New EPA rule will be boon for RI renewable energy sector


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A coal-fired power plant in West Virginia. (Creative Commons)
A coal-fired power plant in West Virginia. (Creative Commons)

Rhode Island’s renewable energy industry is sure to benefit from the EPA’s new Clean Power Plan, said Abel Collins, program director of the Rhode Island chapter of the Sierra Club.

“The new EPA Carbon Rules are great news for Rhode Islanders, because the coal burning fire plants in the Midwest that have been poisoning our air for decades will either be closed down or cleaned up, preferably shuttered for good,” Collins said. “That will mean significant public health benefits, healthcare savings, and that’s even before we look at the climate impacts. Rhode Island’s economy is poised to capitalize on renewable energy development, and the planet will be better for it.”

Seeking a 30 percent cut in power plant emissions by 2030, the New York Times called President Obama’s executive order that the EPA tighten regulations on coal-based power plants “one of the strongest actions ever taken by the United States government to fight climate change.” It’s called the Clean Power Plan.

State Rep. Art Handy, primary sponsor of the Resilient RI bill that would develop a plan to address climate change said:

“While there has been much hand wringing about the new rule from the coal industry and their allies about these reasonable new rules, the truth is they will spur innovation in clean energy and efficiency, prevent thousands of deaths and millions of asthma attacks and will move our country in the right direction to reduce the impact of climate change on our economy and our society. Rhode Island with other northeastern states already started on this path with the successful RGGI program – the new rules will bring the rest of the country along with what we have been working towards for years.”

Channing Jones, campaign director of Environment Rhode Island said: “This announcement is exactly what we’ve been waiting for. EPA’s announcement is a huge win for the health of our families and our environment.”

He added, “The dirty energy companies that oppose this move may question the science and predict economic apocalypse if we act. They can make up whatever claims they want. But a cleaner, more energy-efficient economy and environment is not going to undermine our prosperity. In fact, our kids’ future depends on it.”

Jones’ comments echoed a post Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse wrote for Vice News, published Sunday night:

Sight unseen, the polluters have been characterizing the rules as part of a “war on coal” that will kill jobs and impose unfair costs on industry. Don’t believe them.

Their claims are exaggerated at best, and flat-out lies at worst — and they look at only one side of the ledger, ignoring the effects of carbon pollution on the rest of us.

The EPA proposal, according to Vox “will set different emissions targets for each state — which, when taken together, will aim to cut carbon-dioxide emissions from the nation’s power sector as much as 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.” After a one-year period to finalize and tweak the new rule, Rhode Island and other states will have until June 2016 to develop a plan to reduce emissions. “States will be given a variety of options for cutting their emissions — using more efficient technology at coal plants, boosting their use of solar or wind or nuclear power, or even joining regional cap-and-trade systems that require companies to pay to emit carbon-dioxide.”

President Obama on Voter ID and voter suppression


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Obama National Action NetworkOn Friday afternoon President Obama was in New York City speaking at the National Action Network’s annual convention about Voter I.D. bills and Republican led efforts to restrict voting rights. Here in Rhode Island, of course, efforts to restrict voting rights with Voter I.D. laws have been lead by Democrats, and at the Senate Judiciary Committee meeting held on Thursday night, one day before Obama’s appearance in New York, state Senators Metz, Lombardi and Raptakis were quite vocal in their defense of the law, despite the steady stream of human rights groups that testified for its repeal.

Contrasting the opinions of the Democratically controlled Rhode Island State Senate with those of President Obama demonstrates how out of sync Rhode Island politics have become.

Had President Obama testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee using the words he spoke in New York, the conversation might have gone something like this. (All quotes come directly from Obama’s New York speech.)

Every American citizen must have an equal right to vote. Voting is a time when we all have an equal say. Black or white, rich or poor, man or woman, doesn’t matter. In the eyes of the law and in our democracy, we’re all supposed to have that equal right to cast our ballot to help determine the direction of our society. The principle of one person, one vote is the single greatest tool we have to redress an unjust status company.

But, says Senator Raptakis, if even one person votes under false pretenses, doesn’t that undermine our electoral process? The President agrees.

Yes, we’re right to be against voter fraud. We don’t want folks voting that shouldn’t be voting. Let’s stipulate to that as the lawyers say. But there is a reason why those who argue that harsh restrictions on voting are somehow necessary to fight voter fraud are having such a hard time proving any real widespread voter fraud. So I just want to give you some statistics. One recent study found only ten cases of alleged in person voter impersonation in 12 years. Ten cases. Another analysis found that out of 197 million votes cast for federal elections between 2002 and 2005, only 40 voters out of 197 million were indicted for fraud. For those of you who are math majors, as a percentage, that is 0.00002%. That’s not a lot. So let’s be clear: the real voter fraud is those that try to deny our rights by making arguments about voter fraud.

Senator Metz takes the microphone and tells the President that he has heard anecdotal evidence to the effect that voter fraud has been attempted and taken place. The President is not convinced by anecdotal evidence, because such evidence is useless in determining public policy. Obama counters the unsubstantiated claims of Senator Metz with a fresh dose of reality.

In some places women could be turned away from the poll just because they’re registered under their maiden name but their driver’s license has their married name. Senior citizens are told they cannot vote until they come up with the right I.D. About 60% of Americans don’t have a passport. Just because you don’t have the money to travel abroad doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be able to vote here at home.

Now the Senators are getting annoyed. They don’t want to hear logical arguments and ethics. They want to solve imaginary problems and ensure their reelections. It is suggested that repealing the Voter I.D. law will send the signal that voter fraud is somehow okay in Rhode Island. Obama looks confused, and decides to explain his position in such a way that even a Rhode Island State Senator might understand.

It is wrong, deadly wrong, to deny any of your fellow Americans the right on vote. It’s wrong to it make citizens wait for five, six hours just to vote. It’s wrong to make a senior citizen who no longer has a driver’s license jump through hoops to exercise the right she has cherished for a lifetime. Americans did not sacrifice for the right to vote only to see it denied to their kids and their grandchildren.

There are a whole bunch of folks out there who don’t vote for me, didn’t vote for me, don’t like what I do. The idea that I would prevent them from exercising their franchise makes no sense. Black or white, man or woman, urban, rural, rich, poor, Native American, disabled, gay, straight, Republican or Democrat, voters who want to vote should be able to vote.

Period. Full stop.

You can watch President Obama’s full speech below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3rjGh1QK4gk

Cicilline, Langevin oppose ‘fast-tracking’ TPP free trade agreement


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tppThe Trans-Pacific Partnership, a proposed 12 nation free trade agreement that’s been nicknamed “NAFTA on steroids” between the US, Canada, Japan and others, has the American left – if not mainstream America yet – on high alert for two reasons.

One reason is that so-called “free trade” agreements and organizations like the TPP, NAFTA and the WTO benefit big business rather than regular Americans.

“Global health advocates, environmentalists, Internet activists and trade unions have deep concerns about what the deal might contain, and are making as much noise as possible in order to influence negotiations before a final version becomes public,” according to a Washington Post Wonkblog post from December.

And the other reason is that the final version could win congressional approval without ever becoming public. President Obama has been seeking what is called “fast track authority” which would stifle lawmakers ability to amend the deal.

