Times are Hard and Tent Cities Are on the Rise

Mack Martinez, 19, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, smokes in front of his tent at the tent city that sprung up next to the homeless shelter in downtown Reno, Nev., Wednesday, June 25, 2008. Photo by Scott Sady / AP.

‘From Seattle to Athens, Ga., homeless advocacy groups and city agencies are reporting the most visible rise in homeless encampments in a generation’
By Evelyn Nieves / September 18, 2008

A few tents cropped up hard by the railroad tracks, pitched by men left with nowhere to go once the emergency winter shelter closed for the summer.

Then others appeared — people who had lost their jobs to the ailing economy, or newcomers who had moved to Reno for work and discovered no one was hiring.

Within weeks, more than 150 people were living in tents big and small, barely a foot apart in a patch of dirt slated to be a parking lot for a campus of shelters Reno is building for its homeless population. Like many other cities, Reno has found itself with a “tent city” — an encampment of people who had nowhere else to go.

From Seattle to Athens, Ga., homeless advocacy groups and city agencies are reporting the most visible rise in homeless encampments in a generation.

Nearly 61 percent of local and state homeless coalitions say they’ve experienced a rise in homelessness since the foreclosure crisis began in 2007, according to a report by the National Coalition for the Homeless. The group says the problem has worsened since the report’s release in April, with foreclosures mounting, gas and food prices rising and the job market tightening.

“It’s clear that poverty and homelessness have increased,” said Michael Stoops, acting executive director of the coalition. “The economy is in chaos, we’re in an unofficial recession and Americans are worried, from the homeless to the middle class, about their future.”

The phenomenon of encampments has caught advocacy groups somewhat by surprise, largely because of how quickly they have sprung up.

“What you’re seeing is encampments that I haven’t seen since the 80s,” said Paul Boden, executive director of the Western Regional Advocacy Project, an umbrella group for homeless advocacy organizations in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland, Calif., Portland, Ore. and Seattle.

The relatively tony city of Santa Barbara has given over a parking lot to people who sleep in cars and vans. The city of Fresno, Calif., is trying to manage several proliferating tent cities, including an encampment where people have made shelters out of scrap wood. In Portland, Ore., and Seattle, homeless advocacy groups have paired with nonprofits or faith-based groups to manage tent cities as outdoor shelters. Other cities where tent cities have either appeared or expanded include include Chattanooga, Tenn., San Diego, and Columbus, Ohio.

The Department of Housing and Urban Development recently reported a 12 percent drop in homelessness nationally in two years, from about 754,000 in January 2005 to 666,000 in January 2007. But the 2007 numbers omitted people who previously had been considered homeless — such as those staying with relatives or friends or living in campgrounds or motel rooms for more than a week.

In addition, the housing and economic crisis began soon after HUD’s most recent data was compiled.

“The data predates the housing crisis,” said Brian Sullivan, a spokesman for HUD. “From the headlines, it might appear that the report is about yesterday. How is the housing situation affecting homelessness? That’s a great question. We’re still trying to get to that.”

In Seattle, which is experiencing a building boom and an influx of affluent professionals in neighborhoods the working class once owned, homeless encampments have been springing up — in remote places to avoid police sweeps.

“What’s happening in Seattle is what’s happening everywhere else — on steroids,” said Tim Harris, executive director of Real Change, an advocacy organization that publishes a weekly newspaper sold by homeless people.

Homeless people and their advocates have organized three tent cities at City Hall in recent months to call attention to the homeless and protest the sweeps — acts of militancy, said Harris, “that we really haven’t seen around homeless activism since the early ’90s.”

In Reno, officials decided to let the tent city be because shelters were already filled.

Officials don’t know how many homeless people are in Reno. “But we do know that the soup kitchens are serving hundreds more meals a day and that we have more people who are homeless than we can remember,” said Jodi Royal-Goodwin, the city’s redevelopment agency director.

Those in the tents have to register and are monitored weekly to see what progress they are making in finding jobs or real housing. They are provided times to take showers in the shelter, and told where to go for food and meals.

Sylvia Flynn, 51, came from northern California but lost a job almost immediately and then her apartment.

Since the cheapest motels here charge upward of $200 a week, Flynn ended up at the Reno women’s shelter, which has only 20 beds and a two-week limit on stays.

Out of a dozen people interviewed in the tent city, six had come to Reno from California or elsewhere over the last year, hoping for casino jobs.

“I figured this would be a great place for a job,” said Max Perez, a 19-year-old from Iowa. He couldn’t find one and ended up taking showers at the men’s shelter and sleeping in a pup tent barely big enough to cover his body.

The casinos are actually starting to lay off employees.

“Sometimes I think we need to put out an ad: ‘No, we don’t have any more jobs than you do,'” Royal-Goodwin said.

The city will shut down the tent city as soon as early October because the tents sit on what will be a parking lot for a complex of shelters and services for homeless people. The complex will include a men’s shelter, a women’s shelter, a family shelter and a resource center.

Reno officials aren’t sure whether the construction will eliminate the need for the tent city. The demand, they say, keeps growing.

Source / AP / Yahoo News

Thanks to Jesse James Retherford / The Rag Blog

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Stopping the NSA’s Illegal Surveillance of Us

This is the continuing saga of trying to bring a little justice back to the US. We posted about it a few weeks ago. It is encouraging to see these folks being utterly persistent in the endeavour.

Richard Jehn / The Rag Blog

Credit: AP Photo/Lauren Victoria Burke Brita

Rights Group Suing AT&T for Spying Sues NSA and Cheney, Too
By Ryan Singel / September 18, 2008

Just a day before the government will try again to get AT&T out of court for allegedly helping with President Bush’s warrantless wiretapping of Americans, the scrappy civil liberties group suing the telecom giant filed another suit — this one against the government and top officials involved in the spying.

By suing the government directly, the EFF is attempting to undermine the government’s plan to use a new power handed to it by Congress in July. The so-called telecom immunity provision nearly automatically forces a judge to dismiss lawsuits against companies accused of helping the government spy — without court approval — on the phone and internet communications of Americans.

