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Archive: Michael Munk's 2008 Portland Messages
Reply to Relin: Obama's Afghan quagmire
by Michael Munk
Tue, Dec 30, 2008
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Jan 2: Fifty years of Cuban posters at Onda
by Michael Munk
Mon, Dec 29, 2008
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Dear friends,
Let's think about Cuba on January 1. Sure, after all the winter weather, =
the first thoughts that come to mind are the tropical breezes and warm =
sea. What we'd like to remember on that day is that fifty years ago =
Fidel Castro and his Revolution rode into Havana and the Cuban society =
changed forever.=20
Not the least of these changes was a radically new understanding of the =
role of graphic art. Designers, engravers, printers and typographers =
were called to work on posters for historical and cultural purposes. The =
Revolutionary Government wanted to make sure that literature, theatre, =
film, visual arts, dance and music arrived at the door of the masses. As =
a result, the poster became a vehicle for the spread of culture and a =
permanent expression of a new reality, continually renewing itself and =
accessible to all.
For fifty years, the poster has commemorated every event, every =
contingency of Cuban life, creating political awareness through images =
of contemporary history and the revolutionary process - celebrating =
heroic individuals, important dates, teaching duties of citizenship, =
inspiring individual and group achievements and announcing major events. =
The poster is present in the workplace and at the festival, and artists =
working with government agencies have used the most modem and original =
techniques for communicating with the population in all aspects of daily =
life.
This exhibit shows representative poster art from all five decades, =
including a variety of outstanding artists and a range of political and =
cultural themes. Some are work of graphic artists such as Bachs and =
Rostgaard, whose primary center of activity was the Cuban Institute of =
Cinematic Art and Industry (ICAIC) while others contain images by =
artists such as Ren=E9 Portocarrero, one of Cuba's finest contemporary =
painters. Most of the posters are from Havana but others, such as the =
colorful Carnival posters by Suitberto Goire, are from Santiago. The =
exhibition is curated by Beverly Walton and deeply indebted to the =
pioneering work of Sandra Levinson and the Cuban Art Space, New York =
City.=20
To avoid conflict with the Christmas holiday, we've scheduled our normal =
Last Thursday opening for Friday, January 2. Your Cuban experience will =
be further enhanced by the performance of Jessie Marquez, an amazing =
singer of Cuban music. She and her guitar accompanist Bill Ravel will =
perform starting around 7.=20
Many new textile items have arrived from Ecuador and we'll have some =
special sales too.=20
Thank you for your support this past year and best wishes for great joy =
in your holiday celebrations,
Allan and Pablo
Onda Gallerr
2215 NE Alberta
Portland 97211
503.493.1909
www.ondagallery.com
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Today and tues: Protests in Eugene and Portland against Israeli
attacks]
by Michael Munk
Mon, Dec 29, 2008
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VIA Joanne Cvar
It is critical that you call you representatives about Israel's
disproportionate and indiscriminate attacks against the people of Gaza
as well as Israel's illegal blockade of Gaza.
Please try to attend the following protests :
*Monday, December 29, 2008, 2:00pm, Eugene*
Eugene Protest Regarding the Israeli attack on Gaza
Regarding the Israeli attack on Gaza the Al-Nakba Awareness Project and
Veterans for Peace will erect signage and provide detailed handout
materials along Eugene, Oregon's high-traffic Ferry Street Bridge
approach parkway on Monday, December 29 from 2-5 pm.
*Tuesday, December 30, 2008, 4:30pm, Portland*
STOP THE MASSACRE IN GAZA NOW!
Emergency Demonstration Tuesday December 30, 2008 Gather at 4:30 and
Rally 5:00 pm Where: Federal Building, Downtown Portland, Oregon SW 3rd
& Madison Sponsored by: Americans United for Palestinian Human
Rights, Portland Peaceful Response Coalition, American Jews for a Just
Peace, and International Socialist Organization.
If you are not in Oregon, look that the US Campaign's web site for
possible protests in your area:
http://www.endtheoccupation.org/article.php?id=1773
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com__._,_.___
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Fw: ACTIONS: Act Now to End the Strikes on Gaza!
by Michael Munk
Sat, Dec 27, 2008
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From Dan Handelman's Peace & Justice Works pjw@pjw.info
Below is the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) aciton
alert about the Israeli strike on Gaza today.
I know that the Friday Women in Black vigil at noon at Terry Schrunk Plaza
(SW 3rd and Madison) will likely address this latest bombing; the PPRC
Friday Rally at 5 PM at Pioneer Courthouse Square will likely also make it
a key focus. There may be another rally sooner, we'll try to keep you
posted.
I heard on the radio today that the Israeli government said they had "no
option" but to bomb. That's one of those phrases that is
unconscionable--it's always a choice to use violence. The same news report
said that President Bush cautioned the Israelis to try to avoid civilian
casualties. How nice.
--dan
ADC Action Alert:
The civilians in Gaza need your help now!
Washington, DC | December 27, 2008 | www.adc.org | The American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) calls on the United States and the
international community to take immediate action to pressure Israel to end
its attacks and stop the growing humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
Reports indicate that Israeli air strikes today alone have killed 205
People in Gaza and have left over 400 more hurt. These strikes come after
several weeks of a tight blockade which left many of Gaza's 1.5-million
inhabitants without sufficient food, water, fuel or medicine.
Let your elected representatives know that this course of action taken by
the State of Israel is furthering a humanitarian disaster and an immediate
suspension of hostilities on all sides is necessary to reinstate the
ceasefire. Further, the collective punishments of the population of Gaza
will not likely lead to security for Israelis. According to numerous
surveys, similar attacks in the past have only served to garner more
support to the extremist elements of Hamas and renewed rocket attacks on
Israel.
Contact Your Elected Official Today and Add Your Voice to the Growing
Number of Americans Calling for the Immediate Lifting of the Blockade and
Siege of Gaza. Click here to find your representatives and contact them
now about this ongoing crisis!
http://capwiz.com/adc/utr/1/IXPMJNXMUD/MSACJNXMVC/2737095341/
Also contact President-Elect Obama and ask him to issue a statement
calling for an immediate cessation of hostilities on all sides!
http://capwiz.com/adc/utr/1/IXPMJNXMUD/FEMUJNXMVD/2737095341
###
______________________________________________________________
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee | www.adc.org
1732 Wisconsin Ave., NW | Washington, DC | 20007
Tel: 202-244-2990 | Fax: 202-244-7968 | E-mail: media@adc.org
--~----------------------------------------------------------------
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Rep Wu declines single payer health care
by Michael Munk
Fri, Dec 26, 2008
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In a letter to a constituent, Rep David Wu rejects single payer to protect
the profits of
the private health insurance industry--Mike Munk
Dear Dr. Herman Frankel:
Portland, OR
Thank you for your contacting me with your support for a national health
insurance program. I appreciate hearing from you on this important
issue.
I agree that our healthcare system is suffering. There are 125,000
vacant nursing positions across the country. Physician fees under
Medicare have grown 13 percent less than the costs of practice since
1992. Approximately 56 million Americans are not protected by any state
or federal patient protections. Annual spending on prescription drugs by
seniors has grown 116 percent, from $18.5 billion in 1992 to $42.9
billion in 2000. These are not strong and stable vital signs. They point
to several problems we must address in order to improve the health of
our nation, the most central of which is a lack of affordable,
accessible healthcare for all Americans.
Nearly 50 million Americans are without health insurance of any kind.
The United States spends twice as much on healthcare than any other
country in the nation, and yet is the only industrialized nation in the
world that does not guarantee access to healthcare for all of its
citizens.
H.R. 676, the United States National Health Insurance (USNHI) Program
Act, would provide all individuals residing in the United States
(including in U.S. territories) with health care. The program would
offer many benefits to Americans, including primary care and prevention,
prescription drugs, emergency care and mental health services. This
legislation would also prohibit institutions from participating as
health providers in the Program unless they are a public or nonprofit
institution, and provided for conversions of investor-owned providers
with compensation for real property and equipment. H.R. 676 was
reintroduced by Representative John Conyers on January 24, 2007 and was
referred to the House Committee on Health where it awaited further
consideration when the 110th Congress adjourned.
Like you, I believe that all Americans should have access to
health insurance, and I will keep your thoughts in mind regarding H.R.
676.
To assist the growing number of states tackling the serious problem of
uninsured Americans, I have joined with a bipartisan group of members of
the House of Representatives in cosponsoring groundbreaking legislation
aimed at extending healthcare to the nearly 50 million Americans who
lack coverage. H.R. 506, the Health Partnership Through Creative
Federalism Act, is intended to break the logjam in Washington and allow
states to experiment with various efforts to reduce the number of
uninsured through a federal-state partnership. The Health Partnership
Act provides a path to move forward by allowing a diverse array of ideas
to be tried in specific states.
Specifically, H.R. 506 would allow Congress to authorize grants to
individual states, groups of states, or portions of states to carry out
any of a broad range of strategies to increase healthcare coverage.
States desiring to participate in a healthcare expansion and improvement
program would submit an application to a bipartisan "State Health
Innovation Commission." The Commission would consider applications that
include a variety of approaches, such as tax credits, expansion of
Medicaid or the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP),
creation of pooling arrangements, single payer systems, health savings
accounts, or a combination of these or other options. After reviewing
the state proposals, the Commission would submit to Congress a slate of
recommended state applications that represents a variety of approaches.
At the end of a five-year period, the Commission would be required to
report to Congress whether the states are meeting the goals of the Act
and recommend future action Congress should take regarding overall
reform.
There is no single prescription to solving our nation's serious
uninsured problem. Extending healthcare to the millions of Americans
who are uninsured will require the innovation of governors and other
leaders in all 50 states. H.R. 506 simply helps each state implement
the solution that is right for them. I am pleased to be a cosponsor of
H.R. 506, which was introduced by Representative Tammy Baldwin (WI) on
January 17, 2007 and was referred the House Committee on Health where it
awaits further action.
Additionally, because improving access to quality healthcare
in America is one of my highest priorities in Congress and I believe
strongly that we must work to ensure that children begin with the
support they need to live healthy and productive lives. That is why I am
currently developing legislation that would extend coverage under
Medicare to children up to 18 years of age.
I will continue to push hard in Congress to pass meaningful
legislation to help provide individuals and their families with
accessible and affordable health coverage. Again, thank you for
contacting me on this important issue. If I may be of further
assistance, please contact me at 503-326-2901 or 800-422-4003.
With warm regards,
David Wu
Member of Congress
If
you wish to contact me, please use my website, www.house.gov/wu.
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Virginia Malbin 1913-2008
by Michael Munk
Tue, Dec 23, 2008
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Whether you knew her or should have known her...
News Obituaries | The Oregonian
Dec. 23, 2008
View/Sign Guest Book
VIRGINIA MALBIN, 1913-2008
"You've got to fight back. Once you begin to feel that way about the world,
you never stop."
Virginia Malbin, proud veteran of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade and lifelong
activist in progressive grassroots politics, died Dec. 10. She was a
youthful 95. In 1937, committed to defending a government that was
succeeding against enormous odds at improving the lives of the poor,
Virginia joined the international effort to aid the Spanish Republic, which
was under siege by fascist forces. She was in her early 20s, a recent Phi
Beta Kappa graduate of the University of Chicago, already a seasoned
community organizer, social worker, unionist. Her main task was to aid
Spanish social services in resettling refugee children, many of whom had
been traumatized and orphaned by the war. Returning to the United States,
Virginia went on a speaking tour to inform Americans about the situation in
Spain and raise funds for relief efforts. In 1938 she returned to Spain,
joining her husband Barney, a physician working near the front. Virginia
assisted with evacuating wounded internationals, many from lands already
under Nazi domination, to countries that would protect them. With the defeat
of the Republic and the start of World War II, the couple returned to the
United States. Barney served as an Air Force flight surgeon; Virginia cared
for her two young children and continued her work in anti-fascist
organizations.
After the war, the Malbins moved to Vancouver, Wash., then to Portland.
Throughout the 1950s, they were part of a vibrant community of labor
organizers, artists, educators, and left-leaning people from all walks of
life, making a good life in defiance of the ravages of the McCarthy era.
Virginia worked for Child Welfare in Portland, then soon after her husband's
death in 1959, left for graduate school at the University of Southern
California. After obtaining a master's degree in social work, Virginia won a
grant for a project that challenged San Francisco's practice of
incarcerating indigent elderly in state mental hospitals. Her research and
advocacy resulted in the funding of appropriate housing and services. From
1967 until retiring in 1977, Virginia taught community organizing and grant
writing in the social work department of San Francisco State University. She
was involved in campus politics, most importantly in support of the historic
student strike that ended in the creation of the first school of ethnic
studies in the nation. During the 30 years that she lived in Berkeley,
Virginia traveled the world with friends; hiked with the Sierra Club and
Berkeley Hiking Club; sailed in the Caribbean and San Juans; rafted the
Middle Fork of the Salmon and Colorado (the last time when she was 90); and
was active in Women for Peace. In 1993, Virginia returned to Portland to be
near family. Until the final weeks of her life, Virginia led a full life.
She marched against the war in Iraq just weeks after hip surgery; maintained
membership in the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom;
enjoyed Portland's cultural offerings; went to water aerobics classes;
studied Greek philosophers with the Inquiring Minds group at Terwilliger
Plaza. Virginia was preceded in death by her husband, and her daughter,
Linda. She is survived by her son, Edward, and his wife, Diane; and three
generations of nieces, nephews, and cousins. She is remembered by an
extended family of relatives and friends as a lively, tough, impassioned
intellectual, who inspired them to work for the same causes that shaped her
life: economic justice, equal rights, civil liberties, peace.
"When people have a vision and they know what they are struggling for and
they work together to accomplish it - I think that it is still the most
important thing for people to learn."
A memorial service will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. on Saturday Jan. 17 at
Terwilliger Plaza, 2545 SW Terwilliger Blvd., Portland.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________It was a privilage to have known Virginia for about the last ten years herein Portland. She fixed her listing in The Portland Red Guide (p. 110) bycorrecting her husband's name from my mistaken "Bernard" to Barney and thatshe went to Spain after ( not "with") Barney. She specificed that her workwith the Lincoln Brigade was as a social worker and added to my noting thatshe had "firearms traning" that she was issued a weapon.visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Unions on today's call in for single payer.
by Michael Munk
Mon, Dec 22, 2008
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Local numbers of Oregon Dems--none of whom are among the 93 Reps already
signed up for HR 676:
Blumenauer 503 231-2300 Wu 503 326-2901 DeFazio (who says he prefers for
profit private insurance to single payer) 1-800 944-9603 Schrader
(transition office) 503 723-6174
From: "Unions for Single Payer HR676"
To: "Single Payer News"
Sent: Sunday, December 21, 2008 6:46 PM
Subject: Bring hope for health! Take action on Dec. 22.
Bring hope for health! Take action on Dec. 22.
You can bring tidings of comfort and hope for those who are suffering from
lack of health care.
Join with dozens of national organizations and unions to call your
congressperson on Monday, Dec. 22.
Urge him or her to co-sponsor and help pass HR 676, national single payer
health care. (We will have greater impact by doing this on the same day.)
If he or she is already a co-sponsor of HR 676, ask her or him to sign on
again in the new Congress.
If you cannot speak directly with the congressperson, ask to speak to the
assistant who handles health care. Leave a message, request a response,
and include your contact information.
It's good to call representatives in their home districts at this time of
year. But if you prefer to reach them in Washington, call the US Capitol
switchboard: (202) 224 3121. Then ask for your representative.
Please report back to nursenpo@aol.com on the response you received.
(If you need to look up a congressperson, go to http://votesmart.org/ and
put in the zip code.)
One More thing before you break out the cookies and egg nog:
Please take another brief action that can help tremendously to put single
payer on the national agenda.
Write to noah@moveon.org to urge that Move On place HR 676, national
single payer health care, at the center of their campaign for universal
health care.
Thank you for acting for health and justice!
HR 676 would institute a single payer health care system in the U.S. by
expanding a greatly improved Medicare system to every resident.
HR 676 would cover every person in the U. S. for all necessary medical
care including prescription drugs, hospital, surgical, outpatient
services, primary and preventive care, emergency services, dental, mental
health, home health, physical therapy, rehabilitation (including for
substance abuse), vision care, chiropractic and long term care.
HR 676 ends deductibles and co-payments. HR 676 would save billions
annually by eliminating the high overhead and profits of the private
health insurance industry and HMOs.
HR 676 currently has 93 co-sponsors in addition to Conyers. Co-sponsors
and bill text are here:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:h.r.00676:
HR 676 has been endorsed by 476 union organizations in 49 states including
118 Central Labor Councils and Area Labor Federations and 39 state
AFL-CIO's (KY, PA, CT, OH, DE, ND, WA, SC, WY, VT, FL, WI, WV, SD, NC, MO,
MN, ME, AR, MD-DC, TX, IA, AZ, TN, OR, GA, OK, KS, CO, IN, AL, CA, AK, MI,
MT, NE, NY, NV & MA).
For further information, a list of union endorsers, or a sample
endorsement resolution, contact:
Kay Tillow
All Unions Committee For Single Payer Health Care--HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO)
1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636 1551
Email: nursenpo@aol.com
12/21/08
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Dec 22 Call your Rep for HR 676
by Michael Munk
Sat, Dec 20, 2008
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About Obama's healthcare house parties
by Michael Munk
Thu, Dec 18, 2008
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They are do it yourself. You sign up to lead a discussion and invite folks
to participate. Details below from Obama' web site
http://change.gov/pages/health_care_discussion_faq/
Be aware that the for profit health insurance industry may send you
invitations to its own "Obama house parties" and pretend to be just
interested citizens. See the NYTimes expose at
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/17/us/politics/17health.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=Insurers%20at%20healthcare%20discussions&st=cse
Support single payer HR 676
How do I sign up to host a Health Care Community Discussion?
You can sign up at: http://change.gov/hcdiscussion.
When will the Health Care Community Discussions take place?
They will take place from December 15, 2008 through December 31, 2008.
How do I sign up to attend a Health Care Community Discussion?
There is no signup process on Change.gov to attend an event - just to host
one. We'll provide hosts with a special moderator guide, including
everything necessary to get the conversation going. But it's up to the
discussion leader to invite friends and members of the community. Health
care reform will come from the grassroots, and we're counting on you to
take the lead in your communities.
How do I receive my Moderator Guide and Participant Guide?
Once you sign up, you will receive an e-mail shortly afterwards with a
link to download your Moderator Guide and your Participant Guide.
What if I signed up but never received an e-mail with my Moderator Guide
and Participant Guide?
Sometimes the e-mail from Change.gov with links to the Guides went into
spam folders.
You can download the Guides here:
Moderator Guide: http://change.gov/moderatorguide
Participant Guide: http://change.gov/participantguide
This includes all the information you need to host a Health Care Community
Discussion.
How do I tell you about my Health Care Community Discussion?
The reporting website is at: http://change.gov/page/s/hcdiscussreport
Here, you can submit your Group Submission and Survey Responses and upload
your photos and videos.
Can I hold my Health Care Community Discussion after December 31, 2008?
We are trying to schedule all of the Health Care Community Discussions
between December 15 and December 31 to allow time for the Health Policy
Transition Team to prepare a report for the President-elect. The feedback
page will be live through the first weeks of January, so you can still
submit information about your Health Care Community Discussion until then.
How do I find out if Senator Daschle is attending my event?
We will contact you if your Senator Daschle is going to attend your Health
Care Community Discussion.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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How Nordian of Fargo decides your Medicare coverage
by Michael Munk
Wed, Dec 17, 2008
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Obama's health care local meetings
by Michael Munk
Mon, Dec 15, 2008
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The Obama-Biden Transition Project
An opportunity to urge Obama to back single payer HR 676
=20
=20
=20
Dear Michael,=20
Over the coming weeks, thousands of Americans will be =
leading Health Care Community Discussions -- small local gatherings in =
which Americans are sharing thoughts and ideas about reforming health =
care. President-elect Obama and Health and Human Services =
Secretary-designate Tom Daschle are counting on Americans from every =
walk of life to help identify what's broken and provide ideas for how to =
fix it.=20
You can help shape that reform by leading your own Health =
Care Community Discussion anytime between now and December 31st.=20
Secretary-designate Daschle recorded a short message about =
these important discussions. Watch the video and sign up today to lead a =
discussion in your community:=20
Secretary-designate Daschle is committed to reforming health =
care from the ground up, which is why he won't just be reading the =
results of these discussions -- he'll be attending a few himself.=20
When you sign up to lead a discussion, we'll provide =
everything you need to make your conversation as productive as possible, =
including a Moderator's Guide with helpful tips. All you have to do is =
reach out to friends, family, and members of your community and ask them =
to attend -- and, when it's over, tell us how it went. The Transition's =
Health Policy Team will gather the results of these discussions to guide =
its recommendations for the Obama-Biden administration.=20
No transition has tried something like this before, and your =
participation is essential to our success.=20
Thank you,=20
John=20
John D. Podesta
Co-Chair
The Obama-Biden Transition Project=20
=20
=20
Tell Sen. Baucus to Put Single-Payer Healthcare on the =
Table
Dear Michael,
As this document illustrates, polls show that most =
Americans want single-payer healthcare. So why has the Senate Finance =
Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus taken this option off the table?
With the U.S, economy in freefall and a stimulus =
package in the works, why would Baucus dismiss single-payer healthcare =
when it is clearly part of the solution?
Tell Sen. Baucus you want single-payer healthcare on =
the table. Click here.
Additional actions you can take:
1. At the request of President-elect Obama, healthcare =
house meetings are taking place across the country--now through the end =
of December. Find a meeting near you, or host one, here.
Download these documents and take some copies with =
you:
"Healthcare NOT Warfare" flyer
Ten Reasons to Support HR 676
Quick Facts on HR 676
Groups Endorsing HR 676
Polling Is Quite Clear
2. Mark your calendars for December 22, National =
Call-in Day for single-payer healthcare. Look for the details in an =
upcoming email.
We're pushing as hard as we can and we need your voice =
to be heard--please take action today!
Happy Holidays,
Tim Carpenter
National Director
Progressive Democrats of America is a grassroots PAC =
that works both inside the Democratic Party and outside in movements for =
peace and justice. Our goal: work with and increase the progressive =
majority in Congress as we build on our 2008 electoral successes into =
2009 and beyond.=20
PDA's advisory board includes seven members of =
Congress and activist leaders such as Tom Hayden, Medea Benjamin, Thom =
Hartmann, Jim Hightower, and Rev. Lennox Yearwood.=20
=20
=20
=20
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Who knew? Portland ships to North Korea
by Michael Munk
Mon, Dec 15, 2008
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New bridge deciders lean toward Clark co and its car nuts
by Michael Munk
Sun, Dec 14, 2008
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Nader group joins 676 movement
by Michael Munk
Sat, Dec 13, 2008
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November5.org
December 12, 2008
"November5.org"
Several of us from the Nader for President 2008 campaign had decided to
channel our efforts toward one big goal, but we lacked a major focus.
Recently, results of a survey done by the campaign came back. Top issue?
Adopt single payer health care. It's not the only issue people care about,
obviously. But, to turn this country around it's clear that we need to
address our own pain now.
Our big goal for the next Congress will be to drive for national health
insurance to cover privately-delivered healthcare for all Americans.
We're far from alone in this. The array and scope of the groups and their
allies supporting national health insurance is impressive. But we are not
reinventing the wheel, either. As long as you want to build a lasting
organization that will get Congress to focus on people's needs -- not
those of big business -- November5 can be the place to do it.
Here in the United States, we have excellent private health care. So why
are nearly 100 million of our citizens uninsured or underinsured? You
already know why: profit-driven private insurance companies. Taken
together, they make the Pentagon look streamlined.
Not only that, but consider over 18,000 dead and hundreds of thousands
getting sicker every year specifically because their health insurance is
inadequate -- or non-existent.
The way to fix health care is to cut private insurance companies out of
the basic health care picture, while keeping our system of private
delivery. This is how Medicare came into being in the 1960s. It now covers
all Americans over 65.
If we succeed in creating a system of "Medicare for All," we will help
businesses and other organizations, independent contractors, veterans,
people with pre-existing conditions, students -- all of us. If we get this
done, it will revolutionize all of our lives for the better. We'll be able
to focus on everything else that we want to accomplish for our
communities, and our nation.
Passing national health insurance will be difficult, but it is achievable.
General Plan
Huge amounts of leg work have been done on this issue. H.R. 676, the
legislation that supporters of national health insurance have introduced,
had 93 original co-sponsors in the House. That number will probably
increase as the new Congress comes into session. The first task now facing
all supporters of the bill will be to make a new tally of co-sponsors and
supporters in the next Congress.
We will be up against alternatives to "reform" health care, such as the
plan promoted by Senator Max Baucus. They simply extend the status quo --
and the damage. They would expand the profits of the private insurance
companies, and therefore cannot check the spiraling inflation generated by
these companies, and the broken system they inhabit. So, right away, we
have to draw a sharp line between what we want, and bad compromises.
Remember, to pass the House, we will need roughly another 120 votes. That
means that we will have to go for a margin, to have around 140 votes in
addition to the co-sponsors. Here is where our district-level
organizations will have to go to work to pick up votes.
We will need sponsors of the legislation in the Senate. Those do not yet
exist. This is a critical early step that we hope to help other groups
active on H.R. 676 to take.
November5 is non-partisan. We cannot be bound by the notion that
Republicans will not buy into national health insurance. It maintains
private delivery of health care and will expand choice of doctor, creating
conditions for greater innovation and competition -- not less.
We will need to build fast. This effort will work only if it moves deeply
into communities, where members of Congress get their votes. We are
currently designing a structure that will allow people to begin organizing
independently, district by district, around our current goal -- without
having to wait for plans from above.
Specific Steps
Inform yourself and others by reading:
H.R. 676
and these three articles:
Rose Ann DeMoro, Philadelphia Inquirer, December 8, 2008
Physicians for a National Health Program, Talking Points, December 10,
2008
Statement of Dr. Marcia Angell introducing the U.S. National Health
Insurance Act
and by watching these excellent videos on H.R. 676. Pass them along in
emails, on blogs, facebook and myspace pages. If you create videos on
youtube, do one on national health care yourself:
HR 676 - The Single Payer Solution, Part 1 of 4
HR 676 - The Single Payer Solution, Part 2 of 4
HR 676 - The Single Payer Solution, Part 3 of 4
HR 676 - The Single Payer Solution, Part 4 of 4
Write a letter -- not an email -- in your own words to your member of
Congress stating that you'd like their commitment to vote for H.R. 676. If
your member of Congress is a co-sponsor of the bill, express your support
for that stand. Email a copy to us, if you would, with the words "Letter
to My Congressperson" in the subject line.
President-elect Obama has asked for volunteers around the country to host
discussion groups on the health care issue during the last half of
December. Attend a discussion in your area and make the argument for
single payer. Click here for more information.
Soon, we'll be raising money online to build the November5 movement.
November5.org will not be a passive website, it will be a place where each
Congressional district will be represented by the people of that district.
You'll be able to login and see the latest on your Congressional
representative, plan with others events that make sense to you for
promoting H.R. 676, and organize for meeting with your member of Congress.
If the model works, we'll be able to tackle other issues. For now, let's
focus in, and get November5 built. The bell has rung -- and we are in a
struggle that we can win, if we all dig deep.
The politicians who want to nibble around the edges of the rolling
disaster that is our health care system may have industry on their side,
but we have the best plan. Many highly-qualified doctors, economists, and
legislators have put enormous work into it, we just have to stand up, be
counted and gather others with us to do the same.
We look forward to the rewarding work ahead.
The November5 Team
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Work For Single Payer This Week End
by Michael Munk
Fri, Dec 12, 2008
|
For example, here are just a few house parties around Portland:
Change is Coming
Sunday, December 14 1:00 PM Meriwether East Tower (Portland, OR)
A community gathering to give input to our President-Elect and to learn how
we can make a difference.
Change is ComingRSVP »Details »
The Next Step
Saturday, December 13 1:00 PM First Unitarian Church (Portland, OR)
Come gather with others and share our ideas. We will meet in the Eliot
Chapel and do some brainstorming. Then we will break into smaller...
Change is ComingRSVP »Details »
Smart Tower Verticle Urban Wind Farm & Future Renewable Energy Plan
Monday, December 15 6:00 PM McCall's (Portland, OR)
This plan is a comprehensive plan that will complement existing renewable
energy efforts like wind farms. We are currently working on all 6 items
in...
Change is ComingRSVP »Details »
To: "Single Payer News"
Sent: Thursday, December 11, 2008 7:15 PM
Subject: Work For Single Payer This Week End
Dear Single Payer Supporters -
There's an unusual opportunity to promote single payer to the Obama
administration coming up this weekend.
This Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 13-14, the Obama Transition Team is
sponsoring "Change is Coming" house parties across the country.
To find one near you, go to:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/changeiscoming/.
These meetings are an opportunity to meet neighbors and to educate them
about single payer national health insurance, and to let the Obama
Transition Team know there is broad support for the single-payer solution.
What better bailout for the big automakers and for the rest of us, than
affordable, single payer health care?
If you need more information than the talking points below, go to
www.pnhp.org/change
Kay Tillow
All Unions Committee for Single Payer Healthcare--HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization
1169 Eastern Parkway #2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636-1551
Nursenpo@aol.com
12/11/08
TALKING POINTS:
WHY THE MANDATE PLANS WON'T WORK, AND WHY SINGLE PAYER "MEDICARE FOR ALL"
IS WHAT WE NEED
1. Americans are afraid that they can't afford to get sick. Those of us
with
insurance are paying more and more of the premium and more out-of-pocket
as
well. Studies show further that we face bankruptcy if we get sick(1). Many
among us have to choose between paying for medicine and paying for food
and
housing. And with the recent economic downturn, the ranks of those without
insurance are growing.
2. A majority of physicians (59 percent) and an even higher proportion of
Americans (62 percent or more) support single-payer national health
insurance or "Medicare for All."(2) In spite of this, all we are hearing
about today are mandate plans that would require everyone to buy the same
private insurance that is already failing us. These proposals don't
regulate
insurance premiums, they don't keep the insurance companies from refusing
to
pay many of our bills, and they don't improve the insurance we now have.
Some offer a "public option," but this will quickly become too expensive
as
the sick flee to the public sector as private insurers avoid them, abandon
them, or make it too difficult for them to get their bills paid.
3. These proposals won't work, either to expand coverage or to contain
costs. Plans like these have been tried in many states over the past two
decades (Massachusetts, Tennessee, Washington State, Oregon, Minnesota,
Vermont, Maine).(3) They have all failed to reduce the number of uninsured
or to contain costs.
4. These mandate plans will add hundreds of billions of dollars to the
nation's health care costs. In this economic downturn, we need assure
health
care for all without adding to the nation's cost and the government's
deficit. The bottom line is: these proposals don't reform our fragmented,
inefficient system, they just add to its complexity and costs.
5. As long as we continue to rely on private for-profit insurers,
universal
coverage will be unaffordable. Their administrative costs consume nearly
one-third of our health care dollar.(4) We will never have enough money to
provide everyone with decent care until we eliminate private insurance
with
its enormous waste and inadequate coverage. And we will never be able to
keep costs down and get the care we need as long as the wasteful and
unnecessary insurance companies stand between us and our doctors.
6. Every other industrialized country has some form of universal health
care. None uses profitmaking, investor-owned insurance companies like ours
to provide health care for all their people.(5)
7. We have an American system that works. It's Medicare. It's not perfect,
but Americans with Medicare are far happier than those with private
insurance. Doctors face fewer hassles in getting paid, and Medicare has
been
a leader in keeping costs down. And keep in mind that Medicare insures
people with the greatest health care needs: people over 65 and the
disabled.
We should improve and expand Medicare to cover everyone.
8. A single-payer "Medicare for All" system is embodied in H.R. 676,
sponsored by Rep. John Conyers and 92 other members of Congress. It would
have:
· Automatic enrollment for everyone
· Comprehensive services covering all medically necessary care and
drugs
· Free choice of doctor and hospital, who remain independent and
negotiate their fees and budgets with a public or nonprofit agency
· Public or nonprofit agency processes and pays the bills
· Entire system financed through progressive taxes
· Help job growth and the entire U.S. economy by removing the
burden
of health costs from business
· Cover everyone without spending any more than we are now.(6)
9. The growth in health care costs must be addressed if any proposal is to
succeed.
· Single payer offers real tools to contain costs: budgeting,
especially for hospitals, planning of capital investments, and an emphasis
on primary care and coordination of care.
· Mandate plans offer only hopes: competition among insurance
companies, computerization, chronic disease management. Competition among
the shrinking number of insurance companies has already failed to contain
costs and, in the absence of single payer and reformed primary care,
computerization and chronic disease management will raise costs, not lower
them.
10. Single-payer Medicare for All is the right answer:
· It is right on choice. It provides free choice of doctor and
hospital, the choice Americans want and value. In mandate plans, we lose
those choices.
· It is right on efficiency. Single payer would slash
administrative
costs and promote efficient primary care. It would also enhance
evidence-based quality assurance.
· It is right on accountability. It will be a public, nonprofit
system that will respond to what doctors and their patients need, not what
corporate executives and their stockholders want.
1. "Illness and Injury as Contributors to Bankruptcy," D. Himmelstein et
al., Health Affairs Web Exclusive, February 2, 2005.
2. Carroll, A., Ackerman, R., "Support for National Health Insurance Among
U.S. Physicians: 5 Years Later," Annals of Internal Medicine, 148(7),
April
1, 2008; ABC News/Washington Post, Oct. 9-13, 2003, Associated Press/Yahoo
News Poll, Dec. 14-20, 2007.
3. S. Woolhandler, et al., "State Health Reform Flatlines," International
Journal of Health Services, 2008; Marcia Angell, "Health Reform You
Shouldn't
Believe In," The American Prospect, April 21, 2008.
4. S. Woolhandler, et al., "Costs of Health Care Administration in the
U.S.
and Canada," New England Journal of Medicine, Sept. 21, 2003; J.G. Kahn et
al., "The Cost of Health Insurance Administration in California: Estimates
for Insurers, Physicians, and Hospitals," Health Affairs, 2005.
5. Reid, T.R., "Sick Around the World," PBS, April 15, 2008; Thompson, S.,
Mossialos, E., "Private Health Insurance and Access to Health Care in the
European Union," Euro Observer, Spring 2004.
6. United States National Health Insurance Act (or the Expanded and
Improved
Medicare for All Act), H.R.676,
www.thomas.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c110:H.R.676
; "Health Care for All Californians Act: Cost and Economic Impacts
Analysis," The Lewin Group, January 2005
By Len Rodberg, PhD, Co-chair, PNHP NYMetro Chapter
|
Wyden responds to reported waffling on torture
by Michael Munk
Fri, Dec 12, 2008
|
Following up on my previous posts questioning Wyden's apparant backtracking
on torture. Note that he refers only to the Salon criticism and ignores the
NYTimes and TIME magazine reports that mnetion anti torture gropups like the
ACLU have been upset by his statements. This is his reply to his
constituient, Paul Loney's request for an explanation.
Dear Mr. Loney:
Thank you for contacting me to share your concerns about the United
States's treatment of detainees. I am pleased that we agree on this
important issue.
As you may know, a blogger and columnist for the online magazine Salon
recently posted an article suggesting that I had reversed or changed my
position on torture. Specifically, the article implied that I was
wavering in my opposition to harsh interrogation techniques. I share
your deep concern about this issue and appreciate the opportunity to set
the record straight. You may also be interested to know that I responded
to this article and that you may read this response at:
_http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2008/12/04/feinstein/index1.html_.
I will continue to fight for the adoption of clear-cut interrogation
rules, applied to all agencies, which ensure that America never again
uses interrogation techniques that are anything but legal, humane and
noncoercive. The U.S. Army Field Manual meets this standard, and, in
2007, I supported and fought for legislation that would have required
all agencies to comply with the Army Field Manual. I still believe the
current Army Field Manual is the best common interrogation standard that
has been written so far, and I will firmly oppose any changes that would
weaken or erode the protections it currently contains. However, I am
prepared to work with my colleagues and the Obama Administration to see
if the standard can be improved and codified in law. I am also willing
to consider whether there are any other legal, human, and noncoercive
techniques that could be added to the current list. Just because the
Army Field Manual is currently the best available standard for
interrogation doesnâ??t mean America canâ??t do better. I am not the
only person to hold this view. The Campaign to Ban Torture recently
wrote: "Currently the best expression of [one national] standard is the
U.S. Army Field Manual, which will be used until any other interrogation
technique has been approved based on the Golden Rule principle." In
November 2008, I sent a letter to the Campaign to Ban Torture,
expressing my approval of these views. You may find a copy of my letter
at: http://wyden.senate.gov/newsroom/cbt_letter.pdf/t_blank>.
I trust that this makes clear that I have not backtracked from my
anti-torture position. I remain committed to establishing a clear,
uniform standard for interrogations, and in the 111th Congress, I will
work closely with the new administration to pass the best possible
legislation on this issue. Please rest assured that I remain committed
to ensuring that interrogations are legal and effective and that the
abuses of the last several years are never repeated.
Thank you again for keeping me apprised of the issues that are important
to you. If I may be of further assistance in the future, please do not
hesitate to contact me.
Sincerely,
Ron Wyden
United States Senator
To write to me, go to http://wyden.senate.gov/ and choose the "Contact"
link. Please do not reply to this e-mail. Mail sent to this address
cannot be answered.
|
The left after the election.
by Michael Munk
Thu, Dec 11, 2008
|
|
Tell Obama to back HR 676
by Michael Munk
Tue, Dec 9, 2008
|
Obama Team Seeks Your Input on Health Care Reform
Really? Only single payer reforms the sustem. Early on, Obama suggested he
agreed but "the people" weren't yet ready to dump for profit health
insurnace companies.
Borrowing a community organizing technique, the incoming administration
is
asking Americans to host meetings to come up with ideas. They'll send
discussion packets to anyone who signs up.
Saturday 06 December 2008
http://www.truthout.org/120808HA
»
by: Noam N. Levey, The Los Angeles Times
Washington - Former Sen. Tom Daschle, in his first major speech
since being asked to head President-elect Barack Obama's healthcare reform
effort, on Friday announced a nationwide campaign this month to solicit
public input on improving the nation's healthcare system.
The plan - asking Americans to host meetings to talk about reform -
appears designed to avoid the appearance that the new administration is
developing a sweeping agenda behind closed doors.
That perception is widely believed to have helped doom the Clinton
administration's healthcare reform efforts in the early '90s, when
then-First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton led a months-long task force that
wrote the administration's legislation.
"We want an open process," Daschle told a healthcare forum convened in
Denver by Sen. Ken Salazar (D-Colo.).
In Washington, Democratic officials have been meeting privately for
weeks to develop legislation, which senior lawmakers hope to unveil in
early January, to reshape the country's healthcare system, a longtime goal
of the party.
Obama, Daschle and others - including Massachusetts Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy - envision an effort by the federal government to ensure that all
Americans get health coverage, to bring down healthcare costs and to
improve the quality of care.
Daschle, a former majority leader whom Obama has asked to be Health and
Human Services secretary, said Friday that the transition team would send
discussion packets to any American willing to host a house party in the
last two weeks of December.
He said he would attend a meeting himself, and invited Americans to
sign up for the events at the transition website, www.change.gov.
Some 10,000 people, many of them already involved in grass-roots
efforts to push healthcare reform, have submitted comments on the website,
according to Daschle.
The Obama team's maneuver builds on organizing techniques pioneered by
liberal grass-roots groups like MoveOn.org and deployed by Obama during
the presidential campaign.
It also reinforces the message that Obama has delivered since his
election, that he intends to take aggressive steps to tackle the issue
despite the worsening economic situation.
"President-elect Obama has made health reform one of his top
priorities," Daschle said. "And I'm here to tell you that his commitment
to changing the healthcare system remains strong and focused."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregonian columnist wrong about Wyden and torture
by Michael Munk
Mon, Dec 8, 2008
|
|
Wyden, DeFazio and the Big O protect health industry profits
by Michael Munk
Sat, Dec 6, 2008
|
To the editor, The Oregonian
Your editorial support for Senator Wyden's health plan ("A boost for
Wyden's health care plan," December 6) and Wyden's plan itself assumes our
only option is to protect the profits at the heart of the crisis--those of
the private health insurance industry. Rather than accept your argument,
readers should consider Dawn Cowan's righteous observation on the opposite
page ( Letters, Dec 6) that "It is criminal that companies are allowed to
profit from the sickness and misinformation that bankrupts the oldest and
weakest members of out society."
Fortunately, the Obama administration and the new Congress have before
them a real reform of our disgraceful health delivery system. It exchanges
the for profit insurance industry for a single payer (Medicare) system
that covers everyone
. It is Rep. John Conyers HR 676 and has already has the support
of 93 congressional co-signers and almost 500 labor organization.
Unfortunately, Rep > Jim McDermott (D-WA) is the only Northwest member of
Congress among them,
although AFL-CIO councils of both Oregon and Washington and many local
unions support it. His constituents should know that, like the Oregonian,
their Rep Peter DeFazio has declined to endorse it in favor of the private
health insurance industry while Reps Blumenauer, Wu and Shroeder need to
stand up and declare their position.
Michael Munk
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
How to comment on Obama transistion docs
by Michael Munk
Sat, Dec 6, 2008
|
|
the communist town of Portland
by Michael Munk
Fri, Dec 5, 2008
|
According to the nutcake wife of nutcake Bill Sizemore, we live in "the
communist town of Portland"
This according to Thomas Anable's (of SW Portland) nice letter to the
Oregonian today headed "No More Sizemore" at
http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2008/12/letters_to_the_editor_awol_sol.html
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
We need to know more about Portland's FPRDF
by Michael Munk
Fri, Dec 5, 2008
|
Three separate articles in today's Oregonian draw our attention to a little
known but extremely expensive group in Portland's city government--the Fire
and Police Retirement
and Disability Fund (FPRDF) It uses up the 4th highest total of our tax
dollars,
exceeded only by education and the regular budgets of the city and county.
Its board of trustees is composed of Chair Yvonne Deckard, Bob Lemon,
representing members of the Bureau of Fire and Rescue; Scott Westerman,
representing members of the Police Bureau and "Citizen Members" Jeffrey
Robertson and Justin Delaney, presumably representing the interests of the
public.Its paid staff of 18 is headed by Fund Director Linda Jefferson.
There have been a few
efforts at reforming what has been a rubber stamp for police and fire
unions,
but they obviously haven't worked.
The first article reports that the City Council, with only Commissioner
Leonard dissenting, swept under the rug a possible police scandal when it
voted to avoid a public hearings at which Police Sgt Rocky Balada (demoted
in 2000
for approving "cuff time" for his officers) threatened to expose systematic
corruption in the Portland Police Bureau,including top brass. For nine years
the FPRDF has found creative ways to keep paying Balada "stress-disabilty"
payments
as long as he did not insist on a public hearing on his demotion. In
return,Mayor Potter
and Commissioners Salzman, Adams and Fish agreed to pay him almost $100,000
more
(and retire at Sergeant's rank and $500 in cash) to ensure his silence. They
claimed
a public hearing could have cost the city even more money--as if that's a
reason to bury
potential corruption. I've already sent this story, but if you missed it,
it's at
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/index.ssf?/base/news/122835933054110.xml&coll=7.
