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Friday, December 17, 2004
Real Economic Reform

House Call House Call - From the House to Your House House Call
12/17/2004

House Democrats Demand Real Economic Reform

This week the Bush Administration held a summit to trot out its economic agenda for the next four years - more unaffordable tax cuts, Social Security privatization, and "tort reform." House Democrats hope that the priorities of working families will not be forgotten in the rush to push Republican plans for the 109th Congress that are already well known. They want to rewrite the tax code to favor wealthy corporate interests at the expense of middle-class Americans, eliminate the secure and stable income provided by the Social Security system, and "reform" the legal system to protect multinational corporations from injured Americans who are seeking justice and fair compensation. It is disingenuous for the President to hold this economic summit while ignoring the real solutions our nation's working families are looking for - a more fair and less complex tax system, retirement security, affordable health care, and provisions that toss out junk lawsuits while protecting victims' rights.

Read the Letter from Leader Pelosi and Her Colleagues Calling for Tax Simplification.

Learn more about the Democratic plan for a strong economy.

Learn more about the Democratic commitment to protecting Social Security.


Real Number: 135 The number of U.S. troops killed in Iraq in November.Troops in Iraq Ask Administration
for Armor

"Our vehicles are not armored. We're digging pieces of rusted scrap metal and compromised ballistic glass that's already been shot up, dropped, busted, picking the best out of this scrap to put on our vehicles to take into combat."
- Spec. Thomas Wilson

In a question and answer meeting with the Secretary of Defense, the troops in Iraq sent a clear message to the Administration: they are not getting the armor and protection they need. As soldiers expressed frustration about the lack of armored vehicles, modern equipment and adequate supplies, the Secretary of Defense dismissed complaints by saying, "If you think about it, you can have all the armor in the world on a tank and a tank can be blown up." Real Number: The number of "up-armored" humvees U.S. troops are short of in Iraq.When our troops are sent into battle, they risk their lives every day, and it is our duty to provide them with the best equipment available. The Administration must accept responsibility for the consequences of this poorly planned war and provide our troops with the protection they need and deserve.

Read about the Democratic pledge to leave no soldier behind.


Risky Republican Proposal Will Cut Social Security Benefits

Many Americans are worried about retirement security, and whether the combination of Social Security, their 401(k) plan or pension, and their savings will be enough. And now, Republicans want to privatize Social Security saying the program is no longer sustainable even though Congress' nonpartisan scorekeeper has found that the system will stay solvent for nearly fifty years and after that, will still be able to pay about 80 percent of benefits. Privatization would steal our retirement savings, cut Social Security's guaranteed benefits and undermine the only safe and secure retirement income for millions of Americans. As the baby boom generation approaches retirement, the Social Security benefit faces manageable long-term challenges that will require changes to the program over time. But Republican plans for privatization would drain trillions of dollars from social security, force benefit cuts for current and future retirees and increase our already record-high deficits. Privatization is not the right solution for America's retirees.

Learn more about the Democratic commitment to protecting Social Security.


Paying More and Getting Less?

Across the country, seniors are paying more and getting less coverage under the Administration's flawed Medicare prescription drug plan. Democrats are working for a comprehensive prescription drug bill that benefits seniors and the disabled, not HMOs and big drug companies. Through drug reimportation and the negotiating of prices, Democrats want to make health care affordable for all Americans. Instead of lowering prescription drug prices and providing more choices and greater health care access for seniors, the Medicare bill put choices in the hands of special interests.

Read Leader Pelosi's Statement on Billy Tauzin accepting PhRMA position.

Read the latest news on special interests.

See the latest numbers on how the flawed prescription drug plan is impacting seniors in your state:

How much has your state lost?

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Social Security

 Privatize This!
DCCC Resources on Social Security, New Video

"Proud young Americans, you are in for a con job from Washington that you can't even imagine."
-- Former Republican Congressman and ultra-conservative talk show host Joe Scarborough

During the past two days, President Bush has been using an economic "forum" to push his second term agenda, most prominently Social Security privatization. We at the DCCC have been developing our own resource center on Social Security privatization, which you can find at:

http://www.PrivatizeThis.com

There you'll find, first and foremost, a new DCCC Video - watch it now!

The Social Security Crapshoot

You will also find a page dedicated to research and articles from independent organizations and media outlets. Help us get the word out by visiting the site and using our user-friendly tools to send the truth onto your friends!

http://www.PrivatizeThis.com


DeLay Gets Punk'd

Late last week Tom DeLay and his indicted cohorts got some bad news:

Company agrees to cooperate with investigation [AP]

"A company that made a $50,000 contribution to a Republican political action committee has agreed to cooperate with a state investigation into possible illegal campaign contributions in exchange for the dismissal of charges against it, according to a motion approved by a judge Thursday.

"Diversified Collections Services, Inc. was one of eight corporations accused of giving a total of $190,000 to Texans for a Republican Majority during the 2002 legislative campaign. The use of corporate money for political purposes is illegal in Texas.

"Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle said in the motion to dismiss that the company agreed to cooperate with the state 'in its prosecution of any other indicted person for any offense related to the corporate contribution.'

"Three associates of Republican U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay also have been indicted in the ongoing investigation.

"Diversified Collections also agreed to develop internal policies to prevent making illegal corporate political contributions."

