John W. McCain Really Thinks He Can Win California

I’ve always thought that the repeated assertions by the McCain campaign that California is somehow in play, despite all polling to the contrary, was just bluster, an effort to get Democrats to throw money at a perceived problem, reminiscent of George Bush campaigning in the state in 2000 as a way to unnerve Al Gore.  And the Huffington Post has obtained a Power Point presentation from the McCain campaign that suggests this is exactly what they’re going to try.  This slide includes the states McCain thinks he can contest in November.

The fine print reads: “McCain’s unique appeal to independent voters creates opportunity in CA.”

Those must be the independent voters that have a 42/48 favorable/unfavorable rating of McCain, compared to 72/19 for Obama in the latest Field Poll.  The independents who preferred Obama by 30 points in the last LA Times poll.

This is a common trick by the Republicans, trying to bait Democrats into spending money here.  All I can say is, please, please, John McCain, come campaign in the Golden State early and often.  I’ll do the advance work for you.    And be sure you go up with a week or two of commercials at about $3 million per.  I can think of no better way for you to waste your money back up your bold statements about victory in California than to focus all your efforts on this electoral prize.

And while you’re at it, pay a little attention to your own home state of Arizona, which you acknolwedge might be a loss.

Senate Dems suggest a real budget solution

Sometimes it’s really hard to like Don Perata. He’s a tough SOB. But he’s calling the governor on his latest budget:

State Senate leaders threw down the fiscal gauntlet Wednesday, rejecting Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proposal to tap the state lottery for money and proposing $11.5 billion in new taxes to balance the deficit-ridden state budget.

“There’s not enough money there to fund next year,” Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata said as he unveiled the Senate version of the budget. “We’re proposing to raise taxes.” (CapAlert 6/11/08)

The Assembly also called for revenue increases on the order of about $6 bn, but also included some borrowing on the lottery. In the end, I don’t think the lottery plans do anything other than kick the can down the road a year or two. Perhaps Speaker Bass thinks she can use that time to build a consensus plan on reforming our revenue stream, but it’s an expensive gamble. Even in the best case scenario, we’ll pay millions upon millions in interest for that lottery borrowing plan.

No, the real solution is revenue increases. Of course the Republicans know that too, but they can’t go back to the Club for Growth with that. So, instead they’ll propose cuts to education, cuts to services, and other vital programs, but they’ll fight to keep the prison population high, I’m sure.

We have maybe 6 weeks before our cash reserves start drying up on us. Californians must realize that if they want good schools, healthy communities, and a healthy environment, they have to pay for that. No more passing the buck to future generations, no more willing these problems away. There is no free lunch.

Down the Blackwater Wormhole

Disclosure: I work for the Courage Campaign

There’s a protest from 3-5pm today at Blackwater’s new Otay Mesa facility, and tomorrow Jeremy Scahill will be doing a special Courage Campaign Conversation tomorrow afternoon at 4pm.

In a little noticed vote yesterday, the Merida Initiative passed easily through the House of Representatives 311-106. It provides $1.6 billion with an emphasis on training and equipment to fight drug cartels in Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America, because as Rep. Brian Bilbray explained:

“Either we can go after these cartels in Ensenada, or we can fight them in Escondido,” said Rep. Brian Bilbray (R-Carlsbad), who voted for the plan. “I’d prefer that we move now and take care of this problem south of the border. The drug wars in Mexico and in other regions have grown horrendously violent, and their destructive ways must be quashed.”

It’s tough to directly take issue with any of that, but where does it lead? Potentially to some unpleasant places. In September, the Defense Department opened up five year contracts in support of counter-narcoterrorism efforts to five private companies, including Blackwater USA. “The indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract could be worth up to $15 billion for the awardees.” The Army Times analyzed the content of the contracts, describing:

a series of task orders covering a wide range of products and services. These could include anti-drug technologies and equipment, special vehicles and aircraft, communications, security training, pilot training, geographic information systems, and in-field support.

Now back up for a second and compare that to the State Department description of the Merida Initiative:

   *  Non-intrusive inspection equipment, ion scanners and canine units for Mexico and Central America to interdict trafficked drugs, arms, cash and persons.

   * Technologies to improve and secure communications systems that collect criminal information in Mexico.

   * Technical advice and training to strengthen the institutions of justice – vetting for the new police force, case management software to track investigations through the system, new offices of citizen complaints and professional responsibility, and witness protection programs to Mexico.

   * Helicopters and surveillance aircraft to support interdiction activities and rapid response of law enforcement agencies to Mexico.

   * Equipment, training and community action programs in Central American countries to implement anti-gang measures and expand the reach of these measures.

Quite a bit of overlap. However, in a May 22 press release from Blackwater, it asserted

What it isn’t. Critics of the project have used blatant fabrications —       claiming that the facility will be used for border security or immigration purposes — to build support for their opposition of the facility. The proposed facility will be used for training alone…

This might be comforting if there was any reason at all actually trust Blackwater’s integrity. As just one example, Post-Katrina investigations by expert Jeremy Scahill discovered that Blackwater deployed to New Orleans without a government contract. They just showed up, fully armed, and went to work of their own accord. Leaving aside local San Diego concerns (where private firefighters are already being used to combat wildfires), Blackwater’s contempt for law and oversight in New Orleans is hardly an isolated incident. When Blackwater mercenaries killed 17 civilians in Baghdad’s Nusoor Square,

the first U.S. soldiers to arrive on the scene have told military investigators that they found no evidence the contractors were fired upon, a source familiar with a preliminary U.S. military report told CNN.

