Blogswarm - Online Political News Magazine



Friday, January 07, 2005
3 New Candidates for DNC Chair

Two new candidates, a new website, and more, more, more. Yet another unofficial DNC Chair Cattle Call:

Diaries :: blogswarm's diary ::

Update [2005-1-7 15:33:59 by blogswarm]: JekyllnHyde points out in comments that there is now a third new candidate today (via hotline):

Some women's groups, upset over Roemer's DNC candidacy, are pushing for Kate Michelman to jump in.

  • David Leland is rumored to have entered the race yesterday, but a quick search of google news and technorati suggests that if he is running he chose to follow Webb and Frost by employing the stealth technique of announcement. Brutus Buckeye seems to care enough to have started an account on MyDD just to say, "Former Ohio Democratic Party Chair (and current Project Vote director) David Leland announced his DNC candidacy yesterday. I cannot think of a worse person to lead the DNC. Most people blame Leland for the sorry state the Ohio Democratic Party is in and his "hands-off" approach led to complete chaos within the party. We're still trying to recover from his leadership in Ohio."

  • Marshall Wittman is now the rumored DLC choice for DNC chair. In keeping with Demcratic Leadership Council tradition, Wittman is a Republican. I believe STFU is the appropriate response to this and anything else that comes for the Republican wing of the Democratic Party.

  • Tim Roemer's website, Tim RAemer is still as disappointing as his stances on the issues. Dave Johnson has an in-depth expose on Roemer's connection to the Mercatus Center which is an extreme-right think tank funded by Richard Mellon Scaife and other benefactors of the vast right wing conspiracy. Chris Bowers and Kos have now piled on and this scandal is getting legs. This has been a bad week for Roemer with Talking Points Memo reporting that Roemer is anti social security, pro-abortion criminalization, anti-balanced budget, and pro-deficit spending. Chris Bowers has said Roemer should not be chair. Read more here and then here. Pandagon labels supporting Roemer to be an "exercise in self-destruction" -- hear that Reid and Pelosi?

  • Terry McAliffe's Noalition bid imploded within 48 hours. Chris Bowers called this a "terrible idea" and that is one of the nicest things the blogosphere has said. Through the cigar smoke says he is a, "blight on the Democratic Party. To put it in sports terms, McAuliffe can't carry Karl Rove's jock." Pejmanesque: "He regularly displays strategic and tactical genius the likes of which we haven't seen since 1991 when the Iraqi Republican Guard was facing the wrong way as the Americans made their pincer encirclement move into Iraq. Or when Custer encountered the opposition at Little Bighorn and said "Hey, this should come out as a clear win!"" Suburban Guerrilla: "I have to wonder if the beltway Democrats are COMPLETELY FUCKING CRAZY" The only thing T-Mc has won as Chair is an award for the dumbest quotes of 2004: "This is the best election night in history." Don't let the door hit you on the way out.

  • Martin Frost is still trying to take his losing streak nationwide with his Noalition bid that is supported by the General Custer wing of the Democratic Party. To recap, Frost ran an ad praising Bush. and another ad that, "casts fellow Democrat Ted Kennedy in the same liberal boogeyman role as some Republicans do." Frost is still a Loser and appears to be gaining no traction in bringing his pro-GOP, anti-Democrat approach to the DNC.

  • Wellington Webb still has yet to address WeatherDem's point that he, "helped make sure the state of the art baggage system would be built for the airport. Remember that baggage system? It still doesn't work. Originally estimated to cost $12 million, it ended up costing $250 million and delayed the opening of the airport one and a half years. Oh, and it's now being turned into scrap metal." Western Democrat has been following Webb but today pointed out, "It isn't necessary for us to have a DNC from the West for the DNC to help us in the West."

  • Donnie "king of the burning dog poop" Fowler went "poot" before he had a chance to announce his impressive campaign staff. The flaming bag of dog poop scandle has convinced Chris Bowers that Fowler doesn't understand the problems. Fowler has his scheduler running Internet Communications which may help explain why he campaign went down in "flames" online. There's more on how the wingers would exploit his nickname. Fowler has now become an also-ran.

  • Howard Dean still has an aggressive online organizing effort by Draft Howard, Mainstreet Moms, Driving Votes and the Dean4DNC yahoo group. Dean is gaining enough momentum for the Noalition to have floated the McAuliffe trial balloon. Still no word on whether he will run or hold the Party accountable by keeping his options open for 2008.

  • Simon Rosenberg officially announced yesterday and now has a www.SimonForChair.org campaign site complete with blog. BlogPAC has Rosenberg's plan for the blogosphere:

    As DNC Chair, I'd like to take the DNC and make it a full part of the blogosphere.  The principle behind what I offer here is to foment a continual and robust online discussion that the DNC actually is part of and that reinforces an overall Democratic political strategy.  To that end, I submit that the DNC needs:


    1. Regular conference calls, conferences, and a blog committee of 'netroots' representatives to advise various DNC departments on strategy, research, messaging and outreach.

    2. A consistent non-election year blogad budget dedicated to framing and testing messaging, as well as potential seed money for specialty blogs.

    3. An internal champion in the DNC to break news on blogs and connect elected Democrats and high level staffers with blogs, bloggers, and effective use of the internet with the goal of having the blogosphere surpass cable news networks in reach and influence.

    4. To use the DNC's 3.7 million person email list to create community and promote interesting spinoff projects like and grassroots created quality video and audio content.

    5. Regular guest-posting from DNC representatives on willing blogs to talk through organizational, operational, and policy issues.

    6. To work with blogs to figure out how to use Meetup effectively as a political tool for state and local parties.

    7. To promote a dialogue in which the blogs continue their discussion of the Democratic Party so that we can create the social networks critical to a vibrant progressive movement.

    8. To integrate blogs fully into the progressive messaging machine that targets and unseats Republicans and Republican initiatives.

    9. A New Politics Think Tank inside the DNC that fosters the sharing of best practices among those involved in netroots politics so as to allow for a supported network of savvy operatives to permeate progressive organizing.  This organ would also investigate new technologies like RSS, wikis, podcasting, and their applicability to organizing at every level.


