Activism

2008.03.12

Right-wing think-tanks continue targeting Gore

Pathetic:

The global-warming skeptics at the Competitive Enterprise Institute launched a national ad today targeting — who else? — former Vice President Al Gore.

The $30,000 buy is small as far as national-ad campaigns go, but itwill run on cable over the next two weeks in Boston, Phoenix, Orlando,Pittsburgh, and Washington, D.C.

Fine.  It's a waste of money.  Clearly, this is a right-wing think-tank dedicated to protecting the oil industry.  It proves that Al Gore represents a legitimate threat to polluters, therefore he has accomplished a lot already.

2008.02.14

Yes We Can

2007.12.24

Guest Column: Who I give to

By Paul Rogat Loeb

Over the years, people have often asked me what social change groups Isupport financially. I've pulled together an informal list and thoughtit just might be helpful to you and others who get my regular articles.The end of the year is often a time when people often figure outdonations (though most of the groups I support are too politicallyengaged to be tax-deductible), so this seemed a good time to send it.Plus if you haven't finished your holiday shopping, it's fun to givepeople a donation in their name to a good cause, rather than one moreobject they may or may not need.

So here's a sample of some of the national groups andcampaigns that I've been donating to (not counting good local Seattleones, like our wonderful homeless newspaper Real Change). As you cansee, I focus primarily on groups that do a particularly good job ofengaging people, particularly people who aren't necessarily politicallyinvolved, as opposed to simply advocating for good policies. I've alsobeen supporting political campaigns that I think can make a difference.As we've seen the last seven years, electoral politics matters hugely,but we also need to build strong and durable citizen movements, andI've focused a fair amount on organizations that help with both.

Of course there are loads of great groups that won't make thislist, including some I give to, so if your favorite group is left off(or if you disagree with some of those I'm supporting), just supportthose that most embodies your priorities.

First, you should definitely have your phone and wirelessservice with Working Assets/Credo. The company was founded specificallyto raise money for progressive causes, and has given away $50 millionsince their inception (subscribers vote each year on where the moneygoes). The company also does lots of additional engagement projects,from voter registration drives to email action alerts, and their topexecutives are good and committed people. Signing up with them helpssupport all sorts of good causes.

Speaking of organizations, I don't know if you're familiarwith the environmentally-oriented auto club, Better World Club, butthey're a great alternative to AAA, which despite its wholesome image,spends major resources lobbying for new road construction and againstnon-car transit options. I found out about Better World through the NPRshow "Car Talk," and they contract with pretty much the same network oflocal towing companies (I've had no problem when I've neededassistance), give out similar free maps, and have other comparableservices. But they also donate to environmental causes, encourage theirmembers to speak out on them, and even have a roadside service optionfor bicycles, though I haven't had to use it as yet.

So on to some organizations, some well-known and others not:

They aren't that well known, but I love Institute for PublicAccuracy http://www.accuracy.org/. With a staff of just six people,they do a wonderful job in securing a media presence for progressivealternative perspectives. Every day they fax and email releases to anarray of media outlets, containing three or four experts weighing in ona specific topic, generally one related to breaking news. The mediaoutlets then contact the experts, generating significant coverage. WhenI’ve been on their releases I’ve gotten everything from the BBC and thelargest newspaper chain in Japan, to the God-awful Bill O’Reilly showon Fox, major commercial radio outlets, and alternative networks likePacifica.