The second article is headed "Top Portland cops win 7.5% pay raise". It was
granted by a unanimous city council to 42 Police Bureau commanders, captains
and lieutenants in return for their giving a nice perk known as "executive
leave"--an extra two or three weeks pay supposedly for "outstanding work"
but in fact paid on demand. The cooperative FPRDF allowed the brass to boost
their pensions with this trick by up to $7,000 a year. So now commanders
base pay rises to over $122,000, captains to almost $114,000 and Lieutenants
$99,000. And retirement? Former police chief Derrick Foxworth got a fat
pension
at age 50. See
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/index.ssf/2008/12/portland_police_commanders_win.html
Finally, Commissioner Fish has an oped supporting an effort to officially
calssify many
types of camcer contracted by firefighters as "service connected,":
because he considers their work exposes them to toxic substances. In this
case the FPRDF seems to less enthusiastic, pointing out that many firemen
are
not exposed and suffer from cancer anyway and that not all the lifestyles
they choose are healthy. Also, many non firefighters are exposed to
cancer-causing agents, as health statistics show, and most of us are not
able to cite pollution, for example, when applying for disability
compensation or pensions. Check him out at
http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2008/12/bringing_a_sad_secret_out_of_t.html
|
Onl;y Leonard opposed burial of police scandal
by Michael Munk
Thu, Dec 4, 2008
|
|
Central Oregon Labor Council Endorses HR 676
by Michael Munk
Wed, Dec 3, 2008
|
But to date, Jin McDermott [WA-7] is the only Rep from the Northwest who
has signed on so far. Where are Wu, Blumenauer, DeFazio et al?
21st NW labor organization endorses HR 676
The Central Oregon Labor Council has endorsed HR 676, single payer
healthcare legislation introduced by Congressman John Conyers (D-MI).
It joins 20 other Oregon and Washington unions which have previously
endorsed single payer.(list below).
The Oregon Council is the 118th council to endorse HR 676.
In Bend, it represents 5,500 workers in Deschutes, Crook
and Jefferson counties. President Fernando Gapasin said after the vote:
"We support the single-payer initiative because we believe quality
healthcare is a human right not a privilege for the rich. We also
believe
that taking the cost of healthcare out of the collective bargaining
equation will help to improve the economic gains of unionized workers and
improve opportunities to expand unionization to unorganized sectors of
working people. And, the campaign for single-payer healthcare will
provide practical opportunities for creating a national long term
coalition that continues to work for working class reforms."
#30#
HR 676 would institute a single payer health care system in the U.S. by
expanding a greatly improved Medicare system to every resident.
HR 676 would cover every person in the U. S. for all necessary medical
care including prescription drugs, hospital, surgical, outpatient
services, primary and preventive care, emergency services, dental, mental
health, home health, physical therapy, rehabilitation (including for
substance abuse), vision care, chiropractic and long term care.
HR 676 ends deductibles and co-payments. HR 676 would save billions
annually by eliminating the high overhead and profits of the private
health insurance industry and HMOs.
HR 676 currently has 93 co-sponsors in addition to Conyers. Co-sponsors
and bill text are here:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:h.r.00676:
Oregon
332. Oregon AFL-CIO, Salem, OR
199. Branch 82, National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) Portland,
OR
314. United Steelworkers (USW) Oregon locals at Western Regional Council
330. Southern Oregon Jobs with Justice, Ashland, OR
331. Portland Community College Faculty Federation, AFT Local 2277,
Portland, OR
356. Local 5 International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU),
Portland, OR
357. Oregon Area District Council, ILWU, Portland, OR
358. Portland Jobs with Justice, Portland, OR
410. Southern Oregon Central Labor Council, Central Point, OR
419. Southern Oregon Area Local, American Postal Workers Union (APWU),
Medford, OR
479. Local 206, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Portland, OR
481. AFSCME Local 3214, Albertina Kerr Center Employees of Lane County,
Eugene, OR
Washington
174. Washington State Labor Council, 500 local unions with 400,000
members, Seattle, WA
47. Washington State Alliance for Retired Americans
74. Washington State Machinist Council, International Association of
Machinists District #160 (IAM),
Seattle, WA
96. International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers
(IFPTE) Local 17, Seattle, WA
186. North West Washington Central Labor Council, Bellingham, WA
298. Washington State Building and Construction Trades Council, Olympia,
WA
314. United Steelworkers (USW) Washington locals at Western Regional
Coucil
316. Pierce County Central Labor Council, Tacoma, WA
327. United Association Local 699, Sprinkler Fitters and Apprentices,
Seattle, WA
431. AFT Seattle Community Colleges, Local 1789, Seattle, WA
For further information, a list of union endorsers, or a sample
endorsement resolution, contact:
Kay Tillow
All Unions Committee For Single Payer Health Care--HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO)
1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636 1551
Email:
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Wyden fudges on Obama torture policy
by Michael Munk
Wed, Dec 3, 2008
|
After Sharp Words on C.I.A., Obama Faces a Delicate Task
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/03/us/politics/03intel.html?_r=1&hp=&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1228299069-a6e/UZzQdRmFpggcACfibw
By MARK MAZZETTI and SCOTT SHANE
New York Times: December 3, 2008
WASHINGTON - For two years on the presidential campaign trail, Barack Obama
rallied crowds with strongly worded critiques of the Bush administration's
most controversial counterterrorism programs, from hiding terrorism suspects
in secret Central Intelligence Agency jails to questioning them with methods
he denounced as torture.
Now Mr. Obama must take charge of the C.I.A., in what is already proving to
be one of the more treacherous patches of his transition to the White House.
Last week, John O. Brennan, a C.I.A. veteran who was widely seen as Mr.
Obama's likeliest choice to head the intelligence agency, withdrew his name
from consideration after liberal critics attacked his alleged role in the
agency's detention and interrogation program. Mr. Brennan protested that he
had been a "strong opponent" within the agency of harsh interrogation
tactics, yet Mr. Obama evidently decided that nominating Mr. Brennan was not
worth a battle with some of his most ardent supporters on the left.
Mr. Obama's search for someone else and his future relationship with the
agency are complicated by the tension between his apparent desire to make a
clean break with Bush administration policies he has condemned and concern
about alienating an agency with a central role in the campaign against Al
Qaeda.
Mark M. Lowenthal, an intelligence veteran who left a senior post at the
C.I.A. in 2005, said Mr. Obama's decision to exclude Mr. Brennan from
contention for the top job had sent a message that "if you worked in the
C.I.A. during the war on terror, you are now tainted," and had created
anxiety in the ranks of the agency's clandestine service.
One of the first issues Mr. Obama must grapple with is the future of C.I.A.
detention: will the agency continue to hold prisoners secretly, question
them using more aggressive methods than allowed for military interrogators,
and transfer terrorism suspects to countries with a history of using
torture?
During the presidential campaign, a constant theme for Mr. Obama was the
need to restore "American values" to the fight against terrorism. He pledged
to banish secret C.I.A. interrogation rules and require all American
interrogators to follow military guidelines, set out in the Army Field
Manual on interrogation.
In a speech last year, Mr. Obama cast the matter as a practical issue, as
well as a moral one. "We cannot win a war unless we maintain the high ground
and keep the people on our side," he said. "But because the administration
decided to take the low road, our troops have more enemies."
On Wednesday, a dozen retired generals and admirals are to meet with senior
Obama advisers to urge him to stand firm against any deviation from the
military's noncoercive interrogation rules.
But even some senior Democratic lawmakers who are vehement critics of the
Bush administration's interrogation policies seemed reluctant in recent
interviews to commit the new administration to following the Army Field
Manual in all cases.
Senator Dianne Feinstein, the California Democrat who will take over as
chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee in January, led the fight this
year to force the C.I.A. to follow military interrogation rules. Her bill
was passed by Congress but vetoed by President Bush.
But in an interview on Tuesday, Mrs. Feinstein indicated that extreme cases
might call for flexibility. "I think that you have to use the noncoercive
standard to the greatest extent possible," she said, raising the possibility
that an imminent terrorist threat might require special measures.
Afterward, however, Mrs. Feinstein issued a statement saying: "The law must
reflect a single clear standard across the government, and right now, the
best choice appears to be the Army Field Manual. I recognize that there are
other views, and I am willing to work with the new administration to
consider them."
Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, another top Democrat on the Intelligence
Committee, said he would consult with the C.I.A. and approve interrogation
techniques that went beyond the Army Field Manual as long as they were
"legal, humane and noncoercive." But Mr. Wyden declined to say whether
C.I.A. techniques ought to be made public.
C.I.A. officials have long argued that publishing a list of interrogation
techniques only allows Al Qaeda to train its operatives to resist them. But
they say the secrecy has led to exaggeration and myth about the agency's
detention program.
During the presidential campaign, Mr. Obama's aides said he would consider
allowing the C.I.A to continue holding prisoners in overseas jails, but
would insist that inspectors from the International Committee of the Red
Cross be allowed to visit them. They also said he would end the practice of
"rendering" terrorism suspects to countries that have used torture.
One of the retired generals meeting with the Obama team on Wednesday, Paul
D. Eaton, who oversaw the training of Iraqi forces for the Army in 2003 and
2004, said in an interview Tuesday that it was crucial for leaders to send
the right message on the treatment of prisoners.
General Eaton pointed out that Vice President Dick Cheney once dismissed
waterboarding, the near-drowning tactic considered by many legal authorities
to be torture, as a "dunk in the water" and said such statements influenced
rank-and-file soldiers to believe that brutality was not really prohibited.
"This administration has set a tone problem for the military," General Eaton
said. "We've had eight years of undermining good order and discipline."
It is widely expected that Mr. Obama will replace Michael V. Hayden, the
C.I.A. director. Among those mentioned as possible candidates for the job
are Stephen R. Kappes, a C.I.A. veteran who is the deputy director; Tim
Roemer, a former congressman from Indiana who was a member of the Sept. 11
commission; Senator Chuck Hagel, the Nebraska Republican who is retiring
from the Senate in January; and Jack Devine, a former head of the agency's
clandestine service who left the C.I.A. before the Sept. 11 attacks.
The flap over Mr. Brennan, who served as a chief of staff to George J. Tenet
when he ran the C.I.A., was the biggest glitch so far in what has been an
otherwise smooth transition for Mr. Obama. Some C.I.A. veterans suggest that
the president-elect may have difficulty finding a candidate who can be
embraced by both veteran officials at the agency and the left flank of the
Democratic Party.
A. B. Krongard, the C.I.A.'s third-ranking official under Mr. Tenet when the
detention and interrogation program was created, called Mr. Brennan a
"casualty of war" and said he believed C.I.A. tactics were being
second-guessed for political purposes. The demise of Mr. Brennan's
candidacy, Mr. Krongard said, "is a huge loss to the country."
But Mr. Krongard said he believed that ultimately, under a new director and
a new set of policies, the agency would find common ground with Mr. Obama.
"The C.I.A.'s no different than any other place," he said. "Probably 25
percent of the people there really like him, 25 percent don't like him, and
50 percent are open-minded."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Council to avoid hearing on Balada claims
by Michael Munk
Wed, Dec 3, 2008
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Dec 6 Annual Wobbly Book Fair at Liberty Hall
by Michael Munk
Sun, Nov 30, 2008
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Stadium Task Force members revealed!
by Michael Munk
Fri, Nov 28, 2008
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Commissioner Adams pointed out to me that the members of his task force are
available on his website http://www.commissionersam.com/node/15554
I complained that the BIG O ( and WillyWeek) failed to list them and then
did not respond to my request.
Note that among his "Financial Principles" for any taxpayer support for
Paulson's scheme is "Taxpayers should see a return on the public investment
in the project in 3 to 5 years."
This should be clarified. "Should" is a wish. "Return" means "some return"
or "complete return"?
My proposal would test whether that principle is actually achieved since it
requires Paulson to put up the investment and taxpayers to reimburse him for
whatever part of the public investment is actually returned in 5-10 years.
Also, since some challenge optimistic projections of sports impact on jobs
and business by noting that "entertainment expenditures" are largely
transfered from existing businesses, the negotiated accounting process must
consider that by moniteering those alternatives.
Mike Munk
Request for Comments on Draft MLS Soccer/Triple A Baseball Evaluation
Project Approach
By Sam Adams
We welcome your comments on the attached Project Summary.
MLS Soccer/Triple A Baseball Evaluation Project Summary
DRAFT
Revised: 11/26/2008 3:56:15 PM
Evaluation Advisory Task Force Roster
Billy Barquin, Attorney, Kootenai Tribe
John Bradley, Chair, Land Use Committee, Northwest Neighborhood Association
Elisa Dozono, Attorney, Miller Nash
Lindsay DeRoche, Vice President, Portland State University
Mike Houck, Executive Director, Urban Greenspaces Institute
Drew Mahalic, President, Portland Oregon Sport Authority
Brad Malson, Beam Development
Steve Masser, Dean, School of Business, Willamette University
John Mohlis, Commissioner, Portland Development Commission; President,
Columbia Pacific Building Trades Council
Conrad Myers, Myers & Company
Cora Potter, Chair, Lents Urban Renewal Advisory Committee
Jerry Powell, Chair, Planning Committee, Goose Hollow Neighborhood
Association
Tony Stacey, Oregon Veteran Association
Keith Thamajan, Chair, Parks Board, City of Portland, Executive Director,
Campfire Inc.
Jackie Thomas, Vice President, Global Brands, Nike Inc.
Mark Williams, Former Director, Metropolitan Exposition and Recreation
Committee
TBA, Lloyd District Community Association
Staff
City Staff Team
Ken Rust, Chief Administrative Officer
Eric Johansen, Debt Manager
David Logsdon, Project Manager
Ben Smith, Financial Analyst
Mark Moline, City Attorney
Byron Estes, Portland Development Commission
City Consultant Team
Public Financial Management, financial analysis, sports industry economics,
sports facility cost analysis
Steve Janik, Ball Janik LLC, outside legal counsel
Evaluation Guiding Principles
Financial Principles
Existing City programs will not be cut to help fund the project.
Taxpayers should see a return on the public investment in the project in 3
to 5 years.
To the extent possible, revenues from the MLS/baseball enterprise will be
used to finance the project.
The City should have mechanisms in the agreements that provide a financial
upside to the City should the teams' profitability exceed projections. The
City should also build in mechanisms to protect the City's financial
position on the downside.
The City will identify any amenities or program expenditures it wants the
project to address at the front-end of the discussions with the proposer
The more financial risk the City assumes on the project, the City will need
to have more control over those risks.
Financial data and projections developed by the proposer and given to the
City will be a public record. All meetings of the task force will be open to
the public. The task force will take public testimony prior to finalizing
any recommendations.
Social Principles
MLS and baseball facilities will be required to enter into Good Neighbor
Agreements to minimize impacts on surrounding neighborhoods due to
activities at these facilities. The City and proponent will initiate
discussions with adjacent neighborhoods and properties over the project and
keep affected parties informed over the course of project development and
execution.
The City will work with Portland Statue University to ensure that changes to
PGE Park meet the needs of the university.
The City and proponent will strive to find ways to benefit area high school
sports activities and facilities and bring attention to these activities.
There will be no net loss of outdoor athletic fields within the
neighborhood(s) where the project is developed.
City goals and requirements for M/W/ESB participation and for Workforce
Training and Hiring will apply to the project
State Prevailing Wage requirements will apply to project construction
activities
The City and project proponents will make efforts called for in the Local
Business Initiative to promote the growth and economic health of locally
based businesses.
The City's Fair Wage policy will apply to employees at PGE Park and the new
baseball park.
Environmental Principles
For any remodeling of existing facilities, every effort will be made to
reuse and/or recycle all materials removed from the facilities.
The project will strive to meet the City's Green Buildings Policies and will
meet a LEED Silver Certification and strive to achieve a LEED Gold
Certification.
The team owner/stadium operator will commit to implementing sustainable
practices for facility management and operations.
Schedule
November-December
Task Force
Start-up - background on City sports facilities, presentation on MLS
proposal, facility siting alternatives, affirm project guiding principles
Review consultant product on projected team financial performance, project
funding strategies, projects in other markets
City consultant work of project funding options, evaluation of team
financial performance, research on MLS projects in other markets
Formation of City negotiating team
Determine specifics of what is required by MLS for March franchise award
January
Task Force
Updates on project costs, funding options; form tentative position on
project feasibility and funding strategy
Review progress report from City negotiating team and outline of deal points
February
Task Force
Review final products from consultant team
Prepare draft recommendations and take public testimony
Prepare final recommendations and present to City Council for consideration
March
If project determined to be financially feasible, prepare binding agreement
between City and proponent
In conjunction with proponent, prepare final submittal to MLS
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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How Portland could do the soccer deal
by Michael Munk
Thu, Nov 27, 2008
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Commissioners Leonard and Adams, the leading (only?) supporters on the City
Council to advocate spending taxpayer money to back Hank Paulson's scheme to
score a major leage soccer franchise for Portland, have appointed 18 members
to a "task force" charged with recommending whether and how to do that. But
other than asserting they represent a "nice mix" of opinion ,their names
have not been reported in the media (as the members of the Columbuia
Criossing "Task Force" have not).
Paulson and his supporters promise that the new franchise and stadium deals
would bring jobs and business to Portland that would offset any public
subsidies. It's the same argument that persuaded Mayor Katz and the council
to mistakenly pour $30+ million into Multnomah Civic Stadium ( "PGE Park" is
the commercial name) to benefit the owners of the AAA Beavers baseball team.
When the owners defaulted on their payments to the city, taxpayers were left
holding the bag.
So this time, how about reversing the deal? Instead of the public subsidy up
front, Paulson borrows the $85 million he says he needs from his father or
other investors, builds his stadiums and brings in his team. Negotiate an
agreement that accounts for the new jobs and business actually generated by
the team and make annual repayments from public money in the amount
realized. If Paulson's projections are correct, the $85 miion should be
generated in, say, ten years when he either gets the loan repaid or his
father forgives the balance.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Merkley is OK with his ignorant vote for Lieberman
by Michael Munk
Thu, Nov 27, 2008
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Lieberman Contributed to Smith and other GOP Senate, House Candidates
Washington Post Nov. 27,2008
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/capitol-briefing/2008/11/lieberman_contributed_to_gop_s.html
Sen. Joe Lieberman's (I-Conn.) support of John McCain's presidential
campaign was well known. His contribution to Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) was
not.
By Paul Kane
Here's a story of the Thanksgiving spirit, forgiving and forgetting
senatorial style.
When Democrats gathered last week to decide the fate of Sen. Joe Lieberman
(I-Conn.), a pair of senators-elect, Tom Udall of New Mexico and Jeff
Merkley of Oregon, stepped up to offer symbolically important speeches.
Having ridden the wave of support for President-elect Barack Obama, Udall
and Merkley spoke out in favor of the spirit of reconciliation and moving on
from the campaign, in which Lieberman was one of the highest profile
supporters of the Republican presidential ticket.
But no one in the room knew, as Merkley spoke, that Lieberman had supported
Merkley's opponent, Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.). Lieberman, through his
Reuniting Our Country PAC, gave Smith's reelection bid $5,000 on Oct. 10,
according to reports filed with the Federal Election Commission.
Lieberman's support of Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) for the presidency was
well known, punctuated by his nationally televised speech at the Republican
National Convention in St. Paul criticizing Obama as not prepared to be
president. His endorsement of Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who has served
as the top Republican beside him at the Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs Committee, also was well known in Democratic circles.
But not even Merkley knew of Lieberman's backing of Smith in their critical
Senate race, until Capitol Briefing alerted his staff today.
"We were surprised to hear this news, but it's time to put the election
behind us. Jeff Merkley is looking forward to working with all his new
colleagues on an agenda that will put our nation back on track," said Julie
Edwards, spokeswoman for Merkley.
Lieberman's support of Smith came the same weekend he wrote an op-ed in the
St. Paul Pioneer Press defending Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.) for his work as
chairman of an investigative subcommittee on Lieberman's homeland security
committee. The same day he wrote a check to Smith, Lieberman's ROC PAC gave
$5,000 to Rep. Peter King, the Long Island Republican. In radio and TV
appearances the final days of the campaign, Lieberman also frequently said
that a Democratic majority of 60 votes, a filibuster-proof level, would be a
bad thing.
Lieberman's $5,000 check was clearly not a difference maker for Smith, as
Merkley still won by more than 50,000 votes. And Coleman is clinging to a
razor-thin lead during a recount of his race against Democrat Al Franken.
But the internal Democratic caucus debate over Lieberman's fate almost
always focused on Lieberman's criticism of Obama, not on his support of
Republicans in Senate races. Edwards, Merkley's spokeswoman, has said that
Merkley also expressed how much Lieberman's actions in the presidential race
angered him. He did not encourage other Democrats to vote one way or the
other, but did talk about moving on from the bitter fights of the campaign.
Then, on a 42-13 vote, Democrats supported keeping Lieberman as chairman of
the committee with broad oversight of the Obama administration and removing
him from the Environment and Public Works Committee.
Lieberman's office acknowledged his donation to Smith, but noted that he
worked hard for other Democrats as well. "While the Senator's political
action committee donated to a very few Republicans, the Senator's pacs
donated and raised over a half million dollars for wide range of Democratic
candidates and organizations in this past election cycle," Marshall
Wittmann, his spokesman, said.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Nov. 30: labor and progressive songs at the Star E Rose
by Michael Munk
Thu, Nov 27, 2008
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Balada hearing Nov 26, vote Dec 3.
by Michael Munk
Mon, Nov 24, 2008
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Old Fat Naked Women for Peace
by Michael Munk
Mon, Nov 24, 2008
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Oregon state secrets case faces Obama
by Michael Munk
Fri, Nov 21, 2008
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In a report on decisions Obama faces on domestic spying issues, The New
York Times (Nov. 18) noted
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/18/washington/18nsa.html?pagewanted=1&sq=James%20Risen&st=cse&scp=2
"An Islamic charity in Oregon that had its assets frozen by the Treasury
Department on the ground that it was also supporting terrorism is pushing
ahead with a lawsuit of its own. The Obama administration must decide
whether to continue to use the state-secrets privilege in order to block
the disclosure of information about any N.S.A. eavesdropping.
The [Ashland] charity, Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, is charging, based
in part on a classified document that the government mistakenly gave to
its lawyers, that it was the target of wiretapping without warrants.
Lawyers for the group say they believe that the N.S.A. listened illegally
not only to the international phone calls of members of the charity
itself, but also to the calls of two of its lawyers in Washington.
Mr. [Jon B.] Eisenberg, a [San Francisco] lawyer for Al-Haramain, said the
Justice Department had frustrated efforts to develop evidence in the case
both by invoking the state-secrets claim and by refusing to grant security
clearances to some members of the charity's legal team.
"In every way, they've stonewalled us, and the new administration can
change all that," Mr. Eisenberg said. "They can take the blindfolds off.
I don't think President-elect Obama embraces Dick Cheney's theory of
unfettered presidential power. So if President-elect Obama doesn't embrace
that theory, one would expect a change in the direction of how the new
administration handles this litigation."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Many NW unions for 676, only one Rep
by Michael Munk
Thu, Nov 20, 2008
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What the Big O and Saltzman want for Portland?
by Michael Munk
Wed, Nov 19, 2008
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to the Portland City Council members: How the Joint Terrorist Task Force
operates
Orwell on the Hudson
Cameras to Fight Terrorism in Lower N.Y.
by Tom Hays
Associated Press
http://www.freep.com/article/20081119/NEWS07/811190432/1009
November 19, 2008
NEW YORK - The setting could pass for a high-tech trading floor: men in
dark suits, sitting at tiered banks of desks, studying a steady stream of
video and data on floor-to-ceiling monitors.
But the front doors to the 28th-floor office near Wall Street are
unmarked, and the men aren't fixated on stock market fluctuations. The
stakes in their line of business, they say, are much higher.
The tenants -- counterterrorism officers with the New York Police
Department -- have transformed the space into the new nerve center for an
ambitious plan to protect lower Manhattan from terrorist threats. The
center began operating earlier this month, the first phase of a
$100-million project sparked by the Sept. 11, 2001, attack that destroyed
the World Trade Center.
The project will rely largely on 3,000 closed-circuit security cameras
covering about 1.7 square miles in and around the financial district. So
far, about 150 cameras are in place, with 250 more coming on line by the
end of the year and the rest by 2011.
The program was modeled in part after the so-called ring of steel
surveillance measures in London's financial district. But police officials
in New York said it will exceed that effort in scope and sophistication.
"I believe we'll have the safest business district in the world," Police
Commissioner Raymond Kelly said during a recent visit to the command
center, situated in an office tower that is also home to brokerage,
research and insurance firms.
Smart surveillance
A reporter was allowed into the nerve center on the condition he not
disclose its exact location.
The 33 officers assigned to the center monitor the live feeds
round-the-clock.As the volume of images increases, the NYPD hopes to
incorporateso-called "smart surveillance" software programmed to
automatically detect possible signs of trouble -- an unattended bag, an
unauthorized vehicle -- and sound an alarm.
On the street, 30 police cars with two roof-mounted cameras have begun
reading license plates of passing and parked cars; an additional 96
stationary readers also will be installed. Computers check the scanned
plate numbers against a database of stolen and suspicious cars, while
interactive maps help officers pinpoint their locations and track their
movements.
The command center eventually also will receive data from devices designed
to detect any radiological and biological threats posed by cars and trucks
crossing through the neighborhood on Canal Street or entering the 16
bridges and four tunnels serving Manhattan. About a million vehicles drive
onto the island every day.
Police said they picked the downtown location so that private security
officials would have ready access.
***
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Oregon Teamster endorses single payer
by Michael Munk
Tue, Nov 18, 2008
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Oregon Teamster Local Endorses HR 676
Portland, Oregon. Teamster Local 206, which represents workers in a
variety of occupations through out the state of Oregon, has endorsed HR
676, single payer healthcare legislation introduced by Congressman John
Conyers (D-MI).
Tom Leedham, Local 206 Secretary-Treasurer said: "Members of our union are
very involved in health care and have studied a number of proposals for
reform both at the state and national levels. Health care and health care
issues are often the subject of discussion at our general and contract
ratification meetings. Because we enjoy a high quality schedule of
benefits we are not inclined to support a proposal that would be a
reduction in benefits or an increase in costs for 206 Teamsters. A
national single payer plan like HR 676 is the only program we see that
meets our quality and cost criteria. HR 676, like no other, is consistent
with our union's overall philosophy: 'everybody in, nobody out'.
#30#
HR 676 would institute a single payer health care system in the U.S. by
expanding a greatly improved Medicare system to every resident.
HR 676 would cover every person in the U. S. for all necessary medical
care including prescription drugs, hospital, surgical, outpatient
services, primary and preventive care, emergency services, dental, mental
health, home health, physical therapy, rehabilitation (including for
substance abuse), vision care, chiropractic and long term care.
HR 676 ends deductibles and co-payments. HR 676 would save billions
annually by eliminating the high overhead and profits of the private
health insurance industry and HMOs.
HR 676 currently has 93 co-sponsors in addition to Conyers. Co-sponsors
and bill text are here:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:h.r.00676:
HR 676 has been endorsed by 474 union organizations in 49 states including
117 Central Labor Councils and Area Labor Federations and 39 state
AFL-CIO's (KY, PA, CT, OH, DE, ND, WA, SC, WY, VT, FL, WI, WV, SD, NC, MO,
MN, ME, AR, MD-DC, TX, IA, AZ, TN, OR, GA, OK, KS, CO, IN, AL, CA, AK, MI,
MT, NE, NY, NV & MA).
For further information, a list of union endorsers, or a sample
endorsement resolution, contact:
Kay Tillow
All Unions Committee For Single Payer Health Care--HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO)
1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636 1551
Email: nursenpo@aol.com
11/19/08
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Mayor: Lacks votes for Balada settlement
by Michael Munk
Tue, Nov 18, 2008
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This is good news, but the story fails to say why many believe the proposed
settlement is a scandal. The City has tried to avoid a hearing on Sgt
Balada's claim that "cuff time" --police slang for getting off duty early
and getting paid for it--is part of Portland police culture. Balada's
lawyer had threatened to produce numerous witnesses as evidence that police
brass were witty to the practice, so the Disability and Retirement board
(which spends the 4th highest amount of city taxpayer dollars) has tried to
bribe Balada and buy his silence. Randy Leonard seems to be leader of the
Council majority that is resisting the whitewash.
Mayor Tom Potter withdraws proposed settlement for controversial sergeant
from agenda
by Maxine Bernstein, The Oregonian November 17, 2008
Mayor Tom Potter has removed a proposed settlement for a former Central
Precinct sergeant from the council agenda, recognizing he doesn't have the
votes to pass it.
"He didn't want to risk bringing it back and having it fail," said Kyle
Chisek, Potter's senior policy manager.
When the proposed settlement for former Sgt. Rocky Balada first went before
the City Council on Oct. 22, Commissioners Nick Fish, Randy Leonard and Sam
Adams expressed concern that it could set a bad precedent. They sought more
information about the history of Balada's claims.
Linda Jefferson, director of the Portland Fire and Police Disability and
Retirement Fund, and Stephanie Harper, a deputy city attorney, countered
that case could end up costing taxpayers at least half a million dollars if
Balada's job-related stress claim, pending for nine years, were to be
approved by an administrative law judge.
But that's where Balada's claim now appears to be headed.
Balada, then a supervisory sergeant, filed a disability claim for
job-related stress as he was about to be demoted in July 1999 in connection
with a Central Precinct overtime abuse scandal. The disability fund never
held a hearing on the claim, instead granting Balada a non-job-related
stress claim from 2000 until 2006, which is equivalent to 50 percent of pay.
In 2006, the fund terminated Balada's benefits, finding he was able to
return to work. His doctor disagreed, and he has remained off with no pay or
benefits. He hasn't worked in more than eight years.
Under the fund's proposed settlement, the city would have paid Balada
$92,300, in essence granting him the job-related stress claim, or 75 percent
of his pay that he had sought from 2000 through 2006. It would also have
allowed his retirement at sergeant's rank to be effective retroactive to
Sept. 1, 2006.
Balada's attorney, Vic Calzaretta, could not be reached for comment.
-Maxine Bernstein; maxinebernstein@news.oregonian.com
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Joint Terrorism Task Force Redux!
by Michael Munk
Tue, Nov 18, 2008
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From Dan Handelam at Copwatch: His letter to the Big O and Randy Leonard's
oped
To the Oregonian:
We were disappointed by your editorial calling for the return of Portland
Police officers to the Joint Terrorism Task Force (November 15). From the
time community members discovered Portland's participation in the PJTTF,
quite by accident, in 2000, labor, faith, peace, civil liberties and other
groups organized to oppose the City's participation in the Task Force.
Mayor Potter's decision to pull out of the PJTTF was based on the fact
that as Police Commissioner, he would not be granted the same security
clearance as the officers working under him in order to ensure they follow
Oregon state law. ORS 181.575 guarantees Oregonians that their religious,
political, and social affiliations will not be investigated without
reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct.
The FBI has violated such rights for many years. Barack Obama's election
does not guarantee that the FBI as an institution will not continue to
target Muslims, peace activists or others who oppose US foreign and
domestic policies. It also does not guarantee that the Portland Police
will not step over the line and investigate peaceful, legal organizations
such as Peace and Justice Works, which they did at least twice (in 1992
and 1998).
In 2005, the City of Portland enacted a policy not to let fear and secrecy
drive its law enforcement. Rather than asking why don't we join everyone
else, the Oregonian should ask, why don't other cities follow our lead?
--dan handelman
peace and justice works/portland copwatch
PO Box 42456
Portland, OR 97242
503-236-3065
The buck stops with public accountability
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2008/11/the_buck_stops_with_public_acc.html
by Randy Leonard, Guest opinion
The Oregonian November 18, 2008
In its editorial last week concerning the Joint Terrorism Task Force
("Put the city back on terrorism task force," Nov. 15) The Oregonian's
editorial board continues a familiar theme discounting the importance
of civilian oversight of the Portland Police Bureau and suggesting
that by voting to withdraw from the JTTF in 2005, the City Council
made Portland less patriotic, less part of our nation, "a city alone,
unto itself."
I disagree.
When I authored the resolution that caused the city to withdraw from
the JTTF, I drafted language committing to a continued partnership
with the federal government on the JTTF subject to one condition, that
the mayor and the police chief have the same security clearance as the
officers assigned to the task force.
Every officer employed by the Portland Police Bureau, even those
assigned to the JTTF, must operate within the Police Bureau's chain of
command, including the police chief and the elected commissioner in
charge of the Police Bureau. Why? Because the police chief and
commissioner in charge are ultimately responsible for holding our
police officers accountable and making sure they adhere to Oregon law.
We've all heard the phrase "the buck stops here." For the Police
Bureau, the buck stops with the commissioner in charge. Keeping that
person in the dark about the activities of certain employees doesn't
make any sense. Talk about a "deliberate failure to communicate."
In fact, our insistence on maintaining clear lines of communication
and accountability is a position we share with the FBI. The FBI would
never consider allowing one of its agents to operate without the
oversight of the supervisors accountable for the agent's actions, up
to and including, if you will, the "commissioner in charge": the
president of the United States.
But the editorial board was right about one thing: The Bush
administration has clearly demonstrated that the abuse of power is not
just a hypothetical possibility. Abuse happens. And for this reason,
it's vitally important to maintain a chain of command that includes
the elected official accountable to the citizens, to deliberately
communicate with the person whose job description, in essence, says
"the buck stops here."
By the way, this isn't anything new, and it's not an idea conjured up,
as suggested by the editorial board, to "style" Portland as a defender
of civil liberties. In our country, citizens elect the men and women
who oversee our military and our federal, state and local police
agencies -- and we hold our elected officials accountable. It's part
of what makes our nation unique and strong.
While I share the editorial board's hope that the Obama administration
will introduce a new climate of respect for civil liberties, I will
not vote to rejoin the JTTF unless the police chief and mayor have
complete access to what the officers assigned to the JTTF are doing. I
will not support our blind participation in the task force.
I welcome the new era of respect for individual liberties and civil
rights that President-elect Barack Obama will bring. But as President
Ronald Reagan said, trust but verify.
Randy Leonard is a Portland city commissioner.
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Americans in worst health voted for McCain
by Michael Munk
Sun, Nov 16, 2008
|
I checked election returns from each of the five counties in the Huntington
metro area and they all voted for McCain/Palin by margins of of 54% to 58%.
I was not able to check whether they are among the mainly Appalacian
counties that went more heavily for McCain than they did for Bush in 2004.
W. Virginia town shrugs at poorest health ranking
By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer
Nov. 16,2008
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081116/ap_on_he_me/med_unhealthiest_city_2
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - As a portly woman plodded ahead of him on the sidewalk,
the obese mayor of America's fattest and unhealthiest city explained why
health is not a big local issue.
"It doesn't come up," said David Felinton, 5-foot-9 and 233 pounds, as he
walked toward City Hall one recent morning. "We've got a lot of economic
challenges here in Huntington. That's usually the focus."
Huntington's economy has withered, its poverty rate is worse than the
national average, and vagrants haunt a downtown riverfront park. But this
city's financial woes are not nearly as bad as its health.
Nearly half the adults in Huntington's five-county metropolitan area are
obese - an astounding percentage, far bigger than the national average in a
country with a well-known weight problem.
Huntington leads in a half-dozen other illness measures, too, including
heart disease and diabetes. It's even tops in the percentage of elderly
people who have lost all their teeth (half of them have).
It's a sad situation, and a potential harbinger of what will happen to other
U.S. communities, said Ken Thorpe, an Emory University health policy
professor who is working with West Virginia officials on health reform
legislation.
"They may be at the very top, but obesity and diabetes trends are very
similar" in many other communities, particularly in the South, Thorpe said.
The Huntington area's health problems, cited in a U.S. health report, are a
terrible distinction for the city, but the locals barely talk about it. Many
don't even know how poorly the city ranks.
Culture and history are at least part of the problem, health officials say.
This city on the Ohio River is surrounded by Appalachia's thinly populated
hills. It has long been a blue-collar, white-skinned community -
overwhelmingly people of English, Irish and German ancestry.
For decades, Huntington thrived with the coal mines to its south, as barges,
trucks and trains loaded with the black fuel continually chugged into and
past the city. There were plenty of manufacturing jobs in the chemical
industry and in glassworks, steel and locomotive parts. Nearly 90,000 people
lived in the city in 1950.
The traditional diet was heavy with fried foods, salt, gravy, sauces, and
fattier meats - dense with calories burnt off through manual labor. Obesity
was not a worry then. Workplace injuries were.
But as the coal industry modernized and the economy changed, manufacturing
jobs left. The city's population is now fewer than 50,000, and chronic
diseases - many of them connected to obesity - seem much more common.
Shari Wiley is a nurse at St. Mary's Regional Heart Institute in Huntington.
She runs a program that identifies heavy school children and tries to teach
them better eating and exercise habits. The effort began because of an
alarming trend.
"A lot of the patients we were seeing were getting heart attacks in their
30s. They were requiring open heart surgery in their 30s. And we were
concerned because it used to be you wouldn't see heart patients come in
until they were in their 50s," Wiley said.
The Huntington area is essentially tied with a few other metro areas for
proportion of people who don't exercise (31 percent), have heart disease (22
percent) and diabetes (13 percent). The smoking rate is pretty high, too,
although not the worst.
However, the region is a clear-cut leader in dental problems, with nearly
half the people age 65 and older saying they have lost all their natural
teeth. And no other metro area comes close to Huntington's adult obesity
rate, according to the report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, based on data from 2006.
Perhaps fittingly, hospitals are now Huntington's largest employers. Another
is Marshall University, home of the "Thundering Herd" football team depicted
in the 2006 film "We Are Marshall" which dominates local sports
conversations.
The river runs along the edge of town, but it's not a focal point. Marshall
and one of the city's remaining factories sit to the east with several
blocks of hotels and office buildings farther west. A new complex called
Pullman Square - which includes a movie theater and a Starbucks - is trying
to become a retail and dining center and illustrates a transition to a
service economy.
The area's unemployment rate was about 5 percent in September, actually a
bit better than the 6.1 percent national average that month. But often the
jobs are not high-paying. Many workers lack health insurance, and corporate
wellness programs - common at large national companies - are rare.
Poverty hovers, with the area rate at 19 percent, much higher than the
national average. In the hilly coal fields to the South, people still live
in houses or trailers with drooping, battered roofs. They stare hard at any
stranger in a new car. In Huntington and its outskirts, many people think of
exercise and healthy eating as luxuries.
The economy needs to pick up "so people can afford to get healthy," said
Ronnie Adkins, 67, a retired policeman, as he sat one recent morning on the
smoking porch of the Jolly Pirate Donuts shop on U.S. 60.
Doughnut shops don't help either, of course. But breakfast pastry shops
aren't the most common outlets for fatty food. Pizza joints are. They are
seemingly on every block in some parts of the city. The online Yellow Pages
lists more pizza places (nearly 200) for the Huntington area than the entire
state of West Virginia has gyms and health clubs (149).
Hot dog places also abound, with the city hosting an annual hot dog festival
every summer. "I've never seen so many places that are hot dog oriented. I
guess it's a cultural thing. Appalachian," said Mayor Felinton, who grew up
in Maryland and moved to Huntington to attend Marshall University and stayed
put.
Fast food has become a staple, with many residents convinced they can't
afford to buy healthier foods, said Keri Kennedy, manager of the state
health department's Office of Healthy Lifestyles.
Kennedy said she had just seen a commercial that presented "The KFC $10
Challenge." The fried-chicken chain placed a family in a grocery store and
challenged them to put together a dinner for $10 or less that was comparable
to KFC's seven-piece, $9.99 value meal.
"This is what we're up against," said Kennedy, noting it's an extremely
persuasive ad for a low-income family that is accustomed to fried foods. "I
don't know what you do to counter that."
Lack of exercise is another concern. During a warm and sunny autumn week in
Huntington - the kind of weather that would bring out small armies of
joggers in some cities - it was unusual to see a runner or bicyclist. The
exercise that does occur is mostly confined to a local YMCA, at campus
recreation facilities at Marshall, or at Ritter Park in a tony neighborhood
south of downtown.
Some attribute the problem to crumbling sidewalks in the city and a lack of
walkways along busy rural roads. Others blame it on lack of motivation, as
well as a cultural attitude that never included exercise for health.
There's a connection between education and lack of exercise, too, said Dr.
Thomas Dannals, a Huntington family physician.
"The undereducated don't know the value of it. They don't have the drive for
it. There's a reason you're successful, you've got drive. The same is true
for exercise," said Dannals.
Dannals has been trying to change cultural attitudes. The local newspaper
has called him "an exercise evangelist" for founding the city's triathlon,
marathon and other projects designed to make exercise popular and fun. He's
also spearheading a riverfront exercise trail project, called the Paul
Ambrose Trail for Health (PATH).
Ambrose was a Huntington physician who died in the Sept. 11, 2001, jet that
crashed into the Pentagon. Just before he died, he had been working on a
U.S. Surgeon General report on obesity, and was on the plane that morning to
attend an adolescent obesity conference in Los Angeles.
But the PATH project, first proposed more than a year ago, has yet to win
the necessary funding. The lack of support is not surprising: Dannals can't
even get a company to sponsor the Huntington marathon.
Local politicians tend to be equally tepid about improving health, said Dr.
Harry Tweel, director of the Cabell-Huntington Health Department.
Smoking - a common sin in West Virginia - has been hard to control, Tweel
said. When the health department tried to restrict smoking in local bars and
restaurants, a group of local businesses fought it all the way to the state
Supreme Court. (The restrictions were upheld in 2003.) Even hospitals have
fought smoking restrictions in the past, Tweel said.
Other communities have taken more ambitious steps to control the amount of
fat in local restaurant food. In July, the Los Angeles City Council placed a
moratorium on new fast food restaurants in an impoverished area of the city
with above-average rates of obesity. In 2006, New York City became the first
U.S. city to ban artificial trans fats in restaurant foods. Other cities are
considering similar measures.
Forget it, Tweel said. Not in Huntington.
"You're mentioning areas (of the country) that are well beyond this local
region in accepting that kind of change," said Tweel.
"People here have an attitude of 'You're not going to tell me what I can
eat.' The cultural attitude is 'My parents ate that and my grandparents ate
that,'" he said.
Mayor Felinton echoed Tweel. Felinton had stomach surgery last year to help
him lose weight and has been walking to work about three days a week. He has
shed nearly 80 pounds and became sort of a local poster boy for weight loss.
But in the midst of a re-election campaign last month, he said he had no
plans to plunge into a fight over fat in restaurants.
"We want as much business as we can have here," said Felinton, who lost his
recent re-election bid and leaves office in January. "As many restaurants as
you have, it kind of enhances the livability. Maybe not the health."
To be fair, most people in Huntington don't seem to be aware of how poorly
their city looks in national health statistics.
The latest numbers came from the CDC report, released in August, but
little-publicized. It was based on survey data from 2006, comparing about
150 metropolitan areas. The Huntington area includes five counties - two in
West Virginia, two in Kentucky and one in Ohio.
