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Darn That Dream-Awake the State

January 11, 2012 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By Jerry Waxman

Back on March 8, 2011 Awake the State rallied in many of Florida’s communities including Orlando. The Orlando rally attracted hundreds of people and many speakers who all were all on the same page: Hey, Governor Scott and the legislature, we can’t afford your budget cuts that affect the middle class in order to pay for more tax breaks for large corporations. Guess what happened? Neither Scott nor his Republican allies listened to the people. Their campaign promises about bringing jobs to the state never materialized and the entire legislative focus was on austere budget cuts that actually lost jobs in the state along with voter suppression bills, restrictions on women’s reproductive rights, cutbacks in state employee pensions and anti-middle class measures that gave big corporations huge tax breaks at taxpayers’ expense.

 

Florida was by no means the only state to do this. At the same time that the Florida Lawmakers were having their way other states like Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan, New Jersey and Indiana were experiencing the same thing. Wisconsin did something about it as did Ohio. The results of the Wisconsin protests are that two Republican state senators lost their recall elections thereby almost restoring balance to the state. Governor Scott Walker is being recalled and the hope is that he will be defeated if he runs for re-election. The citizens of Ohio overturned anti-union laws in November. Democrats in Indiana are fighting anti-union legislation at the present time. The citizens of Florida are now gearing up to fight the repressive Republican initiatives and the movement is gaining strength.

 

At the same time last year as these radical measures were being tested in the US, resistance forces were awakening in the middle east and were successful in toppling governments in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya, with major resistance still going on in Syria, Bahrain and Yemen. Other countries in the region are experiencing ongoing civil protests and unrest. The name given the uprisings is the Arab Spring or the Arab Awakening and it shows no signs of abatement.

 

In Florida the people at Organize Now, Florida Watch Action and other like minded groups sprang into action.  They organized rallies to “Pink Slip Rick”, a term to fire the current governor even though the Florida Constitution does not allow for recalls of state officials. Any time the governor speaks publicly within Central Florida there is always a crowd showing up with “Pink Slip Rick” signs, most notably at a donut shop in Tampa several months ago. “Pink Slip Rick” is catching on throughout the state and requests for t-shirts and bumper stickers are increasing every day. Susannah Randolph, wife of State Representative Scott Randolph has also drawn attention to the repression of women’s rights by mockingly announcing that she would incorporate her uterus because it has more rights as a corporation than she does as a woman. Her husband spoke about it on the house floor thereby arousing the ire of House Speaker Dean Cannon who attempted to ban the word in chambers. The incident drew national media exposure and MSNBC ran with it for a long time. It remains one of the funniest political inanities of the year yet it shows the house Republicans to be without humor, incredibly uptight and terribly sensitive to criticism.

 

At the same time on a national scale Tea Party influenced Republicans in Congress were doing whatever they could to tank the already fragile economy and restrict a robust recovery in any way possible strictly for political advantage. It was at this fateful moment in time that average people were beginning to realize that our system of government at all levels had been co-opted by powerful corporate interests who had the power to influence political outcomes detrimental to all save a powerful few. Thus, the Occupy Movement was born in this country. Occupy Wall Street led the way, and all of the Occupying movements are having their effect on their respective communities. The Occupations have shown that organizing and direct actions are having their effect.

 

According to the Press release issued Jan 10 all of these rallies coincided with the first day of the Florida legislative session where there were also major demonstrations taking place by concerned citizens who want legislators to focus on protecting and expanding Florida’s middle class. Florida’s taxing structure places a much higher burden on working families than on major corporations who barely pay any taxes at all. “That’s not fair” said Amy Ritter of Florida Watch Action. Sheena Rolle of Organize Now said “We will continue to fight extreme Tallahassee Republicans, led by Rick Scott, until we see these anti-middle class policies changed and the middle class and job creation is the focus in Florida once again. The fight for the future of Florida has begun. As a part of the protests these groups are handing out flyers with the names of the Republican legislators who have acted like Scott puppets and a list of “Dirty Dozen” businesses that financially supported Scott’s 2010 campaign. The flyers have been distributed around the state as part of the protests. More information can be found at www.pinksliprick.com/dirtythirty.

 

So, Awake the State was blessed with nineteen actions from around the state, and Orlando’s rally was a resounding success. It is not always easy to get a crowd of people downtown at 4:00 PM on a workday, but there was a crowd of over 100 people charged up and ready to demonstrate outside of the Progressive Center. Other cities reported similar crowds with similar agendas. This was not a crowd of fringe people. This was a crowd of working people, college students, recently laid off professionals looking to get back to work and political activists. There were many “Pink Slip Rick” shirts in attendance. Several candidates for local offices were there in support, most notably Jeff Ashton, who has announced that he will be running for State Attorney against his former boss, Lawson Lamar, and Mayoral hopeful Michael Cantone, who is looking to unseat current mayor Buddy Dyer. Before the actual rally there were a series of chants to warm up the crowd.

 

Sheena Rolle acted as emcee and welcomed the crowd. She introduced Steve Clelland, head of the Orlando Firefighters who pointed out the hypocrisy of his representative, Fred Costello, when he was mayor of Ormond Beach opted for a defined benefit plan, yet introduced an anti defined benefit plan as soon as he went to the legislature. He also spoke about Rep. Chris Dorworth who accepted union money and then filed legislation to restrict union dues from being deducted from their paychecks because they were giving money to politicians. He also blasted the Orlando Chamber of Commerce who pays a dollar a year rent for over 40 years on the property yet sponsored ads that blame public employees for the current crisis. Clelland intimates that public employees are going to be changing their registrations and start campaigning against these particular legislators.

 

Sisters Ana and Ida Eskimani are two pint sized powerhouses active in the College Democrats at UCF who complained about the voter suppression bills that have restricted registration by college students. Diana Moore with the Classroom Teachers of America spoke about the need for legislators and parents to be more accountable and responsible in order to bring education to the forefront again. She spoke about the need for proper funding of public education in order to achieve first rate goals.

 

Booker Perry, a retired firefighter who made headlines recently when he was evicted in a foreclosure action spoke about the trials of people who have to leave their homes. The new voter suppression laws have made it extremely difficult for people to reregister to vote. For many people this is a hardship that will prevent them from voting in the next election. Andy Dominguez, head of Latino Leadership is heavily invested in voter registration for minorities. He spoke against the repressive voter suppression laws.

 

Once the speakers were done it was time to march. Chanting and sign waving were the order of the day and based on the number of approving horn honks from rush hour traffic it was a very successful rally.

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Filed Under: Blogroll, Education, Political

“Congressman Mica, We’re from the union and we’re here to help.”