    Blogs represent a increasingly democratizing media, and I want to make sure that this trend is encouraged in the years ahead.  These ideas are not final, and will evolve in accordance with yours and others' feedback.

  • Posted at 04:32 pm by blog swarm
    Comments (7)  




    Thursday, January 06, 2005
    Donnie Fowler: Change the Party

    Donnie Fowler as King of Flaming Dog Poop
    Wed Jan 5th, 2005 at 21:18:39 PST

    The Flaming Bag of Dog Poop is the name of the Donnie Fowler scandal. Check out this Donnie Fowler Q & A for more information.

    Now that Fowler has referred to himself as the "king of the burning dog poop" let us take a moment to consider what would happen if Ken Mehlman made the same mistake:

  • Kos would have a diary within hours saying that the GOP was finally being honest and it would get 400 comments.

  • Atrios would write how, economically speaking, dog dung has less value than cow dung (because cow dung makes good fertilizer).

  • Chris Bowers would post excel spreadsheats showing how the geographic transportation of dog dung moving from city parks to exurb landfills has mimicked the evolving dynamic of GOP votes.

  • Josh Marshall would write how Mehlman is actually the king of dog shit, but the media censored the language.

  • Dozens of Kos Diarys would be posted on how this proves they stole the election.

  • John Aravosis would remind everyone that dog-dung is a slang term for closetted gay men.

    This would all happen within hours. After that, it would begin to gather some serios mo' and Ken Mehlman would forever be linked to dog-dung. But the right would never do something like that to our leader.

  • http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/1/6/01839/33903 

    http://www.changeforamerica.com/community/node/view/2387


    Posted at 01:06 am by blog swarm
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    Wednesday, January 05, 2005
    Candidates for DNC Chair

    With apologies to Jerome, I decided to do my own Cattle Call. While the official MyDD Cattle Calls are unbiased analysis of what is going on in the races, I'm going to leave that to Jerome. In the spirit of Gonzo-Blogging I'm going to insert myself into the conversation while covering the race.

    There are only a few candidates remaining, so I think now is the time for other users to also post their views on the field.

    Tim Roemer now has a website, www.TimRAemer.com, where patriotic symbolism appears more important than spelling. Roemer is the candidate that Reid and Pelosi convinced to run to ensure that the money flows through their campaign committees instead of helping state parties. Targeting is important, but considering 75% of state parties don't even have a blog and many don't even have an organizer, I believe this approach has failed to meet primia facia burdens for Democrats having a national party. As Talking Points Memo reports, Roemer is anti social security, pro-abortion criminalization, anti-balanced budget, and pro-deficit spending. Chris Bowers said Roemer should not be chair and started a firestorm of netroots declarations that a Roemer DNC would be abandoned by the base. Read more here and then here. Make no mistake, Roemer is not running because he wants to lead our party, he is running because powerful people have asked him to help safeguard their turf. He's wrong on the issues and would splinter the party.

    Terry McAliffe is the latest to be discussed by the ABD crowd -- henceforth referred to as the Noalition. This trial balloon was launched by the General Custer wing of the Democratic Party. When Jerome blogged it the reaction went from shock to angst quicker than T-Mac's primary season. People who mistakenly believe that McAliffe could succeed where he has failed before are wise to also understand the fact that, "Bloggers like the Daily Kos have made ridding the party of McAuliffe a central political crusade." McAliffe bet the wrong way on the length of the primary season, on corporate funding instead of grassroots support, on the early convention, and on how to deploy resources during the 2002 midterm. All of his bets were placed from his experience as a bagman and all proved he is not a strategist.

    Martin Frost has the unique distinction of being amenable to both the Noalition and the General Custer wing. Annatopia was represented by the guy and seems to have the best grasp of what he's about. She thinks he's a "dime a dozen" and was kind enough to bring to light the scandal that will doom his campaign. During his re-election bid, Frost ran ads praising Bush. If that wasn't bad enough, he also ran an ad that, "casts fellow Democrat Ted Kennedy in the same liberal boogeyman role as some Republicans do" (in the words of the Dallas Morning News). Not only did his selfishness fail to get him re-elected, but Annatopia notes this strategy of hating our party also cost down-ticket Democrats in tight races -- meaning Dallas County ended up a half a percentage point from turning blue. To recap, Frost is a loser who ran ads praising Republicans while also running ads attacking Democrats -- hurting all of the Democrats around him. Now he wants to take this approach nation-wide?

    Wellington Webb decided to announce in secret so that not even Kos found out. Webb has some baggage, or should we say expensive lost baggage. WeatherDem explains that he, "helped make sure the state of the art baggage system would be built for the airport. Remember that baggage system? It still doesn't work. Originally estimated to cost $12 million, it ended up costing $250 million and delayed the opening of the airport one and a half years. Oh, and it's now being turned into scrap metal." The word on the street is that Webb will endorse Dean if he continues to fail at achieving traction.

    Donnie Fowler is now Donnie "king of the burning dog poop" Fowler. While Don's kid has been telling anyone who will listen that he is a netroots genius, he proved himself wrong this week in with the flaming dog poop scandal that destroyed his credibility as an online campaigner while earning him his new nickname. To respond and prove he could interact online, he came out of hiding between 3 and 4 AM with requests for people to read his 14 page manifesto. Not surprisingly, there weren't many people there for him to interact with. It just keeps coming. Voting for the King of Dog Poop is a crappy vote (if he is elected chair, then what does that make us). Of course, if Don can get his son the job, then the GOP will have a  field day with his nickname.

    Reform Candidates are all that remain and I would be proud to follow either Howard Dean or Simon Rosenberg. I actually think that the Democratic Party is screwed up enough to need both of them. Governor Dean's candidacy is being supported online by Draft Howard, Mainstreet Moms, Driving Votes and there is also Dean4DNC yahoo group. Rosenberg announces tomorrow at the National Press Club. Directly after his announcement he'll be talking with BlogPAC to answer blogger questions.


    Posted at 08:57 pm by blog swarm
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    Tuesday, January 04, 2005
    Donnie Fowler for DNC Chair?