But here's the funny part. Really funny. The news came just days after the company got their payback:

"When Reps. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., and Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. , teamed up in September to get the House to pass an amendment blocking the use of private companies to collect back taxes from delinquent taxpayers, it seemed the Bush administration plan might be doomed for at least a year.

"But in the final hours of drafting a 3,300-page spending bill last month, House and Senate negotiators eliminated Capito's and Van Hollen's handiwork, clearing the way for the Internal Revenue Service to hire commercial debt collectors. These private agents could keep as much as 25 percent of the amounts they recovered.

"While the Bush administration has strongly supported the initiative as a way to increase revenue collections amid growing deficits, critics contend it could lead to harassment of taxpayers and breaches of privacy. Labor groups representing federal workers also oppose the change. But it has the backing of the debt-collection industry, which has contributed heavily to GOP organizations and causes since Bush became president.

One company that lobbied for the change is Union City-based Diversified Collection Services Inc., one of eight companies indicted in September by a Texas grand jury, along with three Republican fund-raisers for House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, on charges of alleged money laundering and illegal corporate campaign contributions."

In fact, it appears that the company turned on DeLay less than 24 hours after Bush signed that bill into law.

Never hustle a hustler!

Also of note, an independent website called Raw Story appears to have gotten a hold of the letter DeLay sent to Rules Committee Chairman Dreier asking him to change the ethics rules, which has a largely overlooked section suggesting legal action against the watchdog groups that helped with the complaint. The watchdog groups also had a pretty good laugh:

"CREW's Executive Director Melanie Sloan scoffed at the complaint, which was aired Wednesday by The Brad Blog.

"'As far as I know they don't have a jail,' Sloan told RAW STORY Wednesday. 'That's not to say you couldn't fashion a cell. But it would be, I would think, international news really, if they put someone in jail in the basement of the Capitol.'

"'It's my fantasy if they would do that,' she laughed. 'And I think the courts would have me out of there in an hour.'"

"The Majority Leader's and the Rules Committee offices did not return requests for comment.

"In the letter, Bethune also notes CREW's 'agenda of counterbalance[ing] the conservative legal watchdog groups.' Curiously, one of the most notable conservative judicial groups, Judicial Watch, actually agrees with Sloan.

"Judicial Watch chief Tom Fitton said the complaint would never succeed, seeing it as a desperate attempt for DeLay to save face. The group, which by and large supports a Republican agenda, has been critical of DeLay's attempts to insulate himself from ethics charges.

"'It's just not serious,' Fitton said. 'They don't have any jurisdiction. This is a man who was admonished three times for ethics violations and this is his flailing about - it's not terribly becoming.'

"'It was Tom DeLay who was admonished on three separate instances on three separate issues,' he added. 'It's really a silly response to a serious issue.'"

Tom DeLay, laughing stock.


The Truth About Social Security

Rep. Robert Matsui of California is not only the current chair of the DCCC, he is the ranking member on the Ways and Means subcommittee on Social Security.

Wearing that hat, Rep. Matsui penned this op-ed in Roll Call recently:

******************************

Social Security Needs to Be Stabilized for Future

Social Security has revolutionized how America's workers prepare for their retirement. It operates as both retirement security and social insurance, offering a lifetime, inflation-protected benefit for senior citizens, disabled workers and widows. It has saved millions from poverty, reducing the number of seniors living at or below the poverty line from 50 percent to less than 10 percent today. Since its inception in 1935, this New Deal has been a good deal for hundreds of millions of Americans.

Today, we find ourselves being asked if Social Security is still a good deal for Americans. The answer is a resounding yes. Together, pensions, personal savings and Social Security make up the three key components of American retirement portfolios; however, it is only Social Security that ensures our workers have retirement security. Today, only 41 percent of retirees have an employer-sponsored pension - and less than one in five low-income workers receive a pension. While 60 percent of retirees receive income from assets, this income tends to be very modest - less than $2,000 a year for the median retiree.

We should certainly increase incentives for individuals to save and for employers to offer pensions, but we must also acknowledge that Social Security remains the cornerstone of retirement security for most Americans.

As such, its long-term financial solvency must be closely monitored - and it is. According to the Social Security actuaries, the trust funds currently carry enough reserves to pay full benefits to all who are eligible through 2042. The Congressional Budget Office projects that the trust funds are even stronger than that, carrying enough in reserves to pay full benefits through 2052. At that time, the trust funds will still have enough in revenue to pay 73 to 81 percent of benefits, according to the actuaries and CBO respectively.

Critics of Social Security point to these dates and sound the alarm bells. Yes, Social Security needs to be shored up, and the sooner we do so, the easier this task will be. But, Social Security is not facing an immediate financial crisis. Efforts by critics to paint it as such are patently false, as are arguments that privatization "strengthens" Social Security.

Let's be very clear: Privatization proponents do not support private accounts in addition to Social Security. They support private accounts instead of Social Security. And, replacing Social Security with private accounts does not improve the solvency of Social Security - it significantly worsens it, eroding the foundation of the system and jeopardizing guaranteed retirement benefits for seniors, disabled workers and survivors.

The president has suggested that a plan put forth in 2001 by his handpicked Social Security commission would be a "good blueprint" for reform. Under this plan, one-third of a worker's contributions to Social Security would be diverted from the trust funds into private accounts. As a result of this plan, the trust funds would lose almost $2 trillion in the first 10 years alone.

