Chantilly VA Bilderburg 2008 June 5-8

Are we going to bomb Iran?  Will Bush actually leave?  Will gas really be $15 a gallon and when, or will they just release the ebola virus.  These and other great questions to be decided in total secret at Bilderburg 2008.  How bad and how long will the depression be?  Yes, this year David Rothkopf’s Superclass, the elite Davos Douchebags, meet inside the US, perhaps for the last time!

http://9-11.meetup.com/330/cal…

We Are Change appears to the up for it!

http://www.newsnet14.com/2008/…

This one was interesting.  I worry about Europeans coming here for the first time.  Having lived in Germany I think we scare the shit out of them with our Tee-Vee zombi-news.

This one has the address.  Good luck booking now within miles of it though.

http://ronpaul.meetup.com/31/b…

http://www.bilderberg.org/2008…

And the same organization held a meeting in 2002.

http://www.propagandamatrix.co…

http://progressiveindependent….

The establishment would have you believe it is merely a social gathering of old men and that policy is not discussed and made.  Ok, then why the secrecy, the security lock down and the international convergence of spy vs spy.

Only those who OWN the press attend.

McCain denounces Hagee, filed under: Master of the Totally Obvious

This off-the-cuff rant cross posted from my little blog The Wild Wild Left! Come visit!

You douchebag, you just noticed what a fucksnot psycho this man is?

FromWAPO

Hagee’s sermon was delivered in the late 1990s, and this, after saying Gays caused Katrina RECENTLY, is your tipping point?

Oh yeah, right, the gays don’t have as big a voting PAC or as many purse-strings as the Jews he offended. He has offended women, Catholics, he basically hates anyone but rich white born-again neo-cons; and THIS is what it takes to get your attention tuned to the fact he is a whack-job?

“Obviously, I find these remarks and others deeply offensive and indefensible, and I repudiate them,” McCain said. “I did not know of them before Reverend Hagee’s endorsement, and I feel I must reject his endorsement as well.”

Hagee has had something to offend everyone, not just Fire to Truth like Rev. Wright on one subject.

The Hitler statement, however reprehensible, is worse than applauding God for fucking New Orleans and killing innocents over a parade?

The dude is whacked, always has been always will be.

You, Mr. McCain, are just a pandering sell-out, willing to flip flop on everything from torture (which you endured) to a Religious Right Snake Oil Salesman turned Revival Preacher.

You have no morals or ethics.

He didn’t offend you, you probably thought “Good One, heh heh.” You are a brawler, you like insults. I have a few for you later down thread.

But you will sell to the highest bidder, whore.

Fuck you, fuck your wife, fuck the product of your fouled seed, fuck your dog, fuck the horse you rode in on, fuck the bot eggs on his scurvied legs and may even your crabs have gonorrhea.

You suck.

But, hey, millions of Jews will love you for denouncing their exceptional hit in a line of bloodied skulls Hagee has left in his wake.

Did I mention Fuck You?  

Jesus and John McCain

Some days I feel like I’m living in Bizarro World.  I’m reading the news from the usual sources, and I come across this beaut from ajc.com, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

“John McCain is kind of like Jesus Christ on the cross,” Everhart said as she began the second day of the state GOP convention. “He never denounced God, either.”

John McCain is like Jesus?  Really?  uh… in what way?

Let’s see here.

Jesus on peace and war: blessed are the peacemakers.

John  on peace and war:  bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran.

Jesus on marriage: May they be brought to complete unity to let the world know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.

John  on marriage: At least I don’t plaster on the makeup like a trollop, you cunt.

Jesus on sacrifice: go, sell whatsoever thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come, follow me.

John  on sacrifice: Since the beginning of their marriage, Senator McCain and Mrs. McCain have always maintained separate finances.  As required by federal law and Senate rules, Mrs. McCain has released significant and extensive financial information through Senate and Presidential disclosure forms.  In the interest of protecting the privacy of her children, Mrs. McCain will not be releasing her personal tax returns.

Jesus on respect:  do unto others as you would have them do unto you.

John  on respect:  Why is Chelsea Clinton so ugly?  Janet Reno is her father.

You get the idea.  Feel free to add your own observations.  Add your own spiritual advisor, deity, or scientific principle in comparison to the Maverick.  Have some fun.  Otherwise, in Bizarro World, we’ll all go mad and O.D. on Woolite.

Pony Party….TITS,ASS

Thursday,  I  Think  Seriously,  About  Self  Sustainability

Health.

No one wants to be sick…ill.

And yet we are going farther & farther from what would make us healthy.

Food.

fresh veggies

Real food!

Not the agri-corp,  perfectly formed, devoid of vitamins, shipped a million miles stuff, NO.

I’m talking about growing it yourself in your own yard.

Even if you are an apartment dweller….you can container garden a portion of your food.

At the very least find someone in your county that grows Heirloom veggies…Buy Local.

Heirloom…. this means these plants are true to form… the seed has been saved from each ‘generation’ of plants to produce the next generation. Oftentimes these veggies are not pretty…the tomatos aren’t perfect orbs~ they have bumps and valleys; the corn kernels aren’t in straight rows…they meander a bit on the ear….

BUT these veggies taste wonderful….just like you remember as a kid!

Because these seeds have not been hybridized to look lovely & ship a million miles with little or no damage (thanks agri-business!) but instead have been ‘passed down’, they have naturally evolved, developed disease resistance and have given up none of their taste or vitamins along the way…AND imho when you buy local produce it has grown & developed in your area & so your food has built in immunities to the germs in your area….it’s better for you!

