Channeling Lucy

Monday, January 24, 2005

Still A Dean Believer

I caught a few minutes of Crossfire on Friday... just enough to hear so-called Democrats lament the possible election of Howard Dean as the new Chair of the DNC. God forbid the most succesful candidate at online fundraising and activism in the party's history be our new leader! God forbid the only presidential candidate to consistently speak out against the war in Iraq - which the majority of Americans now believe was a pretty crappy idea - be our new leader! We certainly don't want anyone to speak their principles before the Republicans have stuck us in a corner and prelabeled any opinion we might have as unpatriotic.

I understand that Howard Dean isn't universally loved. But let's get real. We've played it safe the past few years by putting a fundraiser, not a leader, in charge of the DNC. We've played it safe by making the uber-moderate Sen. Harry Reid in charge of our diminished minority in the Senate. We need someone who will yell a little. And yes, I know... there was that scream. But if the biggest criticism we have of someone is "He gets too excited when thanking the volunteers who worked for him," um, are we trying to make sure we never lead the country again?

I'd much rather have a DNC head who speaks Democratic principles first than one who sits around waiting for public opinions polls to be conducted and reconducted and reconducted until we're absolutely sure that maybe we won't annoy one swing voter in one county in Okahoma who might consider voting Democrat this year if we make sure not to stand up for our party platform when it comes to those silly little issues like civil rights and reproductive rights, which only affect the strongest Democrat supporters, not the "much needed" swing voters!




Saturday, January 22, 2005

the sky is blue, no the sky is red

"I'm fine. I just threw up in my mouth a little bit."
--Kate Veatch (Christine Taylor) , Dodgeball

While those of us under the Big Tent struggle endlessly with our own identity, the Republican party is marching confidently into the next stage of its permanent war on progress/humanity/sanity -- appointing Ken Mehlman to lead the party and immediately launching their "Durable Majority" plan. They say they will (1) institutionalize their '04 grassroots operation (2) GOTV of presidential election voters for off-year elections, (3) target D base groups with specific issues, (4) use judicial nominations (affecting gay marriage/abortion) to mobilize the church vote, (5) keep working on redistricting and long-term candidate recruitment. And, of course, push Bush's agenda on Social Security, tax code change, and "fighting terrorism" (loosely defined as military aggression as it suits the administration's needs). And just when we thought we could put the elections out of our mind for a moment, take a breath and go back to fighting the good fight, Bush announced his plan to conduct an election-style PR campaign that will spend over $15 million to convince Americans to gut Social Security.

I know it's not just me that feels like we're trying fruitlessly to peel ourselves off the floor of the ring as Ah-nold sails through the air for another body-slam, because our side is debating literally everything -- trying to get at the heart of why we lost so badly (and unexpectedly), and what we can do to stop the bleeding:
-Do we just need a coherent progressive message that will unify us and help us frame the debate in our own terms?
-Do we need a progressive crusader to provide strong leadership for the party?
-Is the problem that we failed to put terrorism at the center of our message during a time when it was central in Americans' minds?
-Do we just need to expand and improve our grassroots mobilization operations? (After all, we only lost by a couple of percentage points.)
-Should we fire the consultants that keep giving D candidates bad advice?
-Can we relax because demographic shifts are eventually going to bear out an emerging democratic majority?
-Do we need to recruit party leadership and candidates from the South and West? Everybody knows those damn Yankees are wicked retaaaded, and snobby peaceniks to boot.

These are the questions that keep me up at night. And, lucky for me, working during the day. Hopefully we'll get to hash some of them out on this blog.

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

Introducing... Stuff...

Hey all,

About 150 of you are very familiar - if not painfully too familiar - with my ranting liberal emails asking you to help me change the world. I've been a little silent of late. I was busy working on the election here in the lovely, blue-leaning (although, really, isn't this whole red state-blue state thing getting way old? Howard thinks it is.) Pennsylvania... and after the election... Well, I had to catch up on that whole school thing I was supposed to be doing all along. And frankly speaking, I was a little distressed.

Make that a lot distressed. Staring down another four years of the Bush Administration is frightening. Anyway... so in lieu of some of my emails, I'm going to regularly blog about important issues, ways you can take action and whatever other random things are on my mind. The bonus for all of you is that my good friend Ros should be joining me on this blog soon, especially seeing as I've now publicly shamed her into participating.

Thanks for being loyal recipients of propaganda for the good cause of liberalism.

Kat

So Many Outrages, So Little Time

Of course all the crazy stuff happens when I'm supposed to be writing a 30 page paper that I've supposed to have been writing for months... but then there was that election thing... then finals... and then, well, I digress.

