Thursday, December 31, 2015

Another year

Charlie Brown is talking to Linus.  He says, “Well, this is it....  The last day of the year and I did it again.”

Linus looks at him and says, “Did what?”

Charlie Brown replies, “I blew another year.”


Happy new year, everybody.  Don't blow it.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Elementary Center in Lehighton

I don’t live in the Lehighton School District, but yesterday’s Times News included an anonymous circular concerning a proposal to build an elementary center in that district.  The ad was sponsored by a group called REACH, which I think is short for “we’ll REACH into your pockets and extract all the tax money we can.”

The ad said the proposed center would promote equality in class size, equality in instructional time, and what was most strange, “more community opportunities.”  Since the proposal for an elementary center would result in shutting down four neighborhood schools, that last one is hard to understand.

Finally, the ad used the really bad argument of “sunk costs,” which was that since the District already spent a pile of money (evidently over a million dollars to architects, engineers, and other construction agencies), it ought to sink even more into the project.


With that kind of thinking, I’m glad I live in the Palmerton Area School District.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Alvin on the No Fly List

Alvin the Chipmunk is on the “No Fly List.”  Yes, I went to see the latest chipmunk movie.  The villain in the film is a federal air marshal, and the TSA checkers don’t come off very well either.  

When I taught the political films class at San Jose State, I interpreted “political film” very widely.  While I probably wouldn’t include the chipmunk movie, it illustrates that many Americans are tired of the airport checks they must all go through.

Imagine a film that made fun of air marshals and the TSA checkpoints in 2002.  No way.  But now they are both fair game.


By the way, Simon and Theodore are also on the No Fly list, although presumably they all can buy assault weapons, if gun dealers would be willing to sell those to a chipmunk.  I’m guessing they would.

Monday, December 28, 2015

Arms sales

In 2014, the last year for which we have the statistics, the U.S. was the top arms seller in the world.  Our take was 36.2 billion.  We controlled over half the market.  

Following the U.S. were 
Russia, at 10.2 billion
Sweden, at 5.5 billion, 
France, at 4.4 billion, and 
China, at 2.2 billion.  


Let’s hear a big cheer.  We’re #1!  We’re #1!

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Chris Christie and the boy on the beach

Today the New York Times ran six pages of pictures emblematic of 2015.  One of them was that little Syrian boy lying dead on the beach sand.


I saw that, and I thought of how the governor of New Jersey doesn’t want Syrian children in his state, and I thought, you pandering son of a bitch.

Saturday, December 26, 2015

Concussion

In “Concussion” Will Smith plays an immigrant doctor from Nigeria working in the Allegheny County Coroner’s office.  This doctor researched and named the condition suffered by NFL players who received repeated blows to the head in the course of their careers.

The film will make you very angry at the NFL, which knew about the injuries, kept the information quiet, and did its best to discredit the researchers and players who tried to expose the issue.


I am always amazed at the lengths to which large corporate interests will go in order to protect profits, even while they are causing great harm to people or the environment.  I am also amazed that courageous people exist who are willing to put their lives on the line to expose that harm.

Friday, December 25, 2015

Letters to Santa

#1:  I want a drum and a hook and ladder.” Signed Alfred McGann.

#2:  “Dear Santa Claus:  I am very glad that you are coming around tonight.  My little brother would like you to bring him a wagon which I know you cannot afford.  I will ask you to bring him whatever you think best.  Please bring me something nice what you think best. 
P.S.  Please do not forget the poor.”  Signed Mary McGann.

The first letter was dated 1905; the second 1907.  They were found behind chimney bricks 15 years ago by a man named Peter Mattaliano, who was renovating his fireplace in his Hell’s Kitchen residence.

He learned from research that the parents were Patrick and Esther McGann, Irish immigrants who had married in 1896.  Mr. McGann died in 1904, so at the time the letters were written, the children were being raised by their mother, a dressmaker.

From his research, Mr. Mattaliano found out that Mary had married, moved to the Bronx, and died in 1982.  This year Mr. Mattaliano took a small potted tree to Mary’s grave at Mt. St. Mary’s Cemetery in Flushing.

That this child, obviously living in poverty, could end her letter “Please do not forget the poor” is both amazing and humbling.

The full story, with Mr. Mattaliano’s picture, appeared in an article by Corey Kilgannon in the Times, Dec. 15, pp, A1, A25.


Thursday, December 24, 2015

Muslims and Christians in Kenya

On December 21 a bus in Kenya carrying over 100 people was stopped by Al-Shabab militants.  The attackers tried to separate the Muslims from the Christians as a prelude to killing the Christians.  It didn’t work.

Muslim women gave Christian women their hijabs and Muslims told the attackers, “we will die together.”  In the face of this unity, the terrorists left.


The Kenyan Interior Cabinet secretary said, “We we are all Kenyans.  We are not separated by religion.”