That’s why Congressmen David Cicilline and Jim Langevin, along with 150 House Democrats, signed a letter saying the TPP it should not be fast tracked.

“I believe it is too important an issue for Congress to be bypassed with fast-track authority,” Langevin said in an email to RI Future. “The TPP is far-reaching, affecting economics, intellectual property, the environment, health care and so much more, and as such, it merits a transparent, measured discussion between the Administration and members of Congress.”

Added Congressman David Cicilline: “Using trade promotion authority to ‘fast track’ complex trade agreements restricts Congress’s ability to ensure trade policies are fair for American workers, businesses, intellectual property holders, and consumers. Congress should have a say in crafting trade agreements, which impact U.S. workers and our economy.”

While details of the TPP are still shrouded in secrecy, there is some evidence that the free trade agreement could have a particular impact on an industry important to Rhode Island’s economy. According to the International Business Times (emphasis mine): “The U.S. has its own issues about opening up certain industries, too, such as removing sugar import tariffs and quotas that would harm American sugar beet farmers. The U.S. is also facing the sensitive prospect of inflicting harm on domestic textile and seafood producers in the negotiating process.”

But the Left in general fears the deal because, like NAFTA, it could put American workers in peril and would probably have adverse effects on environmental protections as well. According to the Economist: The “21st-century” aspects of TPP are “behind-the-border” issues, such as intellectual-property protection, environmental and labour standards, the privileges of state-owned enterprises and government-procurement practices. All are problematic.”

And then there are the provisions of the TPP that should raise ire in every American. According to the Electronic Frontier Foundation: “Leaked draft texts of the agreement show that the [intellectual property] chapter would have extensive negative ramifications for users’ freedom of speech, right to privacy and due process, and hinder peoples’ abilities to innovate.”

EPA’s McCarthy says Obama may use executive order to regulate CO2


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Obama SOTU 14 Since President Obama’s State of the Union lacked details on he was going to address the accelerating climate change problems while touting his “all-of-the above” energy policy that was buoyed up by domestic “fracking” of oil and gas and the need to Fast Track trade deals like the Trans Pacific Partnership that “protect the environment (the opposite of what leaked documents indicated)”, I was not excited when he later said “if congress won’t act, then I will.”

However, when I (along with 15,000 people) got on a conference call last night with EPA Director Gina McCarthy, I was pleasantly surprised to hear her say that Obama was serious about using executive orders to strengthen the EPA, indicating that he had already issued one when he asked when-not if- she would be ready to start regulating Greenhouse Gas emissions.

RIPTA Eco pass  Gina also said there will be “creative funding sources” in the pipeline to help do things like expand mass transit, “one of the most important sources that receives too little attention” along with smart sustainable solutions like biomass waste facilities that capture methane at dump sites.

The call was sponsored by the Environmental Defense Fund, who McCarthy said will help make the argument that “addressing Climate Change is the key to controlling the the new economy,” an approach that RI St. Rep. Art “Climate Change Solutions Guy” Handy is trying to take with the new Climate Change Bill in RI.

In an important notice to the Rhode Island State House, when McCarthy was asked “where to start,” she said “the first thing is to look up your states, cities and towns Climate Change Plan.” She used her hometown Boston as an example and said “you will be amazed what you find in there.”

This underscores the need for Rhode Island to get a Climate Change Bill passed this year, one that has targets like Sierra Club’s Fossil Free by 2030 that reflect the realities of the challenge; regulators have more power when state and municipalities have laws with targets and a plan of action that the EPA can help by enforcing Federal standards.

Word cloud_sotu_2014_word_cloud_605  McCarthy said that to be successful, environmental groups will have to invest time and money into spreading the word on the benefits of making necessary changes sooner than later.

Also, that water pollution and air pollution are just plain bad for everyone everywhere, and carbon pollution, which is a byproduct of burning fossil fuels, can be addressed at the source by replacing them with renewable technologies as quickly as possible.

The EDF website shows a media campaign being developed for a Valentines Day launch that will include television advertising.

McCarthy said, “now, that like in the ’70’s when real legislation was passed¦it’s all about the grassroots” – the EPA has a lot of tools for this on their website but it is up to activists to get this information out.

West-Virginia-chemical-spill   Another concern was chemical pollution, and Gina stated that the West Virginia’s Freedom Industries spill demonstrates how weak Toxic Chemical regulations are and the dangers it presents to public health.

This is one tragedy that could have been avoided but there are many more happening every day and disasters in waiting. She urged the immediate passage of the Toxic Chemical Safety Improvement Act- now reintroduced by Barbara Boxer in the Senate.

Tying this together with Climate Change, was for activists to emphasis the health benefits of C02 standards, green energy and a green energy lifestyle, something the American Lung Association has worked on for a long time.

“Climate change is the biggest challenge we face in terms of public health. In addition to the benefits of reducing CO2, It causes ozone depletion which makes the air harder to breath” McCarthy noted, going on to say that this “is a economic issue as well as it disproportionally hurts the poor and people of color.”

“A green energy lifestyle is better because cleaner air and water is better.” Even small things like urban community gardens can be big things. In DC McCarthy said she went to one that was put in an abandoned lot in a poor urban area and now “the people have fresh food and a connection to the land.”

sotu_solar 5 fold increase   This will take new technology is new jobs – “Green is all about jobs that will keep the economy and our communities sustainable (it is a win-win).”

Peter Galvin from the RI Sierra Club commented “ we have known this for a long time, action on this now could open the door to making this an election issue which will reinforce the growing renewable/sustainable businesses that are happening now.

She mentioned that caring about how what we do effects other countries is an olive branch from a foreign policy perspective and advised “to go easy one China bashing-1/3 of one region of China has a cap & trade policy working well,” and pollution is a big issue there.

In closing McCarthy reiterated- “power plants are not the only source (of green house gasses)…addressing transportation is a key issue adding  “keep people excited about building a green sustainable economy.”

Gina ended by thanking the grass roots activists that were already working for this, don’t wait for politicians to act, and remember “we are all in this together.”

This sheds a different light on Obama’s statements in the State of the Union-”Climate change is a fact…And when our children’s children look us in the eye and ask if we did all we could to leave them a safer, more stable world, with new sources of energy, I want us to be able to say yes, we did.”

When he made a commitment to protecting our pristine wilderness areas and reiterated his commitment to have the Environmental Protection Agency implement those carbon pollution limits was he “showing his cards” to environmental groups like EDF, Natural Resources Defense Council Obama (Reaffirms Commitment to Climate Action in State of the Union http://huff.to/1egu16w) and Sierra Club?

As Michael Brune, Sierra Club Executive Director, stated in his response:

“As the president put it…we must act on the climate crisis ‘before it’s too late.’ We couldn’t agree more. The Sierra Club thanks President Obama for his strong words in his State of the Union address, and we applaud his vow to prioritize innovative climate solutions, including investments in jobs-producing solar and wind energy as well as a focus on energy and fuel efficiency. These are critical steps forward in the fight against climate disruption, but that progress would be rolled back by more destructive oil drilling and gas fracking, and the burning of toxic tar sands.