Of the 40 Huntington-area residents interviewed for this story, many had
heard something about West Virginia being one of the unhealthiest states.
But only one - Tweel - knew about the latest report showing how bad
Huntington compared with other metro areas.
Some doctors, on hearing the statistics, noted the Huntington area is not in
such bad shape by West Virginia standards. A recent state study found that
health problems are significantly worse in the more rural coal counties to
the south. But those places didn't show up in the CDC report, because they
were too small.
Still, Huntington is an unusually obese place, said Dr. John Walden,
chairman of the family and community health department at Marshall
University's medical school.
Walden is a third generation physician in the area, but he's also traveled
extensively around the world. He says it's always a little jolting coming
home and realizing how obese his hometown is compared to the rest of the
world.
"I don't know that I've ever been in a place where I've seen so many
overweight people," he said.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Potter squelches cop retirement scandal vote
by Michael Munk
Sun, Nov 16, 2008
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|
Nov. 21: new Lincoln Brigade book at Powell's.
by Michael Munk
Fri, Nov 14, 2008
|
A long lost memoir of an American "premature anti-fascist" in the Spanish
civil war will be discussed by its editors Friday, Nov. 21 at Powell's
flagship store, 1005 W. Burnside at 7:30PM. It's "War is Beautiful" by poet
James Neugass, an Abraham Lincoln Brigade ambulance driver and is edited by
Stanford historian Peter Carrroll and Peter Glazer. Carroll is also director
of the Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives, which co-sponsored
its publication. Library Journal honored the book as one of its editors'
"Fall Picks."
At least eleven Lincoln vets from Oregon are listed in my Portland Red Guide
(pp. 110-111). Virginia Malbin, a social worker who assisted Lincoln Brigade
fighters in Barcelona during the war and later moved to Portland, hopes to
attend.
Both Obama and McCain recently cited Robert Jordan,the leftist Lincoln
brigade fighter Hemingway created in "For Whom the Bell Tolls," as one of
their main heroes.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
All the news that should be fit to print
by Michael Munk
Thu, Nov 13, 2008
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Don't Let Barack Obama Break Your Heart
by Michael Munk
Wed, Nov 12, 2008
|
Recommended to anyone who voted for Obama
Tom Engelhardt | Don't Let Barack Obama Break Your Heart
http://www.truthout.org/111208B
|
The voice behind the anthem of The Depression
by Michael Munk
Sun, Nov 9, 2008
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Michelle Obama's brother at Oregon State
by Michael Munk
Sun, Nov 9, 2008
|
Advertise on NYTimes.comFor some interesting details, check out the =
link to Q & A
He Helped Elect a President; Now Comes a Harder Job=20
=20
Ryan Gardner for The New York Times
Craig Robinson, the new basketball coach at Oregon State and Barack =
Obama's brother-in-law, directed a 5:30 a.m. practice two days after the =
election.=20
By PETE THAMEL
Mew York Times: November 8, 2008=20
CORVALLIS, Ore. - With a hint of 5 o'clock shadow and small bags under =
his eyes, Oregon State Coach Craig Robinson took the basketball court on =
Wednesday to start a campaign that is nearly as daunting as the one he =
just helped to complete.=20
Related
The Quad: Q & A With Craig Robinson (November 8, 2008)=20
=20
Bruce Ely/The Oregonian, via Associated Press
Barack Obama with Craig Robinson, his brother-in-law, at a town-hall =
meeting in Oregon during the presidential primaries.=20
For the past 20 months, Robinson assisted his brother-in-law Barack =
Obama's bid for the presidency. Robinson stumped in Iowa, gave speeches =
in Washington State and did interviews about his childhood on Chicago's =
South Side with his younger sister, Michelle, who is married to Obama.=20
All that work culminated in one magical Tuesday for Robinson and his =
family as they ate dinner at the Obamas' house on election night and =
later exchanged congratulatory hugs onstage at Grant Park in Chicago.=20
"I've been so busy, I haven't been able to process it yet," Robinson =
said less than 24 hours later as he sat on the bleachers at Gill =
Coliseum after practice. "It's wild. I don't know what to say."=20
Now that the Obamas are preparing to enter the White House and Robinson =
can devote all his energy to his first season at Oregon State, Robinson =
and the president-elect can debate about whose task is tougher.=20
"Before this whole economy thing, I would have said that we had a bigger =
rebuilding job," Robinson said of Oregon State. "But this economy thing =
puts him over the top, hands down. He's got the economy, and you can =
throw in the housing crisis and the war. He's got more on his plate than =
I do."=20
Robinson simply inherited an Oregon State program that is coming off an =
0-18 season in the Pacific-10, carrying a 21-game losing streak and =
looking for its first N.C.A.A. tournament appearance since 1990.=20
Robinson installed the Princeton-style offense that he used to lead =
Brown to a team-record 19 victories last season. He also brought many of =
the themes prevalent in the Obama campaign: change, hope and reform.=20
Robinson's players at Brown said he went out of his way to separate =
politics and basketball. He would walk a block from his office on Hope =
Street and duck into the Blue State Coffee shop to talk politics. (Jesse =
Agel, Brown's new coach, said he would send Robinson a pound of Blue =
State Coffee, with its "drink liberally" slogan, to congratulate him.)=20
Although Robinson was happy to discuss politics with anyone who asked, =
he would never start the conversation. But as Robinson went from =
coaching in the Ivy League to coaching in the Pac-10 and his =
brother-in-law went from representing Illinois in the Senate to being =
elected the nation's 44th president, those discussions are becoming =
harder to avoid.=20
He called his connections the "white elephant" in the room, and his =
Pac-10 rivals are wondering just how much his ties to Obama will help =
him in recruiting. Robinson said that if it helped him land a recruit, =
he would be the first one to say so.=20
"I want my players to know that I'm recruiting them to play basketball =
at Oregon State," Robinson said, "and to the extent that my network can =
help them after college, if you come play for me, you're part of my =
network. I think people can figure that out without me hitting them over =
the head with it."
Robinson has received commitments from two highly regarded high school =
seniors: shooting guard Roberto Nelson and center Joe Burton.=20
Nelson, considered one of the country's top 75 recruits, chose the =
Beavers over perennial powers like U.C.L.A., Ohio State, Florida and =
Southern California. Burton had looks from Tennessee, Florida and =
Marquette.=20
Nelson's outgoing cellphone voice mail message showed that Robinson's =
political connections did not hurt. The message included the passage: =
"I'm probably watching the presidential election. You know my man Barack =
Obama over here taking it to John McCain."=20
But Robinson offers more to recruits, as his story is one of the most =
fascinating of any college basketball coach. After graduating from =
Princeton, where he played for Pete Carril and was twice named the Ivy =
League player of the year, Robinson wanted to coach.
Carril laughed as he recalled telling him that coaching would waste =
Robinson's talents. Instead, he went to graduate school and succeeded in =
the financial world, including spending seven years as a vice president =
at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.
But the six-bedroom house, high-six-figure salary and luxurious =
vacations lost their appeal, and Robinson decided nine years ago while =
in a cab in Chicago to take an assistant's job on Bill Carmody's staff =
at Northwestern. He made a tenth of his previous salary, but said he =
felt whole again.=20
That job eventually led Robinson to Brown, where in two seasons he =
overhauled the program with his work ethic, tough love and relentless =
demands on his players. He put a dictionary in the locker room for =
players to look up the words he used - a tradition that has continued at =
Oregon State, where the word guile has become a buzzword - and adopted a =
few campaign catchphrases of his own. At Brown's practice on Monday =
night, a few Bears players wore T-shirts with the slogans "Make Shots" =
and "Cut Hard."=20
"He left us the confidence to go into any gym and not just compete, but =
to win," said Agel, an assistant to Robinson for two seasons. "He did =
that by giving us his toughness and competitiveness, and his will to get =
it done. He's going to do that to Oregon State. He's going to have them, =
in no time, believing that they can go into any Pac-10 arena and come =
out with a victory."=20
Skip to next paragraph=20
Related
The Quad: Q & A With Craig Robinson (November 8, 2008)=20
The Brown senior Chris Skrelja assessed Robinson's impact this way: "The =
name Brown means a lot more than it did four years ago. Four years ago, =
it was at best a midlevel Ivy League school."
Oregon State has a long way to go to reach the middle of the Pac-10 =
pack. Robinson found a group ready to listen after it endured a 6-25 =
record last season. Guard Josh Tarver said that a loss to Division II =
Alaska-Fairbanks in November set the tone for the season, as players =
screamed at coaches in the locker room and coaches screamed at players.=20
"It was a rough year," Tarver said. "It was chaos."=20
Seemingly craving some discipline, the players set up voluntary 6 a.m. =
weight-lifting sessions this summer after they found out about =
Robinson's 5:30 a.m. practices. When a freshman arrived late for =
lifting, the entire team ran sprints as punishment to teach =
accountability. The same group punishments apply when a player shows up =
late for tutoring.=20
"This is about the rest of their life," Robinson said. "Most of these =
guys are not going to be pros, but they're going to have to get up and =
go to work and be on time and be accountable."
That message has started to sink in. No one was late for 5:30 a.m. =
practice in the first three weeks.=20
"We're too scared to see what he'd do," the sophomore forward Omari =
Johnson said with a laugh. "Way too scared."=20
Obama said Robinson's discipline and diligence enhanced his presidential =
campaign.=20
"Craig doesn't profess to know the specifics of politics the way he =
knows the X's and O's of basketball," Obama said in a statement last =
week. "But I think what he does understand is the need to wake up every =
morning doing your best and having a positive attitude. And him =
communicating that to me was always very helpful."
In a fitting twist, Oregon State's first regular-season game under =
Robinson is Friday at Howard University in Washington, the future home =
of the Obamas. Robinson joked that he wished he had been clever enough =
to create that matchup.=20
Pac-10 teams rarely play on the road against a lesser team like Howard. =
But the previous staff had scheduled it for the junior Calvin Hampton, =
who is from Maryland.=20
"There's going to be so much pressure on them," Robinson said of his =
players and the expected circuslike atmosphere surrounding the game. =
"But you know what? If you're going to win games on the road in the =
Pac-10, then you have to win these kinds of games. We might as well just =
do it."=20
Now that the pressure of the election is off, Robinson's job is to bring =
change to Oregon State. His campaign kicks off Friday.=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregon judge rules for Ashland charity
by Michael Munk
Sat, Nov 8, 2008
|
The Oregonian reported this story quite differently.
Federal judge in Oregon rules against terrorism law
By WILLIAM MCCALL
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nov. 7, 2008
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/386904_oregonlaw08.html
PORTLAND -- A federal judge in Oregon has ruled a law prohibiting material
support for terrorists is unconstitutional because it is too vague.
U.S. District Judge Garr King said the Treasury Department violated the
rights of the Oregon chapter of a defunct Islamic charity based in Saudi
Arabia.
Treasury officials froze the assets of the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation in
Ashland after listing it as a "specially designated global terrorist
organization."
King said the department violated the charity's due process rights by
failing to provide it with any basis for the designation.
The judge also ruled the law on the provision of "material support" to any
group given the designation was unconstitutionally vague.
A Justice Department spokesman had no immediate comment.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Vet Workers Tell Their Story & Utah Phillips Nov 11 & Nov 14
by Michael Munk
Sat, Nov 8, 2008
|
Northwest Oregon Labor Council hosting 'Veteran Workers Tell Their =
Story: Our Living History'=20
=20
The Northwest Oregon Labor Council (NOLC) is sponsoring a =
Veteran's Day forum to honor those who served the nation in the military =
and now as fellow workers.
=20
'Veteran Workers Tell Their Story: Our Living History' is Tuesday, =
November 11 from 2:00 PM - 7:00 PM at the Multnomah County Central =
Library - U.S. Bank Room, 801 SW 10th Avenue, Portland. The event is =
free and open to the public. Space is limited and seating is available =
on a first-come, first serve basis.
=20
There will be scheduled speakers with about 15 minutes each and, =
as time permits, an opportunity for others to sign up and speak.
=20
Since 1991, November is celebrated as Labor History Month in =
Oregon . NOLC Executive Secretary-Treasurer Judy O'Connor said, 'This is =
an opportunity to recognize and honor Oregon 's Veterans and their =
experience in the workforce. We will hear about current experiences =
returning to the workforce. We encourage family members attending to =
share stories and memories.'
=20
In addition to speakers, some will read book excerpts, including =
poems of veterans and their families from the recently published, =
'Voices of Vets: A Bridge Back to the World.'
=20
For more information contact NOLC History Committee Chair Jim Cook =
at=20
503-703-1693, or the NOLC office at 503-235-9444.
=
************************************************************************
Utah Phillips Tribute Concert - November 14th - 9 PM=20
Laurelthirst Public House - 2958 NE Glisan
=20
Local Musicians celebrate the life, music, and stories of Bruce =
' Utah ' Phillips with a benefit concert on Friday, November 14th. Music =
begins at 9:00 PM at the Laurelthirst Public House, 2958 NE Glisan, =
Portland . Donations at the door of $5 or more benefit the Portland IWW.
=20
Musicians include Casey Neill, Fast Rattler (with Utah 's son =
Brendan Phillips), Mark Ross, Dick Weissman, Melinda Pittman, and =
General Strike. Join in the rabble-rousing music, personal stories, keen =
humor and long memories.
=20
For more information contact Jim Cook at 503-703-1693 or=20
radrosepro@gmail.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com=20
|
Paulson pleads for Portland taxpayer help
by Michael Munk
Fri, Nov 7, 2008
|
These days, a lot of capitalists have lost faith in their cherished =
economic system and demand bailouts rather than take risks to make =
profits. This one wants taxpayer help because he claims pro sports will =
boost Portland's economy. So how about turning the deal around:. Put up =
your and your dad's money and if after a few years Portland taxpayers =
actually benefit from the investments his teams generate, give him a =
proportional break on his local taxes.
Seeking Help to Bring an M.L.S. Team to Portland=20
=20
Thomas Boyd/The Oregonian
Merritt Paulson, the son of Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr., =
wants to bring an M.L.S. expansion team to Portland, Ore.=20
By RICHARD SANDOMIR
New York Times: November 6, 2008=20
Merritt Paulson left his N.B.A. job last year to buy the minor league =
baseball and soccer teams in Portland, Ore. His chief adviser and =
financier in the $16 million sports spree was his father, Treasury =
Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr.
=20
Craig Mitchelldyer/Portland Beavers
Merritt Paulson is asking for public financing to renovate PGE Park, =
home to Portland's minor league soccer and baseball teams.=20
"I had to convince him that this wouldn't be some sort of vanity play =
and sell the business plan to him," said Paulson, who owns 80 percent of =
the teams with his father owning the rest. "The terms had to make sense =
from a family standpoint." He added, "Historically, my father's been my =
best source of advice through my business career."
The elder Paulson was the chairman of Goldman Sachs when his son settled =
on his Portland strategy. But as the engineer of the $700 billion =
economic bailout, the Treasury secretary is not preoccupied with the =
Beavers of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League or the Timbers of the =
United Soccer Leagues First Division.=20
"He's aware of what's happening, but he hasn't had much time for this," =
said Paulson, who was born Henry Merritt Paulson III and is called =
Merritt, like his grandfather.
Paulson, 35, is immersed in a more ambitious, riskier stage of his =
sports plan, one that puts him in the middle of a continuing debate =
about the economic value of government investments and incentives for =
stadiums that benefit private team owners.
The debate grows more resonant given the worldwide economic crisis.
Paulson wants a Major League Soccer expansion team for Portland, which =
became known as Soccer City U.S.A. when the Timbers of the N.A.S.L. =
played there in the 1970s and '80s. He said he was willing to use $40 =
million in family money to buy it. Six other cities have applied for the =
two franchises that are expected to be awarded early next year.
To make his plan work, Paulson wants an $85 million package of city and =
state financing to renovate PGE Park, where the Beavers and Timbers now =
play, into a 23,000-seat soccer-only stadium, and to build a Beavers =
ballpark at a separate location.
"This is not a negotiation," Paulson said. "The $85 million is it."
Sam Adams, a city commissioner who will become the mayor on Jan. 1, =
chuckled.
"I guess that's the opening salvo of the negotiations," he said by =
telephone.
Adams and another commissioner on the City Council, Randy Leonard, =
support the project and reason that an M.L.S. team will increase the =
city's national and international exposure, visitors and attendance in a =
market with one major league team, the N.B.A.'s Trail Blazers.
But they said they wanted to keep Paulson's plan from using taxes that =
would diminish services in a city where recessionary effects usually lag =
behind the rest of the country.=20
Paulson has proposed using team revenues and ticket taxes to repay =
city-issued bonds, taxes from economic activity that would ostensibly =
increase in a commercial district around the renovated stadium, and a =
state income tax on players' salaries.
"I'm not willing to do this unless I can see a reasonable return in =
three to five years," said Adams, who has proposed other sites to reduce =
costs. "It's got to pay for itself."
Leonard said: "We have to limit our liability, and Merritt has to have a =
fair amount of skin in this game. My position is to get him to pay for =
as much of it as we can."
Paulson is sensitive to criticism that great family wealth should =
require him to pay for the stadiums, or that he is seeking a bailout, =
like the one his father is overseeing.=20
"That idea is based on the assumption that I'm dealing with huge pools =
of family trust money," he said. "Everything I've worked from is a legal =
loan. We're making a considerable private investment, and we're saying =
there needs to be infrastructure."
Adams knows the city will provide some financing and does not expect =
Paulson to pay for everything. "Wealthy people tend to be wealthy =
because they're shrewd business folks," he said. "Private owners need a =
return, but we don't want them to get unduly rich off us."
Still, critics of public financing, like Tom Potter, the current mayor, =
and Jody Wiser, chairwoman of Tax Fairness Oregon, believe the city and =
state should not enter the stadium business. "This is a private business =
that needs to support itself," she said. "There's no real evidence of =
public subsidies providing great returns to cities."
Mark Rosentraub, a professor of urban affairs at Cleveland State =
University, said the goal of public financing was not to subsidize =
private businesses but to stimulate public returns. "If Portland can =
engender new development that can generate new property taxes to pay for =
its investment, then the deal could be worthwhile," he said.=20
Paulson grew up enamored of baseball, basketball and football, and =
marketed NBA TV while at the league. But for three of his five years =
there, he spent his spare time looking at investing in minor league =
baseball, the N.B.A. Development League and soccer.
"Portland was just the most attractive opportunity, with an incredibly =
strong Triple-A baseball market and one of the best soccer markets, by =
any metrics," he said.
Moving up the soccer hierarchy to owning an M.L.S. team suggests a =
heightened stability to a league in which teams are now worth $40 =
million or more. Over all, it is still not profitable, but it is losing =
far less than it once did. It has lured David Beckham and investors like =
Oscar De La Hoya. It has created intimacy with soccer-specific stadiums =
and fostered stability with long-term television deals. "There are no =
longer questions about our survival," Commissioner Don Garber said. "The =
question now is, how far we can go?"
Similar questions face Paulson: Will he receive stadium financing, as =
other M.L.S. teams have, and will he get it in time for the expansion =
vote in the first quarter of 2009?
"Look, you have to be a believer," Paulson said. "This is a vetted =
market in terms of its appetite for soccer and has a corporate community =
ready to support an M.L.S. team."
If he does not receive the financing, Paulson said he would continue =
running his two minor league teams. He is not facing a crisis or city =
officials who do not want to negotiate with him.
"All I'm doing is presenting an opportunity," he said. "It's been =
embraced, but it doesn't mean it will happen. I'm not holding a gun to =
anyone's head"
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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How to send email to Obama's new office
by Michael Munk
Fri, Nov 7, 2008
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Jewish Peace News has provided a contact page for Obama's new Office of
the President Elect.
I've tried it and it works.
http://change.gov/page/s/contact
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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NW names on Obama list
by Michael Munk
Wed, Nov 5, 2008
|
Politico lists these northwesterners as possible Obama cabinet members. For
the complete list go to
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/15142.htmlp
Secretary of Health and Human Services: John Kitzhaber, doctor and former
Oregon governor
Secretary of the Interior: Rep. Jay Inslee (D-Wash.),
Secretary of Transportation: Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.),
Defense secretary : Richard Danzig, Navy secretary under Clinton (Reed, '65)
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Memo to Progressives for Obama
by Michael Munk
Tue, Nov 4, 2008
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Pressure on Obama to stay in Iraq
by Michael Munk
Mon, Nov 3, 2008
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Anyone organizing against this?
Obama and Iraq
The Nation Oct 31, 2008
http://www.thenation.com/blogs/dreyfuss/378887
by Robert Dreyfuss
There's no doubt that the financial crisis, job insecurity, and
fundamental economic worries are the No. 1 issue in Tuesday's vote. But
that raises a critical question: If Barack Obama is elected, will he have
an antiwar mandate?
The answer isn't clear.
In 2006, when Democrats reconquered the House and Senate, the election was
widely seen as a referendum on the failing war in Iraq. Many Democrats,
including those who had previously been supporters of the war, felt
tremendous pressure from that public expression of antiwar sentiment, even
if the Democratic majority in Congress was either unable either to block
the so-called surge or to pass legislation halting the war. Their
inability to do so was largely the result of President Bush's veto powers
and the Senate minority's ability to filibuster defense spending bills and
other measures.
If Obama wins, he will face enormous pressure to abandon his pledge to
stop the war in Iraq. That pressure will come from some within his own
circle of advisers, many of whom saw Obama's antiwar stance as good
politics but bad policy. It will come from hawkish Democrats outside
Obama's circle, from those elbowing their way to get in, typified by
Richard Holbrooke, who found himself shut out of Obamaland after he
endorsed Hillary Clinton in the primaries. It may come from more hawkish
Democrats close to Senator Biden, who voted for the Iraq war in 2002. It
will certainly come from conservatives, neoconservatives, and the
editorial pages of the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal. It
will come from thinktanks such as the Brookings Institution and the Center
for a New American Security, which have close ties both to Obama and to
the Democratic establishment.
And most of all, the pressure on Obama will come from the US military and
General Petraeus, who won't look kindly on an incoming administration that
wants to change course. Early in his administration, Obama is going to
have to sit down, face to face, with Petraeus -- a politically savvy
general who, it is rumored, is thinking about running for office
himself -- and say something like this:
"General Petraeus, I value your service to our country. But under our
system, I am the commander-in-chief. I'm the boss, not you. We're getting
out of Iraq, and we're doing it quickly. I want a plan on my desk in 24
hours for the withdrawal of at least one to two brigades per month, and I
want the withdrawal completed by the summer of 2010 at the latest. If we
can do it more quickly, tell me. Anyone who doesn't like this new policy,
well, there's the door."
And he'll have to look around the room, one by one, at the members of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Ray Odierno, the commander of US forces in
Iraq, and others.
Each one of them will know the pressure that Obama will be under from
hawks and right-wingers. The constitution gives Obama the power to order
them to carry out the new policy, whether they like it or not -- and they
won't like it. But Obama will be a lot stronger if he goes into that room
with a mandate from the Nov. 4 election.
Problem is, Iraq has receded so far in the public's consciousness that it
isn't entirely clear what next Tuesday's vote will mean for Iraq.
Certainly, Obama catapulted over Hillary Clinton in the primaries because
he mobilized antiwar voters against her, based on his 2002 speech opposing
the war and Clinton's vote, in October, 2002, for it. Since then, however,
the war has become less and less prominent, especially during the general
election campaign. During the debates between Obama and John McCain, it
hardly came up, although Obama did slam McCain for his poor judgment in
supporting the war in 2003. Still, Obama did not aggressively put forward
his plan to get out of Iraq during the debates, and he was oddly defensive
whenever McCain challenged him over the "surge." Obama could have said
that the surge was a fiasco and that Iraq is poised to explode in renewed
civil war because there is no political agreement among Iraq's various
armed factions.. He could have said:
"Senator McCain, in 2006 I called for withdrawing American troops from
Iraq, and so did General Casey and General Abizaid, who were commanding
our troops. And so did the bipartisan Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group. Had
we done so, the war would be over now, and American troops would have long
been home. But we didn't. Instead, President Bush listened to you, and to
the neocons, and two years later we are still stuck in Iraq."
He could have said that, but he didn't.
It's true that, among voters, Obama is widely seen as the antiwar
candidate. In the New York Times, for instance, there is a poll today that
asks: "Would the candidate's policies lead to greater US military
involvement in Iraq, less US military involvement, or wouldn't they have
any effect on US military involvement?" According to those polled, 80
percent said that Obama would order "less US military involvement" and
only 7 percent answered that he would order "more." In contrast, only 18
percent responded "less" for McCain and 56 percent said McCain would order
"more US military involvement."
Still, polls across the board have shown that Iraq has dropped for fourth,
fifth, or even lower among things that voters are concerned about in 2008.
The Baltimore Sun reports on one such result, but there are many:
"According to a Gallup poll last December, one in three Americans surveyed
felt that the war in Iraq was the most important issue facing the country,
more than selected the economy and health care combined. But a Pew
Research Center survey this month indicated that only one in 10 still say
that Iraq is the most pressing issue. ... Both campaigns have moved on to
other issues."
That will make it hard, but not impossible, for Obama to argue that he has
a mandate to end the war on Nov. 5.
Obama hasn't helped his case by downplaying his opposition to war. He
hasn't helped by refusing to say much about his plans for Iraq besides the
withdrawal, including what a residual force might look like, i.e., how
many troops might remain in Iraq after the withdrawal of the US combat
brigades, and what their mission might be. (During the summer, some
advisers to Obama wanted to draw a starker contrast with McCain over Iraq,
and some wanted to muddy the differences. The mud advocates seem to have
prevailed.) And Obama hasn't made his mandate stronger by adopting hawkish
views on other, non-Iraq related issues: he supports a bigger military; he
supports an expansion of NATO to include Ukraine and Georgia; he supports
more troops for Afghanistan; he has called for cross-border raids into
Pakistan to go after Al Qaeda officials; and, of course, he has hewed
closely to orthodoxy in support of Israel.
In his most recent speech, yesterday in Sarasota, Florida, Obama didn't
mention at all his plan to end the war in Iraq. He said nothing -- yes,
nothing -- about withdrawing US forces. Here is the full text of what he
said about Iraq in that speech:
When it comes to keeping this country safe, we don't have to choose
between retreating from the world and fighting a war without end in Iraq.
It's time to stop spending $10 billion a month in Iraq while the Iraqi
government sits on a huge surplus. As President, I will end this war by
asking the Iraqi government to step up, and I will finally finish the
fight against bin Laden and the al Qaeda terrorists who attacked us on
9/11. I will never hesitate to defend this nation. From day one of this
campaign, I have made clear that we will increase our ground troops and
our investments in the finest fighting force the world has ever known.
Watching our Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines fight in Iraq and
Afghanistan has only deepened my commitment to invest in 21st century
technologies so that our men and women have the best training and
equipment when they deploy into combat and the care and benefits they have
earned when they come home.
I won't stand here and pretend that any of this will be easy - especially
now. The cost of this economic crisis, and the cost of the war in Iraq,
means that Washington will have to tighten its belt and put off spending
on things we don't need.
Let's analyze that.
First, he doesn't reiterate that he is pulling US forces out. Instead, he
appears to say that the key is to get Iraq to pay for the war, to get the
Iraqis to use their surplus. That may appeal to budget-conscious US
voters, but -- especially with the price of oil dropping fast -- Iraq,
which is a poor, Third World nation with a devastated economy, isn't going
to pay for the war.
Second, he says that he wants "the Iraqi government to step up," meaning,
presumably, to fight its own war. That, of course, is exactly what
President Bush can been saying, namely, that the US will "stand down" when
the Iraqis "stand up." Problem is, the Iraqis need to be handed an
unconditional timetable that doesn't depend on what they do or don't do.
Iraq doesn't need President Obama to "asking" it to step up.
Third, and most troubling, Obama says that Americans will have to tighten
their belts because of the "cost of the war in Iraq." Doesn't that mean
that the war will continue?
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Latest Oregon poll
by Michael Munk
Sat, Nov 1, 2008
|
Note that while only about 45% of registered voters have sent in their
ballots (fewer than at this point in 04), this poll must be estimating that
59% of those who will actually vote have done so.
Congressional Races »
Is GOP Senator Gordon Smith Doomed? Early Voting Numbers Suggest It's
Possible
By Eric Kleefeld - October 31, 2008, TPM
The early vote, a key statistic that has been closely watched in the
presidential race, appears to have already taken a toll on one Republican in
particular: Sen. Gordon Smith of Oregon, whose re-election campaign now
appears to be in serious trouble.
Indeed, a victory now appears to be very difficult for him -- which would
put Dems one step closer to the magic number of 60 in the Senate.
The pattern of the early voting in Oregon -- where all balloting is
conducted by mail -- is clear from the opinion polls. A SurveyUSA poll from
Monday had Smith's Democratic challenger Jeff Merkley up 51%-41% among the
early voters, with an estimated half of the total likely votes already cast.
A release this morning from Public Policy Polling (D) has Merkley up 59%-37%
among early voters, with 59% of the total likely votes now cast.
If these numbers are accurate, then Smith would need to win the remaining
likely voters by a two-to-one margin, just to scrape out a bare win. But
right now, he's only ahead 51%-39% among this remaining group in the PPP
numbers. And if the newer ballots don't immediately come in at that
two-to-one-ratio for Smith, that means Smith's required margin of the
remaining votes would keep going up.
Don Hamilton, communications director for the Oregon Secretary of State's
office, confirmed to Election Central that over half of the total vote for
2008 has probably been sent in already, with the remaining votes making up a
decent mix of registered Democrats and Republicans. A win is not impossible
for Smith, but the math is very daunting.
A TPM reader says, not necessarily sarcastically: "Poor Gordon Smith...if
only he'd been running in a pro-American state."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Portland retirements
by Michael Munk
Sat, Nov 1, 2008
|
In the wake of the scandal to lay a pension on Portland police Sergeant
Rocky Baluda to prevent him from testifying that his "cuff time" corruption
was part of police culture, former Chief Dennis Foxworth goes on pension at
age 50. Taxpapyers need to recognize that police and fire pensions and
disability is the fourth most costly component of their property taxes,
exceeded only by education and city and county general costs.
While retired cops get generous pension at an age where they can get new
jobs, retiring PGE executives fare far better. CEO Peggy Fowler is eligible
for a "Golden Parachute" worth over $11 million--exploited from PGE
ratepayers. Public Power, anyone?
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Reinhard leaves as the Big O downsizes
by Michael Munk
Tue, Oct 28, 2008
|
David Reinhard has just promised to leave The Oregonian as its rightwing
fringe columnist after the election. He credits angry and impolite readers
for his unlamented decision. But more likely is that the owners (the
Newhouses) gave him an offer he could not refuse-take a buyout now or risk
a layoff later. The Oregonian, which has seen its circulation decline almost
20% in the last 10 years (now only 283,000 daily from 347,000 in 1998) in
the face of increasing population, has been cutting back the editorial side
for some time. A sign of its desperation for ad revenue was publisher Fred
Stickel's recent distribution of a hate-Muslim DVD while calling it "free
speech"!
Mourning Old Media’s Decline
by David Carr
New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/29/business/media/29carr.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
October 28, 2008
The news that Google settled two longstanding suits with book authors and
publishers over its plans to digitize the world’s great libraries suggests
that some level of détente could be reached between old media and new.
If true, it can’t come soon enough for the news business.
It’s been an especially rotten few days for people who type on deadline. On
Tuesday, The Christian Science Monitor announced that, after a century, it
would cease publishing a weekday paper. Time Inc., the Olympian home of Time
magazine, Fortune, People and Sports Illustrated, announced that it was
cutting 600 jobs and reorganizing its staff. And Gannett, the largest
newspaper publisher in the country, compounded the grimness by announcing it
was laying off 10 percent of its work force — up to 3,000 people.
Clearly, the sky is falling. The question now is how many people will be
left to cover it.
It goes on. The day before, the Tribune Company had declared that it would
reduce the newsroom of The Los Angeles Times by 75 more people, leaving it
approximately half the size it was just seven years ago.
The Star-Ledger of Newark, the 15th-largest paper in the country, which was
threatened with closing, will apparently survive, but only after it was
announced that the editorial staff would be reduced by 40 percent.
And two weeks ago, TV Guide, one of the famous brand names in magazines, was
sold for one dollar, less than the price of a single copy.
The paradox of all these announcements is that newspapers and magazines do
not have an audience problem — newspaper Web sites are a vital source of
news, and growing — but they do have a consumer problem.
Stop and think about where you are reading this column. If you are one of
the million or so people who are reading it in a newspaper that landed on
your doorstop or that you picked up at the corner, you are in the minority.
This same information is available to many more millions on this paper’s Web
site, in RSS feeds, on hand-held devices, linked and summarized all over the
Web.
Historically, people took an interest in the daily paper about the time they
bought a home. Now they are checking their BlackBerrys for alerts about
mortgage rates.
“The auto industry and the print industry have essentially the same
problem,” said Clay Shirky, the author of “Here Comes Everybody.” “The
older customers like the older products and the new customers like the new
ones.”
For readers, the drastic diminishment of print raises an obvious question:
if more people are reading newspapers and magazines, why should we care
whether they are printed on paper?
The answer is that paper is not just how news is delivered; it is how it is
paid for.
More than 90 percent of the newspaper industry’s revenue still derives from
the print product, a legacy technology that attracts fewer consumers and
advertisers every single day. A single newspaper ad might cost many
thousands of dollars while an online ad might only bring in $20 for each
1,000 customers who see it.
The difference between print dollars and digital dimes — or sometimes
pennies — is being taken out of the newsrooms that supply both. And while it
is indeed tough all over in this economy, consider the consequences.
New Jersey, a petri dish of corruption, will have to make do with 40 percent
fewer reporters at The Star-Ledger, one of the few remaining cops on the
beat. The Los Angeles Times, which toils under Hollywood’s nose, has one
movie reviewer left on staff. And dozens of communities served by Gannett
will have fewer reporters and editors overseeing the deeds and misdeeds of
local government and businesses.
The authors and book publishers looking for royalties from the Google deal
may be the lucky ones in the old media sweepstakes. Print publishers are
madly cutting, in part because the fourth quarter, postfinancial crisis, is
going to be a miserable one. Advertising from the car industry, retail
business and financial services — for years, the three sturdy legs of a
stool that print once rested comfortably on — are in steep decline.
So who can still afford to pay for the phone calls that reporters have to
make? USA Today was made exempt from the current rounds of cuts at Gannett
but even national papers, including The New York Times, have resorted to
modest staff cuts over the last year. The blogosphere has had its share of
news breaks, but absent a functioning mainstream media to annotate, it could
be pretty darn quiet out there.
At the recent American Magazine Conference, one of the speakers worried that
if the great brands of journalism — the trusted news sources readers have
relied on — were to vanish, then the Web itself would quickly become a
“cesspool” of useless information. That kind of hand-wringing is a staple of
industry gatherings.
But in this case, it wasn’t an old journalism hack lamenting his industry.
It was Eric Schmidt, the chief executive of Google.
***
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On Obama's coatails, Merkley leads Smith
by Michael Munk
Tue, Oct 28, 2008
|
In Oregon, Obama Pulls Away At the Finish, Dragging Merkley With Him.
Survey USA internals at
http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=0b63ff1a-61f7-4ec0-bd56-38d157768f62
With half of Oregon poll respondents telling SurveyUSA they have already
voted, Democrats Barack Obama and Jeff Merkley appear poised, 8 days till
the counting begins, to win Oregon elections for President and US Senator,
according to research conducted exclusively for KATU-TV in Portland. Today,
it's Obama 57%, Republican John McCain 38%; compared to an identical
SurveyUSA poll 2 weeks ago, Obama is flat, McCain down 2. Obama leads 2:1
among those who tell SurveyUSA they have already voted. In the US Senate
race, Merkley defeats incumbent Republican Gordon Smith 49% to 42% today;
Constitution Party candidate Dave Brownlow gets 5%. Merkley is up 3 points
in the past 2 weeks; Smith is up 1. Merkley leads by 10 among those who tell
SurveyUSA they have already voted, by 2 among those who have not yet voted
but promise to. If Smith does not carry by 5:4 the votes of those in Oregon
who have not yet voted, this is a pick-up for the Democrats in the US
Senate. 800 Oregon adults were interviewed 10/25/08 and 10/26/08. Of them
736 were registered to vote. Of them, 672 are included in the likely voter
mix.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Solomon looks for A Great Rejection
by Michael Munk
Tue, Oct 28, 2008
|
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Paulson demands more taxpayer subsidies
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 24, 2008
|
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Obama no socialist
by Michael Munk
Thu, Oct 23, 2008
|
To the editor, The Oregonian
I know socialists. In fact, I am one. And I can assure Carl Kostol (see
below), John McCain and other "know nothings"
that Barack Hussein Obama is not one of us. To my dismay, Mr. Obama
is an avowed, unrepentent capitalist
who supported the attempted bailout of the Wall Street welfare queens that
Congress extracted from the taxpayers.
The marginal progressive tax structure Mr. Kostel mistakes for socialism
was
in fact imposed to rescue capitalism from rejection by the
American people. But socialism does not need taxes to provide health care,
education, infrastructure, transportation and other public services. Instead
it pays
for them with what now goes into the pockets of weathy private owners as
"profit.." If the American people were ever able to enjoy life under
socialism, major productive enterprises (like our Columbia River dams) they
would own and benefit from those "profits."
Michael Munk
http://www.oregonlive.com/letters/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/editorial/1224636914216450.xml&coll=7&thispage=1
Avoid 'socialist' candidate
To the editor, The Oregonian Oct. 22, 2008
Barack Obama is continually calling for "change" in his campaign. Let us see
what he considers "change." He wants to increase taxes on everyone who earns
more than $250,000 per year and reduce taxes for lesser earners. This is
redistribution of wealth and is one of the basic principles of socialism.
To (socialists), wealth can be money or property. Communists redistribute
wealth by force but socialists try to do the same by political means.
I have avoided socialist candidates since my first vote in 1940 at age 18
and would urge readers to do the same. Is Obama a socialist? You had better
believe it.
CARL R. KOSTOL Baker City
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Obama no socialist
by Michael Munk
Thu, Oct 23, 2008
|
To the editor, The Oregonian
I know socialists. In fact, I am one. And I can assure Carl Kostol (see
below), John McCain and other "know nothings"
that Barack Hussein Obama is not one of us. To my dismay, Mr. Obama
is an avowed, unrepentent capitalist
who supported the attempted bailout of the Wall Street welfare queens that
Congress extracted from the taxpayers.
The marginal progressive tax structure Mr. Kostel mistakes for socialism
was
in fact imposed to rescue capitalism from rejection by the
American people. But socialism does not need taxes to provide health care,
education, infrastructure, transportation and other public services. Instead
it pays
for them with what now goes into the pockets of weathy private owners as
"profit.." If the American people were ever able to enjoy life under
socialism, major productive enterprises (like our Columbia River dams) they
would own and benefit from those "profits."
Michael Munk
http://www.oregonlive.com/letters/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/editorial/1224636914216450.xml&coll=7&thispage=1
Avoid 'socialist' candidate
To the editor, The Oregonian Oct. 22, 2008
Barack Obama is continually calling for "change" in his campaign. Let us see
what he considers "change." He wants to increase taxes on everyone who earns
more than $250,000 per year and reduce taxes for lesser earners. This is
redistribution of wealth and is one of the basic principles of socialism.
To (socialists), wealth can be money or property. Communists redistribute
wealth by force but socialists try to do the same by political means.
I have avoided socialist candidates since my first vote in 1940 at age 18
and would urge readers to do the same. Is Obama a socialist? You had better
believe it.
CARL R. KOSTOL Baker City
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Reed-Bryant Romance (Munk)
by Michael Munk
Wed, Oct 22, 2008
|
My OHQ article on the "True Romance" of John Reed and Louise Bryant is now
available online at
http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ohq/109.3/munk.html
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregon Labor Walks scheduled
by Michael Munk
Mon, Oct 20, 2008
|
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Council to consider Balada settlement Wed AM
by Michael Munk
Mon, Oct 20, 2008
|
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Anti-Obama Robocalls in Oregon
by Michael Munk
Mon, Oct 20, 2008
|
From: Jon Isaacs, Jeff Merkley for Oregon
National news outlets have widely reported on a smear campaign against
Barack Obama and Democrats. The Republican National Committee and the
McCain/Palin campaign are sending robocalls across the country that
suggest, among other things, that Barack Obama is a terrorist
While several Republican Senate candidates have already called for these
calls to stop, one has not: Gordon Smith.
We may know why. Public campaign finance reports show that Gordon Smith
employs the same firm conducting these shady robocalls. Public records
show that Gordon Smith has spent nearly $100,000 on FLS Connect to conduct
calling on his behalf. *In addition, the Oregon Republican Party owes FLS
Connect over $40,000.
This robocalling firm is headed up by several former Bush operatives with
close ties to Karl Rove. These robocalls are just one of the many things
George W. Bush and his lieutenants are doing to re-elect Gordon Smith, who
is a reliable supporter of Bush policies.
There have already been news reports of push-polling
in Oregon on behalf of Smith. And it was reported this week that Karl Rove
is heading up a group that has spent over $2 million helping Gordon Smith.
Now we are starting to receive calls from supporters about robocalls
attacking Jeff Merkley
We are asking you and our other supporters to report any robocall or
push-poll you receive which attacks Jeff Merkley. If you receive such a
call, do not hang up the phone. Then, record the time, date, and the
message, and call our office at (503) 274-4439 or e-mail the campaign
.
Please spread the word to your friends and neighbors about these shady
tactics.
Together, we can overcome these swift boat tactics and bring Oregon the
change it deserves.
Sincerely,
Jon Isaacs, Campaign Manager
Jeff Merkley for Oregon
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Portland passed by St Louis: 100,000 Greet Obama
by Michael Munk
Sun, Oct 19, 2008
|
Obama says 'Meet Me in St Louis' & 100,000 show up
http://www.truthout.org/article/101908Z
Julian Gavaghan, The Daily Mail UK: "Barack Obama made history again...
drawing the highest American crowd of this year's presidential campaign."
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City Council should demand open hearing
by Michael Munk
Sat, Oct 18, 2008
|
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Crisis sends German to Marx--what about Americans?
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 17, 2008
|
Germans flocking to Marx
By Erik Kirschbaum for Reuters Oct 16, 2008
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081016/wl_nm/us_financial_germany_capitalism;_ylt=AgUHxABHCsGVVFCudzKyGcpm.3QA
BERLIN (Reuters) - Two decades after the Berlin Wall fell, communism's
founding father Karl Marx is back in vogue in eastern Germany -- thanks to
the global financial crisis.
His 1867 critical analysis of capitalism, "Das Kapital," has risen from
the publishing graveyard to become an improbable best-seller for academic
publisher Karl-Dietz-Verlag.
"Everyone thought there would never ever again be any demand for 'Das
Kapital'," managing director Joern Schuetrumpf told Reuters after selling
1,500 copies so far this year, triple the number sold in all of 2007 and a
100-fold increase since 1990.
