Muse in the Morning


Cyanide

On Being Lazy

The bad part about laziness

is the guilt that insists I

accomplish things in order

to hide that facet

The paradox is that if I

became free to be lazy

I suspect I would get

much more accomplished

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–February 5, 2008

Please join us inside to celebrate our various muses…

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Muse in the Morning

The muses are ancient.  The inspirations for our stories were said to be born from them.  Muses of song and dance, or poetry and prose, of comedy and tragedy, of the inward and the outward.  In one version they are Calliope, Euterpe and Terpsichore, Erato and Clio, Thalia and Melpomene, Polyhymnia and Urania.

It has also been traditional to name a tenth muse.  Plato declared Sappho to be the tenth muse, the muse of women poets.  Others have been suggested throughout the centuries.  I don’t have a name for one, but I do think there should be a muse for the graphical arts.  And maybe there should be many more.

I know you have talent.  What sometimes is forgotten is that being practical is a talent.  I have a paucity for that sort of talent in many situations, though it turns out that I’m a pretty darn good cook.  🙂  

Let your talent bloom.  You can share it here.  Encourage others to let it bloom inside them as well.

Won’t you share your words or art, your sounds or visions, your thoughts scientific or philosophic, the comedy or tragedy of your days, the stories of doing and making?  And be excellent to one another!

Iglesia………………………………………Episode 53



(Iglesia is a serialized novel, published on Tuesdays and Saturdays at midnight ET, you can read all of the episodes by clicking on the tag.)

Previous episode. Previous pertinent episode.

Paul ran down the stairs, trying to catch Iglesia before she left.

He had bolted upright in bed just a moment ago, stunned form sleep by remembering that he hadn’t had a chance last night to tell her that he would be working even later at the Medical Center tonight than usual. It was important, since it was the penultimate day of the peak of her cycle and he was supposed to try to to get her pregnant tonight.

She was going to be pissed enough at him for having to work late. The thought of how pissed she would be if she stayed up to wait for him …and then him standing her up…..well, his balls literally shriveled a little at the thought of that confrontation. Part of ‘the deal’ of their marriage was that he was a receptor for her temper. He preferred it that way, since he could usually deal with the tempest with a certain grace and equanimity, and it beat having her assault random strangers at the drop of a hat.

Their marriage, like many modern marriages, was a series of deals. They didn’t know one young couple who didn’t have some sort of similar deal. The sacrifices you had to make these days to get ahead…hell, to survive, dictated ‘deals.’

She was rising in the police force, and working the odd hours demanded by her calling, he was a resident at the most prestigious research hospital in the country, at the beck and call of his superiors, and often worked shifts in excess of thirty hours and was in effect, permanently on call. Her job called for a somewhat fiery temperament….his for the placid calm needed for the long stretches of study and boredom, and then spasms of life or death excitement as they received a subject that met their criteria of study at the Medical Center….life or death, and the line in between.

The process of death was the concern of his department, the line between them was his line of study, of work. He and his colleagues studied death. They measured and weighed it and observed it. The just before, and due to it’s unpredictability for the most part, mainly the after. They were the fully funded, elite, research oriented medical staff studying the process and act …and trying with every cutting edge technology to prevent it, of the bane of humanity, death itself.

Thus it was that when he bolted from slumber and rushed down the stairs to inform his wife that he would be home late….and found her very freshly dead, not more than a minute dead, on his doorstep….his reaction was considerably  different than most husbands in that unfortunate situation.

State Killing Recommences In Georgia

(8 am – promoted by ek hornbeck)

This disgusting, barbarous event will be overlooked in the news about the primaries in Indiana and North Carolina.  

This evening Georgia resumed killing its prisoners by lethal injection.  William Earl Lynd has been executed. This is the 1100th execution in the modern era and the first following the Supreme Court’s ruling in Baze v. Rees, upholding Kentucky’s lethal injection protocol.  It has been almost 8 months since a state killed a prisoner. This is longest amount of time between executions since at least the early nineties.

Convicted Georgia prisoner William Earl Lynd was executed Tuesday, the first inmate to be put to death since the U.S. Supreme Court lifted its nationwide ban on executions.

Lynd was pronounced dead at 7:51 pm at the Diagnostic and Classification prison in Jackson, Georgia as anti-death penalty activists stood in quiet protest outside.

According to prison officials, Lynd had been “somber all day,” and had requested a mild sedative before being lead to the death chamber.

Lynd had been convicted for the 1988 kidnapping and murder of live-in girlfriend Ginger Moore.

source

The crime was an extremely brutal one, and Lynd waited on death row for almost 20 years to be killed while he appealed.

Tonight, almost 2 decades later, Georgia executed him by lethal injection.  The Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that “he was the 41st man Georgia has executed since 1983, the 19th by lethal injection.”  He was 53 years old.

Barbarism and revenge killing have returned to the US.  I want it to be understood that William Earl Lynd was not killed in my name.  I detest killing.  I detest Lynd’s killing his victim.  My heart goes out to the victim, her family, Lynd, Lynd’s family, the lawyers who defended and prosecuted him, the jurors who deliberated his case, the judges who ruled at his trial and appeals, those who wrote and those who read the newspaper coverage of the crime and the trial and the execution, in fact, everyone who had knowledge of this case or any contact with it.  How can we live with ourselves when to revenge a killing, we permit our government to kill?  

Mahatama Gandhi correctly identified the issue. “An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind.”

An economic stimulus for the antiwar movement?

Is the U.S. Treasury, which can’t print money fast enough to pay for the trillion-dollar tragedy in Iraq, about to give an economic stimulus to peace organizations working to stop the war?

It seems highly unlikely, but if it doesn’t happen it won’t be because the antiwar folks haven’t tried.  Many seem to be on the same wave length as an email I received yesterday from United for Peace and Justice:

Spend your stimulus check on peace! The sooner the war ends, the more money the nation saves. Not to mention the lives and futures of millions of people. So let’s use the stimulus money to stop the war, bring all of the troops home and get the nation’s budget back on track.

We invite you to spend your stimulus check, or some portion of it, on the one thing the Bush administration doesn’t want you to invest in: Help strengthen the peace and justice movement!

Steve Burns, a staffer for the Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice, like UFPJ a coalition of many groups, didn’t even wait to get his check.  He wrote to President Bush in March to tell him how he was spending his stimulus check:

Now it seems we’re in a recession anyway, and the checks aren’t expected to arrive until May, so I decided to spend my $600 now, figuring that the US government was good for the money.

So, on March 15, for about the amount of my hoped-for rebate check, I rented the Orpheum Theater [in Madison WI] and a digital projector for a day. After a last-minute purchase of a hundred feet of internet cable (a further stimulus to the economy), the seats filled up, and the screen filled with a live video feed of Iraq Veterans Against the War’s Winter Soldier hearings. For five hours, we watched and listened as American veterans gave firsthand reports on the tragic consequences of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars — your wars, Mr. Bush.