This opening directive to the EPA to get busy regulating CO2 is an encouraging sign, but there is still work to do on Obama’s over all approach.

Note: In a poll by Generation Progress, Millennial’s rated addressing Climate Change with Green Jobs 2nd in their concerns, tied with Healthcare. First was “creating a Fair Economy” and 4th was student debt.

8 Actions Young Americans Want To Hear President Obama Discuss In …

Melleneal responces to SOTU

President Obama eulogizes Nelson Mandela


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obamaPresident Barack Obama says of Nelson Mandela: “Mandela taught us the power of action, but he also taught us the power of ideas; the importance of reason and arguments; the need to study not only those who you agree with, but also those who you don’t agree with. He understood that ideas cannot be contained by prison walls, or extinguished by a sniper’s bullet. He turned his trial into an indictment of apartheid because of his eloquence and his passion, but also because of his training as an advocate. He used decades in prison to sharpen his arguments, but also to spread his thirst for knowledge to others in the movement. And he learned the language and the customs of his oppressor so that one day he might better convey to them how their own freedom depend upon his.”

You can watch POTUS’ entire eulogy here:

Last one in shut the door


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excludeA few weeks ago, my church had a Sunday sermon devoted to stewardship. Translated, that means how much are you going to pledge to donate to the church for the coming year? This year, the priest asked people in the congregation to stand up and explain why they gave. Now, I was a coward and did not speak in public. But I had thought of something that I thought clever, and that’s why I didn’t say it out loud: cleverness often comes across as something unpleasant.

My point was that I give to a church because I can. As a friend of mine describes it, I hit the cosmic lottery. Of all the places and times I could have been born into, I had the supreme good fortune to be born at a time, in a place, and to a family that gave me an enormous chance at being successful. In fact, the odds were stacked so far in my favor that I more or less succeeded despite my best efforts to screw it up. I have attained a level of physical comfort that 99% of the people who ever lived–royalty included–could only have dreamed about attaining.

That’s rather appropriate for a post-Thanksgiving thought. I am darn grateful for this opportunity. I’ve been on the underbelly of prosperity. I won’t say I was poor, because I wasn’t. But I was in a situation where money was in short supply, even if my basic needs were always met.

But the point. I was skimming a blog that has a strong right-wing bias. One of the entries was a review of a book about Clarence Thomas, the Supreme Court Justice who also has a decidedly right-wing bias. Apparently, Thomas spent a childhood of difficult poverty, and difficult family circumstances. Yet, he overcame these to become a member of SCOTUS. That is one huge accomplishment. It’s difficult enough for a child of privilege and opportunity to attain such a height, let alone someone from a background like the one Thomas had.

Now, of course, Thomas is convinced that he made this on his own efforts. Be if far from me to disparage or belittle what Thomas has achieved. And yet…time and circumstances matter. Had Thomas been born as few as ten years earlier than he was, and certainly had he been born twenty years sooner, no amount of Herculean effort would have gotten him to where he is. He could have worked twice as hard and been lucky to get half as far.

Thomas benefited, to an enormous degree, from the era in which he was born. He reached the peak of his career when the idea of an African-American Justice was not an alien, or a laughable, concept. He became a member of SCOTUS in 1991. In 1981, I think it would be highly doubtful that he would have been nominated. This was Reagan’s first year in office; would he have nominated Thomas? Would Reagan have made Thomas his first appointment? Probably not. And too, let’s face it, the country was not ready for someone as conservative as Thomas is. Now, this last statement is a matter of my opinion, but it took a long time for the right wing to gain the control it did. We were just coming out of the 70s; hedonism was still cool and it seemed like marijuana legalization was going to happen.  And if he had been at the same point in his career in 1971, there is virtually no chance that he would have been considered for such a post. Thurgood Marshall was on the Court; another African-American would have been out of the question for any Republican president, let alone someone like Nixon.

And yet, he and the right wing would have us believe that the people at the top made it solely on their own efforts. Their own effort is certainly a necessary condition, but it’s nowhere near enough. Effort has to be matched with time and circumstance. The conditions that made it possible for Thomas to reach the pinnacle that he did are the same ones derided as giving Sonia Sotomayor an unfair advantage. Thomas made it on merits; Obama was a creation of affirmative action.

Do we see the hypocrisy?

Again, I do not mean to detract from Thomas’ accomplishment. I disagree with the man about 95% of the time, and I sincerely wish he was not on the Court, but that he has overcome obstacles he has is truly impressive. I only wish he would realize that he did not do it on his own, that the time and circumstances under which he came of age had an enormously beneficial effect on his efforts. More, I wish he would stand up for those who still languish under horrific impediments to accomplishment. I wish he would not continue to boast of his achievements while standing on the heads of those who would follow him.

More, I wish the entire right-wing apparatus would stop pretending that anyone and everyone who tries can “make it”. Yes, it’s possible for every child born in this country to become president, or a CEO, or whatever. It’s possible. A lot of things are possible. But difficult circumstances are holding a lot of people back. And not just from rising to become a member of SCOTUS. But from simply rising into–or staying in–the middle class. Thomas and his right-wing cronies are standing on people’s heads, or even their necks, holding them down, destroying the sorts of opportunities that Thomas and the rest of them enjoyed. They hold Thomas out as an example of what can be, even when they’re trying to ensure that there won’t be any more like him.

I applaud Thomas for doing what he has done. I strenuously object to the way he is trying to pull up the ladder behind him.

The TPP is coming


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TPP_Revere_small2_web300The future is pushing through the gates of congress and it’s horrendous. No Homeland Security for this. Remember the classics: Soylent Green & Blade Runner? Well this ain’t a movie, folks, but the white hats we need to count on may just be surprising ….

This week, the president is going to urge congress to relinquish their responsibility for fully considering the implication and the intention of international treaties by  “fast-tracking” the Trans-Pacific Partnership Treaty.  With “fast-track” authority, the president, not Congress, would control the legislative process and allow passage of the most secretive piece of legislation in recent history – maybe ever.

The Trans-Pacific Partnership, is a “free trade” agreement that has less to do with tariffs than with changing our world as we know it. Study of hundreds of pages of complex issues would be limited to a few days and debate would be limited to a few hours. No amendments would be allowed, only an up or down vote.  And that vote may be happening as I write this. If the president gets his way, I sincerely believe the Trans-Pacific Partnership, “NAFTA on steroids,” could be the coup de grâce for our already feeble government.

Negotiations for the TPP have been going on for the last 5 years, but members of Congress, small business leaders and the media have been shut out. Unlike past treaties, the business of the TPP is BIG business and is strictly limited to the BIGGEST of the big. And their deliberations are being held behind closed doors and chain linked fences with a strong cadre of security police to guard them.

Negotiators consist of representatives from 600 of the largest international corporations and trade officials from countries of the Pacific Rim: Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand. Peru, Singapore, Vietnam and the United States.These are the original 11 members. Recently Japan, the world’s largest gas importer, has indicated interest.

It has been touted as simply another free trade agreement to counter the growing exporting power of China, but it is something far greater and grander, since only 5 of the 29 articles in this “free trade” treaty actually relate to trade. It seems to be the ultimate wet dream of the international corporate elite. And, ironically, word is that it may eventually include China as well.