Most people have heard of MoveOn.org by now. They draw plenty of heatfrom the political right, but that’s because they’re probably the mostsingle effective progressive social change organization in terms ofgetting regular people involved. They did get in trouble this yeartrying to be too cute with the headline of their General Petraeus ad(though Petraeus is giving exactly the kind of political cover to theBush administration that Generals Maxwell Taylor and WilliamWestmoreland did for Johnson and Nixon during Vietnam). But no group inrecent years has engaged more ordinary people in progressive politics,particularly new participants, and they're working continually to gettheir over 3 million members not only to sign petitions and email theirCongressional representatives, but also to take additional stepstowards involvement, like participating in local activist networks, orjoining the phone banks whose seven million phone calls helped shiftthe House and Senate in 2006. They do this all with a tiny nationalstaff (less than a dozen people at one recent point), and I've donatedto a variety of their efforts from general support to specific targetedcampaigns. (The political right promotes the myth that they're justpuppets of George Soros, but although Soros did contributesignificantly to their 2004 election efforts, their primary base hasalways been donations from regular members).

I don’t share the theology of Sojourners (traditionalist Christian,tending toward evangelical), but no one has had a greater impact ingetting conservative Christians, including evangelicals, to think aboutpeace and social justice issues. Founder Jim Wallis has been anamazingly influential prophetic voice. Together with the organization,he really has created powerful ripples for change in a constituencythat has been the core grassroots base for people like Bush and Cheney.

WellstoneAction does great regional trainings for progressivecandidates running for office, including people who've never runbefore. Founded by the children of the late Senator Paul Wellstone,they continue his mission of trying to broaden citizen participation.If we're trying to bring new people into politics, they need to learnthe necessary skills to run effective grassroots campaigns. No one doesthis better.

If you've ever felt that progressive organizations end up being lessthan the sum of their parts come election day, America Votes is anantidote. They bring together major environmental, labor, socialjustice, and peace groups to register voters and get them out to votecome. In 2006 they involved 250 different groups--from Acorn and theAFL-CIO to the NAACP and the Sierra Club--to coordinate and magnifytheir impact. And they reached 13 million voters in key swing states..

Democracy for America does similar work to MoveOn, but are a bit moreface-to-face focused. They grew out of the 2004 Howard Dean campaign asa way of keeping participants involved, and do a mix of excellentaction alerts, their own campaign trainings, and general organizing.They're smaller, but more intimate than MoveOn. And they put lots ofgood energy into building local community.

Speaking of Howard Dean, the media may have buried his careerfor trying to shout over a noise-filled room after he lost the Iowacaucuses, but I love what he's doing with the Democratic NationalCommittee. He's trying to recreate the Democrats as a genuinegrassroots organization as opposed to one relying primarily on mediaconsultants and ad buyers, and to do it nationwide, and he's doing thisdespite major opposition from DC insiders. I don't know if he'llsucceed in recreating a Democratic party where people actuallyparticipate on a local level—like they used to do in the old politicalmachines, but without the corrupt ward bosses. But if these horizontalconnections grow enough, we'll see state parties strong enough toactually begin to call the shots on a national level. And to maybe evenmake possible genuine primary fights when incumbents get too complacentand refuse to lead. This is a long-term process, and may not succeed,because the Democrats have let their base atrophy for decades. But forall my frustrations with the timidity of Senate and CongressionalDemocrats, I've felt great supporting the DNC in building that basicinfrastructure of volunteer coordinators and grassroots organizers thathas the potential to both revitalize the party, and help shift itsdirection.

I also think it's important to support individual candidateswho we like, and not just leave this to the big money donors. Theinternet really has made the small donor model more possible, so Ioften use it to add my small contribution to those of thousands ofothers. I'll sometimes give directly to the Democratic SenatorialCampaign Committee or Democratic Congressional Committee, who thenfunnel resources to appropriate campaigns. But I can't say I alwayslike their choices, so more often I'll pick specific candidates who notonly seem to have a decent chance of winning, but also more closelyreflect my values. Those tend to be the ones featured in the emails ofMoveOn or on the pages of politically oriented blogs like the Daily Kos.