    DNC CHAIR DONNIE FOWLER
    More than twenty-four hours ago, DNC Chair candidate Donnie Fowler posted a diary on MyDD and then fled without answering any of the dozens of questions that people asked.

    Over on Kos, ttagaris referred to this as A Flaming Bag of Dog Poop, noting:

    Remember when you were teenager and you used to play ding-dong-ditch with your friends?  Maybe some of us took it to the next level and would leave a flaming bag of poop on a doorstep?
    [...]
    Would a candidate, when going door to door, ring the doorbell, drop a piece of literature on the front step, and then run away to the next house? The same should be asked about on-line outreach.
    He continues:

    You see, the Internet is the ONLY medium of two-way mass communication available.  One of the things I dread is that the Democratic Party will see this wonderful blogosphere and think in terms of pre-modern campaign communications.

    I don't want to see them stuck in the mindset of television, radio, and print advertising.  Just talking at you in a 30 second spot, or a full-page advertisment.  NO! NO! NO!  If that is the way you want to use the net in 2005/2006 -- then you will get left behind in the netroots.  For many, that will be just fine.  To you, I wish the best of luck -- but I am uninterested in your campaign.

    To the candidates who recongize the value of this two-way dialogue, the spoils shall go.  And I am not just talking about fundraising.  Cause if fundraising dollars are the only reason your are willing to "put up" with us, then you are not welcome in the netroots vision for the future of the Democratic Party.

    In the comments, wanderindiana notes, "I salute you for your connection of two-way communication with reform."

    Which I think is a very important concept. Reform requires responsiveness and accountability, not flaming bags of dog poop. We don't need leaders who use the internet like an ad, we need leaders who use the internet to interact.

    Absent interaction, Fowler's post is nothing more than an ad "talking at" us by another politician who doesn't get it. To paraphrase Plato, Fowler has come out of the cave and realized there is more to see than the shadows on the wall. But he hasn't realized that he can interact with this new world.

    An entire 24 hour media-cycle later, the questions people posted appear to have been in vain. This was a major missed opportunity. I don't want our Chair to miss opportunities...we've done enough of that.

    I figure it is time to forget about Fowler and talk amongst ourselves. Thus, I have attempted to answer some of the questions about Fowler from comments that have ended up in the blogosphere.

    QUESTION: MySteve:

    What about minority outreach?"

    ANSWER: Maxwell:

    I have a little trouble fully committing to someone like Fowler who make such gross errors of fact as this:

    Whether marching under the banner of the Tories (Revolutionary War), the Democrats (Civil War), or the Republicans (civil rights movement), conservatives have consistently resisted progress that we now consider obvious and natural:

    The Republicans were the natural allies of the Civil Rights Act, and voted 27-6 to pass it through the Senate. It was Southern Democrats who resisted it...22 in the Senate and 96 in the House. This was the seminal event that restructured political affiliations along demographic lines among Democrats, and resulted in the exodous of many party members over the next decades.

    If Fowler misunderstands one of the most fundamental events in modern Democratic Party history, I'm worried about him becoming the operational and very public voice of the party.

    ***

    QUESTION: Josh Koenig:

    I'm curious how you'd see the National party working (if at all) to revitalize state-level organizations.

    ANSWER: Emptywheel:

    In short, if the MI campaign is an example of what Donnie Fowler's DNC would be like, I want out. Here are some gripes:

    I was the precinct/ward organizer for one of the medium-large counties in MI. You'd think, as a grassroots organizer for one of the must-win areas in MI, I'd have heard from you, or at least known that you valued my work and that you were listening to my good ideas.

    But you see, the volunteers who ran our grassroots never attended one of the state meetings. Nor did we see you locally (suffice it to say we're accessible to both Lansing and Detroit). The people who attended meetings were the paid people--some might call them consultants, part of that aristocracy you claim to want to get rid of.

    I don't really care that I wasn't invited to meetings--I was spending 10-60 hours a week volunteering, I didn't need more meetings (although I think it belies your claim for inclusion at every level).

    But I do care that every time we tried to do something at a local level because IT MADE SENSE, we either had to lie, subject our paid staffers to berating in those weekly meetings, or just try to fudge the numbers. That is, not only did the MI coordinated campaign NOT listen to local leaders, it forced local leaders to manipulate the system in order to do what we knew to be right.

    Now I'm willing to see you provide proof that you can change--that your leadership of the DNC would be different from what I saw in MI. But barring that I really can't see throwing you a lot of support. You talk a good talk. But your proven record doesn't match that talk, at least not from the perspective of this local grassroots leader.

    ***

    QUESTION: desmoulins:

    I'm all for reforming the party nationally and at state level but I wonder what the new reformed party will look like that is different from how it functions today.

    ANSWER: BigDog04:

    Fowler is trouble not for any obvious policy or reform reasons, in my judgment, but because he's incompetent in my opinion. All he succeeded in the Clark Campaign was to insure chaos and an unprepared candidate with astoundingly weak staffing...which just compounded the errors.
    Imagine a nascent, last minute Presidential Campaign with an inexperienced political candidate, (who has the ENTIRE Media Spotlight, a compelling history with substantive viewpoints, significant strategic strengths against the Republican Machince) yet the first non-pro Press Secretary and Campaign Manager Fowler don't prepare the candidate for the most obvious of questions about Iraq?

    I'm not a highly paid professional political operative...but I guarantee that conversation and role-play would have taken place where I or any other of hundreds of experienced politcal types in charge.

    Why do you think he was on the Clark Campaign such a short period of time? Let's see....Wes Clark madee his decision late in the afternoon on September 15, 2003, announced on Sept 17, 2003 and Fowler resigned October 8, 2003. Why is his presidential campaign chairmanship even mentioned?

    Leaving while publicly claiming to have been championing the 'rights' of the Draft Movement participants, the reality is that he was asked to take a secondary role...and he petulantly picked up his toys...went home AND TALKED TO THE PRESS ABOUT IT!

    That wasn't loyal professional political technique then or now.