September 2, 2011 by Jerry Waxman 1 Comment

By Jerry Waxman

Since the ascendency of Ronald Reagan every time conservative Republicans either run for office or stand for re-election their main talking points are how wasteful and inefficient the federal government is. Their prophecy is self-fulfilling because they prove it every day they are in office. They know how to campaign well, but they just don’t (or don’t want to) govern well. John Mica of Florida’s 7th congressional district is no exception. He’s represented his district for the last eighteen years and since January he has been the chairman of the powerful House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

 

Florida’s 7th district is a masterful example of gerrymandering in that Mica lives in the city of Winter Park yet represents people in Seminole County, Volusia County and other counties as far north as Jacksonville. Somehow, strangely, the city of Sanford escapes his district, belonging instead to Corrine Brown of Florida’s District Three. District Three is another marvel of gerrymandering. It looks like a small dog with its head in Jacksonville and its hind legs down in the Pine Hills and Oakridge sections of Orlando. Its tail is interpolated into District Seven as the city of Sanford. What is not in her district is the Sanford/Orlando airport, which is about on the boundary line of the two districts. By 2002 Mica had already served on the House Transportation Committee for ten years, so these things are not done without a reason.

 

As part of the Republican agenda of lessening the impact of unions Mica insisted on legislation that would sharply curtail union activities as a requisite to passing the FAA Reauthorization bill in July. There was no resolution and the FAA shut down all unnecessary operations on July 22. This action caused millions of dollars in tax revenue to go uncollected, as well as the loss of thousands of jobs and construction starts, which in an economy as fragile as the one we are in is not good news for anyone. A temporary measure was passed later that extended FAA authorization until September 15th. Congress, of course, has been on vacation and is just now coming back into session, so there is a narrow window of opportunity to pass a clean bill.

 

During the congressional recess period Mica had to come home to face the voters and he got earfuls from many quarters. Earlier in August Dana Milbank of the Washington Post had this to report:

 

The usually biting chairman of the House Transportation Committee spoke with remorse about the standoff, which caused furloughs of 74,000 people, delays to airport safety projects and the loss of hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars.

“I’ve had a brutal week, getting beat up by everybody,” Mica told me, minutes after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced a deal that would end the shutdown, at least until Congress returns next month. “I didn’t know it would cause this much consternation,” he said. “Now I’ve just got to get the broom and the shovel and clean up the mess.” Switching metaphors, he said he wanted “to unclog the toilet, but it backed up. So I don’t know what to do, what to say.”

The labor unions who deal with the FAA sprang into action with a plan to deal with Mica’s dilemma, but not in an adversarial way. Spearheaded by the Communications Workers of America they visited all five of Mica’s district offices Friday with brooms, dust pans, plungers and other cleaning up paraphernalia to take back to Washington to aid him in his cleanup effort.

 

The group at the Maitland office was headed by Washington D.C. based CWA Mobilization Director Eileen Toback and CWA local President “Dave” Skinner. The group marched into Mica’s office and received a warm welcome from the secretary. She introduced the office’s district director, Dick Hartke, who graciously allowed several people to speak. At the end of the meeting everyone was invited to sign a guest list for a personal response from Mica. Someone said softly “just make sure you’re not going to wind up on Dan Webster’s list!” Here’s a video of Dave Skinner being interviewed. Here’s a video of the entire meeting with Hartke.

 

It’s probably a much bigger mess than the CWA and all the other unions think, so if you are so inclined here’s a list of all five (Really? He needs five? Talk about inefficiency and waste! ) offices so that if you are so inclined you could send him some more cleaning supplies:

 

Maitland:  100 East Sybellia Ave. Suite 340,  Maitland, FL. 32751

 

Palatka: 2509 Crill Ave, suite 200,  Palatka, FL 32177

 

St. Augustine:  3000 North Ponce de Leon Drive, Suite 1  St. Augustine, FL. 32084

 

Ormond Beach:  770 W. Granada Blvd. Suite 315, Ormond Beach, FL. 32174

 

Deltona:  840 Deltona Blvd.  Suite G,  Deltona, FL. 32725

 

Just one more thing…..someone include some disinfectant spray.  Just because he may clean up the mess, you can be sure that the malodor will linger on.

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Filed Under: Blogroll, Political, Uncategorized

Will They Ever Get It, And Do They Care?

March 24, 2011 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

By

Jerry Waxman

 

The great trumpeter and American icon, Louis Armstrong, was once asked by an interviewer “What is Jazz?” Armstrong responded “Man, if I have to explain it to you, you’ll never know,” or words to that effect. That statement currently applies to today’s right wing assault on all forms of governing bodies. They really don’t “get it.” Getting it is something more than either knowing or understanding, which are purely intellectual concepts. Getting involves a visceral reaction as well. The great con man, Werner Erhard (nee Jackie Rosenberg, a Philadelphia used car salesman) used the term in his EST trainings in just that way. Erhard/Rosenberg would tell his assembled audiences not to question what he or his other trainers said. Instead, they were supposed to “get it.” The by-product of the EST training was for people to see things in a clear, unmuddled way.

The current breed of right wing politicians now in power have no desire or need to “get it.” They are ideologically controlled through the vast network of right wing think tanks and Chamber of Commerce money to think and act in lockstep to policies that were designed to completely dismantle all concepts of FDR’s New Deal, which raised the standard of living for everyone in this country, not just the rich. The New Deal provided for the proliferation of labor unions and afforded even the most disadvantaged among us the prospect of a dignified retirement. The New Deal made the Middle Class a working partner with the Owner/Managerial Class. The forces working against the New Deal are still out there and they have been working tirelessly since 1955 (Brown v Board of Ed.) on regaining the upper hand. Since Ronald Reagan’s ascendency they have made huge gains and in their thinking they’re on a roll and there’s no need to stop.

If you think that Scott Walker or any other Republican governor is worried about his poll numbers or that he may be recalled you can forget it. His future employment and income is assured. He’ll immediately become a corporate lobbyist or a fellow at one of the big think tanks, as will the minions of others who, lemming-like, follow in the same path. They care about their marching orders; they do not care one iota about their subjects …oops!…constituents. There are enough Democrats in Congress, as well as our President, who have bought into the “starve the beast” and “don’t tax the rich” philosophy (at least to some extent) just to keep their jobs that it is unconscionable to anyone with progressive leanings. These Democrats don’t “get it” either.

Unfortunately, here in Florida we have a situation where neither our governor nor our legislators can be recalled so, basically they can do what they want almost at will. The assault on teachers is in full swing and more is coming. No amount of protest will nullify that at the present time, yet elements in the state are beginning to organize and the future is nowhere near bleak. Awake the State and other similar organizations are going to the grass roots and a movement is starting to build. It will take time and lots of organization but there is a growing feeling of unrest in most neighborhoods and every one of these organizations is going to be converting that negative energy into positive action. When average citizens “get it” things will change.