"Even bankers and managers are now reading 'Das Kapital' to try to
understand what they've been doing to us. Marx is definitely 'in' right
now," Schuetrumpf said.
The revival of Marx's treatise reflects a broader rejection of capitalism
by many in eastern Germany, a communist country until 1989 and now racked
by high unemployment and poverty.
A month of intense financial turmoil has toppled banks in the United
States and forced a series of government bailouts in Germany and
elsewhere, reinforcing anti-capitalist sentiment.
Chancellor Angela Merkel -- herself an easterner -- unveiled a 500 billion
euro financial rescue package this week, a move decried as a reward for
irresponsible bankers.
A recent survey found 52 percent of eastern Germans believe the free
market economy is "unsuitable" and 43 percent said they wanted socialism
rather than capitalism, findings confirmed in interviews with dozens of
ordinary easterners.
"We read about the 'horrors of capitalism' in school. They really got that
right. Karl Marx was spot on," said Thomas Pivitt, a 46-year-old IT worker
from east Berlin.
"I had a pretty good life before the Wall fell," he added. "No one worried
about money because money didn't really matter. You had a job even if you
didn't want one. The communist idea wasn't all that bad."
CAPITALISM EVEN WORSE
Unemployment in the former communist east is 14 percent, double western
levels, and wages are significantly lower. Millions of jobs were lost
after reunification. Many eastern factories were bought by western
competitors and shut down.
"I thought communism was shit but capitalism is even worse," said Hermann
Haibel, a 76-year old retired blacksmith, who was strolling near
Alexanderplatz in the heart of old East Berlin.
"The free market is brutal. The capitalist wants to squeeze out more,
more, more," he said.
Free market hopes were high in the east when Chancellor Helmut Kohl
promised "flourishing landscapes."
But while some areas on the outskirts of Berlin, in Leipzig and along the
Baltic shore are thriving, much of the rest suffers from depopulation and
high unemployment.
The opposition Left party, which traces its roots to Erich Honecker's SED
party, has capitalized on the frustration and become the east's most
popular party with support of 30 percent.
"I don't think capitalism is the right system for us," said Monika Weber,
a 46-year-old city clerk.
"The distribution of wealth is unfair. We're seeing that now. The little
people like me are going to have to pay for this financial mess with
higher taxes because of greedy bankers."
Like many other east Germans, Ralf Wulff said he was delighted about the
fall of the Berlin Wall and to see capitalism replace communism. But the
euphoria was ephemeral.
"It took just a few weeks to realize what the free market economy was all
about," said Wulff. "It's rampant materialism and exploitation. Human
beings get lost. We didn't have the material comforts but communism still
had a lot going for it."
But not everyone condemned capitalism. Astrid Gerber was a master tailor
in East Berlin before her company was shut down.
"It was my dream job," said Gerber, 42. She was unemployed for seven
years, then opened up a newsstand but gave it up after her family
disintegrated due to her 90-hour work week.
"Capitalism has its advantages but so does communism," she said. "I can't
say one is better than the other."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Crisis sends German to Marx--what about Americans?
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 17, 2008
|
Germans flocking to Marx
By Erik Kirschbaum for Reuters Oct 16, 2008
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081016/wl_nm/us_financial_germany_capitalism;_ylt=AgUHxABHCsGVVFCudzKyGcpm.3QA
BERLIN (Reuters) - Two decades after the Berlin Wall fell, communism's
founding father Karl Marx is back in vogue in eastern Germany -- thanks to
the global financial crisis.
His 1867 critical analysis of capitalism, "Das Kapital," has risen from
the publishing graveyard to become an improbable best-seller for academic
publisher Karl-Dietz-Verlag.
"Everyone thought there would never ever again be any demand for 'Das
Kapital'," managing director Joern Schuetrumpf told Reuters after selling
1,500 copies so far this year, triple the number sold in all of 2007 and a
100-fold increase since 1990.
"Even bankers and managers are now reading 'Das Kapital' to try to
understand what they've been doing to us. Marx is definitely 'in' right
now," Schuetrumpf said.
The revival of Marx's treatise reflects a broader rejection of capitalism
by many in eastern Germany, a communist country until 1989 and now racked
by high unemployment and poverty.
A month of intense financial turmoil has toppled banks in the United
States and forced a series of government bailouts in Germany and
elsewhere, reinforcing anti-capitalist sentiment.
Chancellor Angela Merkel -- herself an easterner -- unveiled a 500 billion
euro financial rescue package this week, a move decried as a reward for
irresponsible bankers.
A recent survey found 52 percent of eastern Germans believe the free
market economy is "unsuitable" and 43 percent said they wanted socialism
rather than capitalism, findings confirmed in interviews with dozens of
ordinary easterners.
"We read about the 'horrors of capitalism' in school. They really got that
right. Karl Marx was spot on," said Thomas Pivitt, a 46-year-old IT worker
from east Berlin.
"I had a pretty good life before the Wall fell," he added. "No one worried
about money because money didn't really matter. You had a job even if you
didn't want one. The communist idea wasn't all that bad."
CAPITALISM EVEN WORSE
Unemployment in the former communist east is 14 percent, double western
levels, and wages are significantly lower. Millions of jobs were lost
after reunification. Many eastern factories were bought by western
competitors and shut down.
"I thought communism was shit but capitalism is even worse," said Hermann
Haibel, a 76-year old retired blacksmith, who was strolling near
Alexanderplatz in the heart of old East Berlin.
"The free market is brutal. The capitalist wants to squeeze out more,
more, more," he said.
Free market hopes were high in the east when Chancellor Helmut Kohl
promised "flourishing landscapes."
But while some areas on the outskirts of Berlin, in Leipzig and along the
Baltic shore are thriving, much of the rest suffers from depopulation and
high unemployment.
The opposition Left party, which traces its roots to Erich Honecker's SED
party, has capitalized on the frustration and become the east's most
popular party with support of 30 percent.
"I don't think capitalism is the right system for us," said Monika Weber,
a 46-year-old city clerk.
"The distribution of wealth is unfair. We're seeing that now. The little
people like me are going to have to pay for this financial mess with
higher taxes because of greedy bankers."
Like many other east Germans, Ralf Wulff said he was delighted about the
fall of the Berlin Wall and to see capitalism replace communism. But the
euphoria was ephemeral.
"It took just a few weeks to realize what the free market economy was all
about," said Wulff. "It's rampant materialism and exploitation. Human
beings get lost. We didn't have the material comforts but communism still
had a lot going for it."
But not everyone condemned capitalism. Astrid Gerber was a master tailor
in East Berlin before her company was shut down.
"It was my dream job," said Gerber, 42. She was unemployed for seven
years, then opened up a newsstand but gave it up after her family
disintegrated due to her 90-hour work week.
"Capitalism has its advantages but so does communism," she said. "I can't
say one is better than the other."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
CORRECTION: Oregon voter fraud story was from '04
by Michael Munk
Wed, Oct 15, 2008
|
Sorry! Jeff Mapes at the Big Om pointed out that Oregon voter registration
fraud story was from 2004. I checked and he's right.
Cheers, Mike
My post began:
"Voter Outreach of America, a front for Sproul & Associates, a Republican
political consulting firm in Phoenix, is under investigation in Oregon
for "alteration and destruction of voter registration cards," said Anne
Martens,
a spokeswoman for Oregon Secretary of State Bill Bradbury."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
GOP registration fraud in Oregon
by Michael Munk
Wed, Oct 15, 2008
|
Voter Outreach of America, a front for Sproul & Associates, a Republican
political consulting firm in Phoenix,
is under investigation in Oregon for "alteration and destruction of voter
registration cards," said Anne Martens, a
spokeswoman for Oregon Secretary of State Bill Bradbury.
Martens said her office had received numerous complaints since CNN affiliate
KGW
in Portland broadcast a report spotlighting an out-of-state canvasser who
was registering only Republicans.
"That's how I get paid, and I am doing it for the money," said the
canvasser, whom KGW identified as Mike Johnson. He said he received $5 per
card. The
TV report aired Tuesday -- the registration deadline in Oregon.
"We didn't know this was going on until that happened," Martens said.
"We're
launching a full investigation."
Edited from post by leaontomson@aol.com
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregon poll: Obama up by 17, Merkley by 5
by Michael Munk
Tue, Oct 14, 2008
|
See the internals at
http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=919c5c8c-0b5b-4b62-9b95-231631c98558
In Oregon, Obama Consolidating Support, Building Broad Coalition, As Early
Voting Begins:
In an election for President of the United States in Oregon today, 10/13/08,
three weeks till votes are counted, Barack Obama defeats John McCain 57% to
40%, according to a SurveyUSA poll conducted for KATU-TV Portland. 3 weeks
ago, Obama led by 11. Today, by 17. Obama is above 50% among men, women,
voters of every age group, Independents, Moderates, those with college
degrees and those without, those who earn more than $50,000 a year and those
who do not, those who live in greater Portland and those who live elsewhere.
McCain leads only among Conservatives, Pro-Life voters, and those who attend
church regularly. John Kerry carried Oregon by 4 points in 2004. Al Gore
carried Oregon by 3 points in 2000.
Filtering: 725 state of Oregon adults were interviewed by SurveyUSA 10/11/08
and 10/12/08. Of them, 658 were registered to vote. Of them, 584 were
determined by SurveyUSA to be likely to vote. Oregon has 7 electoral votes
and conducts its elections entirely by mail; voters will begin receiving
ballots this week.
NOTE: Merkley 46 Smith 41 and Brownlow (Constitution party, antiwar
libertarian) 7 , undecided 6.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Are your neighbors registered to vote?
by Michael Munk
Mon, Oct 13, 2008
|
|
PR firm in shady Oregon poll ID'd
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 10, 2008
|
Big GOP Pollster Behind Oregon Calls
TPM
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/10/big_gop_pollster_behind_oregon.php
By Zachary Roth - October 10, 2008
So yesterday we reported on a possible push poll being conducted in Oregon
by a company called Western Wats. A caller told one Oregon woman we spoke to
about tax increases being supported by Democratic Senate candidate Jeff
Merkley, then asked whether the information made her less likely to support
Merkley -- who's in a tight race with Republican incumbent Gordon Smith.
Western Wats had told us yesterday that its client was NMB Research, who did
not return our call. But today, Stacey Jenkins of Western Wats called back
to say that, after speaking again with their client, Western Wats had been
authorized to tell us that the client is in fact Public Opinion Strategies
(POS), a well-known GOP polling firm. POS, Jenkins said, had asked Western
Wats yesterday to give us the name NMB Research as the client.
Jenkins could not answer why POS had directed Western Wats to give what
appears to be misleading or incomplete information to a news organization.
A representative for POS did not immediately make available to TPMmuckraker
anyone who could provide more information, or clarify the relationship
between POS and NMB Research, but pledged to do so.
POS is a major GOP polling firm, founded by respected veteran pollsters Bill
McInturff, Glen Bolger, and Neil Newhouse. Its involvement may indicate that
the call was not part of a push poll, but rather an effort to test negative
messages with a sample group of voters, for research purposes -- a
possibility we suggested yesterday.
We'll keep you posted as we learn more.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
PR firm in shady Oregon poll ID'd
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 10, 2008
|
Big GOP Pollster Behind Oregon Calls
TPM
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/10/big_gop_pollster_behind_oregon.php
By Zachary Roth - October 10, 2008
So yesterday we reported on a possible push poll being conducted in Oregon
by a company called Western Wats. A caller told one Oregon woman we spoke to
about tax increases being supported by Democratic Senate candidate Jeff
Merkley, then asked whether the information made her less likely to support
Merkley -- who's in a tight race with Republican incumbent Gordon Smith.
Western Wats had told us yesterday that its client was NMB Research, who did
not return our call. But today, Stacey Jenkins of Western Wats called back
to say that, after speaking again with their client, Western Wats had been
authorized to tell us that the client is in fact Public Opinion Strategies
(POS), a well-known GOP polling firm. POS, Jenkins said, had asked Western
Wats yesterday to give us the name NMB Research as the client.
Jenkins could not answer why POS had directed Western Wats to give what
appears to be misleading or incomplete information to a news organization.
A representative for POS did not immediately make available to TPMmuckraker
anyone who could provide more information, or clarify the relationship
between POS and NMB Research, but pledged to do so.
POS is a major GOP polling firm, founded by respected veteran pollsters Bill
McInturff, Glen Bolger, and Neil Newhouse. Its involvement may indicate that
the call was not part of a push poll, but rather an effort to test negative
messages with a sample group of voters, for research purposes -- a
possibility we suggested yesterday.
We'll keep you posted as we learn more.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Another shady Oregon poll
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 10, 2008
|
Anti-Dem Push-Polling In Oregon Senate Race?
TPM October 9, 2008
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/10/antidem_pushpolling_in_oregon.php
By Zachary Roth
Is Gordon Smith, Oregon's Republican senator who's in a tight reelection
race, using push polls to turn voters against his Democratic opponent?
Kay Phillips, of Cottage Grove, Oregon told TPMmuckraker that last night she
received a call about the race. After responding to some standard polling
questions, including how she intended to vote in the Senate race and the
presidential race, Phillips says she was then asked whether her opinion of
Jeff Merkley, Smith's Democratic opponent, would change if she knew about
tax increases he had supported. The caller then read six instances of tax
increases, asking after each one whether she would change her opinion. The
call lasted about 5-6 minutes, Phillips said.
At the start of the conversation, Phillips said, the caller told her she was
calling with Western Wats. When, at the end of the call, Phillips the caller
to repeat her affiliation, the caller spelled out the name, according to
Phillips.
It's worth noting that political campaigns sometimes make similar calls to
test negative messages, rather than to deceptively sway the opinions of
large numbers of voters. Message testing calls are typically -- though not
necessarily -- longer than 5-6 minutes, and conducted on a far smaller scale
than push polls, since they seek only to target a representative sample of
the electorate.
A spokesman for Western Wats, a Utah-based market research firm, confirmed
to TPMmuckraker that his firm was conducting calls on the Oregon Senate
race, and named NMB Research as the client, would not give additional
information, citing a non-disclosure agreement.
Western Wats may ring a bell for TPM readers. Last fall, the New Hampshire
Attorney General launched an investigation [of Portland Republican pollster
Bob Moore, evidently hired by McCain] after voters in that state and Iowa
reported receiving calls from the firm, informing them of Mitt Romney's
Mormon faith, and praising John McCain's military record. As of August, the
investigation was still ongoing.
NMB Research did not immediately return a call for comment. According to
campaign disclosure records, the Virginia-based firm was paid $13,000 by the
National Republican Campaign Committee to conduct "generic survey" in
January.
Calls by TPMmuckraker to Smith's campaign, and to the National Republican
Senatorial Committee, which also conducts polling on Senate races, were not
immediately returned.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Another shady Oregon poll
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 10, 2008
|
Anti-Dem Push-Polling In Oregon Senate Race?
TPM October 9, 2008
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/10/antidem_pushpolling_in_oregon.php
By Zachary Roth
Is Gordon Smith, Oregon's Republican senator who's in a tight reelection
race, using push polls to turn voters against his Democratic opponent?
Kay Phillips, of Cottage Grove, Oregon told TPMmuckraker that last night she
received a call about the race. After responding to some standard polling
questions, including how she intended to vote in the Senate race and the
presidential race, Phillips says she was then asked whether her opinion of
Jeff Merkley, Smith's Democratic opponent, would change if she knew about
tax increases he had supported. The caller then read six instances of tax
increases, asking after each one whether she would change her opinion. The
call lasted about 5-6 minutes, Phillips said.
At the start of the conversation, Phillips said, the caller told her she was
calling with Western Wats. When, at the end of the call, Phillips the caller
to repeat her affiliation, the caller spelled out the name, according to
Phillips.
It's worth noting that political campaigns sometimes make similar calls to
test negative messages, rather than to deceptively sway the opinions of
large numbers of voters. Message testing calls are typically -- though not
necessarily -- longer than 5-6 minutes, and conducted on a far smaller scale
than push polls, since they seek only to target a representative sample of
the electorate.
A spokesman for Western Wats, a Utah-based market research firm, confirmed
to TPMmuckraker that his firm was conducting calls on the Oregon Senate
race, and named NMB Research as the client, would not give additional
information, citing a non-disclosure agreement.
Western Wats may ring a bell for TPM readers. Last fall, the New Hampshire
Attorney General launched an investigation [of Portland Republican pollster
Bob Moore, evidently hired by McCain] after voters in that state and Iowa
reported receiving calls from the firm, informing them of Mitt Romney's
Mormon faith, and praising John McCain's military record. As of August, the
investigation was still ongoing.
NMB Research did not immediately return a call for comment. According to
campaign disclosure records, the Virginia-based firm was paid $13,000 by the
National Republican Campaign Committee to conduct "generic survey" in
January.
Calls by TPMmuckraker to Smith's campaign, and to the National Republican
Senatorial Committee, which also conducts polling on Senate races, were not
immediately returned.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Friday: Pacific Greens after the 5pm rally
by Michael Munk
Thu, Oct 9, 2008
|
The Pacific Green Party, a cosponsor of the continuing demonstrations on
Friday afternoons at 5 pm in Pioneer Courthouse Square, is building upon
the anniversary rally on October 10th with its most broadly-attended rally
of the campaign.
At 6 pm at Pioneer Courthouse Square the Pacific Green party will introduce
its Peace Slate, five
Congressional candidates and two candidates for statewide office, all of
whom are committed to
deny approval of any funding whatsoever to the continued occupation of Iraq
and Afghanistan, as well
as to deny any increase in the military budget.
Appearing as candidates at the rally will be Jim Nicita, of Oregon City, and
Michael Meo, Seth Woolley,
and Chris Extine of Portland. Meo is candidate for U.S. Congress from the
3rd District, Woolley is
running for Oregon Secretary of State, and Extine for the Oregon House of
Representatives from
the 42nd District. Former Oregon Senator Walter F. Brown, the Pacific Green
Party candidate
for Attorney General of Oregon, will speak as well.
It is the basic core value of the Pacific Green Party that, in conformity
with the United Nations Charter,
the United States ought not to use war as a means of foreign policy, nor
threaten to engage in war.
Rather, the United States ought to commit itself to nonviolent solutions to
international problems.
Rather than continue with an unsustainable economic stripping of the planet
of all its resources, and
leaving it poorer forever, the Green Party maintains a policy of sustainable
economic activity. In
conformity with many other Green Parties in other nations of the world, the
Pacific Green Party, the
local arm of the Green Party of the United States, advocates a reversal of
factory farming and
energy-intensive agricultural practices, reduction of pollution to levels
that are compatible with
good health, decentralization and transformation of industries to
environmentally friendly practices,
and the implementation of real electoral reforms and social equity.
The focus of the rally will be on the global question of war and peace, but
the local issues of the
homeless in our community and the senseless persecution of gays and
pot-smokers will not be
forgotten.
PRESS RELEASE
Pacific Green Party of Oregon
http://www.pacificgreens.org
Contact: James J. Nicita
Pacific Green Party Co-Chair
503-650-2496
jim_nicita@hotmail.com
PACIFIC GREEN PARTY OF OREGON COMPLETES
CONGRESSIONAL PEACE SLATE
NOMINATES WALTER BROWN FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL
EUGENE - (August 28, 2008) - The Pacific Green Party filled its
Congressional Peace Slate in advance of Tuesday's candidate filing, and
nominated former State Senator Walter Brown for Attorney General, the PGP
said.
The nomination of Chris Henry, a Teamster and Portland State University
student, as its candidate for U.S. House District 1 makes 2008 the first
time in the PGP's history that the party has nominated candidates to all
five of Oregon's Congressional Districts.
"Every member of Oregon's Congressional delegation has voted to fund the
war in Iraq," said Henry, who will be challenging incumbent David Wu. "Now,
every voter in the state will have the opportunity to vote for a
Congressional candidate who will refuse to fund this war."
The PGP also nominated Walter Brown for Attorney General. Brown is a
25-year Navy veteran, former law professor, and served as a State Senator
from 1974 to 1986. As a State Senator, probably his greatest victory in the
Senate was the world's first ban on ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs) in 1975, which served as a model for several other governments. He
currently serves as a volunteer Attorney for the Consumer Justice Alliance
and Oregon Consumer League.
Brown ran four times as a Socialist Party candidate for Congress against
Earl Blumenauer between 1998 and 2004, and was the 2004 presidential
candidate of the Socialist Party USA.
PEACE SLATE
Presidential Candidate: Cynthia McKinney
Leading the PGP Peace Slate is former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney,
who was nominated at the national convention of the Green Party of the
United States held July 10-13, 2008 in Chicago. Her running mate is Hip Hop
activist Rosa Clemente
http://www.runcynthiarun.org
http://www.gp.org
At its June 2008 state convention, the PGP also nominated the following
Congressional candidates for its Peace Slate:
2nd District: Dr. Tristin Mock
In the 2nd district, the PGP nominated Dr. Tristin Mock to challenge
incumbent Greg Walden, a staunch supporter of the Bush war policy. Mock is a
naturopathic physician who grew up in The Dalles. She has already been
active campaigning through the vast 2nd Congressional District, which covers
all of Oregon east of the Cascades, as well as southern counties such as
Jackson.
http://www.votemock.com
3rd District: Michael Meo
In the 3rd District, the PGP nominated Michael Meo to challenge
incumbent Democrat Earl Blumenauer, who has angered progressives in his
east-side Portland district by supporting funding for the Iraq war, as well
as free-trade deals such as CAFTA. In fact, Joe Walsh, Blumenauer's
challenger in the Democratic primary, has endorsed Meo in the general
election. Meo has tremendous credibility as an anti-war candidate, having
served two years in prison as a Vietnam War draft resister. He is the chair
of the mathematics department at Benson Polytechnic High School in Portland.
http://www.meoforcongress.org
4th District: Mike Beilstein
In the 4th District, the PGP nominated Mike Beilstein to challenge
incumbent Peter DeFazio, whose inconsistent record on Iraq includes votes to
fund the war. Beilstein is a sitting member of the Corvallis City Council,
and is the architect of the PGP's Peace Slate strategy. He devotes a month
of every summer to travel to Cuba with Pastors for Peace to defy the US
trade and travel embargo. He is an active member of Committees of
Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and Citizens for Global
Solutions.
http://www.newmenu.org/mikebeilsteinforcongress
5th District: Alex Polikoff
In the 5th District, the PGP nominated Alex Polikoff for the seat being
vacated by Democratic Congresswoman Darlene Hooley. Like McKinney, Polikoff
recently left the Democratic Party after it took over Congress in 2006 and
yet failed totally to end the war in Iraq. Polikoff is an electrical
engineer in Corvallis. He decries the fact that both major parties seem more
concerned with getting elected and appeasing their corporate donors than
dealing with the threat of our ballooning public debt, job and health
insecurity, world instability, the energy crisis and global warming.
http://www.votepolikoff.org
SECRETARY OF STATE
In addition to the Peace Slate candidates, the PGP also nominated Seth
Woolley for Oregon Secretary of State. A software engineer, Woolley will
focus on the concerns generated by electronic voting machines, and is an
advocate for electoral reforms such as preference voting -- also known as
instant runoff voting -- which allows voters to rank all candidates in their
order of preference, and solves the "spoiler" problem . Although preference
voting is authorized by Oregon Constitution Article 2, Section 16,
Democratic Secretary of State Bill Bradbury and his Elections Division head
John Lindback have aggressively worked to undermine attempts in Eugene,
Ashland, and the Oregon Legislature to implement this constitutional
provision.
http://seth4sos.org/
-30-
|
Friday: Pacific Greens after the 5pm rally
by Michael Munk
Thu, Oct 9, 2008
|
The Pacific Green Party, a cosponsor of the continuing demonstrations on
Friday afternoons at 5 pm in Pioneer Courthouse Square, is building upon
the anniversary rally on October 10th with its most broadly-attended rally
of the campaign.
At 6 pm at Pioneer Courthouse Square the Pacific Green party will introduce
its Peace Slate, five
Congressional candidates and two candidates for statewide office, all of
whom are committed to
deny approval of any funding whatsoever to the continued occupation of Iraq
and Afghanistan, as well
as to deny any increase in the military budget.
Appearing as candidates at the rally will be Jim Nicita, of Oregon City, and
Michael Meo, Seth Woolley,
and Chris Extine of Portland. Meo is candidate for U.S. Congress from the
3rd District, Woolley is
running for Oregon Secretary of State, and Extine for the Oregon House of
Representatives from
the 42nd District. Former Oregon Senator Walter F. Brown, the Pacific Green
Party candidate
for Attorney General of Oregon, will speak as well.
It is the basic core value of the Pacific Green Party that, in conformity
with the United Nations Charter,
the United States ought not to use war as a means of foreign policy, nor
threaten to engage in war.
Rather, the United States ought to commit itself to nonviolent solutions to
international problems.
Rather than continue with an unsustainable economic stripping of the planet
of all its resources, and
leaving it poorer forever, the Green Party maintains a policy of sustainable
economic activity. In
conformity with many other Green Parties in other nations of the world, the
Pacific Green Party, the
local arm of the Green Party of the United States, advocates a reversal of
factory farming and
energy-intensive agricultural practices, reduction of pollution to levels
that are compatible with
good health, decentralization and transformation of industries to
environmentally friendly practices,
and the implementation of real electoral reforms and social equity.
The focus of the rally will be on the global question of war and peace, but
the local issues of the
homeless in our community and the senseless persecution of gays and
pot-smokers will not be
forgotten.
PRESS RELEASE
Pacific Green Party of Oregon
http://www.pacificgreens.org
Contact: James J. Nicita
Pacific Green Party Co-Chair
503-650-2496
jim_nicita@hotmail.com
PACIFIC GREEN PARTY OF OREGON COMPLETES
CONGRESSIONAL PEACE SLATE
NOMINATES WALTER BROWN FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL
EUGENE - (August 28, 2008) - The Pacific Green Party filled its
Congressional Peace Slate in advance of Tuesday's candidate filing, and
nominated former State Senator Walter Brown for Attorney General, the PGP
said.
The nomination of Chris Henry, a Teamster and Portland State University
student, as its candidate for U.S. House District 1 makes 2008 the first
time in the PGP's history that the party has nominated candidates to all
five of Oregon's Congressional Districts.
"Every member of Oregon's Congressional delegation has voted to fund the
war in Iraq," said Henry, who will be challenging incumbent David Wu. "Now,
every voter in the state will have the opportunity to vote for a
Congressional candidate who will refuse to fund this war."
The PGP also nominated Walter Brown for Attorney General. Brown is a
25-year Navy veteran, former law professor, and served as a State Senator
from 1974 to 1986. As a State Senator, probably his greatest victory in the
Senate was the world's first ban on ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs) in 1975, which served as a model for several other governments. He
currently serves as a volunteer Attorney for the Consumer Justice Alliance
and Oregon Consumer League.
Brown ran four times as a Socialist Party candidate for Congress against
Earl Blumenauer between 1998 and 2004, and was the 2004 presidential
candidate of the Socialist Party USA.
PEACE SLATE
Presidential Candidate: Cynthia McKinney
Leading the PGP Peace Slate is former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney,
who was nominated at the national convention of the Green Party of the
United States held July 10-13, 2008 in Chicago. Her running mate is Hip Hop
activist Rosa Clemente
http://www.runcynthiarun.org
http://www.gp.org
At its June 2008 state convention, the PGP also nominated the following
Congressional candidates for its Peace Slate:
2nd District: Dr. Tristin Mock
In the 2nd district, the PGP nominated Dr. Tristin Mock to challenge
incumbent Greg Walden, a staunch supporter of the Bush war policy. Mock is a
naturopathic physician who grew up in The Dalles. She has already been
active campaigning through the vast 2nd Congressional District, which covers
all of Oregon east of the Cascades, as well as southern counties such as
Jackson.
http://www.votemock.com
3rd District: Michael Meo
In the 3rd District, the PGP nominated Michael Meo to challenge
incumbent Democrat Earl Blumenauer, who has angered progressives in his
east-side Portland district by supporting funding for the Iraq war, as well
as free-trade deals such as CAFTA. In fact, Joe Walsh, Blumenauer's
challenger in the Democratic primary, has endorsed Meo in the general
election. Meo has tremendous credibility as an anti-war candidate, having
served two years in prison as a Vietnam War draft resister. He is the chair
of the mathematics department at Benson Polytechnic High School in Portland.
http://www.meoforcongress.org
4th District: Mike Beilstein
In the 4th District, the PGP nominated Mike Beilstein to challenge
incumbent Peter DeFazio, whose inconsistent record on Iraq includes votes to
fund the war. Beilstein is a sitting member of the Corvallis City Council,
and is the architect of the PGP's Peace Slate strategy. He devotes a month
of every summer to travel to Cuba with Pastors for Peace to defy the US
trade and travel embargo. He is an active member of Committees of
Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and Citizens for Global
Solutions.
http://www.newmenu.org/mikebeilsteinforcongress
5th District: Alex Polikoff
In the 5th District, the PGP nominated Alex Polikoff for the seat being
vacated by Democratic Congresswoman Darlene Hooley. Like McKinney, Polikoff
recently left the Democratic Party after it took over Congress in 2006 and
yet failed totally to end the war in Iraq. Polikoff is an electrical
engineer in Corvallis. He decries the fact that both major parties seem more
concerned with getting elected and appeasing their corporate donors than
dealing with the threat of our ballooning public debt, job and health
insecurity, world instability, the energy crisis and global warming.
http://www.votepolikoff.org
SECRETARY OF STATE
In addition to the Peace Slate candidates, the PGP also nominated Seth
Woolley for Oregon Secretary of State. A software engineer, Woolley will
focus on the concerns generated by electronic voting machines, and is an
advocate for electoral reforms such as preference voting -- also known as
instant runoff voting -- which allows voters to rank all candidates in their
order of preference, and solves the "spoiler" problem . Although preference
voting is authorized by Oregon Constitution Article 2, Section 16,
Democratic Secretary of State Bill Bradbury and his Elections Division head
John Lindback have aggressively worked to undermine attempts in Eugene,
Ashland, and the Oregon Legislature to implement this constitutional
provision.
http://seth4sos.org/
-30-
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Friday, October 10 rally: US Out of Iraq and Afghanistan!
by Michael Munk
Mon, Oct 6, 2008
|
US OUT OF IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN!
6 years after Congress authorized Use of Force on Iraq and
7 years after the US Invasion of Afghanistan
Friday Rally Set For October 10, 2008
5:00 PM, Pioneer Courthouse Square, SW Yamhill and Broadway
Marking six years since Congress authorized the Use of Force against Iraq
and seven years since the invasion of Afghanistan, local groups are
planning an expanded Friday rally for peace and justice on Friday, October
10, 2008 at 5 PM at Pioneer Courthouse Square, SW Broadway and Yamhill.
The United States attack on Afghanistan took place on October 7, 2001,
less than a month after 9/11; since then, more American soldiers and
Afghan civilians have been killed each year. The congressional vote on
Iraq took place on October 10-11, 2002, in the political climate of
terrorism, fear and the politically-charged interim congressional
elections. The message of the October 10 rally will be "US Out of Iraq &
Afghanistan: 6 & 7 Years Later."
The human costs of the wars are nearly incalculable, but it is estimated
that 4176 American military personnel and between 93,000 and over 1
million Iraqis have died since the US invasion in March, 2003. In
Afghanistan, at least 606 American service members have died and an
estimated 12,000 to 20,000 Afghans. In September, a spike in civilian
deaths in Afghanistan led to a report from the United Nations High
Commissioner on Human Rights which shows 1445 civilian casualties in the
first 8 months of 2008, far more than the 1040 in all of 2007, with 395 of
this year's deaths caused by US/NATO air strikes. US military deaths have
been increasing each year since the October, 2001 invasion, with 131 to
date in 2008 well outpacing the 117 in all of 2007.*
In terms of money, the total appropriated or spent for both conflicts is
at least $872 billion,** with estimates from the Congressional Budget
office (October 23, 2007) of a total of $2.4 trillion in the long run,
while economist Joseph Stiglitz predicts an even higher total in his book,
"The Three Trillion Dollar War."
The rally is being cosponsored by Peace and Justice Works Iraq Affinity
Group and Portland Peaceful Response Coalition. Numerous peace rallies
will be taking place around the country that same weekend. The Friday
rally began as an institution in Portland shortly after the invasion of
Afghanistan in October, 2001, and has gone on every week, rain or shine,
since.
For more information or to get your organization involved as a cosponsor
or endorser, contact Peace and Justice Works at iraq@pjw.info or
503-236-3065, or PPRC at 503-344-5078 or pprc@riseup.net. Additional
cosponsors and endorsers of the event include Women in Black and the
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom chapters in Portland,
OR and Madison, WI. Download a poster for this event at
http://www.pjw.info/oct1008rally.pdf
*Figures from http://www.icasualties.org ,
http://www.unknownnews.net/casualties.htm , UN High Commissioner on Human
Rights/UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, and **Center for Arms Control
and Non-Proliferation.
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Stickel stonewalls AP on hate DVD
by Michael Munk
Sun, Oct 5, 2008
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Merkley against bailout?
by Michael Munk
Sat, Oct 4, 2008
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New Street Roots out today
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 3, 2008
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For those who can=E2=80=99t afford free speech
=20
=E2=86=90 Pissed about the fed bailout? Make friends Thursday=20
October 2, 2008
The new Street Roots hits the streets tomorrow. Buy a new copy from your =
local and friendly neighborhood vendor. You won=E2=80=99t be =
disappointed.
Michael Munk, the local author of Portland=E2=80=99s Red Guide talks =
Marxism, the Rose City=E2=80=99s radical past and where the Left fairs =
today.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Capitalism Saved (for long?)! how locals voted
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 3, 2008
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PGE customers screwed by Oregon PUC
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 3, 2008
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Bush This sucker [capitalism] is going down.
by Michael Munk
Tue, Sep 30, 2008
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Local Reps split on bailout vote
by Michael Munk
Mon, Sep 29, 2008
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Bailout vote (Thanks to Steve Weiss for posting the rollcall):
For: Baird, Holley and Walden
Against: Blumenauer, DeFazio and Wu.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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E&P on Oregonian's hate DVD
by Michael Munk
Mon, Sep 29, 2008
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Editor & Publisher
Go to www.eandppub.com for links
=20
=AB Obama Wins in a Gallup | Main | Is It Parody or Is It Memorex? =BB=20
September 28, 2008
UPDATE: More Heated Reaction to 'Obsession'
Complaints keep arriving at many of the dozens of papers that =
distributed the 'Muslim terror" DVD "Obsession" this month (which we =
have followed here for two weeks). The ombudsman at The Blade in =
Toledo wrote a column today about it, declaring that the paper should =
have rejected the deal (he actually saw the film at a screening two =
years ago). He goes so far as reveal that none of the top execs who =
approved the idea are Jewish. =20
Meanwhile, The Oregonian in Portland distributed the DVD today -- over =
objections to the publisher from the mayor of the city (and some =
community leaders). And some Obsession critics are charging that there =
may be a link between the DVDs' distribution in Dayton, Ohio and a =
chemical attack on a local mosque a few days later. -- Greg Mitchell
=20
=AB=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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E&P on Oregonian's hate DVD
by Michael Munk
Mon, Sep 29, 2008
|
Editor & Publisher
Go to www.eandppub.com for links
=20
=AB Obama Wins in a Gallup | Main | Is It Parody or Is It Memorex? =BB=20
September 28, 2008
UPDATE: More Heated Reaction to 'Obsession'
Complaints keep arriving at many of the dozens of papers that =
distributed the 'Muslim terror" DVD "Obsession" this month (which we =
have followed here for two weeks). The ombudsman at The Blade in =
Toledo wrote a column today about it, declaring that the paper should =
have rejected the deal (he actually saw the film at a screening two =
years ago). He goes so far as reveal that none of the top execs who =
approved the idea are Jewish. =20
Meanwhile, The Oregonian in Portland distributed the DVD today -- over =
objections to the publisher from the mayor of the city (and some =
community leaders). And some Obsession critics are charging that there =
may be a link between the DVDs' distribution in Dayton, Ohio and a =
chemical attack on a local mosque a few days later. -- Greg Mitchell
=20
=AB=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Oregonian disgraces itself
by Michael Munk
Sun, Sep 28, 2008
|
Dear Mr. Stickel:
I am outraged that you sent racist hate propaganda into my home today and
call it "free speech." I am certain you would not have agreed to be paid
to include a similar DVD depicting Roman Catholics or Jews as terrorists
(which some of them have been) and telling your readers to fear them.
Responsible owners and publishers have refused to touch this trash, and I
regret the Newhouse and Stickel families do not earn that distinction.
I will carefully consider whether to patronize businesses who agree to
associate
their ads with those from perveyors of racist hate.
Mike Munk
Portland
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Oregonian disgraces itself
by Michael Munk
Sun, Sep 28, 2008
|
Dear Mr. Stickel:
I am outraged that you sent racist hate propaganda into my home today and
call it "free speech." I am certain you would not have agreed to be paid
to include a similar DVD depicting Roman Catholics or Jews as terrorists
(which some of them have been) and telling your readers to fear them.
Responsible owners and publishers have refused to touch this trash, and I
regret the Newhouse and Stickel families do not earn that distinction.
I will carefully consider whether to patronize businesses who agree to
associate
their ads with those from perveyors of racist hate.
Mike Munk
Portland
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10AM tomorrow: Demo at Oregonian to protest hate DVD
by Michael Munk
Sun, Sep 28, 2008
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URGENT PORTEST: Oregonian to distribute hate DVD Sunday!
by Michael Munk
Fri, Sep 26, 2008
|
There was a story on Morning Edition on this DVD this morning. Now news
that it's coming to Oregon via Sunday's Oregonian. Several newspapers in
other cities have refused to carry this "ad". We must do what we can to
stop it here and now! Objecting after the fact does little to counter the
effect this could have on the election.
Please forward widely.
There's a ton of supporting information below. Read as much as you
like--the main thing is to call the Oregonian and object. Number below
takes you directly to the publisher's office.
Thanks,
Ms Beech
____________________
The below DVD "Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West" is to be a
paid "ad" insert in The Oregonian this Sunday. It's being primarily
distributed to swing states prior to the presidential elections. To join
with others from many faiths and from human rights groups to urge The
Oregonian to take a moral stand and refuse to circulate this hateful and
inflammatory DVD, as some other newspapers have, contact the Oregonian
publisher:
Fred Stickel Phone: 503.221.8140, Fax: 503.294.4175.
Thank you,
Jennifer Grosvenor
Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights
________________
For more background information, see these below:
1) Request to call/contact Oregonian by Ned Rosch and Maxine Fookson
who on 9/11 were featured in the front page Oregonian coverage about
their bringing an injured Iraqi child here for medical/surgerical help
2) Press release by CAIR, America's largest Islamic civil liberties
group, includes the director of Middle East Studies at Drury University
saying the film is "a blatant piece of anti-Muslim propaganda", etc.
3) Asia Times article the DVD, funders, etc.
1)
----- Original Message -----
From: Ned Rosch/Maxine Fookson
Sent: Thursday, September 25, 2008 12:17 AM
Subject: Important Notice for action-- Anti-Muslim DVDs being sent to
swing states
Dear peace and justice friends.
I am writing to alert you to an important situation in our community. At
the same time as we are all building bridges of compassion and peace in
caring for Mustafa, an incredibly biased anti-Muslim campaign is unfolding
on our doorstep.
This Sunday, The Oregonian is planning to enclose a DVD called
"Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against The West" in every newspaper.
This is a highly inaccurate, biased and hateful DVD depicting Muslims
as terrorists and as a rising threat. You can view the DVD on youtube
if you wish. The Oregonian is circulating the DVD as a paid
advertisement from a group called The Clarion Fund. The Clarion Fund
is circulating millions of copies of this DVD to newspapers across the
country, especially in swing states. Several newspapers in other
cities have refused to carry this "ad". Below is a statement from the
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) issuing a complaint to the
FEC about the hateful content of the DVD.
To join with others from many faiths and from human rights groups to
urge The Oregonian to take a moral stand and refuse to circulate this
hateful and inflammatory DVD, contact the Oregonian publisher, Fred
Stickel
Phone: 503.221.8140, Fax: 503.294.4175.
Below is the statement from CAIR concerning this DVD.
Thanks,
maxine
2)
Press Release
Subject: CAIR Asks FEC to Probe Anti-Muslim DVDs Sent to Swing States
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CAIR Asks FEC to Probe Anti-Muslim DVDs Sent to Swing States
Israel-based group behind 'Obsession' distribution to 28 million U.S.
homes
(WASHINGTON, D.C., 9/23/08) - A prominent national Islamic civil rights
and advocacy group today announced that it has filed a complaint with
the Federal Election Commission (FEC) over the distribution of an
anti-Muslim film to 28 million homes in presidential election swing
states.
The Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is
urging the FEC to investigate whether the Clarion Fund, a shadowy
non-profit organization that distributed DVDs containing "Obsession:
Radical Islam's War Against the West," is really a front for an
Israel-based group seeking to help Sen. John McCain win the U.S.
presidential election. (No information about a board of directors,
staff or even a physical address is offered on the fund's website.)
In its complaint to the FEC, CAIR wrote in part:
"The Clarion Fund recently financed the distribution of some 28 million
DVDs containing the film 'Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the
West' in what many political analysts describe as 'swing' states in the
upcoming presidential elections. Those same analysts say the
distribution of the 'Obsession' DVD was designed to benefit a
particular presidential candidate, namely Sen. John McCain…
"According to the website for the Secretary of State for New York,
Clarion Fund Inc. is incorporated in New York as a Delaware based
foreign not-for-profit corporation. According to the Delaware
Department of Corporations, Robert (Rabbi Raphael) Shore, Rabbi Henry
Harris and Rebecca Kabat incorporated Clarion Fund. All three of whom
are reported to serve as employees of Aish HaTorah International, an
organization apparently based in Israel. Also according to the Delaware
Department of Corporations, the incorporators of the Clarion Fund used
Aish HaTorah's New York City address (150 West 46th Street, New York)
to incorporate Clarion Fund in Delaware…
[SEE:http://www.aish.com/aishint/wwprogram.asp ]
"It appears that the funding for the production, marketing and
distribution of 'Obsession' may have originated from Israel-based Aish
HaTorah International."
To read the entire FEC complaint, click here.
http://www.cair.com/Portals/0/pdf/ObessesionlettertoFEC.pdf
There is at least one report of a person who received the DVD also
getting an automated phone call asking that person to watch the film
and then "keep it in mind when you go to the voting booth."
"American voters deserve to know whether they are the targets of a
multi-million-dollar campaign funded and directed by a foreign group
seeking to whip up anti-Muslim hysteria as a way to influence the
outcome of our presidential election," said CAIR Executive Director
Nihad Awad.
Awad said CAIR has received numerous complaints from those who were
sent the DVD in newspapers delivered to their homes and has recorded at
least one report of an anti-Muslim bias incident directly resulting
from the DVD distribution.
SEE: Ohio Muslims Fearful After DVD Released in Newspapers
http://www.wtol.com/Global/story.asp?S=9043986
Some newspapers, including the News & Record in North Carolina and the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, have refused to distribute the DVDs.
