Reasonable People Can Disagree- Are Any Left?
Posted: April 7, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentThe Wisconsin Supreme Court election of Wednesday, April 6th was a real squeaker…Kloppenburg, the democratic challenger has beaten Prosser, the incumbent Republican by 204 votes out of a little over 1,400,000 cast. This ensures a recount. This election has turned out around a half million more voters than in a normal off-year Wisconsin election, and certainly a huge turnout for a nominally non-partisan Supreme Court election.
Reportedly, over 3 million dollars was spent on this election, a stunning amount for such a race. (The Brennan Center for Justice puts the total from 4 conservative groups in Wisconsin judicial races in 2011 at $2,177,220 and the progressive Greater Wisconsin Committee’s spending at $1,363.040.)
Does this election, on the heels of the Republican governor and legislature there passing legislation banning collective bargaining for most unionized government workers foretell an ever more fractured electorate, both there and nationally? With a rally there turning out some 100,000 people protesting the elimination of the collective bargaining rights, it would seem so.
There is no doubt that there is huge money from very conservative billionaires behind the union-busting in Wisconsin and elsewhere. There is also no doubt that there is a substantial amount of union money and union on-the-ground organizing supporting the government employee unions, trying to maintain what they’ve gained over years.
Pulling out to the national level, witness the potential government shut down over the temporary budget continuing resolution that the two major parties can’t agree on. Until relatively recently, politics was the art of the compromise. The two major parties have now grown so far apart, and so entrenched in their positions, it seems almost impossible for them to agree on the slightest point.
Perhaps it’s time to see a modification of our at least formerly great system of government. It could be third and fourth parties at the least disruptive…perhaps serving the more moderate voters and independent voters, which actually outnumber those on the extremes in each party. A lot of younger voters seem to be leaning towards this. As one television commentator who had formerly worked in the legislative branch noted, it might even be time to take a giant step, and blow the whole thing up and switch to the parliamentary system. It could be something not yet even contemplated.
Whatever course the country ends up taking, it’s time for the great middle to start dictating terms to the extremes in both the major parties, instead of giving in to their often unreasonable demands. This is, and I hope will remain, the greatest country in the world, but we are in serious need of pulling together and really addressing our challenges.
The End of Newspapers-Why You Should Care
Posted: April 4, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentAfter reading an article about how much longer do newspapers have ( read it here: http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/the-newsonomics-of-oblivion/), and an earlier observation about the expense involved now in publishing, it seems like a good time to remind those who never touch a paper about how this will affect them.
An earlier article noted that it costs so much to put out the New York Times, the paper could send every subscriber FOUR free Kindles per year, and still end up with more money than they are taking in now! This pretty effectively underscores that newspapers can’t possibly continue putting out print editions…in today’s world, the economics just prohibit it.
What does this mean to you, the non-newspaper reader (or perhaps the concerned newspaper reader?) It means that newspaper organizations have to find a way to profitably stay in business as NEWS organizations…without the paper. Why? The short answer is that they are the ones at this point in time that are doing the heavy lifting as far as local news and investigative journalism.
Virtually everyone else borrows or steals from them. Bloggers and aggregators either have no news staff or very small ones. Radio news is so badly reduced that many major market outlets don’t even have enough reporters to send one out when a story breaks. Television news isn’t far behind when it comes to reduced staffs that can barely cover what breaks. The national networks also have reduced staffing. Watch as CNN has a guy in Dallas cover a story in Kansas City, for example. They don’t even have a stringer or local reporter they can call! Sure, lots of websites will still rewrite press releases they receive, and can publish tips that come in, but who’s going to do the digging to verify facts or interview people at the scene when an actual hard news story breaks or continues to unfold?
Newspapers need–right now- -to figure out a way to combine electronic subscriptions and mobile and web advertising in a manner that will support their news operations and make a profit or they will go away. When? A lot of observers think in the next 5 to 10 years. If you value knowing what’s going on in your neighborhood, city, and the world, you should be very concerned.
An Aside to the Reagan Shooting Anniversary
Posted: March 30, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentThirty years ago tonight, I was doing a weekly jazz show on the public station where I lived. When I got in, the Operations Manager said I’d have to join PBS LIVE at the top of the hour…and that was really hard to do. I laughed a bit, and said I’d joined NBC news live every evening for 4 years, it wouldn’t be a problem. The General Manager, with whom I’d gone to college, also found it amusing.
