Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Elections Media How Bad for Democrats? Michael Tomasky, NY Review of Books

Tags: Media Distortions Social Security Elections How Bad for Dems Repubs Know How to Win Elections

If the Republicans win control of the House, Impeachment of President Obama likely in spite of denials of some Republicans. They will shut down the government and try to roll back any laws that reduce the already massive power that corporations and the top one percent of Americans extracted from all of us.


The propaganda is hot and heavy from the corporate news channels. I have noted that just about all the news on the so-called liberal MSNBC has generally been negative towards the Democrats based on the type of questions they been asking of Democrats as guests. The slant is subtle, but the way propaganda works best is by which questions are asked and not asked.


EXTRA! October 2010, www.fair.org Excerpts: … For example, Jonathan Karl, a conservative groomed to join the so-called mainstream media has been criticizing the Obama administration about the stimulus bill on ABC’s Morning Show. 8/3/10 For example, he criticized giving money to revamp the closed visitor center to Mt. Helen volcano. He neglected to emphasize that the reason for the small grant is to fix it up for sale.


Another example was his criticism of the stimulus bill providing money for the study of one type of ant as if all scientific studies serve no purpose and a waste of money. He neglected to tell us that this new ant can devastate the food crops in California if not controlled!


Mike Anton of the Los Angeles Times 8/3/10 reported that the argument that Judge Vaughan used in his detailed ruling should not overturn the voters wish who passed Proposition 8 which stopped Gay marriages passed by the California legislature. Anton did note that the Constitution designed to protect the rights of individuals against the majority is one of the oldest conflicts in the nations. Anton “forgot” to make comments explaining why it is in the Constitution and it is the law of the land!


I have repeated many times that one sided anti-President Chavez reporting by Romero of the New York Times. The NY Times praised the short lived overthrown of a Democratic government in Venezuela as the Times praised many of our so-called legitimate “interventions” in Central and South America. The major reason is Oil and Minerals.


Extra! Criticized the reporting by Romero deceptively saying that Venezuela had four times more civilian deaths than Iraq in 2009. “Its more like comparing apples to alligators! Of course the deaths in Iraq are known to be at least three times this number, especially in more remote Western Iraq where we can kill with impunity. Many of the deaths in Venezuela is due to drug gang violence.


Not ever mentioned in the corporate news media is that Wall Street is really after the trillions of dollars in the Social Security USA Treasury Bonds by privatizing Social Security. Extra! Explains this clearly in the link below.


Extra! October 2010


‘Saving’ Social Security From Its Previous Rescue

The multi-trillion surplus that must never, ever be used


By Jim Naureckas http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=4161


Jim Kawakami, October 12, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

Elections How Bad for Democrats? Michael Tomasky, NY Review of Books


Excerpt … My own answer to the question of how things got this bad has less to do with whether Obama should have been more liberal or more centrist than with his and his party’s apparent inability, or perhaps refusal, to offer broad and convincing arguments about their central beliefs that counter those of the Republicans. This problem goes back to the Reagan years. It is a failure that many Democrats and liberals hoped Obama could change—something he seemed capable of changing during the campaign but has addressed rather poorly once in office.


In American politics, Republicans routinely speak in broad themes and tend to blur the details, while Democrats typically ignore broad themes and focus on details. Republicans, for example, speak constantly of “liberty” and “freedom” and couch practically all their initiatives—tax cuts, deregulation, and so forth—within these large categories. Democrats, on the other hand, talk more about specific programs and policies and steer clear of big themes. There is a reason for this: Republican themes, like “liberty,” are popular, while Republican policies often are not; and Democratic themes (“community,” “compassion,” “justice”) are less popular, while many specific Democratic programs—Social Security, Medicare, even (in many polls) putting a price on carbon emissions—have majority support. This is why, when all else fails, Democrats try to scare people about the threat to Social Security if the GOP takes over, as indeed they are doing right now.

What Democrats have typically not done well since Reagan’s time is connect their policies to their larger beliefs. In fact they have usually tried to hide those beliefs, or change the conversation when the subject arose. The result has been that for many years Republicans have been able to present their philosophy as somehow truly “American,” while attacking the Democratic belief system as contrary to American values. “Putting us on the road to European-style socialism,” for example, is a rhetorical line of attack that long predates Obama’s ascendance—it was employed against the Clintons’ health care plan as well.

But now consider the specific problems facing Obama, a mixed-race (but visibly black) man with an exotic name and a highly atypical biography for a president. Add in also the greatest economic crisis in eight decades, and governmental responses to the crisis that, to an energized and organized right wing, seem to smack of socialism. One result is that we have a new faction, the well-financed Tea Party movement that has been able to arrogate to itself practically every symbol of Americanism and to paint the President, his ideas and policies, and his supporters as not merely un-American but actively anti-American. In a Newsweek poll released in late August, nearly a third of Americans actually agreed that it was “definitely” or “probably” true that Obama “sympathizes with the goals of Islamic fundamentalists who want to impose Islamic law around the world.”2

In the face of all this, it seems not to have occurred to a single prominent Democrat, from Obama on down, to say something like: We love our country every bit as much as they do, and we believe patriotism means expanding access to health care, protecting the environment, and imposing effective new rules on Wall Street. Democrats have thus crippled themselves by adapting comparatively limited ideas of legitimate political action, and by ceding to Republicans the strong claim of love of one’s country.

