Chick-fil-A Supporter Allen West Comes to RI


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(Photo courtesy of Domestic Divapalooza)

Let’s hope that when hate-spewing Allen West, a Florida congressman known for his intolerance, comes to the Ocean State for a 1,000-per-person GOP fundraiser on Saturday, he doesn’t threaten to open a Chick-fil-A, like he did on a recent trip to Chicago.

Yep, Rhode Island Republicans cordially invite the Chick-fil-A’s favorite congressman to the Ocean State this weekend to raise money for, among others, self-proclaimed moderate Brendan Doherty (Sorry Brendan, that dog’s not gonna bark anymore). 

Since we, most fortunately, don’t have a Chick-fil-A, maybe should host our same sex kiss in at this fundraiser?

West and RI Republicans will be at Capriccio’s from 4 to 6 p.m. on Saturday and after that it’s off to Providence Prime, a swanky Federal Hill steakhouse.

Here’s the video of West talking up Chick-fil-A.

Of course, once he started getting flack for it, said he was only kidding … but look at this list of other notable West “lowlights” compiled by the RI Democratic Party:

“I believe, for personal security, every American should go out and have to buy a Glock .9-millimeter.”

http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/your-world-cavuto/2012/07/05/rep-west-fired-over-government-overregulation#ixzz22Ol0KWKS

He wrote the angry unprofessional email to Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Shultz last summer and had an outburst over her in the U.S. House. He said the Democratic National Committee chairwoman is “the most vile, unprofessional, and despicable member of the US House of Representatives.”

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/07/21/allen-west-s-anger-toward-women-feud-with-debbie-wasserman-schultz.html

http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/172427-rep-west-blasts-wasserman-schultz-as-despicable-in-email

He said that women who represent Planned Parenthood or who work in groups to prevent violence against women are ‘neutering’ men. (This was at a Women Impacting Nation meeting in Boca Raton, FL):

“….strengthen up the men who are going to the fight for you. To let these other women know on the other side — these planned Parenthood women, the Code Pink women, and all of these women that have been neutering American men and bringing us to the point of this incredible weakness — to let them know that we are not going to have our men become subservient. That’s what we need you to do.”

http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2011/04/25/161001/allen-west-liberal-women/

http://www.theroot.com/buzz/allen-west-american-men-neutered-liberal-women

He compared being gay to picking an ice cream flavor:

“No. I like chocolate chip ice cream and I will continue to like chocolate chip ice cream. So there’s no worry about me changing to vanilla.”

“You cannot compare me and my race to a behavior. Sexuality is a behavior. And so yeah, I said I can’t change my color. People can change their sexual behavior. And I’ve seen people do that.”

http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/news/politics/broward/blog/2011/08/allen_west_on_the_economy_gays.html

He said that a good percentage of Democrats are members of the Communist Party:

“I believe there’s about 78 to 81 members of the Democrat Party who are members of the Communist Party. … It’s called the Congressional Progressive Caucus.”

http://www.politifact.com/florida/statements/2012/apr/11/allen-west/allen-west-says-about-80-house-democrats-are-membe/

He joked to his wife, when talking about voting for a bill that would allow hospitals to turn away women seeking abortions, even if the abortion would save her life:

“Did you know that I voted to let you die?”

http://www.womenarewatching.org/article/allen-west-jokes-about-let-women-die-act

http://thinkprogress.org/health/2011/10/12/341070/house-gop-proposes-so-called-let-women-die-bill-that-lets-hospitals-deny-life-saving-care/

Said Social Security is modern-day slavery because people are “dependent” on it:

“[Obama] does not want you to have self-esteem…He’d rather you be his slave.”

http://articles.latimes.com/2012/jul/02/news/la-pn-allen-west-accuses-obama-of-wanting-americans-to-be-his-slave-20120702

Gays in military will lead to “break down”

“when you take the military and you tell it they must conform to the individual’s behavior, then it’s just a matter of time until you break down the military,” according to the Tampa Tribune.

http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/riptide/2011/07/allen_west_says_its_just_a_mat.php

Says Obama administration too “tolerant” of Muslims who are terrorists:

“We’re showing tolerance, which will lead to cultural suicide”

http://twg2a.wordpress.com/2012/07/04/allen-west-military-infiltration-part-of-stealth-jihad/

Says racism is over and people who say it exists are doing it out of desire to “instill fear” or because they have “angst:”

“Institutional racism in the United States of America is gone.”

