Chafee improves gender gap appointment by 19%


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Of the more than 2,000 Rhode Islanders who serve on boards and commissions 677 are women. And of the 166 boards and commissions in state government there are 38 with entirely male membership.

But the gender gap in appointed government is actually getting much smaller under Lincoln Chafee, who was lauded today by the Women’s Fund of Rhode Island for increasing the percentage of female appointees from 15 percent when he took office to 34 today. Also of his six senior staffers, half are women.

The Women’s Fund celebrated Chafee’s improvements in a press event at the State House.

I am pleased to announce that the Governor continues to have a strong record of appointing women to cabinet level positions, state boards, and commissions. More than 75 percent of the boards we monitor have women serving on them,” said Marcia Coné, CEO of the Women’s Fund. “However, as we celebrate the improvements we have made, there are still some gaps.  While our intention is to increase the number of women who serve, the overarching goal of RIGAP and the Women’s Fund is to ensure there is diversity at the intersection of race, class, and gender on each and every board, commission, department, and within the administration senior staff. This will guarantee that our government remains inclusive and representative of the population.”

And made this info-graphic to go with it:

gap graphic

Will Raimondo return all her JP Morgan cash?


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wall street democratJP Morgan looks close to settling with the Justice Department, says the New York Times.   

JPM would pay $13 billion in penalties that follow from the bank’s shady mortgage lending, which helped to precipitate the financial crisis and make the lives of tens of millions of people completely miserable.  It would be the largest fine that a company has ever paid in a settlement with DOJ, but surely doesn’t go far enough.

Rhode Island was, of course, hit disproportionately hard by the financial crisis and the mortgage fraud that fomented it.  You might think that this would make local pols want to steer clear of association with the people and corporations who did all that terrible stuff to the Rhode Island electorate — but then you’d be wrong.

If politicians are expected to return funds taken years ago from an insurance fraudster who cost his victims a few tens of millions of dollars, then shouldn’t the same standard certainly apply to money from bankers who’ve helped cost the American economy several trillion dollars over the last 5-6 years?

So let’s call the question: How many JP Morgan execs has General Treasurer and Wall Street acolyte Gina Raimondo taken money from since she became State Treasurer?  Well, I don’t know!  Because I spent an hour or so counting them yesterday afternoon and then had to get back to doing some real work.  (Namely, this book salon over at firedoglake about that book I wrote/edited about the SOPA fight.)  Somebody should keep on looking, or maybe I’ll find more time to later.  Just go over here and search the filings for the word “morgan”.

But here’s a partial list of what I dug up during a skim of just a few of her most recent campaign finance filings.  These are not bank tellers, mind you: Bank tellers are fine people.  These are not fine people: These are the people who lead/led the company that’s on the verge of having the biggest settlement ever with the DOJ, because they engaged in rampant mortgage fraud and helped destroy our economy and the livelihoods of tens of millions of people.  Disproportionately in Rhode Island.

And they love Gina Raimondo and are bankrolling her political career!

-Jill Bickstein, Managing Director for Corporate Responsibility (sic)

-Cheryl Black, Managing Director

-Kelly Coffey, head of Diversified Industries Investment Banking

-Martha Gallo, Chief Compliance Office

-Eric Gioia, Vice President of J.P Morgan Chase’s private bank

-Karen Keough, chief state lobbyist

-E John Rosenwald, Vice Chairman Emeritus

-Peter Scher, Head of Corporate Responsibility (sic)

-Emily Seizer, Vice President for international affairs

-Richard Smith, Vice President

Reporters should consider asking if Raimondo will give back the money that she took from these people and their associates.  (Really, somebody please at least tweet the question at her a few times.  I don’t think she’ll respond to me.)

Ayaan Hirsi Ali stands with women, wars with Islam


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372px-Ayaan-Hirsi-Ali-VVD.NL-1200x1600I have the greatest respect for Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who details in her two autobiographical memoirs her brave escape from a life of religious oppression in Somalia to her eventual life as a United States citizen working for the conservative think tank American Enterprise International.

A staunch critic of Islam, Hirsi Ali has spoken out passionately against female genital mutilation, forced and arranged marriages of girls as young as ten years old, and the culture of violence that permeates radical Islam. However, her neo-con views on politics and war are troublesome, to say the least.

Hirsi Ali spoke at the Central Congregational Church in Providence Friday night as part of the Darrell West Lecture Series on Religion and Politics. The event was held under somewhat tight security and local police scrutiny because Hirsi Ali has lived under a fatwa, an Islamic sharia law decision, mandating her death due to a film she authored that was critical of Islam. The director of the film, Theo van Gogh, was murdered in the streets of Amsterdam by a man who shot him repeatedly, slit his throat and stabbed him.