The soldiers found evidence suggesting the guards fired on cars that were trying to leave, and found that weapon casings on the scene matched only those used by U.S. military and contractors.

Yet there have been no successful prosecutions and Blackwater’s contracts with the U.S. government continue to grow and it’s existing Iraq contracts renewed. Why? Because every time a government function is outsourced, the capacity (at least short term) for the government to retake that responsibility is lost. Which means that without dramatic top-down action (the Stop Outsourcing Security Act would be a good start), every step forward by Blackwater is one that’s exceptionally difficult to take back.

Which circles back to San Diego in a number of ways. If Blackwater establishes itself locally, it’s exceptionally difficult to push them out again. With a local base of operations, not only are they positioned for “narcoterrorism” contracting and unauthorized deployments on the streets of downtown San Diego, but it’s a base of marketing operations for what Blackwater itself describes as a private CIA offering “surveillance and countersurveillance, deployed intelligence collection, and rapid safeguarding of employees or other key assets.”  In a land of Minutemen and giant contracts for virtual border fences that “failed to perform as expected,” outside-the-law private intelligence organizations are unlikely to help anything.

Activists are keeping up the fight in San Diego, but this is not a local issue. The Bush Administration and its allies have been trying to sell off the entire government without any concern for functionality or accountability, and the front lines of resistance have extended to San Diego. There’s a protest from 3-5pm today at Blackwater’s new Otay Mesa facility, and tomorrow Jeremy Scahill will be doing a special Courage Campaign Conversation tomorrow afternoon at 4pm.

Two small but important steps to avoid the Blackwater wormhole.

Did the Clinton Campaign Kill Mandates?

This year’s extended primary just might be great for healthcare reform as the Clinton campaign’s failure may have killed off the terrible idea of insurance mandates.  She ran on it, and lost–just like Arnold did in California last year.

If so, great news all around.  Working people, already struggling, will not face the prospects of having their wages garnished to pay off Blue Cross’ inflated premiums, overhead, and denials.  Healthcare reformers can focus their work towards enacting genuine solutions, rather than fighting off this insurance marketing scheme masquerading as health care policy.  And all of us can debate the real issues at hand here, like the new report finding the number of underinsured is spiking as our healthcare system continues its death-by-insurer spiral.

We’ll take a look at this and updates from single-payer movement below!

The big political advantage of health insurance mandates (laws forcing people to buy private insurance, no matter the cost or quality) is that insurance companies love them, and can create big coalitions of business-friendly groups that seem safely centrist but also reasonably effective.  They seem so dang politically viable.

But the Wall St. Journal points out they’re not and argues that Clinton’s Exit Deals Setback to the Push for Health-Care Mandates

Sen. Hillary Clinton’s exit from the presidential race will deal a blow to supporters of a key element in the tussle over universal health coverage: the idea that all Americans be required to buy or have health insurance.

After gaining considerable political ground, especially at the state level, the concept has suffered other setbacks lately, too. Despite years of entrenched political opposition to the idea of a mandate, it was a key part of the 2006 universal health care legislation enacted in Massachusetts and of California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s plan to overhaul health care in that state….

The Schwarzenegger plan, though, failed this year, in part because unions and business groups objected to its individual and employer mandates. In Massachusetts, results have been mixed. While the overall plan has cut the number of uninsured adults in that state by roughly half, the state authority responsible for overseeing the program has exempted nearly 20% of uninsured residents because it has deemed they can’t afford the policy premiums on offer.

The California plan died when the public and legislators learned that nurses and labor unions were strongly opposed to the idea-and that their wages could have been garnished or a lien put on their home.  This same strategy will kill similar proposals nationally.  It is generous to call Massachusetts’ experiment mixed; check out Dr. Steve B’s more informed comments.

There are a number of problems with mandates.  On a macro level, they make genuine healthcare reforms-single-payer-impossible by showering for-profit insurers with millions of new customers and billions in new revenues and subsidies.  On a micro level, they trap patients into this broken system and saddle them with junk insurance that will drain their bank accounts only to offer them no protection in the case of a health crisis.

A new study today elaborates on this very problem of underinsurance:

About 25 million Americans – or approximately one of every five adults younger than age 65 with health insurance – did not have sufficient coverage last year to shield them from financial hardship if they ended up in the emergency room or were seriously ill, according to a new study to be released on Tuesday by the Commonwealth Fund.

I actually think that number is really low, but at least it focuses our attention on this:

As the nation debates how best to improve its health care system, including how to insure the increasing number of Americans without coverage, policy makers also need to discuss the quality of available coverage, said Karen Davis, the president of the Commonwealth Fund.  “Lack of insurance is only part of the problem, as even the insured have serious gaps in coverage,” she said.

Meanwhile, hilarity ensues as The head of Blue Shield of California begs health reformers: “Stop demonizing health plans.”  I don’t think so.

Chellie Pingree is about to become a great Congresswoman from Maine, and she is running on a single-payer platform.  Rose Ann DeMoro from the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee,  finds a gold rush town that symbolized our healthcare crisis.

Elsewhere, a writer in the Tennessean reminds us why we don’t have single-payer healthcare…the war…and the trend of getting married for health insurance continues.

Finally, Elizabeth Edwards, well, um, eviscerates John McCain’s so-called health care plan.  Snap!

CA-11: DC Republicans Displeased About The Efforts Of Their “Golden Boy”

It’s hard to overstate how pathetic national Republicans have been so far this cycle.  Some of their top challengers can’t get on the ballot, and the leader of their campaign efforts in the Senate said recently that keeping the Democrats to a gain of eight seats would be a moral victory.