    ****

    QUESTION: Norm:

    You were the National Field Director for Gore 2000. You state you worked in both Iowa and New Hampshire that year. In Donna Brazile's recent book she has a story about election day for the New Hampshire primary. Basically, she writes that after the Gore campaign discovered that Senator Bill Bradley was leading in the exit polls, the Gore campaign helped cause a traffic jam during rush hour in areas of New Hampshire that were trending heavily for Bradley. Essentially, she wrote this off as something like "alls fair in love and war." Michael Whouley I think has also told similar stories. Vice President Gore ended up barely defeating Senator Bradlay in NH. My question to you, Mr. Fowler, is this: what role did you play in any discussions about causing a traffic jam to block Bardley voters from getting to the polls? Were you involved in any such discussions, and if so, how do you explain this attempt to block voters getting to the polls with all of the Democratic rhetoric is 2000 about voting in Florida and 2004 in Ohio?

    ANSWER: wmtriallawyer:

    He was national field director for Gore/Liberman. In other words, he was the guy in charge of ensuring all D voters in the U.S. were targeted, called, cajoled, and brought to the polls.

    If he did his job in Tennessee (Gore's home state), Arkansas (Big Dog's home state), West Virginia (traditional D state before Rove got to it), Ohio, Florida, etc., etc., we wouldn't be here moaning over W.

    Some field director. And now he wants to run the party? Mmmm, no thanks...

    ****

    QUESTION: Rayne:

    I'll be real blunt here: I saw more organization in my county here in Michigan from MoveOn and from the Sierra Club than I did the Democratic Party.

    Frankly, I can't see what the impediments were towards making any of the so-called "innovative programs" work in Michigan during this last campaign. If MoveOn could do them, why weren't they already implemented?

    If this didn't get done at state level, what's to say they'll get done at national?

    ANSWER: BigDog04:

    This is vintage Donnie F. He makes a great sales job to GET the job..then blows it because of a lack of real skill.

    This interchange says a lot more about a lack of ability to work with people than it does anything else.

    Whatever else the new DNC Chair does...he/she must be able to work with people who really disagree with them...and still make progress towards a greater goal. Fowler has NEVER shown a bit of success at a high level in his work.

    *****

    QUESTION: Andrew C White:

    I also wonder about your statement here...

    "raise money through traditional means and recognize value of new donors"

    What do you mean by that? "traditional means"? Is this a poorly worded statement or are you sending an anti-internet and small-donor message? That's the way it sounds but I doubt you really meant it that way. Care to take a moment to clarify?

    ANSWER: BigDog04:

    And I have, after hearing a participant in a DFA training tell me how Fowler said "he" knew the secrets of the online campaign revolution, even less respect. Bah. Lots of Dean people should have stood up and stoned him in that meeting...much less the Draft Movement folks that took the online campaign to a new place too and worked it as hard as they could.

    As one activist has already told me:
    "If Fowler become DNC Chair...I'm gone. The Party is hopeless."


    Posted at 06:39 pm by blog swarm
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    Denounce Torture

    An Open Letter to Alberto R. Gonzales

    January 4, 2005

    Hon. Alberto R. Gonzales

    Counsel to the President

    The White House

    1600 Pennsylvania Avenue

    Washington, DC   20500

    Dear Judge Gonzales:

    We, the undersigned religious leaders, greet your nomination to be Attorney General of the United States with grave concern.

    As a self-professed evangelical Christian, you surely know that all people are created in the image of God. You see it as a moral imperative to treat each human being with reverence and dignity. We invite you to affirm with us that we are all are made in the image of God – every human being. We invite you to acknowledge that no legal category created by mere mortals can revoke that status. You understand that torture – the deliberate effort to undermine human dignity – is a grave sin and affront to God. You would not deny that the systemic use of torture on prisoners at Abu Ghraib was fundamentally immoral, as is the deliberate rendering of any detainee to authorities likely to commit torture.

    We urge you to declare that any attempt to undermine international standards on torture, renditions, or habeas corpus is not only wrong but sinful. We are concerned that as White House counsel you have shown a troubling disregard for international laws against torture, for the legal rights of suspected "enemy combatants," and for the adverse consequences your decisions have had at home and abroad.

    How could you have written a series of legal memos that disrespected international law and invited these abuses? How could you have justified the use of torture and disavowed protections for prisoners of war? How could you have referred to the Geneva Conventions as “quaint” and “obsolete.” We fear that your legal judgments have paved the way to torture and abuse.

    We therefore call upon you

    •  To denounce the use of torture under any circumstances;

    •  To affirm, with the Supreme Court, that it is unconstitutional to imprison anyone designated as an "enemy combatant" for months without access to lawyers or the right to challenge their detentions in court;

    •  To affirm the binding legality of the Geneva Conventions and the laws of war;

    •  And to reject the practice of "extraordinary rendition," at home and abroad, by which terrorist suspects are sent to countries that practice torture for interrogation.

    We believe, as you do, that the United States must be an example of moral leadership in the world community. However, the events at Abu Ghraib have gravely compromised America's moral authority. We ask that you commit yourself as Attorney General to repairing that damage by articulating and enforcing legal policies that reject the use of torture, embrace and advance standards of international law, and honor the dignity of all of God's creation.

    With prayers for wisdom and grace,

       Over 225 Religious Leaders

      (Affiliations listed for identification only)

    Initial Endorsers:

    Rev. Dr. George Hunsinger, Princeton Theological Seminary 

           Coordinator: Church Folks for a Better America

    Dr. C. René Padilla, General Secretary for Latin America, IFES

    Sr. Dianna Ortiz, director, Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition International

    Rabbi Arthur Waskow, The Shalom Center

    Sr. Joan Chittister, OSB

    Dr. Susan Thistlethwaite, President, Chicago Theological Seminary

    Mr. Jim Wallis, Editor, Sojourners

    Dr. Ron Sider,   President,   Evangelicals for Social Action

    Dr. Anthony Campolo, Evangelical Association for the Promotion of Education

    Dr. Rubén Rosario Rodríguez, St. Louis University

    Dr. Juanita Jartu Jolly, Agape Christian Tabernacle

    Rev. Victor Aloyo, Jr., Director of Vocations, Princeton Theological Seminary

    Rev. Alexia Salvatierra, Executive Director, Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice

