Amazon.com Widgets

Monday, April 28, 2008

Florida Continues its Anti-Citizen, Anti-Democracy, Anti-Constitutional Immoralities

Florida Citizens Continue to Acquiesce to Their Republican Rulers

April 28, 2008

Election Day in Florida May Look Familiar

By DAMIEN CAVE MIAMI — The League of Women Voters in Florida and its 27 local groups have helped thousands of residents register to vote over the years.

But just over a week ago, the organization’s leaders said they would have to stop their current drive because the state’s top election official planned to enforce strict deadlines and fines of up to $1,000 for groups that lose voter registration forms or turn them in late.

“We’re an all-volunteer organization,” said Dianne Wheatley-Giliotti, president of the League of Women Voters in Florida, which plans to sue. “It’s a matter of being able to protect the leagues from liability.”

Eight years after the debacle of “hanging chads,” Florida once again seems to be courting electoral trouble. A handful of laws have been passed since the 2000 presidential recount, with state officials saying they bring order to a chaotic system.

“Some say we err on the side of caution,” said Joe Pickens, a Republican from Palatka who served on the Florida House’s Ethics and Elections Committee in 2005 and 2006. “I would say that’s the place we should be.”

But Election Day may end up looking oddly familiar. According to independent elections experts at Pew’s Electionline.org and other organizations, it is now harder to vote here than in nearly every other state in the nation. Some critics predict that tens of thousands of potential voters will be kept off the rolls — many of them poor, black or Hispanic.

In many ways, the battle over the laws reflects the larger national debate over how to overhaul the election system after the 2000 recount. Congress tried to institute a uniform guide for voter registration, but the compromise legislation left many details to the states, and partisanship arose in the void. Republicans typically demanded high standards of accuracy to eliminate voter fraud, while Democrats focused on making voting as easy as possible.

Many states decided that disputes would be worked out case by case, without written rules. But more ambitious states, including Florida, responded with new policies or laws. By 2006, for example, at least 11 states had “no match, no vote” provisions, rejecting potential voters whose Social Security numbers or driver’s license numbers did not match state databases.

Civil rights groups challenged much of the new legislation in court, and they often won. But in Florida, many of the cases remain unresolved.

Three laws in particular are at issue, including a “no match, no vote” measure; the provision managing voter registration drives conducted by third parties, like the League of Women Voters; and a law that would keep a voter from correcting mistakes or omissions on a registration form in the final month before an election and would bar that person from having his or her vote counted.

Two recent federal rulings have gone in the state’s favor.

On March 25, a Federal District Court in Miami rejected a challenge to the provision on corrections and omissions.

An oversight can be as simple as failing to check what many Florida residents call the “crazy box.” It asks people to affirm: “I have not been adjudicated mentally incapacitated with respect to voting or, if I have, my competency has been restored.”

So far, about 3 percent of voter registrations collected by the Florida chapter of Acorn, a national organizing group, have lacked the required checkmarks.

In the second decision, on April 3, the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, in Atlanta, sent a case challenging the “no match, no vote” law back to a Federal District Court, reversing an earlier injunction without ruling whether the law was unconstitutional.

Other states, meanwhile, have been moving in the opposite direction. Now, 33 states allow voters to amend forms after their registration deadlines. In 2006, a judge in Washington State struck down a “no match, no vote” law, and at least six other states have abandoned similar provisions.

Election lawyers say Florida’s Republican-controlled government has introduced more restrictions on the voting process than other states since 2000 and has fought harder to keep them.

Critics say state officials are subtly trying to block new voters, many of whom tend to vote for Democrats, from participating.

“It’s really about politicians trying to game the system,” said Michael Slater, deputy director of Project Vote, a voting rights organization based in Arkansas. “They’ve done that by adding all these bureaucratic obstacles to voting, and then when people can’t jump over them, they blame the voter.”

Gov. Charlie Crist of Florida, a Republican, sidestepped specific questions about the state’s approach.

“We want to have as many people vote as want to vote that are legally registered to vote,” Mr. Crist said. He also offered to “do some campaigning to encourage people to register to vote.”

Some volunteers actually registering voters are not pleased. The Florida statute governing such groups is somewhat unusual. Besides Florida, only New Mexico assesses fines on them. The law is also a second try.

The first effort, in 2006, called for fines of up to $5,000 per form, but it was struck down in federal court after the League of Women Voters filed suit.

