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Wednesday, December 01, 2004
Democrats need to do better in the month of December. The holiday season is an opportunity for Democrats to ensure that we are prepared for the major battles we know are coming in 2005. We can't take a month off, every day is a news cycle and any week we don't win is another week the majority wins.
In January, we need to be lying in the tall grass, prepared to strike at any opportunity and capture any advantage. Snakes know how to defend territory and now is the time for us to fight like a COBRA. December is our month to:
Contribute strategically
Organize locally
Battle electronically
Reform nationally
Advance personally.
We are the COBRA and we need to fight.
Contribute Strategically
If you want to give a holiday present to future generations, give to the Democratic causes that need money right now. We need to finish the last fight before we start pilling up money for 2006. Contribute strategically during the month of December:
A currently tied vote for one state house race in Montana will decide if newly Governor-elect Brian Schweitzer (D) will have a Democrat or Republican as Speaker of the House. If we win our legal case over the bizarre double-count votes or if we can stall in the courts until after January 3, then the next Speaker is a Democrat. The Montana Democratic Party needs the resources right now to win over the holidays. Contribute Strategically
Democrats are 42 votes from retaining the Washington State Governor's Mansion. There is a $750,000 fee for the next vote count. Additional legal fees and the cost of winning in the court of public opinion drives up the price further. This is our state and we need hold on during the holidays. Contribute Strategically
Organize Locally
We all need to do a better job of organizing locally if we ever hope to win nationally. Our message needs to extend into every conversation and we need to do better from the ground up, in every precinct, in every state. Democrats are not in a position to take anything for granted and we can't afford to give up anywhere. Being strong in 2006 starts with better organizing now:
Democracy for America is hosting meet-ups tonight where "many groups are starting to plan for 2005 by researching filing deadlines for local offices, recruiting and encouraging people to think about running, and planning ways to get more involved in the Democratic Party." Meetup tonight to Organize
Democracy for America has a great new tool to find out information about your local Democratic Party. They are making it as easy as possible to get involved in organizing at the grassroots level where you live. Find out when your local Democrat Party meets and organize the grassroots. Many of the meetings in December and January will also decide who be voting for our next Chair and why. Get Local and Organize
Battle Electronically
Republicans are acting like Bush has a mandate and we need to fight back, in real-time, every day. We need to stop bad ideas before they spread and force a fight on every issue. The internet provides us an opportunity to engage the Republicans relentlessly. If you know how to use a computer well enough to be reading this, then you have the skills necessary to battle the GOP online over the holidays:
The blogosphere's best minds have banded together around BlogPAC. If you believe in fighting hard online and want to join online battle, sign up to be a BlogPAC member. Send an email to your friends asking them to sign up and spread the word. BlogPAC needs a million email addresses by Bush's inauguration, so sign up and Battle Electronically
Continue the pressure to make sure every vote counts. Working in December as a (small 'd') democrat will strengthen us in January to fight as Democrats. Understand Actionable Fraud and do what you can to Help America Recount.
Monitor the online skirmishes and be prepared to respond rapidly when we need action. The CBS/NBC censorship scandal demonstrated that our opposition won't allow holiday cheer to stand in the way of oppression. The best practices from the Sinclair blockade are already being put to use. Support online battles you believe in and keep fighting.
Reform Nationally
The month of December will see much of the battle for control of the Democratic Party. It is vital that we elect reform leadership for the DNC and modernize our Democratic Party. All of the action is going on behind the scenes right now, we will only have a voice if we speak up immediately:
Pay attention to the race DNC Chair by reading Jerome Armstrong who is keeping us up-to-date: 11-30, 11-26, 11-24, 11-22, 11-22, 11-22, 11-18, 11-16, 11-15, 11-12.
Use the Draft Howard tools and the Phraxos phone list to contact your DNC representatives and demand fundamental reform to create a modern Party that will win. You can read Why I am a Reform Democrat or I am a Reform Democrat for ideas.
Demand candidates for DNC Chair list their vision before the election. I believe Donnie Fowler was the first candidate to announce candidacy and list a vision. Other candidates need to follow Fowler and let us know where they are coming from and what they would do if elected.
Advance Personally
December is also a great time to cozy up in front of the fireplace and reflect back upon the cycle with an eye towards learning to do better.
Read a George Lakoff book or read class notes from his Political Linguistics 290
Read what Kid Oakland thinks about being a Fighting Democrat.
Read classic posts like Matt Stoller's How to Leverage the Fact that Democrats are Right on Everything.
Understand Why Pat Toomey Lost.
Learn why Chris Bowers says we should reject the concept of electability and focuses on a 50 state strategy.
Hop on the Political Cluetrain.
Keep reading, keep learning, keep writing and remember the minority has to work harder and smarter every day...even during the month of December!
Posted at 06:13 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
NBC, CBS scandal...more, more, more
NBC, CBS affiliates refuse to air ad welcoming gays, minorities
Click here to view the ad
By John Byrne | RAW STORY Editor
CBS and NBC’s television networks are refusing to run a 30-second television ad from the United Church of Christ welcoming gays and minorities to its churches, saying it is “too controversial,” RAW STORY has learned.
Negotiations between network officials and the church’s representatives broke down Tuesday, the day before the ad campaign begins airing nationwide on a combination of broadcast and cable networks. The ad has been accepted and will air on a number of networks, including ABC Family, AMC, BET, Discovery, Fox, Hallmark, History, Nick@Nite, TBS, TNT, Travel and TV Land, among others, the church said.
The ad, part of a broad public relations campaign by the mainstream Protestant Christian denomination was set to begin airing nationwide on Dec. 1. CBS and NBC were not available for comment Tuesday evening.
