know your gop … part two

gop taking you back by hip is everything

a collection of posts from around the web that highlight just who the right has become …
and who the gop really are today …
the first piece here is a post by a great poster from politicususa that is a MUST read
it perfectly summarizes exactly what is going on in america these days …
and combined with the hundreds, if not thousands, of examples of the right wing madness that is gripping a large segment of the american population in the last several years …
if this doesn’t scare the shit out of any thinking and caring person, then honestly, i don’t know what will …

read part one of “‘know your gop” here

 

Republican “Patriots” Terrorize America with Calls for Armed Insurrection

By: Rmuse
June 30, 2012
The sole reason humans progressed beyond cave dwelling was their ability to learn, reason, and communicate to form communities and eventually civilizations. Unless a person is born with a genetic brain defect or are developmentally retarded, they should have the capacity to think rationally and assess situations critically to make choices in their own best interests. Of course, there are circumstances where ignorance plays a role in making bad choices, but unless a person is stupid, there is really no reason to continue reaching conclusions with no basis in fact. There is a notable difference between ignorance and stupidity, but both can lead to unwise acts, and in combination, there are few outcomes that do not produce disastrous results for the person and anyone connected with them.
In their quest to transform the country into a corporatist theocracy, Republicans are using the ignorance and stupidity of a significant segment of the population to incite violent reactions to every policy proposed by President Obama. Americans got a glimpse of the stupidity in the teabagger movement during the healthcare reform debate two years ago, and despite the availability of information about the myriad benefits of the health law, it appears that, coupled with racism, that particular group is still stupid and becoming a hazard to the security of the entire population. In the 24 hours after the Supreme Court’s ruling that the Affordable Care Act is constitutional, the combination of ignorance, stupidity, and racism exposed the threat of a violent uprising against the government of the United States.
There are Americans openly discussing armed insurrection to overthrow the government based on the notion that the worst form of tyranny this country has ever witnessed is the Affordable Care Act’s constitutionality. A list of comments labeled “Hilarious Reactions to the High Court’s Ruling” on a liberal website are not remotely humorous, and only serve to inspire more hatred toward President Obama among stupid Americans who lack the ability to discern between a legally passed law upheld by the High Court and tyranny against the citizens of the United States. A Michigan lawyer emailed numerous media outlets asking, “Is Armed Rebellion Now Justified? There are times government has to do things to get what it wants and holds a gun to your head. I’m saying we have to ask when do we turn that gun around and say no and resist.” A Breitbart activist claimed, “This is the greatest destruction of individual liberty since Dred Scott… the end of America as we know it. No exaggeration.” A conservative blogger Tweeted, “We don’t just need a new president. We need a revolution.” The Christian extremist Bryan Fischer said Chief Justice Roberts “is going down in history as the justice that shredded the Constitution and turned it into a worthless piece of parchment,” and the teabagger group Freedomworks said, “the power to tax is the power to destroy.” Another conservative blogger wrote that “someone got to Roberts and told him he has to vote this way or members of his family – kids, wife, parents, whoever – were going to be killed.”
Now, any semi-conscious American with a rudimentary understanding of the legislative process may find these assertions hilarious, but there are plenty of angry, racist, stupid, and extremely well-armed Americans who perceive the court’s ruling as a threat to themselves and their ignorant concept of American liberty. Their perception of tyranny is being co-opted by Republicans who use coded language and sometimes overt proclamations that the only solution to President Obama’s tyranny is a “2nd Amendment remedy” and armed rebellion. A Republican in the House of Representatives, Michele Bachmann, told residents of Minnesota that she wants them to be “armed and dangerous” if the federal government attempted to implement laws she felt were impinging on their freedoms, and the infamous 2nd Amendment remedy solution to a Democratically-controlled Congress originated with a candidate for the U.S. Senate from Nevada. However, there are less overt buzz-words and catch-phrases being used on a daily basis by Republicans that are instigating violence-tinged reactions across the country from seriously stupid and tragically ignorant Americans.
snip//
It is a travesty that the divisiveness raging across America for the past three years has its basis in racism, ignorance, and stupidity, because it is not health insurance reform, consumer protection from predatory banks, less government spending, lower taxes, or the jobs President Obama created. Republicans have seized on America’s racism and stupidity and parlayed them into a perpetual campaign of hate and vitriol to implement their Libertarian vision of America. America is being torn apart by Republicans and their hate-filled teabagger and evangelical bootlickers, and the real shame is that this country could be a truly exceptional nation for all the right reasons, and not because Republicans want to kill Muslims, Liberals, gays, and non-Christians. The proliferation of guns among evangelicals, teabaggers, and Mormons is no accident and there are specific reasons they stockpile assault rifles, machine guns, and a two-year supply of food and ammunition, and it is not for hunting rabbits and pheasants. The lot of the religious super patriots are on standby for a signal that the nation is ripe for armed insurrection and the Supreme Court just gave the “on your mark” warning by ruling that a brilliantly beneficial health insurance reform law is constitutional. Americans are going to need all the healthcare they can get when the shooting starts and one thing is certain, there will not be one Republican on the front line. They will be hiding out in corporate or church-provided bunkers to pick up the pieces and if any American thinks it is a joke, then they are as ignorant and as stupid as those who fire first.
READ HERE