    Pastor Amaury Tañón-Santos, American Baptist Churches

    The Rev. John E. Denaro, Episcopal Migration Ministries

    Rabbi Michael Lerner, The TIKKUN Community

    Dr. Stanley Hauerwas, The Divinity School of Duke University

    Bishop Thomas J. Gumbleton, Aux. Bishop, Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit

    Bishop James H. Burch, Catholic Diocese of One Spirit

    Rev. Dr. Joseph C. Hough, Jr., President, Union Theological Seminary

    Rabbi Mordechai Liebling, The Shefa Fund

    Rev. Dr. James H. Cone, Union Theological Seminary

    Dr. Teresa Whitehurst, Jesus on the Family Institute

    Dr. Glen Stassen, Fuller Theological Seminary

    Rabbi Brian Walt, Rabbis for Human Rights North America

    Rev. Romal Tune, African American Ministers Council

    Rev. Dr. Therese M. Becker, Department of Spiritual Care, University of Chicago Hospitals

    Rabbi Shirley Idelson, Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion

    Rev. Theophlus Caviness, Greater Abyssinia, Cleveland, OH

    Rev. Violete Dease, Abyssinian Baptist, Harlem, NY

    Dr. Paul H. Sherry, National Council of Churches of Christ
    Iftekhar Hussain, Secretary General, American Muslim Society of the Tristate Area

    Rev. Victoria J. Furio

    The Rev. Julio Torres

    Rev. Timothy McDonald, African Amer. Ministers Council & First Iconium Baptist

    Dr. Tarunjit Singh, Secretary General World Sikh Council - America Region

    Dr. William Werpehowski, Center for Peace and Justice Education, Villanova University

    Mr. Dave Robinson, Executive Director, Pax Christi USA

    Mahdi Bray, Executive Director Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation

    Sheila Musaji, Editor, The American Muslim Magazine

    Mohammed Kaiseruddin, President, Muslim Community Center, Chicago

    Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf

    Dr. A.S. Mahdi Ibn-Ziyad, Africana Islamic Institute

    Imam Abdul Malik Mujahid, Sound Vision Foundation

    Rabbi Steven B. Jacobs

    Rev. Meg Riley, Unitarian Universalist Association

    The Rev. Frank Morales, St. Marks Church

    Rabbi Gerry Serotta, Temple Shalom

    Rabbi Nancy Fuchs-Kreimer, Reconstructionist Rabbinical Assoc. (Past President)

    Dr. E. Glenn Hinson, Professor Emeritus, Baptist Theological Seminary

    The Rev. Robert Moore, Coalition for Peace Action & Peace Action Education Fund

    Rev. Dr. Donald W. Shriver, President Emeritus, Union Theological Seminary, NYC

    Sr. Betty Obal, SL, UN NGO Representative, Loretto Community

    Rev. Dr.  Frederick R. Trost, Wisconsin Conference of the United Church of Christ

    Bishop Charles Wesley Jordan

    Mr. Jason Byassee, Assistant Editor, Christian Century

    David W. Reid, Publisher, Vital Theology

    Richard V. Pierard, Stephen Phillips Professor of History, Gordon College

    Dr. Barbara DeConcini, Executive Director, American Academy of Religion

    Rev. Steven C. Baines, People For the American Way Foundation

    Dr. Tarunjit Singh, Secretary General World Sikh Council - America Region

    Bishop Marshall L. Meadors, Jr. Bishop in Residence Candler School of Theology Emory

    The Very Rev. Tracey Lind, Dean Trinity Episcopal Cathedral

    The Very Rev. Dr. Ann J. Broomell, Dean Trinity Episcopal Cathedral

    Rev. Dr. Albert M. Pennybacker, Chair/CEO, Clergy and Laity Network

    Rev. Vicky A. Fleming

    The Reverend K. Dennis Winslow, St. Peter's Episcopal Church

    Rev. Dr. James E. Fitzgerald, Minister for Mission and Social Justice, The Riverside Church

    Dr. Sondra Wheeler, Martha Ashby Carr Professor of Christian Ethics, Wesley Theological Seminary

    Rev. Brenda Bartella Peterson

    Dr. George F. Regas, The Regas Institute

    Dr. Charles Hunter, Presbyterian Minister, Parish Associate at the Oak Cliff Presbyterian Church in Dallas, Texas

    Rev. Dr. Charles Raynal, Director of Advanced Studies, Columbia Theological Seminary

    Mark A. Chancey, Religious Studies, Southern Methodist University

    The Rev. Gary R. Weaver

    Julie M. Hill

    Scott R. Gansl, president, World Congress of GLBT Jewish Organisations: Keshet Ga'ava

    Dr. S.M. Ghazanfar, Professor of Economics University of Idaho

    Dana Regan, First Unitarian Church of Portland, OR

    Rev. Dr. William G. Brockman

    Bob Morris

    Helga Scow Stern

    Chuck Currie, United Church of Christ Seminarian, Central Pacific Conference UCC

    Rev. Jay R. Newlin, OSL, Pastor Jenkintown United Methodist Church

    Rev. Melody C. Porter, First United Methodist Church of Germantown

    Ruth Messinger

    Anne Ewing

    The Rev. Meg A. Riley, Unitarian Universalist Association

    Rabbi Nancy Flam, Institute for Jewish Spirituality

    Rabbi Alana Suskin, Congregation Adas Israel

    Rabbi Dr. Andrew Vogel Ettin, Wake Forest University and Temple Israel

    Rev. David Wesley Brown

    Dr. S. Huw Anwyl, Senior Minister & CEO Shepherd of the Hills Church

    Rev. Dexter Lanctot

    Rabbi Suzanne Griffel

    Rabbi Laura Geller, Los Angeles

    Rabbi Douglas E. Krantz

    Rabbi Neil Kominsky, Temple Emanuel of the Merrimack Valley

    The Rev. James F. McIntire, MDiv, JD, The United Methodist Church of Bala Cynwyd

    Eric Mount, Centre College (Rodes Professor Religion Emeritus)

