Medina County Dem News
Friday, November 30, 2007(Medina County Democratic Action Committee)
Tom
Wolfe Retirement Party
TONIGHT
Reminder: A retirement
party for Tom is being held Friday, November
30th, from 4:30 to 7 at the Eagles Hall in
Medina.
Reminder: Governor Ted
Strickland Event December 8,
2007
Governor Ted Strickland will be
the guest at a special holiday brunch sponsored
by the Medina County Democratic Party on
December 8, 2007, at the Rustic Hills Country
Club in Medina. Tickets are $50.00 per person.
Reservation deadline is December 4th. Send
checks to Medina County Democratic Party, P.O.
Box 583, Medina, OH 44258.
Reminder:
Medina County Democratic Party Holiday
Brunch
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1,
2007
10:00 AM
COPPERTOP, AT CHEROKEE
HILLS GOLF COURSE
5740 CENTER RD. (RT. 303),
VALLEY CITY
$16 PER PERSON; CHILDREN 3-12,
$8; 3 AND UNDER FREE
IN KEEPING WITH THE
SPIRIT OF HOLIDAY GIVING, PLEASE BRING
NON-PERISHABLE FOOD ITEMS OR HOUSEHOLD SUPPLIES
TO BE DONATED TO THE COMMUNITY SERVICES CENTER
IN MEDINA.
PAY AT THE DOOR
VOLUNTEER FOR ROBIN WEIRAUCH – ELECT
ANOTHER DEMOCRAT TO CONGRESS
Ohio
Democrats have an opportunity to pick up
another Congressional seat in the special
election being held on December 11, 2007. There
are many volunteer opportunities. If you can
help this special election cycle, please
contact any of the following:
Megan
Joyce (NE Ohio Field Director)
614-207-1714
(c)
megan@ohiodems.org
Michell Domkee
(NW Ohio Field Director)
614-207-5702
(c)
michell@ohiodems.org
Courtney
Foley (Weirauch Field Director)
202-276-5305
(cell)
419-352-1787
(office)
Courtney.foley@gmail.com
Reader
Submission: The Kids on My Street
On
my street, the kids went to war when they
graduated high school. The moms and dads had a
party for the boys before they left for basic
training and another one before they shipped to
Vietnam. The kids on my street all went to
Vietnam.
There weren't many parties
when the kid came back. Just having him back in
one piece was enough. The moms and dads seemed
to sink into themselves and always aged while
their child was gone.
When the kid came
back he was usually working at Chevy, Ford or
Republic Steel before his hair grew over his
ears and onto his collar. Most of the boys on
my street grew their hair long after they came
back from Vietnam.
The people on my
street knew that the fortunate sons of
privilege were not going to Vietnam. The
Batchelders, Bushes and Cheneys lived on
avenues, drives and boulevards where all of the
children went to college and joined the
National Guard or the Army Special Reserve or
got themselves elected to a Government position
if they ran out of deferments. These children
didn't keep themselves out of the war. Their
moms and dads used their power and influence
and money to keep their kids out of Vietnam.
The children on the Batchelder's,
Bush's and Cheney's avenues and boulevards were
already working in Government when the kids on
my street came back from Vietnam. The
Batchelder, Bush and Cheney children never did
grow their hair long and they didn't learn
first-hand about real human justice and
injustice and tragedy and corruption and
courage and sacrifice, but they did get a big
head start in government, which is part of the
reason that we are in the situation we are in,
in Iraq. These sons of privilege never tested
or tempered their own character in the Vietnam
crucible and arrived in positions of power
without the capability of exercising the
thoughtful judgment that they may have
possessed had they only gone to war with the
kids on my street.
John
Galish
Brunswick
Make Your Own
Attack Ad with DNC's Flipper TV
The
Democratic National Committee has launched a
new project called "Flipper TV." This
website features hours of video
clips of the Republican presidential
candidates. More video will be added over the
coming months, including clips from the You
Tube Republican debate held on Wednesday,
November 28, 2007. This is a really cool idea.