This is not the sort of thing that is measured by polls, but I believe the Democrats’ hesitance to tie their programs to larger beliefs has been demoralizing to liberals and confusing or off-putting to independents. The impression is left with voters that Republicans are fighting for the country, while Democrats are fighting for their special interests. The pre-presidential Obama powerfully made this kind of broad, patriotic appeal, both at his 2004 convention keynote address and in his stirring Jefferson-Jackson Day speech in Iowa in November 2007. But any sense that the Democrats are now making a coherent argument about what kind of country they want has vaporized. Underneath all the Democrats’ bickering about such issues as health care and the performance of Tim Geithner, that is their real problem.

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2010/oct/28/elections-how-bad-democrats/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=Emailmarketingsoftware&utm_content=92435620&utm_campaign=October282010issue&utm_term=TheElectionsHowBadforDemocrats

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Supreme Court Chemerinsky, LA Times Increased Corporate Power, Lowered Defendant Rights, Remedies for Segregation

Tags: Supreme Court Books, Law and Justice, Assault on Constitution, Making Our Democracy Work, Nine


Jeffrey Toobin’s “The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court is the easiest to book on the Supreme Court to read and understand and to enjoy how the various characters in the Supreme Court make decisions based on their ideology and so called logic.

Making Our Democracy Work: A Judge's View I watched Justice Stephen Breyer talk about his book on C-Span’s http://www.BookTV.org Very impressive.


Book review: 'The Conservative Assault on the Constitution' by Erwin Chemerinsky

When I lived in Los Angeles for almost ten years before I emigrated to Eugene, Oregon, I listened to Chemerinsky’s talking on radio many times and reading his columns in the Los Angeles Times. Even though he is called a Liberal, I know he is really a moderate or as the media often uses left leaning. We saw in the British Empire that law without justice serves only those with wealth and power.

Many of us know that governments are often formed throughout history to serve the interests of the wealthy and powerful. Who wrote our Constitution? The rich and powerful. Benjamin Franklin walked out of the Constitutional Convention because he realized that forming the Senate as the Convention did kept control of government for the rich and powerful. How prescient Ben Franklin has been is reflected in how our government allows the top 1 percent of our peoples to make more money than the bottom 90 percent of Americans!

Most of our true wages taking inflation into account has been the same since the early 1970s while the average CEO makes 500 times greater wages than they typical worker in the company. The CEOs who make the most money fire the most employees.

Ironically, when we become fearful because we don’t know if we can survive, we believe the Republicans who were mainly responsible for our problems because Repubs know how to win elections by getting money from corporations to steal all the advertising on television. The lie, lie, and lie with a straight face and keep repeating them to make us fearful of Democrats.

President Obama inherited this economy from the Bush Republicans running two wars, two huge tax cuts for the rich, and Medicare Advantage with huge subsidies to the drug companies and Health Insurance Companies. Cost? About a $880 million to one billion dollars when all the bills came in. All the money was borrowed. Bush accumulated Three Trillion Dollars in debt from a Surplus in 2,000 with counting all the lifetime medical care required for veterans who were sent to war without armoured vehicles!

Before the Gore-Bush 2,000 Presidential Election, I happened to be flipping channels and could not remove my eyes from C-Span which had a live meeting of judicial scholars examining the question of what effect this election will have on the Supreme. One judicial expert after another said it would be enormous!

The big shock to me was that John Stossel of ABC News, a Libertarian, was presiding over the long session! Both conservative and more liberal commentators discussed this in detail.

We now know that our whole society has been affected by the decisions made by the Roberts court thanks to Sandra Day O’Conner retiring to take care of her husband and putting Alito in her place. Most people who took the time to read the Constitution which is very short and many times vague. The assumption was that the Constitutional interpretation will depend on the society wishes in the future.

The Courts and the Republican Party successfully converted our society from communities and corporate responsibility to one which follows the philosophy of Ayn Rand of everyone does what is best only for themselves and f--k everyone else. Our social structure has already crumbled to a large extent and repairing our society may no longer be possible. For all its faults, at least other countries think of what best for their nation while we think of is what is best for profits.

Jim Kawakami, Oct 10, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

Making Our Democracy Work: A Judge's View [Hardcover] Amazon.com


Stephen Breyer (Author) The Supreme Court is one of the most extraordinary institutions in our system of government. Charged with the responsibility of interpreting the Constitution, the nine unelected justices of the Court have the awesome power to strike down laws enacted by our elected representatives. Why does the public accept the Court’s decisions as legitimate and follow them, even when those decisions are highly unpopular? What must the Court do to maintain the public’s faith? How can the Court help make our democracy work? These are the questions that Justice Stephen Breyer tackles in this groundbreaking book.


Today we assume that when the Court rules, the public will obey. But Breyer declares that we cannot take the public’s confidence in the Court for granted. He reminds us that at various moments in our history, the Court’s decisions were disobeyed or ignored. And through investigations of past cases, concerning the Cherokee Indians, slavery, and Brown v. Board of Education, he brilliantly captures the steps—and the missteps—the Court took on the road to establishing its legitimacy as the guardian of the Constitution.


Justice Breyer discusses what the Court must do going forward to maintain that public confidence and argues for interpreting the Constitution in a way that works in practice. He forcefully rejects competing approaches that look exclusively to the Constitution’s text or to the eighteenth-century views of the framers. Instead, he advocates a pragmatic approach that applies unchanging constitutional values to ever-changing circumstances—an approach that will best demonstrate to the public that the Constitution continues to serve us well. The Court, he believes, must also respect the roles that other actors—such as the president, Congress, administrative agencies, and the states—play in our democracy, and he emphasizes the Court’s obligation to build cooperative relationships with them.