Just before the top of the hour, I was ending a song, and was reminded that I had to join the network, and had to be EXACTLY on time. I said, “No problem. I’ll come out of the record (which were still being played 30 years ago!), do the weather, a legal ID, and join PBS exactly at the top of the hour.” The Operations Manager and about a half dozen staffers were in the studio watching…they didn’t seem to think this was possible. My buddy the General Manager was in the hallway just smiling.
Of course, everything worked perfectly. Just like riding a bike, you don’t forget how to join a live network broadcast after you’ve done that for years and years. Yes, after the update about the President’s condition in the newscast, the jazz rolled on!
They say moments like the Reagan shooting are defining moments. Having been through the assassinations of President Kennedy, his brother Robert, Martin Luther King, and the shooting of President Reagan, I am one of those who can tell you exactly where I was when each occurred. If you were around then, I bet you can too!
Health Care & Bargaining-A Real Story
Posted: March 28, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentOn Friday, March 25th, the Vermont House passed single payer health care. The Senate there is looking to follow suit, and the governor will sign it…making Vermont the first state in the country to have a program similar to Medicare for all its citizens. Even after this, they still have to get federal permission to put it into effect under ERISA before 2017- they have introduced and amendment in Congress to move the waiver date to 2014, which is endorsed by President Obama.
Contrast this to the Wisconsin situation where a law has just passed stripping government workers of collective bargaining rights. While this really looks more and more like a blatant union-busting tactic, let’s say for the sake of argument that it really is just to cut costs.
To bring this down to the individual level, I offer my own story in a nutshell. Just about a year ago, I had to have major surgery…without which I would have a nasty cancer by now, and would be on the way to a lousy and slow demise. While the health insurance of my previous employer would have paid for surgery, they would have only paid for the old fashioned “crack your chest open” way…which the Chief Surgeon and Professor of Medicine I was seeing at UCSF Medical Center said would have worked, but cuts through the vocal chords. Since I use my voice for a living, that would have saved my life, but would have been a career-ender.
With the good UNION insurance I have through my present employer, a product of collective bargaining, I didn’t have to choose between a much shortened life and miserable slow death and ending my career and becoming homeless. I was able to have a type of “minimally invasive” surgery only performed at UCSF in San Francisco and a handful of other medical centers around the country.
For all our problems in this country, we are still the richest in the world, and our people shouldn’t have to make such choices! Think about that the next time you hear about “death panels!” Those already exist…they are the people that say “no” at insurance companies, in order to fatten their bottom line at the expense of peoples’ lives and quality of life. To me, profit at the expense of my life doesn’t seem like the American Way!
Operation Odyssey Dawn & The War Powers Act
Posted: March 22, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentWith all the noise from the right and left on President Obama’s leading the US into the Libya “no-fly zone,” and “all necessary means” to protect Libya’s people from Moammar Gadhafi’s brutality (and it would be nice if there was a standard spelling of his name), it seemed a good time to look at an overview of the War Powers Resolution of 1973 (which is commonly called the War Powers Act.)
The act was passed by Congress to re-assert it’s role in the use of US armed forces abroad in hostile situations. While the Constitution gives the President the Commander in Chief of the armed forces role (Art. II, Sec. 2), it also gives Congress the power to make declarations of war, and to raise and support the armed forces (Art. I, Sec. 8.)
In fact, various Presidents over the years have committed US forces some 125 times without the declaration of war or later Congressional approval. The formal declaration of war has only been made twice in the last 100 years, World War One and World War Two.
During the operations in Kosovo, President Clinton noted that he considered the War Powers Resolution constitutionally defective. Members of the House filed suit. The court ruled in favor of the President, holding that the Members lacked legal standing to bring the suit; this decision was affirmed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. See Campbell v. Clinton, 203 F.3d 19 (D.C. Cir. 2000). The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal from this decision, in effect letting it stand.
This decision gives a President wide latitude to exercise the Commander in Chief power, which makes calls for impeachment seem like just a lot of partisan throat clearing.
http://www.loc.gov/law/help/war-powers.php
A Need for A Facebook for Neighbors?
Posted: March 21, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentAccording to an article at mashable.com, Everyblock, the hyperlocal news source, has relaunched itself as a community site. “We’re shifting from a one-way newsfeed to more of a community-empowered website,” says EveryBlock founder Adrian Holovaty. “Instead of going to the site to passively consume information, we’re going to offer a platform for posting messages to your neighbors, to discover who lives near you.”