The 30-second commercial features two muscle-bound “bouncers” standing guard outside a picturesque church and selecting which persons are permitted to attend Sunday services, and turning away apparent gays and persons of color.
Written text interrupts the scene, announcing, “Jesus didn’t turn people away. Neither do we.” A narrator then states, “No matter who you are, or where you are on life’s journey, you are welcome here.”
According to a written explanation from CBS, the United Church of Christ is being denied network access, they church says, because its ad implies that other denominations are not as accepting of minorities and therefore too “controversial.”
“Because this commercial touches on the exclusion of gay couples and other minority groups by other individuals and organizations,” the group states an explanation from CBS reads, “and the fact the Executive Branch has recently proposed a Constitutional Amendment to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman, this spot is unacceptable for broadcast on the [CBS and UPN] networks.”
A rejection by NBC declared the spot “too controversial;” UCC did not elaborate on the network’s letter.
“It’s ironic that after a political season awash in commercials based on fear and deception by both parties seen on all the major networks, an ad with a message of welcome and inclusion would be deemed too controversial,” said Rev. John Thomas, UCC’s general minister and president. “What’s going on here?”
In focus groups and test market research conducted before the campaign’s national rollout, the UCC found that many people throughout the country feel alienated by churches, the group said in a release.
“We find it disturbing that the networks in question seem to have no problem exploiting gay persons through mindless comedies or titillating dramas, but when it comes to a church’s loving welcome of committed gay couples, that’s where they draw the line,” Rev. Robert Chase, director of the church’s communication ministry said.
More background from the UCC release:
In 1959, the Rev. Everett C. Parker organized United Church of Christ members to monitor the racist practices of WLBT. Like many southern television stations at the time, WLBT had imposed a news blackout on the growing civil rights movement, pulling the plug on then-attorney Thurgood Marshall. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. implored the UCC to get involved in the media civil rights issues. Parker, founding director of the Office of Communication of the United Church of Christ, organized churches and won in federal court a ruling that the airwaves are public, not private property. That decision ultimately led to an increase in the number of persons of color in television studios and newsrooms. The suit clearly established that television and radio stations, as keepers of the public airwaves, must broadcast in the public interest.
“The consolidation of TV network ownership into the hands of a few executives today puts freedom of speech and freedom of religious expression in jeopardy,” says former FCC Commissioner Gloria Tristani, currently managing director of the UCC’s Office of Communication. “By refusing to air the United Church of Christ’s paid commercial, CBS and NBC are stifling religious expression. They are denying the communities they serve a suitable access to differing ideas and expressions.”
Adds Andrew Schwartzman, president and CEO of the not-for-profit Media Access Project in Washington, D.C., “This is an abuse of the broadcasters’ duty to inform their viewers on issues of importance to the community. After all, these stations don’t mind carrying shocking, attention-getting programming, because they do that every night.”
Posted at 12:25 am by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Protests Begin on Kos
| Let's email, phone and letter-bomb these stupid fascist fucks:
[Best part - I got the contact info from the Focus on the Family site!!]
NBC
Randy Falco
President
NBC Television Network
30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York, NY 10112
Phone: 212-664-5083 (Mr. Falco's office)
Phone: 212-664-4444 (general switchboard)
Fax: 212-664-3019
E-mail: nbcshows@nbc.com
Robert C. Wright
Vice Chairman and Executive Officer
General Electric (he is also Chairman and CEO of NBC)
30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York, NY 10112
Phone: 212-664-4555 (Mr. Wright's office)
Fax: 212-664-7288
Web site: www.ge.com (this includes a "contact us" section for e-mailing GE)
CBS
HOW TO CONTACT CBS:
CBS TELEVISION IS A DIVISION OF VIACOM, INC. (NYSE: VIA, VIA.B)
CBS Television's main phone number is 212-975-4321. You may also find this information helpful:
Sumner M. Redstone
Chairman and CEO
Viacom, Inc.
1515 Broadway
New York, NY 10036
212-258-6000
Mr. Leslie Moonves
Chairman and CEO
CBS Television
7800 Beverly Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
323-575-2600
email: audsvcs@cbs.com
Those who fail to learn from history...are invited to submit an application for a position in the Bush administration. |
| by Timoteo on Tue Nov 30th, 2004 at 20:31:03 PST |
Posted at 12:22 am by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
From powellb@ucc.org
Date Tue, 30 Nov 2004 18:32:49 -0500
United Church of Christ
Barb Powell, press contact
(216) 736-2175
<powellb@ucc.org>
<http://www.ucc.org>
For immediate release
Nov. 30, 2004
CBS, NBC refuse to air church's television advertisement
United Church of Christ ad highlighting Jesus' extravagant welcome called
'too controversial'
CLEVELAND -- The CBS and NBC television networks are refusing to run a
30-second television ad from the United Church of Christ because its
all-inclusive welcome has been deemed "too controversial."
The ad, part of the denomination's new, broad identity campaign set to
begin airing nationwide on Dec. 1, states that -- like Jesus -- the United
Church of Christ (UCC) seeks to welcome all people, regardless of ability,
age, race, economic circumstance or sexual orientation.
According to a written explanation from CBS, the United Church of Christ is
being denied network access because its ad implies acceptance of gay and
lesbian couples -- among other minority constituencies -- and is,
therefore, too "controversial."
"Because this commercial touches on the exclusion of gay couples and other
minority groups by other individuals and organizations," reads an
explanation from CBS, "and the fact the Executive Branch has recently
proposed a Constitutional Amendment to define marriage as a union between a
man and a woman, this spot is unacceptable for broadcast on the [CBS and
UPN] networks."
Similarly, a rejection by NBC declared the spot "too controversial."
"It's ironic that after a political season awash in commercials based on
fear and deception by both parties seen on all the major networks, an ad
with a message of welcome and inclusion would be deemed too controversial,"
says the Rev. John H. Thomas, the UCC's general minister and president.