We are just returning to the land this year, after a decade away. I didn’t think you could forget gardening…& I guess I haven’t really. But some of the little ‘tricks’ we learned along the way, growing a garden for 20 years seem to stay hidden til just after we needed them this year. So my very first piece of advice is get a notebook!  Write Gardening in large friendly letters on the front. At the end of your time spent gardening each day, write down what you’ve done~ planting, watering, weeding, fertilizing. After awhile this will become a habit that’ll really save you time in the long run. So  even if you’re only going to grow one patio tomato in a pot you need a gardening notebook. If your tomato dies, you don’t want to repeat your mistakes year after year do you?

So we got some helpers….

5.20 helpers

And planted our garden…..

5.14 planted

some were ‘sets’…wee little plants you put in the ground to grow bigger….

Green & Purple Peppers…

5.17 peppers

Tomatoes…<./b>

5.21 maters

and waited patiently for the seeds to come up….

First you see cracks…

5.20 cracks

Then the seeds come up like magic!

(these are beans)

5.22 beans2

5.21 beans

Corn (which came in spotty, we’ll replant)…

5.20 corn

Cukes …

5.21 cukes

Okra…

5.21 okra

Muskmelon…

5.20 muskmelon

Radishes…. always so rewarding…they come up in 3 or 4 days & you can be eating them in a month!

5.21 radish


Thanks for stopping in, so glad You’re here …. (yes, YOU!)

Pull up a chair…. relax.. Hang out and chit chat awhile…

O &… Please don’t rec this pony  party, another will trot up in a few hours.

(^.^)

The Maddow Movement: Day 2…Lallygaggers!

If you haven’t sent an e-mail or signed the petition for the Maddow Movement yet….well….I’ll let this guy say it!

I am by no means done…and I hope you all are spreading the news as well! I attempted to post at Facebook today, but I am old and feeble and unhip! I was overwhelmed by all the geegaws and gadgets, I will try again tomorrow though! Nate Roberts over in the comments at Dkos pointed out that there was already a Maddow group, http://www.facebook.com/group…. and posted a link to The Maddow Movement! Please give them some love…if you know how! So more disseminating tomorrow…please post posting suggestions in the comments!

The Maddow Movement has now been posted at:

Pam’s House Blend http://www.pamshouseblend.com/

Cobalt6 http://www.cobalt6.net/frontPa…

Blue House Diaries http://bluehousediaries.com/sh…

EENR blog http://www.eenrblog.com/

My Left Wing http://www.myleftwing.com/show…

Booman Tribune http://www.boomantribune.com/s…

and Diatribune http://www.diatribune.com/the-…

As well as a nice run on the reclist over at Daliy Kos http://www.dailykos.com/storyo…

Which was blessed by a visit from the OlberMann himself!

Keith winks and gives some advice to the Maddow Movement. PLEASE be as positive as possible in your contacts with MSNBC…(note the “as possible!” I am not trying to cramp your style, lol)

This is at heart a consumer advocacy campaign and the sage advice is well considered! Flies, honey, vinegar….you know the drill!

And the response has been great so far!

In addition to all the lovely folks who have written e-mails, we are the top petition of the day at the ipetitions site, with over 1000 signatures! That IS impressive!!! But is it good enough?



NO!

Because some of you are ….lallygagging! Get up off your virtual butt and haul it over and sign the petition! Write an e-mail….DO SOMETHING!

Or I shall be forced to taunt you again!

McCain needs to explain his own deep ties to Chalabi

(10 am – promoted by ek hornbeck)

Earlier today, teacherken had a very important diary about the connection between McCain campaign honcho, lobbyist and political advisor Charles Black and Ahmed Chalabi, who we all know as the de facto Iranian double agent who duped the US with bogus intelligence about Saddam.

But there is something that has only been noted here and there which really merits more probing, and certainly demands an explanation from McCain himself – especially if he is to claim that he is not clueless on foreign policy and that is his own connections to Chalabi and how he helped Chalabi dupe the US, how he stood by Chalabi and how he propped up Chalabi all while Chalabi was working for Iran (even FoxNews reported that Chalabi was spying for Iran).

 

And before you wonder whether this a stretch, it is something that dates back more than a decade, showing a long relationship between John McCain and the man who scammed our country into the worst foreign policy clusterfuck in my lifetime, if not longer. Let’s flash back to 1997, when:

he tried to pressure the Clinton administration into setting up an Iraqi government in exile. Despite opposition from the Pentagon and the State Department, the next fall, McCain co-sponsored the Iraq Liberation Act, committing the United States to overthrowing Saddam and funding opposition groups.

The chief beneficiary of this Act? One Ahmed Chalabi.

However, this is just the very beginning. It is likely that McCain became more involved with Chalabi through Randy Scheunemann who, as Cliff Schecter points out in his book, The Real McCain:

Scheunemann, is largely credited with bringing McCain into the neoconservative fold and creating the rogue-state rollback strategy. Beginning in 2000, when Scheunemann became a key advisor, McCain sought to distinguish himself from other Republican presidential candidates and House isolationists. McCain began reading the Murdoch-owned Weekly Standard and conferring with its editors, especially Bill Kristol.3

 

Scheunemann joined Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz on another bright idea: giving approximately $350,000 per month in taxpayer money to Iraqi National Congress kingpin Ahmad Chalabi. As we now know, Chalabi lied to the United States about Saddam Hussein’s capabilities and purportedly passed on classified U.S. intelligence to his friends in Iran.

Schenuemann and McCain go back to the 1990s, where he was highly influential to McCain on foreign policy:

Randy Scheunemann, who had drafted the Iraq Liberation Act and was on the board of Kristol's Project for a New American Century, became McCain's foreign policy adviser.

—snip—

McCain unveiled his new approach in a March 1999 speech at Kansas State University.

—snip—

The centerpiece of the speech was a strategy that McCain called “rogue-state rollback.” Scheunemann says he invented the term, adapting it from the conservative critics of 1950s cold war containment. According to this strategy, the United States would back “indigenous and outside forces that desire to overthrow the odious regimes that rule” illiberal states. At the head of this list of regimes was Saddam Hussein's.