Holovaty goes on to note that sites such as Facebook enable you focus on neighbors, not necessarily people you already know. In addition to the neighborhood-specific news, business reviews, crime reports and real estate listings the site delivered previously, new features encourage users to share and discuss local news, meet one another and coordinate neighborhood activities.
My question is whether people will actually care about reaching out to neighbors in this way…in other words, is this a product trying to fill a need that’s not really there?
Beaming Electricity-Pipe Dream?
Posted: March 15, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentThe devastation from the quake and tsunami in Japan, aside from the obvious terrible human losses and destruction of structures also raises another issue…transmission of power. The nuclear reactor problems are getting a huge amount of media attention, as they should. In the meantime, people are without necessities like food, water, & shelter.
It’s worth noting that not so much information is coming out as we have seen recently in Egypt, Tunisia, and other places where unrest has or may overturn regimes. It’s likely that a lot of this is due to the loss of electricity…which we rely on for daily needs, from household to running gas pumps. It goes without saying that it also runs the computers and cell towers that enable smartphones people use to post updates on the web.
An interesting thought for the future…transmitting the electrical power through the air without wires, so it could be rerouted virtually anywhere. No, I don’t have the plan for this, nor the capacity to form one, but offer this as a thought starter to perhaps find it’s way to some brilliant scientific minds out there. If we can beam radio waves around, how about figuring out a way to safely and economically beaming the actual electricity? Ok, geniuses…the ball’s in your court!
Corporations- No personal privacy
Posted: March 1, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentThe Supreme Court today ruled 8-0 that corporations do not have a right of personal privacy which would prevent disclosure of documents under the Freedom of Information Act. The opinion written by Chief Justice Roberts said that, despite the use of the terms “person” and “personhood” in describing corporations (and perhaps walking corporate rights back a tad after the Citizens United decision of last year), AT&T could not claim that a FOIA disclosure would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
The FCC had released some information under an open records request, but withtheld other documents over concerns that business secrets or humans’ privacy might be compromised. The trade secrets protection for corporations still stands.
Justice Kagan worked on the dispute while at the Justice Department, and did not take part in the case. (FCC v. AT&T, 09-1279).
Web Access Cut at Wisconsin Capitol?
Posted: February 22, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentThinkprogress.org reports that pro-labor folks at the Wisconsin Capitol building can’taccess the site they have been using to update activities there, recruit volunteers, and call for supplies to the protesters. More here:
http://thinkprogress.org/2011/02/22/wisconsin-protest-internet/
This dovetails in with a lot of folks’ worst nightmare. The FCC recently appeared to ok AT&T and Comcast manipulating access and download speeds and data amounts. We saw how Mubarak in Egypt cut web access there, and infuriated people. Let’s hope that the people of Wisconsin get the word out, and are as angered about this as the people of Egypt were. For all the conservative talk about free speech, it now seems that free speech only applies if you agree with the conservative line. This could be a sad day for America, or the beginning of some real change for the better. It’s up to the people!
Judge says MERS doesn’t have right to transfer mortgages
Posted: February 15, 2011 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a commentYou may have heard about this, but if not, it levels the playing field for some homeowners who are under water in their battle to stay in their homes. The company that tracks around half of all American home loans has no right to transfer mortgages, according to a ruling last week (2-10-11) by Judge Robert Grossman of the U.S. bankruptcy court in Central Islip, NY. Judge Grossman’s ruling means that Merscorp Inc, a private company known as MERS and owned by large banks and mortgage processors, cannot act as an agent of the banks that own mortgages. If his ruling isn’t overturned by a higher court, or superseded by a new law giving it authority passed by Congress and signed by the President, it could significantly affect the foreclosure process nationwide.
MERS was designed to speed up legal recordkeeping of mortgages and sales of mortgage loans through securitizations, but critics– including borrowers’ lawyers and advocacy groups– contend it has no right to pursue foreclosures because it does not own the mortgage loans. If Judge Grossman’s ruling is picked up by other courts in other districts, and MERS is regularly found not to have authority to foreclose, many foreclosure proceedings could be halted indefinitely, and affected homeowners could end up with clear title to their homes. Watch how hard the banks push to have this changed by Congress!
Update: The ABA Journal reports that the state of New York is drawing up plans to use court-appointed attorneys to represent homeowners in some 80,000 foreclosure cases there.


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