The state appealed but in the meantime passed an amended law, cutting the fines but keeping some original elements in place. A “standstill agreement” between the state and the plaintiffs kept the new law from being enforced, until Secretary of State Kurt S. Browning gave notice of his plans in court documents in late March. In a statement, his office said it was obligated to enforce the new law.

His office said it had not started assessing penalties. It has also acknowledged that the law is vague on whether the cap of $1,000 would apply to an entire organization, a chapter or individual volunteers.

Ms. Wheatley-Giliotti of the League of Women Voters said her group’s roughly 3,000 members could not risk paying the fines. The organization stopped helping voters register for the first time in 2006, before a federal judge struck down the original law that August.

Now, she said, the group must stop again because some local leagues have a budget of only $1,000.

Ms. Wheatley-Giliotti said: “I just believe it’s making it much more difficult for many sectors of the population to register. It’s groups like the League of Women Voters that take extra steps so that seniors, the poor, the underrepresented have an opportunity to register to vote conveniently.”

Christine Jordan Sexton contributed reporting from Tallahassee, Fla.

Online NYT article here.

Labels: , , , ,

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Reminder: Some of the Lies of Conservatism, McCain, Republicans

I couldn't help but post this memorable quote from a Washington Post Politics online chat discussing working class voter issues (Who is the Working Class, Anyway?):
Misconceptions: Bush before he became president had less money budgeted for the military and military families than did either Gore or, subsequently, Kerry -- both of whom actually served in a combat zone. Yet military folks voted overwhelmingly for Bush. I bring this up because more and more we see that the reality of what the candidates do flies in the face of what people believe.

Hardly a day goes by that a conservative doesn't say "I'm here to show that the liberals are wrong about there being class warfare between the rich and the poor." Yet, through each Republican administration, the gap between those with wealth and those without widens.

Republicans use every bit of evidence of wealth on the liberal side to say: "They are wealthy. We're just like you, we're not the intellectually elitist. Wouldn't you rather sit down to a beer and barbecue with us?"

Having been born and raised in the country in both the public and private school system, I have been troubled by one question: Since when did stupidity become a virtue in the U.S.?
It pairs very well with this Prescott, Ariz. chatter's reminder of John McCain's actual history of lies, flip-flopping, hypocrisy and unethical behaviors instead of his mythological persona promulgated by the mainstream and right-wing press:
  • Left his ill first wife after multiple affairs; [must have given advice to Newt 'scumbag' Gingrich]
  • participated in the "Keating 5" scandal;
  • gotten so friendly with a young and blonde lobbyist that his staffers felt they had to intervene;
  • [does] legislative favors for the clients of said lobbyist;
  • voted against the "Bush tax cuts" then later supported them;
  • actively courted the support, and made campaign appearances of a man who calls the Catholic Church the "great whore" [personal note: it should actually be called One More Woman-Hating Church of Child Rapists and Pedophiles];
  • constantly blurred the difference between Shia and Sunni Muslims even while claiming that foreign policy is his strong suit;
  • admitted he didn't know much about economics.
Timothy Noah: You forgot, "Gave a speech this week about what he was going to do for the working class and then announced tax cuts that benefit almost exclusively the rich."

Here is the full transcript of chat with Timothy Noah of Slate's Chatterbox' and here's his online article .

Technorati Tags:


Labels: , , , , , , ,

Monday, April 14, 2008

They're back. MacHeist has a new bundle for mac users.

Passing along this new offering update from MacHeist:


With 12 great applications at over an 80% discount
, the MacHeist directorate is featuring an amazing software sale you can't let pass you by.

iClip, CoverSutra, Awaken, Cha-Ching, Xslimmer, WriteRoom, DEVONthink Personal, Wallet, Overflow and 3 great Pangea games: Enigmo, Nanosaur 2, and Bugdom 2.

The MacHeist Retail Bundle features a bevy of productivity apps geared towards a wide range of users. Whether you just picked up your first iMac, or are pounding away on your 8-core Mac Pro, MacHeist has something for everyone.

Online sales are for a limited time only (it's over before you know it), so don't hesitate: over $250 worth of software for only $49.

When in doubt, if you stumble into dark mazes and empty hallways, always click the MacHeist logo in the upper left hand corner. For the uninitiated, MacHeist usually involves some kind of puzzle quest which must be solved to make your way into the hidden extras goodie bag.





P.S. 25% of the proceeds go to a group of worthy charities. You get to pick your choices when you buy the bundle. MacHeist thinks the Retail Bundle could push total donations to over a million dollars. Buy and Give at the same time.