So now that we have established the history of this relationship, and the genesis of McCain’s obsession with overthrowing Saddam (as far back as the 1990s), let’s look at how this has impacted the relationship between McCain and Chalabi – and how McCain has never explained his support and actions that led to Chalabi duping the US into invading Iran – all while benefitting himself in the process.

In a book that was recently released about Chalabi and the US and the Iraq invasion, there were revelations that showed a relationship between McCain and Chalabi going back to 1991:

One of his key backers has been John McCain, who was one of the first patrons of Chalabi’s grand-sounding International Committee for a Free Iraq when it was founded in 1991. McCain was Chalabi’s favored candidate in the 2000 election since Chalabi knew that he would be able to free up the $97 million in military aid plus millions pushed through in Congress and earmarked for Chalabi’s exile group, the Iraqi National Congress, but held up by the Clinton State Department.

But wait, there’s still more…..

Back to the article by John Judis in 2006 linked above. Even as the invasion was beginning and there was debate and questions as to the intent and loyalties of Chalabi (as evidenced by the US raid on his home in early 2004), McCain was still pushing hard for Chalabi:

As the war unfolded, McCain remained a Chalabi booster. With the Iraqi military crumbling in early April, McCain signed a letter with four other Republican senators complaining that Chalabi's INC was not being funded. Appearing on “Good Morning America,” he argued for “bringing in Chalabi and the Iraqi National Congress as soon as possible.”

Despite all of this, as well as the actions of Chalabi that were most certainly in support of Iran and even more certainly against the interests of the United States, McCain is still unapologetic. As recently as this past March, McCain was supporting his decisions to back Chalabi:

Asked by The Times this month if he regretted backing the 1998 law, which produced few discernible results other than bolstering Chalabi, McCain said he did not.

I think McCain owes it to America to let us know how a double agent who was giving the United States false information in order to benefit himself and the Iranian government was either able to dupe him for nearly two decades or whether he still thinks that this double agent who was working for a group that McCain has called a terrorist organization is a “patriot who has the best interests of his country at heart”.

Either way, it shows a stunning lack of ability on John McCain’s part to effectively represent the United States and its interests from a foreign policy perspective.

Four at Four

  1. So Israel and Syria have begun peace talks. The type of dialogue that Bush compared attempts to “negotiate with the terrorists and radicals” with appeasement of Hitler. So was Bush using the horrors of Nazi Germany to attack Obama or disrupt Israel’s peace talks with Syria?

    According to “Advice From White House Is Not Always Followed“, a news analysis by Helene Cooper in The New York Times, The Bush administration was “initially opposed” to the talks.

    The Israel-Syria announcement, in particular, offers an interesting case study, because Israeli officials have said for months that the United States was the only obstacle blocking talks with Syria, which both Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Defense Minister Ehud Barak advocated.

    In particular, Elliott Abrams, Mr. Bush’s deputy national security adviser, has cautioned against an Israeli-Syria negotiation, according to Israeli and Bush administration officials. Administration officials said they feared that such a negotiation would appear to reward Syria at a time when the United States was seeking to isolate it for its meddling in Lebanon and its backing of Hezbollah.

    But a few weeks ago, Israeli officials told their counterparts at the State Department that they planned to begin the negotiations, which are being mediated by Turkey.

    “They weren’t asking our permission,” one senior administration official said. Another Bush official characterized the Israeli announcement as “a slap in the face.”

    And there it is: talk of peace is a slap in the face of the Bush administration. Hat tip a gnostic.

  2. Yet another way Bush’s failed war in Iraq impacts Bush’s failed war in Afghanistan. The Associated Press reports One NATO soldier killed in Quran protest.

    Gunfire broke out Thursday at a protest in western Afghanistan against a U.S. sniper in Iraq who used a Quran for target practice. Officials said a NATO soldier and two civilians were killed.

    Police opened fire on demonstrators who threw rocks and set tents on fire near a military airfield in western Ghor province, said NATO spokesman Maj. Martin O’Donnell.

    Two civilians were slain and seven others were wounded, he said.

    Gunfire also killed one NATO soldier from Lithuania and wounded another, but it was not clear who shot at them, O’Donnell said. The Lithuanian Defense Ministry identified the dead soldier as Sgt. Arunas Jarmalavicius, 35, the first Lithuanian soldier killed in Afghanistan.

  3. Meanwhile back in Iraq, The New York Times reports another U.S. airstrike kills 8 civilians in Iraq. “Iraqi officials said an American helicopter strike on Thursday killed eight civilians including two children and an elderly man during an assault near the northern Iraqi town of Baiji. American officials confirmed that two children had died in an American assault on Sunni insurgent suspects in the area and expressed regret. Iraqi officials, however, said the incident was likely to stoke anti-American resentment.

    “Unfortunately, two children were killed when the other occupants of the vehicle in which they were riding exhibited hostile intent,” said the American statement, which was released in Baghdad.

Four at Four continues with this year’s Atlantic hurricane outlook.

  1. Yesterday’s Four at Four looked at the already deadly year of tornadoes in the U.S. Today, the Associated Press reports NOAA forecasts up to 9 Atlantic hurricanes in 2008. “The 2008 Atlantic hurricane season could be slightly busier than average, with a good chance of six to nine hurricanes forming, federal forecasters said Thursday in a new way of making predictions. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration officials also said 12 to 16 named storms and two to five major hurricanes could form. They said there is only a 60 to 70 percent chance for their predictions to come true, the first time officials gave a probability.”

How do Democrats Win in Tough Races? We Walk….

Cross posted from EENR Blog

That’s right.  Gary, Charlotte and I went for our first precinct walk this weekend together in Aliso Viejo, California.  Oh man, not a good weekend to start, it was very hot and we waited until early evening to grab walking shoes and knock on doors in our very own neighborhood.  Why not start where we live?  Our community is in the heart of the 33rd State Senate district.