"What's going on here?"
Negotiations between network officials and the church's representatives
broke down today (Nov. 30), the day before the ad campaign begins airing
nationwide on a combination of broadcast and cable networks. The ad has
been accepted and will air on a number of networks, including ABC Family,
AMC, BET, Discovery, Fox, Hallmark, History, Nick@Nite, TBS, TNT, Travel
and TV Land, among others.
The debut 30-second commercial features two muscle-bound "bouncers"
standing guard outside a symbolic, picturesque church and selecting which
persons are permitted to attend Sunday services. Written text interrupts
the scene, announcing, "Jesus didn't turn people away. Neither do we." A
narrator then proclaims the United Church of Christ's commitment to Jesus'
extravagant welcome: "No matter who you are, or where you are on life's
journey, you are welcome here." (The ad can be viewed online at
<www.stillspeaking.com>.)
In focus groups and test market research conducted before the campaign's
national rollout, the UCC found that many people throughout the country
feel alienated by churches. The television ad is geared toward those
persons who, for whatever reason, have not felt welcomed or comfortable in
a church.
"We find it disturbing that the networks in question seem to have no
problem exploiting gay persons through mindless comedies or titillating
dramas, but when it comes to a church's loving welcome of committed gay
couples, that's where they draw the line," says the Rev. Robert Chase,
director of the UCC's communication ministry.
CBS and NBC's refusal to air the ad "recalls the censorship of the 1950s
and 1960s, when television station WLBT in Jackson, Miss., refused to show
people of color on TV," says Ron Buford, coordinator for the United Church
of Christ identity campaign. Buford, of African-American heritage, says,
"In the 1960s, the issue was the mixing of the races. Today, the issue
appears to be sexual orientation. In both cases, it's about exclusion."
In 1959, the Rev. Everett C. Parker organized United Church of Christ
members to monitor the racist practices of WLBT. Like many southern
television stations at the time, WLBT had imposed a news blackout on the
growing civil rights movement, pulling the plug on then-attorney Thurgood
Marshall. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. implored the UCC to get involved
in the media civil rights issues. Parker, founding director of the Office
of Communication of the United Church of Christ, organized churches and won
in federal court a ruling that the airwaves are public, not private
property. That decision ultimately led to an increase in the number of
persons of color in television studios and newsrooms. The suit clearly
established that television and radio stations, as keepers of the public
airwaves, must broadcast in the public interest.
"The consolidation of TV network ownership into the hands of a few
executives today puts freedom of speech and freedom of religious expression
in jeopardy," says former FCC Commissioner Gloria Tristani, currently
managing director of the UCC's Office of Communication. "By refusing to air
the United Church of Christ's paid commercial, CBS and NBC are stifling
religious expression. They are denying the communities they serve a
suitable access to differing ideas and expressions."
Adds Andrew Schwartzman, president and CEO of the not-for-profit Media
Access Project in Washington, D.C., "This is an abuse of the broadcasters'
duty to inform their viewers on issues of importance to the community.
After all, these stations don't mind carrying shocking, attention-getting
programming, because they do that every night."
The United Church of Christ's national offices -- located in Cleveland --
speak to, but not for, its nearly 6,000 congregations and 1.3 million
members. In the spirit of the denomination's rich tradition, UCC
congregations remain autonomous, but also strongly in covenant with each
other and with the denomination's regional and national bodies.
# # #
Posted at 12:19 am by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
NBC and CBS Gay Bashing with Bush
CBS Joins Bush Gay Bashing Campaign
by Joe in DC - 11/30/2004 10:30:31 PM
John posted the news that CBS and NBC won't run the UCC ad. Read the language in the UCC release from CBS carefully....
Because this commercial touches on the exclusion of gay couples and other minority groups by other individuals and organizations," reads an explanation from CBS, "and the fact the Executive Branch has recently proposed a Constitutional Amendment to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman, this spot is unacceptable for broadcast on the [CBS and UPN] networks. (emphasis added) This is really scary. What the fuck does anything the Executive Branch proposes have to do with what ads a television network will take? This is an amazing admission. CBS is cowering before the Bush Administration.
View the ad yourself. It does not say ONE THING about gay marriage. Yet, somehow, a proposal by the Bush Administration to ban gay marriage trumps an anti-discrimination ad from a religious group.
Maybe if the ad celebrated that fact that gays were being turned away, CBS would run it. Smacking gays around seems to be the new sport for the media. After all, as Americablog reported, The Washington Post was willing to publish a gay-bashing insert earlier this month.
If you are a gay American or have a gay relative or a gay friend and aren't really worried about the anti-gay fervor sweeping this country, you are not paying attention. Let's just call it what it is: gay bashing. And, the gay bashing is led by President Bush. He condoned it, he ran on it and he is fostering it.
What a truly amazing world it would be if our "born again" President and his hate filled party actually heeded the words of that guy, Jesus Christ, they are always talking about. The UCC ad notes quite accurately "Jesus didn't turn people away." And, if my memory serves me, Jesus also didn't use try to pit one group of people against another. In fact, his message was quite the opposite.
The irony of this would almost be too rich, if it weren't for the fact that in America, gay bashing has become acceptable thanks to the President. Unfortunately, it looks like the so-called independent media is willing to follow his lead.