How not to be part of the problem

The Irish philosopher Edmund Burke wrote “The only thing necessary for the triumph [of evil] is for good men to do nothing.”  Radio and TV host Thom Hartmann always closes his program with the words “Tag, you’re it!” Eldridge Cleaver in 1969 paraphrased an old African proverb, “If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.” It’s a wakeup call for ordinary people to get involved. Theologian Martin Niemoller’s famous statement First They Came referred to the Nazi takeover in Germany and the lack of resistance to it. The idea is that you and I, ordinary everyday people need to unite together to reverse the current abuses heaped on us.  Write letters (not e-mails) in your own hand to your elected representatives outlining your dissatisfaction with their policies. Write letters to the editor. Support your local public schools in letters to the school board. Make it a point to attend at least one local rally supporting a good or protesting a bad government action. Go on line and read news and opinion from several sources. Get involved, get off the couch, DVR the “Real Housewives” and get to know your neighbors and their reactions to the issues. The walk will do you good. Attend a city or county commission meeting and see the craziness that happens there. Voting in a presidential election every four years is not enough. Floridians in general got the government they deserved because too few good people were involved or engaged. It’s not a matter of money; it’s a matter of too many good people doing nothing. Buy American when and where possible and look for the union label.

Florida needs to fight back

Here’s a novel idea, especially if you’re a teacher: If you graduated from a college or university outside Florida then contact your school president, dean of admissions and board of governors informing them of the current funding and legislative situations here. Plead with them nicely to not accept students from Florida public schools because, despite your best efforts, educational policies from the top down have severely restricted your students’ ability to do the required work at your alma mater and you have concerns that they would be inadequate. Make these institutions aware of the backward attitudes in this state. Here’s another: Rick Scott will produce zero meaningful jobs in Florida. One major global concern is starting its exodus out of the central part of the state because of the loss of high speed rail. One third of its workforce is being transferred to North Carolina almost immediately. Almost 1000 high paying executive and technical jobs will leave this local economy, and these people are going to have to sell their homes at much less value than they bought them for. Not good for local Florida businesses or property taxes. So, get in touch with Fortune’s list of 500 and get in touch with anyone whose stock is publicly traded. Write to their CEO’s, their board chairmen and their shareholders magazines and let them know what kind of a crook Rick Scott is. Cite his company’s Medicare fraud conviction and his taking the fifth an unprecedented number of times. Let them know that, contrary to his claims, Florida is not a place for them to do business. The dearth of real cultural and first class educational facilities, a non-existent public transit system, and a woefully undereducated work force would be contradictory to their expansion or relocation plans. The more people do this, the less these companies will be inclined to invest in Florida. Yes, it may hurt us a little economically, but…hey!…..we’re already hurt and we have been for twelve years, and we’ll remain this way until Rick Scott and the Republican legislature is gone. I’ll bet that at least half of the schools and executives you write to have no clue as to what’s going on in this state. They need to be awakened as well.

Getting it

We need to emphasize that since the election of Ronald Reagan people have been lied to for thirty years about the role of government and government workers in our society. It took thirty years to get this way and it will take a lot of time to reverse these lies and myths. Here are some pointers on how we can stop the lies and myths:

§  All governments, local, statewide and national exist to serve (not rule) their respective constituencies.

§  All people involved in government including our elected officials are public servants and ultimately answer to us.

§  Government is there to deal with quality of life issues that affect everyone, i.e. clean air, clean water, clean streets, education, health, law enforcement, fire protection and other things that within government’s realm.

§  All citizens are entitled to these basic services that we’ll call things of common interest.

§  These services are necessarily paid for by property taxes and service fees on a local level, sales taxes at the state level and income taxes on a national level. In a county the size of Orange it takes a lot of people to serve the public and give them the services they demand. Quality of life necessities must not be regarded as free market commodities.

§  Public employees at local levels are paid less than their private sector counterparts. Their pensions and benefits were negotiated as a part of their total compensation package, in lieu of salary, based on previous property tax valuations.

§   Local and state non-elected public employees were in no way responsible for the economic collapse and are in no way responsible for any economic shortfalls. The fault lies with legislative policies which neither adequately nor properly address our society’s obligation

§  Cutting taxes for people who can well afford to pay them and cutting services for people who rely on them is today’s equivalent of ancient and medieval “Bloodletting.”

§  Eliminating public sector jobs and services in order to balance the budget will just further depress meaningful economic recovery.

§  Governments are supposed to serve us, not make a profit on us. If government is not serving us properly, it is our responsibility to do something about it.

§  Public School Teachers are well trained, highly regarded professionals, to whom we as a society have entrusted our children’s futures. They deserve our admiration and respect.

The assault on our public education system is especially troubling and is going to require a lot more work to reverse the damage, but if we don’t get teachers fired up to defend themselves and if we don’t get parents and guardians to see the harm that’s being done to their children it will cost us dearly. Got it? If not, you’d better “Get it.”

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Filed Under: Blogroll, Education, Political

Crist’s Veto of SB 6 ends Round One. More heated battles to follow

April 16, 2010 by Jerry Waxman 3 Comments

By Jerry Waxman

As submitted to the Huffington Post

 

Opponents of Florida’s SB 6 were some of the happiest people you’d ever want to meet Thursday afternoon and they had good reason to be. Governor Charlie Crist vetoed the bill, citing among several reasons the Florida Senate’s failure to give the bill an adequate hearing from all sides and the rush to push it through without amendments. An overwhelming display of opposition from teachers, students, administrators, parents, politicians, civic groups, social networking groups and ordinary citizens didn’t hurt either. He really should be thanked publicly for vetoing bad legislation, but before all these people start popping their champagne corks and saying nice things about him they had better read the letter he sent to the Senate. In the last paragraph on page 2 he said that he agreed with the stated goals of the legislation, just not the process, so let’s not get any warm fuzzy feelings yet about Charlie. There’s a lot more legislation coming up that he should also be vetoing.
 
The groups on Facebook know this and are asking all members to keep up the effort and not to relax their guard. They are actually asking members to suggest new members to join so that they can show solidarity for future causes that they know are going to be arising. What they know is that Jeb Bush’s not-so-invisible hand has been stung severely, and Jeb (with his political cronies) is not going to take this lying down.
There are several other bills pending in the legislature, while not as notorious as SB6, still bear his imprint and really need to go down in flames as well:
 
SB4 – Increased testing requirements for HS students
SB2 – Amends (Repeals) Class size amendment to Constitution
SB2580 – Health Insurance bill mandating purchase of cheapest plan.
SB2022 – Require .25% salary contribution to FRS.
HB1543 – Cut Retirement
SB1902 – Companion to HB1319
HB1319 – Public Employee Retirement Reform Bill
HB5701 – Removes $150 monthly health subsidy & Reduces Retirement contribution by $1800/yr
SB2126 – Increase Private Corporate voucher contributions for tax cuts
SJR2550 – Amends Constitution to allow public funding of religious schools.
 
For now, at least, the biggest obstacle has been defeated. Reaction from the pro SB6 side has been predictable. Here’s Jeb’s response, and here’s the response from the typical Republican Supporters of SB 6. From the same article cam this satirical comment to their response:

From Senate President Jeff Atwater: “I am disappointed that today Governor Crist chose to reverse direction and…” not allow private schools to benefit, loss $ for Reps; not allow testing companies to benefit from the districts budgets, loss $ for Reps; limit social biased vouchers to steer billions in tax payers money to private education and the companies that publish their materials, loss $ for Reps.