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Test case on gun laws

In 2007 the Missouri legislature repealed a requirement that all handgun purchasers had to get a permit by undergoing a background check, in person, at a sheriff’s office.

Last year the legislature dropped the legal age for caring a concealed gun to 19.  

To paraphrase Sarah Palin, how’s that working out for you?
Evidently, not so well.  The director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research found that in the six years after controls were loosened, the homicide rate was 16% higher than in the six years before.  

The share of guns linked to crimes soon after they were bought doubled between 2006 to 2010.

Of course, you can always find skeptics who argue that the statistics are flawed, that crooks will always be able to get guns, that California’s toughest gun laws didn’t stop the San Bernardino tragedy, etc., etc.

In the meantime, Congress, bowing to NRA pressure, will not permit any federal studies of homicide rates and crimes related to guns.  


Information for this post came from “Gun Killing Rise as Controls Ease Across Missouri,” New York Times, Dec. 22, 2015, p. 1, A14.  The snide comments about the N.R.A. are mine alone

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Wir schaffen das

I love Angela Merkel.  Germany is accepting about one million refugees from the Middle East.  “Wir schaffen das,” Merkel’s slogan, translates “We can do this.”  Contrast this with the poop in the pants reaction of Gov. Christie or the panic of Donald Trump to accepting refugees.

The Catholic Church is proposing sainthood for Mother Teresa.  This is a mistake.  Mother Teresa, with her opposition to birth control, has set India back for decades.  Sainthood should go to Merkel, who has accepted political opprobrium by doing the right thing and helping hundreds of thousands of refugees.  She really is a saint.

Answers to last night’s quiz:
#1--Kasich actually proposed setting up a government agency to “promote Judeo-Christian values.”  Those of you who thought Kasich was a reasonable Republican candidate may want to re-evaluate.

#2--Cruz’s Harvard roommate said he would prefer someone picked from the phonebook to be President rather that Cruz.

#3--when asked what he thought of Cruz, John Boehner raised his middle finger.

#4--Trump picked a man with known ties to a Mafia-linked stock fraud scheme to be his business advisor.  God help us if he is elected president.


#5.  If you know your Bible, you know it was Jesus who said he came to bring “not peace, but the sword.”  It is in the book of Matthew.

Monday, December 21, 2015

Political quiz

Tonight at the annual holiday party for the Carbon County Democrats for Progress, party-goers took a political quiz.  The quiz had 14 questions, but I’ll only reprint five.  Answers in tomorrow’s post.

1.  John Kasich has proposed the creation of:
A.  a government agency to promote Judeo-Christian values.
B.  an EBay type auction site to sell surplus government equipment.
C.  a government bureau to catalog the birthplaces of blues musicians.
D.  a clearing house to test the strength of various strains of medical marijuana.

2.  Ted Cruz’s freshman roommate said of Cruz and the possibility of his presidency:
A.  I’ve never met a smarter guy.
B.  his praying before bed kept me awake.
C.  I always assumed he was gay.  Isn’t he?
D.  I would rather pick someone from the phone book.

3.  Asked about Cruz at a fund-raiser last spring, John Boehner responded by:
A.  turning orange.
B.  giving a thumbs up.
C.  raising his middle finger.
D.  saying, “that guy couldn’t pour piss out of a boot if directions were written on 
the heel.”

4.  For his senior business advisor to his real estate empire, Trump picked:
A.  Bernie Madoff
B.  his second wife.
C.  a man with known ties to a Mafia-linked stock fraud scheme.
D.  a economics professor from Princeton who preaches “supply side” economic 
theory.

5.  Which religious leader said he came to bring “not peace but the sword”?
A.  Muhammad, in the Quran.
B.  Moses, in the Book of Exodus.
C.  Jesus, in the Gospel of Matthew.
D.  Mike Huckabee, in a speech in Duluth.

Sunday, December 20, 2015

Pennsylvania Public Pensions

Pennsylvania legislators are the 2nd highest paid in the nation, coming in after California.  Of course, California only has a total of 120 legislators, so the overall amount in California is quite a bit less.  At the same time, Pennsylvania has a problem with public pensions; the debt is $55 billion and growing, in part because past legislators did not put the necessary funds into the plan.

So what did our legislators do about pensions?  The Republicans tried to pass a bill that would mandate that future state employees would be forced to enter a 401(k) style benefit plan.  Employees would have a traditional pension, but it would only be half of that of current employees.

The legislators, of course, would not be part of this.  They would keep their pensions as they are.  I’m serious.  


If you look up the word “hypocrisy” in Wikipedia, it says, “see Pennsylvania Republican legislators.”

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Antibiotics in livestock feed

Capitalism has no conscience.  We all know that putting antibiotics in livestock feed is a bad idea.  Both the American Academy of Pediatrics and the World Health Organization have warned that for antibiotics to work treating sick humans, the agricultural industry must stop using them in feed given to animals that are not sick so those animals will grow faster.

