach out to people of all walks of life to make sure that the sport is inclusive. The best way to do it is to convince little kids how to—the beauty of playing baseball."—Washington, D.C., Feb. 13, 2006

"And I want those who are questioning it to step up and explain why all of a sudden a Middle Eastern company is held to a different standard than a Great British company."—Defending a plan to allow a company from the United Arab Emirates to manage ports in the United States, Feb. 21, 2006

"One of the interesting initiatives we've taken in Washington, D.C., is we've got these vampire-busting devices. A vampire is a—a cell deal you can plug in the wall to charge your cell phone."—Denver, CO. Aug. 14, 2001

"Well, it's an unimaginable honor to be the president during the Fourth of July of this country. It means what these words say, for starters. The great inalienable rights of our country. We're blessed with such values in America. And I--it's--I'm a proud man to be the nation based upon such wonderful values."-- July 2, 2001

"We spent a lot of time talking about Africa, as we should. Africa is a nation that suffers from incredible disease."-- June 14, 2001

"It's very important for folks to understand that when there's more trade, there's more commerce."--Quebec City, Canada, April 21, 2001

"I've coined new words, like, misunderstanding and Hispanically."—- Washington, D.C., March 29, 2001

"I am mindful not only of preserving executive powers for myself, but for predecessors as well."—Washington, D.C., Jan. 29, 2001

"Then I went for a run with the other dog and just walked. And I started thinking about a lot of things. I was able to—I can't remember what it was. Oh, the inaugural speech, started thinking through that." U.S. News & World Report, Jan. 22, 2001 issue

"Redefining the role of the United States from enablers to keep the peace to enablers to keep the peace from peacekeepers is going to be an assignment."—Interview with the New York Times, Jan. 14, 2001

"The California crunch really is the result of not enough power-generating plants and then not enough power to power the power of generating plants."—- New York Times, Jan. 14, 2001

"They misunderestimated me."—Bentonville, Ark., Nov. 6, 2000

"I know how hard it is for you to put food on your family."—Greater Nashua, N.H., Chamber of Commerce, Jan. 27, 2000

"I know the human being and fish can coexist peacefully."-Saginaw, Mich., Sept. 29, 2000

"The great thing about America is everybody should vote."-Austin, Texas, Dec. 8, 2000

"It's clearly a budget. It's got a lot of numbers in it."--Reuters, May 5, 2000
"Rarely is the question asked: Is our children learning?"-Florence, S.C., Jan. 11, 2000

"I understand small business growth. I was one."-New York Daily News, Feb. 19, 2000

"The most important job is not to be governor, or first lady in my case."-Pella, Iowa, as quoted by the San Antonio Express-News, Jan. 30, 2000

"It's important for us to explain to our nation that life is important. It's not only life of babies, but it's life of children living in, you know, the dark dungeons of the Internet."—Arlington Heights, Ill., Oct. 24, 2000

"I think if you know what you believe, it makes it a lot easier to answer questions. I can't answer your question."— Reynoldsburg, Ohio, Oct. 4, 2000

"Natural gas is hemispheric. I like to call it hemispheric in nature because it is a product that we can find in our neighborhoods."—Austin, Texas, Dec. 20, 2000

"The senator [McCain] has got to understand if he's going to have—he can't have it both ways. He can't take the high horse and then claim the low road."—- Florence, S.C., Feb. 17, 2000

"We ought to make the pie higher."—South Carolina Republican Debate, Feb. 15, 2000

"They want the federal government controlling Social Security like it's some kind of federal program."—Debate in St. Charles, Mo., Nov. 2, 2000

"It's your money. You paid for it."—LaCrosse, Wis., Oct. 18, 2000

"It's not the governor's role to decide who goes to heaven. I believe that God decides who goes to heaven, not George W. Bush." -- George W. Bush, in the Houston Chronicle.

"There ought to be limits to freedom. We're aware of this [web] site, and this guy is just a garbage man, that's all he is." -- George Jr., discussing a web site that parodies him

"I'm a uniter not a divider. That means when it comes time to sew up your chest cavity, we use stitches as opposed to opening it up." -- Bush, on David Letterman, March 2, 2000. (the audience booed)

"I didn't -- I swear I didn't -- get into politics to feather my nest or feather my friends' nests." -- Bush Jr., in the Houston Chronicle


More wisdom from our President:

17 April 2006

There are none so blind as they that will not see.

William J. Clinton looked into the cameras, and with all the sincerity he could muster, said: "I did not have sex with that woman, Monica Lewinky." (January 1998) He was lying. He lied because he had been having an adulterous affair with Ms. Lewinsky and was embarrassed by being exposed. The affair was not a criminal act in itself, Ms. Lewinsky being a consenting adult. However President Clinton had been lying to his wife and friends about the affair, and lied to the American people to cover that up. The Republicanns in congress tried to impeach him for this. In fact, with bombs and missiles starting to rain down on Baghdad, the House began its historic debate - the first for 130 years - on whether to impeach the president. Being a Democratic "war president" meant only- at least to the Republicans in Congress- that there was one more reason to attach the Commander in Chief. Luckily the American people had better sense.