I've also been giving some to the presidential campaigns, justbecause the stakes are so high. I like to think my money is going notonly for ads (where my dollars feel a pitiful drop in the bucket), butalso for the campaign infrastructure that actually coordinatesvolunteers, gets people out to vote, and in the case of both theEdwards and Obama campaigns, goes to some lengths to try to buildgrassroots movements that might stick around, no matter who ends upgetting the nomination. As you've probably gotten a sense from recentarticles of mine like Hillary Clinton and the Politics ofDisappointment and Hillary Clinton and My Visa Bill (updated in aBaltimore Sun piece last week, entitled Hillary Clinton and the Ghostsof 2006), Hillary is my distinct last choice of the Democraticcandidates, though still better than the Republican field. I've beengiving most of my money to John Edwards, who I think has taken thestrongest recent stands. I loved how when he spoke to a Seattle unionaudience, he led with not with economic issues where he knew he'd getan enthusiastic response, but with more challenging positions on theIraq war and global warming. A recent CNN poll also flagged him as theonly Democrat to beat all four major Republican candidates. I've alsogiven some money, though a lesser amount, to Barack Obama, who I likeas well, and who really does seem to be bringing new participants intohis campaign in an exciting way, especially younger voters. I was quiteimpressed hearing Obama in Seattle recently, and think he could be bothan effective candidate and president. And though I'm wary about theyway "unify America" rhetoric can blur real policy differences andinterests, I just read a very thoughtful recent piece that links it toObama's community organizing background and suggests it might actuallybe the soundest approach in a nation where people have beendeliberately polarized for short-term political gain..

Of course none of these electoral donations sever the linkbetween money and politics, which we have to do if we are going toreclaim America. By far the best approach is the Clean Elections modelthat I described in Soul of a Citizen, and which has worked wonderfullyin Maine, Arizona, and Vermont. If you raise enough $5 contributions inthese states, you now get public resources to run a competitivecampaign. The approach has brought wonderful new people into politics(I recently heard a great presentation from an Arizona teacher who wasable to run for state rep only because of this process, but could nowbe a rising political star). And it severs the link between campaigningand having to constantly do the bidding of wealthy donors. PublicCampaign is the great group that coordinates the national efforts (withgood work from a reenergized Common Cause and from the campus effortsof Democracy Matters). Many states also have local Clean Electionsefforts that are coordinated through Public Campaign. On a hopefulnote, all the Democratic candidates have said they'll back the CleanElections approach, although Hillary Clinton only signed on afterCommon Cause ran major Iowa ads on the subject, and it will clearlytake a sustained grassroots effort to make this happen.

All of the groups and campaigns I've mentioned so far aremulti-issue, because the challenges we face are so profoundlyinterconnected. But there are also some issue-specific groups that I'vealso been supporting.

I'm working a lot on global warming, as you may know. And moregood groups spring up on the issue each day, like the 1Sky coalition,or the Focus the Nation project that's planning a day of nationalteach-ins January 31. The Climate Crisis Coalition puts out aparticularly useful weekly digest of relevant news in terms of relatedscience, new energy initiatives, and citizen and political efforts, anddoes it on an absolute shoestring. But of all the good environmentalgroups, the Sierra Club seems the most genuinely participatory andgrassroots—which is key for me. Most of these groups lobby and takegood stands, but the Sierra Club really puts energy into developinglocal chapters, which means it connects people to each other and thenencourages them to take the lead. Sierra Club has also been in theforefront in creating labor-environmental alliances, as in itsBlue-Green Alliance with the United SteelWorkers, who along with SEIU,do more innovative organizing projects than any other unions inAmerica.

In fact, the UnitedSteelWorkers have a new Associates Memberprogram, Fight Back America, which anyone can join for $40 (less ifyou're a student or unemployed), and which both builds their base andgives you a connection with union activism even if you aren't in one(or if you're in a union that's doing little to build socialmovements). The other major union-oriented group that anyone can joinor support is Jobs With Justice. They do great work buildinglabor-community coalitions, and have local offices in 23 states.