From Newt Gingrich: “It is very disappointing that Governor Crist abandoned the children of Florida and sided with the teachers union …” he should have ignored the non-union teachers voice as the legislature did, the voices of concerned parents that cannot afford private education, the voices of students of education that were going to be left with hard to re-pay students loans. “… It is sad to see the public interest abandoned for a political calculation with a powerful union…”

From House Majority Leader Adam Hasner: “I’m disappointed that after sending his top policy staffer to the House Committee to testify in support of the proposal, Governor Crist would change his mind and now veto the bill.” The presence of a staffer is MUCH more valuable than the 109,000 voices the Governor heard.

From Barney Bishop, president and CEO of Associated Industries of Florida: “Governor Crist’s decision to veto SB 6 is not only a disappointment to Associated Industries of Florida and the businesses we represent,…” private schools, testing companies, companies that publish education material, telemarketers, and construction companies

From Rep. John Tobia, R-Satellite Beach, who pulled his support of Crist in the U.S. Senate race: “Governor Crist is playing political games with our children’s education,” We play with the children and the industries that will exploit them like telemarketers and construction companies that need cheap labor.

From Mark Wilson, Florida Chamber of Commerce President and CEO: “While Governor Crist’s decision to veto SB 6 is very disappointing, the Florida Chamber of Commerce will continue to fight for higher pay for good teachers…” that teach in favorable areas or in private schools since we can give up on the disable, the infirm, and the economically disadvantageous.

 
 
 
On the teacher side these arguments refute any claims that SB6 would benefit education:
 

“This legislation would require the development of scores of end-of-course exams, which would be used to determine if students made learning gains. These tests are not currently developed and how they would measure those learning gains have not been developed either.

It is clear that there are tremendous costs that are associated with the passage of this legislation. The analysis of the bill by those who developed this legislation says that the actual price tag is “indeterminate,” which means they don’t know what it will cost. Yet the Legislature has allocated no money for this purpose.

In fact, the legislation seeks to pay for these costs by holding back 5 percent of each district’s budget. Yes, the same budget that has been cut for the past few years and that each district is struggling with every year. That means there will be even less money available for salaries, programs and school operations. All of this, while districts seek to comply with this legislation and other costly mandates that are currently being considered by the Legislature.

The legislation states, without equivocation: “A district school board may not use length of service or degrees held as a factor in setting a salary schedule.” So experience and knowledge are no longer important in the classroom?

The salary schedule would not be subject to collective bargaining and the state will decide what categories of differentiated pay will be provided for.

Probationary contracts are issued for up to five years, after which a teacher could get an annual contract if they are rated effective or highly effective, which will be defined by the DOE, not the school district. The state will have a much greater hand in appraisals.

The bill would abolish the Dale Hickam Excellent Teacher program, which rewards teachers who have attained National Board Certification. “

 

Since yesterday’s veto the news spread nationally and was picked up by the Huffington Post and the New York Times plus many other news organizations. It’s no secret that several other states were waiting to see the outcome of this case. In Jeb Bush’s world Florida has become his laboratory test case to package to the rest of the country. One local poll in the Palm Beach Post show massive favorable reaction (84%) to the veto. Fund Education Now is a local Central Florida group founded by three concerned parents who have been taking the legislature to task for failing to properly fund the schools every year. Here’s a video of their latest statement.

Florida is just representative of what’s going on nationally. The Obama administration has made no gains with the selection of Arne Duncan as Secretary of Education. As a matter of fact Duncan is actually worse than his two predecessors, Margaret Spellings and Rod Paige because he knows their policies were a sham and he continues to inject steroids in them. Respected educators such as Diane Ravitch have repudiated these methods and one of America’s premier education authorities, Henry A. Giroux, writing in Truthout.org has weighed in on this. If you want to know what his credentials are, his website is www.henryagiroux.com. It’s also indicative of what’s going on if you look at what’s happening at Arizona State University, which is a leading research institution in this country. They have recently disestablished their unit for higher education showing tremendous disrespect for the profession. Dr. Karen Anijar-Appleton suggests everyone join Public Education Matters to keep abreast of news and happenings throughout the country.

U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio recently told reporters in Orlando that he supported SB 6. He was elected to the Florida House in 2000 and served as Speaker during the 2007-2008 terms. He is a full supporter of the Bush agenda and that is not really a surprise. He is also a product of a dumbed down society and educational system under the Reagan/Bush 1 years. He was 9 years old when Ronald Reagan took office so he has no concept of what life was like or how education worked prior to that point in time. It’s no wonder he can’t see past his narrow concepts. I feel sorry for him.

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Filed Under: Blogroll, Political

Haiti on Reflection

January 16, 2010 by Jerry Waxman 10 Comments

By Jerry Waxman

As submitted to the Huffington Post

When the news of the earthquake in Haiti hit the first thing I did was take out my expired passport and look up the last time I had been there. It was July 31, 1987. My first trip had been in April of 1978. My brother and I had just taken over the family textile supply business and we were looking to expand. Back in those days the US still had a viable textile industry and it supported lots of wealthy owners and middle class workers. Even in the Carter administration American companies were sending American made cut fabrics and trimmings into Mexico and other countries in the Caribbean Basin under a trade agreement called Article 807 Offshore Manufacturing. This allowed the actual assembly labor to be done offshore and taxed at its add-on value, with finishing done back in the US. Through mutual business acquaintances we got involved with a contractor from Port-au-Prince who wanted us to place garment work in one of his factories. We took the trip and had some loose agreements to manufacture children’s clothing there. There was one little detail that had to be ironed out, that of giving Baby Doc Duvalier his percentage. Nothing got done in that country without his getting his part of the action. It took a few more trips to get things rolling. We were in Baby Doc’s company several times where he either entertained us at the palace, or we wined and dined him (and his entourage). Before actually signing any binding contracts we decided not to go through with it because we felt that the country wasn’t stable enough to protect our interests if things didn’t go well. It had always been one of those nagging feelings in our minds and it manifested itself just in time. We placed the work in Mexico instead (and that’s another story). Baby Doc’s abdication didn’t come for several years, but on reflection we were better off not being there.

The striking contrast between the opulent life of the ruling elite and the abject poverty of the masses was always a concern. Every time I flew in I was met by an armed escort that traveled with me to my hotel and went to the factories with me. No amount of profit is worth that kind of risk. The ruling elite were still powerful after Duvalier’s downfall. The contractor from Port-au-Prince again asked me to place work for him and I tried, but no reputable US manufacturer wanted to take a chance, even though Henri Namphy was now in office. 

Haiti is an absolutely beautiful country once you get outside the city. It’s very mountainous and its soil is very rich. At one time Haiti produced more than half of the world’s sugar cane and was one of the wealthiest countries in the Americas. Today it is the poorest. This is not by accident, and we in the US are as much to blame as anyone. The devastation, contributed to by absolute lack of infrastructure could have been a lot less had there been proper building codes and effective government policies in place. Had we not treated Haiti like a banana republic for the last 95 years it might have prevented much of the loss of life and breakdown in its civil systems that were caused by the earthquake.