"Let me just say something about leaks in Washington," George W. Bush told reporters in September 2003. "There are too many leaks of classified information in Washington. There's leaks at the executive branch, there's leaks in the legislative branch, there's just too many leaks. I want -- and if there's a leak out of the administration, I want to know who it is. And if a person has violated law, the person will be taken care of." Later, Bush looked into the cameras, and with his most sincere look (the one without the usual smirk), said: "I don't know of anybody in my administration who leaked classified information. If somebody did leak classified information, I'd like to know it, and we'll take the appropriate action." (September 30, 2003) Both times he was lying. He lied because he was trying to conceal the fact his administration had leaked misleading classified information in an attempt to discredit Ambassador Joe Wilson, who, with his wife, a covert CIA agent, had been sent to Africa to determine if Iraq had tried to buy Uranium to make nuclear weapons, as the White House had claimed. They found Iraq had not, so information about the trip and Wilson's wife, Valerie Plame, was leaked by top administration officials to selected friendly press. Of course Bush had signed an Order allowing him to declassify such information but he had not followed his own rules, and by leaking Plame's cover he endangered many hundreds of other agents and operations. The Republicans in congress refuse to even consider impeaching him for this. Just about 5 years after trying to impeach Bill Clinton the same Republican Congress has decided that being a "war president"- even if he started an unnecessary war and conducted it poorly- means the Commander in Chief has complete carte blanch and full immunity.

I have actually figured out why some Republicans still cannot admit what the entire Bush Administration has done is enough to impeach them all. It is because of what they did to Bill Clinton. They MUST keep their heads buried in the sand because given how they attacked Clinton for ONE lie regarding a private matter, it is obvious that- at least as concerns Bush, Cheney, Rove and Rumsfeld- impeachment alone is no where near a sufficient penalty. We are talking treason, war crimes, intentionaly starting a war of aggression based on lies, which killed thousands of US service personnel and many, many tens of thousands of innocent civilians. We DO NOT HAVE a penalty for the crimes they have committed. (Yes, the death penalty does apply in times of war, but THOUSANDS of deaths?)

Of course Republicans cannot "see" the truth. Its a form of hysterical blindness, I suppose. Of course the neo-cons are still lost in their monomania, and the extreme, fanatic "Christians" ( I apologize to real Christians) are so blinded by their hatred of gay families that nothing else matters. But as regards the majority of everyday Republicans- good, intelligent, upstanding, ORDINARY, the only explanation is a psychotic break of some kind.

"Hysterical Blindness" is a well-documented reaction when someone sees something so terrible that their minds simply cannot acknowledge seeing it, so the brain shuts off all future visual stimuli to protect itself. Here Republicans CANNOT admit even to themselves that they supported someone who has done the things Bush has done, so they refuse to see what he has done. This is an extreme form of a common reaction. Many times after an election where one candidate wins and then shows total incompentence, EVERYONE will say "I didn't vote for him" even though obviously SOMEONE did. But many people convince even themselves that THEY did not. Given that the Bush administration is scores of times worse (I honestly believe I do not overstate the problem when I say that the Bush Administration will be remembered as the most criminal, most destructive to American Freedoms and Values, the most harmful to our World Standing, Economics, Environment and our great, great, great grandchildren's future, in American history) the reaction is as many times as strong.

The good news is that hysterical blindness is nearly always temporary- as the brain processes what happened, and the mind copes, the sight comes back. First in flashes, then fully. We can see this happening with many Republicans. The risk is that if we push them too hard- faster than their minds can process the truth- we risk driving them into some permanant break with reality. So do not push your Republican friends- lead them by the hand gently, guide them as you would a blind person,, and soon we will all be seeing the truth together.

And if you still cannot find even one slim ray of light--- Remember: Oh yeah, gay people can't get married! Its all been worth it.

jessie

15 April 2006

Democracy is two wolves and a sheep deciding what to eat for lunch.

Liberty is a well-armed sheep.
Many people who DO NOT know me personally and only read my books or editorials have a firm belief that I am just another "bleeding heart commie pinko" or whatever the right's PC phrase is these days. (Actually with the Right it should be called "Politically Incorrect") This blog is my attempt at correcting that perception.

Somewhat. The "bleeding-heart" IS probably correct. And I am not sure what "pinko" means. Kinda commie? A little gay? I dunno. Maybe someone out there can fill me in.

Anyway, please check out my website, http://www.votejessie.org. Consider voting for me this November if you live in Michigan's 80th District. If not, I would still appreciate your support of any kind. Feedback, ideas, resources, things I've overlooked.

So, starting next post I will give you MY take on the day's news, politics, social events and the people making headlines. I am willing to PROMISE you will not agree with me on everything, and in fact will probably strongly DISAGREE on occasions. But I am ALSO willing to bet I provide a viewpoint that is unique in being eclectic.

Please read on- and THEN dare to call me a "Pinko". jessie