Sunday Open Thread

Well, I’m back. The wedding was by all accounts an excellent party. Married life is great (and of course the first week is surely an indication of the many years to come…). Seattle was lovely as always, the Oregon Coast was spectacular, Humboldt County is still suffering under the US occupation, and Mendocino is doing well now that the air is clear and the fires contained.

One thing that stood out to me on my travels in Washington and Oregon is how well governed those states are. Roads, schools, parks, even health services – they all work well. Each could be improved in their own way, but the contrast with California was striking. After 30 years of conservative-dominated politics we have grown too used to a state government that has to make do with too few resources and often fails at its primary mission. WA and OR face many of the same problems we do, including a strong anti-tax mentality and conservatives who want to break government. But their experience shows that they don’t have to succeed, and that we can and must insist that our government services are properly funded and administered.

Plus it was nice to be in states where the governor isn’t carrying out a pogrom against public workers.

Some items for a lazy Sunday afternoon:

  • Nancy Pelosi is pushing Rep. Chet Edwards (TX-17) to be Obama’s running mate. I don’t know much about Edwards but someone who voted for the Iraq War, for drilling in ANWR, and for CAFTA isn’t quite the direction I want Obama to be going with this. It’s depressing that the conventional wisdom and even many bloggers are accepting that he needs to pick a moderate Blue Dog type as the veep.
  • Library patronage is soaring in CA and the US but libraries also face ongoing budgetary problems. Libraries are often an easy target for local politicians seeking cuts, despite the myriad of basic services they provide to residents. Still, it’s good to see libraries getting a shout-out from the Gannett papers.
  • The SacBee’s Marcos Bréton has some depressing personal stories of workers whose lives have been upended by Arnold’s despicable mass firings. 24-year old Josh Patterson, who was laid off from a job at the state printing office, explained:

    “I had just gotten my health care through the state and now that’s gone,” Patterson said Friday. “I’m out of my pocket now. I’ve cut out my cable, Internet, cell phone. But I can’t cut back on health care for my family.”

    Bréton concludes “There must be a special place in purgatory for politicians who inspire such questions among people who want to work.” Amen to that. Fuck you, Arnold.

  • Dan Walters says it’s time to end the 2/3 rule and shows that Republicans have little to fear – if Dems “spend the windfall” then they would still be held accountable at the ballot box. It’s good to see more of the state media accepting the need to get rid of the 2/3 rule – is is the #1 problem with our state’s budget process and even our state’s entire system of governance. Too bad that Common Cause and others aren’t focusing their efforts on this than on yet another flawed redistricting measure.

Feel free to add to this or to expand on any of these in a separate post  – Walters’ column in particular deserves more attention than I can give it today.

And pictures over the flip:

The wedding ceremony in Seattle.

The toast!

Goonies!

Who knew that Crescent City could be a perfect honeymoon stop?!

Election 2008: Churches Across California Today Enjoined Members to Vote for Proposition 8

Portions XPosted 8/3/2008 11:23 AM PDT on MyDesert.com

According to one of my activist friends, a former deacon of a religious extremist church in Utah, who attends an evangelical megachurch in the Coachella Valley in order to monitor its adherence to the tax code as it applies to its tax exempt status, churches across America today began ‘100 Days of Prayer’ against Marriage Equality and cajolled their members and attendees to vote in favor of Proposition 8 and defeat gay marriage at the polls in November.

Proposition 8 is an amendment to the California State Constitution that would ban Marriage Equality and would dictate that marriage is only between ‘a man and a woman.’ Prop 8 is another in a long line of attempts by out-of-state religious extremist organizations that attempts to further the religious extremist agenda as a step towards fomenting theocracy rather than democracy in the United States of America:

(Proposition 8) (a)mends the California Constitution to provide that only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California. Summary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local government: The measure would have no fiscal effect on state or local governments. This is because there would be no change to the manner in which marriages are currently recognized by the state. (Initiative 07-0068.) (Full Text)

From the pulpit of the church, directly in violation of the principles of the separation of church and state, church leaders discussed the impending vote on Prop 8 and advised members to not only ‘pray’ for the success of the proposition, but to also vote for Prop 8.  My friend advises that in churchspeak, this use of the term ‘pray’ means ‘send money.’

More below the flip…

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has investigated churches that in violation of their tax-exempt status exhort attendees to vote particular ways.  Recently, those investigations have been suspiciously limited to more mainstream, more liberal churches.  It is not against the law for, say, a minister, priest, or rabbi to state how he or she will vote, but it is against the law to encourage attendees to vote in a particular manner.  The most extreme penalty for the latter action is removal of tax-exempt status.