Finally, Justice Breyer examines the Court’s recent decisions concerning the detainees held at Guantánamo Bay, contrasting these decisions with rulings concerning the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II. He uses these cases to show how the Court can promote workable government by respecting the roles of other constitutional actors without compromising constitutional principles.


Making Our Democracy Work is a tour de force of history and philosophy, offering an original approach to interpreting the Constitution that judges, lawyers, and scholars will look to for many years to come. And it further establishes Justice Breyer as one of the Court’s greatest intellectuals and a leading legal voice of our time.


Book review: 'The Conservative Assault on the Constitution' by Erwin Chemerinsky

The influential legal scholar's evidence includes the court's role in resegregating many schools, the expansion of presidential powers and the weakening of criminal defendants' rights.

Tim Rutten, LA Times Oct 6, 2010, http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-rutten-20101006,0,4322009.story Southern Californians with a taste for politics or public policy probably know Erwin Chemerinsky best as the reliably liberal voice in countless left-right radio and television debates about timely legal questions or as a key contributor to Los Angeles charter reform efforts. Far fewer will be familiar with his day job as an influential legal scholar — author of a widely used textbook on the Constitution and professor of that subject at USC, Duke and, most recently, UC Irvine's School of Law, where he is also founding dean.

"The Conservative Assault on the Constitution" is his urgent, admirably lucid amalgam of both those roles, along with Chemerinsky's first-hand experience as an advocate arguing before the U.S. Supreme Court and a wide variety of lower appellate panels. He introduces his argument, in fact, with a nicely detailed anecdotal account of his appearance before the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of Leandro Andrade, a man sentenced to life in prison under California's draconian three strikes statute for shoplifting videotapes worth $153. Despite Chemerinsky's advocacy, a court divided 5 to 4 upheld Andrade's conviction, making him the first man in U.S. history imprisoned for life for petty theft.


By the author's reckoning, the process that produced the florid injustice of Lockyer vs. Andrade began in 1968, when Richard Nixon made criticism of the Warren Court a centerpiece of the successful presidential campaign that ultimately enabled him to name four Supreme Court justices. "Since 1968," Chemerinsky writes, "conservatives have sought to remake constitutional law and they largely have succeeded. They initially set out to overturn the decisions of the Warren Court, but soon began to aggressively pursue a vision of constitutional law that consistently favors government power over individual rights … and the interests of businesses over individual employees and consumers. Because decisions come one at a time over years and because the Court never overruled the Roe v. Wade abortion decision (though it came within one vote of doing so), it is easy to underestimate how successful the conservative assault on the Constitution has been."


With that thesis as a starting point, Chemerinsky briskly moves from topic to topic in a clear but lawyerly fashion, building the evidence for his argument. Thus, there are chapters on the court's role in resegregating so many of the nation's schools, on the dramatic expansion of presidential powers, on the ongoing erosion of criminal defendants' rights, on denial of due process and the general diminution of individual liberties. Many of these chapters are enlivened by journalistic accounts of the author's first-hand experience participating in such consequential cases as Bush vs. Gore and the Texas Ten Commandments suit. Chemerinsky has a born teacher's gift for evoking context, which he does with particular effect when he explores the interplay of electoral politics and the contention over separation of church and state.


The author strongly indicts the court's conservative majority for its decision in Bush vs. Gore because he believes the justices were wrong on the law — and not for their activism. To the contrary, Chemerinsky believes that our political conversation's false choice between judicial activism and neutral or "strict construction" judging has obscured the Supreme Court's authoritarian drift. The Constitution, he argues, requires interpretation — and has since the earliest days of the Republic, when the Framers still were engaged in national government — and interpretation is inherently an active process.


"The difference between liberals and conservatives," he writes, "is not in their willingness to overrule precedent or in their degree of deference to popularly elected officials or to make momentous decisions affecting society. The divergence is entirely about when they want the court to do this and for what purpose. The other difference is in their rhetoric; conservatives continue to rail against judicial activism and profess judicial restraint even though they are every bit as willing to be activist as liberals."


Chemerinsky argues that another of the fictions that needs to be dispelled involves the confirmation process for Supreme Court justices and the notion that it's somehow illicit to inquire into the nominees' ideological inclinations or views on Constitutional interpretation. It's not only a pious, rather convenient dodge, but a recently minted one. George Washington, for example, had a nominee for chief justice rejected on ideological grounds, and the practice was common throughout the 19th century and well into the 20th. The author points out that both conservative and liberal nominees recently have been all too willing to take refuge behind the prim new standard.


In place of what Vice President Joe Biden has labeled legislative kabuki, Chemerinsky argues for vigorous questioning of nominees regarding their ideological views and approach to constitutional interpretation. Although it's clearly undesirable to have senators ask nominees how they might rule on pending cases, the author endorses what he calls the "elegant" suggestion by two Yale law professors that prospective justices be asked how they would have voted on previous cases and why. Such an approach wouldn't divorce the court from politics — nor Chemerinsky would argue could it — but it would inject a welcome note of honesty and roll back the clouds of pious obfuscation that surround so much of what the court majority really is about.