    Rev. Robert G. Coombe Pastor:   Union United Methodist Church

    Elizabeth Memel, Ojai, CA

    Haim Dov Beliak

    Rev. Susan Cole

    Rev. Michael Kinnamon The Allen and Dottie Miller Professor of Mission and Peace, Eden Theological Seminary

    Rev. Charlene F. Gaspar, Gladwyne United Methodist Church

    Rev. Al Krass, Philadelphia Area Interfaith Peace Network

    Rev. Kaye Edwards Director of Family and Children's Ministries, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

    The Rev. Patricia Pearce Tabernacle United Church, Philadelphia, PA

    Rev. Linda M. Maloney, St. Matthew's Episcopal Church, Enosburg Falls, VT

    Dr. Alicia Ostriker, Professor of English, Rutgers University

    Rev. Dr. F. Mark Mealing, Kaslo, B.C., Canada

    Wil Gafney, Assistant Professor of Hebrew Scripture and Homiletics, Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia

    Phyllis T. Albritton, Blacksburg VA

    Sidney Callahan, Ph.D

    Gaile M. Pohlhaus, Ph.D., Villanova University

    Dr. Malcolm Nazareth and Ms. Mariani Nazareth, St. Cloud, MN

    Rabbi Avi Winokur, Society Hill Synagogue

    Dr. Nan Gefen, President, Chochmat HaLev

    Rabbi Jonathan Omer-Man, Berkeley, CA

    Rabbi Ellen Lippmann, Kolot Chayeinu/Voices of Our Lives

    Dorothea Dorenz

    Rev. Peter Laarman, Progressive Christians Uniting

    Dr. Mary E. Hunt, Women's Alliance for Theology, Ethics and Ritual

    Dr. Rita Nakashima Brock, Director, Faith Voices Institute and Lift Every Voice!

    Charles Rooney, Catholics for the Common Good

    Rev. Dr. Elsie McKee, Ph.D., Archibald Alexander Professor of Reformation Studies and the History of Worship, Princeton Theological Seminary

    Rev. Dr. Daniel Meeter, Pastor, Old First Reformed Church, Brooklyn, NY

    Marilyn Chandler McEntyre, Westmont College

    Reb ZalmanSchachter-Shalomi Rabbinic Chair, ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal;

    Rabbi Hillel Cohn

    Rabbi Zev-Hayyim Feyer, Claremont, California

    Rabbi Howard A. Cohen, Congregation Beth El

    Rabbi Dennis Beck-Berman Past President, OHALAH:Association of Rabbis for

    Jewish Renewal

    Dr. M. Douglas Meeks, The Divinity School, Vanderbilt University

    The Rev. Dr. Christian T. Iosso, Scarborough Presbyterian Church

    Rev. Kenneth Samual, Victory Church, Atlanta, GA

    Rev. A.W. Howard, Baltimore, MD

    Rabbi Roberto D. Graetz Temple Isaiah Lafayette, Ca

    Rabbi Laurence L. Edwards Congregation Or Chadash

    Rabbi Phyllis Berman, Riverside Language Center

    Rabbi David Greenstein, The Academy for Jewish Religion, NY

    Rev. Robert Shine, Baracha Baptist, Philadelphia, PA

    Rev. Clarence Pemberton, New Hope Baptist, Philadelphia, PA

    Rev. James Sampson, First Mount Zion, Jacksonville, FL

    Rev. Michael Harrison, Union Baptist, Youngstown, OH

    Rev. Michael Pfleger, St. Sabina, Chicago, IL

    Rev. Olen Arrington, Second Baptist, Kenosha, WI

    J. Ross Wagner, Princeton Theological Seminary

    Mark Lewis Taylor, Princeton Theological Seminary

    The Rev. Dr. John McEntyre, PCUSA

    The Rev. C. Clifton Black, Dept. of Biblical Studies, Princeton Theological Seminary

    Barbara Levatich

    Dr. Geffrey B. Kelly, La Salle University

    Dr. Robert DeFina, Villanova University

    Prof. Ellen Charry Princeton Theological Seminary

    Rev. Bryan Langlands, St. Luke UMC, Sanford, NC

    Rev. Muriel Burrows, Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church

    Anne Gibbons, Associate Chaplain and Director of SERVE, Lynchburg College

    The Rev. Robert L. Livingston. United Church of Christ

    Rev. Patricia Daley

    William Stacy Johnson, Princeton Theological Seminary

    Rev. Douglas King

    Dr. Alexander J. McKelway

    Rev. James M. Collie, Presbytery of Santa Fe

    Rev. Theresa F. Latini

    The Rev. Fleming Rutledge

    Rev. Todd Cioffi, Princeton Seminary

    Dr. Jacqueline Lapsley, Princeton Seminary

    Dr. Brian K. Blount, Princeton Theological Seminary

    Rev. Dr. Deborah van Deusen Hunsinger, Princeton Theological Seminary

    The Rev. Dr. Laura Delaplain (UMC)

    Dr. Catherine Keller, Theological School of Drew University

    The Rev. Dr. Gary Wehrwein

    Ftr. Lawrence H. Kaiser

    Rev. Gloria H. Albrecht, Ph.D. (Presbyterian Church, USA)

    Rev. Sally Osmer, Director at The Crisis Ministry of Princeton and Trenton

    Dr. Cherith Fee Nordling, Director of Christian Formation, Calvin College

    Rev. Richard Broderick

    Rev. Ann Marie Coleman, Co-Senior Minister of University Church

    Rev. Don Coleman, Co-Senior Minister of University Church

    The Rev. Lisa Keppeler

    The Rev. Geo. Anthony Hoeltzel

    The Rev. Dr. Frank J. Alagna

    The Rev. Dr. Peregrine L. Murphy

    The Rev. Elizabeth G. Maxwell, Church of the Holy Apostles

    The Rev. Ralph E Fogg

    The Rev. Carol R. Fox

    Rabbi Chaim Leib Schneider, Santa Cruz, CA

    Rabbi Steven B. Jacobs, Temple Kol Tikvah, Woodland Hills, CA

    Rabbi Patricia Karlin-Neumann, Stanford University

    Rabbi Neil Comess-Daniels, Beth Shir Sholom, Santa Monica, CA

    The Rev. Chloe Breyer, St. Mary's Manhattanville

    Rev. Dr. Lois Malcolm, Luther Seminary

    The Reverend Canon Brady J. Vardemann, Episcopal Diocese of Montana

    Dr. Mark S. Burrows, Andover Newton Theological School

    Rev. Dr. Betty Jane Bailey

    Rev. Dr. J. Martin Bailey

    Dr. Kathryn L. Johnson, Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    Rev. Joan LaLiberté, St. Andrew's Episcopal Church