next up, an awesome post by “the ghost of huey long”

Who cares if they want to call health care a tax…what better could we spend our tax dollars on as a nation?
Hmm should we take care of our own people with dignity and respect, or should we go kill some people in another country instead?
I don’t believe they really asked our opinion on that one.
So far, the majority of our tax dollars goes to the military for wars the Republicans started and lied about…to destroy things, kill and maim millions of innocent people
and
Republican Big Government slush funds like Homeland Security and the TSA which use our tax dollars to violate our Bill of Rights, illegally spying on us, illegal detainment, naked photos and groping your grandma at the airport.
I really don’t like how Republicans waste our money, so that is just too damn bad if they don’t want to pay for health care.
We need to call them on their bullshit! Protecting the Constitution my ass!! Who forced the patriot act on us?
Worried about the debt my ass!!!! Maybe you shouldn’t have stolen the Social Security Trust fund for your wars and Big Government.
I say we cancel all your bullshit tax cuts, wars and Big Government programs and use that money to pay for health care. Problem solved.
I am really tired of these hypocrites and their stupid ass corporate media.
And then to claim the moral high ground!!
What would Jesus want for US? Wars and Authoritarianism or health care for all?


Chris Mathews made an interesting and relevant point …

In his "last word" comments, he pointed out just how far right the Republican Party has gone and how they are different from the Democratic Party?
He noted that the Democrats were prepared to lose the Supreme Court decision. Not only the mandate portion but a possibility of losing it all. Yet, they were not ready to clinch their teeth and fists and riot over the decision. They were ready to accept the Supreme Court decision as the rule of law.
But the Republicans…
They were ready to declare Roberts a traitor. They were making all kinds of irrational and volatile comments. They were threatening to repeal it as soon as Romney became President. They were not ready to accept the decision as the law. They believed the Supreme Court belonged to them. They felt betrayed.
It was a stark contrast between the two Parties.


Pic of the Moment


Conservative Southern Values Revived:
How a Brutal Strain of American Aristocrats Have Come to Rule