To conclude his argument over why the conservative assault on the Constitution matters as deeply as it does, Chemerinsky talks about how the first assignment he gives his constitutional law students is to read the U.S. Constitution alongside the one adopted by the Soviet Union under Stalin. "My students," he writes, "are always surprised to see that the Soviet constitution has a far more elaborate statement of rights than the American Constitution. I also assign them to read a description of life in the gulags. I ask how can it be that a country with such detailed statements of rights in its constitution could have such horrible abuses.


"The answer is that in the Soviet Union no court had the power to strike down any government action. Judicial review … is at the core of enforcing the Constitution and ensuring our freedom."


In an election cycle awash in fictional, delusional and genuinely demented notions about the Constitution, Chemerinsky's book is a welcome dose of real history, clear thought and genuine respect for the rule of law as a humane covenant.


timothy.rutten@latimes.com


… During the first years of the Roberts court, it has ruled consistently in favor of corporate power, such as in holding that corporations have the First Amendment right to spend unlimited amounts in independent political campaigns. For the first time in American history, the high court has struck down laws regulating firearms as violations of the Second Amendment and held that the Constitution protects a right of individuals to possess guns.

It has dramatically cut back on the rights of criminal defendants, especially as to the exclusion of evidence gained through illegal searches and seizures under the Fourth Amendment and the protections of the Fifth Amendment’s privilege against self-­incrimination. It has limited greatly the ability of the government to formulate remedies for the segregation of public schools. It has expanded significantly the power of the government to regulate abortions. …

On the issues that today define the ideological continuum, these four justices are as conservative as any in American history. Their views are best understood far more by reading the 2008 Republican Party platform than by studying the views of the Constitution’s framers. …

There is no reason to think that this term will be any different as the court considers major issues concerning the separation of church and state, the ability of states to regulate immigration and the rights of criminal defendants. And in the following term or two, the court will be asked to consider such major issues as the constitutionality of the federal health care bill, the ban on marriage equality for gays and lesbians, and Arizona’s law requiring state and local police to enforce federal immigration laws. … http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-chemerinsky-scotus-20101004,0,3541336.story

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Did Not Like Comedic Video by Italian Comedian: If wee had an Italian President from NJ

Tags: Stereotyping American-Italians Not Funny. Comedic Video? White Americans Lost Its Mind? Michael Parenti

Kawakami: I didn't know we had Italian comedians. I normally don't watch Mafia shows on TV, even Sopranos.


For reasons I don't understand, American-Italian politicians tend to be Far Right Wing. The Cuomo Family is an outstanding exception.


I did not find him funny and did not even crack a smile because it stereotyped New Jersey Italians. Link: Bottom of Page.


This article in the current Village Voice explains what is happening quite well in a long article. Jim



White America Has Lost Its Mind

By Steven Thrasher Village Voice Wednesday, Sep 29 2010


About 12:01 on the afternoon of January 20, 2009, the white American mind began to unravel. Will someone please throw a butterfly net over Palin, Limbaugh, Beck, DeLay, and Schlessinger? It had been a pretty good run up to that point. The brains of white folks had been humming along cogently for near on 400 years on this continent, with little sign that any serious trouble was brewing.


White people, after all, had managed to invent a spiffy new form of self-government so that all white men (and, eventually, women) could have a say in how white people were taxed and governed. White minds had also nearly universally occupied just about every branch of that government and, for more than two centuries, had kept sole possession of the leadership of its executive branch (whose parsonage, after all, is called the White House).


But when that streak was broken—and, for the first time, a nonwhite president accepted the oath of office—white America rapidly began to lose its grip. … http://www.villagevoice.com/2010-09-29/news/white-america-has-lost-its-mind/

My favorite American-Italian who grew up in New Jersey is Michael Parenti. Home Page http://www.michaelparenti.org/index.html Next to Noam Chomsky, he has the greatest books describing how our Coercive Capitalist System works. He has written many great books, but his most famous which he used to teach his former Yale college class is Democracy for the Few which he has seven editions at least. I have his sixth which came out in 1995. His books are very expensive, a way the establishment to limit readers, so bought the much cheaper used version. Its about 300 pages in a paperback edition.


Each revision results in a better book which is both shorter, up-to-date, and better written. He is a superb writer. Parenti grew up in a close-net very Italian Blue Collar family. He got his Ph.D. at Yale and did work for a while as a professor until he was selling enough of his well written books and popular books to make his living writing books and giving lectures to sell his books. Of course the New York Times never reviews his books.


I strongly recommend reading one of his books. Below are some of his quotes: http://www.michaelparenti.org/quotes.html

I have put my favorites in bold type. Sample of Michael Parenti quotations:



“Conventional opinions fit so comfortably into the dominant paradigm as to be seen not as opinions but as statements of fact, as 'the nature of things.' The very efficacy of opinion manipulation rests on the fact that we do not know we are being manipulated. The most insidious forms of oppression are those that so insinuate themselves into our communication universe and the recesses of our minds that we do not even realize they are acting upon us. The most powerful ideologies are not those that prevail against all challengers but those that are never challenged because in their ubiquity they appear as nothing more than the unadorned truth.”

“Global warming is already acting upon us with an accelerated feedback and compounded effect that may be irreversible! We do not have eons or centuries or many decades. Most of us alive today may not even have the luxury of saying 'Après moi, le déluge' because we will be around to experience it ourselves. And if you think it will be 'interesting' or 'exciting,' ask the tsunami survivors if that’s how they felt. This time the plutocratic drive to 'accumulate, accumulate, accumulate' may take all of us down, once and forever.”