I also belong to the NAACP because they're still the majorforce working for racial justice and these issues are far from solved.Results is a great grassroots non-partisan lobby group on global andnational hunger issues And I'm a card-carrying ACLU member becausewell--after what Bush, Cheney, and their appointed judges and justiceshave done to the constitution, we have a long way to go to get back toa balance that Thomas Jefferson would have approved of. (interestingly,somewhere around a third of the ACLU's new post-9/11 members have beenself-described political conservatives.)

Finally, we need strong forces pushing outside the electoralarena to get us out of Iraq and to prevent future destructive wars.Lots of the multi-issue groups I've mentioned make this a major focus,but there are also some excellent specific ones working on war andpeace issues, like Peace Action (formerly Sane/Freeze, the largestnational group focusing just on peace issues), and True Majority(founded by Ben Cohen of Ben & Jerry's). I'm not a pacifist, butThe War Resister's League has carried the banner of peace activism for85 years, and I always admire what they do. And there are some localfriends, The Backbone Campaign, who are probably a bit harsher onmainline elected Democrats than I am, but have initiated wonderfullyinnovative efforts with puppets and processions, that have developed anational presence. I also support a couple of primarily Jewish peacegroups that are definitely pro-Israel but push for a major shift fromcurrent Israeli policies), Americans For Peace Now and Brit Tzedek.

Hope this list is useful. If you don't like some of thegroups, I've suggested that's fine, and I hardly expect you to give tothem all. But I thought this might offer a useful window into somecitizen engagement efforts that I admire and try to support.

Have a lovely holiday
Paul Loeb

2007.12.23

Global Warming: 'How it All Ends'

There's a YouTube user Wonderingmind42that I have been following for some time now, and have posted his videos in thepast. He is a humble science teacher that puts Global Warming into perspectivein a way that a simple mind like mine can understand. After watching his videos,It's hard to comprehend comments which totally dismiss any type of concernregarding GW (Global Warming). Irespect other's comments and views, but often they are along the lines of "TheEarth has been warming and cooling forever and Al Gore uses more electricitythat anyone, and I'm driving my SUV, so there!!", without any realargument.

Watch this video (and a few of his others), even if you don't agree with him,they are entertaining to say the least.

"How it All Ends"

2007.11.09

Democrats could have filibustered Mukasey if they wanted

If I could write the rules, I would make seniority work against lawmakers.  The less years you spend in Congress, the higher committee rank you get.  It would discourage legislators from staying in Washington -- because the longer you stay, the more your power diminishes.

Of course, that is not how things work.  Seniority is an asset that lawmakers use to convince voters to reelect them.  Once reelected, those same lawmakers take their laundry list of promises, set them on fire and protect the status quo of broken government.

As a matter of principle, you cannot alter the status quo without showing some spine.  On Thursday, by failing to filibuster the nomination of Michael Mukasey, Democrats showed no spine, no desire for change and no inability to fulfill a promise made to voters one year ago:

The Senate confirmed Michael B. Mukasey as attorney general Thursday night, approving him despite Democraticcriticism that he had failed to take an unequivocal stance against thetorture of terrorism detainees.

The 53-to-40 vote made Mr. Mukasey, a former federal judge, the thirdperson to head the Justice Department during the tenure of PresidentBush, placing him in charge of an agency that members of both partiessay suffered under the leadership of Alberto Gonzales.

Six Democrats joined 46 Republicans and one independent in approvingthe judge, with his backers praising him as a strong choice to restoremorale at the Justice Department and independently oversee federalprosecutions in the final months of the Bush administration.

Sixty votes are needed to end debate and force a vote on the nomination.  There were not 60 'yea' votes present, meaning that many who even opposed Mukasey voted for cloture.  Where was their spine?  We all know that if it were the Republicans in our shoes, they would have had the courage to block the nomination.

This is why seniority rules hurt democracy -- nothing gets done, and the status quo is protected.