SEE: Post-Dispatch Refuses to Distribute DVD Offensive to American
Muslims
http://www.stltoday.com/blogzone/civil-religion/politics/2008/09/post-
dispatch-refuses-to-distribute-dvd-offensive-to-american-muslims/
Interfaith leaders such as Rev. Dr. C. Welton Gaddy, president of the
Interfaith Alliance, have spoken out against the distribution of
"Obsession" in swing states. In a statement, Gaddy also called for an
FEC investigation: "…when a cynical attempt is made to influence our
nation's presidential election by stoking fear of one religious group
we believe the media along with public officials, such as the Federal
Election Commission, must establish who is trying to influence our
politics through religious bigotry."
SEE: Statement of Rev. Welton Gaddy On the Distribution of the
Anti-Muslim Film "Obsession" in Newspapers
http://www.interfaithalliance.org/news/268-statement-of-rev-welton-
gaddy-on-the-distribution-of-the-anti-muslim-film-obsession-in-
newspapers
An editorial in the Palm Beach Post outlined the apparent political
motivation behind the Clarion Fund campaign:
"Distribution of the DVD…was timed with the post-Labor Day start of
presidential election season. About 95 percent of the papers that
contained the DVD are in Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan,
Wisconsin, Iowa, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada and New Hampshire.
"Notice a pattern? Right, those are the swing states that most analysts
believe will determine the election. The issue on which polls
consistently show John McCain ahead of Barack Obama is national
security. One way to make voters worry less about the economy and more
about national security would be to send out a DVD that opens with
clips of 9/11 and includes scenes of Muslims chanting 'Death to
America!'"
SEE: The Secret Cell Helping McCain (Palm Beach Post)
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/opinion/content/opinion/epaper/2008/09/21/
a16a_schultz_col_0921.html
SEE ALSO: Anti-Islam Film Targets "Swing State" (IPS)
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=43940
Editorial and letter writers nationwide have called the film
"propaganda" and even compared it to Leni Riefenstahl's 1935 pro-Nazi
film "Triumph of the Will." One writer called it "misleading and
dangerous." (Broward-Palm Beach New Times, 9/20/08)
SEE: Putting Lipstick on Propaganda Doesn't Change It (NWF Daily News)
http://www.nwfdailynews.com/news/clarion_11254___article.html/
fund_obsession.html
Jeff VanDenBerg, director of Middle East Studies at Drury University,
called the film "a blatant piece of anti-Muslim propaganda."
(News-Leader, 9/17/08)
Those interviewed in "Obsession" constitute a veritable who's who of
Muslim-bashers. Speakers include Walid Shoebat, who once told a
Missouri newspaper that he sees "many parallels between the Antichrist
and Islam" and "Islam is not the religion of God -- Islam is the
devil." (Springfield News-Leader, 9/24/07)
Others interviewed in the film include Nonie Darwish, a self-styled
"former Moslem" who wrote that "Islam is cruel, anti-women,
anti-religious freedom and anti-personal freedom in general," and
Daniel Pipes, who warned a Jewish convention of the "true dangers"
posed by "the presence, and increased stature, and affluence, and
enfranchisement of American Muslims." (American Jewish Congress,
10/21/2001)
Another "Obsession" interviewee, Brigitte Gabriel, told the Australian
Jewish News: "Every practising Muslim is a radical Muslim." She also
claimed that "Islamo-fascism is a politically-correct word...it's the
vehicle for Islam...Islam is the problem."
SEE: The World According to Brigitte Gabriel (Australian Jewish News)
http://www.ajn.com.au/news/news.asp?pgID=3403
When asked whether Americans should "resist Muslims who want to seek
political office in this nation," Gabriel said:
"Absolutely. If a Muslim who has -- who is -- a practicing Muslim who
believes the word of the Koran to be the word of Allah, who abides by
Islam, who goes to mosque and prays every Friday, who prays five times
a day -- this practicing Muslim, who believes in the teachings of the
Koran, cannot be a loyal citizen to the United States of America."
SEE: `Obsession` Stars Have Lectured at U.S. Military Colleges
http://www.israelenews.com/view.asp?ID=3168
CAIR, America's largest Islamic civil liberties group, has 35 offices
and chapters nationwide and in Canada. Its mission is to enhance the
understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties,
empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and
mutual understanding.
- END -
CONTACT: CAIR National Communications Director Ibrahim Hooper,
202-488-8787 or 202-744-7726, E-Mail: ihooper@cair.com; CAIR
Communications Coordinator Amina Rubin, 202-488-8787,
E-Mail: arubin@cair.com
3)
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/JI26Ak03.html
Asia Times
Middle East
Sep 26, 2008
A dangerous obsession
By Ali Gharib and Eli Clifton
WASHINGTON - A group of hardline United States neo-conservatives and
former Israeli diplomats were behind the controversial, allegedly
Islamaphobic DVD which was recently distributed in US swing states
ahead of November's presidential elections.
The 60-minute movie,Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West ,
was an initiative of the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET), but
produced by the Clarion Fund, an organization described as a "front"
for Israeli group Aish Hatorah.
Some 28 million copies of Obsession are currently being inserted in
newspapers and delivered by mail in key electoral swing states - such
as Michigan, Ohio and Florida which, according to recent polling, could
go either way.
Critics allege the movie Obsession is "hate propaganda" which paints
Muslims as violent extremists and, among other things, explicitly
compares the threat posed by radical Islam to that of Nazi Germany in
the 1930s - at least two major metropolitan newspapers refused to run
the movie because of its perceived bias.
"Despite the perilous state of American newspapers, the St Louis
Post-Dispatch advertising department took an ethical stand and refused
to distribute the DVD of a film that for two years has troubled
American Muslims," Tim Townsend, a reporter at Missouri's most
influential newspaper wrote this month.
The Clarion Fund is based at the same New York address as Aish
Hatorah, a self-described "apolitical" group dedicated to educating
Jews about their heritage. Its street address, as listed on the group's
website and a DVD mailer for the film, is a "virtual address" that goes
to a post office box in New York City.
While initial press reports about the mass distribution focused on
the Clarion Fund's financing role, it was EMET that organized and oversaw
the distribution, EMET's spokesman and a former press officer for the
Israeli Embassy in Washington, Ari Morgenstern, told Inter Press
Service.
EMET, according to a recent press release, is "a non-partisan,
non-profit organization dedicated to policy research and analysis on
democracy and the Middle East." According to filings made in compliance
with the organization's tax-exempt status, "The organization hosts
seminars, debates and educational films featuring Middle East experts
in order to educate policymakers and the public at large on the common
threats facing Israel and the United States."
Morgenstern said EMET was "partnered with the Clarion Fund" on
what he called the "Obsession Project" which he identified as "an
initiative of EMET". He declined to name the project's donors - a
spokesman for the Clarion Fund, Gregory Ross, also refused to name the
fund's donors, whose identities remain a mystery.
Morgenstern also declined to reveal the cost of the DVD distribution,
but did say, "It cost a great deal - it's a multi-million-dollar
effort." Outside experts have estimated the cost of the operation at
between US$15 million and $50 million.
Like hardline neo-conservatives, EMET opposes any land concessions to
Palestinians and takes other hardline positions identified with
Israel's right-wing Likud Party and the ''Settler Lobby'' there. EMET's
website says, "We regard ourselves as 'intellectual revolutionaries'."
Two weeks ago, EMET sponsored a seminar series on Capitol Hill for
the controversial multi-billionaire casino and hotel magnate Sheldon
Adelson, who is a major donor to right-wing Zionist organizations in
the US, such as the far-right lobby group, Freedom's Watch and the
Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC).
RJC efforts to persuade Jewish voters that Democratic presidential
candidate Barack Obama is aligned with radical anti-Israel forces in
the Islamic world have drawn strong criticism from the mainstream
Jewish press.
EMET's board of advisers includes a list of familiar neo-conservative
figures, as well as three former Israeli diplomats, including a former
deputy chief of mission in Israel's Washington embassy.
The group is headed by Sarah Stern, who began her activism on Israeli
issues in opposition to the 1993 Oslo Accords between Israel and
Palestinians. She made a career out of her activism in the far-right
Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) as its national policy
coordinator from 1998 through 2004.
Notable members of the advisory board include prominent hardline
neo-conservatives, including former US UN ambassador the late Jeane
Kirkpatrick; Daniel Pipes of the Middle East Forum; and the Hudson
Institute's Meyrav Wurmser - the Israeli-born spouse of Vice President
Dick Cheney's former top Middle East adviser, David Wurmser.
Other prominent neo-conservative members of the board include Center
for Security Policy (CSP) president Frank Gaffney; former Central
Intelligence Agency chief James Woolsey; and Heritage Foundation
fellows Ariel Cohen and Nina Shea, who has served for years on the
quasi-governmental US Commission for International Religious Freedom.
The US-born and educated hardline deputy managing editor of the
Jerusalem Post and senior fellow for Middle Eastern Affairs at
Gaffney's CSP, Caroline Glick, is also an adviser. Glick, Pipes and
Walid Shoebat, a "reformed" terrorist and EMET adviser, are all
featured as experts in Obsession.
Also among the top names of listed advisers to EMET are three Israeli
diplomats. Two of them, ambassadors Yossi Ben Aharon and Yoram
Ettinger, were among the three Israeli ambassadors whom then-Israeli
prime minister Yitzhak Rabin referred to as "The Three Musketeers" when
they lobbied Washington in opposition to the Oslo accords.
Stern began her career at the behest of three unnamed Israeli
diplomats who were based in Washington under Rabin's predecessor,
Yitzhak Shamir, according to EMET's website, while Ettinger was at one
time the chairman of special projects and is still listed as a
contributing expert at the Ariel Center for Policy Research, a hardline
Likudist Israeli think-tank that opposes the peace process.
Ben Aharon was the director general - effectively the chief of
staff - of Shamir's office.
The third Israeli ambassador, Lenny Ben-David, was appointed by Likud
prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to serve as the deputy chief of
mission - second in command - at the Israeli Embassy in Washington from
1997 until 2000. Ben-David had also held senior positions at the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee for 25 years and is now a
consultant and lobbyist.
But EMET is not the only group involved in the controversy to have
direct ties to Israel.
The Clarion Fund has also been criticized for initially denying its
ties to the Israel's Aish Hatorah, which were first disclosed publicly
by an IPS investigation last year. Honestreporting.com, an organization
set up by Aish Hatorah and also a client of Ben-David, admitted to IPS
that it had aided the production of the film.
The Clarion Fund and Aish Hatorah are headed by twin Israeli-Canadian
brothers Raphael and Ephraim Shore, respectively. The two groups appear
to be connected as Clarion is incorporated in Delaware to the New York
offices of Aish Hatorah.
"It seems that the Clarion Fund, from what we can tell, is just a
virtual organization that is a front for Aish Hatorah," said Ibrahim
Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
"They don't have staff, they don't have a physical address. Nothing."
Little is known about the shadowy Clarion Fund, which is listed with
the New York Secretary of State's office as a "foreign not-for-profit
foundation". The group has rejected requests for information about its
donors.
IPS has uncovered one donor to the Clarion Fund, the Mamiye
Foundation, which gave it $25,000 in August 2007, according to tax
filings. Four Mamiye members: Charles M, Charles D, Hyman and Abraham,
are listed as trustees on the forms.
According to filings with the New York Secretary of State, a contact
listed for a Mamiye company is also the same man listed as a contact
and counsel for the Clarion Fund - Eli D Greenberg of the law firm
Wolf, Haldenstein, Adler, Freeman and Herz.
Foreign nationals and companies, and domestic tax-exempt non-profit
organizations, are prohibited by federal election law from attempting
to sway US elections at any level through either contributions to
campaigns or advocacy.
Morgenstern, EMET's spokesman, said that the DVD distribution only
went to "swing states" because media attention was focused there, and
EMET was hoping to spark a public debate about the threats posed by"
radical Islam".
But the Washington-based CAIR has filed a complaint asking the
Federal Election Commission to review the actions of the Clarion Fund both
as a foreign entity and as a non-profit outfit.
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URGENT PORTEST: Oregonian to distribute hate DVD Sunday!
by Michael Munk
Fri, Sep 26, 2008
|
There was a story on Morning Edition on this DVD this morning. Now news
that it's coming to Oregon via Sunday's Oregonian. Several newspapers in
other cities have refused to carry this "ad". We must do what we can to
stop it here and now! Objecting after the fact does little to counter the
effect this could have on the election.
Please forward widely.
There's a ton of supporting information below. Read as much as you
like--the main thing is to call the Oregonian and object. Number below
takes you directly to the publisher's office.
Thanks,
Ms Beech
____________________
The below DVD "Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West" is to be a
paid "ad" insert in The Oregonian this Sunday. It's being primarily
distributed to swing states prior to the presidential elections. To join
with others from many faiths and from human rights groups to urge The
Oregonian to take a moral stand and refuse to circulate this hateful and
inflammatory DVD, as some other newspapers have, contact the Oregonian
publisher:
Fred Stickel Phone: 503.221.8140, Fax: 503.294.4175.
Thank you,
Jennifer Grosvenor
Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights
________________
For more background information, see these below:
1) Request to call/contact Oregonian by Ned Rosch and Maxine Fookson
who on 9/11 were featured in the front page Oregonian coverage about
their bringing an injured Iraqi child here for medical/surgerical help
2) Press release by CAIR, America's largest Islamic civil liberties
group, includes the director of Middle East Studies at Drury University
saying the film is "a blatant piece of anti-Muslim propaganda", etc.
3) Asia Times article the DVD, funders, etc.
1)
----- Original Message -----
From: Ned Rosch/Maxine Fookson
Sent: Thursday, September 25, 2008 12:17 AM
Subject: Important Notice for action-- Anti-Muslim DVDs being sent to
swing states
Dear peace and justice friends.
I am writing to alert you to an important situation in our community. At
the same time as we are all building bridges of compassion and peace in
caring for Mustafa, an incredibly biased anti-Muslim campaign is unfolding
on our doorstep.
This Sunday, The Oregonian is planning to enclose a DVD called
"Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against The West" in every newspaper.
This is a highly inaccurate, biased and hateful DVD depicting Muslims
as terrorists and as a rising threat. You can view the DVD on youtube
if you wish. The Oregonian is circulating the DVD as a paid
advertisement from a group called The Clarion Fund. The Clarion Fund
is circulating millions of copies of this DVD to newspapers across the
country, especially in swing states. Several newspapers in other
cities have refused to carry this "ad". Below is a statement from the
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) issuing a complaint to the
FEC about the hateful content of the DVD.
To join with others from many faiths and from human rights groups to
urge The Oregonian to take a moral stand and refuse to circulate this
hateful and inflammatory DVD, contact the Oregonian publisher, Fred
Stickel
Phone: 503.221.8140, Fax: 503.294.4175.
Below is the statement from CAIR concerning this DVD.
Thanks,
maxine
2)
Press Release
Subject: CAIR Asks FEC to Probe Anti-Muslim DVDs Sent to Swing States
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CAIR Asks FEC to Probe Anti-Muslim DVDs Sent to Swing States
Israel-based group behind 'Obsession' distribution to 28 million U.S.
homes
(WASHINGTON, D.C., 9/23/08) - A prominent national Islamic civil rights
and advocacy group today announced that it has filed a complaint with
the Federal Election Commission (FEC) over the distribution of an
anti-Muslim film to 28 million homes in presidential election swing
states.
The Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is
urging the FEC to investigate whether the Clarion Fund, a shadowy
non-profit organization that distributed DVDs containing "Obsession:
Radical Islam's War Against the West," is really a front for an
Israel-based group seeking to help Sen. John McCain win the U.S.
presidential election. (No information about a board of directors,
staff or even a physical address is offered on the fund's website.)
In its complaint to the FEC, CAIR wrote in part:
"The Clarion Fund recently financed the distribution of some 28 million
DVDs containing the film 'Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the
West' in what many political analysts describe as 'swing' states in the
upcoming presidential elections. Those same analysts say the
distribution of the 'Obsession' DVD was designed to benefit a
particular presidential candidate, namely Sen. John McCain…
"According to the website for the Secretary of State for New York,
Clarion Fund Inc. is incorporated in New York as a Delaware based
foreign not-for-profit corporation. According to the Delaware
Department of Corporations, Robert (Rabbi Raphael) Shore, Rabbi Henry
Harris and Rebecca Kabat incorporated Clarion Fund. All three of whom
are reported to serve as employees of Aish HaTorah International, an
organization apparently based in Israel. Also according to the Delaware
Department of Corporations, the incorporators of the Clarion Fund used
Aish HaTorah's New York City address (150 West 46th Street, New York)
to incorporate Clarion Fund in Delaware…
[SEE:http://www.aish.com/aishint/wwprogram.asp ]
"It appears that the funding for the production, marketing and
distribution of 'Obsession' may have originated from Israel-based Aish
HaTorah International."
To read the entire FEC complaint, click here.
http://www.cair.com/Portals/0/pdf/ObessesionlettertoFEC.pdf
There is at least one report of a person who received the DVD also
getting an automated phone call asking that person to watch the film
and then "keep it in mind when you go to the voting booth."
"American voters deserve to know whether they are the targets of a
multi-million-dollar campaign funded and directed by a foreign group
seeking to whip up anti-Muslim hysteria as a way to influence the
outcome of our presidential election," said CAIR Executive Director
Nihad Awad.
Awad said CAIR has received numerous complaints from those who were
sent the DVD in newspapers delivered to their homes and has recorded at
least one report of an anti-Muslim bias incident directly resulting
from the DVD distribution.
SEE: Ohio Muslims Fearful After DVD Released in Newspapers
http://www.wtol.com/Global/story.asp?S=9043986
Some newspapers, including the News & Record in North Carolina and the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, have refused to distribute the DVDs.
SEE: Post-Dispatch Refuses to Distribute DVD Offensive to American
Muslims
http://www.stltoday.com/blogzone/civil-religion/politics/2008/09/post-
dispatch-refuses-to-distribute-dvd-offensive-to-american-muslims/
Interfaith leaders such as Rev. Dr. C. Welton Gaddy, president of the
Interfaith Alliance, have spoken out against the distribution of
"Obsession" in swing states. In a statement, Gaddy also called for an
FEC investigation: "…when a cynical attempt is made to influence our
nation's presidential election by stoking fear of one religious group
we believe the media along with public officials, such as the Federal
Election Commission, must establish who is trying to influence our
politics through religious bigotry."
SEE: Statement of Rev. Welton Gaddy On the Distribution of the
Anti-Muslim Film "Obsession" in Newspapers
http://www.interfaithalliance.org/news/268-statement-of-rev-welton-
gaddy-on-the-distribution-of-the-anti-muslim-film-obsession-in-
newspapers
An editorial in the Palm Beach Post outlined the apparent political
motivation behind the Clarion Fund campaign:
"Distribution of the DVD…was timed with the post-Labor Day start of
presidential election season. About 95 percent of the papers that
contained the DVD are in Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan,
Wisconsin, Iowa, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada and New Hampshire.
"Notice a pattern? Right, those are the swing states that most analysts
believe will determine the election. The issue on which polls
consistently show John McCain ahead of Barack Obama is national
security. One way to make voters worry less about the economy and more
about national security would be to send out a DVD that opens with
clips of 9/11 and includes scenes of Muslims chanting 'Death to
America!'"
SEE: The Secret Cell Helping McCain (Palm Beach Post)
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/opinion/content/opinion/epaper/2008/09/21/
a16a_schultz_col_0921.html
SEE ALSO: Anti-Islam Film Targets "Swing State" (IPS)
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=43940
Editorial and letter writers nationwide have called the film
"propaganda" and even compared it to Leni Riefenstahl's 1935 pro-Nazi
film "Triumph of the Will." One writer called it "misleading and
dangerous." (Broward-Palm Beach New Times, 9/20/08)
SEE: Putting Lipstick on Propaganda Doesn't Change It (NWF Daily News)
http://www.nwfdailynews.com/news/clarion_11254___article.html/
fund_obsession.html
Jeff VanDenBerg, director of Middle East Studies at Drury University,
called the film "a blatant piece of anti-Muslim propaganda."
(News-Leader, 9/17/08)
Those interviewed in "Obsession" constitute a veritable who's who of
Muslim-bashers. Speakers include Walid Shoebat, who once told a
Missouri newspaper that he sees "many parallels between the Antichrist
and Islam" and "Islam is not the religion of God -- Islam is the
devil." (Springfield News-Leader, 9/24/07)
Others interviewed in the film include Nonie Darwish, a self-styled
"former Moslem" who wrote that "Islam is cruel, anti-women,
anti-religious freedom and anti-personal freedom in general," and
Daniel Pipes, who warned a Jewish convention of the "true dangers"
posed by "the presence, and increased stature, and affluence, and
enfranchisement of American Muslims." (American Jewish Congress,
10/21/2001)
Another "Obsession" interviewee, Brigitte Gabriel, told the Australian
Jewish News: "Every practising Muslim is a radical Muslim." She also
claimed that "Islamo-fascism is a politically-correct word...it's the
vehicle for Islam...Islam is the problem."
SEE: The World According to Brigitte Gabriel (Australian Jewish News)
http://www.ajn.com.au/news/news.asp?pgID=3403
When asked whether Americans should "resist Muslims who want to seek
political office in this nation," Gabriel said:
"Absolutely. If a Muslim who has -- who is -- a practicing Muslim who
believes the word of the Koran to be the word of Allah, who abides by
Islam, who goes to mosque and prays every Friday, who prays five times
a day -- this practicing Muslim, who believes in the teachings of the
Koran, cannot be a loyal citizen to the United States of America."
SEE: `Obsession` Stars Have Lectured at U.S. Military Colleges
http://www.israelenews.com/view.asp?ID=3168
CAIR, America's largest Islamic civil liberties group, has 35 offices
and chapters nationwide and in Canada. Its mission is to enhance the
understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties,
empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and
mutual understanding.
- END -
CONTACT: CAIR National Communications Director Ibrahim Hooper,
202-488-8787 or 202-744-7726, E-Mail: ihooper@cair.com; CAIR
Communications Coordinator Amina Rubin, 202-488-8787,
E-Mail: arubin@cair.com
3)
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/JI26Ak03.html
Asia Times
Middle East
Sep 26, 2008
A dangerous obsession
By Ali Gharib and Eli Clifton
WASHINGTON - A group of hardline United States neo-conservatives and
former Israeli diplomats were behind the controversial, allegedly
Islamaphobic DVD which was recently distributed in US swing states
ahead of November's presidential elections.
The 60-minute movie,Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West ,
was an initiative of the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET), but
produced by the Clarion Fund, an organization described as a "front"
for Israeli group Aish Hatorah.
Some 28 million copies of Obsession are currently being inserted in
newspapers and delivered by mail in key electoral swing states - such
as Michigan, Ohio and Florida which, according to recent polling, could
go either way.
Critics allege the movie Obsession is "hate propaganda" which paints
Muslims as violent extremists and, among other things, explicitly
compares the threat posed by radical Islam to that of Nazi Germany in
the 1930s - at least two major metropolitan newspapers refused to run
the movie because of its perceived bias.
"Despite the perilous state of American newspapers, the St Louis
Post-Dispatch advertising department took an ethical stand and refused
to distribute the DVD of a film that for two years has troubled
American Muslims," Tim Townsend, a reporter at Missouri's most
influential newspaper wrote this month.
The Clarion Fund is based at the same New York address as Aish
Hatorah, a self-described "apolitical" group dedicated to educating
Jews about their heritage. Its street address, as listed on the group's
website and a DVD mailer for the film, is a "virtual address" that goes
to a post office box in New York City.
While initial press reports about the mass distribution focused on
the Clarion Fund's financing role, it was EMET that organized and oversaw
the distribution, EMET's spokesman and a former press officer for the
Israeli Embassy in Washington, Ari Morgenstern, told Inter Press
Service.
EMET, according to a recent press release, is "a non-partisan,
non-profit organization dedicated to policy research and analysis on
democracy and the Middle East." According to filings made in compliance
with the organization's tax-exempt status, "The organization hosts
seminars, debates and educational films featuring Middle East experts
in order to educate policymakers and the public at large on the common
threats facing Israel and the United States."
Morgenstern said EMET was "partnered with the Clarion Fund" on
what he called the "Obsession Project" which he identified as "an
initiative of EMET". He declined to name the project's donors - a
spokesman for the Clarion Fund, Gregory Ross, also refused to name the
fund's donors, whose identities remain a mystery.
Morgenstern also declined to reveal the cost of the DVD distribution,
but did say, "It cost a great deal - it's a multi-million-dollar
effort." Outside experts have estimated the cost of the operation at
between US$15 million and $50 million.
Like hardline neo-conservatives, EMET opposes any land concessions to
Palestinians and takes other hardline positions identified with
Israel's right-wing Likud Party and the ''Settler Lobby'' there. EMET's
website says, "We regard ourselves as 'intellectual revolutionaries'."
Two weeks ago, EMET sponsored a seminar series on Capitol Hill for
the controversial multi-billionaire casino and hotel magnate Sheldon
Adelson, who is a major donor to right-wing Zionist organizations in
the US, such as the far-right lobby group, Freedom's Watch and the
Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC).
RJC efforts to persuade Jewish voters that Democratic presidential
candidate Barack Obama is aligned with radical anti-Israel forces in
the Islamic world have drawn strong criticism from the mainstream
Jewish press.
EMET's board of advisers includes a list of familiar neo-conservative
figures, as well as three former Israeli diplomats, including a former
deputy chief of mission in Israel's Washington embassy.
The group is headed by Sarah Stern, who began her activism on Israeli
issues in opposition to the 1993 Oslo Accords between Israel and
Palestinians. She made a career out of her activism in the far-right
Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) as its national policy
coordinator from 1998 through 2004.
Notable members of the advisory board include prominent hardline
neo-conservatives, including former US UN ambassador the late Jeane
Kirkpatrick; Daniel Pipes of the Middle East Forum; and the Hudson
Institute's Meyrav Wurmser - the Israeli-born spouse of Vice President
Dick Cheney's former top Middle East adviser, David Wurmser.
Other prominent neo-conservative members of the board include Center
for Security Policy (CSP) president Frank Gaffney; former Central
Intelligence Agency chief James Woolsey; and Heritage Foundation
fellows Ariel Cohen and Nina Shea, who has served for years on the
quasi-governmental US Commission for International Religious Freedom.
The US-born and educated hardline deputy managing editor of the
Jerusalem Post and senior fellow for Middle Eastern Affairs at
Gaffney's CSP, Caroline Glick, is also an adviser. Glick, Pipes and
Walid Shoebat, a "reformed" terrorist and EMET adviser, are all
featured as experts in Obsession.
Also among the top names of listed advisers to EMET are three Israeli
diplomats. Two of them, ambassadors Yossi Ben Aharon and Yoram
Ettinger, were among the three Israeli ambassadors whom then-Israeli
prime minister Yitzhak Rabin referred to as "The Three Musketeers" when
they lobbied Washington in opposition to the Oslo accords.
Stern began her career at the behest of three unnamed Israeli
diplomats who were based in Washington under Rabin's predecessor,
Yitzhak Shamir, according to EMET's website, while Ettinger was at one
time the chairman of special projects and is still listed as a
contributing expert at the Ariel Center for Policy Research, a hardline
Likudist Israeli think-tank that opposes the peace process.
Ben Aharon was the director general - effectively the chief of
staff - of Shamir's office.
The third Israeli ambassador, Lenny Ben-David, was appointed by Likud
prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to serve as the deputy chief of
mission - second in command - at the Israeli Embassy in Washington from
1997 until 2000. Ben-David had also held senior positions at the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee for 25 years and is now a
consultant and lobbyist.
But EMET is not the only group involved in the controversy to have
direct ties to Israel.
The Clarion Fund has also been criticized for initially denying its
ties to the Israel's Aish Hatorah, which were first disclosed publicly
by an IPS investigation last year. Honestreporting.com, an organization
set up by Aish Hatorah and also a client of Ben-David, admitted to IPS
that it had aided the production of the film.
The Clarion Fund and Aish Hatorah are headed by twin Israeli-Canadian
brothers Raphael and Ephraim Shore, respectively. The two groups appear
to be connected as Clarion is incorporated in Delaware to the New York
offices of Aish Hatorah.
"It seems that the Clarion Fund, from what we can tell, is just a
virtual organization that is a front for Aish Hatorah," said Ibrahim
Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
"They don't have staff, they don't have a physical address. Nothing."
Little is known about the shadowy Clarion Fund, which is listed with
the New York Secretary of State's office as a "foreign not-for-profit
foundation". The group has rejected requests for information about its
donors.
IPS has uncovered one donor to the Clarion Fund, the Mamiye
Foundation, which gave it $25,000 in August 2007, according to tax
filings. Four Mamiye members: Charles M, Charles D, Hyman and Abraham,
are listed as trustees on the forms.
According to filings with the New York Secretary of State, a contact
listed for a Mamiye company is also the same man listed as a contact
and counsel for the Clarion Fund - Eli D Greenberg of the law firm
Wolf, Haldenstein, Adler, Freeman and Herz.
Foreign nationals and companies, and domestic tax-exempt non-profit
organizations, are prohibited by federal election law from attempting
to sway US elections at any level through either contributions to
campaigns or advocacy.
Morgenstern, EMET's spokesman, said that the DVD distribution only
went to "swing states" because media attention was focused there, and
EMET was hoping to spark a public debate about the threats posed by"
radical Islam".
But the Washington-based CAIR has filed a complaint asking the
Federal Election Commission to review the actions of the Clarion Fund both
as a foreign entity and as a non-profit outfit.
|
Sept 30: Portland invaded by global warming denier
by Michael Munk
Thu, Sep 25, 2008
|
Klaus is an embarrasment to many Czechs. This bizarre politican =
campaigns around the world for capitalism and considers concern about =
global warming to be a communist plot against his favored ecnomic =
system. Let him know he's not welcome in Portland!
Cascade Policy Institute, Americans for Prosperityand Competitive =
Enterprise Institutecordially invite you to meet
His Excellency
V=E1clav Klaus
President of the Czech Republicand author of the book"Blue Planet in =
Green Shackles:
What is Endangered: Climate or Freedom?"
Tuesday, September 30, 200811:30 a.m. V.I.P. Reception and Photo Op $50
12:00 p.m. Luncheon & Book Signing $50
Advance payment required.
The Hilton Portland921 SW Sixth Ave.
Portland, Oregon 97204
=20
RSVP to nancy@cascadepolicy.orgor 503 . 242 . 0900 before September 25.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Confidential from Minister of Treasury (US)
by Michael Munk
Tue, Sep 23, 2008
|
|
Sunday: Give socialism a chance!
by Michael Munk
Fri, Sep 19, 2008
|
American capitalism today:
privatized profits
socialized losses
why not socialize the profits too?
Give socialism a chance...
---------------------------------------------------------
Among the several Oregon groups hoping to that, two meet this Sunday
September 21
(1) Willamette Reds meet 3 PM at the Blue Pepper, 241 Commercial St. NE in
Salem.
Contact http://willamettereds.blogspot.com/.
(2) Multnomah County Socialist Party meets 1PM at the Belmont Library
meeting room, 1038 SE 39th Ave, in Portland.
Contact Cass at 503-289-3511. Mail to PO Box 5633, Portland OR 97228,
http://www.thesocialistparty.org/spo/pdx.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Just out: The Romance of John Reed and Lousie Bryant
by Michael Munk
Thu, Sep 18, 2008
|
Current Issue
=20
Oregon Historical Quarterly
Fall 2008, Vol 109, #:3
"The Romance of John Reed and Louise Bryant: New Documents Clarify How =
They Met"
by Michael Munk=20
Abstract
Sifting through both popular myth and historical fact, historian Michael =
Munk recounts the romantic affair of John Reed and Louise Bryant, =
radical writers and activists from the early twentieth century. Reed, a =
native Portlander, and Bryant, who moved to Oregon in 1907, were "one of =
the most notorious romances to have been born in Oregon" and have since =
been surrounded by both celebrity and public speculation. Their initial =
meeting in 1915, reconstructed in Hollywood films and biographies, has =
inspired the most wide-spread curiosity among admirers. Relying heavily =
on the diary of Helen Walters, a close friend of Bryant, Munk accurately =
describes Reed and Bryant's relationship, beginning with their meeting =
in Portland in 1915 and ending with Reed's death in Moscow in 1920. =
Ultimately, Munk suggests how such a short-lived relationship could =
capture and hold onto the public imagination for so long.=20
=20
Single copy $10 from Oregon Historical Society Museum store: phone (503) =
306-5230, fax (503) 221-2035, or email museumstore@ohs.org.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Just out: The Romance of John Reed and Lousie Bryant
by Michael Munk
Thu, Sep 18, 2008
|
Current Issue
=20
Oregon Historical Quarterly
Fall 2008, Vol 109, #:3
"The Romance of John Reed and Louise Bryant: New Documents Clarify How =
They Met"
by Michael Munk=20
Abstract
Sifting through both popular myth and historical fact, historian Michael =
Munk recounts the romantic affair of John Reed and Louise Bryant, =
radical writers and activists from the early twentieth century. Reed, a =
native Portlander, and Bryant, who moved to Oregon in 1907, were "one of =
the most notorious romances to have been born in Oregon" and have since =
been surrounded by both celebrity and public speculation. Their initial =
meeting in 1915, reconstructed in Hollywood films and biographies, has =
inspired the most wide-spread curiosity among admirers. Relying heavily =
on the diary of Helen Walters, a close friend of Bryant, Munk accurately =
describes Reed and Bryant's relationship, beginning with their meeting =
in Portland in 1915 and ending with Reed's death in Moscow in 1920. =
Ultimately, Munk suggests how such a short-lived relationship could =
capture and hold onto the public imagination for so long.=20
=20
Single copy $10 from Oregon Historical Society Museum store: phone (503) =
306-5230, fax (503) 221-2035, or email museumstore@ohs.org.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Francis Murnane Memorial Wharf
by Michael Munk
Wed, Sep 17, 2008
|
|
Dodgy Moore Oregon poll: Obama 43-37
by Michael Munk
Tue, Sep 16, 2008
|
Moore Insight
Oregon Voters and Presidential Voting Intentions=20
September 15, 2008
http://www.moore-info.com/MI_ORPres9.08.htm=20
This is the same Bob Moore whose fraudulent push poll was exposed =
in the New Hampsire primary (by McCain!).
Obama/Biden Narrowly Lead Presidential Race in Oregon=20
Our recent survey of Oregon voters shows Republicans John McCain =
and Sarah Palin within six points of Barack Obama and Joe Biden (43% =
Obama/Biden, 37% McCain/Palin). Another 14% have not made a decision as =
of today, and 6% of Oregon voters say they would not vote for either set =
of candidates in the November election.
Oregon Presidential Voting Intentions=20
"If the election for President and Vice President were held =
today and the candidates=20
were (ROTATE) John McCain and Sarah Palin, Republicans, and=20
Barack Obama and Joe Biden, Democrats, for whom would you vote?" =
=20
Please feel free to call or email with any questions.=20
Bob Moore Bobm@moore-info.com 503.221.3100
Hans Kaiser Hansk@moore-info.com 410.216.9856=20
Data reported are from a telephone survey conducted by Moore =
Information, Inc., September 10-11, 2008, among a representative sample =
of 408 voters statewide. The potential sampling error is plus or minus =
5% at the 95% confidence level. Party distribution: 33% Republican, 44% =
Democrat, 23% Independent/other.=20
-------------------------------------------------------------------------=
-
=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Sept15, 16 17:Fr Bourgeois on shutting the SOA
by Michael Munk
Sun, Sep 14, 2008
|
Monday, Sept. 15, 2008:
Grassroots Organizing for Peace and Justice in the Americas
An evening with Fr. Roy Bourgeois,
Internationally recognized human rights activist
Close the School of the Americas!
7:00 PM
Augustana Lutheran Church
2710 N.E. 14 Street (15th & Knott)
Download a .pdf flyer at http://www.pjw.info/Fr_Roy_Sept_08.pdf
A Vietnam veteran and Catholic priest, Fr. Roy Bourgeois is on of the
founders of the movement to close the School of the Americas (SOA). The
SOA/WHINSEC is a U.S. Army training facility for Latin American military
officers. Graduates of the SOA have been responsible for every major human
rights abuse in Latin America over the past several decades. Father Roy
will be speaking in Portland on Monday, September 15 at 7:00 PM at the
Augustana Lutheran Church, 2710 NE 14th, focusing on "Grassroots
Organizing for Peace and Justice in the Americas."
Fr. Roy will share about the School of the Americas Watch's Latin America
Project. In the past few years, SOA Watch has succeeded in persuading the
governments of Venezuela, Argentina and Uruguay to stop sending their
troops to the SOA for training.
For more information, go to www.soawpdx.org or contact Witness for Peace
NW at 503.287.7847 or wfpnw@witnessforpeace.org.
Event Co-sponsors:
School of the Americas Watch Oregon
Witness for Peace Northwest
American Friends Service Committee
PDX Peace Coalition
Ainsworth UCC Justice Commission
Portland Central America Solidarity Committee
Peace and Justice Works
Latin America Solidarity Committee
Willamette University Office of the Chaplain
Father Roy will also appear elsewhere in Oregon on Sept. 16 and 17:
Eugene
Tuesday, Sept. 16
7 pm
First United Methodist Church
1376 Olive St.
Salem
Wednesday, Sept. 17
4 pm
Willamette University
Mark Hatfield Library, Hatfield Room
For information on Oregon SOA Watch see http://www.soawpdx.org
For information on SOA Watch nationally, see http://www.soawatch.org
Peace and Justice Works
Portland SOA Watchers
PO Box 42456
Portland, OR 97242
(503) 236-3065
soaw@pjw.info
|
HR 362 grounds for war with Iran
by Michael Munk
Wed, Sep 10, 2008
|
Note that no Oregon Dems are sponsors, but Walden is.
Congress is About to Pour Lighter Fluid on Iran
by William O. Beeman
Minneapolis Star Tribune
http://www.startribune.com/opinion/commentary/27836054.html?elr=KArksc8P:Pc:U0ckkD:aEyKUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aULPQL7PQLanchO7DiU
September 5, 2008
VIA cord macguire cordymac@hotmail.com
The U.S. Congress may inadvertently lay the foundations for war against
Iran when it reconvenes in Washington this month.
Two essentially identical nonbinding resolutions call upon President Bush
to "immediately and dramatically increase the economic, political and
diplomatic pressure on Iran to verifiably suspend its nuclear enrichment
activities."
The House resolution has more than 200 cosponsors, including Minnesota
Reps. Michele Bachmann, John Kline and Jim Ramstad. The Senate resolution
has more than 30 cosponsors, including both Minnesota senators, Norm
Coleman and Amy Klobuchar.
The methods for increased pressure differ slightly in the two resolutions.
The House resolution calls for "stringent inspection requirements" of all
goods entering or leaving Iran. The Senate resolution does not call for
the inspection of all goods but joins the House resolution in calling for
an embargo of refined petroleum products to Iran, which lacks the refining
capacity to meet its need for gasoline. Achieving either goal would
require a naval blockade -- a de facto act of war on the part of the
United States, though paradoxically both resolutions explicitly exclude
authorization for military action.
Other provisions call for an economic embargo of banking operations, with
the House resolution adding a prohibition of international movement on the
part of Iranian officials.
Both resolutions have begun to cause alarm throughout the United States,
and have caused several representatives to withdraw their cosponsorships.
Rep. Robert Wexler, D-Fla., summed up the concerns in an article for the
Huffington Post: "It is clear that despite carefully worded language in H.
Con. Res. 362 that 'nothing in this resolution should be construed as an
authorization of the use of force against Iran' that many Americans across
the country continue to express real concerns that sections of this
resolution will be interpreted by President Bush as 'a green light' to use
force against Iran."
According to the Jewish Daily Forward, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., offered
an apology to a representative from the antiwar group Peace Action,
saying, "I regret the fact that I did not read this resolution more
carefully." He further told the Valley Advocate of Northampton, Mass.,
that he's "all for stricter sanctions against Iran, but the blockade part
goes too far. I'm going to call the sponsors and tell them I'm changing my
vote."
Both Wexler and Frank are assuming some risk, because they are opposing
the powerful American Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), which had
a strong hand in the drafting of both resolutions. Just days before the
resolutions were introduced, AIPAC issued a memo outlining what should be
done to put more pressure on Iran. The language of the memo mirrors the
language of the resolutions. The introduction of the resolutions also
conveniently coincided with AIPAC's annual policy conference during which
it had more than 7,000 people on Capitol Hill to lobby. Its top
legislative priority was for cosponsorship of the resolutions. AIPAC is
careful to avoid direct calls for military strikes against Iran's nuclear
facilities but makes no secret that it would support such an action by the
United States or Israel.
The most unfortunate aspect of the two resolutions is that they contain
numerous outright falsehoods, misinformation and alarmist exaggeration
about Iran and its nuclear development program. Of the 23 clauses in the
Senate resolution, only five present incontrovertible statements of fact.
The many legislators who have signed on as cosponsors, having subscribed
to this false information, could be attacked by the Bush administration if
they oppose a later request for military attack, as happened in the Iraq
invasion.
Sadly, these resolutions make it clear that the battle to stop a war with
Iran is not over.
***
William O. Beeman is a professor and chair of the Department of
Anthropology at the University of Minnesota, and is president of the
Middle East Section of the American Anthropological Association. He has
lived and worked in the Middle East for more than 30 years. His most
recent book is "The 'Great Satan' vs. the 'Mad Mullahs': How the United
States and Iran Demonize Each Other."