“Ecology's implications for capitalism are too momentous for the capitalist to contemplate. [The plutocrats] are more wedded to their wealth than to the Earth upon which they live, more concerned with the fate of their fortunes than with the fate of humanity. The present ecological crisis has been created by the few at the expense of the many. In other words, the struggle over environmentalism is part of the class struggle itself, a fact that seems to have escaped many environmentalists but is well understood by the plutocrats---which is why they are unsparing in their derision and denunciations of the 'eco-terrorists' and 'tree huggers.' ”


“In societies that worship money and success, the losers become objects of scorn. Those who work the hardest for the least are called lazy. Those forced to live in substandard housing are thought to be the authors of substandard lives. Those who do not finish high school or cannot afford to go to college are considered deficient or inept.”

“The goal of a good society is to structure social relations and institutions so that cooperative and generous impulses are rewarded, while antisocial ones are discouraged. The problem with capitalism is that it best rewards the worst part of us: ruthless, competitive, conniving, opportunistic, acquisitive drives, giving little reward and often much punishment -- or at least much handicap -- to honesty, compassion, fair play, many forms of hard work, love of justice, and a concern for those in need.”



If we had an Italian President from NJ...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Avw0n9b2o9U










Dudley: Debate Reveals His Plan Help Rich, Tax Us

Tags: Dudley: Debate Reveals His Plan Help Rich, Tax Us To Make-Up Holes in Budget

I watched the TV debate between Governor Kitzhaber and Dudley. Dudley blamed Kitzhaber in his popular two term governorship for not passing certain laws. Dudley did not know that it was his Republican pals that prevented the passive of some very good laws such as the rainy day fund. Kitzhaber looked like the governor while Dudley looked like a new employee knowing little about Oregon by not living here and avoiding taxes.


Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her fellow Democrats passed over 400 minor and major laws. But almost all have not been considered by the Senate even though many were passed with enthusiastic support by House Republicans! The Republican Senate using the 60 vote rule has stopped or tried to stop almost every bill up for consideration. About the only bill they did not try to stop is the Bailout of Wall Street.


If the Republicans get control of the House, they have said they will not pass one bill but investigate the Democrats and try to Impeach President Obama. The Republicans also scared the Democrats into not expressing pride at passing the Healthcare Bill which is very popular when the people know what is in the bill.


Republicans are better at campaigning because they have billionaires giving them loads of television ad money and hiring the best public relation psychologists to fool the American people about the Democrats and about what they are really planning to do. We still do not know the extent of the harm that Bush/Cheney/Republicans did to our country because they kept everything secret. Our drinking water quality has gone down so much that most health officials recommend at least using a filter for tap water. Bottled water in many cases come from tap water, sometimes untreated. It's a scam.


It is no accident that we had lots of bad drugs approved by Bush's FDA with a Big Pharma lobbyist in power giving us bad drugs and contaminated foods, including Avandia for diabetes drug and pain medication Vioxx which could kill or make people really sick.


Bush/Cheney put corporate lobbyist in charge of regulating our health and safety heads. Many of them were former lobbyists for Healthcare, Oil, Coal, Metals, Big Agriculture Food Companies, and the like. The CEO who ignored safety regulations is on the Board of the Chamber of Commerce, a Republican and Big Business and so-called small businesses with 70,000 employees. They mean private companies with a small number of owners such as Hedge Funds, Lawyers, and oil companies such as Koch Brothers, billionaires who have donated a large part or 97% of Karl Rove's Republican slush fund to win races in Oregon, California, and other states.


Democrats got almost all their donations from Americans donating less than $200. How many? 95 percent! Republicans got almost all their money from corporations after our corporate Republican Supreme Court made corporations people who can donate any amount of money in the Citizens United Case this year!


Yes! Elections have consequences!


Jim Kawakami, October 5, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com

Olbermann on Dudley: "That's a rich former athlete explaining how he's going to keep everybody else poor."

Kari Chisholm


Here in Oregon, it's easy to think that what's happening in Oregon isn't connected to what's happening around the rest of the country.

But tonight, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann connected the dots between Republican candidates all across the country. From Senate candidates - like Joe Miller (AK), Linda McMahon (CT), John Raese (WV), Dino Rossi (WA) - to gubernatorial candidates - Bill Brady (IL), Tom Emmer (MN), and... Chris Dudley of Oregon.

In fact, Dudley comes in for the strongest opprobrium from Olbermann: "That's a rich former athlete explaining how he's going to keep everybody else poor."

Oh, and a bit of an aside: We're doing the happy dance here at BlueOregon -- as Olbermann cited Jesse Cornett's 9/21 column in his report.

Here's the video. Dudley appears at 2:45 (though you should watch the open, too.)

http://www.blueoregon.com/2010/10/olbermann-dudley-s-rich-former-athlete-explaining-how-hes-going-keep-everybody-else-poor/


On the jump, the full transcript of the bit about Dudley...

Chris Dudley also has a problem with "waitresses." The Oregon gubernatorial candidate made headlines last month when he said that "it doesn't make sense that our waitresses are getting tips plus the highest minimum wage in the country."

How high is the Oregon minimum wage Dudley has a problem with? $8.50 an hour.

The website BlueOregon reporting this means an average salary of 35 to 50 thousand dollars, well below the 450,000 that is the minimum wage for Dudley's old job in the NBA.

Why haven't you heard about this from Republicans? Ask Dudley:

(Dudley, on tape): I'm not going to make a forefront campaign issue out of it, because it's something that I think is a hot button that people don't really understand. But at some point - I'm well aware of the issue.