Posted at 12:18 am by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
CBS, NBC refuse to air church's ad because includes pro-gay message
by John in DC - 11/30/2004 09:02:36 PM
Apparently the United Church of Christ (those wild folks)can't run an ad on CBS or NBC because the ad mentions gay people in a positive light. CBS had the audacity to come right out and blame it on the gays:
"Because this commercial touches on the exclusion of gay couples and other minority groups by other individuals and organizations," reads an explanation from CBS, "and the fact the Executive Branch has recently proposed a Constitutional Amendment to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman, this spot is unacceptable for broadcast on the [CBS and UPN] networks." Still think the media is left wing? We need to blow these bastards out the water. From the Washington Post to the major networks (e.g., ABC's "expose" on Matthew Shepard last week that including, well, nothing new), it's time to tell them that being anti-liberal doesn't make them objective.
You can watch the ad here for yourself. Yes, it's come to the point where an ad for pro-tolerance is now too controversial in America.
Posted at 12:16 am by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Posted at 12:15 am by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Tuesday, November 30, 2004
Major Tom on "Actionable Fraud" and More!
by Einsteinia
Tue Nov 30th, 2004 at 15:55:32 PST
Hello Kossacks:
What are our post-mortem election rights? Specifically, what constitutes "actionable fraud"?
Also, did you know there is a fascinating historical parallel to our recent election madness?
This and more I found in a comment posted by Major Tom just before the pre-Thanksgiving bustle.
I think the free legal opinion here is worthy of the several minutes you'll need to thoroughly read this enjoyably written mini-treatise by Major Tom.
BTW, I suggested to Major Tom that he re-post this as a diary because it was far too dense and difficult to read--not to mention easily missed--as a mere comment. Major Tom graciously declined, but gave me permission to post it and make formatting changes. And changes I did make. You can blame the annoying italics, bolding, subject headers, etc., all on me. My intention was to make it easier to read on the computer--forgive me if you find it distracting.
Enjoy and Learn:
If History is always good prologue when it comes to politics. Back in 2000, nearly all of America (Republicans as well as Democrats) became uncomfortably aware that that our election system was severely broken in numerous places around the country. Of course, nowhere was that more clear than in Florida with its hanging chads and butterfly ballots. In fact, it was so terribly broken in Florida that the election was actually handed over to the loser, GW Bush. Months following the election, and after an exhaustive review of all the state's voting precincts, a number of reputable news organizations, including the Wall Street Journal (hardly a bastion of liberalism), concluded that Al Gore had in fact won Florida and should have taken all its electoral college votes and been elected President of the United States, if all the votes would have been counted based upon the intent of the electorate.
But heck, we knew that by just considering all the lost votes due to the infamous "butterfly ballot." Remember, Bush ended up winning the state by less than 600 total votes, while the votes lost by Gore by reason of the "butterfly ballot" exceeded 10,000 in number (all those Jewish people in Palm Beach certainly weren't voting for Buchanan, a candidate who loudly proposed giving less financial and military support to the State of Israeli). By the way, the irony is that Gore would have picked up thousands of votes in central and northern Florida (including the Panhandle) had he been sage enough to request a hand count in all of Florida's counties when he first requested a recount.
Well, when the outrageous U.S. Supreme Court (using incredibly spurious logic and reasoning, breaking many well established legal precedents, and smashing entirely the seminal concept of "res judicata"), subsequently pulled the plug on the statewide recount that was well in progress, it seemed everyone sought of just went home and completely forgot about the outrageous miscarriage of justice that had just occurred in our nation. For me, I can tell you, the resulting silence was disturbingly deafening.
Justice in the Supreme Court?
By the way, if the U.S. Supreme Court had orally informed the attorneys for Gore and Bush of their vote count deadline at the end of their oral vote, and not have waited the few days for the official opinion to be written up, the Florida statewide recount could have been hastened and might have been fully completed in time for the false, statutory imposed deadline of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Thus, following the U.S. Supreme Court's incredibly partisan ruling in a case of such national enormity, I began asking myself: Where is the OUTRAGE? Where is the righteous indignation of the American people!!! When are they going to rise up, even if it's only half of them. Of course, there was none; or should I say, there was very little, considering the very high stakes involved. I know, Al Gore had a lot to do with the lack of deep concern and wide public discontentment as well as clarion calls for instant change. Yep, he simply moseyed off into the sunset, and the Democratic powers that be at the time simply followed in his steps. And, of course, we sheepishly followed them. For me, that is when I lost all respect for Al Gore and when the silence became even more deafening to me.
Historical Precedent for the Taking
Yet there was precedent for Al Gore not to give up so easily and scream "foul" to the top of his lungs. Back in the Presidential Election 1876, there was close election where vote fraud had been claimed and which involved no less, the State of Florida. That election was between Samuel Tilden (Dem) and Rutherford Hayes (Rep). Tilden had received 250,000 more votes than Hayes, and he needed just one (1) electoral vote from the four disputed states of Florida, Louisiana, Alabama and Oregon to win office. On the other hand, the very determined Rutherford B. Hayes needed to take the electoral votes from all four of those states in order to win the Presidency. Because the Constitution did not give the U.S. Supreme Court the relegated power to decide the election controversy, the dispute eventually fell to the Republican Congress which swiftly voted along party lines and awarded the election to their brethren, Rutherford Hayes. At that point in time, Tilden and his brethren could have sheepishly walked away like Al Gore had done in 2000, as appears Kerry is doing now; however, they didn't.
The Democrats were so outraged and DETERMINED not to be defrauded, they fostered nationwide threats of civil war. With the country in such grave turmoil, the two parties subsequently entered into negotiations and finally reached the famous "Compromise of 1877" by which the Republicans acceded to several hard demands of the Tilden forces which included guaranteed appointments of Democrats to certain Federal offices and posts as well as a promise that Hayes would not seek a second term of office as President. Gosh, if only Gore had been more like Tilden.
The main point of the above history lesson is that Democrats should not be afraid to stand up at any cost and declare they will not be hoodwinked by Republicans fraudsters. Incidentally, Rutherford B. Hayes kept his promise and did not run for re-election in 1880.