Why NAFTA on steroids? While NAFTA gives authority to international corporations to sue any city, state or country that passes laws that hinder them from doing any kind of business: water rights, food safety oversight, fair labor practices, environmental protection, and responsible financial practices, just to name a few, for financial damages resulting from income lost due to being kept from raping & pillaging people and the planet, (cf. suits in progress in Quebec by a corporation claiming $ billions in lost revenue because of the province’s anti- fracking law and the new one that pharmaceutical giant, Eli Lilly just launched: an investor-state attack on Canada’s medicine-patent policy. Lilly is demanding $500 million dollars in damages). These are before civil courts now.

Thankfully, doors and chain links and guns are no barriers to people of conscience, and someone inside was appalled enough to start leaking information. According to this source,  if the TPP becomes law, it would create new corporate tribunals made up of lawyers from international corporations. These “judges” would hear the cases and rule on them. If they rule for the corporation, the only way for the judgment to be overturned is  if it is unanimously voted against by of all of the signatory nations.

When the leaks began, a group of concerned organizations got together under an umbrella called openthegovernment.org and sent a letter to President Obama. It is so brilliant that I include the first 4 paragraphs. You can read the rest on their website.

February 28, 2012
Dear President Obama,

As organizations dedicated to government openness, scientific integrity and accountability, we are writing to urge you to increase the transparency of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) Free Trade Agreement (FTA) negotiating process. Currently, without any public access to even the most fundamental draft agreement texts and other documents, important policy decisions that may significantly affect the way we live our lives by limiting our public protections are being made by executive branch trade officials.

On your first day in office you committed to creating an “unprecedented level of openness in Government.” Recently, your Administration co-launched the Open Government Partnership, a multilateral initiative that aims to secure concrete commitments from governments to promote transparency and empower citizens. You also have said that your transparency initiative will extend to the Office of U.S. Trade Representative. Administration officials have repeatedly stated that the administration will conduct the most transparent international commercial negotiations ever with inclusion of all stakeholders to ensure that the TPP FTA will meet your goal of a “high standards worthy of a 21st century trade agreement.” We support all these goals.

However, multiple aspects of the current negotiations process utterly fail to meet these standards. Instead of new levels of transparency, the process has instituted unprecedented levels of secrecy. Indeed, the extreme secrecy surrounding the process was lauded by a U.S. trade lawyer and former U.S government trade official involved in decades of negotiations: “This is the least transparent trade negotiation I have ever seen,” said Gary Horlick at a Global Business Dialogue Forum on the TPP FTA in late January.

At a minimum, your Administration should provide access to the negotiating texts of the pact’s various chapters for all congressional staff, the public, and the press. Such transparency is standard practice for trade negotiations. The World Trade Organization posts negotiating texts on its website for review, and negotiating texts were also made available on the recently-completed Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA). However, this practice has not been adopted, to date, in the context of TPP FTA talks. Indeed, to the contrary, parties signed a Memorandum of Understanding 2010 imposing heightened secrecy for the process.

It was signed by 23 organizations, from the American Association of Law Libraries through the Washington Coalition for Open Government. Obviously, it fell on deaf ears. Because President Obama speaks Orwellian: ‘openness is …’

By January 2013, even Ron Kirk, Obama’s handpicked U.S. Trade Representative quit. He told Reuters that:

“If the contents of the Trans-Pacific Partnership were known, it would not be passed because it would be so unpopular.”

And this June , after her repeated petitions to study the treaty were denied, that fearless Senator from Massachusettes, Elizabeth Warren, wrote an open letter to Ron Kirk’s proposed replacement, U.S. Trade Representative, Michael Froman concerning the TPP:

“ If transparency would lead to widespread public opposition to a trade agreement, then that trade agreement should not be the policy of the United States.”

We hoped for so much, in 2008. I now believe that although his appointments of Arne Duncan to destroy public education, sending the Health Care Bill with the Single Payer option to “Bought” Baucus’ finance committee, and Summers and Geithner to continue the pillage of Wall street, could be nothing in comparison to the potential of damage of the Trans-Pacific Partnership in trampling on the rights of “we the people” in creating laws to protect ourselves. Could Mr. O’s sudden passion for fast-tracking this trade agreement have any connection to his political mama, the newest Secretary of of Commerce? http://www.truthdig.com/report/print/obama_did_it_for_the_money_20130507 Whatever is the reason for his push, this betrayal of the peoples’ interests could be his greatest.

Ironically, our best hope, for now, may be the obstructionist 113th congress, bless ’em. But be forewarned, even if it is postponed for this congressional session, the threat of  the TPP will remain.

You can join me in writing letters and calling the president and congress and just bearing witness. Also talk to people and pass the word forward. You’d be surprised how many informed people don’t know. Check out MoveOn.org for the October 18th rally at 4pm in Providence.

 

Get informed – Threats Posed by TPP –  TradeWatch.org


More Power to Corporations to Attack Nations

Read how foreign corporations would be empowered to attack our health, environmental and other laws before foreign tribunals to demand taxpayer compensation for policies they think undermine their expected future profits.

Threats to Public Health

U.S. negotiators are pushing the agenda of Big PhaRMA – longer monopoly control on drugs for the big firms. This would mean millions in developing countries are cut off from life-saving medicines & higher prices for the rest of us.

Bye Buy America & Jobs

Read how special investor protections incentivize offshoring by providing special benefits for companies that leave. Plus, TPP would impose limits on how our elected officials can use tax dollars – banning Buy America or Buy Local preferences.

Undermining Food Safety

TPP would require us to import food that does not meet U.S. safety standards. It would limit food labeling.

Son of SOPA: Curtailing Internet Freedom

Thought SOPA was bad? Read how TPP would require internet service providers to “police” user-activity and treat individual violators as large-scale for-profit violators. Plus, TPP would stifle innovation.

Financial Deregulation: Banksters’ Delight

TPP would rollback reregulation of Wall Street. It would prohibit bans on risky financial services and undermine “too big to fail” regulations.


Also, I heartily recommend Lori Wallach of Tradewatch discussing the TPP at a PDA event and available on You Tube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PV9tEdMGp-k

There are worldwide threats equivalent to the TPP.

Europe’s equivalent is TISA, that unlike US,  has sparked massive protests under the banner of the OWINFS.org:

“The ‘Our World is not for Sale’ (OWINFS) network is a loose grouping of organizations, activists and social movements worldwide fighting the current model of corporate globalization embodied in global trading system. OWINFS is committed to a sustainable, socially just, democratic and accountable multilateral trading system.”

These great people and their organizations, at least, give me hope.

Peace.

Lisa Roseman Beade

Why Is President Obama Protecting Monsanto?