That's a rich former athlete explaining how he's going to keep everybody else poor.

I couldn't say it better myself. Thanks, Keith! http://countdown.msnbc.com

Countdown: 5:00 PM and 8:00 PM Daily . Also don't miss Rachel Maddow at 6:00 PM and 9:00 PM Second showings Monday-Thursday and not on Friday. http://maddowblog.msnbc.com Also on Satellite radio stations.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Autism Causes Vitamin D Deficiency Highly Correlated Sunscreen Use Affluent

Tags: Autism, Vitamin D deficiency, High Correlation Sunscreens, Affluent, Less Sun States, Feeble Minds

When I discovered accidentally that just 15 minutes of strong sunshine can result in up to 22,000 IU of vitamin D production in our skin more than three years ago, I was concerned that the heavy use of sunscreens may be hurting our health. I started to do a google search and found only very little published research. Only in the last several years did I find many publications on the wonderful effect of the hormone activated in our kidneys!

I have suggested for some time that there may be a correlation between Autism and Vitamin D deficiency. This is the first publication I have seen regarding this possibility. I tend to do my thinking of new things by correlating apparently different areas of research to solve problems in research. Here, Dr. Cannell http://vitamindcouncil.org does this with the correlation between the lowering of blood levels of vitamin D metabolite and Autism.


Although this article gets quite technical, I excerpted parts of this article so the intelligent lay person can understand what Dr. Cannell is trying to tell all of us. The correlation evidence for deficiency of vitamin D is quite strong, many of which I have articulated in the past. What Cannell does well is bring the detailed medical information needed to strengthen the correlation between less sunlight and Autism.


I am one of the few that ignored the consensus in the 1980s to wear sunscreens all the time. My concern then is that with sunscreen I may stay in the sun too long and get overexposed to UVA, the more likely melanoma source which penetrates our skin easily to mutate the melanin precursor. Melanoma mushroomed in both Australia and Sweden in the 1980s which increased my concern. I tried to get researchers at my lab to work on a UVA block, but like most conventional scientists, they stuck with the consensus.


A similar example is the fairly good evidence that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is starting increase the temperature of the oceans and earth by reflecting the heat accumulated during the day back to earth. Venus is 800 degrees Fahrenheit and its atmosphere is all carbon dioxide and some sulfuric acid which tends to block the sun. It was once called an earth equivalent.


The data for global warming was quite strong 40 years ago! Now essentially 100 percent of climate scientists not connected to the oil industry know we are getting very close to the point of no return. That temperature is when carbon dioxide and methane are released massively from the permafrost in the arctic regions. Further warming will also release massive amounts of carbon dioxide from our oceans. Oil drilling in the Gulf is already pumping both carbon dioxide and methane (natural gas) into our atmosphere!


Unlike what we hear from the pundits about Jimmy Carter’s speech before the election, his speech about cutting down the use of oil was accepted by most Americans. We would have had a much different world of morality instead of immorality as practiced now by everyone.


Jim Kawakami, October 4, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com


Correlation of Possible Causes of Autism

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1651-2227.2010.01883.x/pdf

John J. Cannell, MD, Atascadero State Hospital-Psychiatry, Atascadero, CA


Excerpts: I have suggested that the primary environmental trigger for autism is not vaccinations, toxins or infections, but gestational and early childhood vitamin D deficiency (1,2). Subsequently, the title of an article in Scientific American recently asked, ‘What if vitamin D deficiency is a cause of autism?’ (3) Since then, an article on vitamin D and autism in Acta Paediatrica (4) and the accompanying commentary (5) have added to the accelerating suspicion that vitamin D deficiency – either during pregnancy or early childhood – may be an environmental trigger for the genetic disease of autism. …


Among 117 adult psychiatric outpatients is Sweden with various diagnoses, the 10 patients with autism had the lowest vitamin D levels of any of the groups studied, a mean of 12 ng ⁄ mL (31 nM) …


Both papers describe ‘weak mindedness,’ ‘feeble minds,’ ‘mental dullness,’ unresponsiveness and developmental delays. Even more intriguing, both papers report that the mental condition in rickets improved with vitamin D.


Another of the mysteries of autism is the apparent increased incidence of autism in the children of richer college educated parents, especially women, a finding announced a few months ago (12). Actually, this is not a new finding.


As I discussed in my (2007) original paper, this has been known since the early 1980s but was dismissed as being because of ascertainment bias. This very recent report correlates well with a 2007 CDC report (13), which found a similar increased risk for the wealthy and well-educated. …


If the vitamin D theory is true, autism should be more common in richer well-educated mothers, who are more likely than other mothers to practice sun avoidance and use sunblock (1,2). …


If the vitamin D theory is true, autism should be more common in richer well-educated mothers, who are more likely than other mothers to practice sun avoidance and use sunblock (1,2). …


Nevertheless, three of four recent U.S. studies found a higher incidence of autism in black children, sometimes appreciably higher (1,2). …


Autistic boys have unexplained reductions in metacarpal bone thickness (15). At some time in their life, these children laid down less cortical bone than normal children, a finding consistent with undetected and untreated childhood or even intrauterine vitamin D deficiency. …


Yet another recent paper reported that the prevalence of autism in 3 U.S. states was higher in areas of higher precipitation and clouds (16). The 2005 autism prevalence rate among school-aged children, after controlling for differences in population size, demographic characteristics, per capita income and state, was higher in cloudy areas. …

Finally, a 2008 paper reported that autism was more common among mothers who took anti-epileptic drugs (19). A comment to the authors (20) detailed the evidence that anti-epileptic drugs are one of the few classes of drugs that consistently and significantly interfere with vitamin D metabolism, lowering 25(OH)D levels. …


The vitamin D theory of autism does not diminish genetic contributions to autism occurrence. Indeed, without the genetic tendency for autism, I suspect that severe maternal or early childhood vitamin D deficiency may cause bone abnormalities, as referenced above, with no evidence autism. All that the current epidemic of maternal and early childhood vitamin D deficiency does, with its resultant neural deficiency in the pluripotent neurosteroid calcitriol, is to allow the genetic tendency for autism to express itself.