Now there’s news about Dean Andal, one of the few challengers Republicans are counting on nationwide, the guy who’s supposedly working hard to take down Rep. Jerry McNerney.  Only he raised a paltry $11,000 in the pre-primary filing period, and now Congressional Republicans are worried that their golden boy is made of iron pyrite.

Dean Andal, recruited by the GOP with great fanfare to challenge freshman Rep. Jerry McNerney (D) in California’s 11th district, is now coming under attack from Republicans in Washington, D.C., for running what they contend is a flawed campaign.

Andal, a former state Assemblyman, is facing increasing criticism for his fundraising and general campaign strategy, with the grumbling emanating from Republicans in the consulting and lobbying communities. Privately, Republicans on Capitol Hill are also expressing concern.

The handful of sources interviewed for this story on Tuesday declined to discuss their concerns on the record. But all are Washington, D.C.-based Republican strategists who had until recently been singing Andal’s praises and are intimately familiar with the GOP-leaning 11th district.

“I think the fundamentals are there to pull this off,” said one GOP operative. “But Andal still has to run a fundamentally sound race. He hasn’t done that so far.”

At least he’s making all the right hires.  Andal’s top campaign strategist is Richard Temple.  He was last seen as the top strategist to Doug “I Don’t Know How To Use A Ballot” Ose, who got smoked in the 4th District primary by Tom McClintock after spending millions of his own personal fortune.  Andal won’t even have that kind of scratch to work with when he gets pounded in the fall.

This is my favorite quote:

Andal’s critics insist that he is not doing enough to win, particularly in the current political environment.

“He’s dialing it in,” said a native Californian and Republican operative who is now based in D.C. “He’s got the attitude of a Member of Congress. He doesn’t have the attitude of a challenger fighting to get elected in his district.”

Hilarious.  

(CA80AD) Steve Clute, Mensch for Manuel

The Political Insider of the Desert Sun was surprised to find Steve Clute with us at Manuel Perez’s victory party last week.  We weren’t.  When Manuel Perez announced his candidacy for the 80th AD, Steve Clute was there.  Steve Clute was part of our kickoff, and his endorsement quote headed the original website:  “Manuel has the heart, corazon, to truly represent the people of this district.” Clute left me a classy message before the campaign, and called me afterwards to thank me again for my work on behalf of Manuel.  He made that call to everyone heavily involved in the campaign.  

As we head into the general election, it’s appropriate to take a moment to appreciate what a mensch Steve Clute’s been throughout this campaign.

Perez with Clute

Crossposted to dKos: http://www.dailykos.com/story/…

After he fell off the public radar screen, the Sizzler restaurant in Coachella was one of the last places we (the Political Insider) expected to have a Steve Clute sighting.  Yet at Tuesday’s victory party for Manuel Perez, that’s exactly where we found the one-time Democratic nominee for the 80th who had lost the 2006 election to incumbent Assemblywoman Bonnie Garcia.

“It’s great to be here with Manuel Perez, his family and everybody who worked so hard to congratulate them on a fantastic campaign,” Clute said.

Clute backed a winner, as Perez pulled out a primary election victory over three opponents. He’ll face Republican Gary Jeandron in the November general election for the 80th Assembly.  Garcia, a Cathedral City Republican, can’t run again because of term limits.

“I think Manuel is someone who knows the district,” Clute said. “He’s well-educated and committed to the people who live here.”

Like Manuel Perez in 2008, Steve Clute had vigorous support from the education community during his 2006 race:

Allen Tarzwell, teacher, quoted in the California Progess Report back in 06:

Teachers are supporting Steve Clute for Assembly. Clute, a navy veteran who has served in the legislature before, is a moderate Democrat with common sense approaches to problems. He’s someone who supports education and other causes that are near and dear to teachers, like children’s health care. He’s right on the issues and he’s got the experience to get the job done.

It seems much longer than a year ago that Steve Clute first stood with Manuel, the longshot candidate, grassroots champion of working families, teachers, students, women, and healthcare providers:

From the campaign kickoff press release:

Educator and Health Proponent Manuel Perez and former Assemblyman Steve Clute to share their vision of the future of the California State Assembly, 80th District

– Press Conference –

Cathedral City, CA – April, 18, 2007

Healthcare Proponent and Educator Manuel Perez to announce his bid to be the next 80th District Assemblyman, 10 a.m. Wednesday, April 18, 2007, in front of the Cathedral City City Hall.

Joining him on the campaign kick-off and three-stop tour of the 80th District is former Assemblyman Steve Clute, community leaders and friends of the Manuel Perez for the California State Assembly, 80th District Campaign.

Cathedral City, CA

When: 10 a.m. Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Where: Cathedral City Civic Center, in front of City Hall

68700 Avenida Lalo Guerrero, Cathedral City

Coachella, CA

When: 11:30 a.m. Wednesday

Where: Eleanor Shadowen Senior Center

1540 7th Street, Downtown Coachella

El Centro, CA

When: 2 p.m. Wednesday

Where: Antonio’s Restaurant

215 N. Imperial Avenue, El Centro

Manuel Perez brings to this critical time the key attributes of leadership which have become all too rare: a warm heart; a cool head; a fair mind; fresh ideas; a belief in people; and an unwavering desire to attend to the needs of others. Best of all, he brings an unbroken record of real achievements.

Now Manuel Perez heads into the general election, ready to take the 80th AD back for the Democrats, one more progressive for the 2/3 majority.  The crucial 2/3/ majority is all the more feasible now, and in a large part thanks to Steve Clute, who spoke up early and stands with Manuel all the way.