This diversion weakens the trust funds so significantly that the date by which they are no longer able to pay full benefits is moved up by more than two decades - 21 years - from 2042 to 2021. Expediting insolvency is an odd way of shoring up Social Security.

Worse yet, these losses will not stop after the first decade. These so-called "transition costs" continue for 50-60 years. Although the plan claims it will find additional money to put into the trust funds so current beneficiaries can continue to be paid, it resorts to accounting gimmicks to hide trust fund deficits. For example, the plan relies heavily upon deficit financing - more than $200 billion a year until 2054. But, it never tells us where this money comes from or how we pay it back. Borrowing of this magnitude would mean that our national debt will rise to unprecedented levels. This new debt alone - debt in addition to what is already projected under current law - would grow to equal 24 percent of gross domestic product.

These staggering "transition costs" will force substantial benefit cuts. Private accounts are touted as voluntary - if you want to remain in traditional Social Security, proponents claim you will be free to do so. However, even those who opt not to participate in a privatized system will see benefit cuts. For example, if you are in your late 20s today, when you retire at age 65 in 2042 your benefits will be 25 percent less than they would have been under today's Social Security system.

Further, these benefit cuts won't just apply to retirees - disability and survivors' benefits are cut as well. Today, almost 30 percent of Social Security beneficiaries - approximately 14.1 million people - receive either disability or survivors' benefits. All of these beneficiaries - who range from severely disabled workers to children who have lost a parent - would see the same cuts as retirees.

Although this commission plan is viewed as a starting point for privatization, the president has yet to endorse or propose any specific legislation.

To date, President Bush has offered the American people only generalities, a set of principles loosely outlining his vision for reform. Unfortunately, principles are not the same as policy. The benefits and drawbacks of President Bush?s plans for privatization, and their impact on our seniors, cannot be fully measured absent a specific, detailed proposal.

If the president and leaders of his party are serious about Social Security reform, I urge them to come forward with a concrete legislative proposal. Its costs must be fully accounted for in his fiscal 2006 budget, so the fiscal impact of privatization can be made plain for all Americans to see. Once the facts - and the benefit cuts - are unveiled, workers and retirees alike can decide for themselves whether privatization enhances their retirement options - or whether the administration is trying to replace the New Deal with a raw one.


It Never Ends From the Texas GOP...

While the Texas redistricting was a sham that both undermined democracy nationally and foisted several more Tom DeLay "automatons" onto the United States Congress, the precursor of that effort - the apparently illegal engineering of the Texas State House elections - will have even more longstanding and direct implications for Texans themselves.

At this very moment, in fact, the very same Tom DeLay puppets brought in by DeLay's dubious corporate fundraising prowess are bringing his philosophy of partisanship at all costs to the local level. You see, Democrats actually made gains in this bastion of ultra-conservatism, and the GOP just can't have that. That's why the Republicans are currently contesting three different Democratic victories, re-hiring their chief election lawyer and mudslinger to make their case and hurl around unfounded allegations of voting irregularities. In at least one case, where Democrat Hubert Vo pulled off a heroic campaign to unseat 22-year GOP veteran Talmadge Heflin, the Speaker of the Texas House - himself possibly in Grand Jury hot water - is abusing his power to throw aside the will of the people and turn the election over to his cronies in the state House. A committee is currently "evaluating" the election, and may decide to simply call for a new election, or - get this - simply declare their fellow Republican the winner.

In light of all this, in addition to DeLay and Bush's retention of power, it's probably worth revisiting the roots of the modern-day Texas Republican Party. Blogger and commentator Kevin Drum, who now writes for Washington Monthly, took a look at the Republican Party platform for 2000 and summarized some of what he found:

  • The Supreme Court should not be allowed to decide the constitutionality of laws regarding abortion, religion, or anything else related to the Bill of Rights. In these areas, Congress should be allowed to pass any laws it wishes.
  • We should completely do away with separation of church and state.
  • Gay sex should be a criminal offense.
  • All abortion of all kinds should be permanently outlawed by constitutional amendment.
  • Gays should be treated like child molesters and should not be allowed to visit children unsupervised.
  • The Biblical story of creation should be taught in science classes.
  • Social Security should be abolished.
  • The federal income tax should be abolished.
  • The federal minimum wage should be abolished.
  • The EPA, HUD, HHS, the Department of Education, and several other federal agencies should be eliminated. Since these departments supervise all federal welfare programs for the poor and sick, they are presumably advocating the complete abolishment of the federal welfare state.
  • Get the United States out of the UN.
  • Remember this next time you're tempted to give George Bush or Tom DeLay the benefit of the doubt...


    News From the Blog

    Skelton to Bush
    Even DeLay's legal defense fund can't play it straight.

    Sour Grapes in IL-08
    Evidence piles up that Rumsfeld was aware of systematic prisoner abuse for months.

    Have Fun in Court
    Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne discusses the possibilities for bipartisanship.

    Disco Stu
    Two new polls show little support for Bush's grand designs.

    It's Hard Work
    The Washington Post discovers the White House spying on Nuclear Watchdog.

    Follow Up on "Getalongism"
    A rundown of issues, and the possibilities for working with Republicans.

    Whiny Republicans
    DeLay's indicted cronies moan about corporation cooperating with the investigation.