Haiti’s history has been one of suppression by outside forces since Christopher Columbus discovered the Island of Hispaniola in 1492 and established (by necessity) a colony called La Navidad in what is now Haiti. By 1517 the Spanish occupiers of the island were importing slaves from Africa to work in the gold mines. The first French settlers were actually pirates who were looking for safe havens. During this period the French developed plantations for growing sugar cane, coffee and tobacco. Another lucrative industry was the production of indigo. More African slaves were brought to Haiti for the indigo industry as they were experts in growing the plants and processing the dye. The Spanish during this period did not establish agricultural communities but continued to strip the island of its gold and other precious minerals. As the French populations grew and prospered skirmishes between the French and Spanish became more spirited until boundaries were set by the Treaty of Ryswick in 1697, the eastern part of the island to the Spanish (Santo Domingo) and the western part named Saint-Domingue to France. The French were no better at treating slaves than were the Spanish, however, after the French Revolution France actually freed the Haitian slaves for a short period of time until Napoleon Bonaparte took over the government and attempted to reinstitute it. He sent 50,000 soldiers to retake the country but an outbreak of Yellow Fever killed a majority of them and the rest of them were defeated by the Haitian population. Haiti declared its independence on Jan 1, 1804 renaming itself Haiti after a local indigenous tribe.

Having no experience in self determination Haiti was ruled by a series of strong man despots who ruled with iron fists. In the roughly 200 years since Haiti first declared its independence the government has suffered 32 coups from either the Army, the elite class or outside influences. In 1825 France decided to send its Navy and troops to retake the island. France threatened a blockade which would cripple Haiti’s then robust economy. American slave owners from southern plantations also threatened to join the blockade since the idea of a free country run by former African slaves was anathema to their thinking. A treaty was negotiated that allowed Haiti to keep its independence in return for war reparations of one hundred and fifty million francs. Haiti did not finish its war reparation payments until 1947, and in order to pay the debt Haiti had to borrow tremendous sums of money from American, French and German banks at almost usury rates. As economically powerful as Haiti could have become, this onus consumed as much as 80% of its national budget according to British historian and author Alex von Tunzelmann. Up through the beginning of the twentieth century Haiti managed to survive and export its products, however the US sent in marines to occupy in 1915 during another upheaval, ostensibly to protect the safety of US citizens, but the real reason was to protect Haiti’s ability to repay the reparation loans. We were not alone as Great Britain and Germany also sent troops to occupy. Our occupation lasted twenty years and ended in 1935, right in the height of the Great Depression. You can be sure that the US got its loan payments, even if we had to raid the Haitian Treasury to do it.

The US occupation never worked for the benefit of the people; instead, we preferred to use Haiti’s economic engine as a tool to distribute wealth to foreign investors and banks rather than reinvesting in the country’s economy and infrastructure, while further burdening Haiti with an additional forty million dollar debt in 1922.

Francoise (Papa Doc) Duvalier became politically active during the period following the end of the US occupation. His appeal was based on his disdain for the ruling elites and the rise of the African masses and his call for the return of the national religion Vodou (better known as Voodoo). Duvalier was another despot who was acceptable to the US due to his anti-communistic positions. He was an absolute dictator whose private army (the Tonton Macoutes) was more powerful than the regular army. Whatever wealth Haiti could produce found its way into his pockets rather than the treasury and the Duvalier regime was noted for its corruption. During this period most of Haiti’s professionals and intellectuals immigrated to other countries, thereby leaving even less qualified people to run things properly. After his death in 1971 his son Jean Claude (Baby Doc) was installed. Baby Doc had no time for governing the country and let his mother and his ministers do it instead, preferring to race his sports cars and live a lavish lifestyle, as I and my associates can personally attest to. During this period of time the US influenced the Haitian government to open its factories to American manufacturers as a way of putting people to work. It sounded good, but what happened was that people left the farms in the country to come to work in the city. Port-au-Prince did not have the jobs to support the mass influx of people and once they left the farms they weren’t going back. This resulted in less crops being grown or sold, almost complete depletion of its forests because of the need for lumber and charcoal, which in turn led to massive flooding and soil erosion. Ramshackle buildings were constructed anywhere there was space, whether or not the ground was level. Whole hillsides contained residences, lacking foundations and that had not been constructed according to any building codes.

After Baby Doc was exiled there still was no viable infrastructure in place to address these issues. With all the upheaval American manufacturers cancelled their production contracts and placed work elsewhere. This left Haiti in the position of having its agricultural products as the only credible part of its economy. Of course, the farms had lost their labor and soil erosion had also taken its toll. The US, further exacerbating an intolerable situation, convinced Haiti to lower its import tariffs on American foods and operate in a free market fashion. Rice farmers in Haiti were devastated as American rice could be sold cheaper than the home grown product. As rice farms went out of business the population headed to Port-au-Prince to seek work.

While we shouldn’t cast the sins of our fathers upon ourselves, we do bear the responsibility of not continuing them, which we’ve not done. Prior to the information revolution we didn’t give much thought to how we treated Haiti, but in recent years we’ve seen how unrestricted enterprise enriches the elite few at the expense of many and that our government turns a blind eye in most cases. I don’t feel that our government’s efforts in aiding Haiti have anything to do with guilt, favoritism or political advantage. This is something that people of all civilized nations of conscience do willingly. Mr. Limbaugh and his right wing cronies should understand that American involvement in Haitian affairs since  before the Civil War helped bring this devastation about.

Haitians need help not just to get over this crisis, but they need help to rebuild their society properly. It takes more than money. It takes the will to institute agricultural reforms, governmental reforms, economic and social reforms that have been sorely lacking since the nineteenth century. We need to help them get there.

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Seniors to Humana-“Don’t Lie to us!”

October 1, 2009 by Jerry Waxman 1 Comment

By Jerry Waxman  as submitted to and published in the Huffington Post 10/01/09

DSCF0136 

Tony Fransetta pointing the finger at Humana

Don’t mess with these seniors!

The press conference started at 12:00 on Tuesday outside of Humana’s headquarters in West Palm Beach, Florida. This wasn’t the usual group of activists rallying for health care reform; this was a 21st century version of the Over the Hill Gang, although there were no wheel chairs or walkers in sight. The seniors in this group were members of the Florida Alliance For Retired Americans, with over 200,000 active members in the state, and they are very upset with Humana for its recent scare tactics aimed at seniors regarding health care reform. Tony Fransetta, a Korean war veteran and president of FLARA, chastised Humana for its recent letter to its Medicare Advantage clients stating that under the new laws proposed they could lose benefits.

Fransetta read from his open letter to Humana’s CEO, Michael McCallister, “The Florida Alliance for Retired Americans denounces recent mailings to Medicare Advantage recipients. These mailings are a shameful attempt to protect your profits and they are spreading misinformation about health insurance reform. We demand that you immediately cease and desist from sending further mailings and apologize to those seniors who have received this misleading mail from Humana.