We heard a young Army medic testify about an Iraqi prisoner brought into one of the many American prisons in Iraq. The medic noticed the Iraqi prisoner was behaving strangely and seemed disoriented. Somehow, the medic had the presence of mind to administer a blood-sugar test, and learned that the prisoner, a diabetic who had been denied access to his insulin during four days of captivity, was in the advanced stages of diabetic shock. That prisoner later died in American custody — your custody, Mr. Bush.

We heard another soldier testify about seeing one of the men in his platoon shoot into a car speeding toward a US checkpoint. When the car came to a halt, the soldier checked inside, and found a mother, father, and their two children, all dead. Sitting there in that darkened theater, we all knew better than to blame the soldier who fired those shots in fear for his life. We all knew who to blame, and we blamed you, Mr. Bush.

And when the screening was over, we left that theater with a strengthened resolve to fight against these wars, and all wars, and to do our best to heal the people you have so carelessly broken. Not a bad return on an investment of only $600.

Burns asked WNPJ members what they planned to do with their checks.  Here are some of the answers he got:

Chuck in Whitefish Bay: “I’m pledging my rebate check to Nukewatch to pay for the costs of a civil-rights suit by Nukewatch protesters who were arrested in Sen. Oberstar’s office.”

Charles in New Glarus: “All of my rebate is going to Iraq Veterans Against the War.”

Becky in Madison: “My rebate check is going to help support an immigrant family, resettled here from Thailand.”

Harland in Necedah: “I’m giving $100 of my rebate to WNPJ.”

Les in Somerset: “I’m donating $25 to Iraq Veterans Against the War”

Rose in Middleton: “I pledge $300 to help support work-study students at WNPJ”

Dorothy in Madison: “I’m pledging my entire rebate check to WNPJ”

Barb in Appleton: “I’m giving $50 to Fellowship of Reconciliation, $50 to nonviolent peaceforce, and $50 to American Friends Service Committee.”

Chick in Washington Island: “I’m donating $50 of my check to Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice.”

And a friend in Waukesha reminds us that many people will need their rebate to meet daily expenses: “All of my check is going to groceries and rent. I still haven’t been able to find a job!”

I’m a little conflicted in this, as a supporter of UFPJ, a board member of WNPJ and a member of the Iraq Moratorium committee, which operates on almost no money, with no paid staffers, and has sparked more than 900 antiwar events across the country since September.  Moratorium #9 is on May 16, and you’ll find 60 events already listed on the website, along with reports, photos and videos from past events.

There are many, many other worthy organizations working hard to end this war.  Can you help one of them?  If you can’t give your whole check, or half of it, how about 10 per cent?  Two per cent?  Whatever you can do will be a worthwhile investment in the cause of peace.  Please consider it.

Taking a Short Sabbatical

Halfway through this.

http://www.amazon.com/Supercla…

And reading between the lines explains why Pelosi didn’t impeach.

New insight into this summer’s bombing raids on Iran.

The Satanic brilliance of the newest business buzzword and green initiative PR promotional campaign Sustainability

Plus another short camping trip this weekend.  I must fully digest this book.

I must consult with my fellow hatters and alert the others.  Arguments, interpretations, formums and discussions can and must be done.

I am going to have read it, then go back with highlighter and take copious notes.  It is after all a glimpse into the mindset equivalent to the movie American Psycho doesn’t come everyday.

http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-…

Inadvertently my ass!

China, a “global player”

http://en.epochtimes.com/news/…

Lamestream

http://thinkprogress.org/2008/…

Or something far more sinister.

http://www.scl.cc/home.php

And something to ponder at the pump.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/i…

In these, the last of times not much else can be done.

Enjoy yourself and do it with the ones you love.

Pentagon’s Propaganda Documents Go Online

(10 am – promoted by ek hornbeck)

These documents were released to the New York Times regarding the Pentagon’s Military Analyst program.

Much more in Backtrack can be found at this link at PR Watch.org!

News of the Pentagon’s online posting of the documents came from Joe Trento of the National Security News Service, who notes that NSNS provided the New York Times “limited information about a military office early in the reporting process.”

The Pew Excellence in Journalism project has a chart showing that ” there was virtually no mainstream media follow up to The Times’ expose” with the only national TV coverage being the introduction segment and live debate featuring CMD’s John Stauber on the PBS NewsHour.

PBS Newshour Report:

Government Curries Favor With Military News Analysts

The Pentagon may influence the analysis of some retired military personnel who appear on television news programs, the New York Times recently reported. Media insiders discuss the details of this murky world of defense companies, the current administration and the war in Iraq.

Transcript at above Link

Real Media Newshour Player to Listen

Streaming PBS Video Player to Watch

Evening Edition

6 pm- Africa 1, Asia 5, Europe 2, North America 1, South America 3, News & Politics 5, Entertainment 1, Business 7, Science 4, Health 2, Blogline 5

World-

Africa 1

6 pm 1 Greed behind food price rises: development bank head

By Ingrid Melander, Reuters

Tue May 6, 2:04 PM ET

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The food price crisis is caused largely by greed and speculation rather than food shortages, the head of Southern Africa’s development bank said on Tuesday.

Spiraling food costs — called a “silent tsunami” by the World Food Program — have ignited fury and a rash of protests from Haiti to Somalia to Bangladesh. Exporting countries have curbed shipments to ensure domestic supplies and tame inflation.

“These increases in food prices are not the consequence of food shortages, it’s the consequence of human greed that is putting at risk the lives of millions of men, women and children,” Jay Naidoo told Reuters.

Asia 5

6 pm 2 Marines ignore Taliban cash crop to not upset Afghan locals

By JASON STRAZIUSO, Associated Press Writer

2 hours, 51 minutes ago

GARMSER, Afghanistan – The Marines of Bravo Company’s 1st Platoon sleep beside a grove of poppies. Troops in the 2nd Platoon playfully swat at the heavy opium bulbs while walking through the fields. Afghan laborers scraping the plant’s gooey resin smile and wave.

Last week, the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit moved into southern Helmand province, the world’s largest opium poppy-growing region, and now find themselves surrounded by green fields of the illegal plants that produce the main ingredient of heroin.

The Taliban, whose fighters are exchanging daily fire with the Marines in Garmser, derives up to $100 million a year from the poppy harvest by taxing farmers and charging safe passage fees – money that will buy weapons for use against U.S., NATO and Afghan troops.

6 pm 3 Golfing Baghdad’s Green Zone: a course with real bunkers

By BRADLEY BROOKS, Associated Press Writer

Tue May 6, 2:44 PM ET

BAGHDAD – The weight of the 9-iron felt just right. My first swing off the first tee was smooth and the ball sailed straight and true.

For a brief moment I forgot where I was. Then I gazed down the fairway – actually just a few clumps of grass, scrub brush and plenty of rocks.

This is golf, Green Zone style.

