Trying To Maintain Rationality

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

[blank stare]

Fundies.

>< *aargh*

Monday, August 29, 2005

You have a full-time job? Congratulations: You owe $350,000.

The Seattle Times reports that "it would cost every American man, woman and child to pay [$145,000] for the long-term promises the U.S. government has made to creditors, retirees, veterans and the poor." That happens to equate to "$350,000 for every full-time worker." As for personal debt?... that's not even included in the calculation. $43 trillion dollars... that the "current debt and deficit, promises for [Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid], pensions, veterans' health care."

Oddly enough:

A few years ago, government finances were the strongest they've been in a generation. Then came a turnaround — and a stunningly quick one. The budget surplus of $236 billion in 2000 turned into a deficit of $412 billion last year. The government had to borrow that much to cover the hole between what it took in
and what it had to spend; a difference that's called the federal deficit.

Blame the bust of the dot-com boom, the ensuing recession, President Bush's federal tax cuts, the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Obviously the economic impact of the dot-com bust can't be blamed on Bush; was out of his administration's control. But this president's handling of the economy since 9/11 has been simply woeful; it's been nothing but a 5 year rich-guy giveaway.

Oh.

Who's behind this information? Just some dude named David Walker... he only happens to be the UNITED STATES' COMPTROLLER GENERAL.

Jesus H. Motherfucking Christ.

Combine the idiotic economic policy (that, along with the above woes, continues to widen the gap between the richest and poorest citizens while eliminating the middle class) with the just-as-dumb foreign policy (not only wage a war against a non-threat and without international support, but to execute it so incredibly poorly... that absolutely violates the 2 economic efficiencies -- allocative and technical) and we have, arguably, the worst United States administration of all time.

Saturday, August 27, 2005

Meanwhile, Back At Camp Casey...

The retards from Move America Forward, in a fit of being themselves, had a brief run-in with the Protest Warriors. Unsurprisingly, the MAF folks seemed disinterested by the fact that PWs were supporting the same side as the MAFs.

Are these Bush supporters so blinded by irrational rage that they can't even stage a measly counter protest without stomping on one of their own signs?

[shaking head; having good laugh]

Friday, August 26, 2005

Janis Karpinski Speaks Again, Reveals Much More

In the odd case that you haven't already heard about the latest from the former Army Reserve Brigadier General in charge of Abu Ghraib prison, here's a link to Karpinski's interview with truthout.org contributing editor (and law professor) Marjorie Cohn. It's a tale of money, power, and corporate contractors. And, of course, a coverup. What else did you expect from this secretive administration?

I had been hesitant to speak out before because this Administration is so vindictive. But now I will ... Anybody who confronts this Administration or Rumsfeld or the Pentagon with a true assessment, they find themselves either out of a job, out of their positions, fired, relieved or chastised. Their career comes to an end. -- Janis Karpinski, interview with Marjorie Cohn, August 3, 2005

Recall that Karpinski was the one that took the proverbial "administrative fall" for the prison abuse scandal; she was demoted to Colonel and was "retired." Pvt. Lyndie England, et al. absorbed the shelling on behalf of the abusers; they're incarcerated.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Bush Poll Numbers Still Declining... Resign Already, Dude

According to the latest poll from American Research Group, as of 8/22/2005, Mister Bush's approval rating is at an all-time low of 36% (58% disapproving, 6% undecided, unknown +/- error) and the "economy rating" is a measly 33% approving (62% disapproving, 8% undecided, unknown +/- error).

That's "lower than Richard Nixon's was at the height of the Watergate scandal," according to the venerable Democracy Now! website.

Dude: Resign.

Resign.Resign. R R n.Resign.Res R R
e R e e g i e e
s e s s i g s s
i s i i s n i i
g i g g e . g g
n g n n R n n
. n . . . . .
Resign.Resign. R R ngiseR.ngise Resign.Resign.
e R e e R R R
s e s s . e e
i s i i n s s
g i g g R g i i
n g n n e i g g
. n . . s s n n
Resign.Resign. Resign.Resign. ign.Resign.Re . .