We are very disappointed and saddened at Humana’s deliberate attempts to misinform Medicare Advantage recipients about health insurance reform in order to bolster your bottom line.

We all know that Humana makes outrageous profits because of Medicare Advantage overpayments. All seniors, whether or not in Medicare Advantage, are now paying an extra $43.20 a year in Medicare premiums because of these overpayments to Humana and other insurance companies. More than 31 million Medicare beneficiaries are now forced to pay this extra premium money, which goes to your profit margin, not health care for seniors.

It’s time to make Medicare work for seniors, not Humana and the insurance industry. Many seniors know the truth and are working hard to make health insurance reform a reality.

The Florida Alliance for Retired Americans and its members and allies across Florida and the nation will continue to work to ensure that our hard earned tax dollars go toward health care for which they were intended and not unethical insurance company schemes.

Fransetta then told the assembled that the Department of Health and Human Services Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services in a letter dated Sept. 18 had ordered Humana to cease and desist from their current letter writing citing that the information was confusing and misleading.

Once the conference ended Fransetta and his seniors went into the office to present Humana with an enlarged copy of the letter. The office manager tried to duck them but Fransetta’s group would not be denied. Once the manager appeared he tried to empty the office stating that it was a place of business, but the seniors forced a face to face confrontation. Fransetta told the manager in no uncertain terms that what Humana was doing was wrong and that his own office tactics were abominable. He presented the letter with instructions to forward it to Humana’s CEO.

  Presenting to Humana

Presenting the letter to Humana

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Let’s Not Bury ACORN Yet

September 25, 2009 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

 

“A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes” is a quote attributed to Mark Twain and it is quite apropos considering what’s going on in politics today. ACORN has been around almost forty years and the public for the most part never heard of it until a year ago when allegations of voter fraud propped up. The charges were made by right wing operatives who have been trying to discredit ACORN for years. Last year the timing was perfect to try to tie in Barack Obama, a former “community organizer” with ACORN and William Ayres. There were a few people working with ACORN who falsified voter registration forms and those people were properly dealt with. No executives or board members were charged with any wrongdoing.

The reason for all this is simple: it’s all about voter suppression. Through ACORN’s community organizing efforts millions of people who would not normally be part of the process registered and voted. Their efforts affected many outcomes and the right wing sees its power slipping away. These most recent efforts are merely a continuation to discredit a valuable and important community organization and discredit our president at the same time. It is also no coincidence that these tapes have surfaced just as we’re entering the critical stages of health care reform; ACORN has a huge stake in getting real reform passed. Their clients are the people who need it most. I feel like I’m watching a sadistic Road Runner cartoon. No matter how many times that coyote falls flat on his face he continues the chase relentlessly. After all, he only has to win once.

“The Evil that men do lives after them. The good is oft interred with their bones.”

The “birthers”, “teabaggers” and such show a real ignorance of history every time they open their mouths. Now they are going after appointed “Czars” and making comparisons to Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin in the way things are being done by our administration. Allegations of communism and socialism abound and if you ask any of these people what a Czar is they can’t tell you. So here’s a short history lesson for those so challenged. Prior to World War I Nikolas Romanov using the title Czar ruled Russia. Kaiser Wilhelm of the Hapsburg family ruled Germany. The words Kaiser and Czar are derived from Julius Caesar and the emperors of Rome who bore his name. The word Caesar has come to mean something like “supreme ruler”.  It’s just such a shame when people show their ignorance as arrogantly as these groups do. Anyway, the point of this exercise is to give some historical perspective to ACORN’s problems and show that we’ve been there in the past, even in the waning days of the Roman Republic, and the parallels are amazing. The politics of Rome prior to the formation of the Empire were amazingly complicated, but some things were clear: wealth trickled up, influence and legislation could be bought and reform was met with hostility.

Julius Caesar was arguably the most talented leader in the history of Rome. He was a brilliant military leader, strategist, politician and “community organizer”. He was an outstanding writer and a masterful orator, second only to Cicero, who was his bitter political opponent. He was also a social reformer working hard to include all of his conquered subjects as Roman citizens with full rights, and basically setting up his own personal Veterans Administration for soldiers under his command. Much of what ACORN does was ideated by him. He out-thought, out-fought and out-bought his rivals and in doing so amassed fabulous wealth and stature which he intended to share with the citizenry. His fatal flaw was his willingness to forgive his enemies, who should have been put to death, including Brutus and several of the conspirators for past transgressions. Brutus made a big mistake because Caesar had willed him much of the captured Gallic territories for his own domain. While Caesar was immensely popular among the Roman citizenry, he had his enemies and detractors in the Senate who tried to instill the fear in the populace that he would actually become King. His proposed land and agricultural reforms would have diminished the Senate’s power and very much lessened the Patrician influence in government. No wonder they resisted. He reluctantly refused the crown knowing that politically it was the wise thing to do. The sixty conspirators acted on the 15th of March in the year 44 B.C. and assassinated him just prior to his embarking on another military campaign to complete some of Pompey’s unfinished business which would have given him more fame, glory and unrivaled power.

“…so are they all, all honorable men…”

The conspirators spoke to the throngs of mourners and almost convinced them that their acts were justified as he was about to become the great oppressor and they acted on behalf of all Rome. During this brief period the conspirators wanted to do away with Caesar’s chief lieutenant, Marc Antony but Brutus convinced them to spare him, which was another big mistake. Shakespeare has immortalized Antony’s address to the crowd in one of the most famous quoted passages in history. Whatever Antony did say that day it swayed the crowd and Rome to vengeance. The actual Roman Empire did not come into existence for another twenty years but the stage had been set for the sunset of the five hundred year old Republic. By attempting to “Save Our Republic” the conspirators actually hastened its demise.

Let’s fast forward about 1700 years to the Massachusetts county of Essex in the year 1692. From February 1692 through May 1693 a series of accusations and trials took place in Salem and other cities accusing certain people, mostly single women who were not part of the mainstream of the area, of practicing witchcraft. In 1689 Salem had founded its own church and ordained its first minister, Samuel Parris. Forget what you learned in 6th grade. These Puritans were theocrats who wrote their own rules. What they did to the Indians after the first Thanksgiving doesn’t get taught in schools. Women held no rank in society and were perceived to be more lustful and susceptible to Satan than men. When a single woman or recent widow inherited land she was a ripe candidate for the church to take it from her by hook or by crook. Parris was not above this devious behavior so he condoned the trials, in fact members of his family were some of the accusers. This crowd could teach today’s subprime lenders a thing or two about stealing property. The trials had all the atmosphere of a kangaroo court. Overall, more than twenty people were executed and several more died in prison. There have been volumes written about this. Here’s a quick lookup about it. The facts are that no one in authority at the time tried to stop the proceedings because they had too much to gain by allowing it to happen. This was definitely a dark period in both American and religious history. Okay, Massachusetts was not yet a state and we were not yet a country with a constitution, so let’s fast forward a couple hundred more years to the late 1940’s.