6 pm 4 After panda goodwill, Japan, China tackle disputes

By Chris Buckley, Reuters

1 hour, 59 minutes ago

TOKYO (Reuters) – Gifts of pandas and vows of friendship between China and Japan give way to hard questions on Wednesday when leaders of the two Asian powers meet to grapple with disputes that have bred festering distrust between them.

Chinese President Hu Jintao began his state visit to Japan with a flourish of goodwill on Tuesday by offering two giant pandas to a Tokyo zoo.

But friction over history, undersea gas reserves, military plans, international influence and consumer safety has divided the neighbors, and mutual public distrust runs deep.

6 pm 5 2 more U.S. soldiers’ deaths in Iraq raise doubts about MRAP vehicle

By Nancy A. Youssef, McClatchy Newspapers

Mon May 5, 6:18 PM ET

WASHINGTON – The deaths of two U.S. soldiers in western Baghdad last week have sparked concerns that Iraqi insurgents have developed a new weapon capable of striking what the U.S. military considers its most explosive-resistant vehicle.

The soldiers were riding in a Mine Resistant Ambush Protective vehicle, known as an MRAP, when an explosion sent a blast of super-heated metal through the MRAP’s armor and into the vehicle, killing them both.

Their deaths brought to eight the number of American troops killed while riding in an MRAP, which was developed and deployed to Iraq last year after years of acrimony over light armor on the Army’s workhorse vehicle, the Humvee.

6 pm 6 The Next Great North Korean Famine

By BILL POWELL/SHANGHAI, Time Magazine

29 minutes ago

Nearly one million people starved to death when a murderous famine gripped North Korea in the 1990s. Now, the most backward, isolated country in the world may be about to see history repeat itself. According to diplomats, United Nations officials and a variety of non-government organizations, North Korea stands yet again on the brink of a major food shortage. “The prospect of hunger related deaths in the next few months is approaching certainty,” says Marcus Noland, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute and co-author of a just released study raising alarms about the prospect of renewed famine. In fact, one Seoul-based NGO, the Research Institute for North Korean Society, asserts that there have already been a handful of people in small, agricultural villages who have died from starvation.

Europe 2

6 pm 7 Italian Rightist Sparks Outrage

By JEFF ISRAELY, Time Magazine

2 hours, 53 minutes ago

Gianfranco Fini, the president of the Italian Parliament, is facing a firestorm of controversy after saying that the May 1 burning of Israeli flags in Turin by far-left protesters was “much more serious” than the savage beating of a 29-year-old that same day in Verona by a neo-Nazi gang. The victim of the beating, Nicola Tommasoli, died late Monday after several days in a coma. Five young fans of the Verona soccer team have been arrested for the murder.

6 pm 8 US says ‘optimistic’ on missile shield deal with Poland

AFP

1 hour, 54 minutes ago

VIENNA (AFP) – Washington is “optimistic” that it will be able to reach a deal with Poland over US plans to base a missile shield there, a senior US arms control official told reporters here on Tuesday.

“I remain optimistic that we’re going to successfully conclude our negotiations with the Poles to place a site for missile defence interceptors in that country,” US Under Secretary for Arms Control John Rood Rood said, on the eve of a round of negotiations between Polish and US officials in Warsaw.

“I had the opportunity to see my Polish counterpart yesterday in Prague. There are some important issues that still need to be resolved in our bilateral negotiations with the Poles,” said Rood, who is the United States’ lead negotiator on the issue. “But, as I say, I remain optimistic.”

North America 1

6 pm 9 Canada banning all smoking in federal prisons

By Claire Sibonney, Reuters

2 hours, 18 minutes ago

TORONTO (Reuters) – Canada has banned all smoking in federal prisons because a partial ban was largely ignored, the government said on Tuesday.

As a result of the ban, which took effect in all maximum-security prisons on Monday, inmates will be barred from smoking anywhere inside or outside prison property, including private visiting rooms and yards.

“Since the partial ban was not working in order to ensure a safe, healthy, smoke-free environment, we decided to move towards the total ban,” said Lynn Brunette, a spokeswoman for the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC).

South America 3

6 pm 10 Chile volcano erupts; evacuation ordered

AFP

49 minutes ago

PUERTO MONTT, Chile (AFP) – A volcano in southern Chile erupted with renewed vigor Tuesday, raining ash and lava over its surroundings and forcing a total evacuation in a 30-kilometer (19-mile) radius, the National Emergency Office said.

Emergency sirens sounded in the coastal region 1,300 kilometers (800 miles) south of Santiago, after the Chaiten volcano blasted out ash and cinders and generated lava and pyroclastic flows, four days after it awoke from a 300-year slumber.

“A maximum alert has been decreed,” Jorge Munoz, the head of the National Emergency Office (ONEMI), told AFP in Santiago after the volcano blew its top at 8:45am (1245 GMT).

6 pm 11 Official results confirm Bolivian province’s autonomy win

By Boris Heger and Jack Chang, McClatchy Newspapers

Mon May 5, 6:39 PM ET

SANTA CRUZ DE LA SIERRA , Bolivia – Official election results released Monday showed a controversial statute that would grant autonomy to this country’s richest province had built an overwhelming lead in Sunday’s violence-marred referendum and was on its way to victory.

The results thrilled leaders in the eastern Bolivian province of Santa Cruz , who had defied President Evo Morales by putting the statute up for a vote. If implemented, the statute would give the province powers equivalent to that of a U.S. state, such as the right to form its own police, set tax and land-use policies and elect a governor and legislature. Most state functions are now centralized in Bolivia’s federal government.

Morales, who’s a close ally of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez , has called the statute separatist and illegal and warned Santa Cruz leaders not to implement it. His spokesman, Ivan Canelas , however, took a softer approach Monday by inviting Santa Cruz’s prefect, who’s the equivalent of a governor, and other prefects from the country’s nine provinces to discuss the idea of provincial autonomies.

6 pm 12 Bush vows to help Panama clinch free trade agreement

AFP

42 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – President George W. Bush said Tuesday he would do his best to get Congress to approve a pending free trade agreement with Panama, after meeting with its President Martin Torrijos in the White House.

“The Panamanian free trade vote is a priority of this government. It should be a priority of the United States Congress,” Bush told reporters after the meeting.

Bush said he and his administration would “do everything in our capacity to move the trade bills” not only with Panama, but with Colombia and South Korea as well.

U.S.-

News & Politics 5

6 pm 13 Special counsel’s office raided amid obstruction probe

By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer

30 minutes ago

WASHINGTON – Federal agents raided the office and home of U.S. Special Counsel Scott Bloch on Tuesday while investigating whether the nation’s top protector of whistle-blowers destroyed evidence potentially showing he retaliated against his own staff.

Computers and documents were seized during the raid on the special counsel’s downtown office, according to two law enforcement officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing inquiry. At least 20 agents were still on the scene as of mid-afternoon Tuesday.

Bloch’s home, in a Virginia suburb of Washington, also was raided, the officials said.