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While many of us were talking about same-sex marriage and feeling optimistic this week, President Barack Obama signed a spending bill into law on Tuesday, (HR 933), that has been rightly called the “Monsanto Protection Act.”  
The Monsanto Protection Act bars federal courts from being allowed to halt the sale or planting of genetically modified (or genetically engineered) seeds, no matter what health issues prove to be a result of GMO’s in the future.
The Farmer Assurance Provision, Section 735 of the bill, includes language that has many people justifiably outraged.  A Republican of Missouri, Sen. Roy Blunt, worked with Monsanto on this provision, ignoring the thousands of citizens who made their anger and opposition heard.  Obama, too, should be held responsible for ignoring the protestors outside the White House- the organic farmers, consumer advocates, and  everyday heroes who have been tirelessly fighting for our freedoms.  The precedent this has set is scary, and we must continue to pay close attention.
In America, there are a variety of ways to compose a 24 hour day and night, and there are many different ways to build a beautiful, fulfilling life. Though we are partly the products of our environment, we also have some control over our personal choices, priorities, and ecosystems.
We can choose to spend $3.00 on a chicken salad wrap at Whole Foods instead of supporting McDonald’s.  We can choose, as free-thinking individuals, to pick up a book instead of numbing our minds/bodies/souls with television and video games.  Despite living in a society that assaults our senses and experiences with pollution, corruption, and worse, we nonetheless maintain a certain degree of freedom to live well. However, our freedom was threatened in an rather shocking manner this week.

Most Progressive POTUS


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Good thing there is no such thing as President’s Day; whole notion of a national holiday to honor our commenders-in-chief seems a bit un-American to me. The good news is the legal reason for the day off is for George Washington’s birthday, who deserves his own holiday far less than does Abraham Lincoln.

Yeah, Washington was the first and a fearless general, but just because he came clean about cutting down the cherry tree does not entirely absolve his environmental crime. Lincoln, on the other hand, ended America’s greatest atrocity: slavery. He was also the first to implement an income tax, he invested in public transportation and was working on perhaps the biggest government-backed economic redevelopment program in the history of the United States: the Reconstruction.

It’s easy to argue that Lincoln was the greatest president of all time. It’s also easy to argue that while he was a Republican, in many ways, he fits the modern definition of a political progressive. But does that mean he was the greatest progressive president? Perhaps. But here are few other American presidents who deserve consideration as well…

Teddy Roosevelt

Any debate about the most progressive president of the United States has to start with Teddy Roosevelt. During his tenure as chief executive he advocated for environmental conservation, he dealt fairly and sometimes favorably with organized labor and he sought to break up many of the corporate monopolies that were concentrating power and squeezing the middle class. His Square Deal suite of domestic policy laws is the namesake of all future progressive domestic policy proposals. Although he began his career as a Republican, he literally set the standard for the modern movement with the Bull Moose party, officially called the Progressive Party.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt

Not everything FDR did was progressive (he detained Japanese Americans during WWII, for example) but the New Deal sure was.

It not only put thousands of Americans to work building much-needed communal infrastructure and amenities. But it also created Social Security, the US Housing Authority, the Wagner Act, Fair Labor Standards and the Works Progress Administration. Together, these efforts helped America to claw the country out of the depression and build a society that would continue to prosper until we ceased investing in it.

Harry Truman

He followed FDR and his Fair Deal extended the consumer protections of the Square Deal and New Deal. While some of it never made it into law, it did set the tone for the post-war progressive era of consumer and middle class protections.

John Quincy Adams

The sixth president and son of the second, this Harvard and Brown prof took office in 1825 taking the oath with his hand on the Constitution rather than a Bible. He was a strong believer in high taxes, public education and infrastructure investment. He was friendly to the indigenous people of North America, which played a significant role in his lackluster tenure as president.

Jimmy Carter

You laughed at him for wearing sweaters, but it turns out that had we listened to his progressive advice on resource management and foreign oil our economy would be in much better shape today.

Barack Obama???

He coddled big banks but passed near-universal health care … our current president’s progressive credentials will hinge upon his actions taxes, climate change, equality and privacy.

Feb 17: Protest the Pipeline


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The environmental movement – and the planet it wants to protect – will come to a fork in the road on Feb. 17. Tens of thousands of people will descend on DC to demand that President Obama kill the Keystone Pipeline once and for all. And he might do it. On the other hand, he might not.

In the first instance, activists from around the country will rejoice and be energized to build the environmental movement necessary to win the fight of all our lives. In the latter, the environmental movement will have failed to stop a single project that in and of itself will ensure the release of enough carbon emissions that you can kiss goodbye any hope of preventing the worst climate scenarios [you know, the ones with at least 7 feet of sea level rise and billions dead from drought induced famine, heat waves, disease, and war caused by water scarcity] .  If that were to happen, it would leave the environmental movement in disarray.

February 17th will mark a pivotal moment in the history of the human race, and it is not at all clear which path Obama will point us down. One thing is sure though, the more people who turn out to be heard, the more likely it is that he will do the right thing.

Now, I know it’s not easy to go down to Washington. I mean it’s hard to cross the Pell Bridge, right?! Well, extraordinary times call for extraordinary measures, and I hope that you will join me and hundreds of other Rhode Islanders on February 17th in the Capitol.

If it makes the decision easier, you can get a round trip bus ticket for just $20.

What Will Obama Gun Regulation Accomplish?


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Recent controversy over which actual weapons were used at Sandy Hook, including MSNBC’s report as to whether an assault weapon was used at all, is likely to have no impact on the government response moving forward.

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Similarly, the fact that the government told us 9/11 was perpetrated by Saudi citizens trained in Afghanistan, that didn’t get in the way of an Iraqi invasion.  As Gen. Colin Powell basically testified at the UN: Iraq basically deserved an invasion on their own merit.  Stepping away from the causal link between Sandy Hook and forthcoming reactions, let us take a look at likely results:

The 18th Executive Order signed by President Obama is to provide incentives (and funding) for schools to have police oversee the children.  This will create results.  Of all the other items concerning background checks and manufacturing specifics for future guns, there is no clear indication that there will be any tangible differences.  Gun violence will continue with the 300 million guns in America, and millions more throughout the world.  Some people who legally bought guns and have no criminal record or mental health issues will lose their mind and commit a crime.  Whether we consider this an acceptable number or not depends as much on the media frenzy as on actual statistics.

School police, known as “Resource Officers” (perhaps for easier digestion) have been key builders of the School to Prison Pipeline.  The fistfights and the joint in the bathroom do not result in detention or suspension anymore: now they are imprisonment, expulsion, and an often insurmountable mountain to climb towards any “normal” adult lifestyle.  A 2011 report by Justice Police Institute, Education Under Arrest: The Case Against Police In Our Schools,  would lead one to believe that the overall damage to a community is not justified by the vague possibility that the school is safer.  In fact, there are indications that the police actually lead to increased violence in schools.

Fortunately, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the Advancement Project, and others aremounting a campaign to let the President know what he is doing.

President Obama would like to spend $4 billion to put 150,000 more cops on the street, further transferring public safety from the traditional role of states to the federal government.  These cops are not likely to be deployed in Newtown, Aurora, Littleton, Blacksburg, Red Lake, Killeen, San Ysidoro, or any locations similar to past massacres.  Nor will they be deployed in such white collar businesses and institutions that have been the site of these tragedies.  Instead, they will likely be patrolling the public housing areas of urban centers, looking for drugs among mostly Black and Latino boys.  Just as in NYC, where an officer’s job is justified by how many Stops, Questions, and Frisks they conduct, any new officers will be under the same pressures to “produce.”