Thank you, Steve Clute.

Standing Up For The Constitution

On May 5th 2008 the Los Alamitos City Council put on their agenda an item that seemed innocent enough. It was a decision to add a plaque with In God We Trust to the walls of the City Council. This is part of an effort led by Christian fundamentalist Bakersfield Councilwoman Sullivan from her non-profit, In God We Trust – America. A number of cities in the State of California have fallen to this attempt to de-secularize city government, a few have stood up for secular government and said “No.”

I decided to stop it in Los Alamitos.

Alone.

Something silly to do with the state being secular. You know, that kind of silly stuff pushed by those old fogies Madison and Jefferson way back in the 1770’s.

Below the fold are the speeches I have given in the Council Chamber (and the reactions from the Los Alamitos City Council if there was any).

First Speech – May 5, 2008

In god we trust. Singular and plural. We, all the people of Los Alamitos, trust a monotheistic god? Not in lower case “g” In gods we trust? As a city we are diverse. In our personal lives we have our own faith. We all are different. Taxpayers and residents of Los Alamitos fall into all sorts of faiths. From those that believe in no gods, to those that question, to those that believe in the earth mother, to those that believe in a single god to those that believe in the holy trinity of the father, the son and the holy spirit, to those that believe in the many gods of Hindu, the many gods of druidic life, and even the many Gods of what many consider mythology.

The founding fathers of this country were a diverse group. There were Christians, Deitists and non-believers. They understood that faith was a personal thing. That it was personal faith, and for that reason when they created the founding document on which this country was based, the Constitution, their only reference to religion was that there be no religious test for office. Some like to point to God in the Declaration of Independence, but it is not God who gets mentioned there, but Nature’s God. Ask a Wica’n or a druid about Nature’s God and you will hear not of one God, but many. Talk to a Hindu or a Sikh of their God and they will ask which one you speak of. Ask and American Indian of their God and they will ask you to clarify on which of Nature’s God you ask.

1.1 Billion of the worlds people are secular/non-religious/agnostic or atheist. 900 million are Hindu, 394 million are Chinese Traditionalist, 376 Million are Buddhist, 300 million are indigenous tribal beliefs, 100 million are African Traditional, 23 Million are Sikh’s. Not one of these groups believes in a monotheistic entity known as God. Of the top 10 religions based on the number of adherents in the world, only two have a monotheistic God.

If you were to plaster the monotheistic belief on this city, would not Hindus who live within our fair city have the right for equal representation? Would this city be forced to add placards to our city walls that contain a passage from the Bhagavad-Gita? Would the atheists of our city not have an equal right to demand “In nothing we trust” be added? Will all those that have a belief differing from that of a Monotheistic God be permitted equal access to these walls? Or has the tyranny of the majority in religious faith now raised it’s ugly face here in our fine city? Do we no longer protect the minorities around us? Does our city council now show such disrespect to the personal faith of the minority of it citizens that it will shove the faith of the majority down the throats of the minority? How totally un-Christian.

Yet tonight, before this city made up of so many with differing faiths and beliefs, there is the call to place the monotheistic God above all other beliefs and adopt it for a city where some of the people within do not share such beliefs. The founding fathers of this country were wise men. They left their faith out of their government when they created it. There is no place for God in the Constitution. There is no place to raise a monotheistic God within these council chambers or within this city above all others.

I pray, that the Christians among you on this Dias remember Mathew 6:6 where Jesus said, “But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.” And for those of you who are patriotic, remember the words of Thomas Jefferson who in his letter to the Danbury Baptist Association in 1802 wrote “Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between church and state.” The letter was the subject of intense scrutiny by Jefferson, and he consulted a couple of New England politicians to assure that his words would not offend while still conveying his message: it was not the place of the Congress or the Executive to do anything that might be misconstrued as the establishment of religion. And so it is not the place of the Los Alamitos City Council to put any one religion, such as that of a monotheistic God, above any other religion, those with many Gods, or no religion or Gods at all.

We the people of Los Alamitos are blessed with diversity. Will this city council seek to offend some with this declaration that the city officially accepts and believes only in a monotheistic God? How can this city claim to represent and protect the minorities within it, from Buddhist, to Hindu, to agnostic and atheist and all those that don’t subscribe to the belief of a monotheistic God by adopting a formal policy that there is one and only one God and we trust in that monotheistic belief? I ask, no pray, that you don’t adopt a city policy that claims that our city is only trusting in a monotheistic God. Protect the minority, be as wise as Thomas Jefferson, keep religious belief systems out of our government and protect all people by staying secular.

The result of this was a vote by the City Council to have an unofficial survey done to give them an indication as to how people felt about having In God We Trust added to the council chambers. After 4-6 weeks the mater would be brought up for a vote again with the community feedback considered although no one stated how many votes or what percentage would have to object before the council would decide to not add this to the walls. During the debate in council there were any number of things stated that indicated that the members of the city council had no idea as to the history of how God has been added to our secular society. Thus necessitating the second speech.

Second Speech – May 19, 2008

It’s time to correct a few statements that were made from this dais the last time we were here. Mayor Parker, you stated that the motto for this country for 200 years was “in god we trust”. That is in fact false.