from alternet

It’s been said that the rich are different than you and me. What most Americans don’t know is that they’re also quite different from each other, and that which faction is currently running the show ultimately makes a vast difference in the kind of country we are.
Right now, a lot of our problems stem directly from the fact that the wrong sort has finally gotten the upper hand; a particularly brutal and anti-democratic strain of American aristocrat that the other elites have mostly managed to keep away from the levers of power since the Revolution. Worse: this bunch has set a very ugly tone that’s corrupted how people with power and money behave in every corner of our culture. Here’s what happened, and how it happened, and what it means for America now.
North versus South: Two Definitions of Liberty
Michael Lind first called out the existence of this conflict in his 2006 book, Made In Texas: George W. Bush and the Southern Takeover of American Politics. He argued that much of American history has been characterized by a struggle between two historical factions among the American elite — and that the election of George W. Bush was a definitive sign that the wrong side was winning.
For most of our history, American economics, culture and politics have been dominated by a New England-based Yankee aristocracy that was rooted in Puritan communitarian values, educated at the Ivies and marinated in an ethic of noblesse oblige (the conviction that those who possess wealth and power are morally bound to use it for the betterment of society). While they’ve done their share of damage to the notion of democracy in the name of profit (as all financial elites inevitably do), this group has, for the most part, tempered its predatory instincts with a code that valued mass education and human rights; held up public service as both a duty and an honour; and imbued them with the belief that once you made your nut, you had a moral duty to do something positive with it for the betterment of mankind.
Your own legacy depended on this.


Gov. Chris Christie limits halfway house monitoring

Source: Star Ledger
TRENTON — Gov. Chris Christie today limited an effort by the Legislature to learn more about the state’s halfway houses, which have been criticized for being rife with mismanagement and violence.
In their budget proposal, Democrats inserted language that would have required the state Department of Corrections to report quarterly on the halfway houses, including the number of inmates convicted of violent and non-violent crimes, and the number of days they were imprisoned.
The Democrats also sought information on the amount of money reimbursed to halfway houses for taking inmates, the rate of reimbursement, the number of escapes and the number of incidents involving physical violence.
The governor, however, struck out language that would have required the department to report the actions taken to protect inmates imprisoned for non-violent crimes from those imprisoned for violent crimes. Christie also batted back a request for disciplinary actions against inmates accused on violence, and actions taken to prevent violence.
read more here

After the New York Times reported on the dreadful conditions at halfway houses run by Chris Christie’s politically connected friends like Bill Palatucci, halfway houses which are really private prisons in disguise, Christie said he’d conduct a full investigation into these state funded private prisons.
So much for Chris Christie’s word. Using his line item veto powers over the budget today he not only limited an effort by the legislature to learn more about the miserable conditions reported by the NY Times, but he struck language that would allow the legislature to learn how violent inmates are dealt with and he deleted requirements that would have had the corrections department make quarterly reports on the halfway houses.
Governor Christie then said he did this all in the interest of inmate safety.
This man is beyond despicable.
Links to the New York Times 3 part series:

As Escapees Stream Out, a Penal Business Thrives
A company with deep ties to Gov. Chris Christie dominates New Jersey’s system of large halfway houses. There has been little state oversight, despite widespread problems, The New York Times found.

At a Halfway House, Bedlam Reigns
The Bo Robinson center in New Jersey is as large as a prison and is intended to help inmates re-enter society. But The New York Times found that drugs, gangs and sexual abuse are rife behind its walls.

A Volatile Mix Fuels a Murder
As financial pressures grow, officials are using vast halfway houses as dumping grounds, The New York Times found. At Delaney Hall in Newark, low-level offenders are thrown together with violent ones.


O’Malley: GOP Likes Mandates When They’re ‘Transvaginal Probes For Women’
Benjy Sarlin

Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) accused Republicans of hypocrisy for pairing protests against a health care mandate with demands for increasingly invasive restrictions on women’s health.
“The only health care mandate they can embrace are transvaginal probes for women,” O’Malley said Friday during a press call.
O’Malley was referring to bills like one proposed in Virginia that would have required the procedure for women seeking an abortion, part of a broader effort by pro-life groups to shame patients who wish to end their pregnancy. Other Republican-led states, like Pennsylvania and Alabama, have pushed for similar measures.
The governor also dismissed criticism of the Affordable Care Act from Republicans claiming that the Supreme Court’s ruling that the penalty for not having health insurance was actually a tax, noting Mitt Romney had used the same language in his own legislation in Massachusetts.
“It was a penalty provision that was also in Romneycare,” he said.
“Or, as Gov. (Bobby) Jindal just called it, ‘Obamneycare.’”
read more here