What is the Legal Concept of "Reasonable Suspicion"?
There is something else of import that all of us should keep in mind. It is the concept of "reasonable suspicion." In brief, it's a standard that law enforcement authorities need to meet in order to stop and search a citizen, a car and so on; and it can be the valid basis of an eventual arrest. Indeed, it is less than a "probable cause" or "more likely than not" legal standard. Thus, a twenty or thirty percent likelihood of a given event or fact would meet the "reasonable suspicion standard."
Furthermore, hearsay can be the basis of a "reasonable suspicion" threshold finding, while an actual warrant issued by a judge or magistrate is not necessarily required. Certainly, it is a much less stringent minimal bench mark than "actual proof." Unquestionably, if actual proof were always required, there would be very few legitimate searches conducted across the country on the part of law enforcement authorities.
The point that should be garnered from the brief recital of law set forth in the previous paragraph is that absolute guarantees of proof are never required in the law before a search of anything can be conducted. Furthermore, under our legal system, this basal or minimum standard of "reasonable suspicion" is quite sufficient in the criminal law arena where rights are more greatly coveted and protected than in the civil law arena in which considerations of recounts would more generally apply. Therefore, a suspicion legitimately based upon any facts and inferences, including hearsay, are enough to base a civil or quasi-civil case (which a recount case is), even if those facts represent only a small percent of actual likelihood or probability, so long and on the condition that it is made in good faith.
Do We Have Sufficient Grounds?
So to all those who are screaming "where is the indisputable facts or truth, because I haven't heard any yet," I say to them, "that at this point in the proceedings, indisputable proof is not required whatsoever."
In fact, because we are not suggesting that a criminal action be brought, the standard of proof is even less than "a reasonable suspicion." Don't we at least have some of that from what we have thus far heard? OF COURSE, WE DO. Just think about what we now know to have occurred in Volusia County, Florida; or what has occurred in South Carolina; or what has occurred in Ohio, and so on and so on. Even the enormous
improbabilities regarding the discrepancies between the exit polls and the actual poll results should raise within all reasonable people a "reasonable suspicion" that something is definitely awry concerning many of the 2004 poll results. Wasn't the odds 250,000,000 to 1?
Actually, with regard to some of the reports we have been hearing from here and there, I would respectfully suggest that the criminal law, "reasonable suspicion standard" has also been met concerning some of the activities that we have been informed about - destroying original polling tapes. At least, that is my view. Again, however, we are not suggesting that someone bring a criminal action at this point in the continuing controversy. We're talking about a "quasi-civil action" here.
What "Civil Discovery" Would Allow:
There is also the matter of "civil discovery." When someone begins a civil action, the parties then have a corresponding right to request an inspection of documents and or other evidence, including equipment, admissions, and answers to specific questions under oath (interrogatories or depositions) from the other party or parties to a civil action. All of these rights are set forth to assist and aid each party in proving their base allegations as set forth in their complaint or petition.
In our particular situation, we would greatly appreciate a look into the brains and guts of some of the voting machines and voting tabulators, wouldn't we? Yet, unless and until we request a formal recount, or we challenge an election outcome itself, we will never be allowed that right and opportunity to analyze what these machines actually do and don't do.
"Res Ipsa Loquitor," What It Means:
There is something else that I should discuss at this point. There is an old legal doctrine on the books known as "Res Ipsa Loquitor." It is a Latin phrase which basically means, "Let the object speak for itself."
Where's the Burden of Proof?
How is Res Ipsa Loquitor applicable here? Well, in theory, when something goes awry concerning an object or instrumentality which is in the exclusive control of a person or persons, be it equipment or the like, and that failure does not normally occur without fault or without negligence, then the burden to prove that the object or the machine did not malfunction in a certain way then legally shifts to the owner or exclusive possessor of that very object or machine.
Respectfully, under the principles of this specific, time-tested legal doctrine, I would contend that Diebold, et al., should be required to prove how any of its vote machines malfunctioned in any given instance, or put another way, they should have the burden of proof to demonstrate that all of its machines functioned properly, just as they were intended to function. You know, when you really think about the fact that our democracy itself happens to be at stake, that isn't asking a whole lot.
About "Trade Secrets"
Finally, I should discuss the semi-privileges of "proprietary interests" and "trade secret" holders. Friends, they are not absolute. Everyday within our courts throughout the land, trade secrets and proprietary rights cases are litigated. Famous cases involving KFC, Coca Cola, Pepsi, Disney and IBM are just a few examples from many thousands I could mention. Indeed, I could go on and on. Furthermore, parties are frequently ordered by the courts to give up trade secrets and make them known to the court and the opposing party's experts, if justice cannot be served otherwise.
In the case of proprietary interest companies like Diebold, I would predict that a judge would likely order that the secret codes underlying all functions of these voting machines or tabulators, as well as some the voting machines and tabulators themselves, be given over to a candidate's experts, so that they might have a reasonable opportunity to test for themselves whether or not these machines do exactly what they are legally supposed to do and nothing else.
Likely, the court would safeguard the limited release of those trade secret codes by swearing an expert to strict confidentiality. That same court would also likely require the candidate to pay Diebold whatever its reasonable costs might be incurred in order to recode the voting machines and tabulators. That's right, my friends, these voting contraptions simply need to be recoded in order for them to be fully functional and operational again. And I suspect we're not talking about an enormous recoding expense. Really, it's not like Diebold would have to throw all their machines away and start all over again.
Absolute Proof--Nonsense!
So to all those who demand absolute proof, I once again state that absolute proof of fraud (or a smoking gun) is not needed at this point in the proceedings. However, for those who still want to hear about some quite definitive fraud, please consider the following:
(1) That when voting officials tell the voting public that they have counted all ballots, when they have in fact tossed huge batches of ballots in the trash canisters, then that is actionable fraud.