Last week, the government told a federal court judge overseeing some 38 cases against the telecoms that it would file those papers on AT&T’s behalf by Friday.

Thursday’s potential class action suit (.pdf) against the government — filed in federal district court in Northern California — seeks a halt to the program, an accounting of who was spied on and damages for the five named plaintiffs.

It also names high government officials -– in their official and personal capacities — putting them at risk of fines they would be personally liable for.

Among those listed – former Attorney General John Ashcroft, former Attorney General and White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales, Vice President Dick Cheney, and Cheney’s chief of staff David Addington, along with current and former heads of intelligence agencies involved in the spying.

“In addition to suing AT&T, we’ve now opened a second front in the battle to stop the NSA’s illegal surveillance of millions of ordinary Americans and hold personally responsible those who authorized or participated in the spying program,” said senior staff attorney Kevin Bankston.

The suit argues the spying violated federal wiretap law, the First Amendment’s guarantee of anonymous speech and the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee against unreasonable searches.

Others have challenged the government program directly, but no one has succeeded so far. The EFF hopes the whistle-blower evidence it has used to keep the AT&T case alive will also work to prove it has a right to sue the feds as well.

The EFF plans to contest the legality of the so-called telecom immunity powers — but wants to have another avenue to pursue its goal of having the program declared illegal.

Though the full extent of the secret spying is not known, media reports indicate the government collected phone calls and emails – with the help of American telecoms — where one party was inside the U.S. and one was outside the country.

Until recently, wiretapping law required court orders to collect that information inside the U.S.

The FISA Amendments Act of 2008, which largely legalized did not immunize the government or government officials.

The EFF filed suit against AT&T in January 2006, alleging that the company massively violated federal wiretapping laws by turning over billions of phone records to the NSA and letting them building a room for the NSA to spy on the internet.

The suit relies heavily on company documents provided to it by former AT&T technician Mark Klein, who says the NSA controlled a secret internet spying room in an AT&T facility on Folsom Street in San Francisco.

That suit so annoyed the government that the President threatened to veto a bill expanding his ability to spy without warrants unless Congress also included retroactive legal immunity for telecoms being sued for allegedly helping the government warrantlessly spy on Americans.

After a drawn-out fight over immunity that included a threatened filibuster, the Democratically controlled Congress acceded in July to Bush’s demand for immunity.

Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller said it was too early for the government to respond — given it hasn’t even seen the suit yet.

“Once we are served, we will make a determination about how we will respond in court,” Miller said.

Thursday’s suit is known as Jewel v. NSA, while the AT&T suit is known as Hepting v. AT&T.

UPDATE: The original version of this story incorrectly stated that the suit sought damages for millions of potential class members. The suit seeks an injunction for all, but fines for only the named five plaintiffs.

Source / Wired

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The Maverick : They knew he could never be tamed.

Click on art for larger image

Tom the Dancing Bug by Ruben Bolling / Salon.com

Thanks to David McQueen / The Rag Blog

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Our Cultural Divide : California’s Battle over Gay Marriage

Film star Brad Pitt has donated more than $100,000 to oppose a California referendum seeking to ban gay marriages. Photo by AP.

Combatants in the fight have contributed millions of dollars to prepare for an all-out confrontation
September 16, 2008

The stakes of the ballot drive to forbid same-sex marriage reach far beyond California’s geographic and political borders in what has emerged as another chapter in America’s culture wars.

Christian groups, wealthy benefactors and self-styled pro-family groups from all over the US are watching closely – and weighing in with money. Gay-rights groups and wealthy individuals are countering with their own cash from across the country.

In the past eight weeks, combatants in the battle of California’s Proposition 8 have poured in more than $20m (£11.3m) to gear up for an all-out confrontation about whether the US will begin to move toward tolerance of same-sex marriages – or to preserve traditional views of marriage.

“It’s a defining issue for this state and the country,” said Brian Brown, executive director for the National Organisation for Marriage, a New Jersey-based Mormon group with a branch in California, which has contributed nearly $1m to the Yes on 8 campaign.

The outcome of the battle, he said, “will affect what our children will be taught about marriage, and it will affect our religious liberties”.

Opponents say the campaign to defeat the ballot measure is a fight for gay rights around the country.

“I really think this is our Gettysburg,” said Kathy Levinson, a Silicon Valley philanthropist and gay-rights activist who pledged this month to match $100,000 in donations to the No on 8 campaign.

“If Proposition 8 passes, we’d lose a generation of time. If we as a perceived liberal and tolerant state lose this battle, many smaller states will feel permission to say ‘not yet’. If it fails, it’s a statement that says the country has changed, that full acceptance of gay and lesbian citizens has come and it would be perceived as a watershed moment.”

Thousands of Californians have contributed to the Yes on 8 campaign, according to campaign finance statements on the secretary of state’s website.

But the big money has come from out-of-state groups such as Connecticut-based Knights of Columbus ($1.3m), a Catholic men’s organisation; the National Organisation for Marriage ($921,000); Mississippi-based American Family Association ($500,000); and Colorado-based Focus on the Family ($414,000), whose chairman is James Dobson, the evangelical Christian whose syndicated radio show is heard by millions.

Wealthy and well-connected individuals have pitched in. Elsa Prince, the matriarch of a powerful Michigan Republican family, donated $250,000 to the Yes on 8 campaign.

She’s the mother of Eric Prince, the co-founder of Blackwater Worldwide – the controversial private military and security contractor – and of Betsy DeVos, the Republican activist whose family has contributed millions to conservative causes.

Opponents have their heavy hitters, too, including the Republican governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, who hasn’t contributed to the campaign but has voiced his opposition to the initiative.

The top contributor to the No on 8 campaign, Equality California ($3.6m), is its sponsor. Others include Washington, DC-based Human Rights Campaign ($2.3m); Robert Wilson, a New York philanthropist ($1.2m); and Bruce Bastian, a gay Mormon from Utah and the co-founder of WordPerfect ($1m).

PG&E, the California Teachers Association and the California State Council of Service Employees each donated $250,000 to No on 8.