So, if you ever wanted to make your own attack
ad, now you have the material, courtesy of the
DNC.
Clinton Leads in Most Survey USA
Polls
A Survey USA poll
done for
two television stations in Ohio has Clinton
leading all Republicans listed except for John
McCain. The poll was taken on November 9, 2007.
A November 1, 2007 poll
by Survey
USA had Clinton leading all Republicans listed
in Florida. A Survey USA poll
has
Clinton leading all listed Repulicans in
Kentucky.
Thus, in states that were
battleground states in 2000 and 2004, Florida
and Ohio, Clinton leads and in a state that is
usually a safe Republican state, Clinton leads.
Yet, constantly from the news media we hear and
read stories that question Clinton's
electability. This is usually based on the
relatively high unfavorables that Clinton has
when compared to other Democratic and
Republican candidates.
The problem with
such analysis, however, is that it overlooks
the ability of Republicans, with their allies
in the media like Fox News, to drive up the
unfavorables of any Democratic candidate who
wins the Democratic nomination. Can we say
"Swift-boating", children?
What we know
about Clinton is that she can take and deliver
a punch. We don't know that nearly as well
about Obama and Edwards. The question isn't
whether the Republicans are going to attack and
demonize the Democratic nominee. The question
is whether such Democrat will fight back. The
ability and willingness to fight back may be a
lot more important than the negative ratings of
the eventual Democratic nominee.
"Bush Economy" Heading for a
Recession?
The economy is heading
toward a recession. New home sales are down
8.5% since July. Prices of new homes have
fallen 7.5% from a year ago. Credit is increasingly hard
to get for consumers and businesses.
All of
these are signs that the economy is heading
towards a recession.
Ever since Bush's
reckless, radical tax cuts, we have heard from
his supporters and apologists about how they
have helped the economy. Actually, and this is
something that presidents of both parties don't
want to talk about, but the Federal Reserve
Board has more control over the economy than
any president. If the Fed makes more money
available, it helps both consumers and
businesses get loans. They use these loans to
buy goods and services, thereby creating more
jobs for Americans.
Under Greenspan the
Fed basically allowed homeowners to turn their
homes into ATM units. Americans borrowed on
their equity to finance everything from home
remodeling to a new vacation for the grandkids.
Naturally, since Greenspan is a
Republican and since Bush is an idiotic
Republican, no one thought about overseeing the
financial institutions making these loans. As a
result, we now have a wave of losses in the
billions of dollars from risky loans.
Consequently, we see financial institutions,
who are apparently led by people who are not
real bright given their past history, sharply
cutting back on new loans.
If there is
a recession, look for three things to happen.
One is that Republicans like Bush will push for
even more tax cuts under the rationale that we
need to "pump" up the economy. Two, Democrats
will do even better next year than anticipated.
Three, illegal immigration will become even
more potent as an issue because of economic
insecurity among working class
Americans.
Gallup Poll Shows Clinton
& Obama Lead or Tie GOP
Contenders
The Gallup Polling
organization released a poll of nationwide voters on
November 26, 2007, showing that Clinton and
Obama lead all GOP contenders with the
exception that Obama ties Guilliani in the
poll. What is significant about Clinton's lead
is that against all candidates, except
Guilliani, she is doing better in her poll
numbers than she was doing in a June/July poll.
Regarding Guilliani, although Clinton's spread
over Guilliani has increased from four per-cent
to five per-cent, the numbers for both
Guilliani have declined by one point each.
Clinton went to 49% from 50% and Guilliani went
from 46% to 44%.