6 pm 14 EPA might not act to limit rocket fuel in drinking water

By ERICA WERNER, Associated Press Writer

Tue May 6, 2:58 PM ET

WASHINGTON – An EPA official said Tuesday there’s a “distinct possibility” the agency won’t take action to rid drinking water of a toxic rocket fuel ingredient that has contaminated public water supplies around the country.

Democratic senators called that unacceptable. They argued that states and local communities shouldn’t have to bear the expense of cleansing their drinking water of perchlorate, which has been found in at least 395 sites in 35 states – or the risk of not doing so.

The toxin interferes with thyroid function and poses developmental health risks, particularly to fetuses.

6 pm 15 Indiana nuns lacking ID denied at poll by fellow sister

By DEBORAH HASTINGS, AP National Writer

1 minute ago

About 12 Indiana nuns were turned away Tuesday from a polling place by a fellow sister because they didn’t have state or federal identification bearing a photograph.

Sister Julie McGuire said she was forced to turn away her fellow members of Saint Mary’s Convent in South Bend, across the street from the University of Notre Dame, because they had been told earlier that they would need such an ID to vote.

The nuns, all in their 80s or 90s, didn’t get one but came to the precinct anyway.

6 pm 16 U.S. military marriages strained by long deployments

By Claudia Parsons, Reuters

Tue May 6, 11:42 AM ET

FORT DRUM, New York (Reuters) – U.S. military chaplain Nathan McLean says he deliberately makes it difficult for young soldiers to get married because if they have to “jump through some hoops” the marriage is more likely to survive.

The U.S. Army has reported divorce rates rise with longer deployments in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. With one in five veterans of the two wars suffering mental health problems, the strain is taking its toll on military families.

“The more difficult it is for (young soldiers) to marry, typically the better it is for the family,” Capt. McLean said in an interview at Fort Drum, home of the 10th Mountain Division 2nd Brigade Combat Team, which has deployed four times since 2001.

6 pm 17 Senators told to tread carefully on health care

By Donna Smith, Reuters

1 hour, 3 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – With the presidential candidates fighting over how best to rein in soaring health care costs and cover the uninsured, a veteran of the last major U.S. health care reform battle urged lawmakers on Tuesday to build broad public support before embarking on any reform.

Donna Shalala, who served as Secretary of Health and Human Services under President Bill Clinton, told the Senate Finance Committee that public support for Clinton’s health reform effort in the early 1990s diminished as people with health insurance began to worry about what it would mean for their coverage.

The 1990s proposal also faced staunch opposition from the health care industry, which launched a series of television ads that helped doom the plan.

Entertainment 1

6 pm 18 Studios, actors near new deadline in contract talks

By Steve Gorman, Reuters

53 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The Screen Actors Guild and major studios entered a final day of contract talks on Tuesday before their latest self-imposed deadline to close a deal and put to rest Hollywood’s persistent labor anxieties.

The two sides opened formal negotiations on April 15 and have twice extended their talks in hopes of avoiding renewed unrest in an entertainment industry still recovering from a 100-day screenwriters strike that ended in February.

The parties announced last Friday that they would keep their talks going, as long as progress was being made, until 5 p.m. Friday, but neither side has ruled out extending the negotiations further if no deal is in place by then.

Business 7

6 pm 19 U.S. sees oil use down on weak economy and high prices

By Tom Doggett, Reuters

1 hour, 53 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Higher U.S. gasoline prices and a slowing economy will cut into U.S. oil demand through the summer driving season much more than previously thought, the government’s top energy forecasting agency said on Tuesday.

“Based on projections of weak economic growth and record high crude oil and product prices, (petroleum) consumption is projected to decline,” the Energy Information Administration said in its latest monthly forecast.

Thanks to rising crude oil costs, U.S. drivers will pay an average $3.66 a gallon for gasoline this summer, up 12 cents from earlier estimates, the Energy Department’s analytical arm said.

6 pm 20 Pelosi says more stimulus needed, Bush "in denial"

By Kevin Drawbaugh, Reuters

Tue May 6, 2:12 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday called for a second economic stimulus package and said President George W. Bush is “in denial” about the U.S. economy, drawing a sharp White House response.

Tax rebate checks are in the mail to millions of Americans under a $152 billion economic stimulus package passed by Congress earlier this year and signed into law by Bush.

“It’s clear there is a need for a second stimulus,” Pelosi, a California Democrat, told reporters at a news conference.

6 pm 21 Housing picture worsens as Fannie sees price drop

By MARCY GORDON, AP Business Writer

5 minutes ago

WASHINGTON – The outlook for the housing market darkened further Tuesday as the nation’s largest buyer of home mortgages said it racked up more than $2 billion in quarterly losses and forecast a steeper drop in home prices this year.

If Fannie Mae’s prediction proves true, the real estate woes could further shake the confidence of consumers already stung by rising food and fuel prices, and an anemic job market.

Home foreclosures are accelerating around the country, adding to the glut of unsold properties and further depressing prices. As a result, a growing number of homeowners are saddled with loans that outstrip the value of their houses.

6 pm 22 Oil nears Oil nears $123 on $200 oil prediction, supply concerns23 on  00 oil prediction, supply concerns

By JOHN WILEN, AP Business Writer

58 minutes ago

NEW YORK – Oil futures blasted to a new record near $123 a barrel Tuesday, gaining momentum as investors bought on a forecast of much higher prices and on any news hinting at supply shortages. Retail gas prices edged lower, but appear poised to rise to new records of their own in coming weeks.

A new Goldman Sachs prediction that oil prices could rise to $150 to $200 within two years seemed to motivate much of Tuesday’s buying, although a falling dollar and increasing concerns about declining crude production in Mexico and Russia contributed, analysts say.

The Energy Department raised its oil and gasoline price forecasts, but also predicted that high prices will cut demand more than previously thought.

6 pm 23 Stocks lift even as oil prices soar near Stocks lift even as oil prices soar near $123 a barrel23 a barrel

By MADLEN READ, AP Business Writer

8 minutes ago

NEW YORK – Wall Street reversed early losses to close higher Tuesday, as investors monitored the movements of record high oil prices but still laid bets that the economy and companies are in recovery mode.

Crude oil climbed to a record near $123 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange as traders, who have nearly doubled the price of oil over the past year, reacted to the weakening U.S. dollar, supply threats, and a note from Goldman Sachs & Co. predicting that oil could reach $200 a barrel. High oil prices threaten to crimp consumers’ discretionary spending.

But oil price sticker-shock waned and as investors looked past wider-than-expected quarterly losses at Swiss bank UBS, government-sponsored mortgage company Fannie Mae, and homebuilder D.R. Horton Inc.

6 pm 24 ADB to provide 500 million dollars to combat food crisis

by Denholm Barnetson, AFP

Tue May 6, 2:35 PM ET

MADRID (AFP) – The Asian Development Bank will provide 500 million dollars (320 million euros) in immediate assistance to member nations hit hardest by soaring food prices, the head of the bank announced Tuesday.