Steve Westly, the former state controller and Democratic gubernatorial candidate, has donated $5,000.

Twenty-seven states have constitutional amendments outlawing same-sex marriages – 11 approved by voters in 2004, when the issue became a central part of George Bush’s re-election, and seven more in 2006.

Three more states – California, Arizona and Florida – have the issue on November’s ballot. Massachusetts and California are the only states that recognise same-sex marriages.

Conservative and evangelical groups were freshly mobilised by the California supreme court’s decision in May to overrule voters’ approval of a ban on same-sex marriages in 2000.

But the movement has its roots in the culture wars of the 1980s and 1990s, says University of California-Berkeley sociology professor Michael Hout.

“They got as far as they could on abortion and have embraced marriage laws as the next step in their agenda,” said Hout, co-author of The Truth About Conservative Christians: What They Think and What They Believe. “Their main agenda remains the reversal of Roe v Wade, but they’re trying to gain new allies who look askance at gay marriage.”

Not that it’s a purely Machiavellian manoeuvre. Proponents of bans on same-sex marriage are “truly concerned that the state should not be licensing immoral behaviour”, Hout said.

“In their interpretation of the Bible, they see a prohibition on homosexual activity. Gay marriage condones a lifestyle that’s ruled out by their reading of the scripture.”

A key feature of the state supreme court decision, say Yes on 8 forces, is that there is no residency requirement.

“Same-sex couples are flying in, getting married, and flying out,” said Bruce Hausknect, judicial analyst for Focus on the Family.

“What happens in states that don’t recognise same-sex marriage when there are custody disputes? It’s part of their agenda to wear down other states. If they can create enough problems, they’re hoping they’ll force courts to take their cases, which could lead to overturning the laws.

“It’s a subtle way,” he said, “of forcing the same-sex agenda on unwilling states by exporting the problems to states that don’t have same-sex protections.”

Proponents also claim that same-sex marriage laws will lead to an acceptance of polygamy and polyamory (group marriages), and teaching about same-sex marriage in public schools.

The dire warnings are “scare tactics” of rightwingers feeding off myths and fears of the people, says Geoffrey Kors, executive director for Equality California.

“That’s fundraising language, language to get their base motivated,” Kors said. “The only gay agenda is about not being treated differently than others.”

Source / Guardian, U.K.

Thanks to Jeffrey Segal / The Rag Blog

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The Country is a Deregulated Mess


‘It has become obvious that UNregulated business activity gravitates to the dark side’
By Randy H. / The Rag Blog / September 18, 2008

I admit that I’ve vacillated back and forth between Democrat and Republican over the last 40 years. I’ve arrived at a few personal conclusions about our country’s current state. These are merely my own opinions.

I remain a strong advocate of allowing business unfettered access to its markets. However, it has become obvious that UNregulated business activity gravitates to the dark side.

I only offer several examples …

1) Telephone deregulation. An acquaintance who lives in France once asked me, “Are you people crazy?” when the major telephone companies were broken up and deregulated. Of course we briefly have enjoyed proliferation of numerous local and long distance telephone companies and lower rates. However, once the reality became “Oh, I’m sorry sir. That line is not part of our service,” guess what is now happening? Witness today’s re-conglomeration of powerhouses Verizon and AT&T. Nickel-and-dime fee structures, service rules and restrictions, and the telecomm companies’ indifference to customer issues have become the norm. Does this sound like anything with which you’re familiar?

2) Airline deregulation. Give me a break! Even though Southwest and upstart JetBlue survive as prodigies of deregulation, just count the number of personnel laid off and route-miles that have collapsed over the last 20 years. Fuel costs aside, the airline industry is the victim of a nearly complete lack of regulatory constraint and a wholly indifferent federal government. Why should it take the FAA twenty more years to implement a new computer/satellite-based air traffic control system??

3) A Medicare Drug Program (Part D) that is an outright lie. Estimates originally provided to congressional representatives are now shown to have been hugely and falsely understated. Originally estimated at $375 billion for the mandated ten-year horizon, this program is now calculated to cost $2.3 trillion over the next ten years! Oh, and by the way, don’t overlook a provision in the law which prohibits the federal government from negotiating the cost of the drugs for which it is paying. Guess which lobbying group drafted that part of the law.

4) A federal income tax system that is so complex and laden with special-interest provisions that it costs the average taxpayer $37.43 and 12 days to complete and file the federal tax return. The shameful business practices of “refund anticipation loans,” and more recently “rebate anticipation loans,” have cost unwitting taxpayers billions of dollars in needless fees to get their money back from the federal government a few days earlier. The Internal Revenue Service is dead at the switch about simplifying the process for transacting the ordinary individual taxpayer’s tax returns and refunds. A computer system hailed as the “answer to all our problems” went down in flames after five years and hundreds of millions of dollars in outsourced contracts. It remains in limbo to this day.

5) Pathetic lack of regulation of (and even awareness of) the financial services industry’s dubious practices. Lending practices over the last five years became a sham. Surely you’re aware of the shameful lending practices thrust on less sophisticated and lower income people by unscrupulous mortgage brokers, banks, and investment companies. The consolidation of falsely-rated mortgage packages for sale as “investments” on the world market was a practice akin to the old fashioned snake oil salesman.

6) The U.S. dollar’s value has fallen 40% against the value of the Euro and other major currencies in the last six years. While a weak dollar means our exports are less expensive to those who buy them, imports have become more expensive for us. It means that our dollars now buy nearly 40% LESS of goods and services than they did six years ago. Imports of cheap and low quality Chinese goods to Wal-Mart and other retailers will not offset the horrendous decline in our dollar. Our manufacturing sector has lost 3.2 million jobs over the last six years, offset by a lesser increase of 1.2 million jobs in the food service and retailing industries. What a tradeoff, eh?

7) Outsourcing instead of federal oversight. It’s the old budget game that outsourced contracts are separate from onboard personnel in the federal government’s budget and are therefore immune from oversight by Congress. The presumption that outsourced work “saves” money in the long run is provably false. The quasi-governmental Postal Service is a notable exception, because it has a source of revenue to offset the majority of its operational costs.