(2) That when voting officials tell the voting public that they have counted all ballots, when they have in fact loaded huge batches of ballots in the back of a pickup truck that just happens to have a pro-Bush sticker on it, then that is actionable fraud.
(3) That when voting officials tell the voting public that they have turned over all official voting tallies, when they have in fact tossed some official vote tallies that they said didn't exist into trash containers, then that is actionable fraud.
(4) That when voting officials state that they have turned over all official records pursuant to an appropriate Freedom of Information Request (FOIR), when they have in fact not done so, then that is actionable fraud.
(5) That when voting officials secret or destroy public voting records in order to conceal it from the public, then that is actionable fraud.
(6) That when voting officials dissemble anything of significant import concerning an election, then that is actionable fraud.
(7) That when voting officials intentionally give the voting public wrong information about who can or cannot vote in an election, then that is actionable fraud.
(8) That when voting officials intentionally give the voting public wrong information concerning where a person can or cannot vote, then that is actionable fraud.
(9) That when voting officials intentionally give the voting public wrong information about who can or cannot register to vote in an election, then that is actionable fraud.
(10) That when individuals, under the color of authority, accept voter registrations from members of the voting public and promise to bring them to the Registrar of Voters, but instead tear them up or throw them away, then that is actionable fraud.
(11) That when members of the opposing party give the voting public wrong information about who can or cannot vote in an election, then that is actionable fraud.
(12) That when members of the opposing party give the voting public wrong information about where a person can or cannot vote in an election, then that is actionable fraud.
(13) That when members of the opposing party give the voting public wrong information about when a person can or cannot vote in an election, then that is actionable fraud.
(14) That when members of the opposing party tell the voting public that they will be arrested for overdue parking tickets at the polling site when they vote, then that is actionable fraud.
(15) That when voting officials tell the voting public that they do not have any additional machines to put on site, when they know there are another 87 of them sitting in their warehouse, then that is actionable fraud.
(16) That when Blackwell states in a media interview that there were only a few minor problems during the Ohio election, when he knows the statement to be completely false and untrue, then that is actionable fraud.
(17) That when voting officials tell the voting public that they have enough voting machines on site, when they know that they do not, then that is actionable fraud.
(18) That when voting officials tell the voting public that they have sent out by mail, as per individual request, 50,000 absentee ballots, when in fact they did not, then that is actionable fraud.
(19) That when voting officials hide from the voting public the fact that they have thrown out thousands of provisional ballots, then that is actionable fraud.
(20) When voting machine manufacturers actively hide the fact that their key people who generate the secrets codes for their voting machines and tabulators are convicted embezzlers, hackers and felons, then that is ACTIONABLE FRAUD.
I could go on and on, depending upon which particular state or jurisdiction I happened to be talking about. Friends, it is important to remember that an election does not begin and end with a vote being cast on election day; instead it begins when one registers to vote and ends when all legitimate votes cast in a specific election are counted in full.
Perhaps the word "fraud" scares too many people? Well, if that is the case, then simply do not use the word "fraud" in any civil complaint, or any recount justification, or in any news article or internet post. Instead, use the term irregularity, impropriety, dysfunction and even error or mistake. In the twenty listed statements above relating to fraud, simply insert in lieu of the word "fraud" whatever word you happen to prefer, i.e. irregularity, impropriety, etc.
However, my advice to you is to scream out as loud as you can whatever word you choose to use, if you wish to have any reasonable expectation that the right people are going to listen and do something about your grave concerns.
A Few Other Important Considerations:
While I'm discussing improprieties, I should also mention a few other actionable grounds which can be used to base a recount or a election challenge upon. How about: voter suppression, voter intimidation, and voter disinformation. Or how about the fact that minority precincts and college precincts have half the operational voting machines in like precincts that happen to be located in Republican districts?
Do you think there is a legitimate case there?
Sure there is. And perhaps a Civil Rights Voting Act Case. You know, the problem is that there has been far too few legal cases authorized by Democratic leaders and filed in America over the last decade to correct these rampant voter inequities that seem to reoccur without fail each and every election cycle.
Do you realize that perhaps the votes of 60 people PER Ohio PRECINCT, who simply didn't have their vote counted because of intimidation, misinformation, long lines, hanging chads, undervotes, and overvotes or whatever, could mean the difference between Bush or Kerry being in the White House for the next four years.
Too Little, Too Late?
Within the next year or two, I fully expect some newspaper to come along, and after studying the Ohio vote in depth, write an illuminating and riveting column stating that if all the votes of the people who had intended to vote for Kerry in Ohio had been counted in full, then Kerry would have been duly elected President of the United States in the election of 2004. Isn't this more Deja Vu All Over Again? Just how much more of this can we all take or be expected to take?
Listen, I know I've gone on far too long already. I didn't mean to; but I felt I needed set forth some legal precedent and history. I say this because I fully agree with Tocque DeVille that the media as well as the blog masters have been so deafeningly silent when they should be our rally leaders.
Frankly, I don't understand the silence; but it is there. And I don't really know the exact reasons why. However, I do know that if we do not make this cause the most preeminent issue of the day right now, then we are going to have the same situation repeat itself in 2006 and 2008, and God only knows how long after that. Yep, it'll be that Deja Vu Stuff All Over Again.
You know, because seemingly passive Democrats and the National Media did NOT scream to high heavens about the Florida election irregularities right up until the time of the passage of "The Help America Vote Act" (HAVA), what we actually got was something even worse than what we already had.