ADB President Haruhiko Kuroda said the bank would also double lending for agriculture in 2009 to 2.0 billion dollars to combat the crisis, which he has warned puts more than a billion people in the region at risk of malnutrition.

“I am pleased to announce that ADB will provide 500 million dollars as immediate budgetary support to the hardest hit countries so that they can bring food to the tables of the vulnerable, poor and needy,” he said.

6 pm 25 Thomson Financial News journalists to vote on strike

AFP

Tue May 6, 12:36 PM ET

LONDON (AFP) – Britain-based reporters at the Thomson Financial News wire service will vote on whether to strike following the creation of parent group Thomson Reuters, the main journalists’ trade union said Tuesday.

The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) said in a statement that its members at Thomson Financial News had called unanimously for a formal ballot to strike over possible redundancies and changes to their working conditions.

However, Thomson Reuters insisted in a separate statement that it had not made any decisions about staffing levels and pledged to consult with trade unions.

Science 4

6 pm 26 Historians seek public report on World War II forgeries

By GREGORY KATZ, Associated Press Writer

2 hours, 1 minute ago

LONDON – British historians called Tuesday for a public report on the inquiry into 29 forged documents found at the National Archives that falsely accuse Winston Churchill’s government of having a secret, cordial relationship with Nazi SS chief Henrich Himmler at the height of World War II.

Eight leading historians signed an open letter urging police to take action against the suspect who faked the documents, which also allege that Churchill ordered the assassination of Himmler to keep the discussions secret.

“That’s a blood libel against Churchill and totally untrue,” said historian Andrew Roberts, who signed the letter published in the Financial Times.

6 pm 27 Fishermen suspected after 6 sea lions are killed in Oregon

By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER, Associated Press Writer

58 minutes ago

PORTLAND, Ore. – There’s “protected” on paper and there’s “protected” on the river.

Under a 1972 federal law, certain species of sea lion cannot be harmed. But the Columbia River region is big enough, and parts of it are wild and isolated enough, to hide many sins.

That was clear over the weekend, when six protected sea lions were found shot to death with a high-powered rifle near the Bonneville Dam.

Suspicion immediately fell on fishermen, who have long complained bitterly that sea lions gobble up salmon at the base of the dam. But so far, investigators say they have no hard evidence as to who did it and why. And while rewards have been posted for arrests, there is talk of a defense fund for the gunmen if they are ever caught.

6 pm 28 Agencies issue plan to run Columbia dams, preserve salmon

By JEFF BARNARD, Associated Press Writer

2 hours, 19 minutes ago

GRANTS PASS, Ore. – The Bush administration Monday issued its final court-ordered plans for making Columbia Basin hydroelectric dams and irrigation projects safe for endangered salmon.

The proposed changes in operations would cost hundreds of millions of dollars but no dam removals.

Once an expected challenge is filed, it will be up to U.S. District Judge James Redden to decide whether the plans – known as biological opinions – meet the demands of the Endangered Species Act to put salmon on the road to recovery.

6 pm 29 Hey Yogi! Bears’ Picnic Basket Theft Secrets Revealed

LiveScience Staff, LiveScience.com

Tue May 6, 1:40 PM ET

A camper’s worst nightmare has become a homeowner’s reality for many: Bears that once rummaged around campsites now dive into suburban dumpsters and trash cans, munching on more than picnic snacks.

Many human-bear conflicts are caused by human food sources luring bears. Many more are caused by humans encroaching onto bear habitats.

In any case, scientists have wondered how animals learn to find and eat human food. Some researchers assumed bear cubs picked up this behavior from their mothers, but a new study may acquit mama bears.

Health 2

6 pm 30 ‘Invisible’ blockages hide women’s heart attacks: study

AFP

1 hour, 28 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Women suffer from “atypical” symptoms and “invisible” blood vessel blockages that may explain why they often receive less treatment for heart attacks than men, a study said Tuesday.

Women were twice as likely as men to have normal results for an exam of their blood vessels or results showing no blockage of more than 50 percent in a blood vessel, despite having a heart attack, the study found.

Other test results confirmed they were having a heart attack, according to the study published online in the journal Heart.

6 pm 31 Bone marrow treatments restore nerves, expert says

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor, Reuters

Tue May 6, 2:38 PM ET

BETHESDA, Maryland (Reuters) – An experiment that went wrong may provide a new way to treat multiple sclerosis, a Canadian researcher said on Tuesday.

Patients who got bone marrow stem-cell transplants — similar to those given to leukemia patients — have enjoyed a mysterious remission of their disease.

And Dr. Mark Freedman of the University of Ottawa is not sure why.

Bloglines 5

TPMMuckraker

6 pm 32 Today’s Must Read

By Paul Kiel

May 6, 2008, 10:13AM

Forget about the frustration at the slow pace of the military commissions at Guantanamo Bay. You know it’s got to really burn the administration to miss a good chance for a PR coup.

6 pm 33 Yoo, Feith, Ashcroft Agree to Testify

By Paul Kiel

May 6, 2008, 10:47AM

Earlier this morning, the House Judiciary Committee authorized a subpoena for David Addington…

6 pm 34 Lawsuit Mars Abu Ghraib Contractor’s PR Blitz

By Paul Kiel

May 6, 2008, 12:04PM

Cruelly, the lawyers for Emad al-Janabi, which include lawyers from the Center for Constitutional Rights, have used CACI’s own book against the company.

6 pm 35 FBI Raids Home, Office of Office of Special Counsel

By Paul Kiel

May 6, 2008, 1:13PM

To refresh your memory, Bloch’s agency is a little known one that is charged with investigating whistleblower complaints, Hatch Act violations, and the like — but who is himself being investigated for retaliating against whistleblowers and politicizing his office. The Office of Personnel Management’s inspector general has been conducting that investigation since 2005. The feds are apparently investigating whether Bloch tried to obstruct that investigation by deleting his hard drive, among other things.

6 pm 36 Pentagon Report on Iraq Debacle "Remains Classified"

By Paul Kiel

May 6, 2008, 3:54PM

Sanchez added: “From that, my belief was that Rumsfeld’s intent appeared to be to minimize and control further exposure within the Pentagon and to specifically keep this information from the American public.”

Gas Tax Holiday Could Become a Permanant Vacation

Ever since McCain and Clinton proposed and Obama opposed a Gas Tax Holiday, a proposal to repeal the 18.4 cent Federal tax on gasoline for the summer months, there has been near universal condemnation of the idea from a policy standpoint. There is another aspect though that is arguably worse. If enacted, the “holiday” would become a political football in the general election and runs the risk of becoming a permanent vacation.

Before getting into that, here is a little discussion of the policy debate. It can be skipped by those who have been following this issue closely.

Policy Considerations

The holiday is being proposed to supposedly give consumers a little relief from high gas prices that are reaching $4.00 per gallon, driven up largely by crude oil prices of $120 per barrel. The proposal has been widely panned. It is viewed as political pandering that will provide few if any benefits to consumers and create myriad other problems.