    Posted at 11:44 am by blog swarm
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    Thursday, December 16, 2004
    Bill O'Reilly a COWARD

    Letter from David Brock to Bill O'Reilly

    Bill O'Reilly
    The O'Reilly Factor
    FOX News Channel
    1211 Avenue of the Americas
    New York, NY 10036

    Dear Mr. O'Reilly:

    In May of this year, I asked that you allow me to come on The O'Reilly Factor to discuss your attacks on philanthropist George Soros. Your producer denied my request, saying you were no longer discussing the topic. Yet in subsequent weeks, you continued to discuss Mr. Soros on your radio and television programs. Despite my offer to discuss Soros, you still did not invite me on -- even complaining during your June 1 Radio Factor, "I mean, we really can't get anybody in here [to defend Soros] that's not a raving, raving Far-Left person, and why we would want to do that, I don't know."

    In recent months, you have repeatedly attacked me and my organization, Media Matters for America:

    • On the June 28 O'Reilly Factor, you referred to Media Matters as a "Far Left website";
    • On the August 5 Radio Factor, you likened Media Matters to Mao Zedong;
    • On the August 5 O'Reilly Factor, you claimed your critics are "hiding"; in response, I reiterated my willingness to appear on your television show;
    • During your August 7 debate with New York Times columnist Paul Krugman on CNBC, you compared Media Matters to the Ku Klux Klan and Fidel Castro;
    • On August 13, Media Matters noted your recent attacks on us, and wondered how long it would be before you compared us to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels. It took less than a month: On the September 14 Radio Factor, you referred to comments I made as "Joseph Goebbels Nazi stuff";
    • On the December 9 Radio Factor, you called Media Matters "the most vile, despicable human beings in the country";
    • On the December 14 Radio Factor, you called Media Matters "sneaky"; accused us of "tak[ing] things out of context"; called us a "Far Left, deceitful, disgusting website"; and called us "character assassins" and "despicable weasels."

    As you can see, Mr. O'Reilly, you have repeatedly and personally attacked me, Media Matters for America, and my fine staff, calling us "vile," "despicable," and "weasels," and comparing us to the Ku Klux Klan, Castro, Mao, and the Nazis. And you have refused my repeated requests to appear on your broadcast.

    You once offered your viewers your definition of the word "coward." On the January 5, 2004, O'Reilly Factor, you declared: "If you attack someone publicly, as these men did to me, you have an obligation to face the person you are smearing. If you don't, you are a coward."

    Well, Mr. O'Reilly, you have attacked me publicly on numerous occasions, and you refuse to face me. You, sir, are a coward -- by your own definition of the term. You are "hiding under your desk" (to paraphrase your August 26, 2003, claim about a "coward" who declined to appear on your show) rather than allowing me on your program to discuss your insults. You are "gutless," to borrow the phrase you used on January 10, 2003, and February 8, 2001, to describe people who would not appear on your program. I attach additional examples of your pejorative descriptions of those who decline invitations to appear on your broadcast.

    Your frequent complaint that your words are taken out of context appears to have spurred your recent assault on my organization. While reasonable people can disagree about conclusions we, or you, have drawn about your comments, you are simply wrong to say that we took you out of context. I remain willing and eager to appear on either your television or radio program to discuss your contention that my organization has taken your comments out of context.

    Should you continue to refuse this offer, it is only reasonable that the American people will conclude that you are not only -- as you would put it -- a "coward," but a hypocrite as well.

    Sincerely,

    David Brock
    President and CEO
    Media Matters for America


    Highlights from Bill O'Reilly's comments about people who refuse to appear on his program

    O'Reilly frequently calls people "cowards":

    The O'Reilly Factor, 1/5/04:

    O'REILLY: [reading a critical review] John Wright, The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah: "I graduated from one of the best journalism schools in the country, the University of Florida. You, Bill, are not a journalist. You spew propaganda. For example, you said the journalism professors from Rutgers and Lehigh were cowards because they would not come on The Factor. That's not true. Maybe they simply didn't want to appear."

    Well, I'm sorry, Mr. Wright. If you attack someone publicly, as these men did to me, you have an obligation to face the person you are smearing. If you don't, you are a coward. Wise up, sir.

    The O'Reilly Factor, 12/19/03:

    O'REILLY: We asked them both [Rutgers professor Steven] Miller and [Lehigh professor Jack] Lule to appear on The Factor, but they are too frightened.

    [...]

    O'REILLY: But, Professor [Victor] Navasky, what you're missing is -- you're missing that Lule and Miller and all of these other cowards who make these erroneous statements and won't back them up by coming in here and talking about them are basically telling their students in big schools -- Rutgers is a big school, all right -- that the FOX News Channel is not worthy, it's not journalism, it's garbage and ignore it. And that, sir, is dishonest and doesn't serve the student well.

    NAVASKY: OK. First of all, I don't know that you know that they're cowards, and secondly --

    O'REILLY: Yes, we know. We gave them --

    NAVASKY: And secondly --

    O'REILLY: We gave them any time they could appear.

    The O'Reilly Factor, 8/26/03:

    O'REILLY: I mean, this Dan Golden was a coward. We tried to get him on. He hid under his desk.