The murder of her friend did not silence Hirsi Ali, but has instead motivated her to speak out even more forthrightly against Islam, though not always in the politically tactful or necessarily constructive way. Speaking to the libertarian magazine Reason, Ali called for the defeat of Islam:

Reason: Should we acknowledge that organized religion has sometimes sparked precisely the kinds of emancipation movements that could lift Islam into modern times? Slavery in the United States ended in part because of opposition by prominent church members and the communities they galvanized. The Polish Catholic Church helped defeat the Jaruzelski puppet regime. Do you think Islam could bring about similar social and political changes?

Hirsi Ali: Only if Islam is defeated. Because right now, the political side of Islam, the power-hungry expansionist side of Islam, has become superior to the Sufis and the Ismailis and the peace-seeking Muslims.

Reason: Don’t you mean defeating radical Islam?

Hirsi Ali: No. Islam, period. Once it’s defeated, it can mutate into something peaceful. It’s very difficult to even talk about peace now. They’re not interested in peace.

Reason: We have to crush the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims under our boot? In concrete terms, what does that mean, “defeat Islam”?

Hirsi Ali: I think that we are at war with Islam. And there’s no middle ground in wars. Islam can be defeated in many ways. For starters, you stop the spread of the ideology itself; at present, there are native Westerners converting to Islam, and they’re the most fanatical sometimes. There is infiltration of Islam in the schools and universities of the West. You stop that. You stop the symbol burning and the effigy burning, and you look them in the eye and flex your muscles and you say, “This is a warning. We won’t accept this anymore.” There comes a moment when you crush your enemy.

Reason: Militarily?

Hirsi Ali: In all forms, and if you don’t do that, then you have to live with the consequence of being crushed.

Hirsi Ali, to my knowledge, has never backed off from this rather extreme and militaristic claim. Indeed, when given multiple opportunities to walk back her comments by interviewer Roger van Bakel, she instead doubled down on them.

At her appearance in Providence, Hirsi Ali was more careful with her words, refraining, for instance, to repeat the statement, “If the Prophet Muhammad went to bed with a nine-year-old, then according to Dutch law he is a pedophile” and instead talked around her statement, while still conveying its full meaning to the audience. She also better defined her view of Islam, expanding somewhat on the differences between “religious” and “political” Islam as two different, yet intertwined points of view.

None of this controversy seemed on the minds of the 300 or so people who turned out to hear Hirsi Ali speak at the Central Congregational Church, most of whom knew Hirsi Ali from her books, where she portrays herself as a woman who has overcome great obstacles and escaped a life of religious oppression. The only controversy Hirsi Ali addressed during the one hour presentation was the Brown Daily Herald’s opinion column by Suzanne Enzerink that called into question the wisdom of an atheist, conservative anti-Islamist speaking in a liberal Christian Church. Enzerink maintained:

The location of her speech conflates the narrative and the surroundings too much. Holding her speech at a church introduces Christianity into a lecture that could otherwise have fairly straightforwardly engaged with why the political incarnations of Islam — think jihad and sharia law, though neither defines the world’s 1.6 billion Muslims —  are at odds with Western values and culture.

But because Hirsi Ali is speaking at a church, her message automatically comes to carry the stamp of religion. It seems to be delivered with the approval of a Christian institution, transforming the discussion into a clash of religions.

Hirsi Ali began her talk by directly acknowledging Enzerink’s critic but not answering it, saying that she was “…extremely comfortable as an atheist with a giant cross behind [her] to come and speak to you about what many people in the West find incredibly uncomfortable to speak about.”

This gets to the heart of my critique of Hirsi Ali’s politics. During her talk Hirsi Ali made the case that the Western European powers are dealing with a massive influx of Muslim immigrants who, rather than quickly assimilating into western culture, are instead forming small enclaves within which they are demanding special exceptions under the law regarding Islamic customs and Sharia Law. She specifically cites efforts by clerics to lower the legal age at which girls can enter marriage to fourteen and the establishment of secondary Sharia courts and educational systems for Muslim immigrants, and of course both of these are outrageous violations of human rights.

However, Hirsi Ali sees this as a problem with Islam, but not necessarily as a problem with religion itself. She very often gives a free pass to Christianity, even going so far as to say that oppressed Muslims should convert to Christianity because even though there are radical, oppressive Christian groups, these are not the kinds of Christianity she has seen. Note that she can talk about the defeat of Islam, and treat the religion as a monolithic enterprise, but is willing to give Christianity a break on its radicalism. I’m sure the gay population of Uganda, fighting to prevent their sexual identities from becoming a crime punishable by death due to extremist, United States based Christian proselytizing, would beg to disagree.