Consumers may not benefit since there is no assurance that much if any of the tax reduction will be reflected in price reductions at the pump. It is more likely that prices will remain at or near where they are today, and that elimination of the tax will have the effect of further lining the already bloated pockets of the oil industry.

Even if all of the tax relief was passed on to consumers the benefit would be very small, estimated between $30 and $70 per family. Those who argue that every little bit helps relieve the economic suffering of consumers and helps to spur the economy, lose sight of the fact that Congress already enacted a stimulus program providing most individuals and families between $300 and $1800 for the specific purpose of achieving those same two objectives.

Besides providing limited benefit consumers, opponents point out that the holiday will hurt the economy by increasing the budget deficit, enlarging the national debt, and/or reducing the funding available to rebuild our crumbling roads and bridges. On the fiscal issues, when we are running a deficit and have an outstanding debt, there are NO tax cuts. There are only deferred taxes that are imposed on our children and grandchildren. Regarding our infrastructure, now is the time to be spending more not less to rebuild our transportation infrastructure. Not only will it put people to work in this country but it will improve our productivity and spur future economic growth.

(Yes, Clinton couples her proposal with a windfall profits tax on oil companies. That is an excellent idea that should be enacted but it doesn’t really address the concerns about the tax holiday.)

Additionally, many argue that in a time of rising oil imports and increasing concern about environmental impacts, we should not be encouraging the consumption of gasoline. While high prices hurt, they may be the most effective way to reduce consumption and spur interest in high mileage and alternative fuel automobiles.

All of this has been discussed at length and forms the bases for the widespread opposition to the proposal among those who have studied it. But beyond these policy considerations there are big political downsides to the proposal.

Political Considerations, Now and Later

Clinton is championing the holiday because she thinks it will get her votes in the remaining primaries. Whether she is right remains to be seen. McCain apparently thinks it will burnish his image as a candidate with compassion for the economic straits of average voters that could help him in the general election. However, If supporting the holiday has political benefit today, that benefit will only translate to votes in the fall under one circumstance.

First, if the holiday is not enacted now, the question of whether or not a candidate supported it in the spring will have no impact on the general election campaigns. There will be no impact because the American people will have gone on with their lives and be looking to the future. They will not care about something that did not happen in the Spring and would be over with by then anyway. People will be dealing with the problems they are facing in the fall and judging candidates accordingly. There is one thing, though, that could change that calculus. A candidate could revive the idea and propose a tax holiday in the fall. That leads to the real political problem with the holiday.

If, God forbid, the tax holiday is enacted now, it will not die. As summer wanes there will be proposals to extend it for a period of months or maybe indefinitely. McCain will argue for the extension because he will consider the failure to do so as imposing a tax increase on consumers. We know that is how Republicans always package these things. They are doing it with the 2001 and 2003 Bush temporary tax cuts that are due to expire, and will certainly do the same with the gas tax. We will be mere months away from the general election and the ads will be a panderer’s delight. If the Democratic candidate does not support a continuation of the holiday, that candidate will be charged mercilessly with “wanting to raise your taxes.” No matter how bogus the policy arguments are, no candidate wants to subject themselves to that kind of attack.

Trying to rebut these types of attacks is tough enough when you are only facing the typical  type of fabricated charge that the Republicans always gin up against Democrats. This time, it will be much worse. In the fall voters will have become used to the world as it exists without the tax. They won’t know for sure whether the tax cut reduced their gas bills, but the Republicans will repeatedly claim that it saved them tons of money. Voters won’t see the impact of the tax cut on our deteriorating infrastructure and the slow cancer of the national debt. They will, however, see the prospect of the price of gas they pay at the pump increasing by 18.4 cents and will consider that when they cast their ballots. I fear that many will not look kindly on any candidate who supported that idea.

This tax holiday must not be enacted. It is terrible public policy. Moreover, passage of the holiday now could result in an effort to enact a permanent vacation in the fall. Such an effort could be a nightmare for our candidate in the general election.

Pon ye ye

I’m fine!  There, that’s out of the way.

Our journey today takes us from In Grid to Sugar Blue.

From the ‘Be careful what you click on Department’

An Italian Pop-Soul Singer covers Dylan in Warsaw:

Okay, so that’s not too good, an enthusiastic, but possibly really, really drunk crowd…..but I got curious, she’s very popular in Poland

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I…

So then you see one that says:  I Was a Ye Ye Girl.

Move to the ‘What’s New is Old Department’

(In Related Videos , there’s also Dracula Ye Ye  and Egyptian Reggae, but I’m trying to stay focused here on the Ye Ye Phenomenon)

Yé-yé was a style of pop music that emerged out of France and Québec in the early 1960s. Yeye means young, innocent, and cute.

le snip premier

The yeye movement had its origins in the radio programme “Salut les copains”, created by Lucien Morisse and hosted by Daniel Philippacci, which was first aired in December 1959. This program became an immediate success and one of its sections (“le chouchou de la semaine” / “this week’s sweetheart”) turned to be the starting point for most yeye singers. Any song that was presented as a chouchou went straight to the first places in the charts.

le snip deuxieme

Gainsbourg called France Gall the French Lolita, and, wanting to check to which extent her innocence was real, composed for her the song “Les sucettes” (“Lollipops”): “Annie loves lollipops, aniseed lollipops, when the sweet liquid runs down Annie’s throat, she is in paradise “. It is amazing to think that not even that video (with all those giant penis-like sucettes dancing around) rang a bell for poor France! She was finally told of the double meaning of the song and that is when her yeye period finished… Her innocence was gone and it took her some 5 years to sing again, now with a completely different style.

le snip troisieme

As mentioned above, the yeye movement was led by female singers, but that does not mean that there were not any yeye guys.

Link to France Gall doing Les sucettes due to content.  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

DO NOT REC THIS   Go re-read ucc and get really horny, then come back.

. . . Sometimes whole art forms become saturated with Camp. Classical ballet, opera, movies have seemed so for a long time. In the last two years, popular music (post rock-‘n’-roll, what the French call yé yé) has been annexed.

–Susan Sontag

http://interglacial.com/~sburk…

Welcome to Ye Ye Land

http://www.yeyeland.com/

It says Claudine Longet and Brigitte Bardot were considered Ye Ye.  

Yeah right.  But Claudine did marry Andy Williams

(linked due to explicit content)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…

AND THEN

later for being convicted for killing skiing star Spider Sabich.

it was only criminal negligence

The Aspen police made two enormous blunders which turned the tide for Longet.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C…

The incident of criminal negligence in the death of Sabich was the subject of a song written by Mick Jagger, which was ultimately cut from the 1980 Rolling Stones album Emotional Rescue, although copies have surfaced due to piracy over the years. “

Lyrics in the wikipedia link, but there’s other forgetable songs from the album.