    The O'Reilly Factor, 4/24/03:

    O'REILLY: You know, I am so angry. I am so angry, Niger [Innis]. I mean I'm almost at the verge -- if [Brooklyn District Attorney Charles] Hynes were here --

    INNIS: Well, you should be.

    O'REILLY: And he's a coward. He's a coward because we gave him months. This story was on the board before the war, Niger. All right. We bumped it because of the war. We gave Hynes months to come up with his side of the story, explain it to us, tell us what happened, why he did it, and, you know, he gave us the finger. That's what he did.

    O'Reilly calls people "gutless":

    The O'Reilly Factor, 1/10/03:

    O'REILLY: He may have? That's not his prerogative. We have to demand, Mr. [Silver Lake High School alumnus Dan] Sullivan, you at Harvard, me here on The Factor, and everybody in the state of Massachusetts and around the country that these principals uphold principles and not run and hide.

    Look, this guy [Silver Lake High School principal Richard Kelley] could be sitting where you're sitting, Mr. Sullivan. He could be in your chair. He's gutless.

    The O'Reilly Factor, 2/8/01:

    O'REILLY: [Congressman Henry] Waxman wouldn't come on this program, by the way. He's gutless.

    Posted to the web on Thursday December 16, 2004 at 3:15 PM EST

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    Contact:
    Bill O'Reilly
    oreilly@foxnews.com
    Contact:
    FOX News Channel
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    1-888-369-4762
    Comments@foxnews.com
    1211 Avenue of the Americas
    New York, NY 10036
    Contact:
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    Contact:
    The Radio Factor
    Call in live: 1-877-9-NO SPIN (12pm-2pm eastern time)

    Westwood One
    Bart Tessler
    Sr. VP, Network News / Talk Programming
    202.457.7998

    Posted at 11:00 pm by blog swarm
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    Atrios brings it all together

    Hmmm....

    September 16, 2000 NY Daily News:

    A homeless woman lying on the ramp of an upper East Side parking garage was crushed to death early yesterday when she was run over by a mammoth sport utility vehicle, police said.

    The driver, real estate executive Anthony Bergamo, told investigators he did not see the woman from his driver's seat.

    Bergamo was driving a 5,770-pound Ford Expedition.

    Medics pronounced the unidentified woman dead at the scene.

    An autopsy determined that she died of crushing injuries to her chest, said a spokeswoman for the city medical examiner.

    The death was ruled accidental and Bergamo, 54, who manages the Milford Plaza hotel in Times Square for its owner, real estate magnate Howard Milstein, was not charged.


    Who was police commissioner then? Why, Bernard Kerik. And who is Anthony Bergamo? Oh, THAT Anthony Bergamo...

    Rescue workers were combing through the World Trade Center rubble around the clock when Mr. Kerik called Anthony Bergamo, a well-connected vice chairman of the Milstein family real estate company and a police buff, and asked for help finding a place for the workers to rest during breaks, the executive said.

    The family owned Liberty View, a 28-story yellow brick tower two blocks southwest of the trade center at the corner of West Street and Third Place.

    According to the executive, who knows Mr. Bergamo, the vice chairman arranged for Mr. Kerik to have the use of an apartment there. Several apartments in the buildings had been used by rescue workers on breaks, and by Red Cross staff who were treating them, in the months after 9/11, according to a real estate executive.


    (thanks to a sharp reader)



    Posted at 10:57 pm by blog swarm
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    2024

    We haven't even finished counting the ballots from this year, but the 2024 Presidential Campaign isn't that far away.

    Posted at 03:31 pm by blog swarm
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    Tuesday, December 14, 2004
    Atrios: Bum "Rush" dick

    FCC Action Alert!!!

    1. Go to http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/menu/rush.guest.html and find your Limbaugh station.
    2. Send an email to fccinfo@fcc.gov with your own version of the following:

    On Monday, December 113 in the 2nd hour of his program (1pm EST) broadcast on [CALL SIGN HERE], Rush Limbaugh used the vulgar, sexual term "dick" when referring to a Miss Plastic Surgery pageant. Specifically, Limbaugh said:

    "LIMBAUGH: Miss Plastic Surgery. (chuckle) And – I’d – I’d – I – I don’t – I don’t know what the winner – I – and, oh, I didn’t print out both pages, so I don’t know what the – I don’t know what the winner gets. Probably a certificate to go to San Francisco to have an add-a-dick-to-me operation. "


    According to the FCC:

    Information regarding the details of what was actually said (or depicted) during the allegedly indecent, profane or obscene broadcast. There is flexibility on how a complainant may provide this information. The complainant may submit a significant excerpt of the program describing what was actually said (or depicted) or a full or partial recording (e.g., tape) or transcript of the material.

    In whatever form the complainant decides to provide the information, it must be sufficiently detailed so the FCC can determine the words and language actually used during the broadcast and the context of those words or language. Subject matter alone is not a determining factor of whether material is obscene, profane, or indecent. For example, stating only that the broadcast station “discussed sex” or had a “disgusting discussion of sex” during a program is not sufficient. Moreover, the FCC must know the context when analyzing whether specific, isolated words are indecent or profane. The FCC does not require complainants to provide recordings or transcripts in support of their complaints. Consequently, failure to provide a recording or transcript of a broadcast, in and of itself, will not lead to automatic dismissal or denial of a complaint.