Prison Expenditures will Rise

Children have been the fastest growing segment in the industry of prisoners.  They are a commodity justifying the building of a prison and hiring those who will guard them- even those who would try to teach them in these environments so non-conducive to learning.  Industries do not deal well with stagnation or reduction.  Thus, an ever growing number of children and young adults are needed to continue fueling an industry that has yet to be reduced in all the history of American prisons.

More cops requires more prosecutors to process the cases, along with more public defenders, judges, sheriffs, stenographers, interpreters, clerks, and everything else that happens after an arrest.  All on the taxpayer dime at a time when most “American” corporations are multinational and manage to avoid taxes around the globe.  These budgets are already bursting.

Putting police in our schools, and 150,000 police in low income communities of color, will certainly increase the front end of this industry during an era when states have been struggling to make reductions.  Spurred by the Bush Administration’s Second Chance Act, a secondary industry of “Rehabilitation” has expanded to attempt a reduction of prisoners on the back end.  One roadblock to this latter attempt is public perception, and media frenzy, (at times instigated by prison guards themselves) against “coddling criminals” or the perceived dangers of releasing someone who committed a violent crime decades ago.

The Future Economy

President Obama certainly knows that we currently have an economy of excess labor.  Several decades after outsourcing and technology eliminated our manufacturing base, people in Obama’s shoes are tasked with the dilemma of what to do with tens of millions of unnecessary people in our economy.  There is no indication that this trend will be reversed (not to say that it cannot be, but I have yet to hear any proposal that involves a massive new sector requiring human labor at Living Wages).  In the short term, the Prison Solution provides a small consolation, albeit with considerable human cost.

Once labeled as “Criminal,” there can be no moral demand for living wage jobs, education, and affordable housing- at least not in our current culture, where those making such demands represent an increasingly vocal minority.  Those who are labeled are often shut down with the phrase, “You should have thought about that before you became a criminal.”  Yet we are labeling them before they are even old enough to drive a car, vote, serve in the military, or sign a valid contract.  Furthermore, our society cannot even respond to similar demands by non-labeled people.

Non-labeled people from the lower classes can join the ranks of half-a-million prison guards, and twice that in the overall Prison industry.  As the labeled are released from prison, they are expected to have lower expectations, to be happy with a GED and a job that pays $8 per hour.  If we can create a nation where 10 million people are satisfied earning that pay, another 10 million are incarcerated, and another 10 million are watching over them… we may create some stability in our economy.  It will require a relentless Drug War and a massive tolerance for racially imbalanced outcomes.  Such a dystopia will likely require a repeal of the Civil Rights Act.

As a chess player it is important to think many moves ahead for yourself and your opponent.  Naturally, a chess player expects their opponent to think several moves ahead, perhaps five or six, at least.  Sometimes even if you think 20 moves ahead correctly, you still cannot see the victory; you may only see that all the pieces are dead except for the King… but you still must make a move.

This article originally appeared in Unprison.

POTUS Weighs In On RI Marriage Equality Bill


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President Obama makes his case for re-election at DNC. (Photo by John McDaid)

A political heavy hitter has weighed in on marriage equality in Rhode Island – and I don’t mean Bishop Tobin. The Washington Blade, a LGBT newspaper in Washington D.C. asked President Barack Obama specifically about the Ocean State’s effort to end marriage discrimination and here’s the response White House spokesperson Shin Inouye gave The Blade:

“While the President does not weigh in on every measure being considered by the states, he believes all couples should be treated fairly and equally, with dignity and respect,” said White House spokesperson Shin Inouye. “As he has said, his personal view is that it’s wrong to prevent couples who are in loving, committed relationships, and want to marry, from doing so.”

The Blade said it was a similar response as Obama gave to a question about a marriage equality bill before the Illinois legislature, which was the first time the president weighed in on marriage rights at the state level.

Here on the home front, we reported earlier today that Episcopal Bishop Patrick Knisely is instituting procedural changes in the church to allow for same sex sacraments. The Providence Journal reports that Catholic Bishop Thomas Tobin disagrees with how Chafee would like to proceed with marriage equality; the bishop told the governor that the voters should decide the law.

Rev. Gene Dyszlewski posted to RI Future today about why he disagrees with Bishop Tobin, writing, “What is a matter of concern for me is that he seems to be asking that the Catholic understanding of marriage be enshrined into civil law in Rhode Island.  Not a good idea.”

 

Regressive Taxes Now Defines Progressive Victory


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President Obama makes his case for re-election at DNC. (Photo by John McDaid)

Progressives, liberals and Democrats have been getting their political butts kicked for so long that marginal defeats are starting to feel like victories. Such can certainly be said about Obama’s compromise on tax policy.

The president campaigned on reversing tax breaks on those who make more than $250,000 a year. Instead he settled for increases on those who make more than $450,000 and less than $113,000 (yeah, that’s who pays payroll taxes).

According to the New York Times, those who earn between $450,000 and $1 million will see an average income tax increase of about $6,700. Those who earn less than $50,000 will see an increase of about $1,000 in payroll taxes.

While taxes went up on 77 percent of Americans, the roughly 1 percent who makes between $250,000 and a half million were not asked to sacrifice to help the country avoid the fiscal cliff.

I spoke with someone in the enviable position yesterday. It didn’t really occur to them that the fiscal cliff deal had broken in their financial favor. That’s because it won’t have any impact on their spending; when one clears a cool quarter million every year, financial planning about how large you want to live in retirement compared to how much you want to leave to your kids to spend – not about how much or little you will participate in economic transactions.

I’d be willing to bet that the vast majority of Rhode Islanders who were spared a tax increase this week will not notice it one way or another. They will go on vacation, or out to dinner, or renovate their kitchens, or start a small business with little to no regard for what happened – or didn’t happen – in Washington D.C, just like the person with whom I spoke yesterday. I’d also be willing to bet that the vast majority of Rhode Islanders who earn more than $250,000 don’t objected to paying higher taxes, as is also the case with the person I spoke with yesterday.

Fiscal Cliff Negotiations, As Told By SNL, Robert Reich


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Let’s hope this isn’t how negotiations go between President Obama and Speaker of the House John Boehner as they try to hammer out a deal on the fiscal cliff. Although the real joke is that Democrats could cave in spite of all the negotiating power they have…

Just in case Obama and the Democrats do start feeling bad for Boehner and start thinking of caving in, Robert Reich offers this piece of advice:

And for a local spin on the fiscal cliff, check out Rhode Island Public Radio’s week-long series on how the deal could affect the Ocean State.

Democrats, Don’t Throw My House Off the Fiscal Cliff

With the election over, across the country progressives are wondering, will the 2nd Obama administration be more progressive than the first? I’m not holding my breath on that one. Of particular concern for me and for you if you’re a home owner, is the potential for a disastrous change in the home mortgage deduction.

We’re the folks on the front-end of our mortgages, who bought at the height of the boom in Providence and elsewhere and who have diligently made our mortgage payments. We’re the ones who decided to ride out the storm and who have the misfortune of not having a loan owned by Fannie or Freddie, with the potential for a below market refi. Our mortgage rates are near double the current rate and the banks have next to no incentive to modify the loan. Hey, we’re the ones who are still paying! Yes, if you’re like me there’s been no bailout for you, and unfortunately the “grand bargain” (Orwellian language if I ever heard it) may put you into foreclosure. Progressives take note.