In 2005, the IRS began to investigate All Saints Church in Pasadena, CA and its guest minister, George Regas.  According to National Public Radio, Regas issued a sermon from the pulpit about a hypthetical conversation between Jesus, Pres. George W. Bush, and Sen. John Kerry. For that effort, someone filed a complaint with the IRS, and the IRS threatened to remove the tax exempt status of the church, claiming that Regas’ sermon constituted an endorsement of Kerry. The IRS renewed its investigation in 2006.  However, All Saints Church refused to comply with the investigation.  Finally, in September 2007, the IRS bowed to public pressure and to the church and terminated its investigation.  In response, Rector Ed Bacon demanded that the IRS apologize and that the IRS be investigated.

In an attempt to strengthen democracy and to prevent institution of theocracy in America, more and more progressives and activists are attending religious extremist churches in order to monitor potentially illegal activities.

Americans United: for Separation of Church and State indicates that the greatest threat to the separation of church and state is the so-called ‘Religious Right:’

The single greatest threat to church-state separation in America is the movement known as the Religious Right. Organizations and leaders representing this religio-political crusade seek to impose a fundamentalist Christian viewpoint on all Americans through government action.

Americans United, as part of our educational responsibility, regularly monitors the agenda and activities of the Religious Right. We share our research with journalists, elected officials and all Americans who care about church-state separation, democracy and pluralism.

BlueBeaumontBoyz wonders how quickly the IRS will begin an investigation into churches’ endorsement of Prop 8 from pulpits across America.

Next time, my friend promises not funble his video/audio recorder and promises to provide the smoking gun.  Kudos to those who are working to preserve democracy in America!

Eartha Takes It To The Streets

With the SF Chronicle publishing a long front page feature yesterday about the cessation of Medi-Cal payments scheduled to start next week and the resulting hardships to the chronically ill and disabled, I wanted to share a story with you about one activist and how she’s standing up to Gov. Schwarzenegger.

Eartha Newsong is a Democrat and former nun/retired nurse who lives in the upscale Bay Area suburb of Orinda.  Three weeks ago she read an article in her local paper which discussed the fight over state budget cuts and the effect that the Republicans’ ideological intransigence would have on group homes in her community.

Few people are following the state budget impasse in Sacramento with as much anxiety as Steve Zolno, co-owner of 11 homes for disabled children and adults in Contra Costa County.

Hundreds of such homes across the state will be among the earliest casualties of the budget stalemate. Their funding will evaporate within the next week or two as a state contingency fund runs out of money.

Zolno and his business partner, Lupe Henry, are worried how they will continue caring for their fragile clients.

“It’s not like we can cut corners,” Henry said. “I can’t tell my staff to come back in two weeks or reduce the amount of food we buy.  […]

Zolno and Henry operate homes in Concord, Antioch, Pittsburg and Oakley. Each houses about six developmentally disabled children or adults in family-type settings. Many are quadriplegic and are fed through tubes in their stomachs. Some have cerebral palsy. Others have frequent seizures.

“They’re beyond what their families can take care of,” Zolno said.

PhotobucketWhen Eartha read that article she was horrified. How could the severely disabled in her own community be threatened with such cruel indifference?  Where was the outrage?  Well, Eartha found out that there is plenty of outrage because instead of sitting back helplessly, she decided to get involved and do her best to fight against group home closures.  Armed with a copy of the newspaper article and a petition that she wrote herself, Eartha went to her local farmers’ market the next day (July 13).  

Something amazing happened there.

Eartha talked with people who live and shop in Orinda and discovered that they were just as upset as she was.  In one afternoon, she collected more than 150 signatures on her petition.

Think of that.  In just a few hours, Eartha talked to AT LEAST 150 people who share her concern that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Republican members of the legislature need to “…recognize the devastating effects of your proposed budget cuts, and immediately negotiate with Democratic members in the State legislature to find a way to raise revenues imminently needed to assure that the weakest and most vulnerable members of our society such as the disabled, will not face the end of services to them.”

It turns out that California residents everywhere are increasingly angry with the state’s Republican politicians and their willingness to gut the programs that have served us so well and made so many of us proud to be Californians.

Instead of just complaining, wouldn’t it be wonderful if more of us took the initiative as citizens and as Democrats to talk to the people in our community, organize like Eartha did, and send a loud message to the Republicans in Sacramento that they need to stop their obstructionism and get busy finding solutions that work for ALL Californians?  