The motto E Pluribus Unum, (“from many, one”) was approved for use on the Great Seal of the United States in 1782. The motto In God We Trust was placed on United States coins largely because of the increased religious sentiment existing during the American Civil War. Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase received many appeals from devout Christians throughout the country, urging that the United States recognize God on United States coins. President Lincoln had in 1861 fortuitously appointed the religious zealot and National Reform Association member James Pollock as Director of the Mint, The NRA back then was an organization with the stated and well-known goal of the creation of a Christian theocracy in the United States (they even made two attempts at changing the preamble to the Constitution to “We, the people of the United States, humbly acknowledging almighty God as the source of all authority and power in civil government, the Lord Jesus Christ as the ruler among nations, his revealed will as the supreme law of the land, in order to constitute a Christian government, and in order to form a more perfect union”). It should not be considered surprising that Pollock in 1863 submitted several designs to Chase that incorporated variations of the mottoes “Our Trust is in God” and “God and Our Country.” In God We Trust first appeared on the 1864 two-cent coin. American presidents such as Theodore Roosevelt strongly disapproved of the idea of evoking God within the context of a “cheap” political motto. In a letter to William Boldly on November 11, 1907, President Roosevelt wrote: “My own feeling in the matter is due to my very firm conviction that to put such a motto on coins, or to use it in any kindred manner, not only does no good but does positive harm.” In God We Trust was first used on paper money in 1957 when it appeared on the one-dollar Silver Certificate. E Pluribus Unum still appears on coins and currency, and was widely considered the national motto de facto. However, by 1956 it had not been established so by legislation as the official “national motto”, and therefore In God We Trust became the official U.S. national motto after the passage of an Act of Congress in 1956, two years after the Knights of Columbus got Congress to amend the Pledge of Allegiance to include the words “one nation under God.” The same Congress had required, in the previous year, that the words appear on all currency, as a Cold War measure. In 1955 during the debates over adding God to our national identity a representative from Florida told Congress the following: “In these days when imperialistic and materialistic Communism seeks to attack and destroy freedom, it is proper” to “remind all of us of this self-evident truth” that “as long as this country trusts in God, it will prevail.”

In the 1950’s it was “Yes God, No Communism.” Today as we saw from Mr. Grose, it’s “Yes God, No terrorism”. In response to Mr Grose, you brought up the specter of 9/11, terrorists, and our troops. As Zacarias Moussaoui was being transferred to Supermax by U.S. Marshals to serve 6 life terms for being one of the 9/11 terrorists he called out “allah akbar,” which translates to “God is great.” Last time I checked, his Monotheistic God is also your Monotheistic God. I’m sure that Zacarias Moussaoui would have no problem having this city council proclaim his god as the god of our fair city.

Much has been made of this not being religious. That it is all from a non-profit. But let’s consider the words of the founder of that non-profit. Bakersfield Councilwoman Jacquie Sullivan, 68, said she first got the idea in 2001 after hearing on a Christian radio station about attempts to remove the term from U.S. currency and buildings. She then started a nonprofit, In God We Trust – America, with the goal of having every municipal building in America display the phrase. Christian radio station, hmmm. Why am I not surprised.

And yes, we have Mayor Rice in Westminster, who was responsible for bringing this to our neighbor city who doesn’t seem to understand basic civics when she stated, “Our country was founded on religion.” And to think that most of the people who came here were running away from counties where the governments embraced a state religion. Just proof positive that we need to start teaching civics again in our public schools.

Since I stood before you two weeks ago I have been chastised by people in town who have told me that I’m going to burn in hell. Who have said that I am evil. Who have questioned how I could have my daughter go through her Bat-Mitzvah and speak against putting up this phrase. As if somehow by standing up for people that don’t share my faith and trying to ensure that one that is not theirs is not enshrined as part of our city was somehow wrong. It is not.

I believe that one of government’s roles is simple; To protect the minority from the tyranny of the majority. You were elected to represent the will of all the people. The Buddhists. The Hindus. The agnostics. The atheists. All those that are a minority. This is their city government too. They do not share a belief in a single monotheistic god. Rather than trusting in something that they do not believe in, they are trusting in you to do the right thing and protect them.

As to why I do this, I quote Pastor Martin Niemöller (1892-1984)

In Germany, they came first for the Communists, And I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Communist;

And then they came for the trade unionists, And I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a trade unionist;

And then they came for the Jews, And I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Jew;

And then . . . they came for me . . . And by that time there was no one left to speak up

I will not be silent while my fellow Los Alamitos citizens who do not believe in a monotheistic god have their city make a belief in such a city policy. I will raise my voice. I may be turning 50 tomorrow, but I will not let the half-century mark slow me down or silence my voice to speak for those that can not speak or are afraid to speak for themselves. There is no Los Alamitos agnostic Church I can go before to bring those that do not believe in a monotheistic God before you to speak, so I will continue to give voice to them.

This is not about my beliefs or my faith. This is about protecting the meek. This is about protecting those who are afraid to speak up or speak out. This is about embracing the beliefs of our founding fathers, who were wise in their creation of this country, to ensure that there was no mention of God in the Constitution. I will speak up because I believe in that Constitution. I will speak up because I believe in the first Amendment. I will speak up because the belief in a single God is religion. I will speak up, for whether it be “In God we trust” or “God is great” it is wrong for the State to embrace a monotheistic God in a pluralistic society.

Small problem here. I had five minutes to get this education into the history of Christian influence into the record (that is all the time they allow) and speaking even at breakneck speed (sounding like an auctioneer) I was unable to get the last paragraph into the record.

Skipped Meeting – June 2, 2008: The following speech was NOT given instead the local weekly The News Enterprise ran the piece that follows it as their lone Letter to the Editor.

This is my third time before you on this mater. No mater how many times you on the dais claim that it is not about religion, there are many who feel that it is, and they have let me know in no uncertain terms. When a good friend who I respect tells me I’m going to lose this battle because our City Council is made up of five good Christians, it’s religious. When a letter-to-the-editor writer has to stoop to using the American Heritage dictionaries fourth definition for god, and it should be noted the god in that definition is with a lower case “g”, do you on the dais really think that is the same definition for the God in the “In God We Trust”? Does anyone?