At issue is the elimination of the so called “tax loophole” of the mortgage deduction. You may not be in this position, but if you’re a homeowner, a second round of foreclosures in the neighborhood is the last thing you need and is a recipe for a double-dip recession if I ever heard one. The question for progressives is, what grand bargain do we strike with the Obama administration? Is our support unconditional? A Romney administration would certainly have been worse, but is a restoration of the Bush tax cuts to the modest levels of a decade ago enough?

Progressives, the time is now to speak up. Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid are all on the table, yet again asking the working class to bailout the bankers. I say a vote for a grand bargain is a vote for a grand betrayal, further sinking the middleclass. Will progressives demand more?

Progress Report: Tax Fairness; the End of Reaganomics; Free Market Lesson for Mike Riley; Curating the News


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Downtown Providence from the Providence River. (Photo by Bob Plain)

If Obamacare’s survival was the biggest policy victory of the election, a close second has to be tax equity. In his first post-election presser, Obama said yesterday the nation needs to ask the richest 2 percent of the population to pony up a few more tax dollars if we’re to avoid a fiscal disaster. Congressional Democrats are in a great position to win this no-brainer before the new year, and we’ve got Senator Sheldon Whitehouse to thank for making this a kitchen sink issue with his Buffett Rule bill of last session.

Our state legislators would do well to follow this lead and pass their own tax equity bill in 2013. Speaker Gordon Fox told me on election night that the conversation has already begun.

Speaking of tax policy, the ProJo editorial board is incorrect when it asserts that state workers are to blame for Rhode Island’s relatively high cost of government. It’s got far more to do with our small size, high density and desire for top notch services and amenities.

But there’s also a larger takeaway from last Tuesday’s election on economic policy. Newsweek/Daily Beat correspondent Michael Tomasky writes:

Trickle-down economics died last Tuesday. The post-election chatter has been dominated by demographics, Latinos, women, and the culture war. But economics played a strong and even pivotal role in this election too, and Reaganomics came out a huge loser, while the Democrats have started to wrap their arms around a simple, winning alternative: the idea that government must invest in the middle class and not the rich. It’s middle-out economics instead of trickle-down, and it won last week and will keep on winning.

ProJo columnist makes a great point about Mike Riley’s sour grapes concession speech in which he blamed the media for the electoral drubbing he took from popular incumbent Jim Langevin.  He writes, “Riley did say something wise, but he somehow missed how it applies to his own campaign: ‘Hopefully someday many of you will do very well because of your own hard work. You will have succeeded and you will have failed, but ultimately it will be you — and not somebody else that did it to you.'”

Here’s one way the media mistakenly makes it seem like there is fraud and waste in the public sector: GoLocal reports that 52 percent of state education dollars makes its way into the classroom. “That seems small,” says an advocate for smaller government. But it’s not. Does anyone think Hasbro spends half its resources on manufacturing toys? Or your favorite restaurant spends half of its total revenue on your food? Not if the cost was calculated the way GoLocal looked at ed. funding. The reality is we hold the public sector to a ridiculously high standard, which we should, but we shouldn’t mistake our high standards with inefficiency.

I’m absolutely thrilled to be participating in Journalism Day at URI, my alma mater! I’ll be on a panel talking about news curation, or as the URI journalism department calls it, aggregation. Whatever you want to call it, it’s the art of finding, packaging and adding value to already existing content. It’s a super important component of advocacy journalism in general and media criticism in particular for pretty obvious reasons. It’s also a super important component of beat reporting for the most obvious reason of all: it’s a service to readers. We’ll be discussing whether or not it’s ethical, which I actually think is a question that long ago was settled in the affirmative, but as with most topics, I’m more than happy to have the debate…

Progress Report: Why Public TV Matters; Public Cars for Legislators; Woonsocket School Committee; Climate Change


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Image courtesy of WeKnowMemes.com

Remember way back in the days when we feared Mitt Romney might become president and, if he did, he would cut public funding to PBS? Well Rhode Island already beat Romney to this nightmare scenario for liberals … WSBE Ch.36 is being transitioned off the state payroll beginning this month, reports Bill Rappleye of WJAR, and the local PBS affiliate now has about two years to become self-sustaining or else…

WSBE’s budget was dramatically cut in the 2012 state budget and both Gov. Chafee and the legislature should strongly consider reinstating the funding next year. Are there perhaps some potential synergies with Capitol TV? It’s easy to see why the mainstream media wouldn’t give much coverage to public broadcasting cuts, and WJAR deserves credit for reporting this story. It’s also easy to see why publicly financed television is important, in light of WPRI’s decision to keep Abel Collins out of its televised debate.

Speaking of WPRI, the other local TV station reports that state legislative leaders sometimes drive state vehicles to private events. It’s a well-reported story and plenty newsworthy but I often find myself wishing that Tim White would use his considerable investigative prowess to shed light on more meaningful issues than publicly-funded company cars and state workers who take long lunch breaks – like this one, for example. My guess is this type of red-meat-for-Republicans reporting is being driven by the same corporate forces and trickle down mentality that kept Collins out of the debate and thought Rhode Island needed a show catering to corporate executives…

And speaking of red meat for conservatives … Woonsocket voted to make school committee members appointed rather than elected officials. Town councilors and municipal officials across the state are no doubt jealous of the control the city just wrested away from the school department.

Look for financially-struggling West Warwick to be the next to consider this huge change in how local public education is managed.

Might Hurricane Sandy be the bellwether that gets Rhode Island to act on climate change? EcoRI runs a great piece that makes the case it should … meanwhile legislative heavyweights Sen Josh Miller and Rep. Chris Blazejewski are teaming up to study the effects of climate change on the Ocean State.

Here are some of the best overreactions to Obama being reelected. Though my favorite wing nut of the week is the Montana legislator who asked for his salary in gold and solver coin.

If you don’t think Republicans’ war on taxes is a part and parcel of class warfare, famed GOP strategist Lee Atwater might agree with you … but, then, he seemed to think it was part and parcel of a race war!

On this day in 1776, a British newspaper reports that former friend to England Ben Franklin has taken up with the revolutionaries in the American colonies…

When Progressives Fight, Progressives Win


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In 2008 progressives across America were basking in the warm glow of the nation’s first black president. A breeze of Democratic victories had blown through Congress and the long, dark night of the Bush era had given way to the rising sun of the Democratic super-majority. A Democratic executive branch and a bicameral legislative branch teaming with enough blue fruit to overwhelm any red agendas devised by the defeated and deflated Republican party. The progressive tree was blooming in the new era sun and progressives across America were able to relax.

Were the conservative, right wing Republicans relaxing? Were their minds changed and their hearts quiet? Was their spirit broken and did they skulk away quietly, tail between their legs in acceptance of America’s new direction of a liberal and populist agenda? Does the phrase 2010, mid-term elections answer that question?