If you’d like to take it to the streets like Eartha did, you can organize your own budget action(s) by downloading the following materials that have been provided by the California State Assembly Democratic Caucus at their website:

And here’s who you should contact:

  • Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger

    State Capitol Building

    Sacramento, CA 95814

    Phone: 916-445-2841

    Fax: 916-558-3160

    Web: http://gov.ca.gov
  • Assemblyman Michael Villines

    Assembly Republican Leader

    State Capitol Room 3104

    Sacramento, CA 94249-0029

    Ph: (916) 319-2029

    Fax: (916) 319-2129

    Email: [email protected]
  • Senator Dave Cogdill

    Senate Republican Leader

    State Capitol, Room 305

    Sacramento, CA 95814

    Phone: (916) 651-4014

    Fax: (916) 327-3523

    Email: [email protected]

Or if you would prefer to take online action, you can visit the California Demomcratic Party’s website and send a letter to the editor of your local paper and/or sign our online petition. Whatever your choice is, take action — get involved! Don’t just sit by passively and allow the Republicans to put the screws to the weakest and most vulnerable Californians.

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”  — Margaret Mead

Penny

Online Organizing Director

California Democratic Party

WristSlappin’ for the Insurers, Crumbs for the Insured

A few months ago, there was great hope that the Department of Managed Health Care was going after the big insurance companies on the rescission of individual policies.  The DMHC is an executive department, and thus reports to Arnold, not to the Insurance Commissioner (Poizner). So, a few weeks ago we got the news that the DMHC called off the dogs against Blue Cross because they knew Blue Cross would just litigate them to death. Or something like that.

I know, it’s shocking that Arnold’s administration wouldn’t pursue a corporation, but they thought it better just to let BC get off on that charge and settle with them elsewhere.  Ther problem with that? The settlement that the DMHC agreed to with the biggest five insurers in the state is barely a slap on the wrist.  The new procedure requires patients to go through a vague arbitration procedure where they have to prove their case.

Mind you the arbitrator will see far more of the insurance companies than the patients. Where do you think this is going? Yup, just like other arbirtration settings this is going to end up favoring the big company. By the by, that link above states that 99.8% of the cases filed by consumers against credit card companies decided on the merits end up with the company winning. 99.8%! That’s a track record minor deities wouldn’t mind. And even when they get to the arbitrators, cases under $15,000 will typically be decided on the paperwork only. Furthermore, the settlement doesn’t define any legal standards for these decisions, but it appears the legal burden of proof is on the patient to prove he didn’t lie rather than the insurer to prove they did.

This is no victory at all.  And that’s part of why LA City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo filed suit against Blue Shield in mid-July.

“For decades, health insurers have gamed the system and reaped billions,” Delgadillo said. “The time has come to . . . set things right.”

The suit also accuses Blue Shield of falsely advertising its coverage, alleging that the company often reneges when its members need substantial medical care.

Dr. Richard Frankenstein, president of the California Medical Assn., and Dr. Robert Bitonte, president-elect of the Los Angeles County Medical Assn., praised Delgadillo’s efforts to stop the practice known as rescission. (LAT 7.17.08)

Single-payer (likely at the national level) is the ultimate solution, but meanwhile, back in reality land, the insurers are getting off scott free. If the DMHC is going to claim to do its job, it can’t leaving gaping loopholes like this. Delgadillo and other attorneys will have to press the insurance companies for every last concession, because they’re not giving anything away for free.

The Sierra Club Loses Focus

Crossposted from the California High Speed Rail Blog

It wasn’t the article I was hoping to read upon my return from my honeymoon, but it’s not that surprising to read in the Fresno Bee that the Sierra Club and the Planning and Conservation League are hesitating on backing Prop 1 and even considering a lawsuit – and for the nonsensical reason that the choice of the Pacheco route might “induce sprawl.” That objection is bad enough, for reasons I’ll discuss in a moment.

But what’s really disturbing about this move is that it suggests the Sierra Club and the PCL have lost their focus – instead of looking at the big picture of high speed rail and emphasizing the game-changing environmental benefits it brings, they’re focusing on a small non-issue instead. They’ve lost sight of the forest for the trees and instead of providing leadership on this issue they may instead cast their lot with the far right and leave Californians with no viable alternative to soaring fuel prices and a transportation system that is making our environmental problems far worse.