You're destroying the once-proud Republican party... for as much as I'm pissed off with the current state of affairs with the GOP and that I'm experiencing a certain amount of Schadenfreude watching all this go down, I'd rather you just get the fuck out of the way and let people that can actually *govern* go ahead and govern.

You're a fucking albatross hanging around the neck of the entire United States, not just the (R) party. So scoot your worthless ass back to D.C., write your note, take a hike out to Marine 1 (or whatever that 'copter is called), do that habitual flipping of the bird to the public, and get the fuck back to your ranch.

It's the People's White House -- you don't deserve to occupy it.

Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Another Iraq Vet Running For Congress

A lone Iraq veteran, Major Paul Hackett, put the (R) Congress on alert [in this month's special election for the vacant seat Ohio's District 2] that the American people are starting to catch on to this administration's bullshit.

Now there's another.

Captain Patrick Murphy - running for Pennsylvania's District 8 in 2006.

I urge you to check out his site and his message. I just heard him speak on the Randi Rhodes Show; the guy is humble, intelligent, and *knows* wtf is going on... unlike most of the dense (R)s out there that march in lockstep with Mister Bush and his pathetic "vision" for America.

I donated $50.

Blowjoblessness At All Time High

Reports of lackadaisical hummer activity. I weep for my our future.

Monday, August 22, 2005

A Primer In Democracy, For Our Iraqi Brethren.

The right to assemble peacefully need not be held back by the threat of being tasered by a stupid-fat-bald-fuck that never-felt-empowered-in-high-school but somehow-became-a-cop and is gung-ho-on-making-sure-that-you-remember-it.

Welcome! You've Got Sharia!

Whoa, Iraqi dudes*!

Even though we promised you (and others, including Americans) a democracy after invading conquering liberating your country, our representatives just cut a sweet deal with a bunch of your fellow dudes that had "threatened to torpedo talks over the shape of the new Iraq unless Islam was a primary source of law."

According to this Guardian Unlimited article:

Secular and liberal groups were dismayed at the move, branding it a betrayal of Washington's promise to advocate equal rights in a free and tolerant society.

Awesome. Your government is, like... gonna be EXTREME! Do the Dew!

[I'm wielding a bitchin' axe, laying down a sweet air guitar riff] Waaaaaaaaalanalanalana!



*dudettes are totally hosed, but that's cool, according to this guy.

May I Buy A Vowel? May You Own A Letter?

By mistake, today I punched ~Enter~ after only putting the lowly and humble letter "s" in a Google webpage search. I shouldn't have been so shocked by the first result but I was shocked by the first result.

Give it a whirl (with no quotations around the letter s) -- kinda interesting. In a stupid way.

*update: 8/28/05 -- looks like McDonalds got bumped to 2nd by Sprint Nextel's stock quote...

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

How To Use Religion To Your Advantage

So, you're an up and coming dictator? Have *I* got some great news for you. There's a nice little appeal to emotion out there that (1) easily sucks people in, based on inherent fear of the unknown, (2) makes for a fantastic diversion from having to respond to questions with factually-based answers, and (3) already has a strong consumer base. You ask: To what do you refer, EconAtheist?

Christianity!

Yes, Christianity. You too can wield this astounding hammer of silliness; your opponents will literally wither in fear at the thought of having to confront you as you display your newfound love of Jesus, son of the wrathful God of Abraham.