    The Rev. Barbara J. Haddon, Pastor First Presbyterian Church

    Rev. Donald F. Hanchon

    Rev. Paul Feuerstein

    The Rev. Dr. Rebecca Parker, Starr King School for the Ministry

    Dr. John Cobb, Claremont School of Theology (Emeritus)

    Rev. Matthew Freeman, Assistant Minister, Asbury United Methodist Church

    Rev. Jophn Soderberg

    Rev. Dave Weissbard, Senior Minister, The Unitarian Universalist Church

    Dr. Walter Lowe, Candler School of Theology, Emory University

    Rev. Sarah Craig Freeman, Assistant Minister at Asbury United Methodist Church

    Bonnie Jones Shinneman

    The Rev. Prof. Harold R. Bronk, Jr., Grace Episcopal Church

    The Rev. Chuck Kramer

    Rev. Dawson Tunnell

    Frank Kromkowski

    Rabbi Michael Feinberg, Executive Director, Greater New York Labor-Religion

    Coalition

    Rabbi Sheila Peltz Weinberg, Institute for Jewish Spirituality

    Rev. Bill Wylie-Kellermann, Graduate Theological Urban Studies, Seminary Consortium for Urban Pastoral Education

    Rev. Dr. Daniel L. Migliore, Princeton Theological Seminary

    Suzie Armstrong, Vice President, The Interfaith Alliance

    Rev. Dr. Amy Laura Hall, Professor, Duke University Divinity School

    Dr. Creston Davis, Fellow of Arts and Sciences, University of Virginia

    Dr. Scott Bader-Saye, Dept. of Theology/Religious Studies, University of Scranton

    Dr. Brigid Curtin Frein, Department of Theology, University of Scranton

    Dr. Joel James Shuman, Department of Theology, King's College

    Dr. R. David Kaylor, Davidson College (emeritus)

    Dr. Deanna A. Thompson, Ph.D., Chair & Associate Professor of Religion, Hamline University

    Re. Dr. Richard Fenn, Princeton Theological Seminary

    The Rev. Joicy Becker-Richards, Director of Educational Media, Princeton Theological Seminary


    Posted at 09:59 am by blog swarm
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    Left in the West

    I just noticed the new Montana Democrat Blog now has a pagerank of 5! Go Left in the West.

    Posted at 01:59 am by blog swarm
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    Monday, January 03, 2005
    Kerry Shrum Curse

    In Game 6 of the 2002 World Series, the San Francisco Gaints looked like they had the game -- and the Series -- wrapped up. It looked like Barry Bonds would finally get his Championship. That is why everyone was shocked when Willie Mays opened Champagne in the dugout while the game was still going. Mays tempted fate...and the Giants lost.

    If you think that is shocking, wait to you hear the latest story about the Shrum Curse and John Kerry...

    From the January 10th Newsweek:

    It was a little after 7 p.m. on election night 2004. The network exit polls showed John Kerry leading George Bush in both Florida and Ohio by three points. Kerry's aides were confident that the Democratic candidate would carry these key swings states; Bush had not broken 48 percent in Kerry's recent tracking polls. The aides were a little hesitant to interrupt Kerry as he was fielding satellite TV interviews in a last get-out-the-vote push. Still, the 7 o'clock exit polls were considered to be reasonably reliable. Time to tell the candidate the good news.

    Kerry had slept only two hours the night before. He was sitting in a small hotel room at the Westin Copley (in a small irony of history, next door to the hotel where his grandfather, a boom-and-bust businessman, shot himself some 80 years ago). Bob Shrum, Kerry's friend and close adviser, couldn't resist the moment. "May I be the first to say 'Mr. President'?" said Shrum.

    First Kerry tempted fate by hiring Shrum and then Shrum went and did something like that while the polls were still open? WTF???

    Oh, it gets better:

    In the heady days before the election, Kerry's top aides sat around picking a cabinet...

    I'm not making this shit up. Even worse, it appears Kerry thinks he is still a candidate:

    He never quite came out and said it, but Kerry sounded very much like a man who was running for president again. He has a mailing list with 2.9 million names and an organization in every state. His moneymen have not backed away.

    Uh, maybe his big moneymen, but the netroots only supported him because he wasn't Bush -- in fact, I've already unsubscribed from his email list.

    The problem with Kerry is that he knows better but for some reason will never say it. Do you think this character flaw has been remedied since the election?

    Though Kerry did not directly criticize his friend Shrum, it's clear he did not feel well served by his message makers and speechwriters.

    No shit?

    Jose Ferreira, Kerry's nephew, told his uncle, "Some people are saying that your candidacy was driven by ABB [Anything But Bush]." Kerry replied: "Do you think so?"

    Yeah.

    And now you're cursed too.


    Posted at 01:25 am by blog swarm
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    Sunday, January 02, 2005
    Open-source message development

    There is a great debate about Social Security on Kos. Check it out.

    Posted at 06:33 pm by blog swarm
    Comments (2)  




    Saturday, January 01, 2005
    Proposed Republican Resolutions for the New Year

    This past year, Republicans in Congress made a mockery of the democratic process and the intelligence of the American people. They followed the Administration's lead in ignoring important issues like poverty, health care, social security and education. Instead, they focused on special favors for wealthy corporate interests and pursued divisive policies for political gain while abusing the House procedures meant to ensure fair debate.