8) Relations with Mexico and other countries. Mexican truckers are now allowed for a new “extended test period” of three more years to freely traffic on our highways. The U.S. is giving nuclear technology to India in exchange for tariff-free imports of mangos to our country. Nukes for fruit. That one ought to scare you.

9) A dead-at-the-switch Consumer Product Safety Commission. “We’re not allowed to test for toxic substances unless we have evidence of human danger.” Yikes … that’s comforting, huh?

10) An FDA that is so hopelessly under staffed and under funded that it is simply incapable of fulfilling its mission. Explosive growth in our importation of foods, and significant lobbying by pharmaceutical companies, has rendered that agency nearly useless.

11) Federal preparedness. Wasn’t the Katrina debacle enough to show that federal nepotism and cronyism yields an under funded, under talented, and under prepared government? Over 20,000 trailers purchased and unused are now scheduled for destruction. Truckloads of ice were sent to New England during the emergency in New Orleans.

12) Wars being conducted on two fronts, based on blatantly false assumptions and “truths” fabricated to scare the people of our country. Iraq accumulates budget surpluses while the American people continue to fund up to $1 trillion for those unpopular wars, for that country’s “reconstruction,” and digging our country further and further into unsustainable debt. Afghanistan continues as the primary source of opium/heroin in the world and as a sanctuary for the bad guys.

13) Our country is in serious economic trouble. Our public debt (as distinguished from the elusive ‘intragovernmental’ debt) has grown 500% in merely the last five years. We are forever reliant on oil as our primary energy source and feed stock, on the willingness of foreign countries and investors to continue to prop up our unsustainable spending, and the illusion that ‘growth’ will be our salvation. It is time to come back to reality. Taxes will inevitably go up, spending needs to be seriously curtailed, and we need new leadership that will not tell us that everything is okay.

Do you really want to elect a candidate who promises more of the same? I don’t think so.

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Economic Meltdown : Are We a Nation of Village Idiots?


‘Conservative Republicans always want the government to stay out of business and avoid regulation as long as they are making lots of money’
By James Moore / September 18, 2008

Don’t let them tell you this economic meltdown is a complicated mess. It’s not. Our national financial crisis is readily understood by anyone who has seen greed and hypocrisy. But we are now witnessing them on a profound, monumental scale.

Conservative Republicans always want the government to stay out of business and avoid regulation as long as they are making lots of money. When their greed, however, gets them into a fix, they are the first to cry out for rules and laws and taxpayer money to bail out their businesses. Obviously, Republicans are socialists. The Bush administration has decided to socialize the debt of the big Wall Street Firms. Taxpayers didn’t get to enjoy any of the big money profits on the phony financial instruments like derivatives or bundled sub-prime paper, but we get the privilege of paying for their debt and failures.

Let’s just consider the money. The public bailout of insurance giant (becoming a dwarf) AIG is estimated at $85 billion. According to one report, that’s more than the Bush administration spent on Aid to Families with Dependent Children during his entire time in office. That amount of money would also pay for health care for every man, woman, and child in America for at least six months.

How did we get here?

That’s pretty easy to answer, too. His name is Phil Gramm. A few days after the Supreme Court made George W. Bush president in 2000, Gramm stuck something called the Commodity Futures Modernization Act into the budget bill. Nobody knew that the Texas senator was slipping America a 262 page poison pill. The Gramm Guts America Act was designed to keep regulators from controlling new financial tools described as credit “swaps.” These are instruments like sub-prime mortgages bundled up and sold as securities. Under the Gramm law, neither the SEC nor the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) were able to examine financial institutions like hedge funds or investment banks to guarantee they had the assets necessary to cover losses they were guaranteeing.

This isn’t small beer we are talking about here. The market for these fancy financial instruments they don’t expect us little people to understand is estimated at $60 trillion annually, which amounts to almost four times the entire US stock market.

And Senator Phil Gramm wanted it completely unregulated. So did Alan Greenspan, who supported the legislation and is now running around to the talk shows jabbering about the horror of it all. Before the highly paid lobbyists were done slinging their gold card guts about the halls of congress, every one from hedge funds to banks were playing with fire for fun and profit.

Gramm didn’t just make a fairy tale world for Wall Street, though. He included in his bill a provision that prevented the regulation of energy trading markets, which led us to the Enron collapse. There was no collapse of the house of Gramm, however, because his wife Wendy, who once headed up the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, took a job on the Enron board that provided almost $2 million to their household kitty. And why not? Wendy got a CFTC rule passed that kept the federal government from regulating energy futures contracts at Enron.

If John McCain gets elected and chooses Phil Gramm as his Treasury Secretary, which many politico types see as likely, they will be able to talk about the good old days when Gramm was in congress and McCain was in the senate and they were in the midst of the Savings and Loan crisis.

The S and L scandal, which may look precious when compared to our present cascade of problems, isn’t hard to understand, either. But it is impossible to take John McCain seriously on our current financial Armageddon since he was dabbling in the historic collapse of 747 S&Ls that occurred during Ronald Reagan’s era. In the early 80s under the Republican president, congress deregulated the savings and loan industry in much the same way that Gramm made sure there were no laws hindering our current financial malefactors on Wall Street. S&Ls simply lobbied until they had less regulation and then began making rampant, unsound investments.

The guy who was going the wildest with financial freedom was Charles Keating, who headed up Lincoln Savings and Loan of California. Because the S&L industry had managed to get congress to increase FDIC insurance from $40,000 to $100,000 on deposits, the irresponsible investing of people like Keating began to put taxpayer insurance funds at great risk of loss. Keating placed money in junk bonds and questionable real estate projects and because so many other S&Ls started acting the same way the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) began to push for a regulation that limited these dangerous speculative “direct” investments to 10% of an S&L’s assets.

And Keating didn’t like it; he called on a private economist named Alan Greenspan, who promptly produced a study saying that there was no danger in “direct” investments.

But that didn’t convince the FHLBB and as further scrutiny showed Lincoln Savings and Loan was making even more historically bad investment decisions, a federal investigation was launched.

So Keating called his home state senator John McCain.