This will be our cheapest and best way to get the word out about Gary’s campaign and for now we are knocking on all the doors.  Republicans, Declined to States and Democrats.  We’ve found Republicans to be very receptive to meeting the candidate, especially when it’s quite doubtful that the Republican candidate will do any walking at all.  

And this is the best lesson we learned, talking to people is the best way to get them to vote for you.  And we even found some lovely Democratic neighbors who want to donate and volunteer.  What more can a grassroots campaign ask for?

It was a busy weekend for us all.  We started Saturday with haircuts for Charlotte and Gary.  It’s summer here so it was the annual cut a good four inches off of Char’s hair.  She gets her summer bob and Gary got a nice cut as well.

I found out I talk a bit too much 🙂  But that’s me and I don’t just talk, I listen.  Some of my favorite reactions were, “Go, go.  You’ve got my vote, I vote Democratic down ticket, Democrat, Democrat and Democrat!”  and then there was my favorite family of four.  Mom was reading The Huffington Post when I came up.  Her husband pointed out that they had a bumper sticker that said, “Vote Dem”.  But I still wanted to talk to them!  We need money and we need people to help us walk these precincts.  It’s all good time to me when it comes to speaking to people one on one.

Then Sunday came and we went to the Kick Off Party for Loretta Sanchez who is seeking her fourth Congressional term for central Orange County.  She was amazing, I was just so impressed with her humor and wit.  She also walks precincts religiously.  There is no such thing as a “safe” seat for Democrats in Orange County and Loretta understands how important it is to go out and talk to people.  When she won her first election twelve years ago she personally knocked on 65,000 doors.

I had a chance to introduce myself and she was so happy to hear about a Democrat running for office in Orange County and a Democrat that was stepping up to get the “D” on the ballot.  She held my hand while we talked, not awkward and was so involved with ME.  I did not take much of her time but I just wanted to let her know that we were so honored to be there and so proud to call ourselves Democrats because of all the great work she had done on behalf of the County and her district.

Since I’m the worst campaign volunteer ever, I can’t get any of my photos to upload but, I do have a photo from the Ed Chau campaign of Gary and Ed Chau, one of two Democrats running in the 42nd district (The other is well known here at Daily Kos, Ron Shepston is also running.  It’s a very tight race and both my husband and I have not endorsed, we are torn!).   Below is a photo of Gary and Ed taken by Ed’s Campaign Director (Yes, Congressional candidates have CAMPAIGN DIRECTOR, I’m so envious) Drew Cornick.

So what are the Republicans doing that are running to win in November? (There is such a thing as a safe seat for Republicans and it’s assumed that whomever wins in the Primary will most certainly win in November).  They are trading ridiculous claims and throwing around the word “liberal” like it was something heinous.  What is the winner going to call Gary?  A communist.

Below is the most egregious of the attack mailers, this one sent by Mimi Walters against her opponent Harry Sidhu.  It’s not subtle and it’s racist, clear and simple.  This race is catching eyes up in Sacramento too for being a little to nasty and locally it’s getting attention for the very same reason.



I’m still trying to raise $5,000 for Gary this month.  And as I speak he’s working on a letter to the Fort Mojave Tribe to ask for their support (Gary is a Tribal Member) as well as sending request for donations to all the organizations that have endorsed him and the people he’s personally met.  This is what I do, I blog and this is how I’m trying to help Gary at least make a dent in this so called “safe” seat.  He’s going to work hard and knock on as many doors as he can by the November election but we need door hangers, fliers and mailers and we need to hire someone to help out his frazzled wife who has a full time job.

Please support a fellow Democrat who stepped up to put a “D” on the ballot and who is willing to go out and talk to people, face to face, to get their votes.

Goal Thermometer

How An Illinois Gal Got Katrina Brain

I’ve often imagined many in have been wondering why I care so much and have been so passionate in my support of New Orleans and the rest of the Gulf Region from afar, after having been to New Orleans but once, over 30 years ago. And how Hurricane Katrina and the federal flood have had such a tremendous, shattering impact on me though I witnessed them safe and dry far from the sea in central Illinois. And how not only could I be well-deservedly hard on BushCo, but even take Clinton and Obama to task for not paying enough attention to New Orleans and the rest of the Gulf Region. And why I feel so strongly about this I started the NOLA/Gulf Blogathons. I’ll go into that in more detail below the fold–but first I’ll tell you how 9/11 impacted me.

I was, to make a long story short, traumatised. Here’s how I first heard about the attacks–it wasn’t in my car because I’d been listening to a tape instead. But when I arrived at work and turned on my radio I heard a chaotic jumble of info that wasn’t clear until there was a news story that put it all together. On top of that one of my co-workers had heard from someone else that the Sears Tower had also been hit–which was much too close for comfort–2 1/2 hours away. But fortunately that turned out to be a rumor.

After that, for at least the next few months, I was all shook up. I don’t have a crystal ball–so I felt as if anything could happen at any time, fearing that I’d be hearing of new terror in Chicago, Los Angeles, New Orleans…all around this country. Because around this time, although there were no new explosions, the anthrax attacks took place. And I did some things I’m embarrassed to admit now. Looking back on them, I know they were foolish, but they made perfect sense to me at the time the way the world situation appeared to be.

But several years went by and, while terrorist bombings took place in Spain, Britain and elsewhere overseas, no further attacks occured in this country. So I gradually became less apprehensive that anything like another 9/11 would happen here.

Now for Katrina and the federal flood. I’d begun following hurricanes on the Weather Channel in 2004 when four struck Florida. So naturally when Katrina formed, crossed Florida, and then entered the Gulf and strengthened to a Cat 5, and storm trackers forecasted that it was going to directly impact New Orleans, I started paying close attention. And was more than a little shook up, because of the doomsday predictions that she would be wiped out and uninhabitable for many years afterwards.