Oh, and by the way, I hope Connecticut voters are happy.  Republicans like him so much that they allotted him five minutes of time to speak on their behalf about Mukasey:

2007.11.04

Editorial: 365 days until election day

Picphoto110407flag Remember the sick feeling in your stomach when in the late evening hours of election night 2004 you saw that the margin in Ohio was too wide for John Kerry to make up.  Remember thinking, "Or if Kerry just wins Florida," only to discover that Bush was up by even more votes there.  I remember it quite clearly.  A few hours earlier I had returned from the hospital after having the stitches removed on my stomach, following life-saving intestinal surgery one month earlier.  That night, the pain was back -- only this time it wasn't me.  Our country was the one in trouble.

Since his razor-thin reelection, George W. Bush has used his so-called "political capital" to nominate two right-wing conservative justices; nearly get away with cutting guaranteed Social Security benefits for seniors; suspending habeas corpus; failing the Gulf Coast; enacting fiscal policies that continued to weaken the US dollar; vetoing legislation on stem cell research and health care for children; and presiding over an Iraq policy that killed about 2,000 more US soldiers.  And that is not even the half of it.

We need to prevent this mishap from happening again in our lifetime.  It starts by nominating a presidential candidate from the Democratic Party with the courage to think outside the box, and who has shown a consistent pattern of rejecting the conventional wisdom of the so-called 'experts' in Washington.  So much is at stake. 

Do we want eight more years of this mess?  Do we want the authoritarian Rudolph Giuliani, who has loaded his campaign team with neoconservative advisers?  Do we want the elitist Mitt Romney, whose country-club mentality is underscored by his deep-rooted special interest connections?  How about Fred Thompson, who strangely enough is campaigning as a Washington outsider even though he worked as a lobbyist for 20 years?  Or how about Mike Huckabee, who wants to shift more economic burden to the poor and middle class by installing a regressive national sales tax?  This is what progressives are up against.

It's exactly one year until election day.  Don't sit on the sidelines.  Get involved in any way that you can to help nominate a Democratic candidate with the backbone to stand up to the right-wing smear machine, and to restore honest and open government back to Washington for the first time since before the K-Street Project.  What we cannot afford to have is a Democratic nominee that loads up on Washington consultants and falls into the trap of promoting the status quo.  The status quo mentality is what has hurt our country this decade.  Let's start out on the right foot in the beginning of January by voting for a Democratic nominee with the moral judgment to lead responsibly and promote open democracy.

2007.10.25

New left-leaning group formed to stop Hillary

John Edwards and Barack Obama may have just found the help they are looking for -- it's a group called Democratic Courage.  It's aim is to stop Hillary Clinton from getting the Democratic nomination:

A newly formed political action committee is aiming to stop HillaryClinton in the Democratic primary by calling into question herprogressive credentials.

"We think there are other Democratic presidential candidates who areboth more progressive and have a better chance of beating theRepublicans than she does," said the president of Democratic Courage, Glenn Hurowitz.

He declined to tip his hand on the group's case against Clinton, butsaid the PAC plans a paid media campaign in the early primary states tomake its position clear.

"We’ll definitely have sufficient resources to make a significantmedia buy," he said, adding that their campaign against Clinton wouldbe "edgy" enough to get attention. "We don’t need to raise an immenseamount of money to make a big difference."

Democratic Courage is up and running, and I encourage you all to take a look around.

2007.09.25

The World Was Watching Ahmadinejad

How dare Columbia University to allow THAT monster to speak and answerquestions. The monster doesn't believe there was THEE "holocaust".there are no "fags" in his country, and I'll bet he thinks "Goddidn't make the little green apples, and it don't rain in Indianapolis in thesummer time" (on a personal note, the jury's still out on the apple thingfor me and Hitchens). Columbia U. should have saved their money and donated itfor bombs dammit! What good would it do to watch this kook try and "bob& weave" through a barrage of direct and not so bad questions?