McCain and four other US senators (known to history as the Keating Five) met with Edwin Gray, then chairman of the FHLBB. McCain had been hesitant to attend but had reportedly been called a “wimp” behind his back by Keating. The message to the FHLBB and Gray from the Keating Five was to lay off Lincoln and cool the investigation. Gray and the FHLBB did not relent but Lincoln stayed in business until 1989 when it collapsed with the rest of the S&L industry. The life savings of more than 20,000 elderly investors disappeared with the failure of Lincoln. Keating went to prison for five years.

Charles Keating was John McCain’s pal. They met in 1981 and Keating dumped $112,000 in the McCain campaign bank accounts between ’82 and ’87. A year before McCain met with the FHLBB regulators, his wife Cindy and her father, according to newspaper reports at the time, invested about $360,000 in one of Keating’s shopping centers. The Arizona Republic reported McCain and his wife and their babysitter took nine trips on Keating’s private jet to the Bahamas to stay at the S&L liar’s decadent Cat Cay resort. The senator didn’t pay Keating back for the plane rides until years later when he was under investigation.

McCain wasn’t found guilty of anything but bad judgment, which is an historic understatement. Republicans, who led deregulation of the S&L industry, delayed the bailout until after the 1988 election to make sure George H. W. won the White House. The cost to taxpayers for helping these 747 bad actors in the S&L industry was finally estimated at $1.4 trillion. If the bailout had begun in 1986 instead of after the presidential election, the cost would have been contained at $20 billion.

And now the Republicans who engineered our present crisis and got us into the S&L debacle of the 80s are before us saying the markets need regulation. No, actually, they don’t need regulation. Why don’t you Republican capitalists who believe in the free markets get out of the damned way and let them work and allow these various financial nuthouses be crushed by the weight of their own stupidity? When it is all over, we’ll have sane and sober people create laws to make sure it doesn’t happen again, assuming we survive this chaos.

Also, while you are handing out our tax money to idiots on Wall Street, save a little of the long green for the unemployed auto and construction workers and all of the other people who have lost their jobs because you were too stupid to notice what Phil Gramm was doing and you were convinced everything was going to be just fine because the markets work.

These, then, are the people — the Republicans — who want to run our government for four more years. John McCain isn’t just one of them. He rides their jets. He takes their campaign donations. He makes them his campaign advisors. And he tells us to trust him.

He must think we are a nation of village idiots.

Hell, maybe we are.

Source / The Huffington Post

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Kate Braun: Fall Equinox Seasonal Message


Tarot by Kate

Monday, Monday, so good to me”

By Kate Braun / The Rag Blog / September 18, 2008

Monday, September 22, 2008 is Mabon, the Fall Equinox. Lady Moon moves from her third quarter in Gemini to her fourth quarter in Cancer, prompting the centered energy of this water sign to reinforce the balancing energies of Lord Sun’s Libra. This is a festival about abundance, as well as balance, as its alternative names of Second Harvest, Harvest Home, and Cornucopia indicate. Part of enjoying abundance is sharing, so encourage your guests to take some of the leftovers home. The giving and accepting of abundance promotes more abundance for both the giver and the receiver.

Encourage your guests to join you in dressing in warm colors: red, orange, maroon, deep gold, russet, brown and dark violet. Use these colors also for your altar and table decorations. There are many items that can be used to signify the season in your decorating: gourds, pine cones, apples, and horns of plenty are but a few. As this is a celebration of balance, a scales filled with acorns, grapes, and/or autumn leaves would make a lovely centerpiece.

The focus of your menu should be the fruits of this Second Harvest: nuts, root veggies (onions, carrots, potatoes, parsnips, etc.), berries, apples, pomegranates, garlic, cider, fruit wine, bread. Add some roast beef or chicken and a few cheeses for your non-vegan friends.

This festival is sacred to Cerridwen, a water-oriented Goddess of Autumn. The Druids honored The Green Man at this time by offering libations to trees. You may honor both deities by leading your guests to a favorite tree, surrounding it, singing to it, and giving it a gift of blessed water and/or wine. Don’t forget to include the nature fairies and other elementals in this ritual; a thimble filled with wine and a few berries or nuts will provide a feast for them.

In addition to contemplating balance in all its aspects in your life, this is a time to start a project to work on over the winter. Traditionally, quilts were started about now, for example, although making plans to Feng Shui your home room by room would also be a long-term winter project worth starting. This is also a time to give thanks. For friends and family, for the food on the table, the clothes we wear, the work we do, the goodnesses in our lives. Be specific in your thankfulness.

An activity that you and your guests might enjoy is the making and planting of a corn dolly. Using fresh corn husks, about 3, bend them in half and use a strip of corn husk to tie off a small bit at the bend to form the dolly’s head; decide where the waist should be, twist the corn husks at this point and tie them with another strip of corn husk. If necessary, use garden twine instead of corn-husk-strips, but do not use twisties or metal; natural fibers such as cotton or hemp are preferred. Fluff out the skirt and your corn dolly is finished. Sprinkle her with a few drops of wine and tell her the qualities and goals you choose to work on over the winter. Write this down for future reference. Then bury her in your garden or back yard or under a tree, as you would plant a seed you want to grow vigorously. Plan to visit the site periodically; use it during the Dark Time to meditate on what you have sown. When celebrating the Spring Equinox, look at what your goals were and see what strides you have made towards achieving them.

Reminder: I will be Elaine Ireland’s guest on her Live-on-the-internet-radio-talk-show at 9 PM CDT on Thursday, September 18. To hear this program, Going Global For Spirit,, go to www.bbsradio.com, click on Channel 1, check the drop-down menu for the program and click on it. There is also a toll-free number to call if you have questions or comments or would like a short Tarot reading from me.

Tarot by Kate 512-454-2293
www.tarotbykateinaustin.com
kate_braun2000@yahoo.com

The Rag Blog

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We Don’t Trust Politicians with Big Brains

Today’s Palin Sing-a-Long
By Dada / September 18, 2008

Seems our friends, Steve and Kathy, just up north in way-south New Mexico, have been doing mischief with Steve’s “satiric anthem about Sarah Palin’s home town.”