After Frank and Wexler formally withdraw, about 115 Democrats including
its main sponsor are still on board
Here are the supporters:
Rep. Gary Ackerman [D- AIPAC, NY)
Cosponsors [as of 2008-08-30]
Rep. Todd Akin [R-MO]
Rep. Rodney Alexander [R-LA]
Rep. Jason Altmire [D-PA]
Rep. Michael Arcuri [D-NY]
Rep. Joe Baca [D-CA]
Rep. Michele Bachmann [R-MN]
Rep. James Barrett [R-SC]
Rep. John Barrow [D-GA]
Rep. Roscoe Bartlett [R-MD]
Rep. Melissa Bean [D-IL]
Rep. Shelley Berkley [D-NV]
Rep. Robert Berry [D-AR]
Rep. Judy Biggert [R-IL]
Rep. Brian Bilbray [R-CA]
Rep. Gus Bilirakis [R-FL]
Rep. Rob Bishop [R-UT]
Rep. Sanford Bishop [D-GA]
Rep. Timothy Bishop [D-NY]
Rep. Marsha Blackburn [R-TN]
Rep. Roy Blunt [R-MO]
Rep. Jo Bonner [R-AL]
Rep. John Boozman [R-AR]
Rep. Dan Boren [D-OK]
Rep. Allen Boyd [D-FL]
Rep. Robert Brady [D-PA]
Rep. Paul Broun [R-GA]
Rep. Corrine Brown [D-FL]
Rep. Henry Brown [R-SC]
Rep. Virginia Brown-Waite [R-FL]
Rep. Vern Buchanan [R-FL]
Rep. Michael Burgess [R-TX]
Rep. Dan Burton [R-IN]
Rep. Ken Calvert [R-CA]
Rep. David Camp [R-MI]
Rep. John Campbell [R-CA]
Rep. Christopher Cannon [R-UT]
Rep. Eric Cantor [R-VA]
Rep. Shelley Capito [R-WV]
Rep. Dennis Cardoza [D-CA]
Rep. Russ Carnahan [D-MO]
Rep. Christopher Carney [D-PA]
Rep. Kathy Castor [D-FL]
Rep. Donald Cazayoux [D-LA]
Rep. Steven Chabot [R-OH]
Rep. Travis Childers [D-MS]
Rep. Emanuel Cleaver [D-MO]
Rep. Howard Coble [R-NC]
Rep. Tom Cole [R-OK]
Rep. Michael Conaway [R-TX]
Rep. Jim Cooper [D-TN]
Rep. Jim Costa [D-CA]
Rep. Jerry Costello [D-IL]
Rep. Joe Courtney [D-CT]
Rep. Ander Crenshaw [R-FL]
Rep. Joseph Crowley [D-NY]
Rep. Barbara Cubin [R-WY]
Rep. Henry Cuellar [D-TX]
Rep. John Culberson [R-TX]
Rep. Artur Davis [D-AL]
Rep. David Davis [R-TN]
Rep. Lincoln Davis [D-TN]
Rep. Charles Dent [R-PA]
Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart [R-FL]
Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart [R-FL]
Rep. Norman Dicks [D-WA]
Rep. Michael Doyle [D-PA]
Rep. Thelma Drake [R-VA]
Rep. David Dreier [R-CA]
Rep. Thomas Edwards [D-TX]
Rep. Brad Ellsworth [D-IN]
Rep. Rahm Emanuel [D-IL]
Rep. Jo Ann Emerson [R-MO]
Rep. Eliot Engel [D-NY]
Rep. Philip English [R-PA]
Rep. Mary Fallin [R-OK]
Rep. Tom Feeney [R-FL]
Rep. Michael Ferguson [R-NJ]
Rep. Bob Filner [D-CA]
Rep. Jeffrey Fortenberry [R-NE]
Res.Com. Luis Fortuño [R-PR]
Rep. Vito Fossella [R-NY]
Rep. Virginia Foxx [R-NC]
Rep. Trent Franks [R-AZ]
Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen [R-NJ]
Rep. Elton Gallegly [R-CA]
Rep. Scott Garrett [R-NJ]
Rep. Jim Gerlach [R-PA]
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords [D-AZ]
Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand [D-NY]
Rep. John Gingrey [R-GA]
Rep. Louis Gohmert [R-TX]
Rep. Charles Gonzalez [D-TX]
Rep. Virgil Goode [R-VA]
Rep. Robert Goodlatte [R-VA]
Rep. Barton Gordon [D-TN]
Rep. Kay Granger [R-TX]
Rep. Samuel Graves [R-MO]
Rep. Al Green [D-TX]
Rep. Raymond Green [D-TX]
Rep. Ralph Hall [R-TX]
Rep. Phil Hare [D-IL]
Rep. Jane Harman [D-CA]
Rep. Alcee Hastings [D-FL]
Rep. Doc Hastings [R-WA]
Rep. Robin Hayes [R-NC]
Rep. Dean Heller [R-NV]
Rep. Jeb Hensarling [R-TX]
Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin [D-SD]
Rep. Brian Higgins [D-NY]
Rep. Paul Hodes [D-NH]
Rep. Peter Hoekstra [R-MI]
Rep. Tim Holden [D-PA]
Rep. Steny Hoyer [D-MD]
Rep. Bob Inglis [R-SC]
Rep. Steve Israel [D-NY]
Rep. Darrell Issa [R-CA]
Rep. Jesse Jackson [D-IL]
Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee [D-TX]
Rep. Eddie Johnson [D-TX]
Rep. Henry Johnson [D-GA]
Rep. Samuel Johnson [R-TX]
Rep. Timothy Johnson [R-IL]
Rep. Stephanie Jones [D-OH]
Rep. Jim Jordan [R-OH]
Rep. Steve Kagen [D-WI]
Rep. Patrick Kennedy [D-RI]
Rep. Ronald Kind [D-WI]
Rep. Peter King [R-NY]
Rep. Steve King [R-IA]
Rep. Jack Kingston [R-GA]
Rep. Mark Kirk [R-IL]
Rep. Ron Klein [D-FL]
Rep. John Kline [R-MN]
Rep. Joseph Knollenberg [R-MI]
Rep. John Kuhl [R-NY]
Rep. Doug Lamborn [R-CO]
Rep. Nicholas Lampson [D-TX]
Rep. James Langevin [D-RI]
Rep. Thomas Latham [R-IA]
Rep. Steven LaTourette [R-OH]
Rep. John Lewis [D-GA]
Rep. John Linder [R-GA]
Rep. Daniel Lipinski [D-IL]
Rep. Frank LoBiondo [R-NJ]
Rep. Nita Lowey [D-NY]
Rep. Frank Lucas [R-OK]
Rep. Daniel Lungren [R-CA]
Rep. Connie Mack [R-FL]
Rep. Tim Mahoney [D-FL]
Rep. Carolyn Maloney [D-NY]
Rep. Donald Manzullo [R-IL]
Rep. Kenny Marchant [R-TX]
Rep. James Marshall [D-GA]
Rep. Jim Matheson [D-UT]
Rep. Carolyn McCarthy [D-NY]
Rep. Kevin McCarthy [R-CA]
Rep. Michael McCaul [R-TX]
Rep. Thaddeus McCotter [R-MI]
Rep. Patrick Mchenry [R-NC]
Rep. John McHugh [R-NY]
Rep. Mike McIntyre [D-NC]
Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers [R-WA]
Rep. Michael McNulty [D-NY]
Rep. Kendrick Meek [D-FL]
Rep. Michael Michaud [D-ME]
Rep. Bradley Miller [D-NC]
Rep. Candice Miller [R-MI]
Rep. Gary Miller [R-CA]
Rep. Harry Mitchell [D-AZ]
Rep. Jerry Moran [R-KS]
Rep. Christopher Murphy [D-CT]
Rep. Patrick Murphy [D-PA]
Rep. Tim Murphy [R-PA]
Rep. Marilyn Musgrave [R-CO]
Rep. Sue Myrick [R-NC]
Rep. Devin Nunes [R-CA]
Rep. Frank Pallone [D-NJ]
Rep. Edward Pastor [D-AZ]
Rep. Mike Pence [R-IN]
Rep. Todd Platts [R-PA]
Rep. Ted Poe [R-TX]
Rep. Jon Porter [R-NV]
Rep. Tom Price [R-GA]
Rep. Adam Putnam [R-FL]
Rep. George Radanovich [R-CA]
Rep. James Ramstad [R-MN]
Rep. Dennis Rehberg [R-MT]
Rep. Dave Reichert [R-WA]
Rep. Rick Renzi [R-AZ]
Rep. Thomas Reynolds [R-NY]
Rep. Ciro Rodriguez [D-TX]
Rep. Michael Rogers [R-AL]
Rep. Michael Rogers [R-MI]
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher [R-CA]
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen [R-FL]
Rep. Peter Roskam [R-IL]
Rep. Mike Ross [D-AR]
Rep. Steven Rothman [D-NJ]
Rep. Edward Royce [R-CA]
Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger [D-MD]
Rep. Paul Ryan [R-WI]
Rep. Timothy Ryan [D-OH]
Rep. John Salazar [D-CO]
Rep. Bill Sali [R-ID]
Rep. Loretta Sanchez [D-CA]
Rep. John Sarbanes [D-MD]
Rep. James Saxton [R-NJ]
Rep. Steve Scalise [R-LA]
Rep. Janice Schakowsky [D-IL]
Rep. Adam Schiff [D-CA]
Rep. Jean Schmidt [R-OH]
Rep. Allyson Schwartz [D-PA]
Rep. David Scott [D-GA]
Rep. Peter Sessions [R-TX]
Rep. Joe Sestak [D-PA]
Rep. John Shadegg [R-AZ]
Rep. Christopher Shays [R-CT]
Rep. Brad Sherman [D-CA]
Rep. John Shimkus [R-IL]
Rep. Heath Shuler [D-NC]
Rep. William Shuster [R-PA]
Rep. Michael Simpson [R-ID]
Rep. Albio Sires [D-NJ]
Rep. Louise Slaughter [D-NY]
Rep. Adam Smith [D-WA]
Rep. Adrian Smith [R-NE]
Rep. Christopher Smith [R-NJ]
Rep. Lamar Smith [R-TX]
Rep. Mark Souder [R-IN]
Rep. Zackary Space [D-OH]
Rep. Jackie Speier [D-CA]
Rep. John Spratt [D-SC]
Rep. Clifford Stearns [R-FL]
Rep. John Sullivan [R-OK]
Rep. Betty Sutton [D-OH]
Rep. Thomas Tancredo [R-CO]
Rep. Ellen Tauscher [D-CA]
Rep. Lee Terry [R-NE]
Rep. Bennie Thompson [D-MS]
Rep. Michael Thompson [D-CA]
Rep. Patrick Tiberi [R-OH]
Rep. Edolphus Towns [D-NY]
Rep. Michael Turner [R-OH]
Rep. Mark Udall [D-CO]
Rep. Christopher Van Hollen [D-MD]
Rep. Peter Visclosky [D-IN]
Rep. Timothy Walberg [R-MI]
Rep. Greg Walden [R-OR]
Rep. James Walsh [R-NY]
Rep. Zach Wamp [R-TN]
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz [D-FL]
Rep. Henry Waxman [D-CA]
Rep. Anthony Weiner [D-NY]
Rep. Gerald Weller [R-IL]
Rep. Lynn Westmoreland [R-GA]
Rep. Charles Wilson [D-OH]
Rep. Addison Wilson [R-SC]
Rep. Rob Wittman [R-VA]
Rep. Donald Young [R-AK]
Rep. Danny Davis [D-IL]
Rep. Steve Cohen [D-TN]
Rep. Thomas Allen [D-ME]
Rep. William Clay [D-MO]
|
Sunday, Sept 14: Woody Guthrie Celebration
by Michael Munk
Mon, Sep 8, 2008
|
The Lents Folk Festival Celebration of Woody Guthrie will be held in =
his old neighborhood. From 2pm Sunday September 14 at Lents Park, SE =
92nd Ave and Holgate, three three bands will play his music, including =
The Wanderers (Bill Murlin and Carl Allen), Ken Vigil, and Joe Seamon. =
FREE
In May and June of 1941, while Woody was writing "Columbia Roll On" and =
many other great songs for the Bonneville Power Adminsitration, he and =
his family lived in one of the four apartments a few blocks south at =
6111 SE 92nd Ave (Photo attached) which still stands. The site is =
described on p. 139 of my Portland Red Guide, which also lists several =
other sites related to Woody.
|
Mayor Potter on the Red Guide
by Michael Munk
Thu, Sep 4, 2008
|
|
Wake up! Merkley absent on the war
by Michael Munk
Sun, Aug 31, 2008
|
U.S. SENATE RACE
The Oregonian, August 31, 2008
http://www.oregonlive.com/commentary/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/editorial/1219967715195050.xml&coll=7
By CANDY NEVILLE
Candy Neville of Eugene finished third, with 7 percent of the vote, in the
Democratic primary for U.S. senator.
I went into my campaign for the Democratic Party's nomination for U.S.
senator with a passion for ending a war that has drained our blood,
resources, money and dignity. I exercised what little courage I had each day
until it grew and watched my involvement help lift the Iraq war from the
bottom of the issue heap to the top.
After I lost the primary election in May, I watched with dismay as the war
sank back to the bottom like a rotting fish in the trash.
I was asked to join Jeff Merkley's campaign as chair of the Bring the Troops
Home Committee and lend my passion to the cause. I agreed and began to
arrange for Merkley to meet with representatives from Oregon's vibrant peace
community and watched him pledge to listen and respond. But he did not
answer or return the phone calls he promised, on camera, to make.
Meanwhile, I watch hideous ads in which Republican incumbent Gordon Smith,
whose votes have supported sending thousands to harm and death in Iraq,
takes a bow for later changing his mind about the war. After doing so, he
voted to deny a few extra days for the traumatized and exhausted soldiers on
leave between redeployments.
I watched what had been a sharp and hopeful spring primary campaign
disintegrate into a bland, listless, silly campaign by both the Democrats
and the Republicans for one of the most powerful offices in the nation.
I have watched the war issue practically vanish. I read hopeful candidate
statements about ending it, and wrenching articles about the reality of
sending thousands of Oregonian soldiers to be fish in a barrel in this
bizarre and wretched war.
The agony of neglect for our soldiers and veterans began to bleed in me like
an ulcer. It was so severe I considered running again on my own as an
unaffiliated candidate and then as the nominee of the newly formed Peace
Party. I had until 5 p.m. Tuesday to decide.
I weighed the consequences -- the wrath of the Democrats and the amusement
of the Republicans. Anonymous and slimy attacks from the back alleys of
blogs. Misery. And the remote possibility of victory if the many voters who
are disappointed and fed up with this election could be roused. In the end,
I let the clock run out. I paced, inquired and, finally, fitfully slept on
the couch.
But that is no reason to remain asleep. Nor to accept limp and lifeless
promises from two candidates who are falling far short of their potential.
We must stop aiding and abetting our candidates rather than calling on them
to live up to their claims.
I long for real action. Real courage. I hope we voters will demand as much.
I put my faith -- or lack of it -- in the American people. Politicians will
be only what we force them to be. If we do not want them owned by the
corporate contributors, then we must stop being admiring and being cowed by
their campaign war chests. We demand far too little.
The soldiers and veterans and jobless and sick need and deserve more. We
must muster what courage we have and rescue them from our collective regret.
We must start with our soldiers and veterans -- trapped in a nightmare,
their bravery and loyalty squandered in a war that never should have been.
You there, sleeping on the couch. Wake up. And wake your candidate up, too.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
political stadiums
by Michael Munk
Fri, Aug 29, 2008
|
The 84,000 who packed the Denver football stadium l;ast night reminded me
that it
was modeled (probably unwittingly) after Henry Wallace's acceptance of the
1948
Progressive party nomination in a Philadelphia baseball park.The definitve
history of
that campaign, Curtis MacDougall's Gideon's Army (1965), called it "a
phenomenal episode in the
history of Amnerican political parties"
On the evening of July 24, 32,000 people filled every seat , buying
tickets ranging from 65 cents to $2.60 (Denver was free) to hear Wallace
and running mate Sen Glen Taylor of Idaho accept their nominations at
Connie Mack's Shibe Park, home of his American League Athletics. And Obama
followed the PPs model:. in Philadelphia, there was music and singing
(including Paul Robeson), warm up speeches and a dramatic entrance by the
nominees. No mention of fireworks, however.
The Wallace campaign was the last serious political effort by the American
Left,
tragically defeated by redbaiting as the Cold War and McCarthyism were
growing up.The PP was polled as much as 20% of the early in the campaign
but wound up with just over a million votes--less than 3%. The history of
the world would have been dramatically different had Wallace got the
opportunity to follow up on FDR's record.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
footnotes to Denver
by Michael Munk
Fri, Aug 29, 2008
|
Obama forced Kucinich to cut the best line from his speech: "The Republicans
want four more years, in a just world they'd get 10 to 20."
Portlander Sue Castner of the Oregon delegation and Vancouver resident Carol
Anderson were Clinton supporters who have switched to McCain. But Clinton
delegate Robert Williams of Clackamas County didn't join them.
As soon as Clinton released her pledged delegates, Williams "took off his
Clinton shirt and donned an Obama t-shirt, hat and button."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregonian Dan Carol has Obama's ear
by Michael Munk
Fri, Aug 29, 2008
|
John Hightower writes that among Obama's braintrust is "Dan Carol. A recent
addition and a big plus, this 50-year-old Oregonian is a longtime
progressive strategist, a pioneer in Internet organizing, a proponent of
grassroots-based policy development, a believer in the politics of big
ideas, and an unabashed advocate of making political action fun.
(Disclosure: Carol is a friend of mine and was a key organizer of our
Rolling Thunder Downhome Democracy Tour a few years ago). He has been a
strategist for MoveOn, True Majority and the Oregon Bus Project, among other
innovative grassroots efforts, and he has now been brought onto the O-team
as "director of content and issues."
That's a fuzzy title, but I do know that he'll be a major force in pushing
one of Obama's signature ideas: a "Green Deal" that would enlist the
American people themselves to build a green infrastructure all across
America, creating millions of new conservation and renewable energy jobs,
reviving our grassroots economy and achieving energy independence. This
would be a multibillion-dollar national effort derived from the successful
community-based projects already under way through the Apollo Alliance..."
See his entire list article at
http://www.alternet.org/election08/96142/?page=2
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Carol Anderson joins Castner for McCain
by Michael Munk
Thu, Aug 28, 2008
|
|
Portland Dem delegate for McCain?
by Michael Munk
Wed, Aug 27, 2008
|
To the editor, The Oregonian
Portlander Sue Castner of the Oregon delegtation to the Democratic
national convention says she may vote for John McCain ("Clinton delegates
remain unconvinced" A1 Aug 26) .
So why isn't she going to St Paul rather than ranting in Denver?
She owes an explanation to Oregon voters for why any Democrat, let alone
a woman, wouild support a misogonist war criminal. Does Castner really
represent those Oregon Democrats who voted for Clinton in May?
Either way, they should let her know...
Michael Munk
|
What's with the military invasion of Portland?
by Michael Munk
Tue, Aug 26, 2008
|
|
What's Wrong with Oregon?
by Michael Munk
Wed, Aug 20, 2008
|
The property rights anti union fanatic Bill Sizemore's Measure 59 is a
perfect example of the "What's Wrong with Kansas" syndrome. That's the
analysis by Robert Frank that asks why working class voters too often
succumb to rightwing propaganda and vote against their interests (what we
Marxist have long called "false consciousness" as opposed to "class
consciences").
Measure 59, which will be on the November ballot, offers an attractive but
completely phony bait: it removes the current $5600 limit on federal income
tax deductions from Oregon's rather regressive income tax. Does that sound
in the middle of recession?
Only if you live in Sizemore's real constituency--the top 4% of Oregonians
with incomes averaging $111,000. That tiny minority would pocket over
$2,000. And Sizemore proposes to reward millionaires (the top 1%) with
almost $16,000 more.
Obviously, measure 59 won't pass by relying on the the less than 5% of
Oregonians who would receive 97% of its benefits. So its passage depends on
bamboozling the middle class ( the 35% between $50- $80,000) who would only
get between $46 and $450 and the remaining 60% of us who get nothing at all
or at most $2. And many in those groups will suffer from the cutbacks in
public services required to make up the loss of between $1 billion and $2
billion in state revenue.
Sizemore has already fooled enough Oregonians to put his scheme on the
ballot. In November, any proportion of voters over 5% who support Measure 59
qualifies for the "What's Wrong with Oregon" constituency.
Go the Oregon Center for Public Policy's website for details:
http://www.ocpp.org/cgi-bin/display.cgi?page=es080818NoGain59
ite www.michaelmunk.com
|
92 House members for 676--none from OR or WA
by Michael Munk
Fri, Aug 15, 2008
|
Rep Carson Andre (D-IN) recentl;y became the 91st co-sponsor of HR 676, the
Conyers single payer healthcare legislation. Supporting 676 are 446 union
organizations in 48 including 112 Central Labor Councils and Area Labor
Federations and 35 state AFL-CIO's--including Oregon and Washington, but
still not a single Oregon or Washington Democrat has signed on.
(Note that both Obama and Clinton plans protect the for profit health
insurance industry and oppose single payer_.
NW labor supporting 676 includes:
Oregon AFL-CIO, Salem, OR
Branch 82, National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) Portland, OR
Oregon and locals of the United Steelworkers (USW)
Southern Oregon Jobs with Justice, Ashland, OR
Portland Community College Faculty Federation, AFT Local 2277, Portland, OR
Local 5 International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), Portland, OR
Oregon Area District Council, ILWU, Portland, OR
Portland Jobs with Justice, Portland, OR
Southern Oregon Central Labor Council, Central Point, OR
Southern Oregon Area Local, American Postal Workers Union (APWU), Medford,
OR
Washington State Labor Council, Seattle, WA
Washington Alliance of Technology Workers (WashTech), Communications Workers
of America (CWA), Local 37083, Seattle, WA
Washington Chapter 10, The Retired Public Employees' Council of Washington,
AFSCME
Washington State Alliance for Retired Americans
Washington State Machinist Council, International Association of Machinists
District #160 (IAM),Seattle, WA
International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers (IFPTE)
Local 17, Seattle, WA
Washington State Building and Construction Trades Council, Olympia, WA
Pierce County Central Labor Council, Tacoma, WA
Washington locals of the United Steelworkers (USW)
United Association Local 699, Sprinkler Fitters and Apprentices, Seattle, WA
AFT Seattle Community Colleges, Local 1789, Seattle, WA
For further information:
Kay Tillow
All Unions Committee for Single Payer Health Care-HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization
1169 Eastern Parkway, #2218
Louisville, KY 40217
Phone (502) 636-1551
nursenpo@aol.com
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Progressive Dems of Oregon
by Michael Munk
Wed, Aug 13, 2008
|
This is the group that's challenging MoveOn on its intent to support the
private health insurance industry rather than single payer HR 676.
Progressive Democrats of America
Caucus and Chapters in Oregon
PDA State Coordinators
For support in organizing in Oregon, contact:
John-Mark Gilhousen
jmg@pdgorge.org
541-296-6126
Martha Perez
martha.perez@yahoo.com
Moses Ross
publicoutreach@pdoregon.org
Chapters
Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson Counties
Progressive Democrats of Central Oregon
Ray Duray
ray@pdoregon.org
541-318-8169
http://centraloregon.pdoregon.org
Gilliam, Hood River, Sherman & Wasco Counties
Gorge Progressive Democrats
Chris, , co-chair (Hood) Burgess
cmb@pdgorge.org
541-354-3432
http://pdgorge.org
Greg, co-chair (The Dalles) Keller
ggk@pdgorge.org
541-296-5560
Linn and Benton Counties, Oregon
Midvalley Progressive Democrats
Willa Kenoyer
wmk@pdoregon.org
541-758-2182
Midvalley.pdoregon.org
Portland
Portland Metro Progressive Democrats
Moses Ross
publicoutreach@pdoregon.org
503-309-7985
State Caucus
The Oregon State Caucus needs your help in forming. Please contact State
Coordinators listed above
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
MoveOn. against single payer?
by Michael Munk
Wed, Aug 13, 2008
|
|
Oregon poll: Obama, Smith ahead
by Michael Munk
Mon, Aug 11, 2008
|
Oregon Not a Swing State, Obama Up By 10
August 11, 2008
Oregon shows no indication of becoming a swing state in the race for the
White House this year.
The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey of Oregon voters shows Barack
Obama leads John McCain by 10 percentage points, 47% to 37%. That's
virtually identical to last month's results when Obama led 46% to 37%.
When "leaners" are included, it's Obama 52% to 42%.
This is the sixth Rasmussen Reports telephone survey in Oregon for Election
2008, and the Republican has never been closer than six points behind. Four
times, Obama has enjoyed an eight-to-10 point lead, and once he was up by
14.
Oregon has gone for the Democratic candidate in the last five presidential
contests. Rasmussen Markets data gives the Democrats a % chance of carrying
Oregon once again this fall. At the time this poll was released, Oregon is a
"Likely Democratic" state in the Rasmussen Reports Balance of Power
Calculator. NOTE: Factors other than the latest Rasmussen Reports poll
impact the Balance of Power ratings. The current status is indicated on the
table in the upper right hand corner of this article.
Obama is viewed favorably by 56% of Oregon voters, down six points from a
month ago. McCain earns favorable reviews from 54%, down a single point.
Forty-eight percent (48%) of voters say the United States and its allies are
winning the War on Terror while 21% say the terrorists are winning. That
assessment is similar to the national average.
Fifty-nine percent (59%) say it is more important to find new sources of
energy than to reduce the amount of energy Americans consume. Thirty-three
percent (33%) disagree and say reducing consumption is more important. Those
figures, too, are similar to the national average.
Forty-six percent (46%) say that most reporters are trying to help Obama win
the election while only 14% think they are trying to help McCain. Just 24%
think reporters try to offer unbiased coverage. Nationally, 49% believe that
reporters are trying to help Obama. A separate national survey found that
most voters believe media bias is a bigger problem than big campaign donors.
Just 30% of Oregon voter say that President Bush is doing a good or
excellent job, up a point from last month. However, 54% say he is doing a
poor job, also up a point since July.
Oregon Senate: Incumbent Smith Regains Lead, Still Receives Under 50%
Support
August 07, 2008
Republican Senator Gordon Smith has regained the lead over challenger Jeff
Merkley in Oregon's U.S. Senate race, but still receives under 50% support
from voters. The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey in the state
finds Smith on top 47% to 39% this month.
When "leaners" are included, the incumbent leads 50% to 44%.
In July, Merkley enjoyed a statistically insignificant two-percentage point
lead. In the month prior, Smith led by nine percentage points. Still, any
incumbent who polls below 50% is considered vulnerable.
The incumbent, who is currently seeking his third term, is supported by 80%
of Republicans while Merkley attracts 69% of Democrats and 8% of
Republicans. Among unaffiliated voters, Smith leads 44% to 38%. Smith leads
by eleven among men in Oregon and by five among women.
Favorability ratings for the incumbent have changed little since July. Smith
is viewed favorably by 55% and unfavorably by 38%. By contrast, Merkley's
ratings have worsened over the past month. The challenger is viewed
favorably by 42%, down from 51% last month, while 45% view him unfavorably,
up from 34% last month.
Smith is far from the only GOP senator at risk in the upcoming election.
Many Republican Senate seats are potentially in play for Democrats including
seats in Alaska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Colorado, Mississippi,
Minnesota, and Virginia. As a result, Democrats are expected to add several
seats to their Senate majority this November. It is worth noting, however,
that the number of Republican seats at risk has declined somewhat over the
past month or so.
Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski (D) earns good or excellent ratings from 42%
of voters, while 31% say he is doing a poor job.
visit mmy website www.michaelmunk.com
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Times finally calls Croatian bomber a terrorist
by Michael Munk
Sun, Aug 10, 2008
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Oregonians note: Busic father in law , whoi is in touch
with the Busics in Croatia, lives in Portland and Busic's lawyer
is Marc D. Blackman of Portland.
I sent a rant to the NYTimes complaining about their July 19 description
of Zvonko Busic, leader of Croatian fascist hijackers whose bomb
killed a New York City police officer in 1976. Busic was paroled from
prison a few weeks ago and now is free in Croatia, which has rehabilitated
mamy of its fascists after the fragmentation of Yugoslavia. I protested
that the Times called the terrorists "Croatian independence fighters."
Also referring to Cuban emigres who blew up a civilain aircreft killing
over a hundred
people, I wrote "evidently, you call terrorists "terrorists" only if their
cause resists US actions or policies. So the released Croatian terrorist
wasn't a terrorist leader because he killed to oppose a "Communist
regime."
On the other hand, that's how you routinely call
Lebanese, Palestinian, Iraqi and Afgan resistance righters.
Well, perhaps the Times got the message: It ran a full page hede (although
back on A26) reading "Terrorist's Release Reopens Wound of Unsolved
Bombing" and correctly referred to it among "chapters of American
terrorism." But it tuirns out that federal agents stopped the New York
police from fully investigating whether Busic and his terrorist gang also
bombed La Guradia airport 10 months before the bombing they were convcited
of. That killed 11 people and wounded 75.
The article is at
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/10/nyregion/10laguardia.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Oregon war casualties rise to 629.
by Michael Munk
Fri, Aug 8, 2008
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Oregon poll: Obama up 48-45
by Michael Munk
Wed, Aug 6, 2008
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This poll had the identical numbers im June, although others survey had
Obama with a wider lead.
For details go to
http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=be47b9e3-bdae-4acd-ba37-0bd196006c9b
In Battleground Oregon, 3 Months Out, Obama 3 Atop McCain: In an election
for President of the United States in Oregon today, 08/06/08, three months
till votes are counted, Barack Obama edges John McCain 48% to 45%, within
the survey's 4.0 percentage point margin of sampling error, according to
this SurveyUSA pre-election poll conducted exclusively for KATU-TV Portland.
Obama leads by 13 points in greater Portland; McCain leads by 14 in the rest
of the state. Among voters younger than Obama, Obama leads by 15 points.
Among voters older than McCain, Obama leads by 9. Among voters who are
inbetween the ages of the two candidates, McCain leads by 9. McCain holds
82% of the GOP base. Obama holds 80% of the Democrat base. Independents
split. McCain is backed by 80% of conservatives. Obama is backed by 83% of
liberals. Moderates break 5:3 for Obama. McCain leads 2:1 among those who
attend religious services regularly. Obama leads 2:1 among those who almost
never attend religious services. Among men, McCain leads by 5 points. Among
women, Obama leads by 13.
Filtering: SurveyUSA interviewed 900 Oregon adults 08/02/08 through
08/04/08. Of them, 809 were registered to vote. Of the registered voters,
629 were determined by SurveyUSA to be likely voters in the 11/04/08 general
election. Oregon has 7 Electoral College votes. John Kerry carried Oregon by
4 points in 2004; Al Gore carried Oregon by four-tenths of a point in 2000.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Poll: Smith has big lead over Merkley
by Michael Munk
Wed, Aug 6, 2008
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The last survey gave Merkley a lsight lead. Details at
http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=bae17f79-860b-4401-a25b-bf872ed6db69
3 Months to Election, Incumbent Smith 12 Atop Merkley in Bid to Hold US
Senate Seat for GOP:
In an election for United States Senator in Oregon today, 08/05/08,
incumbent Republican Gordon Smith retains his seat, fighting off Democrat
Jeff Merkley, the Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives, 49% to
37%, according to this KATU-TV news poll conducted by SurveyUSA.
Constitution Party candidate Dave Brownlow takes 8% of the vote. Smith,
considered by some to be vulnerable among the Republicans who must defend US
Senate seats in 2008, leads today among both men and women, leads among the
rich and poor, leads among the more educated and less uneducated, and leads
in both the Portland area and the rest of the state. 9% of Republicans
cross-over and vote Democrat. 3 times as many Demorats, 28%, cross-over and
vote Republican. Independents split. Smith, first elected in 1996, is
seeking his third term in the U.S. Senate. Merkley was first elected to the
state House in 1998.
Filtering: SurveyUSA interviewed 900 Oregon adults 08/02/08 through
08/04/08. Of them, 809 were registered to vote. Of the registered voters,
629 were determined by SurveyUSA to be likely voters in the 11/04/08 general
election.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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July 8- 9: Labor/Civil Rights events in Portkland & Salem
by Michael Munk
Mon, Aug 4, 2008
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=20
=20
=20
=20
=20
=20
=20
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------=
----------------------------------------
and a twofer: To the Editor, The Oregonian:
All references to Jim Adkinsson in your July 30 letters, are to a =
"killer"=20
or a "shooter. Adkinsson executed an armed suicide attack on members =
of a=20
church, murdered two members of the congregation and seriously =
wounded=20
five others with a shotgun. He killed them because of his =
ideological=20
hatred of liberals --echoed in his favorite reading matter by =
Michael=20
Savage, Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly. Radio station WNOW-FM in =
Knoxville=20
broadcasts Limbaugh, Hannity and other shock jocks every weekday.
So why are we so reluctant to call him what he is--a classical =
terrorist?=20
Only heroic action by the congregation disarmed him before he =
expected to=20
die after killing many more Americans--which he hoped would bring =
his=20
total of victims to Iraqi or Palestinian levels.
Michael Munk
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Big O: Oregonians should question Guard deployment
by Michael Munk
Sun, Aug 3, 2008
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DEPLOYMENT OF OREGON SOLDIERS
The plan to deploy 3,500 Oregon National Guard to provide security for
convoys in Iraq next year should have Oregonians asking questions
The Oregonian, August 3, 2008
http://blog.oregonlive.com/oregonatwar/2008/08/the_deployment_from_hell.html
By Mike Francis, Associate Editor
O n the record, the men and women of the Oregon National Guard salute
and say they are ready to do their duty when the 41st Brigade Combat
Team is summoned to Iraq next year. They are soldiers, they understand
the chain of command and they know the "Big Army" doesn't care much
what they think anyway.
But here's what they can't say, at least publicly:
This is a mission from hell.
This mission, to provide security for convoys carrying fuel, food,
medical supplies and other items from base to base, means that the
soldiers of the 41st Brigade are scheduled to spend a year scattered
around a shooting gallery, with no ability to control events by
participating in neighborhood meetings, training police or raiding
houses -- all things that Oregon soldiers have done in previous
deployments.
They will be, one officer said, "IED magnets."
As such, they are less likely to fire their weapons than to be fired
at. And when they see one of their colleagues killed by an improvised
explosive device, they will inevitably ask themselves if it was worth
the life of a friend to escort a load of lettuce, diesel fuel and
toilet paper from one military base to another.
Oregonians generally don't realize the implications of next year's
deployment, which will be the largest from Oregon in 60 years. It will
gather about 3,500 soldiers -- people from every community in the
state -- and send them in the middle of summer to Iraq, where they
will endure 10 or so months of duty escorting people and goods from
one military base to another. Meanwhile, the Guard's strength in
Oregon will be cut almost in half, raising questions about the state's
ability to respond quickly and effectively to disasters like the
Vernonia floods or widespread forest fires.
Of course, a lot can change between now and next May, when the brigade
is scheduled to mobilize, first for 60 days of training in Georgia,
then for 10 months of duty in Iraq. For one thing, the new U.S.
president may decide not to send the brigade overseas at all. Or he
may elect instead to send it to Afghanistan, or give it a different
mission in Iraq or elsewhere. There are no guarantees at this stage
about how the mission will play out.
But brigade commanders and soldiers must operate on the best
information they have today, which is that the Oregon brigade will be
broken down into smaller units, scattered around southern and western
Iraq, and be given jobs that most soldiers would prefer not to do.
"I think it's a very dangerous mission," Gov. Ted Kulongoski said in a
telephone interview. "There are things the active-duty Army doesn't
want to do, and I'm very offended by it."
Kulongoski sent a letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates on July 10
expressing disappointment in the role the Pentagon is asking the 41st
Brigade to play.
"Using (the National Guard brigades) in ad hoc organizations
structured specifically for the mission is seen by our soldiers as
making them 'fillers' rather than trained, cohesive units," Kulongoski
wrote. "It sends the signal to them that they are second-rate soldiers
and units."
Col. Daniel Hokanson, who commands the 41st Brigade, is preparing as
if the brigade will be given the mission that the Defense Department
described to it this winter. But he hopes to find a way to at least
hold the brigade together in a single chain of command, rather than
breaking it into 26 separate security companies that are attached to
active-army units. He is talking with the commander of the Arkansas
brigade who has the job now, and with the commander of the Texas
brigade that will replace it, in an effort to reconfigure the command-
and-control aspect of the deployment. But that effort relies on the
willingness of active-duty commanders and others higher in the
military hierarchy.
"Ideally, the brigade will have the opportunity to shape that,"
Hokanson said. "It's not the ideal mission. It's not what the brigade
has trained to do. But the brigade is the best thing the Army has" to
provide force security in Baghdad and south and west of the city.
The mission is going to startle some of the soldiers, predicted one.
"It's going to be much harder on the young guys who have no idea what
they'll be going into," said a noncommissioned officer who has
deployed previously. "They're not going to be doing anything they were
trained to do. They'll be sitting in their vehicles feeling like 'I'm
being wasted. I'm not facing the enemy.' "
Nobody has done a precise count yet, but Hokanson thinks about half of
the soldiers of the 41st have deployed once already, with the largest
chunk going to Afghanistan at a time when that country was relatively
peaceful. About 30 percent of the previously deployed have gone twice,
estimates Maj. Arnold Strong, the brigade's public affairs officer.
This suggests the challenges associated with the other end of the
mission: when the soldiers return home. Already, the state is
grappling with a wave of post-traumatic stress disorder diagnoses,
traumatic brain injuries, divorces and even some suicides. Families in
every corner of the state have been touched by the war. Employers are
struggling to abide by the law that requires them to hold jobs open
for deployed soldiers, despite the difficulties it poses for them. How
much more of this will wash over Oregon in the months and years after
the brigade comes home in 2010?
"We will see a continued rising number of marriage and family
casualties of the war," said Dr. Jim Sardo, program manager for the
PTSD clinical team and substance program at the Veterans Affairs
Medical Center in Portland. Further, he noted, this deployment will
dramatically increase the number of veterans who have deployed more
than once. And that, he said, "increases the likelihood of long-term
mental-health consequences."
For the roughly half of the brigade that has never deployed, the
planned mission in Iraq will come like a blast from a furnace. They
will fly from Georgia to a desert where temperatures routinely top 120
degrees, they will be saddled with heavy armored vests and told to
ride down roads where other soldiers have been killed, and not to fire
their weapons unless they determine they are in imminent danger of
attack.
They won't be in the fight unless fired upon. They won't interact
deeply with Iraqi civilians. But they will be targets for anybody who
aims to disrupt military operations -- and plenty of such people
remain in Iraq.
Attacks and casualties are indeed down sharply in Iraq -- a benefit
from the adoption of Gen. David Petraeus's counterinsurgency tactics,
as well as by the quiescence of the Sadrists, the shifting attitudes
of the Sunni Arabs and the routing of many elements of al-Qaida in
Iraq. Yet U.S. soldiers are still being killed by explosions in the
country. In July, at this writing, the Pentagon has announced the
deaths by hostile action of two Marines and three or possibly four
soldiers in Iraq -- including at least three who were killed when
their vehicles were attacked.
It's highly likely that some members of the 41st Brigade won't come
home alive. That should cause Oregonians to think deeply about what
their fellow citizens are being asked to do.
"I think everybody is worried about the continual deployment of the
Guard," said Kulongoski. "I think sometimes we're asking too much of
these kids and their families."
Associate editor Mike Francis has covered military issues since first
embedding with Oregon National Guard troops in Iraq in 2004. Read his
Oregon at War blog at http://blog.oregonlive.com/oregonatwar. He can
be reached at 503-412-7014 or mikefrancis@news.oregonian.com.
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Willamette Reds newsletter
by Michael Munk
Fri, Aug 1, 2008
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Vancouver's addiction to (Big)Oil
by Michael Munk
Wed, Jul 30, 2008
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To the editor, The Oregonian:
What is it with Vancouver residents' addiction to (big) oil?
On Sunday, the Oregonian published three letters from Vancouver residents.
Mr. McKlenson whined about mass transit, Mr. Patten demanded we spent
billions to ensure his "freedom to work where [he}wish[es]." and Mr. Siebert
defended the obscene profits of Big Oil companies.
I guess this helps explain why Clark County voted down Mr.McKlenson's
despised light rail and, with higher gas prices feeding Mr. Siebert's oil
companies, now wants to be bailed out with Mr. Patten's $4.2 billion bridge.
For his information, he has the freedom to live in Vancouver and drive to
Portland to avoid the sales tax. But like other freedoms, they carry a
cost. His may be a long commute by expensive private transportation.
Michael Munk
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Friday (July 31) in Portland: Medical Evidence of US Torture
by Michael Munk
Tue, Jul 29, 2008
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Obama's Mom in Seattle
by Michael Munk
Tue, Jul 29, 2008
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Obama's mother's life & times in Seattle
Madelyn and Stanley Dunham (O's mother's parents) moved
from Kansas to Seattle in 1955 , living in an apartment in the
Columbia City neighborhood where Stanley Ann (O's mother)
attended the 8th grade at Eckstein Middle School.The next year
the family moved to Mercer Island (that ferry commuters' island
directly accross the Sound from downtown Seattle). Stanley Anne went all
4 years to Mercer Island High, graduating in'60. And as the
single mother of Barack Obama, Jr., returned to Seattle two years
later and enrolled at UW for one quarter.
This from the Chicago Tribune today: full story at
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/chi-0703270151mar27,0,589824,full.story>>combined with exceprts from an earlier Seattle Times articlehttp://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2004334057_obama08m.html "Consistent with the 1950s, there were undercurrents of>> turmoil. In 1955, the chairman of the Mercer Island school board, JohnStenhouse, testified before the House Un-American Activities Subcommitteethat he had been a member of the Communist Party.>>>> At Mercer High School, two teachers -- Val Foubert and Jim Wichterman --generated regular parental thunderstorms by teaching their students tochallenge societal norms and question all manner of authority. Foubert, whodied recently, taught English. His texts were cutting edge: "AtlasShrugged," "The Organization Man," "The Hidden Persuaders," "1984" MargaretMead and the acerbic writings of H.L. Mencken.>>>> Wichterman taught philosophy. The hallway between the two classes wasknown as "anarchy alley," and students pondered the challenging notions ofWichterman's teachings, including such philosophers as Sartre andKierkegaard. He also touched the societal third rail of the 1950s: Hequestioned the existence of God. And he didn't stop there.>>>> "I had them read Karl Marx's 'The Communist Manifesto,' and the parentswent nuts," said Wichterman, adding that parents also didn't want anydiscussions about "anything to do with sex," religion and theology. Theparental protests were known as "mothers' marches." "The kids startedquestioning things that their folks thought shouldn't be questioned --religion, politics, parental authority," said John Hunt, a classmate. "Anda lot of parents didn't like that, and they tried to get them [Wichtermanand Foubert] fired." Wichterman recalled that Stanley "As much as a high-school studentcan, she'd question anything: What's so good about democracy?What's so good about capitalism? What's wrong with communism?What's good about communism?She had what I call an inquiring mind.">>>> The Dunhams did not join the uproar. (her parents) shed their Methodistand Baptist upbringing and began attending Sunday services at the EastShore Unitarian Church in nearby Bellevue.>>>> "In the 1950s, this was sometimes known as 'the little Red church on thehill,' " said Peter Luton, the church's senior minister, referring to theeffects of McCarthyism. Skepticism, the kind that Stanley embraced andpassed on to his daughter, was welcomed here.>>>> For Stanley Ann, the teachings of Foubert and Wichterman provided anintellectual stimulant and an affirmation that there indeed was aninteresting life beyond high school dances, football games and all-nightslumber party chatter.>>>> Their high school class was an in-between generation. The Beatgeneration had passed, and the 1960s era of protest was yet to begin.Classmates of Dunham -- Wall, Blake, Hunt -- felt they were on the cusp ofsocietal change, the distant early warning of the '60s struggles over civilrights, women's rights and war."She had a really ironic sense of humor, sort of downbeat and she wasa great observer," said Iona Stenhouse, of Seattle, a former classmate. "There was an arched eyebrow, or a smile on her face about the immaturityof us all. I felt at times that Stanley thought we were a bit of aprovincial group."The diversions for Dunham and her class were solidly 1950s vintage:sock hops and sleepovers and the song "Rockin' Robin." Dunham's fatherdrove her and friends to boys basketball games, and would embarrass hisdaughter with his noisy cheering. But Stanley didn't have a regularboyfriendin high school.She gravitated toward an intellectual clique. According to former classmateChip Wall, she caught foreign films at Seattle's only art-house theater, theRidgemont,and trekked to University District coffee shops like the Encore to talkabout jazz,the value of learning from other cultures and the "very dull Eisenhower-nessof our parents."One classmate, Jill Burton-Dascher, said Stanley Ann "was>> intellectually way more mature than we were and a little bit ahead ofher time, in an off-center way." She showed her politics, wearing a campaign button for Adlai Stevenson in 1956."We were critiquing America in those days in the same way we are today: Thepressis dumbed down, education is dumbed down, people don't know anything aboutgeography or the rest of the world," said Wall, who later taught at MercerIsland Highand is now retired in Seattle.>>>> "If you were concerned about something going wrong in the world, Stanleywould know about it first," Wall continued, describing her as "a fellowtraveler. . . . We were liberals before we knew what liberals were.">> Susan Blake said Stanley's father was "always looking for a rise out ofpeople," Blake said. "It seemed like every time her father opened hismouth, she would roll her eyes.">>>> When the Mercer Island High School yearbooks began circulating in thespring of 1960, Stanley Ann's senior year, classmates scribbled best wishesto friends and remembered slumber parties, one mother's exceptionally goodchocolate cake and thoughts on some goofy boys.">>Stanley had hoped to join many of her classmates at the University ofWashington, and was also accepted to the University of Chicago, accordingto Obama's memoir, the best-selling "Dreams from My Father.">>But after graduation, the family moved to Hawaii where Stanley attendedthe University Hawaii . Maxine Box, her best friend in high school and otherclassmates were stunned when Stanley Ann wrote them she'd married theUniversity's So Box and others were stunned when Dunham wrote them to say she'd married the University of Hawaii's first African student, aKenyannamed Barack Obama. She gave birth to Barack Obama Jr. in August 1961."We could see Stanley, with her good grades and intelligence, going tocollege,but not marrying and having a baby right away," said MaxineBox, her best friend at the time and now a retired teacher in Bellevue.I can't think of anything she said or did that would lead to such a radicalthing.At that time, you practically crossed the street if you saw a black man and a white woman. Black and white didn't go together at that time."Stanley "always said [Mercer Island] was a great place to grow up," saidSoetoro-Ng, who now teaches at the University of Hawaii. "She found it a nice mix between civilization and the rural expression and nature."Perhapsthat's why she returned at least twice shortly after she left. ClassmateSusan Blake said that during a brief visit in 1961, Dunham was excited abouther husband's plans to return to Kenya."We all had June Cleaver as our rolemodels,and she was blazing new trails for herself," said Blake, a former MercerIslandcity councilwoman.And in 1962, Dunham had returned to Seattle as a single mother, enrolling inthe UW for spring quarter and living in an apartment on Capitol Hill. Butfriends saidshe got overwhelmed and returned to her family in Hawaii, and formallydivorcedObama Sr. in 1964. >> visit my website www.michaelmunk.com>>
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Friday August 1: Don't Attack Iran Rally, 5 PM Courthouse Square
by Michael Munk
Mon, Jul 28, 2008
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"DON'T ATTACK IRAN" RALLY SET FOR AUGUST 1
Coincides with National Actions, Portland Iranian Festival
Friday, August 1, 2008, 5 PM
Pioneer Courthouse Square, SW Yamhill and Broadway
The Friday rally, a weekly institution in Portland for over 7-1/2 years
will be
followed by a march at about 5:20 PM.