“… 85-95 percent, we don’t see race any more… and I don’t think we do. I don’t think you see race when you go to football games, I don’t think you see race when you go to entertainment events, movies or what have you. I don’t think that we see race in politics. I think there are people out there are trying to manipulate that word racism so that they can instill a fear and instill a sort of um angst, to get people to believe and stir them up and come out to take a side, which, that really doesn’t exist, yet we have people that want to create these chasms. I call it balkanization…and that’s not really what America is about.”

http://newsone.com/778985/tea-partys-allen-west-institutional-racism-is-dead/

Progress Report: MacKay on Marriage Equality; Regunberg on Ravitch; Paul Krugman on Presidential Politics


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The marshy headwaters of Greenwich Cove known as the Dish. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Saying there are too few profiles in courage at the State House, Rhode Island’s best political pundit tells why civil unions didn’t work here, as well as offering some wisdom to elected officialswho might settle for the status quo rather than pushing for change.

“Sometimes when one walks down the middle of the street in politics, he or she gets hit by both sides,” wrote RIPR’s Scott MacKay. “This is precisely what happened with civil unions.”

Certainly this is what happened to House Speaker Gordon Fox, who I think saw that writing on the wall and recently said he’d push harder for marriage equality next session. That combined with the fact that the rest of the country is coming to see the social value in supporting same sex marriage at epic speeds (h/t @tednesi), and we’ve got the right ingredients to get this done in 2013.

It all depends on how stubborn Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed and Senator Michael McCaffrey, who chairs the judiciary committee, decide to be on the issue.

McCaffrey, for his part, has to run for reelection against Laura Pisaturo, a very electable former assistant attorney general who also happens to be a lesbian. I’m dying to see this debate.

Speaking of Scott MacKay’s wisdom … on Political Roundtable this morning he said legislators would be wise to reinstate the money they and former Gov. Don Carcieri took away from them.

Another issue that heating up here in Rhode Island is public education reform, and leading that charge this week has been a letter to Diane Ravtich about a Rhode Island program to train new teachers that doesn’t seem to be meeting students needs. Aaron Regunberg posted her letter here and wrote more about it for GoLocal this morning.

Best lede of the day: “Attention, criminals: There are no more marijuana plants to steal at 12 Hyat St. in Olneyville.” Turns out the pot farmers who lived there had been robbed 17 times in five years, so they have decided to relocate. The Projo didn’t publish their new address, but I’m guessing that moving truck might just have someone tailing it to the garden’s new locale.

Effects of voterID laws: “2.7 million living people who voted in 2008 have since been purged from the voter rolls.”

Here’s how Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman sizes up 2012 presidential politics: “There has been plenty to criticize about President Obama’s handling of the economy. Yet the overriding story of the past few years is not Mr. Obama’s mistakes but the scorched-earth opposition of Republicans, who have done everything they can to get in his way — and who now, having blocked the president’s policies, hope to win the White House by claiming that his policies have failed.”

Awesome tweet: @benschwartzy: KFC v Chick-Fil-A — gay marriage deserves a better battleground. Are we going to settle immigration at Chipotle?

Happy birthday, Uriah Stevens.

Tales of the Unemployment Crisis: Elaine’s Dilemma


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Elaine is a born-and-raised Rhode Islander who has been unemployed for four years now. Her story, like the stories of so many others, is a product of the housing market crash.