How has corporate agriculture responded?  The use of antibiotics in livestock feed has increased 3 percent from 2013 to 2014 and 23 percent in the last five years.  This according to statistics from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration reported by Lancaster Farming on 19 Dec. 2015, p. A17.


My advice is to buy from local butchers who can tell you they use meats that are raised free of antibiotics or go vegetarian.  

Friday, December 18, 2015

No Trump supporters here

Today Linda and I visited the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.  We saw exhibits by Josephine Pryde (where you get to ride a little train), Christopher Knowles, (where you see art made on a typewriter), and Becky Suss (the one we liked the best).


Afterward we had lunch at Baby Blues California-style Bar-B-Cue restaurant.  Linda had the chicken; I had the sausage sandwich.  Both were delicious.  The diners were mostly college students–Asian, African-American, Anglo.  As we were leaving, I said to Linda, “Do you know what was nice about this?  Not one of these people are supporting Trump.”

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Gun Control

Readers occasionally ask me how I decide what to write about.  My problem isn’t that I have to search for topics.  It’s that I must decide what NOT to write about.

Tonight, for example, I could have posted about the new Star Wars movie, or the two men who were exonerated after serving 33 years in prison for setting a fire that they could not have set, or the Democratic Executive Board’s holiday party in Nesquehoning, or the Fed raising the interest rate for the first time in 10 years, or Trump’s proposal to kill children of terrorists.

Instead I decided to quote some of the statements on guns by candidates of one of the two major U.S. parties that were printed in today’s Times:

Ben Carson:  “I never saw a body with bullet holes that was more devastating than taking the right to arm ourselves away.”

Marco Rubio:  “Gun laws fail everywhere they’re tried.”  (Not true in countries that have enacted controls.)

Donald Trump:  “You’re going to have these things happen and it’s a horrible thing to behold.”

Ted Cruz:  “You get rid of the bad guys by using our guns.  We define gun control real simple–that’s hitting what you aim at.”


and Jeb! Bush this past October:  “Look, stuff happens,” and in 2003 at an N.R.A. convention.  “The sound of our guns is the sound of freedom!”  

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Ted Cruz, military strategist?

Talking about ISIS in a speech in Iowa, Mr. Cruz said, “We will carpet-bomb them into oblivion.”

Unfortunately for Cruz’s credibility, the U.S.doesn’t “carpet-bomb” anyone.  Indiscriminate bombing doesn’t work, except to recruit more enemies.  

Cruz compounded his stupidity by saying he wouldn’t target civilians with his carpet-bombing, and he explained, “In the first Persian Gulf war, we launched roughly 1,100 air attacks a day.  We carpet-bombed them into oblivion for 37 days.”

No, we didn’t.  We bombed specific targets.  I have no idea where Cruz is getting this stuff, but General Paul Selva, vice chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the type of bombing Cruz was advocating was “not the way that we apply force in combat.  It isn’t now, nor will it ever be.”  Mr. Selva was speaking at a Senate Hearing entitled “U.S. Strategy to Counter the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and U.S. Policy Toward Iraq and Syria.”

Unfortunately, Cruz missed the hearing.  He was off campaigning in Iowa to be our next commander-in-chief.


Quotes for this posting were taken from “Ted ‘Carpet-Bomb’ Cruz,” The New York Times, Dec. 15, 2015, p. 24.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

PA Infrastructure Task Force Report

Today I submitted seven pages of commentary and suggestions on Governor Wolf’s Infrastructure Task Force Report.  This is a report that looks at possible improvements on pipeline construction in the Commonwealth.

The report was put together by 12 working groups, with heavy input from the gas and oil companies.  Amazingly, the report had good suggestions on environmental issues, safety concerns, and public participation.


Unfortunately, implementation of most of the recommendations will require legislative action.  Pipeline companies are not about to spend money to make their projects less destructive unless they are forced to.  Given the substantial campaign contributions to Pennsylvania Republican legislators, we won’t be seeing any legislative action soon.  Will we, Representative Heffley?

Monday, December 14, 2015

Speeka da English?

Remember the good old days when everyone spoke English?  If you do, you might be having some memory problems. 

In the 1910 census people were asked what language they spoke.  There were 92,228,496 Americans then.  Here’s the breakdown:
German 2,759,032
Italian 1,365,110
Yiddish 1,051,767
Polish    943,781
Swedish    683,219
French    528,842
Norwegian  402,587
Spanish     258,131
Hungarian   229,094
Czech     228,738
Danish    186,345
Slovak    166,474
Lithuanian  140,963
Dutch    126,045
Slovenian   123.631
Greek    118,379


Hundreds of thousands of others, including Chinese and Japanese, were not recorded in this census.  

Sunday, December 13, 2015

The World Agrees

A number of 1950s science fiction films featured a threat to our planet from Outer Space.  We would see flying saucers attacking Paris, London, Moscow, and Washington.  Nations that were at odds suddenly would work together to try to repel the attack.   The Will Smith movie Independence Day (1996) was a more recent example, and in this year’s The Martian, Chinese technology was essential to bring the American Matt Damon back to earth.

