From Pine View Farm

February, 2011 archive

On! Wisconsin 0

James Woolcott takes on the Wis. Kid.

Don’t miss this one.

Share

Drinking Liberally Virginia Beach 0

Struggling start-up needs your help.

When: Thursday, February 24, 6 p

Where:

    One Fish Two Fish
    Long Point Bay Marina
    2109 West Great Neck Road
    (Four blocks south of Shore Drive)
    Virginia Beach, Va. (Map)

Showing up (and paying your own check) is the only qualification for membership.

Share

Facebook Frolics (Updated) 0

State of Maryland demands prison guard job applicant’s social networking login information and reads his posts and messages.

This goes beyond being careful, which is wise, to being creepy. The State of Maryland is confusing itself with the TSA.

The ACLU has more details, plus a petition to the Secretary of Public Safety of Maryland for you to sign.

Addendum, the Next Day:

The policy has been suspended for 45 days pending review.

Share

“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Politeness is breaking out all over.

Robert Allen Bethune is charged with furnishing or permitting a minor to possess a pistol or revolver, and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Bethune is scheduled to appear in Magistrate Court at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Police received a chilling phone call late Monday afternoon from a 15-year-old boy telling them his friend had been shot.

Officers arrived at the scene to find a 16-year-old girl with a fatal gunshot wound to the chest, Clayton police spokeswoman Tina Daniel said. The shooting occurred in a wooded area behind a home in the 4100 block of Dunn Road in Ellenwood.

Share

Cuts for All 0

An open letter from the Republican Party. Read it all the way through.

In these tough economic times, we need everyone to make a sacrifice. We need everyone to share the pain. We are all in this together, and everyone must be willing to suffer for the greater good. So we are going to make some cuts-

Poor people, we are going to cut food stamps, Medicaid, family services (including Planned parenthood), HEAP, and many if not all other programs that you use.

Teachers, social workers, Police, firemen – we will be cutting your numbers, pay and benefits.

Students (and parents of students), we will be cutting financial aid (and of course the above mentioned teachers).

Veterans, we will be cutting veteran services, health care and mental health assistance.

Disabled people, we will be cutting support services and staff used to provide those services.

Senior citizens, we will be cutting social security and Medicare, along with assisted living support and the above mentioned HEAP.

And finally, for the wealthy, we will be cutting your taxes. Everyone has to give up something in these trying times.

Signed, The GOP

P.S. for our corporate friends, we will not just cut your taxes, but also cut many of those rules and regulations also. We appreciate your sacrifice.

Share

Trickle Down 0

You can look at this chart to see what is trickling down:

Income Levels over Time

More charts at Mother Jones.

Via Michael Tomasky.

Share

The Birth of Cosmetics 0

From Comically Vintage.

Share

Correlation 0

Shaun Mullen finds some interesting statistics. Follow the link to see what conclusions they lead him to.

Consider that only five states do not have collective bargaining for teachers. Those states’ rankings on ACT/SAT scores are:

    South Carolina — 50th
    North Carolina — 49th
    Georgia — 48th
    Texas 47th
    Virginia — 44th

Got that? Meanwhile, the states with the highest ACT/SAT rankings all allow collective bargaining:

    Iowa — 1st
    Minnesota and Wisconsin — 2nd
    Kansas — 4th
    Nebraska — 5th

Statistics can lie, but these are unambiguous. States that allow teachers to bargain produce better students, and by inference better teachers.

Share

Doing the Bristol Stomp (Updated) 0

A dance party may be in the future for tea party darling Christine O’Donnell.

The Delaware Republican — who lost the Senate race in November to Chris Coons — says she’s been invited to be a contestant the TV show “Dancing with the Stars,” but she’s not sure if she’ll do it.

She says she can’t dance.

Lack of competence has not stopped her before.

Addendum, the Next Week:

It stopped her this time.

In a statement released Monday night, O’Donnell said she’s currently too busy writing a book about her 2010 election loss and starting a political action committee, ChristinePAC, to hit the reality TV dance floor.

So she’s staying out of “reality” TV and in her fantasy world.

Share

QOTD 0

Lech Walesa:

This conviction brought me, in the summer of 1978, to the Free Trade Unions – formed by a group of courageous and dedicated people who came out in the defense of the workers’ rights and dignity.

Share

McGuire Sisters 0

Share

Pulling the Plug 0

John Jon Stewart, in the video embedded at this Talking Points Memo item (check out the comments), said that there was nothing in common between the Wisconsins gathered in Madison and the Egyptians who gathered in Cairo.

He has a point, certainly as regards the severity of grievances.

Nevertheless . . .

According to pro-labor protesters in Wisconsin, Gov. Scott Walker (R) may be taking a page from former Egyptian Dictator Hosni Mubarak and cutting off internet access to key protest organizers within the state Capitol building.

If you are in the Capitol attempting to access the internet from a free wifi connection labeled “guest,” you cannot access the site defendwisconsin.org. The site has been used to provide updates on what is happening, where you can volunteer, and where supplies and goods are needed to support protesters. Administrators of the website were notified on Monday that the page is being blocked. Wisconsin Democratic Party Chairman Mike Tate says that the site was put on a blacklist typically used to filter out pornography sites so that protestors inside the Capitol could not access this key site.