Hirsi Ali does not mind standing in front of a cross in a liberal Christian church, because in her view Christianity has become civilized under the Enlightenment, which is only somewhat true. The Christian religion is only acting more civilized today because it has been constrained by Enlightenment views. Note that Evangelicals and Catholics maintain dozens of organizations and pump millions of dollars into undermining the Enlightenment values of freedom of conscience and separation of church and state in an attempt to impose their religious views on the rest of us.

This is why women’s reproductive rights and the human rights of the LGBTQ community are under attack in the United States. This attack has nothing to do with Islam, radical or otherwise. The same goes for many of what most of us consider to be more trivial issues such as crosses popping up on public lands, prayer banners in schools, legislative prayer, “Choose Life” license plates funding religious anti-abortion centers, and the faux “holiday tree” controversy during the “War on Christmas.”

During her talk Hirsi Ali said that secular America, with it’s long, proud tradition of separating church and state, stands as a model for how the Western European powers should deal with the cultural invasion of Islam, and I agree. However, the United States did not achieve whatever level of success it has had in this regard by favoring Christianity over its cultural competitors. The favoring of Christianity in our culture counts as a failing, not standing up for our Enlightenment values.

Every time we carve out exceptions for religion, whether it be churches not paying taxes, clergy leading our legislator in prayer, the insertion of “under God” into the Pledge of Allegiance or special religious exceptions for religious institutions under the Affordable Care Act, we are carving out special exceptions for theocracy. When Muslim clerics see these kinds of exceptions being made, they are perfectly right to demand similar exceptions for their religious views, if for no other reason than fairness.

Under theocracy, people suffer. Gays, apostates, unbelievers, women and children are brutalized under all theocracy, whether the theocracy is Christian, Jewish, Islamic, Buddhist or any other religion in nature. When religious privileges are given to religions that are not our own, we recognize the injustice and if we feel that the religious privileges granted to one religion are somehow superior to religious privileges granted to another then we are engaging in religiously based bigotry.

Maryam Namazie, human rights activist and another Muslim woman apostate called Hirsi Ali out on the neo-con roots of her positions when she said,

As an atheist herself, Ayaan must know full well that all religions are misogynist. How can one advocate for others what one does not want for oneself?

Also as I have said a million times before, Christianity only seems tamer because it has been dealt with by an enlightenment. To the degree it has been weakened – that is the degree to which people and women have more freedoms and rights. It’s not because of Christianity but because of the resistance against it.

A minimum precondition to safeguard women’s rights is secularism – the separation of religion from state, educational system and judicial system. But then I guess Ayaan can’t really say that because that would be like advocating Marxism amongst her friends.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a bestselling author and a high profile speaker to bring to the Darrell West Lecture Series, and has the ability to, as they say, put butts in the pews, but her views on Islam are clouded by her conservative and militaristic values. Hirsi Ali’s advice for dealing with radical Islam is a moral and human rights dead end. A more enlightened Enlightenment view can be found in the works of Maryam Namazie or Sikivu Hutchinson, to name just two prominent atheist women of color.

Darrell West, please take note.

Carpetbagger gun advocates seek to overturn 2012 election


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The Exeter Four, left to right: Cal Ellis, Bill Monahan, Council President Arlene Hicks and Bob Johnson.
The Exeter Four, left to right: Cal Ellis, Bill Monahan, Council President Arlene Hicks and Bob Johnson.

The Exeter Board of Canvassers has certified that the Cranston-based RI Firearms Owners’ League has succeeded in getting enough signatures – over 600, or roughly 10% of the number of people who voted in recent Exeter elections – to force a special recall election against four sitting Town Council members. The four targeted members just happen to be Democrats, and nearly all of the petition organizers are Republicans.

“They’re trying to overturn the results of the 2012 election,” said Town Council member Bob Johnson. “They told people things that weren’t true and many voters have told me they felt they were tricked into signing.”

At issue: the vote by the Exeter Town Council on a resolution asking the General Assembly to designate the RI State Police as the agency that would issue concealed carry firearms permits in Exeter, and Exeter alone.

The reason: Exeter is the only one of Rhode Island’s cities and towns that does not have its own police force; the RI State Police perform that function in Exeter. The only “police” official in town is the honorary Town Sergeant, an older gentleman who doesn’t use a computer.