Of course, we don't
elect presidents in a nationwide contest, we
elect them in 50 state elections which result
in the selection of electors who make up the
electoral college. Therefore, national polling
figures are somewhat misleading. While it is
probably impossible for a presidential
candidate to lose the popular vote by more than
five per-cent and still win the 270 electoral
votes required to become president, as we saw
in 2000, it is possible to lose the popular
vote by 500,000 plus votes and still win the
electoral college. In such a case, however, it
is helpful to have the United States Supreme
Court go in the bag for
you.
Republican Representative Pushed
Through Financial Aid for College for the
Rich
Let's say that you were
allocating Federal dollars for a student loan
program. Would one of your priorities be
getting such aid into the hands of parents who
run businesses employing less than 100 people?
Parents who may have a net worth in the
millions of dollars? Well, if you were
Republican Representative Marilyn Musgrave of
Colorado that's exactly what you would do.
This is from an article on the U.S. News &
World Report website dated November 16,
2007:
A little-noticed loophole
written into federal college financial aid
rules allows the children of wealthy
entrepreneurs to collect aid intended for the
needy.
In a bill passed last year,
Congress decreed that when determining how much
each family can afford to contribute to a
child's college education, the federal
government should not consider the assets of
owners of businesses with 100 full-time
employees or fewer. Rep. Marilyn Musgrave of
Colorado inserted this exemption, noting at the
time that small-business owners should be
treated the same as family farmers, who aren't
expected to mortgage their property to pay for
college. Musgrave, a Republican, did not
respond to requests for comment. The federal
government will still consider the income of
all business owners.
According to
the article, financial planners for the rich
are already taking advantage of this provision,
as this quote shows:
Matt Geherin, a
financial consultant in Rochester, N.Y., helped
a client move property worth $700,000 into a
limited partnership to reduce taxes and improve
his children's eligibility for need-based aid.
The new exemption could "change our advice
profoundly," he says.
Major advantage.
Fred Amrein, a fee-only college funding adviser
based in Wynnewood, Pa., says the new exemption
allowed one client's child to qualify for a
federally subsidized student loan this spring
even though the parent's business was worth
more than $1 million. Previously, the
government would have estimated those parents
could have paid more than $70,000 a year for
tuition and thus would have awarded the child
no need-based aid. "This is a major advantage
for small-business families," Amrein says,
adding, "I believe the size [of the exemption]
is too large."
Marilyn Musgrave:
She'll fight to the death to help the
rich!
Afro-American Evangelical
Voters: Personally Conservative but Socially
Liberal?
There is an interesting
article on the Washington Post
website dated November 26, 2007, about
Afro-American evangelical voters being torn
between the two parties. On the one hand they
lean conservative on issues such as same-sex
marriage and abortion, but on the other hand
they are liberal in terms of combating racism
and on economic issues. This is a quote from
the article:
Morality is different
in terms of the way we see it and white
evangelicals see it," said Pastor Lyle Dukes of
Harvest Life Changers Church in Woodbridge, a
member of Jackson's group who supported Bush in
2004. "What we think is moral is not only the
defense of marriage, but we also think equal
education is a moral issue. We think
discrimination is immoral."
The
above quote sums up the problem for some
Afro-American evangelical voters. The GOP will
never back them on issues such as fighting
racial discrimination or equalizing education
opportunities. The Democrats won't back them on
issues such as abortion gay rights. In 2004
they resolved that dilemma by backing Bush in
greater numbers in such states as Ohio where
there was a constitutional amendment on the
ballot outlawing same-sex marriage.
That year Bush received 16% of the
Afro-American vote in Ohio while nationwide he
received about 11% of the Afro-American vote.
Given the closeness of the race here in Ohio,
that extra 5% was very important to Bush and
the GOP.
This year, though, such voters
are feeling like there is no one for them to
support. The Post article ends with a point
made by a Afro-American preacher who supported
Bush in 2004:
He thinks the GOP pays
attention to evangelicals when it needs their
votes but has not delivered when it comes to
advancing their causes. Jackson said that after
the 2004 election, he attended a White House
meeting of evangelical leaders and listened as
Rove said he didn't think the church vote had
won the election for Bush.