With the U.S. giving ultimatums to the Iranian government about their
nuclear program, Israeli planes running test missions apparently aimed at
Iran, and Iran showing off its own missile capabilities, Portland area
peace groups are calling for a "Don't Attack Iran" Rally on Friday, August
1. The event will be an enhanced version of the Portland Peaceful Response
Coalition (PPRC)'s regular Friday rally, which has been held since
November 2001. The rally is being cosponsored by the American Iranian
Friendship Council and the Peace and Justice Works Iraq Affinity Group.
The organizers hope that the message will get out that:
1) Iran has been cooperating with International Atomic Energy Agency
inspectors;
2) the US continues to build up its military in the region despite active
and retired generals warning against military action on Iran;
3) the Iranian people are more likely to support their own government and
suppress their own movements for democracy if they fear being attacked;
and
4) any further military actions by the U.S. or its allies in the Middle
East will likely lead to an eruption of wider violence in the region.
A national "Stop the War on Iran" Coalition has called for nationwide
actions on Saturday, August 2; the Portland area groups are planning this
action for Friday night in part because the annual Iranian Festival will
be taking place August 2 at the Portland State University Park Blocks.
Here are some articles excerpted by the "Stop the War on Iran" Coalition:
Meanwhile:
--the House and Senate are poised to pass resolutions (HR 362 and SR 580)
which will impose stricter economic sanctions on Iran, perhaps including a
naval blockade that many consider an act of war.
--Seymour Hersch reported in the New Yorker magazine that the U.S. has
been funding covert operations aimed at toppling the Iranian regime.
--High level talks between US and Iranian officials could either lead to a
diplomatic solution or an excuse for war.
Organizers for the August first rally ask: What would the United States do
if another country acted this way towards our country?
For more information or to endorse or cosponsor Friday's rally contact the
American Iranian Friendship Council at 503-381-3696, Peace and Justice
Works at iraq@pjw.info or 503-236-3065, or PPRC at 503-344-5078.
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Willy Week picks Ooligan Press
by Michael Munk
Wed, Jul 23, 2008
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Oregon Poll: Obama, Merkley ahead
by Michael Munk
Wed, Jul 16, 2008
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EPA challenges big bridge. Tell Metro to listen
by Michael Munk
Wed, Jul 16, 2008
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Where are NE Dems on health care?
by Michael Munk
Mon, Jul 14, 2008
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Americans United for Human Rights petition
by Michael Munk
Mon, Jul 14, 2008
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=20
=20
Oregon Democrats must challenge AIPAC's promotion of War and =
Occupation =20
=20
View Current Signatures - Sign the Petition=20
-------------------------------------------------------------------------=
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To: Oregon Democratic Party and Leadership=20
To Oregon Democrats and Democratic Politicians, especially Oregon =
Governor Ted Kulongoski, Oregon State House Speaker Jeff Merkley =
(D-Portland), Oregon Senate President Peter Courtney (D-Salem), Sen. =
Vicki Walker (D-Eugene), Sen. Ben Westlund (D-Tumalo), Rep. Mitch =
Greenlick (D-Portland), and Rep. Brad Witt (D-Clatskanie).=20
Dear Oregon Democrats:=20
On May 21st, 2008, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee =
(AIPAC) held a "community dinner" in Portland at the Oregon Convention =
Center. According to our sources, the Democratic leaders listed above =
attended that event.=20
We are Oregonians who are opposed to the current aggressive and =
militarized U.S. policies in the Middle East and concerned that yet =
another war, this time against Iran, is being promoted by right wingers =
such as were present at this event. As a result, we are very concerned =
by your attendance.=20
The keynote speaker, AIPAC member and Fox News analyst Marc Ginsberg =
clearly is promoting military action with Iran. He also was imploring =
his audience, which includes you, to help convince the American people =
of the necessity of the use of military force.=20
We are also concerned by the complete mischaracterization of the views =
of such Americans as former President Jimmy Carter as presented by AIPAC =
officer Brandt. We believe President Carter and others are absolutely =
correct in their criticism of Israel's ongoing policies of occupation =
and oppression of the Palestinians, and the ongoing theft and =
colonization of Palestinian lands. We believe that President Carter is =
correct in his characterization of Israel's domination of Palestinians =
as the creation of a system of Apartheid. Brandt is simply incorrect as =
characterizing Carter's motivation as one simply of not believing in =
America's relationship with Israel as Brandt suggested. Instead, Carter =
is acting out of sincere concern for the human rights of Palestinians =
and the prospect for peace for both Israeli Jews and Palestinian Arabs. =
President Carter is the man who brought peace between Egypt and Israel =
and has worked tirelessly to foster democratic institutions around the =
world (without, like Bush, using violence and force). It should be noted =
that Egypt recently brokered a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. This =
would not have been possible without President Jimmy Carter's earlier =
peace making.=20
Israel already gets over $3 billion in U.S. military assistance each =
year, much of which is used to support the illegal occupation and =
colonization of Palestinian lands. We are further concerned that, at a =
time when we believe Israel needs to be held to account for its policies =
against the Palestinians, Oregon Democrats are seeking to enhance =
economic ties to the state of Israel. Governor Kulongoski obviously is =
trying to make these ties a reality with his recent trade mission to =
Israel and we question the morality of these ties given the oppression =
experienced by the Palestinians at the hands of Israel. We are not =
opposed to economic ties to Israel that also helps the Palestinian =
economy or when relations between Israel and her neighbors are =
normalized in accordance with human rights and international law.=20
We would like an opportunity for representatives of AUPHR (Americans =
United for Palestinian Human Rights) and members of the Oregon Peace and =
Justice community meet with you to discuss our views on these critical =
issues. We do not want the Democratic Party to be leading the charge for =
yet another war against people in the Middle East. Nor do we want Oregon =
Democrats to implicate our great state with Israel's Apartheid policies =
while they continue to illegally take more Palestinian lands. We are =
concerned that the Democratic Party's enmeshment with AIPAC raises these =
very dangers.=20
Sincerely,=20
The Undersigned=20
=20
View Current Signatures=20
=20
-------------------------------------------------------------------------=
-------
The Oregon Democrats must challenge AIPAC's promotion of War and =
Occupation Petition to Oregon Democratic Party and Leadership was =
created by members of Americans United for Human Rights (AUPHR) and =
written by Peter Miller (peteskitoo@gmail.com). This petition is hosted =
here at www.PetitionOnline.com as a public service. There is no =
endorsement of this petition, express or implied, by Artifice, Inc. or =
our sponsors. For technical support please use our simple Petition Help =
form.=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Who is offended by Obama's vote for spying?
by Michael Munk
Mon, Jul 14, 2008
|
|
Check out Salem socialist website
by Michael Munk
Fri, Jul 11, 2008
|
Salem, Oregon Socialists=20
People and Nature Before Profits! We are in the Willamette Valley, =
Oregon, and welcome anyone whose politics come in shades of red. We're a =
working collective of socialists, Communists and independent leftists. =
We are also known as Willamette Reds. And no, we don't sell red wine. We =
do drink red wine.
http://willamettereds.blogspot.com/
August 8, 2008 - Portland Oregon
We are excited to announce this upcoming event - an evening for =
reflection on the civil rights struggle of the 1960s. Please mark your =
calendars and join us - everyone welcome!
"A Hard Rain Fell: Struggles for Civil Rights in the 60's and their =
Meaning Today."
Speakers:
* Ann Montague, union activist; on Bayard Rustin & gay liberation.
* Bob Novick, union organizer; on the legacy of the 60's.
* Jarvis Tyner, civil rights & progressive leader; on connecting the =
60's to now.
There will be plenty of time for Q & A.
Location: 6401 SE Foster Rd, Portland, Oregon (SEIU Hall).
More info: Call Bob Rossi, 581-1505, X 141.
Sponsored by SEIU Local 503's Civil & Human Rights Committee.
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
Capital=20
When I was a kid there was a popular Italian expression: "Not even in =
the third book of Capital!" someone would exclaim in surprise or in =
order to emphasize how obscure a point was. The reference was to Marx's =
classic Capital, although I bet that many people who used the expression =
didn't know that.
Capital is one of those fundamental books we should read but we never =
get around to. It's basic to Marxism. There are shortcuts, and no one =
gets docked for not reading it, but life is so much better if you try. =
And even better if you succeed.
Now you can study Capital in the privacy of your own cyberspace. Go to =
http://davidharvey.org/ and check out what's there.
This is a great resource!=20
Posted by ethnicguy at 6:46 PM 0 comments Links to this post =20
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Rush Limbaugh And I Drive To Corvallis=20
Rush Limbaugh, well-known right-wing fanatic, recently signed a $400 =
million deal with Clear Channel's Premier Radio Networks. This includes =
a $100 million signing bonus and meets and surpasses what Howard Stern, =
another right wing fanatic, took home from Sirius Satellite Radio in =
2004. The two nutjobs have more in common than their artificially high =
salaries, of course, but that's a good place to start.
Limbaugh's prized commodities are hate speech and himself, though not =
necessarily in that order. We get a Limbaugh morning show, the Limbaugh =
Letter, a broadcast website and a subscription service all featuring the =
man for that $400 million. Premier Radio underwrites it all and will do =
so for many years to come.
It's stunning to think that anyone in the world can get that kind of =
money or that anyone thinks that a fanatic deserves that kind of =
funding.
One of the claims made by Limbaugh & Co. is that he is the only =
conservative voice on the radio, or the main conservative voice on the =
radio. I tested that proposition today as I drove from Salem to =
Corvallis by way of Monmouth.
On FM radio I heard four or five decidedly conservative radio stations =
and two or three stations that might be considered liberal or left. I'm =
counting the conservative religious stations which run people like Dr. =
Laura and James Dobson, Limbaugh competitors. Several of these stations =
appear two or three times on the dial, so the number is really more like =
four or six. I'm also counting as liberal the two OPB stations I picked =
up because today there was an OPB program with John Edwards on. They =
seem rather conservative to me, however, and they are definitely giving =
McCain a pass. KBOO is proudly on the left, of course, and carries that =
by itself.
On AM radio I picked up fifteen conservative talk radio stations, again =
including the religious stations, Dr. Laura and people like Sean =
Hannity. I also picked up two OPB stations, KPOJ and KBOO as I got =
closer to Corvallis.
I don't know why people call Dr. Laura and expect anything other than =
humiliation. Besides her advice, which is almost always disempowering =
and focused on blaming victims, her style of communicating is inherently =
oppressive. Hannity uses the same tricks over and over again: tell the =
audience you're on their side and against the bullies who want to keep =
them ignorant, keep creating a "them," bait and humiliate the folks who =
disagree with you and then cut them off and go quickly to the =
advertising. It's a simple formula used by Mussolini and Hitler. The =
religious stations do a slightly milder version of this. We get Dobson, =
Falwell wannabees and the most conservative of theologies without debate =
or discussion. Have you ever heard a station give you Rev. Jeremiah =
Wright, Fr. Michael Pfleger or liberation theology without censorship?
Country stations hit patriotism, sexism and lily-white =
nostalgia--sometimes all in one song. Rap and rock stations recycle =
hopelessness and sexism. All of them are reaching for the advertising =
dollars which is, after all, the real point. There's nothing liberal or =
left there.
Can you get Al-Jazeera, BBC or CBC for different perspectives? Without =
differing perspectives, how do you form your opinions?
If Rush & Co. don't consider the religious stations conservative, their =
problem is more with religion than with liberals or the left. If Dr. =
Laura, Michael Savage and Sean Hannity are competitors on the low road =
created by Rush, he can't blame liberals or the left if his voice gets =
lost in the mob.
So Rush is simply dishonest when he claims to be in a minority and a =
lone conservative voice saving us from liberal and left ideas. Parts of =
America hear his voice and tune in because he and so many others like =
him dominate the airwaves--and not because he's popular or because he =
has a particular message, but because he has the money behind him and =
there is nothing much left to listen to.=20
Posted by ethnicguy at 6:36 PM 0 comments Links to this post =20
Friday, July 04, 2008
Obama And The Left--Part Three=20
The ultra-left, the Socialists and the Greens are instinctively correct =
in pointing out the shortcomings of Obama's program, his backtracking on =
key political questions and the failures and inherent conservatism of =
the Democrats. Their philosophical and practical errors, however, do not =
allow them to go further than focusing on the negatives and imposing =
upon themselves a critical distance and isolation from workers and key =
social movements. This becomes for them an essentially moralistic =
refusal and inability to grasp the dynamics of the present political =
moment, negotiate and lead and, ultimately, to take power on any level. =
This may prove true even for those Greens who hold political office but =
who do not advance a pragmatic radical political program in cooperation =
with contending social forces like labor.
The idea that the main area of debate or struggle now exists between =
center forces represented by Obama and the left is flawed in both its =
theory and its application, despite the good work done by the left and =
social and political movements over the last eight years and the natural =
and justifiable suspicion workers feel towards both the Democrats and =
the Republicans. Against all of this good work and working class realism =
or pessimism, after all, is a world capitalist system sliding into =
chaos, a self-contained capitalist-monopoly elite which is reaching =
beyond its historic role and position, several major wars taking place, =
continuing and deepening environmental crises, extreme barbarism being =
inflicted upon the Third World and the global south while racism asserts =
itself in new ways in the developed countries and in the global north, =
an absence of working-class self-organization and leading political =
alternatives and a disappointing lack of unity at the working class base =
which limits our ability to struggle and win against the monopolies and =
for democratic rights. Under such circumstances we cannot expect people =
to go "from zero to sixty" and intervening with a political agenda which =
calls on them to do so is only a step backwards.
The pragmatic left understands the forces and world events at work very =
well and knows from its own valuable historic experience that working =
class pessimism cannot be relied upon to build something positive and =
enduring. There is a special understanding of how destructive racism is =
and how so much of this election is really about racism, imperialism and =
war. We also understand better than the ultra-left, the Socialists and =
the Greens the weaknesses of class-consciousness and workers' =
organizations today. We understand why and how people, and especially =
workers, are looking for incremental change now and how fragile and =
contradictory these hopes are.
The left-wing response to the ultra-left and to the Obama candidacy has =
been to only see the positive sides of Obama's program, to ignore or =
defend his backward steps, to hope that Obama and the political center =
can be moved to the left later, to work exclusively at the grassroots as =
foot-soldiers for the Democrats and (mirroring the ultra-left) to refuse =
taking principled and critical leadership in situations which might make =
obvious our disagreements with some of Obama's thinking. This response =
is understandable and comes with gains and losses for the left, with =
opportunities and with dead-ends.
The left will gain by learning again how to talk to and organize with =
people in our neighborhoods and workplaces. This new emphasis in working =
primarily at the grassroots can give to the left a new base and a needed =
decentralization. The challenges we face as Obama moves to the right =
help us to rethink our assumptions and arguments and can force us to =
improve left-wing media. To the extent that we openly identify ourselves =
as socialists and communists, we can help people get over remaining cold =
war prejudices and acquaint them with truly left-wing programs which =
speak to their needs. The Obama campaign forces us to confront racism =
within others and in ourselves. Each day that we work with the center =
political forces is a test for us, individually and collectively, and =
these tests should teach us how to negotiate, lead and take power. These =
tests are necessary because they are precisely where we win or lose the =
right to lead others.
Many of these positive advancements are put at risk or deprived of their =
meaning when we overlook the political and strategic shortcomings of the =
Obama campaign and the political center and when we are silent before =
them. Seeing only the positives here mirrors the philosophical errors =
and poverty of the ultra-left and can lead, through a much different =
route, to the same sort of isolation and irrelevancy the ultra-left, =
Socialists and Greens are choosing for themselves.
Obama moved to the left in order to influence or capture some of the =
core forces which might either have gone to Clinton or sat the election =
out. It was an easy move for him given his base and his charisma. Now, =
closer to the election and with the core social forces either supporting =
him or with nowhere else to turn, Obama can move more safely (for him) =
to the right and encourage a cult of personality around him. If this is =
not inevitable, it at least appears to be unavoidable given the peculiar =
structuring of American electoral politics. This takes place as Karl =
Rove's forces are taking over the McCain campaign and centralizing their =
power and their forces. Their attack against Obama once this =
centralization is complete will be racist and under-handed and will have =
the cooperation of the Bush-Cheney administration. Whatever distance =
Obama travels to the right will be more than matched by the right's =
march towards barbarism.
Our main hope now in preventing a further slide to the right by the =
center, including Obama, is in building for a landslide win by the =
Democrats in November and doing so in such a way that we also win power =
and influence for the independent forces like the labor and peace =
movements. Actively encouraging the nomination of a progressive =
Vice-Presidential candidate and focusing on all of McCain's many faults =
and the right-wing danger he represents is key. These efforts require a =
base at the grassroots which works for a win every day, but it also =
requires that that base be built upon our left-wing principles and a =
willingness to explain these principles to the people we work with and =
then negotiate with them.
The willingness of the center to move to right before November can be =
read as an inability to fight or as an unwillingness to fight and win. =
This is the critical and repetitive failing of the Democrats and it does =
not win them elections. Once surrendered, the ground lost by the =
Democrats seems nearly impossible to recover and the task of recovering =
lost ground seems to have fallen largely on the shoulders of =
African-Americans, labor, immigrant workers, women and the peace =
movement. A reliance by the center and parts of the left upon a =
charismatic leader to the practical exclusion or diminishing of an =
activist and critically-thinking base makes organizing, fighting and =
winning more difficult and makes recovering lost ground in the absence =
of that leader much more difficult. The left needs to recover its =
history quickly and its ability to teach others how to fight.
Win or lose in November, we need to prepare now for a national =
conference to be held in the Spring of 2009. That conference should =
unite the left which worked for Democratic victories with the best =
forces in the labor, civil rights, immigrant, peace, womens', gay, and =
youth movements under a shared and fully accountable grassroots =
leadership. If Obama wins, the focus should be on an aggressive plan to =
hold him to his early and progressive promises and to guide the US =
through the likely traumas that withdrawing from Iraq and Afghanistan =
and confronting racism here will bring during a time of economic crises. =
If McCain wins, the focus will need to be on key mass protests, =
protecting the most vulnerable segments of the population and civil =
liberties from further attack and labor and community organizing.
We need that national conference and we need unity.=20
Posted by ethnicguy at 12:10 PM 3 comments Links to this post =20
Older Posts=20
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)=20
=20
=20
=E2=80=98Yes, we did=E2=80=99: Obama hits delegate milestone as =
primaries near end
PORTLAND, Ore. -- Oregon and Kentucky primary voters May 20 gave Barack =
Obama the majority of elected delegates to the 2008 Democratic National =
Convention, virtually assuring his nomination as that party=E2=80=99s =
candidate for the presidency. Even before the votes were all counted =
that night he declared in a victory speech in Iowa that McCain is now =
the focus of the campaign. He dismissed the Republican as a clone of =
President Bush on tax cuts, Iraq and health care.
Read the rest of this article by Tim Wheeler, People's Weekly World, =
here.
=20
People's Weekly World/Nuestro Mundo Website Live
Newly redesigned website for the People's Weekly World / Nuestro Mundo =
newspaper features daily online articles, multimedia, and even a blog! =
Comment on blog articles, and even become a contributor (email blog *at* =
pww d0t org)
=20
NEW CPUSA Videos
History's Challenge - a 30-minute documentary on the Communist Party =
USA!
Elena Mora duking it out with a right-wing hack from the Heritage =
Foundation live on national cable TV!
New Yorkers fed up - Public Housing and Sean Bell!
=20
Video: Salem Oregon May Day March for Immigrant Rights featuring singer =
Chris Meza
=20
Photos from Salem Oregon May 1 Rally and March=20
=20
Photos from the April 12, 2008 drive to promote Latino voter =
registration! CHAVISTA CARAVAN PHOTOS
=20
CPUSA: End the Iraq war
=20
Weathering the Storm: Sam Webb, CPUSA, on the economic recession
=20
Contact Willamette Reds
Email us here
=20
Blog Archive
a.. =E2=96=BC 2008 (96)=20
a.. =E2=96=BC July 2008 (6)=20
a.. Capital=20
b.. Rush Limbaugh And I Drive To Corvallis=20
c.. Obama And The Left--Part Three=20
d.. Obama And The Left--Part Two=20
e.. Obama And The Left--Part One=20
f.. Capitalism, Imperialism & Socialism: The Basics=20
a.. =E2=96=BA June 2008 (17)=20
a.. Ida B. Wells-Barnett=20
b.. Pacific Northwest Takes Some Hits This Week=20
c.. And It's Only Tuesday...=20
d.. NPR Does (at least) Two Stupid Stories=20
e.. Palestinian non-violent resistance=20
f.. You can't have Alex=20
g.. (Gay) Marriage=20
h.. Portland Gay Pride=20
i.. Jobs (not) in Oregon=20
j.. Capitalism doesn't work--#5. Wage Inequality.=20
k.. Oregon workers sucker-punched: if your boss doesn'...=20
l.. Oregon Democrats Select Delegates--The Scene At CD...=20
m.. James Bond Is Dead=20
n.. Capitalism doesn't work---#4 Manufacturing imperia...=20
o.. Capitalism doesn't work---#3. Housing in Oregon.=20
p.. Capitalism doesn't work---#2=20
q.. Capitalism doesn't work--#1 (A short series examin...=20
a.. =E2=96=BA May 2008 (11)=20
a.. A Victory At Burger King!=20
b.. Oregon State University Hits Another Low Point=20
c.. Intimate Politics by Bettina F. Apthek...=20
d.. Our Tito: May 25, 1892--May 4, 1980=20
e.. Bruce "Utah" Phillips Passes=20
f.. Oregon's Primaries--A Left Perspective=20
g.. Moving Through Oregon's Primary=20
h.. Hazel Dickens=20
i.. Move On: Iraq and Recession Salem OR=20
j.. Book Review: Red Chicago=20
k.. May Day Salem Oregon=20
a.. =E2=96=BA April 2008 (17)=20
a.. Oregon Union Retirees Meet: Medicare, Social Secur...=20
b.. Iraq and Recession=20
c.. Candidates Debate At Western Oregon University=20
d.. Forward Oregon Red-Baits Willamette Reds=20
e.. The Renewed Attack On Obama=20
f.. Labor Notes Conference--The Private Equity Struggl...=20
g.. Labor Notes Conference--Staff Unions--Sixth Post=20
h.. Labor Notes Conference And SEIU--Fifth Post=20
i.. Promoting Latino voting: Chavista Caravan=20
j.. Labor Notes Conference And SEIU--Fourth Post=20
k.. Labor Notes Conference--"Pumping Up The Public Sec...=20
l.. Labor Notes Conference--Saturday Morning--Second P...=20
m.. Labor Notes Conference--Friday Night=20
n.. Mark Rudd Weathers Corvallis=20
o.. Book Review: Wobblies on the Waterfront=20
p.. SEIU 503 Holds Political Conference=20
a.. =E2=96=BA March 2008 (15)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA February 2008 (17)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA January 2008 (13)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA 2007 (51)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA December 2007 (14)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA November 2007 (10)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA October 2007 (4)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA September 2007 (1)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA August 2007 (3)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA July 2007 (3)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA June 2007 (6)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA May 2007 (7)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA March 2007 (2)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA February 2007 (1)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA 2006 (56)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA December 2006 (2)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA November 2006 (3)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA October 2006 (6)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA September 2006 (7)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA August 2006 (4)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA July 2006 (8)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA June 2006 (3)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA May 2006 (4)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA April 2006 (11)=20
a.. =E2=96=BA March 2006 (8)=20
=20
Links
a.. Adventures In Historical Materialism=20
b.. Affirming Catholic=20
c.. Aljazeera=20
d.. Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights=20
e.. ANERA=20
f.. Anglo-Catholic Socialism=20
g.. Blue Collar Review=20
h.. BroadLeft=20
i.. Carol P. Araullo=20
j.. Catholic Worker=20
k.. Color of Change=20
l.. Communist Party of Ireland=20
m.. Communist Party USA=20
n.. Communist Party--Labor Commission=20
o.. Comrade Zero=20
p.. Early American Marxism=20
q.. Fruits Of Our Labour=20
r.. Gus Hall Action Club=20
s.. Hands Off Venezuela=20
t.. Haymarket Books=20
u.. Hunter Bear=20
v.. International Publishers=20
w.. International Viewpoint=20
x.. L'Humanite in English=20
y.. Labor Notes=20
z.. Labor Party USA=20
aa.. Le Revue Gauche=20
ab.. Mansoor Hekmat=20
ac.. Marxism-Leninism Today=20
ad.. Monthly Review=20
ae.. News from Cuba=20
af.. Orbis Books=20
ag.. Oregon New Sanctuary Movement=20
ah.. Oregon Peaceworks=20
ai.. Palestine Childrens Welfare Fund=20
aj.. Palestinian news=20
ak.. Pan African News=20
al.. Partido della Rifondazione Comunista - Italy=20
am.. PCUN=20
an.. Peoples Weekly World=20
ao.. Political Affairs Magazine=20
ap.. Pottawatomie Creek=20
aq.. Primary Contradiction=20
ar.. Science & Society=20
as.. Serbian Communists=20
at.. Sindicalista=20
au.. Socialist Action=20
av.. Socialist Party of Oregon=20
aw.. Socialist Party USA=20
ax.. Socialist Unity Blogspot=20
ay.. Socialist Worker=20
az.. Solidarity=20
ba.. Spectrezine=20
bb.. STRIKE=20
bc.. Swans Commentary=20
bd.. Thoughts From Podunk=20
be.. Unrepentant Marxist=20
bf.. US Labor Against the War=20
bg.. Venezuela Analysis=20
bh.. Vox Unus=20
bi.. Watch along the Kanawha=20
bj.. Wet Paint=20
bk.. Winter Soldiers=20
bl.. Women As Muralists - Mary Perry Stone=20
bm.. Young Communist League=20
bn.. Young Peoples Socialist League=20
=20
Contributors
a.. collectivist=20
b.. RedMama=20
c.. rosemarys5th=20
d.. Maggie=20
e.. redfenian=20
f.. ethnicguy=20
g.. Chuck Wynns=20
h.. strannik=20
=20
|
Dems for spying: the names of shame
by Michael Munk
Fri, Jul 11, 2008
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Only 28 Dems against spying
by Michael Munk
Wed, Jul 9, 2008
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Saturday July 5: Bloody Thursday at Oaks Park
by Michael Munk
Thu, Jul 3, 2008
|
If you've seen the reference to Portland's commemoration of the great 1934
west coast longshoremens' strike in my Red Guide (pp 99-100), you already
know that Oregon ILWU locals will meet at Oaks Park after 10AM Saturday.
That will be the 74th anniversary of the killing of two strikers in San
Francisco (also my own 74th anniversary) on July 5, 1934 known ever since as
"Bloody Thurday" and a holdiay on west coast docks.
Marvin Ricks, the last surviving veteran of the '34 strike in Portland will
be there as well as other speakers. A memorial wreath is usually placed in
the Willamette, commemorative T-shirts will be available and a picnic lunch
is provided.
Hope to see you there!
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Naming the Dems who cave
by Michael Munk
Mon, Jun 30, 2008
|
|
forward from Credo, aliberal long distance phone company
by Michael Munk
Sat, Jun 28, 2008
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I-5 boondoggle denounced
by Michael Munk
Sat, Jun 28, 2008
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To the editor, The Oregonian
Re: "Task force favors new I-5 bridge, light rail," (A1 June 26):
I was astounded to read that this "task force" wants to spend $4.2 billion
to cut exactly one hour from the current six hours
of daily vehicle congestion that commuters suffer on the existing bridge.
I understand it speculates the congestion will increase in the future,
but who knows how much tolls, $5 gas and other rising costs and time
wasted in commuting will cause folks in Washington (who voted against
light rail)
to move closer to work or find other ways than cars to get there?
I also wonder who's on that "task force" and how they got there. The only
member you name (Portland lawyer Henry Hewitt)
surely wasn't elected.
Michael Munk
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Portland's orture taxi connection back in the news
by Michael Munk
Thu, Jun 26, 2008
|
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Oregon war casualties rise to 621
by Michael Munk
Tue, Jun 24, 2008
|
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OR-WA senators sign on to attack Iran
by Michael Munk
Mon, Jun 23, 2008
|
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Oregon poll: Obama 48%, McCain 45%
by Michael Munk
Mon, Jun 23, 2008
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Pete Seeger at Wappinger Falls, NY
by Michael Munk
Sun, Jun 22, 2008
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MoveOn to Obama: Fight, don't capitulate on FISA
by Michael Munk
Sun, Jun 22, 2008
|
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Future of US Occupation at stake
by Michael Munk
Sat, Jun 21, 2008
|
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OR Dems vote against spying bill
by Michael Munk
Fri, Jun 20, 2008
|
On the vote passing the FISA spying bill, all Oregon Dems (Blumenauser,
Hooley, DeFazio and Wu) were among 128 Dems voting against, while the
insufferable Baird joined 105 Dems (and 188 Reps)to support it.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Student looking for enviro law work
by Michael Munk
Fri, Jun 20, 2008
|
Passing on this request for a friend. Anybody knows liklet law firms in =
Portland? Cheers, Mike
Hello all,
As most of you know, my daughter Brooke just graduated from the U of O =
and is currently looking for work. She plans to live in Portland and =
attend law school in the fall of '09 aiming toward a degree in =
environmental law. Consequently,her first job choice would be employment =
with a law firm that doesenvironmental work. Her second choice would be =
most any law firm and her third choice would be most any job.
Anyway, I was hoping that one of you might know of something or know =
someone who might know someone who could harness Brooke's =
skills,=EF=BF=BDexperience, =
and=EF=BF=BDunbridled=EF=BF=BDenergy.=EF=BF=BD
Thank you all very much for the consideration your giving Brooke.
George =EF=BF=BD =EF=BF=BD =EF=BF=BD =EF=BF=BD =EF=BF=BD =EF=BF=BD =
=EF=BF=BD415 927 8366
BROOKE A. DAVIDSON
1480 Hilyard Street=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BDEugene, OR =
97401=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD(415) =
497-4118=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BDbrooke.a.davidson@gmail.com
Education
Bachelor of Arts in History and International =
Studies=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BDMinor: Peace Studies
University of Oregon, Eugene, OR (2008)
=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BDA=
ffiliations: National Society of Collegiate Scholars, Dean=EF=BF=BDs =
List
=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BDL=
anguages: Intermediate Spanish, Beginning Arabic
=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BDR=
esearched and wrote paper concerning the role of conscientious objectors =
in Great Britain during the Great War for=EF=BF=BDHistory Seminar
=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BDG=
PA: 3.7
=EF=BF=BD
Legal and Administrative Experience
=EF=BF=BD
Administrative Intern, Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide (2007 =
=EF=BF=BD Current)
a.. Researched international environmental issues for attorneys and =
focused on dam and port development.
b.. Assisted with administrative duties such as mailing and =
photocopying legal resources to international organizations
c.. Developed spreadsheets to document financial transactions and =
track donors
d.. Collaborated with co-workers to provide outreach services for =
legal groups fighting for the global environment
=EF=BF=BD
Democratic Party of Oregon Field Internship (2008 =EF=BF=BD Current)
a.. Provided support to projects run by the Lane County Democratic =
Party
b.. Served the party by making phone calls, creating documents for =
canvassing, and writing memos
c.. Collaborated on 2008 Presidential and State election
=EF=BF=BD
Administrative Assistant, University of Oregon Office of Academic =
Advising (2006 =EF=BF=BD 2007)=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD
a.. Answered and directed phone calls and drop ins from the University =
community in fast paced office
b.. Scheduled appointments for eleven counselors
c.. Addressed and resolved various issues for anxious students while =
maintaining a pleasant temperament
d.. Demonstrated ability to multitask while managing schedule and =
completing special projects
e.. Adapted and helped improve office=EF=BF=BDs switch to new =
electronic system
=EF=BF=BD
International and Community Development Experience
=EF=BF=BD
Sustainable Community Developer, Santa Lucia Ecolodge, Nanegal, Ecuador =
(2007)
a.. Assisted twelve local families=EF=BF=BD work towards goal of a =
sustainable future through projects such as trail maintenance, painting, =
coffee bean and sugar cane harvesting, and weeding
b.. Communicated with member families to ensure quality of work
=EF=BF=BD
Education Volunteer, Sociedad de Beneficencia de Trujillo, Peru (2007)
a.. Organized activities with group of twenty, five year old children =
from broken homes
b.. Overcame lack of resources and language barrier to facilitate =
projects
c.. Initiated beautification projects with other volunteers to =
encourage learning and pride
=EF=BF=BD
Safety Promoter, Assault Prevention Shuttle, University of Oregon (2006 =
=EF=BF=BD Current)
a.. Drove students to requested destination in order to prevent =
assault=EF=BF=BD
b.. Ensured safety and organization by adapting to changing schedule =
and understanding the personal needs of riders
=EF=BF=BD
Mentor, Committed Partners for Youth, Eugene, OR (2007)
a.. Served as a mentor to twelve year old with education and family =
difficulties
b.. Strengthened self worth, interpersonal skills, and value placed in =
education by coordinating compatible and fun =
activities=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD
c.. Maintained communication to help inspire change
=EF=BF=BD
Coach, Ninja Turtle Soccer Team, Eugene, OR (2007)
a.. Organized and attended practices and games=EF=BF=BD=EF=BF=BD
b.. Collaborated with parents to organize schedules and snacks
c.. Facilitated an understanding of team sports and cooperation
=EF=BF=BD
=EF=BF=BD
Other Employment
a.. Steve and Kate=EF=BF=BDs Camp, Counselor, Mill Valley, CA (2005)
b.. YMCA, Basketball Scorekeeper, Eugene, OR (2005)
c.. Noah=EF=BF=BDs Bagels, Cashier and Bagel Chef (2002 =EF=BF=BD =
2004)
=EF=BF=BD
Personal Strengths and Interests
a.. Strong work ethic, initiative, enthusiastic, learn quickly, =
conscientious, computer savvy
b.. Reading, world travel, peace, friends and family, enjoying nature, =
creating change
That's Brooke - the second one in from your left, between her boyfriend =
Ross and Katy in green.
|
Portland Rally for Peace in Somalia Monday, June 30, 4:30 PM
by Michael Munk
Thu, Jun 19, 2008
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Confirmned: Iraq is all about Oil
by Michael Munk
Thu, Jun 19, 2008
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Poll shows Clinton gaining in Oregon
by Michael Munk
Fri, May 16, 2008
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Tonight! Zinn's Peoples History in Portland
by Michael Munk
Fri, May 16, 2008
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Good ridance to Hooley!
by Michael Munk
Thu, May 15, 2008
|
Blumenauer, DeFazio and Wu voted with the 147 Dems (and two Reps) against
funding Bush's wars. Hooley was among the 85 Dems who voted for it (most
Reps voted "present" in protest).
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Sunday: Barack in Portland
by Michael Munk
Thu, May 15, 2008
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527 spending for Clinton in Oregon?
by Michael Munk
Wed, May 14, 2008
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Public Power Coalition backs Vicki Walker
by Michael Munk
Tue, May 13, 2008
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Oregonians for Obama; Kulongoski for McCain?
by Michael Munk
Tue, May 13, 2008
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Clintonite Kulongoski welcomes MCain
by Michael Munk
Mon, May 12, 2008
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May 18: Lloyd Reynolds honored
by Michael Munk
Mon, May 12, 2008
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Mike Munk notes: This promises to be an interesting program about Lloyd =
Reynolds' calligraphy, but the following publicity pointedly ignores =
Lloyd's role in Portland as a radical acitivist and intellectual. His =
Marxist approach to literature and art is responsible for much of his =
influence on his students, including Portlanders such as poet Gary =
Snyder,social scientist Dell Hymes and blacklisted screen writer Ben =
Barzman. It is to the enduring shame of the Reed College administration =
and trustees that they suspended and humiliated Lloyd after he =
righteously stood up against the witch hunters of the House UnAmerican =
acitiviities Committee in 1954. To this day, Oregon's celebration of =
Lloyd Reynolds is limited to his calligraphy and, perhaps to avoid =
embarrassment, unfortunately prefers to hide the core political and =
intellectual commitments of his life.
For an account of his treatment by Reed, see my "Oregon Tests Academic =
Freedom in (Cold) Wartime" Oregon Historical Quarterly, (Fall, 1956) in =
which this photo appeared. My essay about Lloyd's humiliation by Reed, =
which was rejected by the Reed alumni magazine, is avaialble from me on =
request.
M E D I A A D V I S O R Y
F O R I M M E D I A T E R E L E A S E
=20
The public and press is invited to Welcome to the Scriptorium:=20
Calligrapher and Teacher Lloyd Reynolds
=20
What: A free program sponsored by the Oregon Cultural Heritage=20
Commission and the Portland Society for Calligraphy
=20
An exhibition of Lloyd Reynolds=92s calligraphy and books will be on =
view=20
and rare footage from the 1976 television series produced by Oregon=20
Public Broadcasting will be shown.
=20
When: Sunday, May 18, 2008 at 3 p.m.
=20
Where: First Unitarian Church, S.W. 12th and Salmon
=20
Who: Internationally-known calligrapher Lloyd J. Reynolds [1902-1978]=20
taught at Reed College for forty years 1929 to 1969 and at the =
Portland=20
Art Museum School beginning in 1950. He founded the Western Branch of=20
the Society for Italic Handwriting in 1968. That organization today is =
known as the Portland Society for Calligraphy. Reynolds continued=20
teaching in the community following his retirement. In 1972 Oregon=20
Governor Tom McCall honored Reynolds as the world=92s first =
calligrapher=20
laureate and in 1977, he received the Aubrey R. Watzek Award from =
Lewis=20
& Clark College. Reynold=92s lasting legacy was his ability to teach =
and=20
engage his students in his creative writing, art history or studio art =
classes.
=20
Why: Few creative figures have had the local and global impact of Reed =
College=92s legendary professor Lloyd Reynolds, Oregon=92s only =
calligrapher=20
laureate, whose holistic humanist view influenced and inspired=20
generations of calligraphers, teachers, type designers, artists, poets =
and writers including: poets William Stafford, Carolyn Kizer and Gary=20
Snyder, Apple computer=92s Steve Jobs, screenwriter Ben Barzman, type=20
designer Chuck Bigelow and thousands of others.
=20
Presenters are: Bill Gunderson, Bettye Lou Bennett, Inga Dubay, Jaki=20
Svaren, Barbara Getty, Margot Voorhies Thompson, Kim Stafford and=20
invited special guests
=20
For further information: www.portlandcalligraphy.org, www.ochcom.org, =
or=20
contact 503.285.8279, email lleonard@hevanet.com
=20
=20
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Correction: Bradbury still on sideline
by Michael Munk
Sun, May 11, 2008
|
I made a mistake in my recent post about Oregon's superdelegates.
Bradbury has NOT declared (I thought he declared some ago for Clinton) and
therefore two elected supers--Bradbury and Wyden--remain on the sidelines.
The
rest are four Dem party functionaries and an OEA leader.Lineup remains:
Clinton-Kulongoski and Hooley, Obama: Blumenauer, Wu and DeFazio.
One more will be selected by the Dems after the primary.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Krugman lectures the wrong target
by Michael Munk
Sat, May 10, 2008
|
To the editor, The Oregonian:
After your front page hede "Obama attacks McCain, Clinton continues her
primary fight," (May 10) I was shocked to read Paul Krugman's column
"Thinking about November." He expresses his regret that Hillary Clinton's
campaign for the Democratic nomination has faded by lecturing Barack Obama
about "squandering " his chances against John McCaine if he attacks
Clinton.
But as your hede make clear, Krugman chose the wrong target. It is Clinton
who is still trying to play Demorats against each other by race, class and
sex.
Witness Clinton's recent claim that Obama can't attract the "Hard working
white
working class" as if she thinks the Black working class is lazy.
Michael Munk
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Gordon looks vulnerable
by Michael Munk
Sat, May 10, 2008
|
Rasmussen: Oregon GOP Senator Only Narrowly Ahead Of Two Dems
By Eric Kleefeld - May 10, 2008
http://tpmelectioncentral.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/05/rasmussen_oregon_gop_senator_o.php
A new poll shows another Republican senator just slightly ahead of the
opposition, another sign that the Senate GOP will have to seriously play on
defense this year.