BREAKING:
House Republicans Biggest Donor Approved “prostitution Strategy In China

The Associated Press reports that House Republicans’ single largest donor, Sheldon Adelson, "personally approved of prostitution and knew of other improper activity at his company’s properties in the Chinese enclave" of Macau, China. Sheldon Adelson is giving House Republicans’ election efforts $10 million so far – $5 million to Speaker Boehner’s Congressional Leadership Fund super PAC and $5 million to Leader Cantor’s Young Guns Network super PAC. Adelson’s already given $70,800 to the NRCC as well.
What will Speaker Boehner, Leader Cantor, and House Republicans do with their Chinese prostitution money?
Sheldon Adelson Approved ‘Prostitution Strategy’: Fired Former Sands Executive
The fired former chief executive of Las Vegas Sands Corp.’s Macau casinos alleges in court documents revealed Thursday that billionaire Sheldon Adelson personally approved of prostitution and knew of other improper activity at his company’s properties in the Chinese enclave.
read more here


Darrell Issa Puts Details of Secret Wiretap Applications in Congressional Record

Source: Roll Call

In the midst of a fiery floor debate over contempt proceedings for Attorney General Eric Holder, House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) quietly dropped a bombshell letter into the Congressional Record.
The May 24 letter to Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), ranking member on the panel, quotes from and describes in detail a secret wiretap application that has become a point of debate in the GOP’s “Fast and Furious” gun-walking probe.
The wiretap applications are under court seal, and releasing such information to the public would ordinarily be illegal. But Issa appears to be protected by the Speech or Debate Clause in the Constitution, which offers immunity for Congressional speech, especially on a chamber’s floor.
According to the letter, the wiretap applications contained a startling amount of detail about the operation, which would have tipped off anyone who read them closely about what tactics were being used.

read more here

this is probably the reason they held the vote as they knew DOJ wasn’t going to prosecute.

"Contrary to the Attorney General’s statements, the enclosed wiretap affidavit contains clear information that agents were wilfully allowing known straw buyers to acquire firearms for drug cartels and failing to interdict them-in some cases even allowing them to walk to Mexico. In particular, the affidavit explicitly describes the most controversial tactic of all: abandoning surveillance of known straw purchasers, resulting in the failure to interdict firearms," says Issa.
Issa’s counterpart on the House Oversight Committee, Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD), today took issue with the idea that the wiretap application disclosed any hint of gunwalking. He says Issa is "hiding key information" from the very same wiretap documents.
"Sadly, it looks like Mr. Issa is continuing his string of desperate and unsubstantiated claims… His actions demonstrate a lack of concern for the facts, as well as a reckless disregard for our nation’s courts and federal prosecutors who are trying to bring criminals to justice. We’re not going to stoop to his level," said a Cummings spokesman.