Well I'll tell you what good it does/did/done. The World WAS watching.Contrary to what some may believe, it wasn't only FOX, O'Reilly, Hannity, Morganetc. etc. etc....that was watching this.

  From an email I sent to a friend: 

  i have to say though, all the crap about Ahmadinejad is killing me. i can't believe all the conservatives thinking it's wrong to talk to that kook. i equate that to the police not interviewing a murder suspect. even when they have the murder on tape, have the murder weapon and fingerprints...they still interview him/her to find out "who, what, why, where and how" so to speak. the more you talk to someone, the more information you have. as it was pointed out, even when they thought he  was lying they were able to pick up important info from those lies.  

maybe we should just continue bombing everyone we don't like...even though we're short on military, money and support of such nonsense...let's get 'em!! i have to go, my arm is getting tired from waving  the flag (and i'm getting nauseous)

We aren't (or shouldn't be) some "secret society". There's a worldout there. Does anyone really believe that when  Ahmadinejad  said "we don't have that problem in Iran"referring to homosexuality, that the world thought "hmm, interesting, howdo I get on that plan?" or do you think they thought "BULL SHIT,that's one crazy bastard"?

If all the republicans can come up with is "he's bad and supplyingthe insurgents with weapons" not to talk to him, then they're just ascrazy as he is. I wonder if conservatives believe this type of"non-communication" works well with their children as well?

Mom/Dad: "Go to your room and read 5 versus of theBible"...(I would have picked Chapter 11, verse 35 "JesusWept")

Rotten Kid: "Why"

Mom/Dad: "Because I said so and I'm the Mom/Dad"

That's my argument and I'm stickin' to it

2007.09.22

Breast Cancer Patient Protection Act

This featured post is to link to Thursday's 'Breast Cancer Patient Protection Act'post. (Click HEREto view)

Briefly:

There's a bill called the BreastCancer Patient Protection Act whichwill require Insurance Companies to cover a minimum 48-hour hospital stay forpatients undergoing a mastectomy. It's about eliminating the 'drive-throughmastectomy' where women are forced to go home just a few hours after surgery,against the wishes of their doctor, still groggy from anesthesia and sometimeswith drainage tubes still attached.

Comments are not only welcome on the main post, but important, but Action isnecessary. If you feel the cause is worthy to take action, the links areavailable and it only takes a short time to act.

2007.09.20

Breast Cancer Patient Protection Act

There's a bill called the Breast Cancer Patient Protection Act which will require Insurance Companies to cover a minimum 48-hour hospital stay for patients undergoing a mastectomy. It's about eliminating the 'drive-through mastectomy' where women are forced to go home just a few hours after surgery, against the wishes of their doctor, still groggy from anesthesia and sometimes with drainage tubes still attached

Lifetime TV (I know "guys", Lifetime hates "us"...but this is a good cause) lays out this issue very well 'The Re-Introduction of The Bipartisan Breast Cancer Patient Protection Act'.

This bill has been introduced during each Congressional session since 1997 (1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, and 2005). Each time, unfortunately, the bill dies in committee. It has been submitted again during the current legislative session as "The Breast Cancer Protection Act of 2007"   

Lifetime does have an online petition (much like an email petition),   however, there is no way to verify signatures or prevent multiple   "signings". A more productive approach to getting this, or any   legislation passed would be for interested voters to contact their elected representatives   directly. Click the following links for contact information for SENATORS   and REPRESENTATIVES.

 

Those interested in tracking the progress of this latest attempt at   passage, can click HERE   for Senate action, and HERE   for the House version.

Bill_2 The above information came from HERE, and in my opinion does not dilute the importance or effectiveness of Lifetime's petition, it's additional "insurance" and "assurance" of getting the JOB done. Our elected officials are getting the best care available, yet when it comes to us "commoners", it's a crap shoot on the crap table of the insurance companies. 

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