Jackson told
him: "I am a registered Democrat. The only
reason I am here is because I thought you were
working on issues of faith and that it would be
better for my folks than the promises, promises
of the Democratic party."
Democrats, he
said, "come to us under the cloak of darkness
at the last hour, get what they want and then
act like they don't know us the next day."
That got a big laugh from the
conservatives, he recalled. Then Jackson said
he told Rove: "You all are doing the same thing
to the evangelicals."
Politics
is About Personal Relationships as Much as
About Philosophy
There is a
story in the New York Times
dated November 24, 2007, about how a former
Marine is organizing western Iowa for Barack
Obama. The essential point of the story is that
he is trying to develop a network of voters who
will recruit other Democratic voters to Obama's
cause for the upcoming Democratic caucuses.
This is a quote from the
article:
The outcome of the Iowa
caucuses, a set of 1,781 precinct meetings to
take place across the state on Jan. 3, hinges
on creating a strong and loyal person-to-person
network. Mr. Steele is among the hundreds of
Democratic and Republican campaign aides
stationed in Iowa responsible for building —
and sustaining — those networks throughout the
state's 99 counties.
Most local
campaigns don't understand this point: In
politics relationships are as important, if not
more so, as philosophy in winning elections.
People don't go out and work for candidates in
local elections because they agree with their
philosophy, they go out and work for them
because they like them. This is not so true on
the national and state level, but is very true
on the local level.
People who are
thinking about running for office need to work
on developing a network of personal
relationships they can draw on for their
campaigns. It is possible to win local
political campaigns without such a network, but
it is much easier with such a
network.
Huckabee Says America is
"Enslaved" to Saudi Oil
This kind of
language is why we think that Mike Huckabee is
the most dangerous potential Republican nominee
for President. Here is a quote from his
appearance on CNN's Late
Edition:
"Every time we put our
credit card in the gas pump, we're paying so
that the Saudis get rich — filthy, obscenely
rich, and that money then ends up going to
funding madrassas that train the terrorists.
America has allowed itself to become enslaved
to Saudi oil. It's absurd. It's
embarrassing."
No other candidate
of either party is pointing out the obvious:
The Saudis aren't our friends, aren't very good
allies, and only support us because they want
our backing against their own home-grown
religious radicals. This is the country that
produced 19 of the hijackers that killed over
3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001. This is
the country that produced bin Laden. Most
Americans realize the truth of what Huckabee is
saying.
Huckabee's blend of social
conservatism with populism on issues such as
immigration and energy consumption would give
Democrats fit in the general election.
Hopefully, he won't get the nomination. If he
does, look out.
More Voinovich BS
from the PD
Is there a law somewhere
that says that the Plain Dealer has to describe
Voinovich as some sort of Republican "moderate"
on Iraq, even though it is obvious he is not
such thing? Time and time again the PD tells us
that Voinovich is searching for a different
policy in Iraq than Bush's even though it is
simply not true.
The latest example is
a Plain Dealer editorial that appeared on Sunday,
November 25, 2007. The editorial included this
gem:
You might think that
Democratic leaders, having already fallen hard
on this path this year, would look to form an
alliance with Republicans - including Ohioans
Steve LaTourette in the House and George
Voinovich in the Senate - who want a new course
in Iraq.
Here's a question
for the stupid editorial writer who wrote the
above: When has George Voinovich proposed a new
course for Iraq that is substantially different
than George Bush's? Voinovich has supported the
President on every vote that has been held this
year. He refuses to come out in support of any
kind of deadline for the withdrawal of American
troops. He supported the so-called "surge." So
just what is this new course that Voinovich and
LaTourette supposedly want?