read more here

d-bag of the week … once a d-bag, always a d-bag

dbagweek

again, another week full of lying politicians and incoherent, ass kissing, windbag broadcasters …
a week that was full of some of the slimiest, slithering, scuzzball serpents the world of partisan politics, religion and big business has to offer …
and this week was even busier than usual, with more than it’s fair share of douche bag manoeuvres, sleaze ball antics and out and out treasonous behaviour, especially by the right wing and it’s bat shit crazy proponents …
in a week that saw indiana gop senate candidate
richard mourdock double down on his empathy deprived belief that employers should not have to cover cancer or contraception in their insurance plans if they don’t want to; ex car thief, weapons law violator and arsonist darryl issa and his hyper partisan witch hunt to bring down eric holder no matter how many truths he had to ignore or lies he had to spew, the nra threatening congress so as to assist holder in his fiction fest fiasco; sarah “the wailin’” palin popping her hate filled head out from under her rock to call president obama a liar and spewing that “freedom died” because 30+ million people now have health care; new stories surfacing about gop presidential wannabe mittens RMoney and his spoiled and entitled rich-kid “pranks”, this time detailing his impersonation of firemen and armed robbers so as to scare the locals; faux noise and the gang over at the conservative news network (cnn) BOTH getting the results of the supreme court’s affordable health care act decision WRONG in their haste to obsessively bloviate and bullshit about obama; condy rice, former secretary of state, telling broadcaster charlie rose that the president’s foreign policy is “lacking,” and saying that the united states needs to be more “assertive” in global affairs – now there’s some serious psychological projection for ya’; the vile and bile filled, right wing’s attacks on chief justice roberts for daring to side with fact and the law in the health care act decision; the ever continuing voter suppression strategies being employed by the gop/teathuglican party in it’s desperate attempt to steal yet another election; the texas republican party’s attempt to repeal the 20th century with it’s newest party platform; the us coast guard setting up a “protest free zone” in alaska to protect shell oil from the truth, and allow shell to continue it’s rape of the north and the environment un-abated; and let’s not forget louisiana governor bobby jindal refusing to implement obamacare despite the supreme court ruling, just so he can desperately take his latest shot 15 minutes of fame …

 
yup, quite a week …
oh, the hypocrisy and douche-baggery abounds to be sure …
and trust me, there were a whole bunch more just as worthy contenders, but i’m getting a little carpal here, so on with the show …
even with all the contenders for this week’s award, and the obviously enormous impact many of them would have on the citizenry of the “good ole’ us of a” should any of them be allowed to put their ideas into practice, there was still one guy who managed to out-douche the competition …

and he’s a most deserving winner, if I do say so myself …
a tried and true master of douche-baggery, ignorance, bigotry, elitism and all out lust for power …
and without a doubt, a true douche bag to the core …
taking good ole’ boy, redneck bigotry, and self-serving bullshit and bloviating to a whole new level …

so without further ado …

ladies and gentlemen …

the envelope please …

our latest winner …
of the sometimes coveted, always deserved …

golden d-bag award


and this weeks award goes to …
drum roll please …

that union bustin’, cash ropin’, fuckwagon drivin’ hombre from madison …
a true interlocutor of ignorance,inanity,insanity and ineptitude … 
a barefaced, blatant, bold and bald faced bard of bullshit …
that cheating, conniving,con-artist cretin of the coming confederacy …
the grovelling, grimacing governor of guile, grifting and graft …
that self serving, superficial, self aggrandizing, seller of senseless shiftiness …
a holier than thou, high handed hyper-whore for the high and mighty and hoity-toity …
the envoy of the entitled elite and their exaggerated, exclusivity enhanced elegance …
that bloviating and boneheaded blockhead and bumbling bagger for backwardness …
a truly malicious master of misogynistic misleading and mendacity …
lower than a snake’s belly in a cow pie …
slimier and sleazier than pond scum on a slough …
the man who can lie more than a lohan in litigation …
the man who obviously cares much more about sucking at the koch tit than he does about the health and well being of his own constituents …

scott “right power” walker

walker, wisconsin derranger - by hip is everything

Walker refuses to implement health law

The governor insists the law will be repealed after Republican victories in November’s election