Because I may have been to New Orleans over 30 years ago, but since then, have traveled there many times in spirit. I love that beautiful city and the rest of Louisiana, and have always enjoyed reading about New Orleans and Louisiana and the distinctive culture there. And seeing movies filmed there.

Then on 8/29 Katrina made that jog to the left and instead made first landfall at Buras, Louisiana, then made a second landfall in Mississippi. I was as relieved as was everybody else on the outside, unaware of what had actually happened in New Orleans, to hear newspeople and even people in the French Quarter, away from the danger zone, who didn’t know what was really going on say New Orleans had “dodged the bullet.”

But soon I was to learn of the true scope of the disaster, as the Lower 9th, Gentilly, Lakeview and the rest of the lower-lying areas of New Orleans rapidly filled with water from Lake Pontchartrain due to the failure of levees that should have been maintained by the federal government.

And the spirit-shredding things I saw while glued to the set–people waiting on rooftops for rescue or wading through what was called a “toxic soup” to the overpasses that served as high ground, FEMA’s and other bureaucrats’ blocking aid and rescuers–all broke my heart and made me very sad and angry that our own government was treating people this way.

But even more distressing was how soon after the disaster other Americans would complain about hearing news out of New Orleans in such places as the MSNBC blog Rising from Ruin In response to which was posted, originally in the summer of 2006:

I don’t understand why so many are tired of hearing about New Orleans. I am aware that some are unhappy with the fact that Katrina’s damaging effects in Mississippi, Alabama, etc. were barely covered compared to those of the flooding in New Orleans. I’m not trivializing this, because Mississippi did catch hell from Katrina as she obliterated or nearly obliterated whole communities as she did so. But the storm blew right through. After she had gone, Mississippians were free to begin assessing the damage, cleaning up debris, and taking other halting steps towards putting their shattered lives back together. So, Mississippi got a head start on recovery.

However, for Louisiana, the day of Katrina’s landfall was only the beginning of at least a week of hell not for the faint of heart. Besides New Orleans’ massive flooding, Louisiana was tortured by huge fires which made New Orleans’ skyline resemble Baghdad’s and could not be put out in spite of ironically being surrounded by floodwaters.

Louisiana felt the anguish of those who’d been forced to gravitate to the Superdome and Convention Center–which quickly metastasized into hot, humid, dark, filthy, festering sores where rapes and other violence took place and from where hordes of hungry, thirsty, sick, suffering humanity cried out for help on national TV. And waited…and waited…and waited.

Louisiana fell apart in the sickening sort of collapse usually seen only overseas–where the streets of New Orleans became Baghdad’s. Louisiana was torn apart by leaders–Gov. Blanco and Mayor Nagin–who bickered and pointed fingers instead of working together to make order out of the chaos. In fairness, though, this catastrophe was off the charts, the likes of which had not been seen in America in many years. The levee breaches and rapid flooding had been a sort of “shock and awe.” Is it any wonder that they were at a loss regarding what to do–let alone not being able to get together on dealing with a rapidly deteriorating situation?

And Louisiana was also embroiled in a relationship from hell with a Bush Administration clueless as to how to handle her excruciating crisis. Not to mention FEMA–I read in Michael Eric Dyson’s Come Hell or High Water where, In Jefferson Parish, FEMA cut the telephone lines. Now, WHY would FEMA have done that? I mean, it doesn’t make sense because this was LOUISIANA–not some foreign land with which America was at war.

And it took almost a month before the floodwaters were pumped out of New Orleans, then Rita hit and caused some new flooding, so residents couldn’t even begin assessing the damage and cleaning up until the floodwaters were out of there.

Fast forward to a year after Katrina. It is shameful that with all the hardships New Orleanians, Mississippians, etc. are going through, the broadcast media is not reporting as much out of the storm zone as it should be… This near-total news blackout prevails in spite of the fact that Louisiana and Mississippi still desperately need help. Maybe having more attention paid to what people in those states must deal with could at least get FEMA to release the allocated money it has been sitting on, if not get more money appropriated.

Louisiana is especially in a world of hurt. New Orleans is a “tale of two cities”–small areas including her French Quarter which are in relatively good shape and large areas such as the Lower 9th and Lakeview which look worse than Baghdad. Her water, power, and sewerage systems are in war zone-like conditions. Her streets are full of potholes. Her fire department, schools, justice system, hospitals, etc. are not up to serving a city even of her diminished size. Her mental health system is having a breakdown.

And Louisiana’s “Road Home” program, which is supposed to help her flooded-out homeowners if insurance didn’t cover their losses, is bottled up in red tape. Also, Louisiana wasn’t able to get enough money to sufficiently help her homeowners. (I don’t feel like going into the sordid details of what happened to it at length right now–but originally Louisiana came up with the Baker Plan, (which the “Road Home” replaced) which would have been more helpful to her homeowners. In short, Louisiana got the shaft from the Bush Administration.)

I did what I could to help out by donating money, which since my income is low was a drop in the bucket in light of the desperate need, but was the best I was able to do. It depresses me, the way I’ve been sensitive to the suffering there, that I’m unable to do more, like going down there and helping out. This makes me feel helpless.