For many years, Elaine worked at a title company doing real estate closings. Their biggest client was Countrywide, so when that corporation went under her company lost almost half its business. This was particularly frustrating to Elaine, whose position had allowed her to get an inside look at the makings of the housing bubble. “Working with mortgage companies,” she says, “you see the other side. You see how loan officers are in it for themselves, not for the customers. They were making too much money to care whether people could afford the mortgages or not.”

In the summer of 2008 her employer cut back her hours, and at the end of August she was called into the boss’s office. “The owner told me they couldn’t afford my salary. He said if they get new clients, they’d try to bring me back. But come November, the writing was on the wall. We weren’t going back.”

So Elaine became unemployed at the end of the summer. “Then,” she says, “the job hunt started. It was tough. You send all these resumes out and hear nothing back. Most ads say you shouldn’t follow up, and they don’t follow up, so you’re caught in this limbo land.” Elaine had to make a lot of lifestyle changes to scrape by. “Even when you’re lucky enough to have unemployment benefits, you’re moving from a salary to half of that salary, and then taxes out of that. If I hadn’t moved back to my parents’ home to help my father after his surgery, I’d have been homeless. My parents were really my saving grace—I could never have afforded my own place on the U.I. money I got. And I was making a lot of money before I was laid off; folks who were on lower incomes than I was, I have no idea how they do it.”

Then, something great happened. “The following summer I received a letter from Unemployment saying I may qualify for a tuition waiver. I thought, ‘Why not prepare myself for a new career while I look for jobs?’ So I started taking classes at URI in labor relations, and got my certificate.” For Elaine, this waiver was a godsend, and a perfect example of a positive and effective government program to help with unemployment. “Thank god for the waiver,” she says. “Otherwise I wouldn’t have been able to afford to go back to school. It was the best thing I ever got; it allowed me to get into classes that will hopefully give me opportunities in the future.”

After finishing the certificate program, Elaine was lucky enough to get a graduate assistant position in her department, which allowed her to finish her degree and graduate. But even with her new degree, the job search continues to be brutal. “Even now I send out maybe five to ten resumes a day,” Elaine says. “Entry-level jobs, management jobs, government jobs, union jobs, whatever’s out there that my skills could add value to. It’s very depressing when you have no communication as to where you stand in the whole application process. Less than 10% of companies actually get back to me. You wonder, do they think I’m overqualified now, with my degrees? I have a double-major bachelor’s degree, a law degree from before my real estate career, and a master’s degree. Maybe they think they’ll have to pay you more, because of those qualifications, but I will take whatever salary they’ll offer.”

“It makes you reevaluate yourself,” she continues. “It attacks your self-worth. You ask, ‘What is wrong with me that I can’t get a job?’ You have to remind yourself, ‘No, it’s not me, there just aren’t jobs here.’”

Elaine has been applying to jobs outside of Rhode Island, but she does so with a very heavy heart. “I’ve been unemployed for four years. I don’t have any benefits now, zero income whatsoever coming in. So you have to be willing to leave the state. But it’s hard, particularly with my father, who is not well. And my mother was just in the hospital with a life-saving surgery. They’ve always been there for me. When I had a bad car accident, and I had to learn how to walk again, they were the ones who helped me through. So to move away from them now…it makes me wonder who they’ll have. My brother’s already out of state. And if I had a new job outside of Rhode Island, and something happened to them, would I be able to get back to help them? Would I have the money for a plane ticket? My parents don’t want me to take that into consideration in taking a job.” Elaine sighs. “And I can’t.”

“I want to get a job, any job,” she continues. “There’s a misconception that people on Unemployment are lazy and don’t want to work. But you don’t realize how hard it is to not have somewhere to go every day. I fill my time with volunteering, but it’s incredibly difficult. I hate not working. If you don’t use your skills, there’s the potential to lose them. All we want is to get a job, to be productive. But we can’t seem to manage even that.”