First, their criticisms as reported by E.J. Schulz:

But the environmentalists are still seething over the selection of relatively undeveloped Pacheco Pass as the route to connect the Central Valley to the Bay Area. They favor the more urban Altamont Pass to the north because they say it would induce less sprawl….

Environmentalists would rather see trains run farther north in the Valley before heading west so that more populated cities are served. They like the Altamont route because it would bring trains closer to Modesto, Dublin, Pleasanton and Livermore in the first phase.

By contrast, the Pacheco route — roughly following Highway 152 — is in a less populated area. Environmentalists worry that a planned station in Gilroy would induce sprawl in surrounding rural areas.

These worries are baseless. Gilroy and much of southern Santa Clara County have strict urban growth boundaries. If those places were going to sprawl they would have already done so given their proximity to the job center and hot housing market of Silicon Valley. HSR doesn’t change that dynamic.

More below…

Nor does it change the fact that sprawl is facing hard times. Sprawl is bad, but it isn’t a force of nature. It is instead a product of three major factors: cheap oil, cheap credit, and favorable land use laws. The first is disappearing for good, thanks to peak oil. The second doesn’t exist now, and may never return. Certainly land use policies need to change to limit sprawl, but those changes have long ago been made in southern Santa Clara County. Why should HSR alone carry that burden? AB 32 carbon reduction goals should be applied to new housing developments, and ultimately, localities will have to change their ways.

The loss of cheap oil and the shortage of cheap credit together will lessen sprawl dramatically in the coming decades. I fully support land use changes to further kill off sprawl, but it’s not worth holding HSR hostage to produce the changes that need to happen anyway at the state and local level.

The death of sprawl has already made itself manifest in Gilroy. The Westfield shopping center developers had a plan to convert a significant amount of farmland acreage east of Gilroy along Highway 152 into a huge mall. The plan aroused the opposition of the community and it was dropped earlier this year. High fuel prices, the credit crunch, and public defense of urban growth boundaries all combined to kill that sprawl project. Those factors will do so again.

A Gilroy HSR station would produce strong incentives for transit-oriented dense development in Gilroy, the kind of development that California cities need to focus on instead of sprawl. Gilroy is already partway there, and an HSR station where the current Caltrain station is located at 8th and Monterey would actually discourage sprawl because there would be viable alternatives to building on new farmland. The combination of infill development and strict urban growth rules are what have made Portland’s anti-sprawl plans a success – you need both for the anti-sprawl measures to work. And high capacity mass transit is a necessary component.

Further, since the Authority has rejected plans for a Los Banos stop, and since as Mehdi Morshed explained in the Fresno Bee article that the communities along the Altamont route were not supportive of HSR, what on earth explains the ongoing refusal of the Sierra Club and the PCL to throw their support to Prop 1?

The only answer is a very depressing one, but an answer that is becoming more widely accepted among many environmental activists, sustainability activists, transportation activists, and folks on the left more broadly: the Sierra Club and the PCL have lost their way, and have lost sight of the big picture. In case folks haven’t been paying attention, this country faces a climate crisis and an energy crisis. It’s not like we have a whole lot of time to be fighting over objections that are not grounded in fact. At Netroots Nation two weekends ago Al Gore explained that we need to stop burning carbon and make a bold move to power our society with renewable energy. An electrically-powered high speed train system won’t achieve that 100% renewables goal itself, but it would provide significant environmental benefits:

-Reduce carbon dioxide emissions equivalent to removing 1.4 million cars from the road, and take the place of nearly 42 million annual city to city car trips

-Reduce CO2 emissions by up to 17.6 billion pounds/year

-Reduce California’s oil consumption by up to 22 million barrels/year (same as above)

According to the Final EIR 63% of intercity trips over 150 miles in California are taken by car (scroll to page 12). HSR would provide a huge dent in that figure.

High speed rail is one of those game changing proposals. How can the Sierra Club and the PCL overlook the cars taken off the road? How can they overlook the CO2 reductions? How can they overlook the reduction in pollution, especially in the Central Valley?

Four years ago Michael Schellenberger and Ted Nordhaus criticized the Sierra Club directly in their seminal essay The Death of Environmentalism. In their view the environmental movement, by focusing on small battles, has totally failed to address global warming, and that organizations like the Sierra Club “have little to show” for nearly 30 years of environmental activism after the big victories of the late ’60s and early ’70s. One of their specific criticisms is that the Sierra Club, for example, often eschews big policy changes for a niggling incrementalism that has done nothing to arrest the rate of warming. This has led them to refuse to articulate a bold vision for addressing the global warming crisis that of course hurts the natural environment, and it has led them to ignore the politics of producing change.