Shortly after the 2008 election, the general public was struck with the reality of the total economic collapse of the American banking system, the bottom dropping out of the stock market and the the real estate bubble bursting. Frightening and confusing terms like “derivatives,” “toxic assets” and “ARM loans” were brandished by the talking heads on the cable news networks and the true inheritance of the new electorate was made apparent and they reacted accordingly. President Barack Obama consulted with his cabinet, with economists and stepped up, proposing a Keynesian stimulus package that stalled an economy in free-fall. No need to further recount the history of so recent a period in history; one in which wounds are still in various stages of recuperation and rehabilitation.

Suffice it to say, the Republicans were quickly seeding the sky with storm-clouds. The population, just moths before filled with warm, sunny hope was scared. And rightly so. Jobs were lost in record numbers. Income was falling while prices were rising and the conservative, Republican agenda was ready and mobile with a new and radical group of flashy and simple politicians called the Tea-Party. They catered to the three Gs of right wing, fear-mongering: God, guns and gays. They tied these social-issue weapons of mass distraction to the real, pressing issues of the day and (quite neatly and effectively) laid blame for the Nation’s rapid decline, both socially and fiscally, on the President and his socialist administration.

It worked like a charm. The 2010 mid-term elections were a cyclonic victory for conservatives. The super-majority was blown away and the House of Representatives was owned by the Tea-Party influenced Republicans. Surely the less than honest messaging of voices like Eric Cantor and the less than heartfelt tears of men like John Boehner are worthy of blame for the GOP sweep. Not to mention an entire cable news network dedicated to promoting untruth, injustice and the Glen Beckian way. But just as important to consider is the lack of preparedness and distracted complacency of the Democrats.

Obama promised to reach across the aisle and compromised in spite of having the power to push through any progressive agenda the Democrats and their constituencies wanted. The Democratic message was convoluted and tried too hard to explain why and how and, in a stagnant economy, it is nearly impossible to use economists to prove a negative and certainly impossible to win an off year election on that message. There was no “Go! Fight! Win!” There was no message of solidarity and spirit.

The 2012 elections were a very positive message for progressives. The light shone through the clouds and, once again, the Democratic agenda allows for a deep breath and an enjoyment of the light of populist understanding. But only for a few moments. In this administration, there can be no room for error. There can be no time for compromise. There can be no sacrifice of agenda in exchange for good faith because the anti-progressive movement, given an inch, will take a mile.

In a lesser known speech, Franklin D. Roosevelt wrote:

“… Until the Democratic Party [through this convention] makes overwhelmingly clear its stand in favor of social progress and liberalism, and shakes off all the shackles of control fastened upon it by the forces of conservatism, reaction, and appeasement, it will not continue its march of victory.”

The progressive movement, if it wants to survive and burn off the cloud-cover of the remaining storm, it must not rest on this victory. The election may be over but the great work just begins. The middle class must stand together. Unions must double their efforts. Progressive politicians must dissent, speak up and speak well. They must not merely make their voices louder, but also their arguments better. The 2014 mid-term elections are just around the corner and, if the issues embraced by the the majority this year are truly issues of importance to those who voted, the progressive campaign must begin immediately. The preservation of Medicare and Medicaid as we know them and the expansion of affordable healthcare to everyone and the taxation of the wealthiest while regulating the disenfranchisement of the working class by those same wealthiest – these and many more progressive agendas need to be reinforced and protected a little more every day.

The work is not easy. Nor should it be. Frederick Douglass, a true American champion of freedom, once said, “Those who profess to favor freedom and yet deprecate agitation are men who want crops without plowing up the ground; they want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the the awful roar of its many waters. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.” Progressive Democrats want social justice, but they also want to be nice and expect that if they are nice, so will be the other side.

Although often mistaken for one and the same, there is a difference between what is safe and what is comfortable. And, if progressive Democrats believe that there is safety in American solidarity over the opposition’s beliefs in safety being individual financial insulation at the expense of those less fortunate, then progressive Democrats need to be willing to fight, to throw comfort to the wind and to keep on keepin’ on.

At a rally in Boston’s Dudley Square last week, a congregation of labor and activists reminded one another of what the power of unity can do: hello Elizabeth Warren, goodbye Scott Brown. Hello Barack Obama, goodbye Mitt Romney. “E pluribus unum” has been proven by the American voters to be a preferable national ideal to “sic semper tyrannus.” But, like any dream, ideal or hope for a nation , it requires foresight, strength, perseverance, blood and sweat. It takes a will to fight. Progressive Democrats remember, “When we fight, we win.”

Progress Report: Tax Capacity and Our Failing Cities; Chafee Speculation; Ucci and Blazejewski; Stripped Bass; Burnside


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Ambrose Burnside

Regardless of where you sit on the political spectrum, most agree that Rhode Island’s biggest concern should be the failing finances of our urban communities. GoLocal reports this morning in a piece on which local communities have the highest tax rates: “Some of the most dramatic increases are in urban communities facing financial distress. They also happen to be the places where taxpayers can at least afford the hikes.” This point, as well as those making it in the GoLocal piece, should be very familiar to our readers.

When Don Carcieri and the General Assembly cut income taxes for the affluent and state aid to cities and towns, it was like pouring gasoline on the smoldering fire that is Rhode Island’s regressive reliance on property taxes to fund public services. Gov Chafee and the 2013 legislature would do very well to address this.

That is, if Chafee doesn’t take a job in the Obama administration, as I’m hoping happens. Chafee would be a great Obama appointment and it would give him a classy exit from his unpopular reign as governor … it would also give Rhode Island a progressive governor in Lt. Gov. Elizabeth Roberts. This good idea came courtesy of Dee DeQuattro’s blog, which always has interesting stuff like this in it.

Much has been made about the legislature’s shift to the left, but one way the House will move right is with the promotion of Rep. Stephen Ucci, who is expected to replace Rep. Paddy O’Neil on Gordon Fox’s leadership team. Ucci is a nice enough guy, but he’s an anti-choice Democrat. This effect will hopefully be mitigated if Rep. Christopher Blazejewski moves up to be Deputy Majority Whip.

Is Gina Raimondo less confident in pension cuts prevailing in court than she once was? Seems like it…

Today’s hero: Nick Gibbs catches a 58-pound stripped bass from a Narragansett Bay beach and donates the giant catch to the Amos House in Providence “where it was made into fish chowder to feed hundreds of people in need.” I’m sure we’d all love to know where he caught it but the article doesn’t say…

Former PC hoops star God Shammgod deserves the award too!

Wow … what a great passage in this ProJo editorial about the insurance lobby, climate change and how hurricanes affect the affluent coastal land owners the most: “Contrary to the clichés about ‘welfare queens’ and so on, federal programs skew heavily in favor of middle- and upper-income people.”

So long Tea Party, don’t let the door hit you on your way out!!

Thanks to Dan McGowan for recognizing the RI future crystal ball … but we supported plenty of people who didn’t win, most notably Abel Collins.

On this day in 1862, General Ambrose Burnside, a Rhode Islander for whom the downtown Providence park is named, took command of the Union Army.

Will Wants You to Vote


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After months of information overload, debate, dirty tricks, predictions and more it’s finally time to get out there and vote. As an added bonus, Will Ferrell will do just about anything if you do.

I have to say though, this Samuel L. Jackson “Wake the Fuck Up” video was my favorite campaign commercial of the season:


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