    Republican leaders spent so much time ignoring their Congressional duties they were forced to rush a several thousand page spending bill through at the end of the year just to keep the country running. With only a few hours to review the massive bill, controversial provisions were snuck in, provisions that violated the privacy rights of taxpayers everywhere. Luckily, Democrats caught the 'error' and were able to reverse it.

    We hope that Republicans are able to remember middle-class Americans in their 2005 plans. To ensure this, we would like to suggest a few New Year resolutions for them to keep in mind while they pursue their disingenuous agenda which protects multinational corporations that outsource American jobs and cuts taxes for millionaires at the expense of working families.

    Proposed Republican Resolutions for the New Year

    We are not professional arm wrestlers and thus we will not hold votes open for 3 hours for the sole purpose of twisting arms to get our way.

    We will lead by example and not change our own ethics rules to protect the Leader of our Caucus, no matter how many times they are indicted or rebuked by the Ethics Committee.

    We will not allow the chairman of a key committee to negotiate a private deal with the pharmaceutical industry while considering legislation that benefits that industry.

    We will respect House rules that require three days before legislation that has been through a committee is voted on.

    We will admit that incompetence is not cool: not in our Defense Secretary, not when engaging in war, and not in our fiscal policies.

    We will agree that middle-class families are bearing the burden of economic mismanagement.

    We will engage in diplomatic efforts with countries that pose a real threat to our country and will always present sound intelligence to the American people before using military force.

    We will agree that money does not grow on trees and contrary to popular belief, there is no prize for running record surpluses into record deficits.

    We will remember that children are our future. Slashing Pell Grants and partially funding the No Child Left Behind Act does not demonstrate a commitment to our future.

    We will leave no soldier or veteran behind in our budget.

    We will not dismantle the environmental protections that keep our air clean and preserve our public lands and then name the initiatives "Clear Skies" and "Healthy Forests."

    If these common sense resolutions are adopted and kept, perhaps 2005 will be a better year for the American people and the Representatives in Congress who actually want to get things done. Democrats cross their fingers in hope that Republicans are not holding theirs behind their back.


    Posted at 11:38 pm by blog swarm
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    Friday, December 31, 2004
    Ethical Government

    ALERT: GOP congress to eviscerate congressional ethics laws on Tuesday 

    by John in DC - 12/31/2004 02:38:44 PM

    READ THIS AND TAKE ACTION

    I cannot emphasize enough the importance of
    reading this article on the front page of today's Washington Post:
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37521-2004Dec30.html?sub=AR

    In a nutshell, Republican leaders in the House are planning on GUTTING the ethics rules governing their own members, for the most part because one of their own, Rep. Tom Delay, got caught doing a lot of nasty stuff. So in retaliation, they're changing the rules to make it next to impossible to file an ethics complaint in the future. Any complaint will be dropped, period, unless a majority of members on the committee in favor of it. Like that will ever happen.

    But oh, it gets better. They also plan to change the rules so family members of congressmen can more easily accept gifts from lobbyists trying to influence the congressman in question. AND, they even want to permit congressmen to BRING A PARENT ON A CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION. Yes, now we're giving them perks for mom and dad. Wouldn't it be nice if all of our companies let us bring the folks on business trips to Europe, at the taxpayers' expense, no less.

    This is absolutely outrageously disgusting what they are planning on doing. All the more so because this is the "values" party, and they're now trying to railroad new rules that will permit them to be less ethical. What a way to cast your first vote of the new Congress, and in the case of new members of Congress their first vote ever.

    There are a few clear action steps that are needed:

    1. I hear from good sources that the Dems in the House are terrified of taking on this issue full-blast as they don't want Tom Delay to get mad at them. Well, I'm through with playing nice, hoping the Republicans will throw us a few scraps while they lead us to the slaughterhouse.

    Call Reps. Nancy Pelosi and Steny Hoyer
    , both Democratic leaders who need to grow a set of balls (or vaginas) and finally throw down the gauntlet on this outrageous behavior by the Republicans. What more do the Democrats need handed to them than this proposed vote on Tuesday? If this were the Dems planning this kind of vote, what do you think Newt Gingrich would do? He certainly wouldn't be sitting back issuing press releases and having the occasional press conference. He'd be plotting all out war to embarrass the hell out of the Democrats. It's time the Dems did the same. Call Pelosi and Hoyer and tell them it's about time the democrats started fighting back - demand that they go nuclear over this proposed change to the ethics rules this coming Tuesday. And it is irrelevant if you're from their state or not - they are the leaders of the Democratic party, tell them you're one angry Democrat and demand that your voice be heard, or we should throw them all out.

    Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)
    Phone (415) 556-4862, (202) 225-4965
    Email:
    sf.nancy@mail.house.gov

    Rep. Steny Hoyer(D-MD)
    Phone (202) 225-4131 - Fax(202) 225-4300
    Phone (301) 474-0119 - Fax (301) 474-4697
    Phone (301) 843-1577 - Fax (301) 843-1331
    Web form for email:
    http://www.hoyer.house.gov/feedback.cfm?campaign=hoyers&type=Let%27s%20Talk

    2. Then contact your own House member, Democrat or Republican, and let them have it. I'm serious, the only thing these people understand is pissed off constituents - I worked there, trust me, it gets their attention.

    Use this
    zip-code locator to find your member of Congress. Call and email them today through Tuesday - fill their voice mail with messages over the weekend. Blast them over this issue. http://www.house.gov/htbin/zipfind

    3. Call and email your local newspapers IMMEDIATELY over this issue, especially if you have a new member of Congress elected from your district. Will your congressman's first vote of the new congress, and possibly their career, be in favor of lowering their ethical standards? Make sure your local papers cover this issue - call the paper and ask for a reporter or editor covering the US Congress and talk to them about this issue. Trust me, if they get 20 or so calls from people, they'll write about the issue. Find some friends and have them call too (just look your papers up online for email and phone contact info, letters to the editor, etc.)

    You can read more on this issue here:
    http://www.citizensforethics.org/activities/20041216/

    Feel free to copy this post and put it on your site, or to email this message to your friends. It's high time the Democrats fought back and stopped this outright theft of our government.


    Posted at 04:49 pm by blog swarm
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