REDNECK FROM WASILLA
By Steve Klinger © 2008

We don’t eat arugula in Wasilla
We don’t get our kicks from crëme brulée
We do lots of praying for the end times
We know God protects the USA

I’m proud to be a redneck from Wasilla
A place with each and every big box store
We shoot our wolves and caribou from airplanes
And soon we’ll be drilling in ANWAR

We don’t write our memoirs in Wasilla
We’re pretty picky when it comes to books
We don’t believe in manmade global warming
And we like our mayors with good looks

We don’t use our football fields for speeches
We don’t have no Muslim middle names
We think evolution’s just a theory
We don’t trust politicians with big brains

And I’m proud to be a redneck from Wasilla
A place with each and every big box store
We shoot our wolves and caribou from airplanes
And soon we’ll be drilling in ANWAR

We shoot our wolves and caribou from airplanes
In Wasilla, Alaska, USA

Source / Dada’s Daily Dally

Thanks to Diane Stirling-Stevens / The Rag Blog

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Name That Tune : Theme Songs for John and Sarah

Jackson Browne has filed a lawsuit against John McCain after the Republican presidential candidate used a portion of Browne’s “Running On Empty” in a campaign commercial without permission.

How about SOS by ABBA? Just trying to help…
By Zoltan Abraham / The Rag Blog / September 18, 2008

Check out our suggestions below.

McCain has a music problem. He has a hard time using songs at his campaign rallies without being challenged by the artist for copyright infringement.

Orleans, John Cougar Mellencamp, Mike Myers, Frankie Valli, Jackson Browne, Van Halen, Heart, and ABBA have all complained, and in some cases have even initiated legal action.

But since McCain seems undeterred, why not give him some suggestions for the songs that he *should* use at his rallies?

SOS by ABBA

Disillusion by ABBA

Money, Money, Money by ABBA

Empire by Queensryche

Bad by Michael Jackson

Smooth Criminal by Michael Jackson

Electronic Warfare by Apoptygma Berserk

Nonstop Violence by Apoptygma Berserk

War Pigs by Black Sabbath

Let’s Have a War by Fear

Video Killed the Radio Star by the Buggles

Tragedy by the Bee Gees

Nowhere Man by the Beatles

Union of the Snake by Duran Duran

I’m Afraid of Americans by David Bowie

This Is Not America by David Bowie

Promises, Promises by Naked Eyes

Sheep by Pink Floyd

Master of Puppets by Metallica

American Idiot by Green Day

The Man Who Sold the World by David Bowie

The Running Gun Blues by David Bowie

Big Hat No Cattle by Randy Newman

Always Crashing in the Same Car by David Bowie

Scary Monsters and Super Creeps by David Bowie

Big Brother by David Bowie

1984 by David Bowie

I Just Can’t Wait to Be King from the Lion King

The Imperial March from Star Wars

Heart Attack by Olivia Newton-John

Sheer Heart Attack by Queen

Spinning Wheel by Blood, Sweat, and Tears

Running With the Devil by Van Halen

Welcome to the Jungle by Guns N’ Roses

I’m Going Slightly Mad by Queen

Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend by Marilyn Monroe

Everything You Know Is Wrong by Weird Al Yankovich

No More Mr. Nice Guy by Alice Cooper

The Number of the Beast by Iron Maiden

The Real Slim Shady by Eminem

Mosh by Eminem

We Don’t Need Another Hero by Tina Turner

Putting Holes in Happiness by Marilyn Manson

The Man You Fear by Marilyn Manson

Money for Nothing by Dire Straights

The Time Warp from The Rocky Horror Picture Show

Big Shot by Billy Joel

Ogre Battle by Queen

Crazy Train by Ozzy Osborn

Baby Did a Bad, Bad Thing by Chris Isaak

I Think We’re Alone Now by Tiffany

I Can’t Quit Her by Blood, Sweat, and Tears

And for Sarah Palin:

The Jaws Theme Song

Does Your Mother Know That Your Out by ABBA

Papa Don’t Preach by Madonna

Rich Girl by Hall and Oats

I Want It All by Queen

Oops, I Did It Again by Britney Spears

Lawyers, Guns, & Money by Warren Zevon

Evil Woman by E.L.O.

Funky Town by Lipps Inc.

Everybody Makes Mistakes by Hanna Montana

Disposable Teens by Marilyn Manson

Scotty Doesn’t Know from Eurotrip

Girls Just Wanna Have Fun by Cindy Lauper

Anglefalls by Ayla

White Wedding by Billy Idol

Barbie Girl by Aqua

Material Girl by Madonna

Bad to the Bone by George Thorgood

Killer Queen by Queen

She’s Lost Control by Joy Division

Russians by Sting

Back in the USSR by the Beatles

The March of the Black Queen by Queen

The Thrill is Gone by B.B. King

Happiness Is a Warm Gun by the Beatles

What are your suggestions?

And for old times’ sake, here is the old Bush and Blair lovesong – not in the best of taste, but still wickedly funny:

Zoltan Abraham is affiliated with Progressives for Obama.

The Rag Blog

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Nixon Dirty Trickster on McCain Team : Worked to Deport John Lennon

McCain operative William Timmons played a central role in attempt by Nixon administration to deport John Lennon, shown with Yoko Ono.

William E. Timmons, who worked with segregationist Strom Thurman in effort against John Lennon, heads McCain’s transition team
By Jon Wiener / September 15, 2008

The man John McCain appointed to head his transition team, William E. Timmons, played a central role in the Nixon Administration’s campaign to deport John Lennon in 1972.

Timmons is known today mostly as a lobbyist for the oil companies, but in 1972 he worked in the Nixon White House as Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs. Strom Thurmond, the segregationist senator from South Carolina, sent a letter to Timmons in February, 1972, as the Nixon White House was gearing up for the President’s re-election campaign. The letter informed Timmons that Lennon and his friends were “strong advocates” of a program to “dump Nixon,” and that Lennon was planning “to hold rock concerts in various primary election states.” The purpose of the concerts was political: “to stimulate 18-year-old registration” and to urge people to demonstrate against Nixon at the Republican National Convention. Thurmond’s memo to Timmons concluded, “if Lennon’s visa is terminated it would be a strategy counter-measure.”