Let's take a look at how you can manipulate hordes of stupid people use the Power of The Lord to your political advantage*:


  • “Providence withdrew its protection and our people fell… And in this hour we sink to our knees and beseech our almighty God that He may bless us, that He may give us the strength to carry on the struggle for the freedom, the future, the honor, and the peace of our people. So help us God.” (Pat Robertson said something similar after 9/11)
  • “Secular schools can never be tolerated because such schools have no religious instruction, and a general moral instruction without religious foundation is built on air; consequently all character training and religion must be derived from faith.”
  • “We were convinced that the people need and require the Christian faith. We have therefore undertaken the fight against the atheistic movement, and that not merely with a few theoretical declarations: we will not stop until we have stamped it out.”
  • “Our Party neither opposes the Church nor is it anti-religious, but on the contrary it stands on the ground of a real Christianity… For their interests cannot fail to coincide with ours alike in our fight against the symptoms of degeneracy in the world of today, in our fight against a socialist and communist culture, against atheistic movement, against criminality, and in our struggle for a consciousness of a community in our national life…These are Christian principles!”
  • “With a tenth of our budget for religion, we would thus have a Church devoted to the State and of unshakable loyalty.” (Faith Based Initiatives)
  • “Hence today I believe that I am acting in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator: by defending myself against the Islamist, I am fighting for the work of the Lord.”
  • “We want to fill our culture again with the Christian spirit… We want to burn out all the recent immoral developments in literature, in the theater, and in the press—in short, we want to burn out the poison of immorality which has entered into our whole life and culture as a result of Liberal excess…”
  • “The watchword of American foreign policy ceased to be: preservation of the American nation by all methods; but rather: preservation of world peace by all means.”
  • “Worst of all, however, is the devastation wrought by the misuse of religious conviction for political ends. In truth, we cannot sharply enough attack those wretched crooks who would like to make religion an implement to perform political or rather business services for them. These insolent liars, it is true, proclaim their creed in a stentorian voice to the whole world for other sinners to hear; but their intention is not, if necessary, to die for it, but to live better.” (Think: Jesse Jackson)
  • “…we must not dodge this struggle against Terrorism, but prepare for it, and for this reason acquire armament which alone offers protection against violence. Terror is not broken by the mind, but by terror.”
  • “The Ten Commandments are a code of living to which there’s no refutation. These precepts correspond to irrefutable needs of the human soul.”
  • “I would like to thank Providence and the Almighty for choosing me of all people to be allowed to wage this battle for America. I follow the path assigned to me by Providence ... there is a God… And this God again has blessed our efforts during the past 5 years.”

Guess who's the genius behind all of these quotes? Yes -- You in the back there. George W. Bush? No, no, no; that dude's a total loser. Any other guesses?

Adolf Hilter? Yes! The young Filipino woman in the front row got that correct.

Think of the possibilities, my friends. Think of the possibilities...

* courtesy a post, at the Mike Malloy forums, by the lovely and talented Spitfire of ATJ; Spit notes that all are actual Hitler quotes - from both his speeches and from Mein Kampf - that he found on the internet but with "Germany" changed to "America" and "Jew" changed to "Islam."

Monday, August 15, 2005

The War In Iraq Was Predicated On What Now?

The Washington Post is reporting that the Bush administration has lowered its expectations for whatever it was that we were doing in Iraq in the first place:

The United States no longer expects to see a model new democracy, a self-supporting oil industry or a society in which the majority of people are free from serious security or economic challenges, U.S. officials say.

"What we expected to achieve was never realistic given the timetable or what unfolded on the ground," said a senior official involved in policy since the 2003 invasion. "We are in a process of absorbing the factors of the situation we're in and shedding the unreality that dominated at the beginning."

...

"The most thoroughly dashed expectation was the ability to build a robust self-sustaining economy. We're nowhere near that. State industries, electricity are all below what they were before we got there," said Wayne White, former head of the State Department's Iraq intelligence team who is now at the Middle East Institute. "The administration says Saddam ran down the country. But most damage was from looting [after the invasion], which took down state industries, large private manufacturing, the national electric" system.


Um.

"...shedding the unreality that dominated at the beginning..."?

WTF? First it was WMD and nukes, then it shifted to freedom/democracy for Iraqis, now it's... errrrr... looks lahk we rally gits us a fucked-up sit-chee-a-shun, boahs!