    The date and time of the broadcast. Under federal law, if the FCC assesses a monetary forfeiture against a broadcast station for violation of a rule, it must specify the date the violation occurred. Accordingly, it is important that complainants provide the date the material in question was broadcast. A broadcaster’s right to air indecent or profane speech is protected between the hours of 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. Consequently, the FCC must know the time of day that the material was broadcast.




    Posted at 04:14 pm by blog swarm
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    Stoller endorses Rosenberg

    Campaign visionary Matt Stoller has throws his support to Rosenberg:

    Simon Rosenberg for DNC Chair

    One of the most compelling things Simon Rosenberg ever told me was how much he doesn't like unity. Unity is bad, he said, because it's brittle. He prefers dynamism, vibrancy, debate, and wants to see our party as a true party of ideas, replete with healthy arguments. And I've seen him walk the walk. There's fighting passion around Simon, anger, and argument. It's not unity that Simon prizes, which is another word for top-down control. It's professionalism, and winning.

    I have known Simon Rosenberg of NDN for less than nine months (I do consulting work for his organization), but he is to me the clear choice for DNC Chair. Simon is a blunt, hypercompetitive, disciplined and strategically minded political operative with that rare gift of appreciating political creativity. His roots are New Democrat, but he has long since abandoned their silly unproductive attitude towards politics, and embraced the netroots vision years ago. The Hispanic project, a groundbreaking media campaign in Spanish and English targeted at Hispanics in swing states, was a clear indication that he doesn't let constituencies fall through the cracks, and approaches old politics with a new mindset. He is a terrific listener, and a guy who can build this party into a modern political machine.

    The issue for me in DNC Party Chair is and always has been strategy. The corporate culture of the left is one where strategy is submerged under a large soup of cronyism and dead methods. I have heard this from all quarters, and I believe it is true of the blogs (there's little cronyism among blogs, but a lot of amateurishness of which I can amply claim my share) as well as the state parties (though the state parties are truly neglected). We aren't connected as a party, and the atomization of our culture and message is the obvious result. Simon is a bridge-builder with a strategic mindset. He helped pull together the Phoenix Group, the answer to the vast left-wing conspiracy that will fund our new civil society. He posts on blogs, unlike almost every other political operative out there. He cares what people say, not because he's nice, but because it's stupid not to. People matter in politics, message matters in politics, infrastructure matters in politics - Simon gets this.

    I urge you to read his visionfor the party. I believe that Dean would be an excellent choice, and shares many of these traits with Simon. What distinguishes Simon is that he is just a party builder, not a politician. That's important. Dean will lose much of his power if he has to back the message of Hillary Clinton and Harry Reid - and progressives will lose our best voice. And make no mistake, that's what Dean as DNC Chair will be. On message. I believe Dean would be a great President, and should run in 2008. I also believe that DFA needs to continue as a vessel for new entrants to the party. We need our Ken Mehlman, our guy to overhaul the professionalism and morale of the party. Simon can do this - his experience with TV is a boon for his candidacy (NDN has consistently done the best political ads of any group save perhaps Swift Boats); TV still matters, and it is the combination of the net, TV, and organizing that will lead to a progressive resurgence.

    To some extent, my choice is colored by my view of the DNC as a vessel for coordinating and institutional bridge-building, not a message machine. I think that message can come from other areas, which is certainly how the right-wing does it. But most of it is due to Simon, who respects dissent, has a vision for the party itself, and values professionalism and reform. I can't say enough good things about Simon Rosenberg. Regardless of whether you support him, I hope that you really take the time to understand his arguments about where the party needs to go, because they are important. The right-wing is winning because of the power of their message and apparatus. We need someone who understands this, sees the potential way to combat it, and can play a holding pattern while the left gradually builds its own set of institutions.

    Simon can do this.


    Posted at 01:45 pm by blog swarm
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    Race for DNC Chair Cattle Call

    by Jerome Armstrong

    I should point out that the Orlando meeting was held by the ASDC, which is a group of state officers within the DNC member umbrella. It's a technicality, but a useful one to remember with the process. One other note, I hear that in the ASDC's Q & A, the candidates were all asked if they would turnover to the states, the ~4M list of emails and donors that the DNC had gathered, if they were DNC Chair. Ickes, Rosenberg, and Dean said no, the others basically said 'whatever it takes' to get your vote. Anyway, after three days in Orlando with the DNC members and the candidates, here's the roundup:

    Leo Hindery, in the last CattleCall, was last, and now he's dropped out. After the blogosphere raked him over the coals for his past political actions, Hindery-surrogates spent a week trying to smooth it over with emails ('talk with him, he's a good guy'), before Leo arrived in Orlando in his private jet, only to leave 4 hours later, dropping out of the race.

    Howard Dean has a great time, but he's still not declared himself a candidate, and he's still not the frontrunner. The state chairs and executive directors are not reflective of Howard Dean's base, and yet, he's formidable among even this group. Dean was accessible throughout the event, and he got a lucky break. When Leo Hindery dropped out, it opened the Saturday morning breakfast slot that Dean grabbed up. Dean had been slated for an event to be held at 4-7 PM Saturday, after when many would have already left Orlando. Dean's breakfast was by far the most attended, where he spent over an hour taking questions and answers. Also, I spoke with Jim Dean briefly after the event, Howard's Connecticut-based brother, and unsuccessfully prodded him about taking up an '06 primary challenge against a certain Senator.