The Sierra Club’s failure on high speed rail proves each of Schellenberger and Nordhaus’ controversial charges. Instead of helping change the way Californians get around their state, shifting them away from oil-burning methods of travel to clean methods of travel that limit sprawl and generate urban densities, they are focusing on a small objection that doesn’t even hold up on close examination. They have endorsed the concept of high speed rail in the past but if they don’t endorse Prop 1, what other opportunity will they have to get it passed? If the HSR bonds don’t pass this year, they aren’t coming back anytime soon. It might take 10 years to revive the project – it’s taken 15 in Texas – and that means completion of the line wouldn’t happen until close to 2030.

By then it may be too late. Instead of refusing to support Prop 1 out of pique that they lost the Altamont vs. Pacheco argument, the Sierra Club and the PCL should follow Van Jones’ advice and move from opposition to proposition. We have a proposition – literally – before us. Instead of being on the constant defensive the Sierra Club and the PCL can help California take a bold step in the right direction with Proposition 1. If we pass these bonds in November it will then be a signal to other states and to Congress that HSR is a politically popular project and it will spur similar projects around the country – projects that we desperately need.

Why would the Sierra Club and the PCL oppose these things? They have let their opposition to the Pacheco alignment blind them to the bigger picture. That decision has been made and even though the Sierra Club and the PCL lost, they can still be big winners. Let’s hope they recognize the pressing environmental need for high speed rail before it’s too late.

Theocrats Mobilize for “Armageddon”

This report of a national conference call to fight Prop. 8 and marriage equality sounds more like a battle plan than a political strategy session.  All the leading figures of the religious right were there, and the language is undeniably militaristic.  I believe that the best way to counteract the theocratic right is to display them in all their radicalism, so the whole country understands the goals of their movement.  So here ya go:

The primary focus of the call was Proposition 8 in California, described by (Chuck) Colson as “the Armageddon of the culture war.” Many speakers invoked the language of warfare, raising up an army of believers, putting soldiers in the streets, being on the front lines of a battle. Lou Engle actually described a massive rally planned in Qualcomm stadium on November 1 as a “blitzkrieg moment.”

While speaker after speaker spoke of the dire threats same-sex married couples pose to “traditional” marriage, religious freedom, and civilization itself, the overall tone of the call was confidence that victory would be won with God’s help, 40 days of prayer and fasting before the election, teams of intercessors and prayer warriors around the country, and a massive highly organized deployment of volunteers in a systematic voter identification and turnout campaign.

This is not exactly the stuff of democracy, nor is it in any way reflective of a country with a separation of church and state.  What is at work here is a putsch, a desire to seize the instruments of power and subjugate everyone to one belief system.  They mobilize through fear, claiming that the next steps in the fiendish plan are to ban the Bible, legalize polygamy, and “destroy marriage”.  They’re also using supposedly apolitical churches as an illegal communications apparatus:

Ron Luce from Teen Mania ministries and other organizers talked about plans to organize 300,000 youth and their families for an October 1 simulcast, and using them to reach 2.4 million. A representative of the Church Communication Network, a satellite network that has downlink equipment in 500 churches in California, 95 in Arizona, and 321 in Florida, said it would simulcast the youth event free of charge, and would make a satellite dish available “at cost” to churches who don’t yet have one. Said one speaker of the youth organizing, “if we don’t use them, Satan will.”

That is manifestly against the spirit of tax-exempt laws regarding churches – laws which I imagine you’ll see broken many times between now and November.  The free simulcasting and satellite services amount to in-kind donations.

People for the American Way is on this and keeping tabs on the theocratic right.  As I said, forewarned is forearmed – there’s a growing segment of the state and the country who are repulsed by this fundamentalism, this anti-Democratic dominionism.  We have an opportunity this fall to lay bare the innate bigotry of their movement for all to see.

UPDATE:  Another aspect to this is the exhuming once again of far-right theocratic icon Alan Keyes, who’s running for President again – but only in California, as part of the American Independent Party (formed in 1968 by segergationist George Wallace, which is somewhat ironic).  His running mate is Rev. Wiley Drake, the minister who prayed for the death of members of Americans United for Separation of Church and State last year.  The fundies are lining up, packed in two at a time, and all headed to California in lockstep.  It’s going to be crazy out here for the next 95 days.