What more do you need to hear to be convinced that Bush et al. are fucking liars, have completely fucked up our all-volunteer military, and have diverted our tax dollars into the pockets of the already filthy rich?

Here's what I'm thinking: Does the guy have to balls to resign... or are we gonna have to take him down?

Saturday, August 13, 2005

Dear Soldiers,

Down in Crawford, Texas, where Cindy Sheehan is holding down the fort while waiting for Mr. Bush to answer her simple question about what "noble cause" did her son Casey die for while serving in Iraq, a busload of idiots anti-Cindy ralliers -- led by a nationally-syndicated talk radio host named Mike Gallagher -- made it abundantly clear that they don't care about someone that fights on your behalf.

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

What Would Democratic Elections Look Like?

This article -- originally from reclaimdemocracy.org -- was written by By Jeff Milchen on November 15, 2002 (with some items updated October, 2004). It not only strikes at the blackened heart of illegitimately-gained corporate "personhood," it also provides a glimpse into a future ideal that could [would, dare I say?] radically alter governmental representation such that We the People could actually gain control over our Constitutionally-guaranteed lives, liberties, and pursuits of happiness. Yes, yes... I've linked to this article a few times already but I got the feeling that no one really read it. lol

That said, in honor of Jeff Milchen and his ideas, I post his thought-provoking essay:

"What Would Democratic Elections Look Like?"


By Jeff Milchen, November 15, 2002 (some items updated October, 2004)

Our federal election fiasco in 2000 exposed numerous critical flaws in our electoral process and spurred a new flurry of reform efforts, but despite all the attention generated, the actual changes have been little more than band-aids.

Why? One reason may be the approach taken by most reform proponents that essentially asks "what can we do to make this deeply flawed system less corrupt?" What might change if the approach was to first ask "what conditions are necessary for a truly representative democracy?" and then, "how do we get there?"

It's a fundamental difference in approach. Hopefully, some of the examples here will provoke you to consider the path of electoral reform in the U.S. and to clarify your own thoughts on what actions we must take to achieve representative democracy.

We view as a fundamental requirement for democracy that each person's political influence result directly from the quality of one's ideas and the energy put into promoting them--independent of a person's wealth to the greatest degree possible. Yet we're clearly nowhere close to those conditions when it comes to state and federal elections.

The excessive power assigned to money, especially in federal elections, is glaring. Even in the 2002 Congressional races, where money was less dominant as the determinant of the victors than in 2000, 95% of all House seats and 75% of Senate seats were won by the higher-spending candidate. Incumbents won 97% of races in which they ran. (based on candidate financial reports filed through September 2002, when this article was written.)

And money is a conclusive determinant of who can compete. One-third of all those running for the House (157 candidates) -- effectively ran unopposed. Thirty-five had no opponent at all, while another 122 faced challengers who spent less than $5,000. No wonder only 75 of the 435 House races were even marginally competitive (margin of victory less than 20 points).

The depth of our problems in some specific realms such as campaign financing is explored in detail in other articles. Here, we aim briefly to explore an overview of some of our most vitally needed electoral reforms.

1. Abolish the "Money Equals Speech" Doctrine

2. Revoke the Precedent of Granting Bill of Rights Protections to Corporations
These destructive Supreme Court creations both lack Constitutional basis. The first precedent dates to the late 1800s when the Court applied the Fourteenth Amendment and "due process" guarantees--designed to protect the rights of freed slaves--to corporations, an entity mentioned nowhere in the Constitution.

The 1976 Buckley v. Valeo decision authorized some limits on political donations, but equated campaign spending with speech and legalize political donations at levels beyond the reach of all but the wealthiest Americans. Just one tenth of one percent of Americans gave a $1000 contribution in the 2000 election--one-quarter the present $4000 limit for investments in an individual candidate per election cycle (after the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act doubled the "hard money" contribution limits).

While we fully support public campaign financing, we must also confront those two root problems. While banning "soft money" may prevent direct corporate funding of parties, it doesn't touch corporate interference in democracy via advertising, lobbying, and many other activities.