Though generally considered (by me) a sucky Stones effort, it does have Sugar Blue on it

http://www.sugar-blue.com/home…

w/ Phish

Four at Four

  1. The Los Angeles Times reports Chinese firms are bargain hunting in U.S.

    Liu Keli… is investing $10 million in the Palmetto State, building a printing-plate factory that will open this fall and hire 120 workers. His main aim is to tap the large American market, but when his finance staff penciled out the costs, he was stunned to learn how they compared with those in China.

    Liu spent about $500,000 for seven acres in Spartanburg — less than one-fourth what it would cost to buy the same amount of land in Dongguan, a city in southeast China where he runs three plants. U.S. electricity rates are about 75% lower, and in South Carolina, Liu doesn’t have to put up with frequent blackouts.

    About the only major thing that’s more expensive in Spartanburg is labor. Liu is looking to offer $12 to $13 an hour there, versus about $2 an hour in Dongguan, not including room and board. But Liu expects to offset some of the higher labor costs with a payroll tax credit of $1,500 per employee from South Carolina.

    The jobs are low-paying and the state will not get tax revenue – instead that money will stay in China. In just under two decades, the United States has been successfully transformed into a third world nation – unable to respond to natural disasters, collapsing bridges and deteriorating infrastructure, no health insurance, and corrupt elections and public officials. More environmental laws will be rolled back next. It never used to be like this in the U.S.

    For years, investment between the U.S. and China flowed one way, with American firms spending billions in the Asian nation. But the Beijing government’s $5-billion stake in Morgan Stanley and $3-billion investment in the private equity firm Blackstone Group brought China’s overall investments in U.S. firms to $9.8 billion in 2007, up from $36 million the year before, according to Thomson Financial.

    By comparison, U.S. investment in China was $2.6 billion last year, down from $3 billion in 2006, said China’s Ministry of Commerce.

    China out-invested the U.S. last year by $7.2 billion. Or as Mei Xinyu, an economist at China’s Ministry of Commerce, reasoned of the depressed asset prices in a sluggish American economy: “They don’t want to miss this opportunity to bottom-fish in the U.S..” America – land of the bottom feeders.

Four at Four continues below the fold with DoJ v OSC, Guantánamo Briton, and why do they hate us?

  1. If you ever wanted to see a criminal gang turn on itself, then just watch the Department of Justice and Office of Special Counsel go after one another. NPR News reports the FBI searches Office of Special Counsel building. “FBI agents on Tuesday raided the offices of Special Counsel Scott J. Bloch, who oversees protection for federal whistleblowers, seizing computers and shutting down email service in an obstruction of justice probe… The Inspector General for the Office of Personnel Management has been investigating Bloch for more than two years. He allegedly retaliated against career employees and obstructed an investigation. He also admitted hiring the company “Geeks on Call” to purge his computer and two of his deputies’ computers. Bloch claimed the computers contained a virus; however, investigators are believed to suspect that he meant to destroy evidence.”

    But if Bloch’s name seems familiar, it probably does. As the dependable Paul Kiel at TPM Muckraker notes:

    To give you an idea how fraught this investigation is with unique issues, Bloch is not only busily investigating the White House for political briefings Karl Rove and his aides made to various agencies, but he’s also conducting an investigation of the politicization at the Department of Justice and issues related to the U.S. Attorney firings — a probe that he complained was being blocked by the DoJ. Of course, he can’t do much to block the DoJ investigation of him.

    Operation: Protect Karl at any cost?

  2. The Guardian reports Guantánamo Briton sues UK over ‘torture evidence’. “The last British resident left in Guantánamo Bay is suing the UK government for refusing to produce evidence that he was a victim of extraordinary rendition and torture. Binyam Mohamed faces a US military commission which could sentence him to death, and his lawyers say proving that the case against him is based exclusively on evidence extracted by torture, following his rendition by the CIA, is vital to his defence. Today, they lodged papers at the high court in London, seeking a judicial review to force the Foreign Office to release information on his movements.”

  3. Ever get the feeling that the U.S. isn’t wanted in Iraq? The Los Angeles Times reports Iraqi militia commanders harden stance toward U.S..

    It was sunset, and a pair of Iraqi soldiers were sitting in a roofless house by the Iranian border, awaiting orders. Suddenly, Abu Baqr recalls, his friend let out a gasp and fell silent, a sniper’s bullet in his forehead. Abu Baqr couldn’t help him, couldn’t move for fear of being shot. He lay beside his friend’s corpse until morning.

    “How would you feel after that?” Abu Baqr asked. “You come out of that, you only come out bad.”

    Abu Baqr, now a commander in the Mahdi Army militia of cleric Muqtada Sadr, blames Iran for what happened to his friend more than 20 years ago during Iraq’s war with Iran, just as he blames Saddam Hussein for that conflict.

    He still hates Iran. But now, he said, he accepts its weapons to fight the U.S. military, figuring he can deal with his distaste for the Iranians later. So he takes bombs that can rip a hole in a U.S. tank and rockets that can pound Baghdad’s Green Zone without apology or regret.

    “I think that the Iranians are more dangerous than the Americans. I hate them and I don’t trust them,” he said in an interview over soft drinks. But the militia has limited resources, he said, and “therefore, when somebody gives you or offers help, it’s hard to say no.”

    He laughed: “If it came from Israel, we would use it.”

    Sure it’s also a piece of ‘lets go to war with Iran’ propaganda, but these Iraqis really want the U.S. out of Iraq… as does the majority of Americans.

Lie to me and tell me everything is all right

( – promoted by buhdydharma )

Lie to me and tell me everything is all right

Lie to me and tell me that you’ll stay here tonight

Tell me that you’ll never leave,

oh and I’ll just try to make believe

that everything, everything you’re telling me is true

Lie to me.

-Johnny Lang

The Lie That Launched the 21st Century

Today we affirm a new commitment to live out our nation’s promise through civility, courage, compassion and character.

-George W. Bush’s 2001 Inaugural Address

 

One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we’ve been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. The bamboozle has captured us. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back.

-Carl Sagan

Bamboozled, Bamboozled, Bamboozled, Bam  Boo Zel Duh.  A strange and funny sounding word, almost innocent sounding actually. Kinda knocks the stink off of the word “lie”.

Come on Baby lie to me….

tell me everything is alright.

 

I have trouble lying to even 1 person (all the standard tells; look down and to the left, sweat like a hungover freshman taking a Statistics final on Monday morning…) , so how do these politicians stand up in front of millions and lie like used Edsel salesmen/women trying to make quota on the 31st of the month?

Perhaps they can rationalize it by thinking, “I’ll tell them what they want to hear and I can throw something together in the next 4 years.”

Come on Baby, lie to me

tell me everything is alright.

Or maybe, they just enjoy bamboozling the beejezus out of the rubes out there standing on the gym floors of America.  “Wow, they bought that one, I think I’ll try my sniper story and they will really, really love me.”

   He who permits himself to tell a lie once, finds it much easier to do it a second and third time, till at length it becomes habitual.