At the time–spring of 1972–the war in Vietnam was going strong, Lennon was living in New York City and had become a prominent antiwar voice, singing Give Peace a Chance and Imagine at antiwar rallies and concerts.

Timmons wrote back to Thurmond a few weeks later. The “Dear Strom” letter reported that “the Immigration and Naturalization Service has served notice” on Lennon “that he is to leave this country no later than March 15.” It was signed by Timmons “with warm regards.”

The information Thurmond sent to Timmons was correct–it came from the staff of the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, of which Thurmond was a member. Lennon and his new friends Jerry Rubin and Rennie Davis, who four years earlier had organized the 1968 antiwar protests at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, were planning a concert tour to mobilize young people to vote in the upcoming election. Of course registering young people to vote was not a crime–but the Republicans were concerned about the “youth vote,” since 1972 was going to be the first election in which 18-year-olds had the right to vote, and it was widely assumed young people were mostly antiwar and thus anti-Nixon.

Nixon’s effort to deport Lennon never succeeded. In the end, Lennon stayed in the United States while Nixon left the White House, resigning in the Watergate affair. But Lennon did curtail his antiwar organizing during the 1972 campaign, on the advice of his immigration lawyer, Leon Wildes, who told him not to do anything to further antagonize the Nixon people.

Timmons left the White House shortly after Nixon’s resignation and founded his own lobbying firm. In 2008 he was registered to represent the American Petroleum Institute, Visa USA, Anheuser-Busch and Freddie Mac. He’s also worked with virtually every Republican presidential campaign, starting with Bob Dole.

McCain’s selection of Timmons ties the candidate to Nixon’s dirty tricks and enemies list. Nixon’s campaign to deport John Lennon was an example of White House abuse of power–the use of the power of the president to punish those who criticized him or opposed his policies.

The Thurmond-Timmons documents were first published in Rolling Stone, July 31, 1975.

The story of Nixon’s effort to deport Lennon was told in the 2006 documentary The US vs. John Lennon and in the book Gimme Some Truth: The John Lennon FBI Files

Source / The Nation. Go here to see Lennon documents.

The Rag Blog

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BOOKS : Iraq Occupation Through Eyes of U.S. Soldiers


‘I remember one woman walking by… She had been trying to bring us food and we blew her to pieces’
By Dahr Jamail / September 17, 2008

MARFA, Texas – Aside from the Iraqi people, nobody knows what the U.S. military is doing in Iraq better than the soldiers themselves. A new book gives readers vivid and detailed accounts of the devastation the U.S. occupation has brought to Iraq, in the soldiers’ own words.

“Winter Soldier Iraq and Afghanistan: Eyewitness Accounts of the Occupation,” published by Haymarket Books Tuesday, is a gut-wrenching, historic chronicle of what the U.S. military has done to Iraq, as well as its own soldiers.

Authored by Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) and journalist Aaron Glantz, the book is a reader for hearings that took place in Silver Spring, Maryland between Mar. 13-16, 2008 at the National Labour College.

“I remember one woman walking by,” said Jason Washburn, a corporal in the U.S. Marines who served three tours in Iraq. “She was carrying a huge bag, and she looked like she was heading toward us, so we lit her up with the Mark 19, which is an automatic grenade launcher, and when the dust settled, we realised that the bag was full of groceries. She had been trying to bring us food and we blew her to pieces.”

Washburn testified on a panel that discussed the rules of engagement in Iraq, and how lax they were, even to the point of being virtually non-existent.

“During the course of my three tours, the rules of engagement changed a lot,” Washburn’s testimony continues. “The higher the threat the more viciously we were permitted and expected to respond.”

His emotionally charged testimony, like all of those in the book that covered panels addressing dehumanisation, civilian testimony, sexism in the military, veterans’ health care, and the breakdown of the military, raised issues that were repeated again and again by other veterans.

“Something else we were encouraged to do, almost with a wink and nudge, was to carry ‘drop weapons’, or by my third tour, ‘drop shovels’. We would carry these weapons or shovels with us because if we accidentally shot a civilian, we could just toss the weapon on the body, and make them look like an insurgent,” Washburn said.

Four days of searing testimony, witnessed by this writer, is consolidated into the book, which makes for a difficult read. One page after another is filled with devastating stories from the soldiers about what is being done in Iraq.

Everything from the taking of “trophy” photos of the dead, to torture and slaughtering of civilians is included.

“We’re trying to build a historical record of what continues to happen in this war and what the war is really about,” Glantz told IPS.

Hart Viges, a member of the 82nd Airborne Division of the Army who served one year in Iraq, tells of taking orders over the radio.

“One time they said to fire on all taxicabs because the enemy was using them for transportation…One of the snipers replied back, ‘Excuse me? Did I hear that right? Fire on all taxicabs?’ The lieutenant colonel responded, ‘You heard me, trooper, fire on all taxicabs.’ After that, the town lit up, with all the units firing on cars. This was my first experience with war, and that kind of set the tone for the rest of the deployment.”

Vincent Emanuele, a Marine rifleman who spent a year in the al-Qaim area of Iraq near the Syrian border, told of emptying magazines of bullets into the city without identifying targets, running over corpses with Humvees and stopping to take “trophy” photos of bodies. “An act that took place quite often in Iraq was taking pot shots at cars that drove by,” he said. “This was not an isolated incident, and it took place for most of our eight-month deployment.”

Kelly Dougherty, the executive director of IVAW, blames the behaviour of soldiers in Iraq on the policies of the U.S. government. “The abuses committed in the occupations, far from being the result of a ‘few bad apples’ misbehaving, are the result of our government’s Middle East policy, which is crafted in the highest spheres of U.S. power,” she said.

Knowing this, however, does little to soften the emotional and moral devastation of the accounts.