Here’s something very unfair that happened to me on the MSNBC political website First Read after I posted the following after the first Democrats’ debate on Apr. 26, 2007:

Where was the solidarity of the Democrats–with the exception of Obama, who mentioned New Orleans in a sentence–with the Katrina survivors? Why did nobody speak out regarding the importance not only to survivors but to the rest of America of making Louisiana, Mississippi, and the rest of the storm zone whole? I would not have been surprised by the “let them eat cake” Republicans’ being silent on this matter in support of their “Dear Leader’s” inaction. But for the Democrats–reputedly members of a “party for the people”–to thus remain silent is at the very least cowardly, at the worst, a betrayal of their own principles. Obeying the debate’s rules is not a valid excuse–it smacks of the Nuremberg defense, “I was only following orders.” The Democrats should have stood up and spoken out about the slowness of the recovery in Louisiana, Mississippi, and the rest of the storm zone, against Bush Administration neglect, and in support of Katrina and Rita survivors. There was a lot of “Wag the Dog” crap about abortion and the “right to life”–I have to ask, What about New Orleans’ right to life? What about the right of people now in Houston, Atlanta, and other cities, who now cannot afford to do so because of the housing shortage, to return? The Democrats should have stood up to Brian Williams and let him know what really matters.

A mean-spirited wingnut who was rich enough to be able to afford to send his or her step-daughter to New Orleans to help build houses, who signed himself/herself “Katrina Fatigue” practically yelled at me for the way I kept bringing Katrina and New Orleans up:

I am not so sure I would continue to hound Brian Williams as you have done and continue to do across every board you can access. At least he is giving you the opportunity to express yourself. Once he gets as tired of your NOLA tirades as most of the rest of us are, he might just pull the plug. By the way, as I have previously asked you, how much time have you spent on site in NOLA, post Katrina. I ask, because my step-daughter is there again for the next two weeks. Her church rotates members in for two week intervals. There must be something you could do to help there. If you took all the time you spend writing these angry, repetitive dissertations, you would have time to go help.

Katrina Fatigue

Here’s my reply:

Katrina Fatigue–God bless your step-daughter for going to the storm zone with her church and helping out. This is something I would dearly love to be able to do myself, but I’m too fragile physically and financially to do so. It breaks my heart that I am unable due to these circumstances to do this myself. So all I can do is offer my moral support and a sympathetic ear to Katrina survivors and cheer on those who are able to help or otherwise do right for Katrina survivors. And let those who don’t treat Katrina survivors right know my serious dissatisfaction. I hope you are having a good day after judging me.  

And “Katrina Fatigue” replied:

you judge us all the time. If you wish to fully exercise your right to free speech, including verbally attacking all who have a different opinion from you, then it is unfair for you to take the position of victim when we choose to exercise our own right to free speech.

Having to deal with this kind of insensitivity is one of several reasons I rarely if ever visit “First Read” anymore.

Now for “Katrina Brain.” The mental health problems including depression, anxiety and PTSD that developed in New Orleans and among evacuees elsewhere in Louisiana are well-known, and then there are cognitive issues arising from the stress of living in a disaster zone, colloquially called “Katrina Brain” which make life disjointed and surreal. New Orleans blogger Slate recounts struggles with Katrina Brain:

Out with friends last weekend, one of them said: “Do you have Katrina brain? I do. I’m forgetting things all the time, forgetting words, names, where I put things down.” I said that yes, that had been happening to me as well. We went on to talk about some of the other Katrina brain issues. I just tried to light my cigarette with my chapstick. Didn’t phase me, that kind of thing happens a lot around here. People are gaining weight, losing weight, and not on purpose. Most of us forgive the flakiness of others because we’re a little flaky ourselves. It’s Katrina Brain. It’s a disjointed kind of thing. They need to put xanax and prozac in the water system.

The other day I walked out of my house, fairly normal place: power’s on, phone works, AC will really crank up if necessary. I got somewhere on Gov Nicholls around Dauphine and the dog stopped to sniff something intently. My brain didn’t register that this something no doubt smelled intriguing to a dog. It was three refrigerators on the sidewalk with the telltale Katrina brown color on the outer walls of them. I hadn’t noticed them, they were part of the landscape for so long that they didn’t seem strange. But these were strange. It’s nine months later and there they were. Hadn’t seen one in a while but the brain didn’t process this as an anomaly. Probably had just been removed from an apartment or condo building. Maybe not enough work crews. At this point, they are actually something that should stand out since all the others were hauled away, but here they were with my dog straining at the leash to sniff them. ::::::JOLT:::::::

Time can be strange here. Katrina Brain seems to warp time a little. A lot of us still struggle with what day or date it is. The friend who coined the K Brain term was asking if we find ourselves drinking a little more. Most of us said that although we’re not drinking every day, we might have three instead of two when we do go out. Everyone at the table (6 of us) nodded in agreement and the pharmacy companies must love New Orleanians. So many of them are medicated these days, then of course there are the ones who aren’t.

Now for vicarious trauma. While I Googled this but couldn’t find any useful material specifically on vicarious trauma in individuals who watched Katrina and the federal flood unfold from far-off states, Rodney Luster, Ph.D defines it in general as

exposure to another’s traumatic event and the observer’s reactions as a result of that same event.

He adds:

A partial list of things to look for in yourself or others after exposure to a disturbing event, story, communication exchange, media, or news footage include the following: anxiety, hyper-vigilance, intrusive imagery or flashbacks, hyperactivity, night-terrors, rage reactions, mood swings, reduced ability to cope with daily stressors, social withdrawal, avoidance behaviors with certain situations, depression, despair, hopelessness, recurring anger, self-blame, guilt and shame, compulsive or aggressive behaviors, sleep disorders, concentration problems, disconnection from others, loss of interest in outside activities, and phantom physical pains.

I think I’ve been experiencing the vicarious trauma of seeing what happened not only to New Orleans and her people during and after 8/29 but also how BushCo has treated her in her effort to recover–and identified with her people, and consequently come down with “Katrina Brain.” I feel the mental/emotional pain of those struggling to come back and wish there were more I was able do for them.

Besides, even though I live a safe distance from any coast, I am aware that central Illinois is subject to tornadoes and we even had a 5.2 earthquake 3 or so weeks ago. The New Madrid fault system runs under our feet.