I thought about those movies when I saw today’s headline in the New York Times:  “NATIONS APPROVE LANDMARK CLIMATE DEAL.”  One hundred and ninety-five countries signed on to an agreement to cut carbon emissions.  I understand that some may cheat.  I get it that some won’t meet the terms of the agreement.  

Nonetheless, 195 nations recognize that here is a problem that calls for a global response.  In the year 2050, ISIS will be a small paragraph in history books, if not a footnote.  Global warming, on the other hand, will have reached crisis proportions.  People will wonder why more wasn’t done, but they will also appreciate that 2015 marked the beginning of a worldwide effort.  Hopefully by 2050, the agreement will have had positive results, and the planet will be on a path to healing.  


Our grandson will be 44 in 2050.  

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Canada sets an example

Americans tend to make fun of our “frozen neighbor to the north.”  P. J. O’Rourke says “Very little is known of Canada since it is rarely visited by anyone by the Queen and illiterate sport fishermen.”

Richard Brenner said Canada was a country so square that even the female impersonators are women.  Mike Myers said, “Canada is a country without a cuisine.  When’s the last time you went out for Canadian?”

But how about this headline:  “Canada Welcomes New Arrivals From Syria.”  25,000 are coming in by February.


Evidently Canadians have something that Americans don’t have.  Balls.

Friday, December 11, 2015

Huckleberry Finn

The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that a Philadelphia Quaker High School, Friends Central School, has decided that the “community costs” of reading Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn outweigh the literary benefits.

I was about ten years old when I read Huckleberry Finn.  The part of the book that had the most impact on me was when Huckleberry, who had been raised in the South, knows that if he doesn’t turn in Jim, a runaway slave, he will go to hell.  That’s what he has been taught.  He weighs turning in his friend against going to hell.  

I don’t remember the exact words (it was a long time ago), but Huck decided not to turn in Jim and exclaimed, “All right, then, I’ll go to hell.”  


That made a deep impression on me.  You do what you think is right.  I think a good teacher can explain the racial slurs, and I also think 11th graders are smart enough to deal with them.

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Guns and abortions

Gail Collins today reported on a bill recently introduced into the Missouri House of Representatives by Rep. Stacey Newman.  Missouri has put so many restrictions on abortion that it has only one clinic remaining in St. Louis.  Ms. Newman’s bill would put the same restrictions on gun purchases that Missouri currently imposes on women who want an abortion.

For example, there is a 72 hour waiting period before you can purchase a firearm.  You must travel at least 120 miles from your home to purchase a firearm.  You must listen to a lecture about the medical risks associated with firearms.  You must view pictures of people with firearms wounds.

In Missouri most legislators call themselves “pro-life.”  Interestingly, both Kansas City and St. Louis are ranked in the top ten American cities for firearms deaths.


Ms. Newman does not expect her bill to pass. 

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Why fighting ISIS is so difficult

Thomas Friedman wrote an excellent explanation of why the U.S. will have a problem defeating ISIS.  All of our potential allies in the region would like to get rid of ISIS, but it is not their first priority.

The Kurds:  They want their own country.  They aren’t about to help liberate the rest of Iraq to benefit the Iraqi government.

The Turks:  They have been bombing the Kurds more than areas held by ISIS.

The Iranians:  They don’t like ISIS, but they worry more about moderate Sunnis take over ISIS territory; they could threaten Iran’s allies in Syria.

Putin:  He doesn’t like ISIS, but he is even more interested in keeping Assad in power.  Russia bombs moderate rebels as much as ISIS.

Saudi Arabia:  doesn’t like ISIS, but right now is involved more in Yemen, trying to crush the rebellion there.

Iraq:  has lost territory to ISIS but is still divided between Sunnis and Shiites.

The one thing we don’t want to do is get into a big war with U.S. troops.  We did that in Iraq, and the repercussions have not ended.  And if we did get into a war on the ground, guess who will fight it.  They won’t be troops from the 1%.  Ted Cruz and Donald Trump won’t be going.  Men and women from the bottom of the U.S. economy will be doing the fighting, just like they did in Iraq and Vietnam. 


Just once I’d like to hear these tough-talking war mongers call for a universal draft.

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Nun shoots deer

Sure, there rare more important things to post about.  Obama’s speech on ISIS.  Trump’s racist remarks.  The climate summit.  Clinton’s economic proposals.

However, I don’t think there is any one group of people, including people who fly confederate flags or anti-abortion fanatics, who annoy me as much as animal rights idiots. 
A nun in the Erie Diocese of Pennsylvania shot a ten-point buck on the first day of this year’s buck season.  She posted a picture on Facebook of her holding the deer by the antlers on the back of a pickup truck.  

According to a front page article in today’s Morning Call, “animal rights” people took offense and post comments, some of which were vulgar.