Technorati Tags:
, ,





Technorati Tags:
, , , , , ,


Sunday, April 13, 2008

On The Reading Nightstand: Brain Food for Thoughtful Thinkers

Top of the Reading List

Recommended: New Books about Ida B. Wells
and Women's (Fluid) Sexuality


Ida B. Wells: Exiled American, courageous black woman (and southerner) who would not be silenced in the face of crushing threats and violence. A timely reminder of this great american Woman Hero/shero/heroine. The new book by Paula J. Giddings got a great review in the Washington Post — "She Would Not Be Silent" which would have made an excellent subtitle itself.

Wells used words to fight white Southern lynch mobs, an indifferent white Northern public and, sometimes, black critics who felt that her outspokenness undermined their agenda. Southern white supremacy was cruel and crazy, and she was the rare person who could see beyond the cultural insanity in which she was immersed. For that she paid dearly.


Giddings describes the tensions within the black women's club movement, which fought locally and nationally to ameliorate Jim Crow, and excels in portraying the sexism of black male civil rights activists and their white allies.


Ultimately Giddings does not portray Wells as a victim but instead as the heroic activist who may finally receive the recognition she deserves.


Sexual Fluidity: Understanding Women's Love and Desire by Lisa M. Diamond.
Also mentioned in the Post with another book that received more attention by the reviewer, the editor is to be commended for the title/subtitle of the review:
Carnal Confusion: As sexy as our culture is, we still don't understand sex.

Setting out to prove the theory that, for some women, love is truly blind where gender is concerned, Diamond presents her evidence in a fascinating, anecdotal fashion -- by tracking over the span of a decade the relationships of nearly 100 women who at one point or another had experienced "same-sex attractions." The women move from men to women and back again (or vice-versa), their sexual identity as changeable as their desires. Additionally, she delves into the brain science behind lust, love and infatuation, revealing that what draws women toward a particular partner is as much a function of biology as it is anything else. To her credit, Diamond avoids scripting her arguments in obtuse academese. With her compassionate, understated approach, she has stepped up the business of gender research.



Technorati Tags:
, , , , , , , , , , ,





Campaign Gear
any candidate, any party, past & current elections, pins, stickers, buttons, bumper stickers, posters, autographs and more!




Note: You can helpfully support your local blogger and buy through the links on this page, por favor. Thanks!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, April 10, 2008

How to Have Better Internet Security & Safety

Scammers, spoofers, phishers and thieves -- oh My! They're not going away. If anything, they're proliferating.

I keep reading about newbies, seniors and naive kids being scammed on the internet every day. This is a gentle reminder especially for newer users and those seeking higher levels of security for children, family members, elderly parents, folks not as tech savvy — and because of the sheer volume — especially recommended for windows users......or anyone who doesn't know a firewall from a router.

PhishTank
A growing and already huge database of known phish/spoof/fraud scam sites. http://www.phishtank.com. Add to, report new attempts or search their database of known phish sites/scam emails trying to steal your bank account, credit card, personal information.

Open DNS
http://opendns.com in conjunction with phishtank.com helps protect against known phish spam spyware porn sites and might possibly help the efficiency of your internet connection at the same time --- extra layer of security (nothing is foolproof) but good idea especially for families with kids (will allow you to block sites, unblock sites or use their default settings)

These are both FREE services BTW.



Our Sponsors Recommend: Great New Internet Safety Resources & Monitoring Software

Keep Your Kids, FAMILY (even your parents) SAFE on the Internet Save 30% Special Discount Offer Today
Internet safety security children families seniors grandparents elderly parents

Stop Hackers Now!
Ultimate Guide to Protecting Yourself from Hackers

Computer Monitoring & Web Tracking
Internet Security Webwatcher Program








Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Clinton Hospital Story is Actually True: Washington Post

UPDATE: Clinton Hospital Story is Actually True According to Anne Kornblut of the Washington Post

Clinton Told True Tale of Woe, Says Kin

By Anne E. Kornblut


The aunt of a young pregnant woman who died after a hospital told her she needed to pay $100 up front for care said in an interview on Monday that Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has been telling the story accurately on the campaign trail -- following claims by a different Ohio hospital that it did not turn the patient away.

"...she was sorry it had hurt the Clinton campaign.
She was, and is, she said, a supporter.
"Did I vote for Hillary?" she said. "You'd better bet I did."

For weeks, Clinton repeated an anecdote she heard in Ohio on Feb. 28 involving a young woman who lost her baby and later died because she lacked health insurance and did not have $100 to gain access to a nearby hospital.