Help America Vote Act Madness:
For those who do not know, the act actually financially rewards companies like Diebold that introduce "Direct Electronic Voting Machines Without Paper Trails" to new voting districts that formerly utilized a different voting system or operational format, including the OP-Scan System. Beyond that, HAVA has not changed much of anything else of any significant import or improvement. Yep, the Democrats simply got hoodwinked again. Hell, haven't we all figured that out by now? What else is new? "But damn the torpedoes, and full steam ahead," shouldn't WE bloody well now change OUR Modus Operandi before it's way too late?
Some Laughs?
You know, it's so painfully hilarious to think about it. In 2000 we have Bush in reality losing not only the total national vote count but also losing the real Electoral College Vote count; and yet he has the unmitigated gall to claim a mandate (through none other than Mr. Cheney) from that catastrophic election. And yet he gets completely away with it. Where the hell was the Democratic outrage when Bush claimed that phony mandate back in 2000? Also, just look what we got as a result of the fraudulently claimed mandate. Finally, what are we to be served up as a result of Bush's newest mandate proclamation? Is it too unbearable to even think about it? Only time will tell.
Now matter how you view it, the inescapable fact is absolutely clear: Whether or not Kerry can actually pull out this election is suddenly irrelevant to whether or not an exhaustive, post-mortem examination of the 2004 election should now be conducted post haste.
You know, friends, if the shoe were on the other foot, do you really believe the Republicans would have faded away so conveniently and so quietly? I think not. Perhaps, the Republicans are right about something: Because Democrats are not fighters, "they would constitute a great risk to our national defense, if they happened to be in power in a time of war."
Doctor in the House?
Finally, if you are a medical person or technologically oriented, then please think of this election as a suspicious poisoning death. In that case, don't you think an autopsy might be in order and like pronto.
Huh, no matter how it cuts, I guess it's just Deja Vu All over Again. Great song, isn't it?
However, it gets more than a bit stale after a while, doesn't it?
Posted at 10:45 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
DNC chair ongoings
by kos
Tue Nov 30th, 2004 at 16:49:17 PST
So Michigan's Democratic Party chief says the following Democrats have been making calls to DNC members gauging support for a run: ousted Rep. Martin Frost, former Clark campaign manager Donnie Fowler, businessman Leo Hindery, and Howard Dean. Donnie Fowler is looking to run from the Reform wing of the Democratic Party.
Democrats must stand up for our beliefs and take risks. Democrats must be defiant in defeat. When we lie down, we get run over [...]
Democrats must remember that voters don't live in Washington. Conventional wisdom and an aristocracy of consultants have created a national party that has lost the handle on what is truly important to voters and what is really happening in their lives. Local people know better. Let them lead.
The Democratic Party must increase its communications capability. Democrats must communicate year round with voters where they live, through their local news outlets, and by using trusted local opinion leaders. Regional political and communications offices plus a true understanding of new media and new technologies are essential.
We must form a shadow government. The DNC should coordinate the Party's leadership, not just our congressional members but also our governors, party chairs, DNC members, and leading thinkers. The Democratic Party needs a single entity, acting as a clearinghouse, so that the resources and message of the progressive movement do not duplicate each other or directly conflict. "Aristocracy of consultants"? Be still my beating heart!
Meanwhile, Trippi argues that the netroots are the vehicle to a new Democratic majority in this powerful WSJ op-ed.
The staggering defeat of the Democratic Party, and its ever-accelerating death spiral weren't obvious from the election results. Two factors masked the extent of the party's trouble. Without the innovation of Internet-driven small-donor fund-raising and a corresponding surge in support from the nation's youngest voters, John Kerry would have suffered a dramatically larger electoral defeat. And the true magnitude of the Democrats abject failure at the polls in 2004 would have been more clearly revealed.
Mr. Kerry raised nearly half of his campaign war chest over the Internet. He was so successful at online fund-raising that he actually outspent the Bush campaign in this election. But it was the outsider campaign of Howard Dean, reviled by most of the Democratic establishment, which pioneered the use of the Internet to raise millions in small contributions; Mr. Kerry was just the beneficiary as the party nominee.
And it was the risk-taking and aggressive Dean Campaign that forced the risk-averse Kerry campaign to opt out of the public financing system. Had that decision not been forced on Mr. Kerry, he would have been badly outspent by George Bush; he would not have been competitive at all throughout the long summer of 2004. Is that a Trippi endorsement for Dean's candidacy? Remember, those two aren't exactly best friends these days.
While I am a fan of Frost -- a tough Dem in red Texas -- he's status quo. As for businessman Leo whatever, he's an unknown with no chance in hell.
Simon Rosenberg isn't actively campaigning for the job. If I had to guess, I'd say he's laying low, ready to emerge as a concensus candidate if the DNC battle gets ugly between Dean and the anti-Dean consensus candidate.
Kerry, after being spurned by a Vilsack who suddenly lost his taste for a brawl (was he promised an easy ride by the presumptive leader of the Democratic Party?), looks to be boosting his old NH ally, Jeanne Shaheen.
Posted at 08:04 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Chris Bowers on Electability - MUST READ
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What Electability Has Wrought
by Chris Bowers
Electability is the most pernicious of all lies to penetrate the Democratic psyche. Electability, as frequenter commenter JollyBuddah termed it, is "a fairy tale told by bloviating pundits." It is the sort of mendacity used by swindlers and tyrants: a few simple gimmicks can solve all your problems. Find the right person, from the right state, in the right region, with the right resume, and presto, that is all you need. Simple falsehoods of this sort can appeal to desperate people who, like Democrats, seek immediate relief to crushing problems. We want to believe that all it takes are a few simple tricks, especially when times are at their worst. We want to believe this because we need hope.
What has electability wrought? What do we have now that John Kerry has been defeated?
Do we have a network of volunteers who, now that the election is over, are available to work on projects other than the 2004 election? Not really, as our massive volunteer efforts were geared toward a single purpose that has now passed, and many were not even from the areas where they were volunteering.