It was a time when you reported your neighbor for any suspicious activity. Once the definite threat of world domination by Fascism was put to rest, the fear of world domination by Communism, dormant since the Thirties, reappeared. There were communists everywhere, in government, in Hollywood, in labor unions, at the local supermarket….everywhere. They were hiding under your bed as well as their evil teachers were indoctrinating your children. Even Eleanor Roosevelt was under investigation. Enter the House Un-American Activities Committee with their trusty companion, The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations headed by Senator Joseph McCarthy, aided and abetted by J. Edgar Hoover’s F.B.I. and other government organizations. All you had to do was disagree with someone about official policy and you were pegged a “red”.  The biggest beneficiary of this period was Richard Nixon, who played it for all it was worth and built his entire political career on it. The Red Scare gripped this country with fear for several years before some people figured out it was all a hoax. Careers were destroyed and peoples’ reputations were ruined all in the name of patriotism. Actor Philip Loeb was blacklisted, and although he was never charged and he cooperated fully with the committee, he was never cleared by them. He begged them to clear his name and they never did. He ultimately committed suicide in 1955. In the movie, The Front, actor Zero Mostel’s character, Hecky Brown, was based in part on Philip Loeb.

The Red Scare went on unchecked for about five years before someone actually stood up and exposed it. Playwright Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible about the Salem Witch Trials using actual trial records as part of his text. The play was an unabashed expose’ of McCarthyism, in fact Miller was quoted as saying “The more I read into the Salem panic, the more it touched off corresponding images of common experiences in the fifties.”  The next person to stand up to McCarthy was broadcaster Edward R. Murrow, who in a series of reports on McCarthy revealed him to be dishonest, reckless and abusive. The tide had started to turn. Murrow ended his broadcast with this statement: “We must not confuse dissent with disloyalty. We must remember always that accusation is not proof and that conviction depends upon evidence and due process of law. We will not walk in fear, one of another. We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason, if we dig deep in our history and our doctrine, and remember that we are not descended from fearful men.” The final demise came a year later during the Army-McCarthy hearings which were televised and the country got the chance to see McCarthy’s underhanded tactics live. The reign of terror had finally ended for the time being. Subsequently, the Senate censured McCarthy, HUAC lost most of its power, and many of the convictions brought about during this period were overturned by the courts. Joe McCarthy died in 1957, but his legacy lives on. McCarthyism is an underlying reason why Democrats are perceived as soft on communism and weak on defense, and Democrats have never done much to dispel that idea.

So, let’s see how all this affects ACORN’s situation today. Original founder and CEO Wade Rathke was fired a year and a half ago when it was disclosed that his brother, Dale, embezzled approximately one million dollars in 2000. CEO Rathke covered it up for seven years until the facts came surfaced. Bertha Lewis took over as CEO and immediately started reforming and restructuring all functions of the organization, including policies and board of directors. Someone anonymously made up the loss. She appointed a blue ribbon panel of advisors in early 2009 to help her with the transition:

  • John Podesta, President and CEO, Center for American Progress
  • Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, Board Member, RFK Foundation, former MD Lt. Governor
  • Andrew Stern, International President, Service Employees International Union
  • Henry Cisneros, Executive Chairman, Cityview
  • John Banks, Vice President of Government Relations Con Ed
  • Eric Eve, Senior VP of Global Consumer Group, Community Relations, Citigroup
  • Harvey Hirschfeld, President, Lawcash
  • Dave Beckwith, Executive Director, Needmor Fund

Since the fall of 2008, ACORN’s new management team has instituted a set of changes, including:

  • The establishment of a new senior management team of the organization;
  • Revamping of ACORN’s board structure, including the establishment of new oversight committees with new resourcing to those committees;
  • Processes to hire a new auditor, CFO, and other key management positions.

ACORN workers and volunteers have been on the front lines of the foreclosure crisis and health care reform battles and they work long hard hours for meager compensation. They also take their jobs very seriously. We’re not talking big money here. Bertha Lewis makes an annual salary that is less than most Orange County school teachers make. The office supervisors make considerably less and the average worker is lucky to be making above minimum wage. Many of the people who work in the Orange County office are volunteers. Sometimes they have to wait extra time for their paychecks as resources are not always immediately available. There’s really nothing to hide. Any investigation launched into ACORN’s finances will reveal that the overwhelming amount of dollars goes directly into client services. And that 56 million dollars that keeps popping up? Over a 15 year period that’s a drop in the bucket. By the way, any investigation will find that a large portion of that money went to aid people that the federal government failed to help-Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Wilma victims.

“Listen…….do you want to know a secret?…….

It’s the best kept secret in all of the media. ACORN receives less than 5% of its operating budget from the federal government. Here’s another secret: EVERYBODY IN CONGRESS KNOWS IT! That’s why it was so easy for them to throw ACORN under the bus. It’s just an easy way for these phonies (especially the spineless Democrats) to appear to be resolute. Shakespeare said it best-“A plague on both your houses.”  This is an organization that gets its hands dirty, constantly, in neighborhoods where most of us shudder to think about, serving people who desperately need help. ACORN is there every day doing what we in our churches and synagogues, the private sector and local governments have neglected to do for decades.

Shortly after the videos were made public Bertha Lewis issued this statement:

“As a result of the indefensible action of a handful of our employees, I am, in consultation with ACORN’s Executive Committee, immediately ordering a halt to any new intakes into ACORN’s service programs until completion of an independent review. I have also communicated with ACORN’s independent Advisory Council, and they will assist ACORN in naming an independent auditor and investigator to conduct a thorough review of all of the organizations relevant systems and processes. That reviewer, to be named within 48 hours, will make recommendations directly to me and to the full ACORN Board. We enter this process with a commitment that all recommendations will be implemented.”

Ms. Lewis is specifically ordering the following steps be taken effective noon eastern on September 16, 2009:

  • No new intakes will be accepted into ACORN’s offices for service programs, effective immediately;
  • An immediate in-service training for all frontline staff has been ordered within 48 hours;
  • ACORN’s independent Advisory Council will help select an independent auditor/reviewer no later than September 18th to review all of the systems and processes called into question by the videos.

On Tuesday of this week, ACORN selected former Massachusetts Attorney General Scott Harshbarger to lead the independent review of the organizational systems and processes surrounding the social services of the organization. Mr. Harshbarger, now Senior Counsel to the Firm of Proskauer Rose LLP, is also the former President and CEO of Common Cause, the good government organization.

 

“You have meddled with the primal forces of Nature, Mr. Beale, and I won’t have it!”