Because of the unique lack of a town police force, Exeter lacks the ability to conduct the required background check to issue a concealed carry permit. The only “police” official in town is the honorary Town Constable, an elderly gentleman who doesn’t know how to use a computer. The Town Clerk does not have access to the proper databases to conduct background checks.

The decision by the Council majority to ask the legislature to transfer that responsibility to the same agency that does the town’s policing – the State Police – was characterized by the Cranston-based Firearms Owners’ League as an attack on gun owners’ rights and a dishonorable surrender of Exeter’s sovereignty rights. Incidentally, the legislation sought by the Exeter Council did not get out of committee.

Johnson asserts the Town Council resolution was neither an attack on lawful gun owners’ rights nor a surrender of the town’s rights. “I support gun rights. I’m a gun owner myself. We just wanted to make sure that concealed carry permits were properly issued.”

But no good deed or sensible act goes unpunished.

The RI Firearm Owners’ League set up a front group as a political action committee called “We the People of Exeter.” Except it isn’t. The headquarters of the group is Fiskeville, which is in Cranston.

The head of the group is Glenn Valentine, who is not an Exeter resident. Included among the founders of “We the People of Exeter” are Raymond Bradley III who lives on South County Trail in Charlestown, David Elkeland of Newport and Roger Swann of Hopkinton.

Only three actual Exeter residents are listed as officials of “We the People of Exeter:” Joseph St. Lawrence, Lance Edwards and former state Senator Frank Maher.

Frank Maher (R), as you may recall, represented the northern end of Charlestown, as well as Richmond and Exeter, for two terms before being soundly beaten by current Senator Catherine Cool Rumsey (D).

Frank Maher’s two terms were marked by negligible accomplishments. He was best known for a bill he sponsored to lighten the penalties on criminals who use crossbows in the commission of violent crimes. Maher also sponsored legislation to eliminate the three knock-down rule in boxing, apparently preferring to have fighters beat each other’s brains out.

Maher is listed as the Treasurer of “We the People of Exeter.”

The radical nature of the recall petition and lies told about the Exeter Council’s effort to resolve the concealed carry background check problem has all the hallmarks of a Doreen Costa campaign.

Costa is a Tea Party Republican (“Teapublican”) who is in her second term in the state House of Representatives representing primarily North Kingstown, but also a part of Exeter. Costa has championed Tea Party causes and fashions herself as a Little Rhody version of Sarah Palin, right down to her unconditional love of guns and complete disdain for gun regulation, however sensible.

So far, Costa has not come out publicly in the Exeter recall, but her fingerprints are all over it.

Perhaps Costa is too embarrassed to weigh in publicly, since she actually agreed with the Town Council majority in November 2011 that the Town Clerk should not be issuing concealed carry permits. Where is Costa on the issue now, some Exeter folks are wondering?

Costa has sponsored six bills for the RI Firearm Owners’ League.

Now that the Exeter petitions have been certified, the Board of Canvassers must set an election date to occur within 20 to 60 days. Most likely, the recall election will be held in December.

If voters vote YES for the recall of any of the four targeted Democratic Council members, they will be replaced by the next-highest vote-getter.

The four Democrats defeated three Republicans in 2012 to win their seats. If all four Democrats are recalled, the three Republicans they defeated in 2012 will take their seats and will then appoint a fourth person – with no voter input – to fill the fifth seat.

There are so many things wrong with this picture. First, there’s the ability of a non-resident group to run an ideologically-centered campaign to topple Exeter’s 2012 election. There’s the twisted, if not flat out false, language that was used in the recall petition and the lies that were told to voters when they were asked to sign.

The spokespeople for the gun owners’ PAC say the recall was necessitated because the Council majority did not listen to the will of the people. Yet, the attacks against the Council’s attempt to seek a rational gun permit background check was mounted primarily by people from outside of Exeter seeking to make an ideological point.

Supporters of the targeted Exeter Town Council members are gearing up to fight, fully intending to battle the recall and win the recall election.

They’ve set up a website called SaveExeter.org. Go to that website and click on the documents to see for yourself what this recall is really all about.

This kind of radical, anti-democratic (small d) attack on the integrity of the electoral process is dangerous and must be stopped. If you would like to help, you can contribute by clicking here, or contact SaveExeter if you want to volunteer to help.

(Ed. note: This post originally appeared on Progressive Charlestown blog. Thanks to Will Collette for thinking to share it with us. Also, full disclosure, Exeter Town Councilor Cal Ellis was a teacher of mine in high school, as was his wife, Lois Ellis, who owns the famous Scailo Bros. bakery on Atwells Ave.)