If this theory is true, the path towards effective prevention – and perhaps a treatment effect if adequate physiological doses of vitamin D are given – is so simple, so safe, so inexpensive, so readily available and so easy, that it defies imagination. Seventeen vitamin D experts recently stated, ‘In our opinion, children with chronic illnesses such as autism, diabetes and⁄or frequent infections should be supplemented with higher doses of sunshine or vitamin D3, doses adequate to maintain their 25(OH)D levels in the mid-normal of the reference range [65 ng ⁄ mL (162 nmol ⁄ L)] –and should be so supplemented year round.’ (22) (65 ng times 2.5 = 162 nmoles/L.


Sunday, October 3, 2010

Politics Power & Wealth Keeping Facts from Americans Leads to Control

Tags: Politics, Power, Wealth, Control, Keeping the Public Ignorant, Wen Jiabao, Zakaria, Clinton, Quigley

Zakaria CNN Interviews China’s Premier Wen Jiabao, Engineer, Geologists


http://www.cnn.com/CNN/Programs/fareed.zakaria.gps/


Premier Wen Jiabao doesn’t interview Western Journalists very often. The last time was when Fareed interviewed him 2 years ago. Jiabao speaks perfect English, but in this interview on Sunday he spoke in Mandarin. Premier Wen is very well read of English works such as Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith. Wen pointed out that Fareed did not understand how China was running the economy. As I knew, Wen is trying to give a safety net to a large majority of Chinese who are living a life worst than subsistence due to China’s form of Capitalism which favored government owned factories.


Many living in most of China no longer have free schools and healthcare and cannot afford the money for these so-called services. Because the Chinese government controls the media and newspapers, very little of what is going on gets out because of restrictions put on Western reporters. We get the news, but few realize that our news is also tainted by corporations and government. Sure we have more freedom here to know what is happening, but it takes effort.


Always remember that Fareed Zakaria is a member of the establishment with a Ph.D. From Harvard under Samuel Huntington who wrote the infamous document “Crisis in Democracy” in 1975 for the Trilateral Commission heads of states and supporting cast of the “right” CEOs, journalists and professors in the USA, Europe, and Japan to control “Democracy” because of the freedom and the exposure of our CIA by Senator Church. Bill Clinton also had a Trilateral type of education too at Georgetown. His favorite professor, Carroll Quigley, wrote a world history book which was based on the work of the Trilateral Commission which is pushed by the Right Wing about world domination. They were right.


"Among us today a concentration of private power without equal in history is growing."

Franklin Delano Roosevelt

http://www.truthoffering.com/conspiracy/2010/4/12/the-quigley-formula.html Videos

After Jeb Bush and the Supreme Court stole the election from Al Gore in 2000, I finally decided that I should get a political education. Just logic alone without information is useless. What sounds right from the New York Times could be just the opposite. Background information is necessary to accurately interpret what is seen in newspapers, magazines, and television. Reading all points of views which I did helped me enormously. Each view looked convincing by itself if I read nothing else. With the internet and Google Scholar, you can read many books free. Then search the net to see if there are contradictory views.

One book Tragedy and Hope by Carroll Quigley, Bill Clinton’s favorite Georgetown Professor took about 6 months to get from Amazon.com because the powerful essentially removed it from circulation. I did not know then that the Right Wing websites had plenty of copies of this book to support their amazingly correct conspiracy theories about what the government and corporations wanted was a world government. They did not know that corporations control of governments was the conspiracy.

The widespread use of propaganda to control the way we think started before World War I where President Wilson successfully changed the antiwar mentality of Americans using widespread propaganda against the Huns and Unions. The top journalists approved of keeping Americans ignorant. They are too dumb to understand the information. More likely they will understand they are being screwed.

A union leader was sent to jail for ten years when he spoke against going to War. Professors lost their jobs when they spoke against the war. In spite of the Republican efforts, it is more open now, but such laws as the Patriot Act and government being able to put people including American citizens in jail without charging them or allowing lawyers to represent them or even telling their families what happened to them is still in place. No matter the Party, the powerful always wants more power and give it up reluctantly.

Here is an excerpted customer review of the book on www.amazon.com

Former President Clinton said in 1992: "...As a student at Georgetown, I heard that call clarified by a professor named Carroll Quigley, who said to us that America was the greatest country in the history of the world because our people have always believed in two things: that tomorrow can be better than today and that every one of us has a personal, moral responsibility to make it so."

Unfortunately, Dr. Quigley revealed the game plan of the elite when the elite (a shy group by nature and not at all given to republican government) didn't want it publicized. Far from wanting to hide this "network" (as he called it), Quigley was proud of it.