These are the same idiots who oppose Australian efforts to reduce the feral cat population.  They think in terms of individual animals rather than species preservation.  They have no understanding of ecology.  They don’t get that an expanding deer population means the extinction of both plants and animals that depend on those plants.  


The nun who shot the deer understands.  She says she views hunting as a spiritual endeavor and a form of conservation.  I don’t get the first part of that, but as an environmentalist, I certainly understand the second part.  Animal rights people just don’t get it.

Monday, December 7, 2015

The New York Times v. Sullivan

Did you ever wonder why I can say all those mean things about Jerry Knowles and Doyle Heffley and Lou Barletta and not get sued.  OK, first of all, in a libel suit, truth is always a defense, so when I say that Knowles is the dumbest representative in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, he would have to prove otherwise.  (He can’t.)

More importantly, I have New York Times v. Sullivan (1964) on my side.  Today the Times ran an obituary for an attorney on the losing side in that case.  Prior to Sullivan, Southern states had libel laws that allowed public officials to sue newspapers that reported on their activities.  Sullivan was the Montgomery, Alabama, Public Safety Commissioner who said he was defamed in an advertisement that ran in the Times.


Sullivan won in Alabama courts, but the case was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.  The Court ruled 9-0 (this was decades before Scalia, Roberts, and Thomas) that “the First Amendment protects the publication of all statements, even false ones, about the conduct of public officials except when statements are made with actual malice (with knowledge that they are false or in reckless disregard of their truth or falsity).”

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Spotlight

One of the most depressing features of modern American society is the decline of the daily newspaper.  Whenever I hear someone say, “I get my news on the Internet,” I wince.  Many students told me this during my last few years of teaching, and they knew almost nothing of current news.  Cat videos, yes.  Facebook posting, yes.  Hard news, not so much.

I was reminded again of the importance of investigative journalism when we saw “Spotlight” tonight.  It follows a group of print reporters for the Boston Globe who uncovered the child abuse scandal in the Catholic Church in which church officials knew about pedophile priests and did nothing except move them around and hush things up.

Boston is a very Catholic town, and most of the Globe’s subscribers were Catholic, but the paper did the job newspapers are supposed to do, which is to uncover the truth and make it known to the public. 


Incidentally, the Boston Cardinal who knew all about the pedophile priests was promoted to a position in Rome.

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Ted Cruz, Wartime President?

So here is brave Ted, telling us the country needs a “wartime president.”  He’s not afraid of ISIS.  Unfortunately, the little weasel is afraid of the N.R.A., as are Christie, Rubio, and the whole pathetic lot of them.  

Friday, December 4, 2015

Christmas "doorbuster" special at Cabela's

You too can become a mass killer.  For only $524.99 you can be the proud owner of a semiautomatic tactical rifle, with a 16” chrome-moly steel barrel, available with 10 or 30-round magazines.  You know, the kind you use for hunting squirrels.

Worried that they won’t sell you the rifle because you are on the no-fly list.  No problem.  You say you are on the terrorism watch list.  No problem.

Incidentally, go for the 30 round magazines.


If you threw away your paper, I’ll save the circular for you.  It’s in the same Times News with the front page story about the San Bernardino killing.  It’s also the issue with the comment by Jeremy T. Glaush about how determined killers will use other weapons if denied guns, like a lead pipe.  I wonder how many more would have died in San Bernardino had the killers been armed with lead pipes.  Scary to think about.

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Mass shootings, every day

In the U.S., on average, a mass shooting occurs every day.  A “mass shooting” is defined as one in which at least four people are injured or killed from gun fire.  According to a front page article in today’s Times, 462 people have died and 1,314 have been injured in mass shootings so far this year.

A spokesman for the group “Everytown for Gun Safety” noted that while 14 people were killed in San Bernardino, probably another 88 people died from gun violence in the U.S. the same day.


We do nothing.  In fact, if you are on the terrorism watch list, you are not restricted from buying guns.  You might not be able to fly, but an AK47 or an Uzi shouldn’t be a problem.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

You will know us by the company we keep

The Pennsylvania Republican Party is using Donald Trump for a fundraiser to be held in New York.  This is the man who has made fun of a handicapped reporter.  Who has demonized Muslims.  Who has called for the deportation of 11 million people.  Who knows nothing about foreign policy.  Who has cheated thousands of students who signed up for his “Trump University.”  Who has stiffed hundreds of creditors by declaring serial bankruptcies  

Instead of shunning him, Pennsylvania Republicans see a him as a way to raise funds.  Has Sen. Toomey repudiated this?  Not to my knowledge.  Has Heffley repudiated this?  Not to my knowledge.  This is despicable, but I guess the money they hope to make is too good to turn down.


I cannot remember an American political party sinking this low.

Monday, November 30, 2015

Mainstream Republicans

Tonight I read that many mainstream Republicans are frightened of a Trump-Clinton or a Carson-Clinton matchup, but not for the reason you think.  They aren’t worried that in a matchup like that, Clinton would win.