    Wellington Webb reflects the ASDC priority of gutting the centralized power of the DNC. Webb was far better in his 5-minute speech than the speech he delivered during his evening event on Thursday. Because the ASDC is Webb's base, it shouldn't be surprising that the well-known Vice Chair has a fair amount of support, but I was surprised, because his performance wasn't altogether impressive. Webb's got a base and is a serious candidate, but not likely to become a consensus alternative. If anything, he's more an outsider than is Dean.

    Ron Kirk seemed to come out of nowhere to a landing near the top. He's not that well-known, but he knows how to work a crowd. Kirk's not even that certain that he's even a candidate, and said that he wouldn't know if he'd enter the race until next month. He went last in the speeches, but spoke to the lack of women candidates in a way that connected very well with at least half the audience. The exit poll we did reflected this, as it was basically a snapshot of how the DNC members reacted to the speeches (top three), not who they would vote for as DNC Chair. It will be interesting to see if he gains DC-based traction. If there's a DLC 'status quo' candidate, it's Kirk. He's got charm, and if the Party wants to move to "the middle", Kirk's there.

    Simon Rosenberg could at least be glad that his message got out at this meeting. Rosenberg has spent the last year alerting the Democratic Party to the powerful machine that the Republicans have, and the other candidates listened. But the understanding here of what that means, in terms of building that opposition, was the larger argument that Rosenberg is just beginning to make. It's particularly relevant to the State Parties (& their lackluster websites). If they want money from the grassroots, they need to start giving the netroots the tools to get involved, rather than just giving lip service but only really wanting their money. Simon's support is going to come partly out of DC, and partly through the web-users that are connected to the blogosphere--and there were few of those DNC members in attendance at the ASDC meeting.

    Donnie Fowler raised his stock quite a bit at this meeting by being well prepared. Like Webb, this was Fowler's base of support. He's able to look out across the sea of faces and make connections from previous efforts he'd made in campaigns across the nation. The drawback I heard at the meeting was that Fowler, like Rosenberg, was young, but as they pointed out, embracing young winners doesn't seem to be a difficulty the Republicans have. Fowler knew the campaign he needed to run at this meeting, and made the best of it. Of all the candidates, Fowler was the only one that actually was a candidate, complete with pins, stickers, and signs advertising his candidacy. Fowler most recently was the Field Director for Kerry in Michigan, hopefully, he kept his distance from the State Party's there handling of the money.

    Martin Frost seems about one of the nicest guys you've ever met in a politician. I wasn't sure, but he seemed to recall the BlogPac video ad that we made for his uphill 32nd CD race against Sessions, and it was good to see that his wife was back from Iraq. Frost worked the crowd quite a bit, but it was an uphill event for the Rep., as the ASDC isn't a Hill crowd.

    Jim Blanchard, in case you are wondering, is the new ABD candidate. We caught up with him as TIME was shooting his photo for the spread in the upcoming issue on the DNC Chair candidates. He told us that he'd supported Vilsack, but when Vilsack dropped out, he listened to the DGA, and to surrogates of Clinton and Kerry, and decided to take a look at getting into the race. He might have been expecting to cruise with a bit higher altitude in his candidacy, because when Matt showed him the exit poll numbers, Blanchard seemed to realize the uphill race he was facing. But are we really going to elect a Piper Rudnick DC-lobbyist as the next DNC Chair? Blanchard will need to commit to the race to be taken seriously.

    Harold Ickes bombed, but he didn't back down. There's two things that the ASDC detests. 527's and the DNC's state-based canvassers. Same theme, the State Parties say they want the funds and names, but then, why don't they have canvassers out there? It's a legit complaint, there should be more partnership. For instance, Ickes said to focus on building up the state game by training from the DNC for State Parties. But when many in the ASDC heard "527" on his resume, he was toast in their minds.


    Posted at 01:41 pm by blog swarm
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    1st DNC Chair Campaign TV Ad

    Watch the Drafthoward.com TV Ad

    A month ago we gathered together a coalition of grassroots leaders, fundraisers, and volunteers that believed we should have voice in the DNC Chair race. Since then we have teamed up with Driving Votes PAC to support Howard Dean. Similarly, many othewrs like Jerome at MyDD, DailyKos, Moveon.org and others have championed the need for a reform candidate.

    Now, thanks to your donations, Drafthoward.com and Driving Votes PAC will be taking the next step and taking the grassroots case to the media. We have finished our first TV ad and we will be airing it as soon as we are able to secure time.

    Watch the ad:

    Real Player format: Broadband Version | Dial-up Version

    Thanks to your help we have raised the money to air this ad and let the world know that we support Howard Dean and his ideas to reform the Democratic party.

    Posted at 01:37 pm by blog swarm
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    www.sinclairaction.com

    http://www.sinclairaction.com/

    Led by Media Matters for America and supported by MoveOn, MediaChannel.org, Free Press, Working Assets, Robert Greenwald (Director, Outfoxed), AlterNet, and The Institute for America's Future, we have launched a campaign to protest Sinclair Broadcast Group's continued misuse of public airwaves.

    The campaign aims to spur action against Sinclair Broadcast Group's use of the 62 television stations it owns or operates to systematically promote partisan political interests. Of particular concern is a nightly "news and commentary" segment titled "The Point," in which Sinclair vice president Mark Hyman consistently espouses one-sided, conservative rhetoric without any counterpoint.