Consider the combined effect of these two premises: give an institution (the corporation) with an unlimited ability to amass wealth many key rights of citizens, then allow money to translate freely to political power. Now ask yourself if we can possibly realize the ideal of one person, one vote with these two perversions of our Constitution intact. These issues are at the heart of our diseased democracy.

See "When Money Is Speech, Speech Cannot Be Free" for more on #1. See our Corporate Personhood page for more on #2.

3. Establish a Constitutional Right to Vote
Voting is one of the fundamental elements of citizenship and democracy, and most Americans assume universal suffrage to be a struggle already won--but we lack any Constitutional right to vote! Yes, the 15th, 19th, and 26th Amendments outlaw voting discrimination on the basis of race, sex, or age, but those protections are hollow because all citizens may be disenfranchised so long as it is done without bias. The Supreme Court on at least three occasions has affirmed that voting is a privilege granted at the discretion of those in power.

Our lack of Constitutional voting rights enabled many of the worst abuses in the 2000 elections (such as the mass disenfranchisement in Florida) and continues to invite gross injustice in elections. The deliberate suppression of targeted voting blocks that occurred in 2000 will only worsen in years ahead now that its effectiveness is proven and public opposition was muted.

Our lack of voting rights also allows the United States government to deny residents of Washington D.C. any voting representation in Congress whatsoever. A constitutional amendment is needed to rectify this problem.

Read more on the missing right to vote or see our proposed Right to Vote Amendment.

4. Institute Instant Runoff Voting (IRV)
The unhealthy dilemma of voting one's conscience versus voting for the "realistic" contender should be eliminated. IRV offers a neutral and proven method for correcting this problem. Voters simply rank candidates in order of preference. If a candidate receives a majority of first choice votes, she/he wins. If no candidate receives a majority of first place votes, the candidate with the fewest first choices is eliminated, and ballots cast for that candidate are counted for one of the remaining candidates according to those ballots' second choices.

IRV ensures a majority winner, frees minor-party candidates from a "spoiler" role, and allows voters to express their true preferences rather than voting out of fear. It also spurs cleaner campaigns, as candidates have an incentive to avoid mud-slinging when they compete for second-choice votes. IRV can work at any level of government, and states are free to implement it for federal elections.

Visit the Center for Voting and Democracy for much more on this issue. We also have a free pamphlet on the topic, available to supporters on request.

5. Adopt Public Campaign Financing at Local and State Levels
Taxpayer-funded campaigns are the greatest bargain on Earth when one compares the cost of a few dollars per person for public funding to the cost of paybacks by elected officials to major campaign donors. The results in Maine and Arizona, two states that have led the way in public campaign financing, are impressive: increased participation, more competitive elections, and greater public trust in government.

Public Campaign publishes a guide to voter-owned elections for further reading. Our Guide to Local and State Campaign Finance Reform (pdf) also has useful information.

6. Establish Democratic Presidential Debates
The nationally-televised presidential debates are the single most influential forum for most Americans to decide whether they should vote in the race and for whom. They offer a rare opportunity to hear candidates' ideas unedited and in context.

Since 1988, these debates have been controlled by the Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD), a private corporation created and controlled by the Democratic and Republican parties. The CPD operates with no public oversight and exists primarily to further the interests of those two parties--to the detriment of democracy. The greatest harms to democracy are the exclusion of legitimate candidates outside of the CPD owners' parties and the exclusion of many vital issues from introduction into the debates.

ReclaimDemocracy.org co-founded the Citizens' Debate Commission in 2003 to institute debates that serve democracy, not just the two major parties. Here's one of many articles we've published on democratizing the debates.

7. Reduce Ballot Access Barriers
State laws often raise absurd barriers to political competition that enshrines a two-party duopoly. National standards must be enacted for all federal offices to prevent this discrimination. Non-partisan election officials also are essential to correcting these problems.

Ballot Access News is the definitive resource on ballot access issues.