What they are worried about is that something drastic would happen to her campaign, and she wouldn’t win.  It is good to know that there are still patriotic Republicans out there who care about this country and what might happen to it if one of these ignorant men would win the presidency.

Sunday, November 29, 2015

How Democrats might do better

My friend Sue came up with a suggestion to last night’s question about how we can persuade lower income citizens to vote, and to vote Democratic.  

Prepare a brochure with comparisons of the Democratic and Republican positions on a number of important issues.  Keep the language simple. Keep it short.  Print the brochure in color.  Include a number for people to call if they want to register.  Take it door to door and drop it off so you don’t get into long discussions or arguments.


Sue even offered to help prepare the brochure.  I think the idea has promise.  When we finish the text, I’ll post it.

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Why Democrats lose elections

I will now quote the first three paragraphs of a front page article entitled “Kentucky, Beacon for Health Law, Becomes a Lab for Its Retreat” by Abby Goodnough that appeared in today’s New York Times.  

Carolyn Bouchard, a diabetic with a slowly healing shoulder fracture, hurried to see her doctor after Matt Bevin was elected governor here this month.

Ms. Bouchard, 60, said she was sick of politics and had not bothered voting.  But she knew enough about Mr. Bevin, a conservative Republican who rails against the Affordable Care Act, to be nervous about the Medicaid coverage she gained under the law last year.

“I thought, ‘Before my insurance changes, I’d better go in,’” she said as she waited at the Family Health Centers, a community clinic here.

In the recent election that brought Mr. Bevin to power, 31% of Kentuckians voted.  Some of the poorest counties supported him.

This is the same phenomena Linda, Edie, Patti, and I encountered when we tried to register people who were living in publicly subsidized housing.  People weren’t interested in voting, saw no reason to vote, and refused to register.  

I have no idea how to break through that kind of thinking.  I also know if we don’t come up with some way to raise the consciousness of people who should be the natural supporters of liberals and progressives, we are doomed to leaders like Ted Cruz or Donald Trump or Jeb Bush.  


Any suggestions?

Friday, November 27, 2015

Trumbo

Bryan Cranston, whom you may remember as the star of “Breaking Bad,” stars in a movie about Dalton Trumbo, a Hollywood screen writer who was one of the blacklisted “Hollywood Ten” in the 1950s.  Trumbo was the screen writer for such films as “Exodus” and “Spartacus.”

We saw the movie tonight at the Pocono Cinema in Stroudsburg.  I would like very much if movies like “Trumbo” came to Mahoning Theater, but they seldom do.  Bruce, the manager at Mahoning, appreciates quality films and books them occasionally, but unfortunately Carbon County does not have great demographics for serious cinema.

If you can get “Trumbo” on Netflix or one of those streaming things, I recommend it.  (I have no idea how to do that, which is why I often drive to movie theaters in Allentown or Stroudsburg.)  


In “Trumbo” you will see how hysteria can lead to all sorts of injustices.  You will also see just how craven John Wayne, Hedda Hopper, and Ronald Reagan really were.  I really recommend this film.  The scenes with John Goodman alone are worth the price of admission.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Enlist Duo and GMO crops

The E.P.A. has decided to revoke its approval of the 2,4-D herbicide, called “Enlist Duo” by Dow Chemical.  Because many weeds have developed a tolerance for glyphosate, also known as Roundup, Dow Chemical developed new GMO seeds for corn and soybeans that won’t be harmed by 2,4-D.

Roundup has been linked to many environmental problems, including “colony collapse” in honeybees.  Now Dow is pushing for farmers to be able to spray Roundup and 2,4-D on their crops to kill weeds.  The E.P.A. has said no.

What GMO supporters don’t get is why people like me oppose GMO seeds.  I don’t think the GMO soybeans and corn are harmful to human health.  What I think is harmful is the toxic sprays that are used on specially developed GMO crops.  Monopoly seed production is harmful.  Toxic spray drifting to non-GMO crops is harmful.  The type of agribusiness that uses GMO seeds is harmful.  


GMO crops by themselves may be fine.  It is the uses to which they are put and the purposes for their development that are dangerous to us.  Companies like Dow are not developing GMO seeds to benefit humankind.  They are developing these crops to make money, and the rest of us be damned.

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Woodrow Wilson, racist

We’ve only had one president who was a political science professor, and, I’m sorry to say, he’s always been somewhat of an embarrassment to me.  His opposition to female suffrage was uncalled for; I find his moral righteousness irritating; and his inflexibility doomed one of his better ideas–the League of Nations.  

Now some Princeton students would like his name removed from various university facilities.  Fine by me.  Admittedly, Wilson was a Democrat at a time when Democrats were the party of the “Solid South,” but that does not explain why he had to lead the effort to segregate the Federal workforce and relegate blacks in government service to menial positions.