A non-profit organization headed by a Baptist fundamentalist who got this idea after listening to a Christian radio station rail about people like me wanting the secular society created by our founding fathers and it’s not religious? Councilwoman Sullivan doesn’t have any doubt where she stands. “‘In God We Trust’ is the perfect expression of what it takes to be a good American because from my perspective as a believer, patriotism means love of God and love of country.” Although I can’t prove it, my guess is she is not talking about Jefferson’s ‘Nature’s God”, but about her Christian one. Maybe this helps explain why on 2/21/08 American Family News Network – A Christian Broadcasting network states. “Sullivan says concerned Christians need to get involved so the motto can be displayed in the nation’s city council chambers.” It is clear to the founder of the non profit that it is religious, as it also was to the Mayor of Westminster.

In your unofficial results from last Wednesday over 10% of the self-selected participants said don’t do this. Ken, that’s more people than fought for the New Dutchaven trees; Cat, that’s more people than fought for the Katella wall. And this was a self-selected survey from people where that 10% weren’t meeting after church service talking about this in the parking lot.

I have heard from the dais that this is about the national motto and that it’s the law. It was religious fundamentalists that gave us their version of laws before. Heck, fundamentalists even got one into the Constitution until wiser heads prevailed and took prohibition out of it. Fundamentalists have given blue laws to any number of cities, counties and states. They even made it illegal to listen to rock and roll in some places because we all know that the devil is in the music.

The last time I was here I showed how religious fundamentalists created the law. How the national motto became law due to religious fundamentalists. And just so we can be clear, it wasn’t Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Seik or other religions, but Christian religious fundamentalists that have tried time and time again to make their God the countries God. And in God We Trust is all about their God. It’s about the NRA of the 1700’s. It’s about the Knights of Columbus and it’s about Christian zealots trying to make a secular society religious. In many ways it’s not much different than Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Israel and other countries where the religious zealots have created state sponsored religion.

Today I am making a final plea to this city council to not embrace religious zealotry. To not disenfranchise those who do not share a faith in a monotheistic god. To do as the founding fathers did and keep the government secular. Ask yourself if you would post “In gods We Trust” up on these walls. Yes, plural, as in the many different higher beings that the diverse community of Los Alamitos residents may believe in. Would you be so self inclusive to use a lower case “g” and add an “s”?

Prohibition was bad law. The laws banning rock and roll were bad laws. Blue laws are bad laws. Separate but equal was bad law. The decision to make a monotheistic God the centerpiece of our national motto during the fear induced McCarthyism of the 1950’s was bad law. Just because there has been bad law made is no reason for this city council to embrace it and make it the law of this city, when it cuts out a portion of the cities population, while it is exclusive rather than inclusive. Leave the monotheism in the churches, temples and masques where it belongs. Not here among the walls of a city hall that is supposed to be the sanctuary of all the people. Follow the lead of James Madison, Thomas Jefferson and the other founding fathers of this nation, remain clearly secular. Respect the faith of others. Respect the 10+%. Keep this chamber the chamber of all the people of Los Alamitos. Do not make the people of differing faiths in Los Alamitos separate and unequal. Uphold the Constitution and the principles of equality for all. For in Jefferson I trust. So help us Thomas Jefferson.

News Enterprise Letter To The Editor: June 4, 2008

This Memorial Day Weekend I had the opportunity to do a little thinking about those that have fought for us and what they were fighting for. Not just now when my nephew is fighting as a Ranger in the army, but going back to when my father fought for this country in Europe in World War II and all the wars between them, and the wars before then.

I thought about why they fought, what they were fighting for. Which made me think about what we stand for. Not the symbols of this country, the words we mouth when we show our patriotism, but more the things that we stand for. The things that are worth fighting for.

I looked back at what we bind our leadership to, the principles that matter most to us. And there it was, staring me right in the face. “I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.” The first oath taken by the first US Congress ever seated, “I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support the Constitution of the United States.” A simple 14 words.

It can not be more simple than that. We can use words like “freedom” but what binds us together, fighting for our nation in battle or standing with her in our hearts, is our deep and profound respect for that document. Not the Declaration of Independence. Not laws established by Congress and signed by the President. Not decisions made by the Supreme Court. But the Constitution. That is the centerpiece of our nation. That is the core of who we are and of what we are. It is what we fight for, is what we stand for, it is America.

This train of thought got me back to why was I fighting this silly battle against City Hall on a simple sign to be placed on the council walls. And my answer was, because of the Constitution. The same thing we fight for all the time. The same thing we swear our allegiance to. That document we swear to uphold. The document written without any mention of God. The document that only states that there be no religious test for office. The document only once modified successfully by religious Puritanism, and that amendment being the only one ever to require an amendment to reverse bad law (prohibition).

I looked at the history of this country and saw that God’s introduction came at times of great stress when personal faith was highest and the need for belief was greatest. After the civil war the Knights of Columbus got “under God” added to the pledge and the National Reform Association members added “In God We Trust” to our money. How after World War II and in the midst of McCarthyism it raised its head again with Vermont Senator Ralph Flanders proposing the following Amendment to the Constitution in 1954.

Section 1: This nation devoutly recognizes the authority and law of Jesus Christ, Savior and Ruler of nations, through whom are bestowed the blessings of Almighty God.