8. Abolish the Electoral College
Presently, the vote of individuals for president in the smallest states carries three times the weight of that of citizens in some more populous states. In addition, the winner-take-all system, used by most states, is profoundly anti-democratic because it wipes out the vote of all those within the state not voting for the winning presidential candidate. Eliminating the Electoral College requires a Constitutional amendment--a long-term challenge. But states can implement Instant Runoff Voting, proportional assignment of electors (already done in Maine and Nebraska) and other ideas to improve the system dramatically.

9. Independent Redistricting Commissions and Election Administration
Democracy is hollow when elected officials choose their constituents, rather than constituents choosing them, yet that's our reality in elections for the U.S. House of Representatives today. The combination of partisan gerrymandering (drawing district boundaries to benefit particular candidates or party) of House districts with winner-take-all elections and the huge monetary advantages of incumbency means few citizens have the opportunity to vote in a competitive House election. Indeed, 98% of House members running for re-election retained their seats between 1996 and 2002.

The gerrymandering component of this problem should be addressed by citizens in every state demanding nonpartisan commissions to draw redistricting maps, as Iowa and Arizona already have done, while building a movement for national reform.

Similarly, allowing state elections to be overseen by partisan officials is absurd. All election administration officials should be non-partisan appointments. Additionally, we need federal standards for fair and consistent registration, ballot and voting procedures.

10. Make Election Day a Holiday
Too many citizens are impeded from voting because of limited voting hours and work obligations. A "Democracy Day" to engage citizens in Election Day activities, including voting, is a worthy investment. Citizens can work for this change in their own state or federally. Contact us for a free pamphlet on this topic.

11. Mandate Open-Source Code for Any Computer Voting Machines
We wince at the idea that this even needs to be said. The idea of corporations having total control over the counting of votes without source codes being open-source and inspectable by any interested party is intolerable and must be prohibited.
Blackboxvoting.org focuses on this issue.

12. Reduce Barriers to Voting
Eliminate pre-registration requirements. Such laws are economically and racially discriminatory and a senseless deterrent to voting. A federal mandate for same-day registration is a long overdue update of the Voting Rights Act.

13. Stop Permanent Disenfranchisement
In Florida, over 400,000 citizens, including a whopping 30% of all black men, were prohibited from voting in 2000. Some did not even have actual felony convictions--the official justification--but were purged illegally from the rolls by a private corporation (Choicepoint Inc.) contracted by the state. While the choice of whether to disenfranchise those in prison is appropriately left to states, lifetime voting prohibitions for ex-felons, enacted by several states, are racist and violate the constitutional promise of equal protection of law. Disenfranchisement of those who have served their sentences must be banished.

Demos is one of several excellent resources on this issue.

Of course, this list is incomplete and many other ideas deserve consideration, but key to all truly fundamental reform efforts is to begin with the end goal in mind and to be aware of, but not controlled by, current leanings of the Supreme Court or "political reality." Government of, by, and for the people only will result if the people repossess it.

Please see our Transforming Politics page for more detailed analysis of some issues summarized here and additional links to organizations focusing on these issues.
This letter from four U.S. Representatives to Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell asks pointed questions that illustrate how some of these unaddressed problems tainted the 2004 elections in Ohio.

So there you have it.

Again, the main points are:
    1. Abolish the "Money Equals Speech" Doctrine
    2. Revoke the Precedent of Granting Bill of Rights Protections to Corporations
    3. Establish a Constitutional Right to Vote
    4. Institute Instant Runoff Voting (IRV)
    5. Adopt Public Campaign Financing at Local and State Levels
    6. Establish Democratic Presidential Debates
    7. Reduce Ballot Access Barriers
    8. Abolish the Electoral College
    9. Independent Redistricting Commissions and Election Administration
    10. Make Election Day a Holiday
    11. Mandate Open-Source Code for Any Computer Voting Machines
    12. Reduce Barriers to Voting
    13. Stop Permanent Disenfranchisement
    Ideals may not always be achieved, but that's no excuse for not trying. This is *our* country, after all, so let's get our shit together and start pushing HARD for changes such that *WE* can more accurately assess/dictate who we want to represent us in government. They're public officials; THEY'RE SUPPOSED TO WORK FOR US... we deserve no less than a system that best helps us get the most apt employees for the job.