I recognize that in many areas Wilson was a real progressive.  I can applaud that.  On the other hand, I don’t think we should gloss over his shortcomings which were harmful to millions of African Americans.

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

The Pennsylvania Legislature

Let me try to understand this.  Pennsylvania legislators, who have nothing to do with immigration, are debating restrictions on refugees from Syria.  In the meantime, the state budget, which is their responsibility, has still not been passed and sent to the Governor.  

Agencies are running out of funding, but it is evidently more important to posture and pontificate on the threat of families from Syria.  Just ask Representative Heffley.  

By the way, the Morning Call listed a number of agencies that are helping to resettle refugees and could use some donations.  One is the Syrian Arab American Charity Association, 608 N. Second St., Allentown, PA 18102.  For more info, call 610-432-8001.


I feel like I should apologize to my readers--This must be the eighth or ninth posting on Syrian refugees.  You are probably getting tired of it, but I can’t stop.  My friend Lois, an Obama volunteer from New York who stayed with us in 2008 and 2012, believes the Syrian refugee issue is a moral crisis that we need to confront.  I think she is correct, and I think the response of Republican governors, Republican legislators, and much of the American public is un-American, un-Christian, and unworthy of who we are.

Monday, November 23, 2015

Trump and Muslims

I had planned to write about our trip to the Brandywine River Museum today, but I feel the need to comment on Trump’s latest remarks on Muslims.  

As most people who were around on September 11, 2001, I can tell you where I was when I heard about the World Trade Center attacks.  I know that the press reported on nothing else for days.  I also know that had thousands of people cheered the attack, that would have been front page news.  It wasn’t.  It didn’t happen.  I do remember that we got reports of Iranians being shocked and in sympathy with Americans.

Yet Trump, who claims to have an amazing memory, can recall thousands of New Jersey Muslims cheering the attacks.

Gov. Christie, Governor of New Jersey, issued a weasel statement that he can’t recall such cheering, but then added that he can’t remember everything.

Ben Carson, who had a chance to distinguish himself, instead says he remembers seeing a video of the cheering.  These is a video no one has been able to produce.

The only Republican Presidential candidate who has come out looking good on this is Marco Rubio, who stated it never happened.


I once thought Trump was sort of funny.  As I have learned about his cheating of thousands of students with his “Trump University,” his stiffing of creditors in his bankruptcy filings, his vicious attacks on Muslims, and his “birther” claims on the President, I am no longer amused.  He is an evil man, and he must be stopped.

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Heffley's Town Hall

Rep. Doyle Heffley held a “town hall” in his Lehighton District Office this past Friday.  I printed out the announcement, and I actually thought about attending.  The announcement said he would discuss the overwhelming response from Carbon County residents regarding the state’s budget impasse, Syrian refugees, and property tax reform.

In the end, I stayed away.  I decided the whole thing would be an exercise in futility.  

As for property tax reform, if the Pennsylvania legislature, controlled by Republicans with Republican governor Corbett, couldn’t fix the property tax issue, Rep. Heffley’s town hall would be more of the bait and switch that Republican legislators have been using for years.

As for the budget impasse, the current Republican legislature, including Mr. Heffley, opposes any extraction tax, although every other state, including North Dakota and Texas, has imposed one.  The Pennsylvania Republican legislators are in the pocket of the drilling companies, and that won’t change.


As for Syrian refugees, the kind of fearful people who oppose any refugee resettlement, although they usually call themselves “Christian,” are probably the kind of people who would contract Heffley’s office and show up at a town hall.  I didn’t feel like getting into a shouting match with bigots and cowards.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Clinton's ISIS policy

Yesterday conservative columnist David Brooks wrote about Hillary Clinton’s speech on ISIS to the Council on Foreign Relations.  She delivered the speech on Thursday, November 19.  Brooks pointed out that this was not some blustery and vague call for getting tough on terrorists, but a detailed analysis with real policy recommendations.

I will quote one paragraph of Brooks’s column:  Dealing with both Assad and ISIS simultaneously throws you into the bitter and complex jockeying between Sunni and Shiite, between Iran and Saudi Arabia.  It puts pressure on your Ukraine policy (Vladimir Putin will want concessions as a price for backing off his aggression in the Middle East).  Everything is connected.  Which is why the presidency is for grownups, not rank outsiders.


Hillary Clinton is a grownup.  Her opponents on the Republican could not put together a coherent speech on the Middle East, don’t know the issues, don’t understand the dynamics.  What they are good at is slogans, threats, and bombast.  

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Surrender monkeys

Remember after the invasion of Iraq when France was vilified by many Americans, including members of Congress.  French fries were renamed “freedom fries,” and the French were derided as “surrender monkeys.”

Yesterday the French Premier announced that France would continue to accept Syrian refugees.  He pointed out that the plight of refugees has not changed because of the terrorist attacks.