"I know of the operations of this network because I have studied it for twenty years and was permitted for two years, in the early 1960's, to examine its papers and secret records. I have no aversion to it or to most of its aims and have, for much of my life, been close to it and to many of its instruments. I have objected, both in the past and recently, to a few of its policies...but in general my chief difference of opinion is that it wishes to remain unknown, and I believe its role in history is significant enough to be known."

Thus, unfortunately, Tragedy and Hope was pulled from bookshelves nationwide and recalled faster than an exploding Easter Bunny, never to be published again, except for a highly abbreviated edition. But if you can pick up a copy of this book, you'll find how things often worked behind the scenes of government and the worldwide ambitions of "the network."

If you simply want to know about the network and how it operated up until this book was published, I recommend Dr. W. Cleon Skousen's "Naked Capitalist," which I believe is still in print.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Evolution What Darwin Never Knew Chimps vs Humans Genes Similar Switch On or Off Different

Tags: Evolution Brain What Darwin Never Knew Chimps Differ from Humans Which Genes Off or On

This past week I watched the two hour Nova superb repeat of What Darwin Never Knew.

I enjoyed it even more the second time!


With about half of Americans not believing evolution and about the rest not really being able to explain it in a convincing way how evolution occurs to nonbelievers. I am more and more convinced that most of us think with our emotions so the best way to explain something is through sight and sounds.


Republican Think Tanks such as the Heritage Foundation puts words into the mouth of politicians with all of them repeating the same words every chance Republicans. The herd of Democrats prefer to speak in abstract terms which goes over the head of most Americans.


The way I explain evolution is that the early embryos including humans look so similar such as having tails and gills it is possible we all had similar ancestors. The very old paddle fish with arms allowed it to escape predators by going on to land which eventually led to land animals. The whale is an example of a land animal going back to the ocean.


The most puzzling thing between the Bible’s description that all the life on earth was made by God and the incredible diversity of species of birds and other animals with very similar the same genetic makeup.

The Genome project by our government helped solve some of the mysteries of our origin. Why are we so different from Chimps when Chimps and Humans have almost a match in our DNA with ninety-nine percent being the same?


Why are there so many different species of finches on the different Galapagos Islands? The gene for beak production is the same for these birds! It turns out the timing of beak maturation has a large influence on the type of beak. For finches with short thick beaks to crush seeds on one island, the beak matures earlier. When the beak matures later, the beak is long and thin, which allows the bird to get food from flowers. What happens is that finches that can produce the right beak for the food source available survives and the others die. Eventually the survivor of the fittest does its work.


One difference between humans and chimps is that the Chimp has a much stronger bite than humans with four strong muscles attached to the bones of its skull. This knowledge led to the theory the strength of these muscles prevented the brain of chimps from developing into a larger brain because these muscles fused the brain segments together earlier to prevent the brain from expanding further.


By stacking computers together, the analysis of the genome became fast enough to make it fairly economical to look at the whole genome more carefully including the large segment of our DNA termed junk because it had no genes and is apparently not repaired as the gene section and tends to undergo more mutations.


We have the same genes for having very strong jaw muscles, but the chimp one is turned on by the switch in the junk genome which has only one amino acid difference and ours is apparently not which allowed us to grow much larger brains!


The reason taller and bigger humans have larger heads is that much of the brain is made up of muscle neurons. So if a short person has a large head such as Robert Reich, Clinton’s former Secretary of Labor and now professor at the University of California, Berkeley. Reich also wrote the Introduction to Modern Library edition of “The Wealth of Nations,” by Adam Smith. Reich’s big contribution was to make the index much more elaborate and useful.


Olbermann has a large head! Woman don’t have as much muscle neurons in their brains so it is not as large as a male, but when used, much more formidable than men’s brains.


Remember all our Homo sapiens evolved from just two thousand pre-human survivors of the ice age in the North and horrendous droughts in Africa and the survivors were left only on the shores of South Africa. Extinction happens more often than we like to think.


From page 21 of the October 2010 Scientific American.


Psychopathy, like autism, and many of the clinical disorders, is a spectrum. … Many of us are narcissistic, many of us are impulsive at some level. Many of us do all sorts of things that are at least somewhat morally wrong. We’re somewhere on the spectrum.”


Harvard University evolutionary psychologist Marc Hauser speaking at a July 2010 conference on “The New Science of Morality”


Harvard later said it had found him guilty of scientific misconduct.


Jim Kawakami, Oct 01, 2010, http://jimboguy.blogspot.com


Program Description

Earth teems with a staggering variety of animals, including 9,000 kinds of birds, 28,000 types of fish, and more than 350,000 species of beetles. What explains this explosion of living creatures—1.4 million different species discovered so far, with perhaps another 50 million to go? The source of life's endless forms was a profound mystery until Charles Darwin brought forth his revolutionary idea of natural selection.


But Darwin's radical insights raised as many questions as they answered. What actually drives evolution and turns one species into another? To what degree do different animals rely on the same genetic toolkit? And how did we evolve?


"What Darwin Never Knew" offers answers to riddles that Darwin couldn't explain. Breakthroughs in a brand-new science—nicknamed "evo devo"—are linking the enigmas of evolution to another of nature's great mysteries, the development of the embryo. NOVA takes viewers on a journey from the Galapagos Islands to the Arctic, and from the explosion of animal forms half a billion years ago to the research labs of today. Scientists are finally beginning to crack nature's biggest secrets at the genetic level. The results are confirming the brilliance of Darwin's insights while revealing clues to life's breathtaking diversity in ways the great naturalist could scarcely have imagined. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/evolution/darwin-never-knew.html $25 DVD