The new Rasmussen poll of Oregon has two-term Sen. Gordon Smith below 50%
against state House Speaker Jeff Merkley and Democratic activist Steve
Novick:
Smith (R) 45%, Merkley (D) 42% Smith (R) 47%, Novick (D) 41%
Smith is a relative GOP moderate who has turned against the Bush
Administration on many Iraq-related votes. However, this remains a state
that is likely to go Democratic in the Fall, so he'll need quite a few
ticket-splitters to get across the finish line.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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DeFazio: better late than never
by Michael Munk
Fri, May 9, 2008
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Jim Middaugh on taking PGE public
by Michael Munk
Fri, May 9, 2008
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Oregon war casualties rise to 611
by Michael Munk
Wed, May 7, 2008
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Obama ahead in Oregon
by Michael Munk
Sat, May 3, 2008
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Impeach Team Scoring Points in Oregon Congressional Primaries
by Michael Munk
Sat, May 3, 2008
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Big O fails ILWU war protest
by Michael Munk
Fri, May 2, 2008
|
The ILWU May Day shutdown of west coast ports to protest the Iraq war is =
a major challenge to the trade union movement to stand up against the =
occupation. The Big O's coverage illustrates the disasterous results of =
inexperienced reporters and editors trying to construct a phoney =
"balanced" narrative in a story that can't be "balanced" by straight =
reporting. They ended up buying into the spin from the PMA and Port of =
Portland and preventing their readers from understanding how labor could =
actually shut down the war machine. Read it and weep.
Longshoremen defy work order, stay off the job on May Day=20
Effect on Port of Portland is scant, while dockworkers in the midst of =
contract talks protest the war in Iraq
May 2, 2008 The Oregonian
By AMY HSUAN =20
For about eight hours Thursday, up and down the West Coast, shipyards =
stood quiet, rail cars stopped and trucks scheduled for deliveries and =
pickups were turned back at the port gates.=20
Ten thousand dockworkers -- including about 200 in the Portland area -- =
took May Day off in defiance of labor contracts, bringing 29 ports from =
San Diego to Seattle to a standstill. Union leaders said they wanted to =
stage a protest against U.S. involvement in the Iraq war, but port =
operators speculated that a big reason for the walkout is to demonstrate =
union solidarity in the midst of labor negotiations.=20
Operations at the Port of Portland, Oregon's largest port, were =
minimally affected since no cargo ships arrived Thursday.=20
The show of force by the longshoremen's union comes despite an =
independent arbitrator's ruling Wednesday in California that the workers =
had a contractual obligation "to report to work as they normally do."=20
The 25,000-member International Longshore and Warehouse Union and the =
Pacific Maritime Association, representing port operators and large =
shippers, are just two months away from the expiration of their labor =
contract.=20
Union leaders say the decision to ditch work Thursday wasn't meant to be =
a negotiating tactic, but a show of support for an end to the Iraq war =
on a day that's historically represented solidarity in organized labor.=20
In Portland, chants of "No peace, no work," echoed from the Eastbank =
Esplanade around noon, where 70 dockworkers set 800 carnations afloat in =
the Willamette River, commemorating the deaths of more than 4,000 U.S. =
soldiers who have died.=20
"A lot of longshore workers are veterans and have family and friends in =
the war, and they're fed up," said Jennifer Sargent, a local union =
spokeswoman. "They're taking a patriotic stand here."=20
But representatives of the Pacific Maritime Association, whose members =
include 72 shipping companies, say that the message union leaders are =
sending is not entirely about the war.=20
"Is this a voluntary war protest or a strike aimed at leveraging labor =
negotiations? We're not sure," said Steve Getzug, spokesman for the =
employer group based in Los Angeles.=20
In January, 100 elected union leaders representing West Coast workers =
passed a resolution to take a stand on the Iraq war, which was disputed =
by the Pacific Maritime Association.=20
John Kagel, the coast arbitrator, listened to both sides in a meeting =
last week and in two telephone calls Wednesday. Kagel ultimately ruled =
that the workers had to show up to work.=20
"When an arbitrator makes a decision, that decision is final and =
binding," Kagel said.=20
Union leaders took a different view. "We respect the arbitration =
process, but the union also recognizes the rights of our members to =
exercise their right to free speech," said John Showalter, spokesman for =
the ILWU in San Francisco. "This is completely independent of contract =
negotiations. The members are not being paid today. The negotiations =
today are going well and we hope they continue going smoothly."=20
At the Port of Portland's terminals, the absence of workers Thursday was =
a minor hiccup in the daily flow of goods from dock to door.=20
No container ships or barges were scheduled to arrive in the Port on =
Thursday, said Joshua Thomas, Port spokesman. Most of the activity in =
the shipping yards or on the docks occurs when a ship arrives bearing =
goods. That ship is unloaded and then immediately loaded up with Oregon =
exports by dockworkers.=20
"Without container ships, that work would have been minimal or none," =
Thomas said. The Port opened the docks and yard at 7 a.m. Thursday and =
closed them shortly after when it became clear the dockworkers weren't =
going to show.=20
But in larger ports such as Los Angeles and Long Beach in California, =
where 15 ships were due to dock, the lull could amount to millions of =
extra dollars and a logistical nightmare, said John Martin, a maritime =
economist.=20
"Essentially, any type of dislocation like this in the supply chain is =
significant," Martin said. "There are ships that cost between $100,000 =
to $150,000 a day at hold. They're on a strict sailing schedule. =
Truckers are waiting. There's an impact on the rails. There are a lot of =
people who aren't going to be paid today."=20
In 2002, contract negotiations between the longshoremen's union and the =
association resulted in a 10-day shut down at 29 West Coast ports.=20
Every day, about $5.5 billion worth of goods move in and out of U.S. =
ports. About half move through West Coast ports, which support 7.1 =
million jobs each year and account for $1.2 trillion, or about 10 =
percent of the entire gross domestic product in the United States, =
according to the American Association of Port Authorities.=20
Aaron Ellis, spokesman for the association, said when dockworkers don't =
show, it sends an uncertain message to major trading partners overseas =
who are already uneasy about the U.S. economy.=20
"Ports always want to work toward a stable and reliable work force," =
Ellis said. "Things like this make the whole nation less attractive for =
international markets."=20
The union's defiance of the arbitrator's order could have far-reaching =
implications in its contract negotiations, said Portland attorney Chrys =
A. Martin, who specializes in labor law and is a shareholder of =
Bullivant, Houser and Bailey.=20
The association now has the right to file a complaint with the National =
Labor Relations Board, which can enforce monetary sanctions against the =
union.=20
"They know they're not supposed to do this," Martin said. "They've been =
told not to do this by an arbitrator. It's a clear violation. At the =
same time, it's hard to make people come to work."=20
Stuart Tomlinson contributed to this story. Amy Hsuan: 503-294-5137 =
amyhsuan@news.oregonian.com=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Red Guide wins two design awards
by Michael Munk
Wed, Apr 30, 2008
|
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Oregonians in the Lincoln Brigade
by Michael Munk
Mon, Apr 28, 2008
|
To the Oregonian editor:
RE: "Memorial honors U.S. vets of Spanish Civil War" (A4, April 27).
The new San Francisco memorial honors the "premature" anti fascist vets of
the
Lincoln Brigade. If the US had not appeased Hitler long before Munich and
instead responded to pleas for help from democratic Spain against Franco's
fascist invasion, the Nazis might have been stopped and world War II
avoided. Instead, the West abandoned Spain and left it to volunteers from
around the world organzied mainly by Communist parties to challenge
Germany and Italy and prevent them from practicing their "blitzkrieg"
against
a civilian population..
The San Francisco memorial, however, is not the first to honor those vets
in their homeland; several years ago a monument to local vets was erected
at
the University of Washington in Seattle.
News of the new memorial also reminds us that at least eleven Oregonians
fought against fascism in Spain. One of them, 25 year old William Newton
Miller, who grew up on a farm near Dayton, was killed in one of the last
battles of the Lincoln brigade. Among the others were a seaman, Astoria
Finns, a labor leader from Klamath Falls, a youth organizer from Irrigon
and two Reed College students. Virginia Malbin, who went to Spain as a
social
worker, moved to Portland afterwards and still lives here. The Lincoln vets
.
one and all, they deserve our honor and respect. You can look them up in my
Portland Red Guide (pp110-111).
Michael Munk
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Thursday: an active May Day in Portland
by Michael Munk
Sun, Apr 27, 2008
|
Noon: ILWU war protest back on!
Noon, east end of the Burnside bridge: Flowers in the River by ILWU =
Local 8 Rank and File
Stop the War! Bring the troops home now!
May first is International Workers Day, celebrated the world over to =
remember the fight for the eight hour day in the United States. Local 8 =
rank and file have long opposed the War on Iraq . We are lifting our =
voices once again against this war that should never have begun in the =
first place and continues as a means to secure oil from the East to feed =
the power-hungry West. More than 4,000 U.S. Soldiers and at least =
100,000 Iraqi citizens have died.=20
In protest of this terrible carnage.this year Local 8 rank and file =
will place 800 flowers in the Willamette River, each one representing 5 =
U.S. soldiers dead. We would like to remember also the Iraqi dead, but =
flowers to represent them would fill the river.=20
This Flowers in the River event will take place on the floating dock =
just North of the Burnside Bridge. There is a stairway from the Burnside =
Bridge going down to the Esplanade on the South side of the bridge above =
the east bank. There is also access at the East end of the Morrison =
Bridge.
ILWU Local 8 Rank and File are also co-sponsoring the 4pm Rally and =
March for Immigrants Rights and Workers' Rights.
All are welcome.Please contact Peter Parks for further information: =
503-896-0508, peterparks@speakeasy.net.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------=
-------------------------------------------------------------------------=
---------------------------
May Day March
4:00 PM (Rally and March)
South Park Blocks
SW Park and Salmon
A day of solidarity for workers' rights and immigrants' rights
The annual march to support workers and immigrants, sponsored by the =
Portland=20
Immigrant Rights Coalition. Stop the war on working people at home and =
abroad!=20
Rally starts at 4 pm, march starts at 5 pm.
Contact: Marco Mejia of the Portland Immigrant Rights Coalition (503) =
780-3672=20
for more information.
Groups involved in planning include American Friends Service Committee, =
Voz,=20
and Portland Jobs with Justice.
With national and local candidates jockeying to prove who is most=20
anti-immigrant, the demand to find a solution to the 12 million =
undocumented=20
migrant workers and their families living in the shadows has been =
buried. We=20
renew our call for just reform, and a stop to the war on immigrants and =
wars=20
abroad. We further call on elected leaders to:
* Restore Oregon Driving Privileges to Undocumented Immigrants
* Stop Workplace Raids and Deportations
* Give legalization to all immigrant workers
* Oppose Anti-immigrant Ordinances and Legislation
* Stop the militarization of U.S. borders
* Protect Immigrant and Worker Rights
We call on ALL immigrant rights, labor and peace advocates to join us =
this May=20
Day (Thursday, May 1st , 2008) to continue efforts to build solidarity =
between=20
three powerful, interconnected movements: the immigrants' rights =
movement, the=20
peace movement, and the workers' rights movement.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------=
--------------------------------------------------------
and after the march:
May Day at the Box
Springbox Gallery May 1, 6-9PM
2376 NW Thurman, Portland 97210
503.228.1600
contact
"Midnight at the White Eagle Cafe" by Mitchell Freifeld, oil on canvas=20
Opening reception for Mitchell Freifeld's new works inspired by Michael =
Munk's book, "The Portland Red Guide: Sites & Stories from Our Radical =
Past" (Ooligan Press) Mike and his book will be here.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
I hear Oregon is nice this time of year
by Michael Munk
Sat, Apr 26, 2008
|
|
Is any candidate committed to progressive reform of Oregon's
income tax?
by Michael Munk
Sat, Apr 26, 2008
|
Oregon State and Local Taxes Hit Poor and Middle Class Harder Than Rich,
Study Finds
(Silverton) - Oregon state and local taxes take a bigger bite out of the
pocketbooks of poor and middle-class families than those of wealthy
families, according to a new analysis released today by the Oregon Center
for Public Policy (OCPP).
The figures were compiled for OCPP by the Washington, DC-based Institute on
Taxation and Economic Policy. OCPP is presenting the information today to a
state task force examining how to restructure Oregon's tax system.
"Oregon's tax system is upside down," said OCPP policy analyst Michael
Leachman. "A tax system promotes opportunity when it is based on ability to
pay. But in Oregon, those who can afford to pay more wind up paying the
smallest share of their income."
Adding up all state and local taxes, Oregon's low-income families had an
effective tax rate of 9.2 percent, compared to an effective rate of 7.8
percent paid by Oregon's wealthiest 1 percent of families.
The effective tax rate paid by Oregon's wealthiest families falls further,
to 6.7 percent, when federal deductions for state income and property taxes
are taken into account.
Though faring better than the poorest families, middle-income families in
Oregon are also paying a larger share of their income than the wealthiest
families. Families in the middle had an effective tax rate of 8.4 percent
before federal tax offsets and 7.9 percent when factoring in the federal
deductions.
According to Leachman, the bigger impact on poor and middle-class incomes is
due to the income tax system going easy on the wealthy and to state and
local property taxes and excise taxes, such as gasoline and cigarette taxes,
eating up a larger share of the income of families in the middle and bottom
than of those at the top.
Oregon's wealthy don't pay significantly more in income taxes because Oregon's
income tax brackets and rates are flat compared to the federal system and
the wealthy can fully use Oregon's subtraction for federal income taxes paid
when calculating taxable income, said Leachman.
Even though the wealthy tend to own more valuable homes, the wealthiest 1
percent of Oregon families paid only 1.2 percent of their income in property
taxes, compared to 2.6 percent for middle-income families and 4.6 percent
for the poorest families.
The analysis comes as a task force created by the state legislature and
appointed by the governor is reviewing Oregon's tax system. The Revenue
Restructuring Task Force, which includes as one of its members OCPP
executive director Chuck Sheketoff, is expected to issue its recommendations
this November for the 2009 legislature.
Among the key changes recommended by OCPP is making our tax system more fair
by expanding the Earned Income Credit, a tax credit that's targeted at
boosting the income of low-income working families.
"The task force has a great opportunity to respond to the imbalance in our
tax system and foster opportunity for low-income working Oregonians," said
Sheketoff.
The Oregon Center for Public Policy is a non-partisan research institute
that does in-depth research and analysis on budget, tax, and economic
issues. The Center's goal is to improve decision making and generate more
opportunities for all Oregonians.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
May 1: Freifeld's Red Guide paintings opens
by Michael Munk
Fri, Apr 25, 2008
|
"Midnight at the White Eagle Cafe" by Mitchell Freifeld, oil on canvas=20
May Day at the Box
Springbox Gallery May 1, 6-9PM
2376 NW Thurman, Portland 97210
503.228.1600
contact
Mitchell Freifeld's new works inspired by Michael Munk's book, "The =
Portland Red Guide: Sites & Stories from Our Radical Past" (Ooligan =
Press) Mike and his book will be here.
and sculptor, R.J. Travis Pond, unveils his 3/4 ton steel wolf...=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
A misguided comment on Hitler's birthday
by Michael Munk
Sun, Apr 20, 2008
|
|
Bad news: Local 8 pulls out
by Michael Munk
Sat, Apr 19, 2008
|
|
EPIC Alert: Oregon citizen surveillance center
by Michael Munk
Fri, Apr 18, 2008
|
|
Munk One explains...
by Michael Munk
Fri, Apr 18, 2008
|
Here's Munk One's explanation of why he (Jose A. Mercado, an LA artist) =
chose that name.
----- Original Message -----=20
From: MUNK ONE / munkone.com=20
To: Michael Munk=20
Sent: Friday, April 18, 2008 11:19 AM
Subject: Re: Why?
Hey Mike,
Thanks for the email. I honestly just liked the way it sounded as I =
wasn't to fond of my real name for Art purposes. Sorry there isn't more =
to it. Great work by the way, I found your site very interesting.=20
Be well.
-M1
MUNK ONE
Fine Art . Illustration . Tattoos
Website - www.MUNKONE.com=20
Myspace - www.myspace.com/munkone
Mobile - (626) 433-3442 AIM - munkone
|
MoveOn Petition: The ABC debate travesty
by Michael Munk
Thu, Apr 17, 2008
|
|
Shame on ABC!
by Michael Munk
Thu, Apr 17, 2008
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An Open Letter to Charlie Gibson and George Stephanapoulos
By Will Bunch
The Philadelphia Daily News
Thursday 17 April 2008
Dear Charlie Gibson and George Stephanopoulos,
It's hard to know where to begin with this, less than an hour after you
signed off from your Democratic presidential debate here in my hometown of
Philadelphia, a televised train wreck that my friend and colleague Greg
Mitchell has already called, quite accurately, "a shameful night for the
U.S. media." It's hard because - like many other Americans - I am still
angry at what I just witnesses, so angry that it's hard to even type
accurately because my hands are shaking. Look, I know that "media
criticism" - especially when it's one journalist speaking to another -
tends to be a genteel, colleagial thing, but there's no genteel way to say
this.
With your performance tonight - your focus on issues that were at best
trivial wastes of valuable airtime and at worst restatements of right-wing
falsehoods, punctuated by inane "issue" questions that in no way resembled
the real world concerns of American voters - you disgraced my profession
of journalism, and, by association, me and a lot of hard-working
colleagues who do still try to ferret out the truth, rather than worry
about who can give us the best deal on our capital gains taxes. But it's
even worse than that. By so badly botching arguably the most critical
debate of such an important election, in a time of both war and economic
misery, you disgraced the American voters, and in fact even disgraced
democracy itself. Indeed, if I were a citizen of one of those nations
where America is seeking to "export democracy," and I had watched the
debate, I probably would have said, "no thank you." Because that was no
way to promote democracy.
You implied throughout the broadcast that you wanted to reflect the
concerns of voters in Pennsylvania. Well, I'm a Pennsylvanian voter, and
so are my neighbors and most of my friends and co-workers. You asked
virtually nothing that reflected our everyday issues - trying to fill our
gas tanks and save for college at the same time, our crumbling bridges and
inadequate mass transit, or the root causes of crime here in Philadelphia.
In fact, there almost isn't enough space - and this is cyberspace, where
room is unlimited - to list all the things you could have asked about but
did not, from health care to climate change to alternative energy to our
policy toward China to the deterioration of Afghanistan to veterans'
benefits to improving education. You ignored virtually everything that
just happened in what most historians agree is one of the worst
presidencies in American history, including the condoning of torture and
the trashing of the Constitution, although to be fair you also ignored the
policy concerns of people on the right, like immigration issues.
You asked about gun control - phrased to try for a "gotcha" in a state
where that's such a divisive issue - but not about what we really care
about, which is how to reduce crime. You pressed and pressed on those
capital gains taxes, but Senators Clinton and Obama were forced to bring
up the housing crisis on their own initiative.
Instead, you wasted more than half of the debate - a full hour - on
tabloid trivia that for the most part wasn't even that interesting,
because most of it was infertile ground that has already been covered
again and again and again. I'm not saying that Rev. Wright and Bosnia
sniper fire and "bitter" were never newsworthy - I myself wrote about all
of these for the Philadelphia Daily News or my Attytood blog, back when
they were more relevant - but the questions were stale yet clearly
intended to gin up controversy (they didn't, by the way, other than the
controversy over you.) The final questions of that section, asking Obama
whether he thought Rev. Wright "loved America" and then suggesting that
Obama himself is somehow a hater of the American flag, or worse, were
flat-out repulsive.
Are you even thinking when simply echo some of the vilest talking
points from far-right talk radio? What are actually getting at - do you
honestly believe that someone with a solid track record as a lawmaker in a
Heartland state which elected him to the U.S. Senate, who is now seeking
to make some positive American history as our first black president, is
somehow un-American, or unpatriotic? Does that even make any sense?
Question his policies, or question his leadership. Because that is your
job as a journalist. But don't insult our intelligence by questioning his
patriotism.
Here's a question for you, George. Is it true that yesterday you
appeared on the radio with conservative talk radio host Sean Hannity, and
that you said you were "taking notes" when he urged you to ask a question
about Obama's supposed ties to a former member of the Weather
Underground - which in fact you did. With all the fabulous resources of
ABC News at your disposal, is that an appropriate way for a supposed
journalist to come up with debate questions, by pandering to divisive
radio shows?
And Charlie...could you be any more out of touch with your viewers?
Most people aren't millionaires like you, and if Pennsylvanians are losing
sleep over economic matters, it is not over whether the capital gains tax
will go back up again. I was a little shocked when you pressed and pressed
on that back-burner issue and left almost no time for high gas prices, but
then I learned tonight that you did the same thing in the last debate,
that you fretted over that middle-class family that made $200,000 a year.
Charlie, the nicest way that I can put this is that you need to get out
more.
But I'm not ready to make nice. What I just watched was an outrage. As
a journalist, you appeared to confirm all of the worst qualities that
cause people to hold our profession in such low esteem, especially your
obsession with cornering the candidates with lame "trick" questions and
your complete lack of interest or concern about substance - or about the
American people, or the state of our nation. You embarassed some good
people who work at ABC News - for example, the journalists who worked hard
to break this story just last week - and you embarassed yourselves. The
millions of people who watched the debate were embarassed, too - at the
state of our political discourse, and what it has finally become, at long
last.
Quickly, a word to any and all of my fellow journalists who happen to
read this open letter. This. Must . Stop. Tonight, if possible. I thought
that we had hit rock bottom in March 2003, when we failed to ask the tough
questions in the run-up to the Iraq war. But this feels even lower. We
need to pick ourselves up, right now, and start doing our job - to take a
deep breath and remind ourselves of what voters really need to know, and
how we get there, that's it's not all horserace and "gotcha." Although, to
be blunt, I would also urge the major candidates in 2012 to agree only to
debates that are organized by the League of Women Voters, with citizen
moderators and questioners. Because we have proven without a doubt in 2008
that working journalists don't deserve to be the debate "deciders."
Charlie, I'm going to sign off this letter the way that you always sign
off the news, that "I hope you had a great day."
Because America just had a horrible night.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Munk One (?) on Obama
by Michael Munk
Thu, Apr 17, 2008
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https://www.stonehousedigital.com/stores/upperplayground/category/Posters=
+%26+Prints/details/UP81508PT/263855aaf80b2eec6adb87e89888174d/1532114
1 FIFTY24SF SCREEN PRINTED POSTER: MUNK ONE X BARACK OBAMA
Product #UP81508PT=20
THESE PRINTS ARE SIGNED AND NUMBERED BY MUNK ONE. THESE ARE PRE-SELL =
ITEMS AND WILL NOT BE SHIPPED OUT UNTIL APRIL 21, 2008.
18"X24"
THE 008 AND UPPER PLAYGROUND PARTNER WITH SAM FLORES AND MUNK ONE TO =
SUPPORT BARACK OBAMA
In an ongoing effort to secure Democratic hopeful Barack Obama's =
presidential bid, The 008 and Upper Playground have collaborated with =
Munk One to create new limited screenprints of the artist's portrait of =
Obama. The Munk One posters are part of an ongoing series of artist =
collaborations in support of Barack Obama's presidential campaign.=20
The Munk One limited screenprints are now available for purchase online =
through www.upperplayground.com. The posters will be signed and numbered =
by the artist and are made at a limited quantity of 200, with each =
retailing for $200. Each poster is a pre-sale item and will not ship =
until April 21, 2008. All proceeds from the sales of each design from =
Munk One Obama posters will go directly to creating more campaign =
T-shirts, posters and stickers by other artists in support of Obama's =
bid for President. Currently, the Munk One design is being used in bus =
shelter and billboard advertisements throughout Philadelphia prior to =
the primary in Pennsylvania on April 22, 2008.=20
Upper Playground recently endorsed Obama's campaign by creating posters =
featuring artwork from The Date Farmers and Mac, as well as printing =
T-shirts with Shepard Fairey's Obama poster graphics to help support the =
campaign.
The 008, Sam Flores, Munk One and Upper Playground would like to thank =
everyone who continues their support of the Barack Obama campaign.
PRICE: $200.00
SELECT A COLOR=20
=20
=20
=20
=20
=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Seattle protests Dalai Lama
by Michael Munk
Tue, Apr 15, 2008
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[alliancefordemocracy] Wu opposes Columbia Free Trade Agreement
by Michael Munk
Thu, Apr 10, 2008
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605 Oregon war casualties
by Michael Munk
Tue, Apr 8, 2008
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KATU poll: Obama up by 10 in Oregon
by Michael Munk
Tue, Apr 8, 2008
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Vicki Walker for Oregon Sec of State
by Michael Munk
Fri, Apr 4, 2008
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Oregon Dem Endorsements.
by Michael Munk
Fri, Apr 4, 2008
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reporters who live in glass houses...
by Michael Munk
Mon, Mar 31, 2008
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Jim Yardley wrote about China on A1 of the NYTimes March 31:
If the tough tactics have startled the outside world, the Communist Party
for now seems more concerned with rallying domestic opinion - both by
responding to the deep strains of nationalism in Chinese society and by
stoking it. Playing to national pride, and national insecurities, the
party has used censorship and propaganda to position itself as defender of
the motherland, and at the same time to block any examination of Tibetan
grievances or its own performance in the crisis.
:http//www.nytimes.com/2008/03/31/world/asia/31china.html
We can easily apply his words to his own country:
If the tough tactics have startled the outside world, the Bush
Administration for now seems more concerned with rallying domestic
opinion - both by responding to the deep strains of nationalism in
American society and by stoking it. Playing to national pride, and
national insecurities, President Bush has used censorship and propaganda
to position himself as defender of the homeland, and at the same time to
block any examination of Muslim grievances or its own performance in the
Middle East crisis.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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April 1-3 events in Vancouver
by Michael Munk
Fri, Mar 28, 2008
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May Day: ILWU to Shut Down Port of Portland Demanding End to War
by Michael Munk
Thu, Mar 27, 2008
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April 1 at Reed: Israeli, Palestinian speak on 60 years of
disposession
by Michael Munk
Wed, Mar 26, 2008
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MLK and Wright
by Michael Munk
Sat, Mar 22, 2008
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Five years in: US Iraq casualties c. 85,000
by Michael Munk
Sat, Mar 22, 2008
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Richardson to join Obama in Portland
by Michael Munk
Fri, Mar 21, 2008
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Latest Oregon Dem poll
by Michael Munk
Thu, Mar 20, 2008
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If there were an election for President of the United States today, =
and the only two names on the ballot were Republican John McCain and ... =
Democrat Hillary Clinton, who would you vote for? =20
524 Registered Voters All Gender Age Race Party Affiliation =
Ideology Abortion Does US Need a D Gun Ownership Attend Religious =
Service Evangelical? Top Issue For Next President Region=20
Margin of Sampling Error: =B1 4.4% Male Female 18-34 35-49 50-64 =
65+ White Black Hispanic Other Republic Democrat Independ Conserva =
Moderate Liberal Pro-life Pro-choi Need Not Need Yes No Regularl =
Occasion Almost N Yes No Economy Environm Health C Iraq Terroris Social =
S Educatio Immigrat Portland Rest of =20
McCain 44% 53% 36% 41% 45% 45% 47% 46% 47% 22% 39% 82% 14% 35% 87% =
37% 14% 69% 29% 50% 42% 54% 35% 56% 40% 36% 62% 38% 47% 21% 26% 25% 93% =
41% 31% 64% 43% 47%=20
Clinton 50% 42% 57% 55% 48% 48% 46% 47% 52% 77% 61% 14% 80% 54% 8% =
55% 84% 26% 64% 45% 52% 41% 59% 38% 54% 59% 31% 58% 49% 79% 63% 66% 4% =
56% 67% 27% 52% 45%=20
Undecided 6% 5% 7% 3% 7% 7% 7% 7% 1% 1% 0% 4% 6% 10% 5% 8% 2% 5% =
7% 5% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6% 7% 5% 5% 0% 11% 9% 3% 2% 2% 9% 5% 8%=20
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% =
100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% =
100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%=20
Composition of Registered Voters 100% 48% 52% 27% 30% 24% 19% 87% =
2% 5% 6% 38% 41% 19% 27% 43% 20% 36% 62% 23% 66% 48% 48% 36% 26% 38% 28% =
65% 36% 6% 11% 15% 9% 3% 7% 10% 65% 35%=20
=20
What if it was John McCain against Democrat Barack Obama? =20
524 Registered Voters All Gender Age Race Party Affiliation =
Ideology Abortion Does US Need a D Gun Ownership Attend Religious =
Service Evangelical? Top Issue For Next President Region=20
Margin of Sampling Error: =B1 4.4% Male Female 18-34 35-49 50-64 =
65+ White Black Hispanic Other Republic Democrat Independ Conserva =
Moderate Liberal Pro-life Pro-choi Need Not Need Yes No Regularl =
Occasion Almost N Yes No Economy Environm Health C Iraq Terroris Social =
S Educatio Immigrat Portland Rest of =20
McCain 41% 49% 35% 34% 45% 41% 46% 42% 28% 40% 35% 70% 21% 31% 81% =
34% 11% 60% 30% 50% 37% 51% 31% 53% 38% 32% 59% 33% 43% 20% 27% 18% 82% =
32% 35% 70% 38% 47%=20
Obama 50% 43% 56% 55% 50% 50% 44% 50% 66% 38% 54% 22% 72% 56% 15% =
55% 82% 29% 63% 44% 55% 40% 61% 38% 51% 62% 30% 60% 49% 71% 65% 76% 13% =
64% 50% 16% 53% 44%=20
Undecided 9% 8% 9% 11% 5% 9% 10% 8% 6% 22% 11% 8% 8% 13% 4% 11% 7% =
10% 7% 6% 9% 8% 8% 9% 12% 6% 11% 7% 8% 10% 9% 6% 5% 4% 15% 14% 9% 8%=20
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% =
100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% =
100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%=20
Composition of Registered Voters 100% 48% 52% 27% 30% 24% 19% 87% =
2% 5% 6% 38% 41% 19% 27% 43% 20% 36% 62% 23% 66% 48% 48% 36% 26% 38% 28% =
65% 36% 6% 11% 15% 9% 3% 7% 10% 65% 35%=20
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Wobbly squaredance Saturday night
by Michael Munk
Wed, Mar 19, 2008
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IWW fundraiser SQUARE DANCE, this Saturday, to benefit workers organizing
in
the restaurant industry!
Where: Liberty Hall, 311 N. Ivy St., Portland
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=311+N+Ivy+St,+Portland,+OR+97227&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=32.748002,59.765625&ie=UTF8&ll=45.548964,-122.669692&spn=0.007063,0.014591&z=16&iwloc=addr
When: Saturday, March 22, 6:30p Lesson, 7:00-10:00p Dance!
Who: Dances called by Paul Silveria and Maggie Brunjes, Music by Patrick
Lind & Friends
And?: Food and Drink available! Very tasty treats, complete with bake
sale!
What: An all ages, family friendly event, no experience necessary!
Proceeds will benefit IWW members who are organizing for better job
conditions in the restaurant industry. $5-$10 sliding scale entry fee.
For more information, call the IWW at 503-231-5488.
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Fw: Great Book and Good Event
by Michael Munk
Wed, Mar 19, 2008
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Fw: DeFazio on war, Dem nomination, etc.
by Michael Munk
Tue, Mar 18, 2008
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You can hear the interview at
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/031808J.shtml
My Interview With Congressman Peter DeFazio
By Matt Renner
t r u t h o u t | Report
Tuesday 18 March 2008
In a wide-ranging interview, Congressman Peter DeFazio (D-Oregon)
discussed the Democratic presidential primary contest, the ongoing
occupation of Iraq, the sudden resignation of Adm. William Fallon and the
recent revelations about the Bush administration's surveillance programs.
Serving in his eleventh term, DeFazio is a member of the Congressional
Progressive Caucus and has been a leading critic of Bush administration
policy. DeFazio serves on three committees in the House: Homeland
Security, Natural Resources and Transportation and Infrastructure.
As we discussed in our interview, DeFazio is concerned about the
infighting between Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in their contest
to become the Democratic Party's nominee for president. He wrote a letter
to both senators urging them to compete with each other to prove who can
better take on the Republicans in the general election by targeting
Republican nominee Sen. John McCain with their attacks.
DeFazio is in a powerful position as a "Super Delegate," one of almost
800, who could ultimately decide the outcome of the nomination contest.
"In the end, it is the candidate who can take the fight to McCain and win
that deserves my support and, most importantly, the support of the
Democratic Party," DeFazio said in his letter.
Our interview also addressed the abrupt resignation of Adm. William
Fallon, who, until March 11, served as the head of US Central Command and
oversaw the ongoing military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. A
strongly worded feature story in Esquire magazine painted Fallon as the
main roadblock to war with Iran.
DeFazio said military action against Iran would be "the ultimate
disaster."
We also discussed the Wall Street Journal report that revealed a
massive hidden spy apparatus similar to the Total Information Awareness
program. DeFazio said it is up to members of the House Intelligence
Committee to investigate the legality of the program.
The Bush administration has been working on a Status of Forces
Agreement with the government of Iraq in an attempt to "tie the hands of
the next president," according to DeFazio. A previous report on the
subject by Truthout's Maya Schenwar can be viewed here.
More information about DeFazio's work in Congress can be found at his
web site.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Momentum builds for Wed March 19 Iraq for Iraqis Now!
by Michael Munk
Mon, Mar 17, 2008
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Oregon AFSCME defies national, backs Obama
by Michael Munk
Sun, Mar 16, 2008
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correction needed
by Michael Munk
Thu, Mar 13, 2008
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Sat, 2PM S. Park Blocks: End the War!
by Michael Munk
Wed, Mar 12, 2008
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601 Oregon war casualties
by Michael Munk
Tue, Mar 11, 2008
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Novick: I was marching in anti-war rallies.
by Michael Munk
Sun, Mar 9, 2008
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NW: protest 5 years of war
by Michael Munk
Fri, Mar 7, 2008
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Big O the new Baltimore Sun?
by Michael Munk
Thu, Mar 6, 2008
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To Oregonian editors:
If you've been watching "The Wire" on HBO you've witnessed a depiction of a
once- respected newspaper-- a not so fictional Baltimore Sun-- capitulating
to distant owners looking only to maintain or increase their profit. So
experienced journalists are offered early retirement and, if replaced at
all, are replaced by young'uns on OJT and not familiar with
the local scene. The consequences for coverage are disasterous.
Perhaps that explains what's happening at the Big O. Just today I noticed
two hedes written by editors who evidently didn't read their stories or
weren't familiar with their backgrounds:
1)A2: "Mideast peace talks resume.." The story makes it clear that not only
have they not resumed, there's not even a date set for their resumption. The
hede writer confused Rice's announcement that they would resume with a fait
accompli.
2) A11" "Diplomats reach pact in bid to resolve Colombian standoff."
Readers wouldn't know from that says-nothing hede that in fact the OAS had
condemned US client Columbia for attacking Ecuador in an act that most of
the Latin American media called a defeat for the US.
Since many folks don't read beyond the hedes, the journalistic
responsibility of the Big O is to accurately convey the significance of the
stories they choose to publish. Is its failure to do that a consequence of
the "The Wire" syndrome?
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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$638 million stolen from Portland taxpayers for Iraq occupation
by Michael Munk
Thu, Feb 28, 2008
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Taxpayers in Portland, Oregon have paid $638.5 million for the Iraq War thus
far. For the same amount of money, the following could have been provided:
137,562 People with Health Care OR
600,174 Homes with Renewable Electricity OR
13,610 Public Safety Officers OR
11,745 Music and Arts Teachers OR
113,750 Scholarships for University Students OR
67 New Elementary Schools OR
3,952 Affordable Housing Units OR
190,809 Children with Health Care OR
94,646 Head Start Places for Children OR
11,174 Elementary School Teachers OR
10,681 Port Container Inspectors
You can look up similar info on your other Oregon and Washington towns
at
http://www.nationalpriorities.org/tradeoffs?location_type=4&state=25&town=0.000094976071777994500000000000&program=576&tradeoff_item_item=999&submit_tradeoffs=Get+Trade+Off
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Wheels of Justice Tour in Portland Feb 29-March 2
by Michael Munk
Thu, Feb 28, 2008
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From Dan Handleman at Peace & Jusrtice Works iraq@pjw.info
http://www.pjw.info/Iraq.html
WHEELS OF JUSTICE TOUR TO VISIT PORTLAND AREA TO SPEAK ABOUT THE
OCCUPATIONS OF IRAQ AND PALESTINE
Eyewitness speakers will roll into Portland and Vancouver on a
peace-painted, biodiesel bus to show and talk about the occupation of Iraq
and Palestine as part of the Wheels of Justice Spring 2008 Tour. The
public talks and bus open houses focus on nonviolent education, justice
and human rights and will take place February 28 through March 2 at
various colleges and churches in the area. The major public events will be
11 AM Friday, February 29 at Terry Schrunk Plaza (across from the Federal
Building), 7 PM Saturday, March 1 at First Unitarian Church, and 11:30 AM
Sunday, March 2 at Central Lutheran Church.
The bus drives across the nation and the eyewitnesses share their accounts
from Iraq and Palestine to challenge and educate Americans about the
repercussions of war and occupation on people abroad and Americans at
home. Having seen and lived with war, terror and occupation in Iraq and
Palestine, the tour's featured speakers, Mazin Qumsiyeh and Mike Miles,
say that justice and human rights are the only real roadmap for peace.
They will offer firsthand experience irrespective of partisan politics.
Qumsiyeh is Palestinian American and former Professor of Genetics Yale
University School of Medicine. He is author of the widely acclaimed book
"Sharing the Land of Canaan: Human Rights and the Israeli-Palestinian
Struggle" and appears in national media, interviews and print. Miles is a
catholic worker and founder of Anathoth Community Farm, a center for the
study of nonviolence, community, and sustainable living in Wisconsin. He
holds a masters degree from North Park Seminary in Chicago and has been
arrested numerous times while practicing active nonviolence over the past
25 year. He has spent time as a human rights observer in both Iraq and
Palestine.
The mobile peace center has made over a thousand stops at campuses, peace
groups, and faith communities promoting non violent solutions to war and
occupation. The public is invited to attend the following free speaking
events and bus open houses in our region:
Friday (Feb. 29): 11:00 am - 1:00 pm
Terry Schrunk Plaza, SW 3rd and Madison, Portland
Women in Black vigil 503-288-8958
Saturday (Mar. 1): 7:00 - 9:00 pm
First Unitarian Church, 1011 SW 12th Ave, Portland
Public presentation 503-228-6389
Sunday (Mar. 2): 9:00-10:00 am speakers,
11:30 am-12:30 pm bus open house and refreshments, and
12:30-1:30 pm speakers
Central Lutheran Church, 1820 NE 21st, Portland, 503-284-2331
The Wheels of Justice bus will also be on the campuses of Clark College
and Washington State University in Vancouver on Thursday (Feb. 28) and
Reed College in Portland on Friday (Feb. 29). A Saturday (March 1) visit
at Portland State University is also being planned. At some campuses the
eyewitnesses will also be guest speakers at various classes.
Nationally the tour is supported and hosted by a number of organizations
including Fellowship of Reconciliation and Jews Against the Occupation.
Local endorsers include Women's International League for Peace and
Freedom, Americans United for Palestinian Human Rights, Peace and Justice
Works Iraq Affinity Group, Friends of Sabeel - North America, and
Lutherans for Justice in the Holy Land - A Ministry of Central Lutheran
Church.
For more information on the bus, see http://www.JusticeWheels.org. For
local information call Women in Black at 503-288-8958 or visit the Peace
and Justice Works website at http://www.pjw.info .
###
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Oregon global warming deniers at NY confab
by Michael Munk
Wed, Feb 27, 2008
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Czech President Vaclav Klau is a featured speaker at a meeting of looney
but dangerous global warming deniers in New York March 2. Billed as
"Global Warming: Truth or Swindle," it is sponsored by the Heartland
Institute, an outfit funded by the tobacco and oil industries and other
capitalists who fear their profits could be threatened by environmental
protections. Roy Innis of CORE and John Stossel of ABC are the other two
featured speakers. NYTimes carries an almost full page ad today.
Oregonians: Another speaker is local denier George Taylor, who just
announced
his resignation from Oregon State University where his rants had been an
embarrassment to the school academic reputation. A Cave Junction group
called
the "Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine," is one of the pro capitalist
sponsoring organizations whose founders are also global warming deniers.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Pete Seeger: 9:30PM tonite Ch. 10
by Michael Munk
Wed, Feb 27, 2008
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Inspiring Documentary "Pete Seeger: The Power of Song" on PBS Tonight
Described as a "living testament to the First Amendment," Pete Seeger is a
legendary figure whose music has infused every major social movement for the
past 60 years. His most famous song, "Waste Deep in the Big Muddy," about
the Vietnam war, rings true today as the cost of the Iraq occupation spirals
out of control.
See it at 9:30 tonight (Wed Feb 28) on "American Masters." KOAP Channel 10
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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1st Oregon poll suprisingly close!
by Michael Munk
Sat, Feb 23, 2008
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First Oregon Presidential Poll
Obama 48%, McCaine 47% (Undec: 6%)
McCaine 49%, Clinton 41% (undec 10%)
for details go to
http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=389f3a04-b047-479f-b879-6d5d9babb0ba
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Superdelegate Bradbury chosen out of state
by Michael Munk
Sat, Feb 23, 2008
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In his Feb 22 letter to the Oregonian, Secretary of State Bill Bradbury says
he is an unelected "Superdelegate" to the Democratic convention because "I
was elected by my fellow Democratic secretaries of state from around the
country to represent them" there.
Does that seem odd to you?
He goes on to say that his vote for the party's presidential nominee will
reflect "the preferences of those secretaries of state" in addition
to"significantly, my own judgment." That sounds like the choice of Oregon's
Democratic voters in Oregon May 20 will run a poor third among the factors
influencing Bradbury's decision.
Why is a member of Oregon's delegation selected by officeholders in other
states and why isn't Bradbury accountable to his most important
constituency, the Democrats of Oregon?
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Zinn: for those who know better
by Michael Munk
Thu, Feb 21, 2008
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"The very people who should know better, having criticized the hold of the
media on the national mind, find themselves transfixed by the press, glued
to the television set, as the candidates preen and smile and bring forth a
shower of clichés with a solemnity appropriate for epic poetry."
sounds like you?; sounds like me
Election Madness
By Howard Zinn
The Progressive
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/022108B.shtml
March 2008 Issue
There's a man in Florida who has been writing to me for years (ten pages,
handwritten) though I've never met him. He tells me the kinds of jobs he has
held-security guard, repairman, etc. He has worked all kinds of shifts,
night and day, to barely keep his family going. His letters to me have
always been angry, railing against our capitalist system for its failure to
assure "life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness" for working people.
Just today, a letter came. To my relief it was not handwritten because he is
now using e-mail: "Well, I'm writing to you today because there is a
wretched situation in this country that I cannot abide and must say
something about. I am |
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