It’s time for ACORN to get back to basics-what made it work in the first place. Mention the name Saul Alinsky to any conservative and it’s sure to cause at least heartburn if not a downright stroke in them, and for good reason. Saul Alinsky’s methods of organizing worked then and they still work today. His first major accomplishment was to do what Upton Sinclair’s novel, The Jungle, did not do. While Sinclair exposed the conditions in the Chicago stockyards, Alinsky actually cleaned them up thirty years later. He didn’t care how big they were or how well connected they were or how wealthy they were; when he decided to take them on he won. His methods were unique, unorthodox and at times outrageous and they were also very effective. ACORN was founded on the Alinsky model in 1970 to work in depressed areas in Little Rock, Arkansas. Yes, for a short period of time they are not going to be as effective at preventing foreclosures, or getting necessary health care to clients, however, they are now free to get back into the neglected areas of the inner cities and organize these communities into action. In a way Congress has done them a favor but a word of caution to the wise: “When men sow the wind it is rational to expect that they will reap the whirlwind.”-Frederick Douglass. It’s his take on a passage from the bible and it is a stern warning to politicians about the validity of Newtonian physical laws. Recent actions to defund ACORN were so hastily concocted and so broadly written (as to not be an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder) that they will affect any enterprises that are currently doing business with our government, such as Halliburton, Blackwater and lots of corrupt government contractors.

Before we decide to condemn, let’s get an honest assessment of the situation. No obfuscation, no stonewalling, no excuses, no cover-up. If something’s wrong it gets fixed with full disclosure and no opacity. If ACORN is guilty of anything it is at worst poor judgment. It needs to make sure that its employees are properly trained and managed with regular progress and performance reports. This organization has nothing to hide, but it does have something to fear and here’s where everyone can help. The battle to clear its name is going to be costly because ACORN is being tried in the media and the media is withholding facts that help ACORN’s case. Until or unless John Roberts and Co. completely subverts our individual rights we’re still supposed to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. That’s also supposing that any laws have actually been broken. So far only the two Republican operatives have violated any laws and that’s being looked into by ACORN. ACORN has also initiated legal action against Giles and O’Keefe and it will be interesting to see how that plays out, especially in the MSM. It’s also going to be interesting to see where their defense money comes from. Kudos to Rachel Maddow for her erudite, eloquent and well researched segment, The Truth About the Lies Against ACORN, it’s a real eye opener, and special thanks to all the bloggers on HP who have written on this.  Here’s how to help. Go on to ACORN’s website now http://www.acorn.org/ and give whatever you can afford. 66,882,230 of us voted for change in the last election. If every one of us gave only $10.00 ACORN would have the resources to do its good works without fear or interruption or distraction. It would also show our spineless Democrats in congress what fools and cowards they consistently prove themselves to be.

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“Big Insurance-Sick of It”

September 25, 2009 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment

The E-mail arrived last week announcing Moveon.org’s new initiative in the health care reform arena, Rudy Mejia, a local Moveon organizer stated in his message that “Big Insurance-Sick of it” rallies will be held in front of health insurance offices and Blue Dog Democratic legislative offices throughout the country at twelve noon on Tuesday, September 22. Lunchtime on a Tuesday is not the best time to hold a rally. Despite the timing problem a modest crowd of about fifty people, some from as far away as Lake County, assembled in front of Senator Bill Nelson’s Orlando office to urge the senator to support a strong public option. There were no opposing groups; however, a local landscaping company was trimming hedges at exactly the spot where the rally took place. The noise from the gasoline powered trimmers made it difficult to hear. When asked to trim elsewhere on the buildings site the supervisor refused to do so. Local activist Dave Rice said “This is deliberate and I’m going to find out who put them up to this.” Undaunted, the people moved in closer.

Mejia stated to the assembled that Senator Nelson is a member of the Senate Finance committee chaired by Max Baucus and will play an important role in the shaping of the ultimate bill to be presented to the Senate. He also went on to state that as many as three hundred rallies such as this were being held nationwide and that this will be an ongoing endeavor until real health care legislation is passed. The spokesman for this rally was Lyman Baker, an East Orlando resident, who spoke at length on the need for reform. Here’s part of his speech:

“You can see why it is that the Finance Committee’s bill has been sarcastically called “The Health Insurance Companies’ Profit-Protection Plan.”  It actually should be called “The Health Insurance Corporations’ Profit-Enhancement Plan,” since it directs huge numbers of new customers to them, and uses tax-payers’ money to pay the bill at the rates they set.”

“So it’s not hard to see why Big Insurance has been behaving as we’ve seen it do.   America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) is a national association of some 1300 member insurance companies that has spent millions of dollars fighting to kill real reform, particularly targeting the public health option, which is such a key part of President Obama’s health reform plan because it forces private insurance companies to compete with it and with each other in a way they won’t have to do under the bill proposed by the Senate Finance Committee.”

“That bill is now in “mark-up,” and our Senator Bill Nelson will play a part in that process of amendment.  That’s why we’re here today to let him know why we understand that the public option is essential”

After his opening remarks Baker introduced several people who shared their stories with the crowd:

  • Betty Hack was denied coverage because of a pre-existing condition.
  • Nancy Jacobson spoke about her best friend, Barbara, who is a working artist and who travels around the country displaying her work at art shows and festivals. Considering today’s economy she can hardly afford to pay for her health insurance, which includes a $7500.00 deductible.
  • Joe Reed, an actor, was laid off from Disney.  His story was featured in Linda Schrieves front-page story in Tuesday’s Orlando Sentinel (here) — a story that contains some informative statistics about how Florida is worse than average in the percentage of people without health insurance.
  • Jefferson Soler spoke about difficulties getting insurance as a person with a touch of autism (accepted only with a rider).
  • Tanya Cheney was laid off last fall and who (along with her husband, also laid off) has no insurance.
  • Judy Rice explained that because of a previous condition, she and her husband Dave ended up being charged $1000/month premium, and ended in bankruptcy.
  • Guenther Apsel, a Lutheran minister (81, now retired, living in Florida) who will be returning to Germany because medical coverage and treatment are unaffordable for him here.
  • Christine Fullerton told the crowd her insurance company 19 years ago so delayed authorizing treatment for her spinal condition, with the result that she has suffered permanent damage. Her husband was switching jobs and the old insurance company did not want to get stuck with the medical bills. The new insurance company would not insure her pre-existing condition.
  • Dave Kaminsky is facing 6 months without coverage after recent kidney transplant surgery, between when his current insurance will terminate and Medicare will kick in.
  • Wendy Woodall, a retired USAF Staff Sgt, related story of her friend Cheri who was kicked out of the hospital before 24 hours were up after having a double mastectomy.

Baker went on to say that these stories abound everywhere and that all of the people heard during the rally were productive members of society who are not looking for free government health care.

At the end of the rally a group of attendees including Jacobson, Fullerton, Kaminsky and others visited Nelson’s office and met with Sherry Davitch, his assistant for health care matters. Davitch was sympathetic with their concerns and claimed that Nelson is studying the issues and has not made up his mind. “Remember, Senator Nelson was Insurance Commissioner in this state for six years and he’s not their friend” said Davitch. Steve Litt and Nancy Jacobson, acting as spokesmen cited the latest polls indicating that the public and most doctors are overwhelmingly in support of a strong public option, to which Davitch replied “Which one? There are six of them.” She promised to talk to the Senator and let their concerns be known. The meeting was over and some members of the group felt that they had made some headway.

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Bill Nelson-Florida’s Enigma

August 2, 2009 by Jerry Waxman Leave a Comment