Now you may be wondering exactly how an Illinois gal like myself could show the symptoms of “Katrina brain.” Little cognitive glitches due to pre-occupation, for one. For example, when I wrote in an e-mail, “When you walk with a cain, people are awfully nice to you. As if I’d been thinking of the story of Cain and Abel. Or Sen. John McCain.

I think my “Katrina brain” comes out in my over-sensitivity–my short fuse. Which is why I find it so hard to deal with the way so many, even on this site, seem to have forgotten Katrina and New Orleans and the way the MSM and all candidates have been giving them short shrift. It’s not only as if they’ve written off a valuable part of this country but also as if they’re unaware that something similarly catastrophic could happen to their state or city next. And here’s something that particularly saddens me and makes me almost physically ill–the way people deride New Orleans and Louisiana and her people.

And sometimes “Katrina brain” has the paradoxical effect on me where I know I need to write about New Orleans and Katrina to call them to this community’s attention, but can’t come up with things to say. I just feel emotionally drained.

When there’s another disaster like the China earthquake, the Burma cyclone, or last fall’s California wildfires, I flash back. I’ll watch the news coverage and inevitably look for comparisons to Katrina, the flood, and how BushCo handled them. I’ll notice the fact that China’s govdernment responded more quickly to the quake than did BushCo to Katrina. Or the hypocrisy of how Bush has been protesting the fact that Burma hasn’t been letting in foreign relief workers–when BushCo itself didn’t let in relief supplies and rescuers from overseas as New Orleans drowned. It’s as if BushCo had cruelly wanted people in Louisiana to die.

Lastly, when hurricane season rolls around, as this year’s will about one and a half weeks from now, I become apprehensive even though I live so far from the sea. I’m just fearful of another Katrina and what it could do to a still-recovering New Orleans. And a Louisiana whose coastline has been washing away at the rate of a football field every half-hour. Hearing predictions that a storm could enter the Gulf raises my hackles (and, of course, I don’t want to see one hit anyplace else on the US mainland, either.)

This diary has been difficult to finish because the way I identify so much with people in New Orleans I’ve also been experiencing what one of my NOLA friends calls “yin and yang” as if I were living there (as well as regarding several other matters in my own life I eventually plan to write about.) But I’d like to close this diary, which so far has been something of a downer, on a positive, if not inspiring note.

It sounds strange to speak of gifts from Katrina, but oddly, I received a few. Interestingly, for at least a month or two before Katrina hit, I’d been getting these awful near-migraines almost every day. But then Katrina hit and New Orleans drowned, and the headaches vanished to almost nothing. I still only rarely get such headaches anymore. It’s as if Katrina, the flood, and the aftermath gave me something outside my head to focus on.

Then there are a couple of new interests sparked by the disaster. Such as the food. New Orleans-type food I can afford is hard to find around here, but soon after Katrina I first visited, and quickly developed an addiction to the food at, Popeye’s, which not only has good affordable food and a wonderful NOLA-type ambiance including New Orleans, zydeco, blues, and other Louisiana music, but is also walking distance from my home. I eat lunch there almost every Sunday, and sometimes have ordered their jambalaya to go.

Now for music. I’m a bit embarrassed to admit that in my youth when I visited New Orleans, I hadn’t been interested in any of the distinctive kinds of music that can be found there or elsewhere in Louisiana. And I hadn’t even heard of Dr. John, Marcia Ball, Eric Lindell, BeauSoleil, Irma Thomas, Tab Benoit, Buckwheat Zydeco, Nathan and the Zydeco Cha Chas, John Delafose, Rosie Ledet, or any of the other artists whose Louisiana music I now have in my collection. But now I’m familiar with their music, which is now one of my favorite kinds. So Katrina and the flood have had for me, as one of my NOLA friends has out it, its yin and yang.

Now for something completely different: Prime John Prine

I found this in my email inbox this week, and it was too good not to share:

John Prine TV!?!?

“What is John Prine TV?”

JP TV is a video player that hosts a collection of our favorite videos of John and some of his musical cronies. There is a ton of classic Prine footage on it, and as we find more videos, we’ll be adding them.

“What exactly will I find there?”

On it you’ll find clips of John duetting with Iris Dement and Nanci Griffith, doing “Angel From Montgomery” on the edge of a placid lake (“Lake Marie” maybe?), or sitting around a kitchen table just playin’ for some friends, and a whole lot more. Whether it’s John in front of ten friends or in front of 10,000 strangers, you will find John in some of the intimate settings as well as some of the most grand.  

I have failed in my efforts to embed the video, but this link will take you to a collection of 20 John Prine videos, which just keep playing one after another.

Do yourself a favor and Give it a click.

Fear & Loathing Today…Please Bear With Me.

Ok…I'll admit, I'm posting this here because I'm afraid of the wrath of the “Rules Committee”-types who control the orange zone. I don't need any more stress than I already have and I'm hoping you people are a little more accepting of creative license and will appreciate my effort.

Hunter S. Thompson is a gawd…period. I don't know if he worshipped The Noodles, The Sauce & The Holy Meatballs but I'm relatively sure he would have at least understood the concept and partaken in our particular brand of lunacy to point out the insanity of what is considered “normal” in this 230-year-old experiment we call democracy and the good ol' U.S.A. 

Bearing that in mind I ask you all to consider this brief essay written by Mr. Thompson before his death in 2006 that could apply today and is my way of expressing myself. I agree with everything he says and if this is plagarism or “overuse” of another's writings in my “diary” than I guess I'm glad I'm writing an essay.

I'm sure you'll understand. As Always…Peace ;-)>

 

 

The New Dumb

Something is happening here, but you don't know what it is. Do You, Mister Jones?-Bob Dylan

No sir, not a chance. Mr. Jones doess not even pretend to know what's happening in America Right now, and neither does anyone else.