    We believe the fairest way to remedy this situation is for Sinclair to provide a meaningful opportunity for those with an opposing point of view to respond to editions of "The Point." With your help, we can hold Sinclair accountable for its slanted news programming and demand that it become a responsible steward of the airwaves to which it has been granted access on behalf of the American people.

    We are hopeful advertisers will join our effort to encourage Sinclair to balance the content of their news programming by offering equal air time for a counterpoint.

    Contact Advertisers

    Notable Sinclair advertisers:

    Kraft
    Chief Executive Officer: Roger K. Deromedi (also Director of The Gillette Company)
    Headquarters:
    Three Lakes Drive
    Northfield, IL 60093)
    Main Phone: 847-646-2000
    Fax: 847-646-2922

    Staples
    President and Chief Executive Officer: Ronald L. Sargent
    Headquarters:
    500 Staples Drive
    Framingham, MA 01702
    Phone: 508-253-5000
    Fax: 800-761-7041

    Target
    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer: Robert J. Ulrich
    Headquarters:
    1000 Nicollet Mall
    Minneapolis, MN 55403
    Phone: 612-304-6073
    Fax: 612-696-3731

    Geico
    Chairman, President and CEO: Tony Nicely
    Headquarters:
    5260 Western Avenue
    Chevy Chase, MD 20815
    Phone: 301-986-3000
    Fax: 301-986-2888

    McDonalds:
    Chief Executive Officer: Jim Skinner
    Headquarters:
    McDonald's Plaza
    Oak Brook, IL 60523
    Phone: 630-623-3000
    Fax: 630-623-5004

    Sprint
    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer: Gary D. Forsee
    Headquarters:
    Sprint World Headquarters
    6200 Sprint Parkway
    Overland Park, KS 66251
    Phone: 913-624-3000
    Fax: 913-523-8312

    "We do not believe political statements should be disguised as news content."

    Sinclair Broadcast Group is the largest single owner/operator of television stations in the United States. With 62 stations in 39 markets, Sinclair reaches approximately 24 percent of U.S. television households and includes ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, UPN, and WB affiliates.

    Every day, Sinclair's stations broadcast "The Point," a one-minute conservative commentary by Sinclair vice president Mark Hyman. As Media Matters for America has documented, "The Point" contains a steady stream of one-sided anti-progressive and pro-Bush rhetoric that is broadcast without a progressive counterpoint.

    "The Point" is part of a package of centralized content that is broadcast from News Central, Sinclair's Maryland-based nerve center, to its local stations. In addition to Hyman's commentary, News Central provides centralized national and international news coverage to its stations. An August 31, 2004, Baltimore Sun article noted that "roughly 1.8 million American adults" watch "The Point" daily, according to Sinclair's figures, although Hyman's bio claims that "The Point" has a "daily household audience [of] more than four million daily viewers." According to the Sun, even the lower figure "puts him in the company of far-better known pundits," including FOX News Channel hosts Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity. According to Hyman's bio, all 62 of its TV stations are required to air "The Point." Salon.com's Eric Boehlert reported on October 14, 2004, that "[s]oon after Sept. 11," Hyman's segment "became a must-carry on Sinclair stations."

    Another News Central feature is a segment called "Get This," which purports to cover "the news items that deserve public attention that you probably won't see anywhere else." In fact, "Get This" provides viewers with a steady diet of pro-Bush and anti-progressive news items, as Media Matters has also documented.

    Sinclair has demonstrated its conservative political leanings in other programming decisions as well:

    • In October 2004, Sinclair intended to air the film Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal, a distortion-filled attack on Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, two weeks before the 2004 presidential election. Sinclair ultimately caved to a massive grassroots advertiser boycott effort, threatened shareholder litigation, and numerous other actions (including some led by Media Matters), instead presenting an hour-long program on 40 of its stations, titled A POW Story: Politics, Pressure and the Media. The program spent more than 30 minutes focusing on Kerry's Vietnam War record but included only approximately five minutes of Stolen Honor.

    • In April 2004, Sinclair forbade its ABC affiliate stations to air a broadcast of ABC's Nightline that showed the names and photographs of the 700 American soldiers who had died in Iraq up to that point. In a statement explaining its decision, Sinclair declared: "We do not believe political statements should be disguised as news content."

    • In June 2003, as The Center for American Progress noted: "Sinclair Broadcasting refused to allow WMSN TV -- its FOX affiliate in Madison, WI -- to air a DNC [Democratic National Committee] advertisement that featured a clip of President Bush making the false claim that 'Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa' in his 2003 State of the Union Address. Three other Madison stations, including ABC, NBC and CBS [affiliates], readily agreed to air the ad."

    • After the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, The Baltimore Sun reported that Sinclair "directed its more than 60 stations ... to broadcast spots declaring support for the efforts of President Bush and other government leaders."

    Sinclair executives have also demonstrated their political leanings with their wallets:

    • Sinclair vice president Frederick G. Smith has donated more than $200,000 to Republican candidates and organizations during the 2000, 2002, and 2004 election cycles.

    • In 2000 and 2002, before corporate contributions to political candidates were outlawed, Sinclair Broadcast Group contributed more than $130,000 to Republicans and none to Democrats.


    Posted at 12:23 pm by blog swarm
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