In this post...
1. Why to be mad at GWB for having one of the most scandal-plagued administrations of all time
2. What you can do on Election Day to show your indignation about Iraq and everything else
3. And on a totally different, but I suppose not entirely unrelated note, more unfortunate proof that equality of the sexes is still just a theory for some (I hope all you Harvard alums on this list are writing angry letters and emails!)

Item Number One:
From Salon.com: It’s rather long, so I’m just including the link. The basic point is this: we’ve got a President with no checks on his whims, with a history of scandal, with an unwillingness to acknowledge any mistakes made. Salon documents 34 individual scandals, most of which have yet to be dealt with in a substantive way. For example, number 7:

7. Halliburton's Vanishing Iraq Money
The scandal: In mid-2004, Pentagon auditors determined that $1.8 billion of Halliburton's charges to the government, about 40 percent of the total, had not been adequately documented.

The problem: That's not the government's $1.8 billion, it's our $1.8 billion.

The outcome: The Defense Contract Audit Agency has "strongly" asked the Army to withhold about $60 million a month from its Halliburton payments until the documentation is provided.

Hmmm… $1.8 billion dollars… I think I know a new unfounded federal education mandate that could use an extra billion or two.

Click here for the full article.


Item Number Two:
This Thursday, President Bush’s inauguration will take over Washington. Lots of people are less than thrilled at the prospect of another four years of Bush and want some way to make a statement. Below is an easy way making it’s rounds on the internet now. Stock up on groceries and gas on Wednesday because Thursday purchases are off limits. And to give your protest some extra flavor, why not call the White House and let them know what you’re up to (“I just wanted to let the president know that because I don’t support policies that mislead the American people, I’m not spending one dime today in protest.”) The White House operator can be reached at: 202-456-1414 (switchboard) or 202-456-1111(comments) – I’ll let you choose which line to tie up.

Consumers have power they should use every once in a while!

Iraqi citizens are leaving Iraq to avoid possible violence during the elections.

Troops in Iraq are still being attacked and killed on a regular basis:

Oh, and in case you missed it, Bush said on Monday that we’re not ruling out military action in Iran. Iran in turn said they’d easily repel such an attack. Great. That’s a culture of cooperation being fostered right there.

So here’s the plan for Thursday:

This Thursday - "Not One Dime Day"

Since our religious leaders will not speak out against the war in Iraq, since our political leaders don't have the moral courage to oppose it, Inauguration Day, Thursday, January 20th, 2005 is "Not One Damn Dime Day in America.

"Not One Damn Dime Day" those who oppose what is happening in our name in Iraq can speak up with a 24-hour national boycott of all forms of consumer spending.

During "Not One Damn Dime Day" please don't spend money.
Not one damn dime for gasoline.
Not one damn dime for necessities or for impulse purchases.
Not one damn dime for nothing for 24 hours.

Please boycott Wal-Mart, Kmart and Target.
Please don't go to the mall or the local convenience store.
Please don't buy any fast food (or any groceries at all for that matter).

For 24 hours, please do what you can to shut the retail economy down.

The object is simple. Remind the people in power that the war in Iraq is immoral and illegal; that they are responsible for starting it and that it is their responsibility to stop it.

"Not One Damn Dime Day" is to remind them, too, that they work for the people of the United States of America, not for the international corporations and K Street lobbyists who represent the corporations and funnel cash into American politics. "Not One Damn Dime Day" is about supporting the troops. The politicians put the troops in harm's way. Now 1, 300 brave young Americans and (some estimate) 100,000 Iraqis have died. The politicians owe our troops a plan - a way to come home.

There's no rally to attend. No marching to do. No political agenda to rant about. On "Not One Damn Dime Day" you take action by doing nothing.

You open your mouth by keeping your wallet closed. For 24 hours, nothing gets spent, not one damn dime, to remind our religious leaders and our politicians of their moral responsibility to end the war in Iraq and give America back to the people.

PS You shouldn't be going to Wal-Mart anyway.


Item Number Three:
Last but not least, the President of Harvard University says, “ ‘Research in behavioral genetics is showing that things people previously attributed to socialization weren't due to socialization after all.’ As an example, Summers told the conference about giving his daughter two trucks. She treated them like dolls, and named them mummy and daddy trucks, he said.”

http://mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-InternationalNews&ao=178124

I’m tempted to launch into a tirade of social psychology studies to prove he’s full of crap, but I think the ridiculousness speaks for itself. I know a lot of you are Harvard alums and I sincerely hope you’re as bothered by this as I am. There’s not a female Harvard grad I know who couldn’t excel in math or science academia if she so chose, but more often than not, I find they don’t so choose. Why don’t we attack that problem first. What is it about that world that turns these brilliant women away? It’s certainly not because they think mathematical proofs are dolls.

To my third grade teacher, Mr. Andrews, thanks for giving me long division problems when I got bored with multiplication, I never knew Indiana public schools were so ahead of the time.

Love,
K