-Thomas Jefferson

And then we have the lying liars that are just befuddled, as in the case of John “I did not say that” McCain.


“Always tell the truth. That way, you don’t have to remember what you said.”

-Mark Twain

But what about the “Winds of Change” politician?

Here are some synonyms for “hope”;

             dream     dreamer     future     optimism     optimist

“Only lie about the future.”

-Johnny Carson

Promising a better future is not a lie until the promise is not kept someday down the road a piece, and that’s why we do this cockeyed roadtrip every 4 years. It’s a 50 state family vacation down the dirtiest of the dirt roads of America, pausing ever so often at The World’s 2nd Biggest Ball of Twine and other roadside distractions, occasionally attempting to see the bloody bodies of some hideous highway accident without appearing to rubberneck too conspicuously, listening to cloned radio stations where the only differences from town-to-town are the call signs (WFOX, WABC, WWSJ, WNYT), while the kids in the back seat scream, “Are we there yet?”  

“No, we are not there yet!” we shout over the beeping of low fuel warning indicator.  Do we have enough gas to get to Novemberville, do we even have enough money for more gas? The Bank of America card is near the limit and the only other plastic we’ve got is from The Bank of China and they’re raising the interest rates daily

Maybe we’ll make it….on fumes.

OR-Secretary of State: Meet Vicki Walker

(This is my opinion, and does not necessarily reflect that of DD, or of DD’s other writers)

We tend to pay less attention to down-ballot state races, as if their only real importance lies in the creation of strong political benches, a sort of stockpiling of talent for the future. Even so, just reading the names Katherine Harris and Kenneth Blackwell reveals that we do actually understand that Secretary of State is among the most important political jobs in the country. From the opposite end of the spectrum, Californians proved it, yet again, when Debra Bowen was elected, last year. Now, it’s Oregon’s turn.

A few years ago, it came to the attention of some Portland activists that Portland General Electric (or PGE- and not to be confused with California’s PG & E- Pacific Gas & Electric) had been charging rate-payers for its federal and state tax liabilities, even though it wasn’t actually paying the taxes. The Public Utilities Commission had given PGE a waiver. So, PGE was using false pretenses to over-bill its customers. In the amount of $150,000,000 a year! The total came to over $1,000,000,000! These activists thought it might be a good thing to stop this outrageous practice; so, they approached a prominent state legislator with the idea of passing a law that would forbid it, and that would require utilities to refund to ratepayers the money they were charged for taxes that the utilities did not pay- plus interest. The legislator didn’t want to do it. PGE is enormously wealthy and politically powerful. So powerful, in fact, that it had never suffered a legislative defeat! The activists approached a second legislator. A third. A fourth. A fifth. None had the political courage. The sixth legislator they approached was Vicki Walker, a state senator from a mostly rural Willamette Valley district that also includes Oregon’s second largest city, the university town of Eugene. Walker said she’d do it.

Oregon’s Democratic Governor, Ted Kulongoski, refused to take a stand on Walker’s effort. Even he lacked the guts to confront PGE. But Walker ushered the legislation through both the Senate and the House, and Kulongoski signed it into law. It was one of those extremely rare examples of a government standing up to a powerful special interest, on behalf of the people. And it was the first time PGE had ever been defeated in Oregon’s legislature! And Vicki Walker was singularly responsible for making it happen. And Oregon’s utilities tried to make her pay for it. Eugene’s popular mayor ran against her, in the next election. Eugene’s mayoral candidates need not declare party affiliation, so until this mayor challenged Walker, many of his constituents probably didn’t even know he was a Republican. So, he could run as a liberal Republican, a species with which Oregon actually has a long, and often happy, history. And needless to say, he was very well-funded. He was actually favored to win. And then they had their debate, and Walker was so much smarter, and so much better versed on the issues, that all the local media agreed she had soundly defeated him. And that turned the election, and led to her victory. Now, Oregon has the opportunity to bring her intelligence, integrity, and courage to state office.

The Oregon primary has several strong Democratic candidates, and one of Walker’s strongest opponents is one of the state senators who refused to even co-sponsor Walker’s bill that protected ratepayers from being bilked by the utilities. The choice could not be more clear. Walker has been endorsed by Portland’s Pulitzer Prize-winning alternative newspaper, Willamette Week:

Either Brown or Metsger could be a fine secretary of state, although neither has advanced many specific ideas about how to make the office perform better. And neither possesses the fiery energy of Sen. Vicki Walker. The Eugene Democrat has produced a 16-page booklet of ideas about how to remake the office. That thoroughness is no surprise.

Since entering the Legislature in 1999, Walker, a mild-mannered court reporter by day, has been a whirling dervish of activity, much of it directed at annihilating the status quo. Walker crusaded against mismanagement at the publicly owned workers’ compensation insurer, SAIF Corp. In that battle, she did what was then unthinkable for a Democrat: blasting former Gov. Neil Goldschmidt, whom SAIF was then paying $40,000 to lobby the Legislature. (Walker later tipped WW to Goldschmidt’s sexual abuse of a 14-year-old girl in the 1970s, leading to an exposé, “The 30-Year Secret, WW, May 12, 2004).

But Walker has done far more than challenge Goldschmidt: Along with Metsger, she authored Senate Bill 408 in 2005, a bill that plugged a billion-dollar tax loophole for utilities. She passed a bill that ended golden parachutes for school administrators and another that prohibits the state from entering into secret settlement agreements. Under her guidance, the state’s 75 auditors would crank up government accountability, and the hucksters and fast-buck artists who make a living from the initiative system would face a very determined elections cop.

And by the Eugene Register-Guard:

During the 2007 legislative session Walker was chairwoman of the Senate Education Committee, and can claim a share of the credit for Oregon’s progress toward restoring state funding for public schools. Through most of her legislative career, she has focused on narrower themes relating to consumer protection, workers’ rights and government accountability.

During her 10 years in Salem, Walker has not enlisted to march in anyone’s partisan army. Occasionally she proved her fearlessness, as when she opposed Neil Goldschmidt’s appointment to the state Board of Higher Education at a time when the former governor was still a Democratic kingpin. Walker would kiss no one’s ring – she objected to Goldschmidt’s embarrassingly lucrative lobbying work for the State Accident Insurance Fund, and later played a role in exposing his sexual abuse of a minor.

This independence would serve Walker well in statewide office. It’s likely that the next secretary of state will be given the task of redrawing legislative districts after the U.S. Census of 2010, a job that will require an immunity to the temptations of partisanship.

Walker has plans to improve the fairness of the initiative process, is eager to launch audits of state agencies, hopes to review the effectiveness of tax breaks and wants to increase the flow of revenues from state lands into the Common School Fund. In exercising each of the varied functions of the office, a willingness to buck powerful interests, including her party, would help Walker achieve her goals.

Vicki Walker is exactly the type of politician we all dream about having the chance to support. Now, we have that chance. Learn more about her here. And please donate! Mail-in ballots mean the vote has already begun.

Load more