Section 2: This amendment shall not be interpreted so as to result in the establishment of any particular ecclesiastical organization, or in the abridgment of the rights of religious freedom, or freedom of speech and press, or of peaceful assemblage.

Section 3: Congress shall have power, in such cases as it may deem proper, to provide a suitable oath or affirmation for citizens whose religious scruples prevent them from giving unqualified allegiance to the Constitution as herein amended

True, it didn’t get very far, but less than two years later “In God We Trust” was made our national motto by the same people that fought for the Flander’s amendment getting it passed as a way to show those godless communists that we had faith.

So, when I’m asked how I don’t stand up for our national motto, and why I fight against this small sign in city hall, it is because of what my father fought for in World War II, and what my nephew is fighting for today. I do it because love of country and patriotism starts and ends with the Constitution of the United States of America. Congress can, and has, made bad law. From prohibition to separate but equal, bad law has been made and has been overturned. A national motto that claims there is a God, and that there is one God and only one God is also bad law. On Memorial Day I remember what they fought for and why I fight.

Faith in country, in the Constitution, is not the same as faith in God. But in today’s environment when people think patriotism is shown by waving a flag, putting a “I support the troops” sticker on your car, and mixing religion in with politics, it shouldn’t be considered surprising that the City Council members of Los Alamitos will put the expediency of “how it looks” over taking a stand for the Constitution. It’s hard to say no to a bad law when a Christian run non-profit is pushing it. But like “separate but equal” it is bad law because it makes us unequal. The city would never put “In Satan We Trust”, “In Zeus We Trust”, “In Vishnu We Trust”, “In Yoponcha We Trust” or “In gods We Trust” on the council walls, and the same hold true in the current case. Now, if it was, “In the Constitution We Trust” I would be fighting to hang that at once. So help me Thomas Jefferson.

End of published works

So where does this stand today? Tomorrow (6/11/08) the City of Los Alamitos will release the final unofficial tally of results on the poll. If everything continues as it has been going I suspect that the poll will continue to show a 10%+ trend against posting the plaque. The next meeting of the City Council should have the item back on the agenda for a vote. That should happen at the 6/16/08 City Council Meeting. After that meeting I will amend this post with what should be my final pitch for a secular approach and the results.

Marriage Equality: The End Of Marriage?

What we’ve seen over the last few years, as wingnuts stumble to codify discrimination into state constitutions, is that the laws inevitably have adverse benefits well beyond limiting marriage to between a man and a woman.  In Michigan, the state ban on same-sex marriage eliminated domestic partner benefits, for example.  Here in California, because partners will be allowed to marry starting June 17, if the constitutional amendment passes in November it’s completely unclear what would happen to those legal marriages.  But there’s another possibility that would be hilarious if it wasn’t so sad.

Should voters approve the measure, (USC con law expert David B.) Cruz said, offering another potential outcome, it could inadvertently affect traditional marriages. That’s because the amendment would undo only part of the court’s decision — allowing gay couples to marry — but not the rest, which says that same-sex couples cannot be recognized differently than opposite-sex couples, he said.

“If you’ve got those two rules — that you can’t let them marry, but you can’t give different options to gay and straight couples — then one possible outcome, if the amendment were to pass, is that no one could get married in California,” Cruz said.

Some experts found that scenario highly unlikely, saying such a reading of the decision would be much too technical — and cause too much chaos.

I don’t find that to be technical – in fact you would have to give an intellectually dishonest reading of the law NOT to come to that conclusion.

One county is taking this “no more marriages” thing quite literally – and it’s shameful.

Kern County Clerk Ann Barnett has announced that her office will stop performing all weddings a few days before June 17, the date that same-sex couples can legally apply for marriage licenses.

Barnett’s staff processes marriage licenses for hundreds of Kern County residents each year and it will continue to do, for both straight and gay couples, beginning June 17 as required by law, she said in a written statement. But as of June 13, the staff will no longer officiate at civil ceremonies for an extra $30 fee.

Officials cited financial reasons for the decision. But internal memos between a high-ranking official in Barnett’s office and a conservative Christian legal defense fund, published in the Bakersfield Californian this week, indicate that Barnett may have acted on principle rather than for financial reasons.

As long as Barnett is officiating no marriages instead of only straight ones, it’s not discriminatory.  And the same goes for the state, according to the most honest reading of the relevant statutes.

The idiots who think they’re defending marriage by trying to narrow its definition to one man and one woman are actually trying to do nothing but eliminate it.

CD-37 Laura Richardson’s troubles continue

So the Daily Breeze has an update on the Laura Richardson foreclosure story.  Seems her lender on her vacant Sacramento house has rescinded the foreclosure.  That would be good, except another party has already  boutht the house and has spent money on repairs and improvements.  He’s not leaving, and he says he’ll sue Richardson and WaMu, the lender.

http://www.dailybreeze.com/new…

Apparently, the Press-Telegram obtained Rep. Richardson’s credit report which indicates she had a mechanic’s lien on her record at the time she bought the Sacramento home, after she left her wrecked BMW at an auto repair shop, and never retrieved or paid for it (and then began using a city-owned vehicle).  Nevertheless, WaMau still gave her a 100% loan.

Calculated Risk has asked the following questions about the transactions with regard to this  rescission (which would mean there was a loan workout):

How often are modifications or repayment plans offered to owners of vacant investment properties with no or negative equity that have never been listed or rented?

How often are modifications offered to borrowers with two other properties currently in foreclosure?

How often are modifications arranged in the week before the scheduled trustee’s sale, following nearly a year of no contact?

Does WaMu’s policy on modifications make any reference to requiring a “commitment to homeownership” on the borrower’s part? How, normally, is that established?