    * * *

    ReclaimDemocracy.org is a simple, pragmatic website with no whizbang flash games to keep you entertained. You go there to learn. I encourage you to explore the entire site and hope that you feel compelled to make a $500 donation like I did.

    Friday, August 05, 2005

    CAFTA, Free Markets, And Where Reality Comes Into Play

    Jeff Milchen posted this article at the ReclaimDemocracy.org site a few weeks ago... your retarded host [that's me] forgot to link to it.

    Not that I'd have changed the outcome of the House vote, had I done so - with all the "whoops; here, take this - jeepers where'd that come from" pork stuffed into the highway bill it certainly appeared like DeLay et al. were gonna buy the requisite votes at almost any cost.

    In any case, see if you can find the painfully obvious red herring in the first paragraph...


    “It's going to be easier to sell your product to 44 million new customers," President Bush proclaimed at a recent speech in North Carolina. The event was designed to create support for passing the Central American “Free Trade” Agreement (CAFTA) before Congress adjourns for summer later this month.


    Oh, n/m. It's too easy. Since when does the mere existence of "44 million new customers" equate to being able to sell your stuff? What if said set of customers have a GDP equivalent to a medium-sized U.S. city? Gee. That'd be quite the per capita.

    [insert rolleyes here]

    BTW - I thought that Paul Hackett had a nice showing in OH:02 on Tuesday - in fact, he "flipped" about 1 in 5 voters, losing by less than 4% in a congressional district that shows ~3/4 registered voters as (R) - but he still lost... so I wasn't exactly pitching a tent over the final tally. I'm not gonna go on and on about how things are looking good for the (D) party, blah blah blah blah, since (1) I vote (D) only because I feel that they're the least destructive party in our miserable, corporate-defined, positively-unresponsive political duopoly, and (2) it's been tackled 10,000x all over the goddamned web by now. It's all about the outcome of the policies implemented, my fine friends. Everything else is window dressing. Marketing... meh...

    Frankly... democracy would be much better served if all political speech were publicly funded, corporations had no right to contribute money to politics... oh n/m. Read up here to see how I feel.

    Meh

    I hate it when I can't sleep, have nothing left to read, am too tired to think of anything to type up, and have already seen all the porn on the internet.

    *sigh*

    =(

    Monday, August 01, 2005

    Paycut For Soldiers...

    Armed services personnel that live somewhere other than on a military base are looking at losing hundreds of dollars/month in pay. That's right: The military is cutting our soldiers' pay, in the middle of an overseas armed conflict (a.k.a. war, "struggle," debacle, beach blanket bingo).

    Wow.

    This administration is so in-your-face hypocritical about everything supporting the troops... I tell ya, these folks got 'em balls of freakin' titanium.

    * * *

    [Update, 2am... : good Hackett/Schmidt analysis from red-state.com - (R)s are neither dumb nor our enemies... must I keep reminding myself you us?! =| =P *pplt* Plus, even I bothered to goof with an "outcome scenario"]

    On a related note:

    Iraq veteran Paul Hackett has his big day tomorrow, in Ohio's special election (for its 2nd District, U.S. House of Representatives). I'd ask you to pony up a few bucks on his behalf, but he's actually not looking for any more money for this election! Jesus - How's that for a fresh take? A politician that only spends what's necessary... sounds like the GOP of old. Irony is ... he ain't the (R) in this race; he's running as a (D). Take note to many of the refreshing things he's talking about, (R)s, if you ever want to regain my vote. Plus lay off the religious shit - it's tiresome and is a total red herring. Oh, and you have to actually *do* the things you talk about.