“You see an individual with a white flag and he does anything but approach you slowly and obey commands, assume it’s a trick and kill him,” Michael Leduc, a corporal in the Marines who was part of the U.S. attack of Fallujah in November 2004, said were the orders from his battalion JAG officer he received before entering the city.

This is an important book for the public of the United States, in particular, because the Winter Soldier testimonies were not covered by any of the larger media outlets, aside from the Washington Post, which ran a single piece on the event that was buried in the Metro section.

The New York Times, CNN, and network news channels ABC, NBC and CBS ignored it completely.

This is particularly important in light of the fact that, as former Marine Jon Turner stated, “Anytime we did have embedded reporters with us, our actions changed drastically. We never acted the same. We were always on key with everything, did everything by the book.”

“To me it’s about giving a picture of what war is like,” Glantz added, “Because here in the U.S. we have this very sanitised version of what war is. But war is when we have a large group of armed people killing large numbers of other people. And that is the picture that people will get from reading veterans testimony…the true face of war.”

Dehumanisation of the soldiers themselves is covered in the book, as it includes testimony of sexism, racism, and the plight of veterans upon their return home as they struggle to obtain care from the Veterans Administration.

There is much testimony on the dehumanisation of the Iraqi people as well. Brian Casler, a corporal in the Marines, spoke to some of this that he witnessed during the invasion of Iraq.

“But on these convoys, I saw marines defecate into MRE bags or urinate in bottles and throw them at children on the side of the road,” he stated.

Numerous accounts from soldiers include the prevalence of degrading terms for Iraqis, such as “hajis,” “towel-heads” and “sand-niggers”.

Scott Ewing, who served in Iraq from 2005-2006, admitted on one panel that units intentionally gave candy to Iraqi children for reasons other than “winning hearts and minds”.

“There was also another motive,” Ewing said, “If the kids were around our vehicles, the bad guys wouldn’t attack. We used the kids as human shields.”

Glantz admits that it would be difficult for the average U.S. citizen to read the book, and believes it is important to keep in mind while doing so what it took for the veterans to give this historic testimony.

“They could have been heroes, but what they are doing here is even more heroic — which is telling the truth,” Glantz told IPS. “They didn’t have to come forward. They chose to come forward.”

Source / IPS News

Find Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan: Eyewitness Accounts of the Occupations on Amazon.com

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Mike Hanks on Sarah Palin’s Hacked Emails : Wet Dream No. 365

Photo by Robyn Beck / AFP.

‘That’s right folks, Gov. Palin’s secret e-mail account has been hacked!’
By William Michael Hanks / The Rag Blog / September 18, 2008

Suppose you could read anyone’s personal mail you wanted to. Then suppose it’s not only personal mail but sensitive business of the State. And then suppose it’s not just anyone’s personal/State business mail but the secret mail box of a Governor who just got named as a Vice-Presidential candidate.

A hacker group has released the full contents of Sara Palin’s two Yahoo e-mail accounts to Wikileaks who has posted a good part of the contents. Of course the great irony is that is is alleged that these accounts were set up to circumvent the public disclosure laws to which official correspondence is subject.

Just think … if we elect McCain and Palin this kind of strategic genius will be guiding the military intelligence affairs of our country. How could we go wrong? Let me count the ways, after I read a few more of these e-mails.

Check it out at Wikileaks.

FBI Investigates Sarah Palin’s Yahoo Account After Hackers Break in…

Alaska governor criticised for avoiding transparency by using private account for official government business
By Bobbie Johnson / September 18, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO — FBI investigators are examining an email account belonging to the vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin, after hackers broke into it and posted contents on the internet.

Screenshots and photographs taken from the account — which was hosted by Yahoo — were put online yesterday after being sent to the whistleblowing website Wikileaks.

The images showed a sequence of messages between Palin — the governor of Alaska and surprise choice as Republican vice-presidential nominee — and her state government aides, as well as a draft letter to the California governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Although some of the emails — from the address gov.palin@yahoo.com — appeared to be private, Wikileaks defended its decision by saying that Palin was violating standards on keeping public records by sending official emails through a private account.

“Governor Palin has come under criticism for using private email accounts to conduct government business and in the process avoid transparency laws,” the website said. “The list of correspondence, together with the account name, appears to reinforce the criticism.”

The hack has been attributed to an activist group known as Anonymous, a loose grouping of internet pranksters, vigilantes and anarchists that has previously locked horns with scientologists and internet paedophiles.

Federal investigators are believed to be examining details of the hack to determine the identities of those responsible — though forensic experts have said this could take some time. Last night the Wikileaks website appeared to have gone down, though the reason was unclear.

A spokesman for the Republican presidential campaign said the attack was invasive and unwarranted. “This is a shocking invasion of the governor’s privacy and a violation of law,” said Rick Davis, the McCain-Palin campaign manager, in a statement.

“The matter has been turned over to the appropriate authorities and we hope that anyone in possession of these emails will destroy them. We will have no further comment.”

The use of non-government email services to conduct official business has been strongly criticised in the past. Official government communications are required to be preserved under federal law, but without using official communications channels, it remains unclear whether emails from private accounts are being correctly preserved.

Last year the issue came to the fore after it emerged that the Bush administration had been using private accounts to conduct White House business.

Some senior Bush advisers — including the former political strategist Karl Rove — had used private accounts, contrary to accepted practice. Documentation lost as a result included email conversations discussing the controversial dismissal of a number of United States attorneys, which critics claim was done because they were unsympathetic to the Republican cause.

The attack by Anonymous is also reported to have stemmed from recent speculation about Palin’s decision to fire the Alaska public safety commissioner in July. An independent investigation is under way to examine allegations that she governor sacked Walter Monegan because of his refusal to dismiss a state trooper, Mike Wooten — who was locked in a custody battle with Palin’s sister at the time.

“Where you’ve got a governor apparently using a Yahoo account for state business, that’s kind of a complete inversion of what ought to be happening in terms of public records,” Charles Davis, executive director of the National Freedom of Information Coalition, told the Anchorage Daily News this week.

Source / Guardian, U.K.

Also see Palin’s Email Account Hacked / The Huffington Post, with email screengrabs.

The Rag Blog

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