Does WaMu’s policy on modifications make any reference to establishing that the borrower does not display a “disregard for debt obligations”? How, normally, is that established?

I think I’d like to know the answers to those questions myself, because I’ve tried a do a couple of workouts for clients with fewer “red flags” and had no luck at all.

I’m not going to speculate as to what happened, but I will say that I just don’t think that it’s enough to have more Democrats in Congress if they behave like Republicans.

Obama’s California Goldmine

Yes, we are an ATM for the presidential candidates.  They come here and take our money and rarely actually campaign.  That is unlikely to change, but that does not mean that we have not seen a big difference in how Obama worked this state as compared to his predecessors and competitors.  He has hit the holy grail, which Dean scratched the surface on back in 2004.  The combination of small donor, highly active volunteers and new Silicon Valley cash has fueled his volunteer run offices and campaign activities in other states.

Jose Antonio Vargas has an wonderful profile of an Obama delegate Linnie Bailey, a supervolunteer and political neophyite who ended up running GOTV operations in CA-44.  He follows her from her first $10 donation to running an official campaign office.

One Saturday morning in early November, she drove 30 minutes north to attend a Camp Obama meeting at a storefront church. She had read about the event online. Organized by Obama staffers, Camp Obama is Politics 101 for volunteers, where they learn the value of phone-banking, the goals of precinct captains and how to register new voters. About 25 people attended — young and old, black, white and Latino. When she introduced herself to the group, “Hi, I’m Linnie,” a few recognized her name.

She left the meeting tasked by Obama staffers as the “area coordinator” in charge of Corona. Working with Jose Medina, 55, the area coordinator in nearby Riverside, she scheduled an informal meeting of those from the two cities at a Barnes & Noble the following Wednesday. She posted it on BarackObama.com. They expected 10 people. About 20 showed up.

After the meeting, Medina, a fixture in the local political scene who teaches Chicano studies at Riverside Polytechnic High School, suggested they run as Obama delegates for the convention. She agreed. Outside the bookstore, they shook hands on it.

The period between December and February was, in Bailey’s words, “a complete whirlwind.” She was so effective in organizing meetings, attending rallies and networking that Jocelyn Anderson, an Obama staffer overseeing southern California, asked Bailey to be a “regional field organizer.” “Here’s the thing about Linnie,” Anderson says. “She was always on overdrive and she never said no.”

Now Bailey is hard at work a running voter registration program.  She is in a heavily Latino area, bringing new voters to the Democratic party and Barack Obama.  Oh and she is planning a run at her local community college board of trustees seat.  That is a legacy that will last well after Novemeber.

The flip side of the equasion are all of the new big money people Obama has been able to bring in.  The Chronicle today notes that if Northern California was a state, we would be the forth in the nation in dollars donated to presidential candidates.  This is the year of the love affair between the Silicon Valley and Barack Obama.  Six out of the top 10 zip codes for fundraising in CA are in NorCal.  (flip it)

“It’s not that Southern California is giving less, it’s that Northern California is giving more” said Anthony Corrado Jr., a professor of government at Colby College in Maine, who specializes in campaign finance. “Silicon Valley has become much more engaged, and the new technologies of social networking and Internet-giving have made Northern California much more involved.”

Josh Green at the Atlantic, who I admittedly really enjoy has an article on the Obama fundraising machine and describes it as a Silicon Valley startup that naturally attracted Silicon Valley donors.

Meanwhile, the Obama machine rolls on, to the delight of its early stakeholders. “They’ve gone from zero to 700 employees in a year and raised $200 million,” Steve Spinner says of the campaign. “That’s a super-high-growth, fast-charging operation.”

It’s also one whose growth curve is coming into sharper focus. The Obama campaign has not yet assumed a place in Silicon Valley lore alongside Apple, Google, and Facebook. But a few more months could change that. The hottest start-up in the Valley right now won’t make anybody rich, but it might put the next president in the White House.

Barack Obama was new to most Americans when he entered the presidential race, in February 2007. But he was familiar to Silicon Valley in at least one way: like a hot Internet start-up in the glory years, he had great buzz, a compelling pitch, and no money to back it up. He wasn’t anybody’s obvious bet to succeed, not least because the market for a Democratic nominee already had its Microsoft.

New Silicon Valley bundlers stepped up and helped raise the other half of Obama’s money, from people giving more than $100 at a time.  They were drawn to him for the same reasons why they give 20 year olds millions of dollars to run with a bright idea: they have a vision and experience is often times the exact opposite of what you need when you are trying something new and different.

Furthermore, in Silicon Valley’s unique reckoning, what everyone else considered to be Obama’s major shortcomings-his youth, his inexperience-here counted as prime assets.

I asked Roos, the personification of a buttoned-down corporate attorney, if there had been concerns about Obama’s limited CV, and for a moment he looked as if he might burst out laughing. “No one in Silicon Valley sits here and thinks, ‘You need massive inside-the-Beltway experience,'” he explained, after a diplomatic pause. “Sergey and Larry were in their early 20s when they started Google. The YouTube guys were also in their 20s. So were the guys who started Facebook. And I’ll tell you, we recognize what great companies have been built on, and that’s ideas, talent, and inspirational leadership.”

As Jane Hamshire wrote on HuffPo, “forget what Clinton did wrong.  What did Obama do right?”

He may have lost the primary here, but he got way more out of California than a few delegates.  The Obama campaign created new activists and donors large and small.  He will activate them through the fall and the big question is how much will they build on the Dean legacy of continued political activeness like Linnie Bailey is planning to do.