Look, we
have long known that the Plain Dealer carries
good old George's water. They did it when he
was Cuyahoga County Auditor, when he was
Cleveland's Mayor, when he was Governor, and
now they are still carrying it when he is a
Senator. Instead of insulting the intelligence
of their readers by making up stuff, why
doesn't PD's editorial staff just come out and
admit the obvious: No matter what the facts
are, they support whatever Voinovich
does.
West Losing the "Other War"
Against Taliban in Afghanistan
So,
do you remember the Taliban? You know, the
Islamist group that took over Afghanistan,
provided a safe haven for bin Laden while he
attacked the West, and was driven out of power
in 2001 by American forces? Well, they are back
and on the verge of capturing control of
Afghanistan from the government that we are
backing. This dreary outlook is being painted
by the Guardian, a newspaper in the United
Kingdom, in an article on its website dated
November, 22, 2007.
Okay, so here is a
historical lesson for George W. Bush and his
radical right-wing nutjob supporters: You don't
start one war until you have finished the first
one. Napoleon learned it in Russia, Hitler
learned it in Russia, and now Bush is learning
it in Afghanistan and Iraq. He started his
second war before he had finished the job of
pacifying Afghanistan.
Sometimes, as
say in WWII, when we were attacked by Japan and
then both Germany and Italy declared war on us,
you have to fight two wars at one time. But,
unless you are forced into that position, this
is a very simple concept to learn: DON'T FIGHT
TWO WARS AT ONCE.
Government Uses
Cellphones to Track Americans, Often Without
Showing Probable Cause
One of the
ongoing legal issues in the United States is
applying the United States Constitution to
situations that arise over 200 years after its
adoption. When the Constitution was drafted,
there weren't telephones, computers, cell
phones, email messages, and all the other
devices we now use to communicate. So the issue
becomes how do you apply the Fourth Amendment,
for example, to situations that the drafters of
the Constitution never envisioned?
This
issue is seen in a story that appeared in the
Washington Post dated Friday, November 23,
2007. Apparently, since September 11, 2001, the
United States government has required that
every cellphone sold in America contain a way
that such phone can be tracked used global
positioning systems. The idea is that if there
is an emergency, and a person is lost, that
person can be found if he or she is carrying
his or her cell phone.
According to the
Post story, this system is now being used by
law enforcement agencies to track suspected
criminals. In many cases, Federal law
enforcement agents are obtaining warrants from
Federal Courts without a showing of probable
cause to believe that a crime has been
committed or is being planned. The following
quote is from the first two paragraphs of the
story:
Federal officials are
routinely asking courts to order cellphone
companies to furnish real-time tracking data so
they can pinpoint the whereabouts of drug
traffickers, fugitives and other criminal
suspects, according to judges and industry
lawyers.
In some cases, judges have
granted the requests without requiring the
government to demonstrate that there is
probable cause to believe that a crime is
taking place or that the inquiry will yield
evidence of a crime. Privacy advocates fear
such a practice may expose average Americans to
a new level of government scrutiny of their
daily lives.
Apparently the
argument is being made that two Federal
statutes, the Stored Communications Act and the
Pen Register Statute, authorize the collection
of such information on a standard of "specific
and articulable factsshowing reasonable grounds
to believe the data are relevant to an ongoing
criminal investigation."
While some Federal
Courts are rejecting this argument, other
Federal Courts are accepting it and using
warrants for the collection of such data.
One Federal magistrate in New York
reasoned that since the government "did not
install the "tracking device" and the user
chose to carry the phone and permit
transmission of its information to a carrier,
no warrant was needed." Of course, this
argument overlooks the fact that the while the
government did not install the tracking device,
it required that the tracking device be
installed.
In any event, if you are
interested in the issue of privcy in an
electronic age, you will find this article
fascinating. We learned of this article through
Talking Points
Memo owned
and operated by Josh Marshall.
Newsletter prepared by:
Medina County
Democratic Action Committee
Joyce Kimbler,
Treasurer
P.O. Box 1213
Medina, OH
44258
MCDAC
Website