But over the weekend, Clinton came under fire when officials at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, after reading about her remarks, demanded that she stop recounting it because the patient, Trina Bechtel, was admitted there and did have insurance.

That part, it turns out, is true. But so is Clinton's claim that Bechtel did not get care at another hospital that wanted a $100 pre-payment before seeing her, according to the young woman's aunt, Lisa Casto. "It's a true story," said Casto, 53.

Casto added some details that were not part -- or differed from -- the Clinton anecdote: She said her niece had previously been in debt to a local hospital that later sent her a letter informing her that she could only be treated there in the future if she gave them a $100 deposit. At the time she went into debt to that hospital, Casto said, Bechtel was uninsured, though she later obtained health insurance and was insured at the time of her death.

Casto said she did not want to give the name of the offending hospital because the flood of calls over the incident has overwhelmed her and Meigs County deputy sheriff Bryan Holman, a friend of hers who retold the story to Clinton when she campaigned in southern Ohio.

But court records show that Bechtel had a civil judgment against her by the Holzer Hospital Foundation for the amount of $4,426, entered in 2002, which was repaid in 2005. A call to an official at Holzer Medical Center, which is run by the foundation, in Ohio was not immediately returned.

Casto said her niece, who suffered from preeclampsia during her pregnancy, did not seek care at the first hospital when she fell ill because she knew she did not have the $100 out-of-pocket she believed she would need to be seen. Instead, she went to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, where her baby was stillborn. Bechtel was later flown to Columbus and died there. She was 35.

Casto said she has been stunned by the amount of negative attention her niece's story generated, and that she was sorry it had hurt the Clinton campaign. She was, and is, she said, a supporter. "Did I vote for Hillary?" she said. "You'd better bet I did."

Source: from the Washington Post (but I'm not hearing it anywhere on the 24 hour blatherers of cable network news!)

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Monday, April 07, 2008

Hillary's Creeping Judgment Problems

See Update: Hospital Story is True
    1. Mark Penn: What the frak took so long to dump this sleezebag?
    2. As I've pondered before: why did she hire/trust/entrust her campaign to him in the first place? (He's easily the equivalent of Dick "among the worst of the worst scumbags in politics" Morris, someone we can credit to the first Clinton campaign for subjecting us to the past 15+ years.)
    3. Finally, what the fracking frak is up with the truthiness of the Bosnia and dying woman/hospital anecdotes — where the frak are her key campaign staff to prevent such carelessness? More proof of incompetence? And if on the off-chance they were there trying to 'vet' every story that comes forth from her mouth (as they should and must), but she overrode their attempts to vet/correct/confirm the information/stories, why didn't she listen to them? Bad judgment due to sleep deprivation? Or something worse than confusion and chaos?

Hardball politics. Supposedly the Clintons not only play them, they helped invent them and they should be prepared for them, too.

Now I remember why I registered as an independent (again), after having signed up with the democrats for a while. Sigh...where is the pragmatic progressive party?

The problem and the reality is, there is no viable alternative. And we the people truly can't afford another republican presidency: especially not their violence, their disregard for human life (excepting the theoretical unborn and the rich), their unquenchable greed, their profiteering from irresponsible wars, their right-wing fascist and pro-corporation judges, and their total destruction of regulations and laws set up to protect working people against the growing, creeping wealth and power of the richest of the rich who are always the biggest beneficiaries of the republicans (as has been well-documented by many, including Kevin Phillips).

Still conceded: Obama has run a much better campaign overall. It doesn't mean however, that Obama's prepared for the republicans. But with all the recent (and cumulative) bone-headed miscalculations and mistakes of the Clinton campaign, I'm not sure they're prepared either. I'm seriously reconsidering (again) whether EITHER democrat is electible much less prepared to head this nation, much less prepared to truly LEAD its citizens. At this point, Obama has a slight edge, but he still has his own serious judgment and electibility problems mired in the muckiness of our racist history and his own issues of disingenuousness.



Doubts creep in and they could have easily been avoided.


Get Your Vintage & New Campaign Collectibles
candidate, party and election, pins, stickers, buttons, bumper stickers, posters, autographs and more!




Technorati Tags:
,


Labels: , , , , ,

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Too Much Democracy for the Democratic Party!



Jon Stewart consults his calendar to figure out when Hillary should drop out of the race


Technorati Tags:
, , , , , ,


Labels: , ,

Progressive Women Bloggers Ring
Power By Ringsurf