We have seen weird Times in this country before, but the year 2000 is beginning to look super weird. This time there really is nobody flying the plane…We are living in dangerously weird times now. Smart people just shrug and admit they're dazed and confused.

Live Blog w/ Ed Fallon IA-3 just minutes away!!!

In just a few minutes, Iowa state legislator and candidate for Congress Ed Fallon will be joining us for a live blog at 1pm et over at the EENR Blog. Get your questions ready and let’s get the conversation going!

One of the first candidates the bloggers of EENR decided to endorse was state legislator Ed Fallon running for Congress in Iowa’s 3rd c.d. It wasn’t a difficult choice. Ed Fallon is a progressive’s progressive. In his 14 years as a legislator in Iowa’s House, he never accepted PAC/lobbyist money. Fallon had his values in place long before it was the progressive thing to do to refuse lobbyist/PAC money. Here’s a statement from Fallon about why he’s running for Congress:

Our country needs and wants change.  I’m ready to take on the corporate interests who have corrupted our federal government.  I’m ready to give working families and the poor a voice in national politics.  I’m ready to do what I can to see that environmental issues are taken seriously inside the beltway.  I’m ready to apply what I’ve learned during 23 years of public service in Iowa and be a part of the solution in Washington.

More below the fold….

Ed Fallon v.s. Leonard Boswell

June 3rd is just around the corner and no one knows who is going to win the primary. There is a ton of daylight between Fallon and Boswell, and that’s why we EENR bloggers are so adamant about ousting Boswell and replacing him with fightin’ progressive Ed Fallon. Here’s a little backround on what these two candidates have done in Government and what kind of Democrat they are.

I can’t help but have personal benchmarks for what makes up a real progressive candidate. Fallon passes my test with flying colors. Fallon opposed the Iraq War from the start and supports passage of a timetable for withdrawal. Here’s a snippet from Fallon about his opposition to the war:

It is now clear to nearly everyone that President Bush lied to Congress and to the American people when he spoke of weapons of mass destruction as the premise to go to war in Iraq.  I was among the tens of millions of Americans who opposed the war from the start, and who did not believe the President’s justification for invasion.

Fallon is a huge advocate of UHC, which is incredibly important considering we may have a chance to vote on a UHC bill next year. Fallon supports publicly financed elections and has pledged to champion the issue in Congress. Here’s a snippet from Fallon about his support for publicly financed elections:

The real solution is voluntary public financing of elections.  I support the Fair Elections Now Act (S.936) currently under consideration in the U.S. Senate. As a member of the U.S. House, I would introduce or cosponsor companion legislation. When we take the corrupting influence of money out of campaigns we will have a President and a Congress focused on the needs of people rather than demands of specials interests.

Ed Fallon has a long history of fighting on environmental and conservation issues. While Boswell cuts taxes for oil companies, Fallon will always put environmental interests above the CEO’s of big oil. Another refreshing thing about Ed Fallon is that he’s honest about our economic woes and the recent economic stimulus plan. Here’s what he had to say about our tax rebates:

While I always support giving taxpayers some of their money back, let’s be honest: this proposal will do nothing to fix our economy. At $600 a person, the package will be as effective as, say, giving a cup of coffee to someone who is seriously sleep-deprived…. To pay for the rebates, the federal government will borrow more money from China, give it to consumers, and recommend they go buy something – something probably made in China.

Fallon is right. We will achieve no long term stability by way of tax rebates. It’s nice to see a politician be frank for a change. If you’d like to learn more about where Ed stands on the issues go here.

In the Iowa legislature, Ed Fallon has championed many issues we progressives care about. Fallon has fought against corporate farm takeovers and tried to protect the small family farms in Iowa. Fallon worked hard against HF 519 which led to the expansion of massive hog farms. Fallon introduced and passed legislation requiring voting machines to produce a paper trail. Fallon helped push through a 6% increase in public education funding and fought hard to increase teacher pay and reduce class sizes. Ed Fallon has always been a good friend to Iowa workers. He’s pushed for minimum wage increases, stood in the picket lines with union brothers and sisters and introduced legislation to ban the hiring of replacement workers. If you’d like to take a closer look at Fallon’s record in the legislature, go here

What about Fallon’s Record v.s. Boswell’s Record?

What about Leonard Boswell? Why have we chosen to support Fallon over Democratic incumbant Leonard Boswell? It’s really no contest. Boswell lines his pockets with lobbyist/PAC money. In just one year’s time, over 70% of Boswell’s donations were from PACs. That’s a lot!! Boswell voted to invade Iraq and continues to vote to fund the war. Boswell voted to allow electronic surveillance without warrants back in 2006 and voted to allow overseas wiretapping without a FISA warrant just last year. Boswell also voted to make the Patriot Act permanent back in 2005 and voted to ban flag desecration. Boswell voted for the Bankruptcy bill in 2005 and for the repeal of the estate tax. Boswell has continued to support the Bush/Cheney energy policies and even voted against raising CAFE standards back in 2001. Boswell also supports building a fence along the Mexico border. The truth is, Boswell is not the kind of Democrat I want representing the brand. Our party has been hurt over the years because of conservative Dems abandoning the values the party is supposed to represent. We need strong Democrats like Ed Fallon fighting for what’s right and ensuring that we progressives have a voice inside the halls of Congress.

It’s Time to Help Elect Fallon

The primary is just around the corner and no one knows how this race is going to turn out. The bloggers of EENR have set up an Act Blue page and we’d love it if you could throw him some change in the final weeks of his campaign. If you live in Iowa, please consider volunteering for Ed Fallon. We need to do everything we can to send him to Congress!!

Ed Fallon will be here to talk to YOU

In just minutes Ed Fallon will be at the EENR Blog to have a conversation with us. I hope you’ll join us and give a warm welcome fellow progressive Ed Fallon.  

Load more