In the meanwhile Republican presidential candidates, Republican governors, and much of the American public have decided to repeat the mistakes of this country prior to World War II, when the U.S. turned back Jewish children escaping from Nazi Germany.  I think it is pretty clear who are the “surrender monkeys.”

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Indiana saved from ISIS

Governor Mike Pence has denied a Syrian family of three, exiled from Homs since 2011, permission to enter Indiana.  After all, they could be terrorists.  In Syria the father ran a used clothing store.  The couple’s son is four years old.  But you never know.  Better safe than sorry.  Might be carrying a bomb.

No, they won’t have to return to Jordan where they were living.  The Connecticut governor, a Democrat, said they would be welcome.  They will be settled in New Haven.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Reactions to the Paris Massacre

Everyone was predicable.  The CIA director calls for more surveillance.  Sen. Toomey wants to shut the borders to Syrian refugees.  Republican governors, “Christians” all, say there’s no more room in the inn.  

Bleeding heart liberals, a group in which I include myself, ask who will help the refugees.  We don’t think it is fair that relatively poor countries like Turkey or Jordan should be forced to bear the burden of feeding and housing hundreds of thousands of people.


Sen. Rubio, equally predictable, notes that of 1000 refugees, suppose just one is ISIS.  My question to Rubio is, how do we know you aren’t part of a Castro sleeper cell?  Didn’t your parents come from Cuba?  (I am fully aware of how mean that is, but I am tired of that little prick.)

Monday, November 16, 2015

Cowardly bigots

My first thought on hearing about the Paris massacre was that now Americans would oppose accepting the few Syrian refugees we had planned to take in. 

Sure enough, governor after governor now says no to accepting Syrians. Millions of refugees, including women and children, need help.  The Paris massacres don’t change that.  ISIS must be so pleased; they succeeded in increasing the misery of all those people.  ISIS cannot defeat the west, but they can sow fear and dissension.  They have done that, which means they are winning.


I suppose many anti-immigrant bigots are quite pleased with the Paris bombings.  It gave them the excuse they were hoping for to reject the refugees.  

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Defeating ISIS

I’m all in favor of punishing ISIS.  I think the whole ISIS movement should be destroyed.  It is composed of people who do not belong in the family of nations, who are the equivalent of Nazi functionaries at Buchenwald.  

I’m also in favor of “boots on the ground.”  I’d like to see a coalition of forces tasked with the job of eliminating the whole ISIS infrastructure.

However, if such a task is undertaken, Americans should share in that equally.  I have yet to hear people like Ted Cruz and Lindsay Graham and people of that ilk call for a return of the universal draft.  Until that happens, I will oppose U.S. involvement.  I don’t see why the lower income and less educated group of Americans should be asked to bear the burden of military action.  


If this is a burden to be borne, it should be borne equally by all Americans.

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Democrats in the Obama era

In the last eight years Republicans have done extremely well.  As of January Republicans will hold 32 of 50 governorships, 10 more than they had in 2009.  816 Democratic state lawmakers have lost their jobs while Obama was president, and Republican-controlled legislatures have doubled since Obama took office.

Is it his fault?  I would say in part it is.  When Howard Dean was running the Democratic Party, Dean emphasized a 50-state strategy.  You concede nothing to the Republicans; you fight for every state.  In 2008 Obama benefited from this strategy, winning states that Democrats had written off in the past.

Unfortunately, President Obama organized something called Obama for America, which was not a party-oriented organization.  Later the group morphed into Organizing for America, but the emphasis was on helping administration policies, not the Democratic Party.


In Carbon County the club that grew out of the Obama campaign called itself “Carbon County Democrats for Change,” and it was affiliated with the County Democratic Party.  As a consequence, the Democratic Party in Carbon County is stronger than ever.  Unfortunately, Carbon County seems to be the exception, not the rule.

Friday, November 13, 2015

Garlic and shallots

Tom Merkel, an organic farmer in Mahoning Township, gave me some garlic and shallot sets.  I planted them today.  I think this was the latest and coldest day of the year that I have ever planted plants.  I’ll let you know next spring if it was a success.   


I can tell you that I made apple jelly with apples from one of our trees just two days ago, and that was a complete success.  It is soooo good.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Pipeline Party

This evening I attended a pipeline party at the Big Creek Grange in Franklin Township.  About 90 landowners, environmentalists, and other sympathetic people showed up to eat, drink, and listen to music by Free Range Folk, an amazing group from the Jim Thorpe area.  

We learned what we could do to hinder and stop the 36-inch PennEast/UGI fracking natural gas pipeline that would fragment forests, harm state gamelands, pollute watersheds, run roughshod over property owners, and wreck state parks, 

Everyone in the hall was in opposition to the proposed pipeline.  They were opposed because of the danger of explosions.  Because of the environmental damage.  Because of the lies PennEast/UGI has been telling about the necessity for the pipeline.  Because of the use of eminent domain for private profit.  


We learned that PennEast UGI is angry.  it is scared.  And, if we stick together, it will lose.