Do we have down-ticket Congressional and gubernatorial success to celebrate apart from the Presidential race? No, as the current congressional makeup is very similar to 1994 and 1996.
Do we have stronger local organizations anywhere outside of Montana and Democratic areas of swing states? Not really, as we have no new grassroots structures from the campaign.
Do we have any new issues raised during the campaign that we can seize on as part of a developing national message that can be used to raise the level of debate and bring more people to our side in the future? Not really, unless you count Edwards and Obama. For the majority of the campaign, Kerry's message was his bio. We do not have a single ideological narrative with any national resonance.
No, no, no and no. Kerry's campaign, and subsequent defeat, left us with few improved outlooks on the future. We do have improved netroots, massively improved small donor fundraising, much better voter registration in important Democratic areas and our most favorable partisan index map in decades. There were some long-term victories, but not many. Further, what we did gain, long-term, was entirely as a side-effect of our all-out effort to win at any cost. We improved in swing states because we saw swing states as the key to defeating Bush in 2004. We improved in small donor fundraising because the campaign needed the money. We registered more voters in swing states purely in an attempt to win in 2004. If there was a long-term project we ignored, it was ignored because it was not seen as central toward victory in 2004.
In other words, because we are a party in the death-grip of electability, we consistently fail to work on engaging in the long-term structural organization needed in order to improve our fortunes, long-term. More after the jump.
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Last week I got into a pretty heated argument with my roommate (commenter Spartacus) over my Evolving Partisan Strength series. Near the end of the argument, he said something along these lines:
I can't believe that in an article that long your entire point was that Southerners cannot improve on Democratic chances in the South in Presidential elections just by virtue of their very southern-ness. That is a pretty small point to make for an essay of that length. I was trying to make a few other points in the essay, but he was correct in identifying my central argument. My response was that that was not a small point at all, and the notion that the South can still swing to Democrats if and only if we nominate a Southerner is was one of the central misconceptions fueling the electability argument. Like many other "electability" misconceptions, it is so hard-wired into our national psyche and repeatedly reified by bloviating pundits. When the lie runs deep, it takes a lot of work to demonstrate that it is, in fact, a lie.
There are several other electability myths that I would like to work to debunk, because from what I can tell over two years of blogosphere bickering surrounding the term, every aspect of the electability argument is untenable. Here are a few more:
- A line on a resume will compensate for a person's ideological and/or popularity weakness on a given policy issue (veterans will help us on the military, doctors will help us on health care, ministers will help us on religion, teachers will help us on education, etc). I don't buy this. Quite frankly, it assumes that people are idiots and blank slates dazzled by resumes and bright shiny things more than ideas.
- A moderate will increase our appeal among moderates, or a liberal will increase our appeal among liberals.
- Winning "this election" as all that matters. This is the big one, and it need to be discussed in full.
Winning "this election" is never all that matters. What we do, or do not do, in any given election alters our chances in future elections. If we do not build local grassroots structures in all fifty states during a Presidential election because everything is sacrificed at the alter of swing states, then we will have serious problems in congressional, state legislature, gubernatorial, and senatorial elections outside of swing states in future elections. If we do not work on a national message, and seek instead only to appeal on the given potluck of issues in a single cycle, we will still be lacking a national message in future elections. If we believe that a line on a resume, even if that line is a place of birth, can swing people more than message, we will be lacking in message altogether, which spells permanent electoral doom. If we think that simply being "moderate" will swing people, without ever explaining to people what "moderate" is, then we will be actively working to push more people into the conservative camp, and participating in our own destruction.
What do we have now that the election is over? Why should we be optimistic about our future? What has electability wrought? Trippi has one answer:
Mr. Kerry was a weaker candidate than Mr. Gore. He lost so much ground among women, Hispanics, and other key groups, that the millions in Internet money, the most Herculean get-out-the-vote effort in party history, and the largest turnout of young voters in over a decade, couldn't save him. Had the young stayed home, the sea of red on the map would have grown to include at least Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and New Hampshire--perhaps one or two more.(...)
Since the Democratic Leadership Council, with its mantra of "moderate, moderate, moderate," took hold in D.C., the party has been in decline at just about every level of government. Forget the Kerry loss. Today the number of Democrats in the House is the lowest it's been since 1948. Democrats are on the brink of becoming a permanent minority party. What do we have in return? Pretty much, just money:
A Republican sweep of the White House and control of Congress hasn't stopped the Democratic National Committee's fund raising.
The DNC announced Tuesday that it had raised at least $13 million in November. The total includes $10 million collected after the Nov. 2 election in which President Bush won a second term and Republicans strengthened their House and Senate majorities.
Due in part to growth in fund raising over the Internet, the DNC raised more this election cycle than it did before corporate, union and big individual donations known as soft money were outlawed by a 2002 law.
The committee raised at least $400 million in the 2003-04 election cycle, compared to $210 million in 1999-2000, the last presidential election cycle in which it could collect unlimited donations. The party's fortunes are crashing, and we are still controlled by the electability mindset, and the sychophantic mendacity of the chattering classes currently manifested in an Anyone But Dean movement for DNC chair. It might as well be phrased as an Anything But a Fifty-State Strategy movement, an Anything But A National Message or Ideological Narrative movement, or an Anything But Change and Grassroots Movement. The electability mindset has almost single-handedly ripped our party to shreds, but unfortunately for us, many Democrats out there seem unwilling to try something new, something difficult, and something long-term.
Any reality based community would properly reject "electability" as the lie that it is. To bad more of us are not doing the same. Howard Dean for DNC chair. | http://www.mydd.com/story/2004/11/30/143728/70
Posted at 07:34 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
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