Via The Richmonder.

Share

The Rewards of Incompetence . . . 0

. . . are nil.

Dean Baker, writing at the Guardian, points out that many of those who today crusade against the growing deficit are the same folks who championed the policies of that led to the housing crash, which in turn led to . . . the growing deficit.

A nugget:

When the country actually did face a real economic disaster, these people were nowhere in sight. They were diverting attention to other issues and dismissing those of us who tried to warn of the real danger.

Now that we are experiencing an economic disaster – 25 million people unemployed or underemployed, millions of people facing the loss of their homes, more than 10 million underwater with their mortgages – as a direct result of their incompetence, these same people are telling us again about the urgent need to cut social security and Medicare. The deficit hawks somehow think that their case is more compelling because of the damage done by their incompetence.

It should not work this way. In most lines of work, incompetence is not a credential; it should not be one in designing economic policy either.

Share

On! Wisconsin, Lessons Learned* Dept. 0

Auth

The Rude One extracts some learnings. A sample:

3. Remember: if the majority Democratic Congress and the Democratic president are protested by the Tea Party, that’s just patriots expressing the will of the people against a tyrannical government. However, if the majority Republican assembly in Wisconsin is protested by tens of thousands of workers, that’s the slippery slope to anarchy.

4. Remember: if Republicans in the Senate abuse the rules that run their house by filbustering or putting individual holds on nearly every single bill or nomination from the House or the White House, refusing to even allow them to be considered, even if it affects the actual functioning of the nation, that’s just brave men and women standing in the way of Democrats enslaving the American people. But if Democrats in Wisconsin deny the Assembly a quorum by leaving the state, that’s just arrogant politicians refusing to do their jobs.

____________________

*Hip buzzword of the day for getting consultancy gigs.

Share

GY Joe 0

Tom Tomorrow
Click through to see the image at its original size.

Via Down with Tyranny. who comments

So it really shouldn’t come as such a surprise that the war on women’s rights has emerged from the right-wing muck. For some on the Far Right it’s the answer to prayers long muttered under cover of ideological darkness, for a return to the “happy” days of biblical patriarchy, where uppity people who don’t know their place are forcibly shown their place. For others on the Far Right, notably the economic royalists led by the Koch brothers and their zillionaire cohorts, it’s a useful strategy for reinforcing the loyalty of those militant warriors for their authoritarian agenda. Just how far this holy alliance can succeed under cover of the economic meltdown remains to be seen.

Share

Spill Here, Spill Now 0

Buccaneer Petroleum’s wild well: the gift that keeps on giving.

Now, it’s raining oil. From the clouds.

Via Bob Cesca.

Share

On! Wisconsin 0

In Wisconsin, Republicans reveal their long-tern goals: Rolling the clock back to reinvigorate the meaning of “slave” in the phrase “wage slave.”

Dick Polman explains the rightwing’s union-busting tactics. A nugget (emphasis added):

The new Republican governor’s bold bid to strip public employee unions of their collective-bargaining rights is not just a parochial skirmish about finding money to close the budget deficit. It’s about exploiting that state deficit for political gain, using it as an excuse to declare war, and perhaps eviscerate, the last healthy sector of the labor movement – a strategy nurtured these past four decades by national conservative strategists and their well-heeled backstage business donors.

(snip)

But conservatives smell a greater golden opportunity in all that red ink. They’ve previously ridiculed Rahm Emanuel’s ’08 quip about how “you never want a serious crisis to go to waste,” but now they’ve adopted it – by launching a radical attack on the core principle of collective bargaining. If successful, in Wisconsin and elsewhere, they might achieve their aim of turning back the clock to the era, circa 1929, when all workers were at the mercy of their employers.

I am not a big fan of individual unions, but for a long time I was in a union job, a member of TCU local 1506, and I held my union card (and paid my dues) for two decades–as long as I was with the railroad–after leaving the union job for management.

By and large, unions have done far more good than bad. They have certainly done far more good for average Americans than has Goldman-Sachs.

Anyone who thinks otherwise needs to read up on the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory; Harlan County, Kentucky; and the Pullman Strike.

It wasn’t the workers who were packing lead; it was the bosses.

My first father-in-law, one of the finest and fairest men I have ever known, could tell stories of being shot at for his activities on behalf his fellow railroad union members not so long ago.

Share

TSA Security Theatre 0

Harry Shearer tells of his encounter with TSA en-pants-ed patdowns on Sunday’s Le Show (the story’s in the first few minutes of the show; you can listen at the link).

He silently put up with it because he wanted to make his plane.

He strikes back:

Share

Future Cast 0

Thoreau foretells the future for the Middle East.

Here’s the more light-hearted prediction:

Saudi Arabia will not face a revolt. At the rate that things are going, very soon a majority of the Saudi population will consist of deposed dictators and their families.

Share

QOTD 0

Emma Goldman:

The history of progress is written in the blood of men and women who have dared to espouse an unpopular cause, as, for instance, the black man’s right to his body, or woman’s right to her soul.

Share