MADISON, Wis. — Gov. Scott Walker pledged again Thursday not to phase in any parts of President Barack Obama’s signature health care reform law ahead of November’s elections even though the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it is constitutional.
Walker, a Republican, has said he holds out hope the GOP will recapture the White House and gain full control of Congress and repeal the legislation. He reiterated his stance Thursday minutes after the court released its ruling.
"While the court said it was legal, that doesn’t make it right," Walker said at a news conference. "For us to put time and effort and resources into that doesn’t make a lot of sense."
The law’s next deadline isn’t until mid-November, after the elections. But Democrats insisted the governor needs to start work now.
"Ignoring federal laws in hopes that someday they will be repealed is ridiculous and irresponsible policy making," said state Rep. Kelda Helen Roys, D-Madison, who is running for Congress. "Walker, who falsely calls for increased bipartisanship, is once again pursuing his extremist policies at the expense of Wisconsin families."
The law will provide health care to about 30 million uninsured people by mandating all Americans carry health insurance and expanding Medicaid enrolment. Twenty-six states, including Wisconsin, filed a lawsuit challenging the legislation’s constitutionality, particularly the insurance mandate. The court ruled, 5-4, the mandate can stand because it can be considered a tax, but said the government can’t cut funding for states that opt out of Medicaid expansion.
Republicans blasted the ruling as a tax increase. They promised the ruling would energize conservative voters and help Republican Mitt Romney defeat Obama in Wisconsin. The state’s business and insurance communities lambasted the law, too, saying it creates uncertainty for employers and will increase costs for consumers and employers.

scott “right power” walker

this week’s  golden d-bag award winner


..

health care act upheld

a pic that is worth a million words … at least …

a million words pic - scotus aca ruling

House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) at the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
(Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press)

Supreme Court Health Care Decision: Individual Mandate Survives
from
huffington post

The individual health insurance mandate is constitutional, the Supreme Court ruled Thursday, upholding the central provision of President Barack Obama’s signature Affordable Care Act. The controlling opinion, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, upheld the mandate as a tax, although concluded it was not valid as an exercise of Congress’ commerce clause power. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan joined in the outcome.
The decision in
National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius comes as something of a surprise after the generally hostile reception the law received during the six hours of oral arguments held over three days in March. But by siding with the court’s four Democratic appointees, Chief Justice Roberts avoided the delegitimizing taint of politics that surrounds a party-line vote while passing Obamacare’s fate back to the elected branches. GOP candidates and incumbents will surely spend the rest of the 2012 campaign season running against the Supreme Court and for repeal of the law.
Five justices concluded that the mandate, which requires virtually all Americans to obtain minimum health insurance coverage or pay a penalty, falls within Congress’ power under the Constitution to "lay and collect taxes."
"The individual mandate cannot be upheld as an exercise of Congress’s power under the Commerce Clause," Roberts wrote. "That Clause authorizes Congress to regulate interstate commerce, not to order individuals to engage in it. In this case, however, it is reasonable to construe what Congress has done as increasing taxes on those who have a certain amount of income, but choose to go without health insurance. Such legislation is within Congress’s power to tax."
Ginsburg, writing separately for the four liberals, said they would have upheld the mandate under the commerce clause too. "Unlike the market for almost any other product or service, the market for medical care is one in which all individuals inevitably participate," she wrote. "Virtually every person residing in the United States, sooner or later, will visit a doctor or other health care professional."
Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito joined in a dissent. Together, Roberts’ controlling opinion, Ginsburg’s concurrence, the four-justice dissent and Thomas’ own dissent add up to 187 pages.
In a nod to the importance of the health care cases, Roberts, Ginsburg and Kennedy all chose to read summaries of their opinions from the bench.
In a section of his opinion joined by the liberal justices, Roberts noted that the conservative dissenters contend that the mandate cannot be upheld as a tax "because Congress did not ‘frame’ it as such. In effect, they contend that even if the Constitution permits Congress to do exactly what we interpret this statute to do, the law must be struck down because Congress used the wrong labels."
But the majority was not persuaded by that argument. Roberts wrote that the mandate provision "need not be read to do more than impose a tax. That is sufficient to sustain it."
On Medicaid expansion, the court upheld the expansion but with a critical caveat: The federal government may not threaten the states that don’t comply with the loss of their existing funding. Essentially, the Medicaid expansion is now optional for the states.
"As for the Medicaid expansion, that portion of the Affordable Care Act violates the Constitution by threatening existing Medicaid funding," Roberts wrote. "Congress has no authority to order the States to regulate according to its instructions. Congress may offer the States grants and require the States to comply with accompanying conditions, but the States must have a genuine choice whether to accept the offer. The States are given no such choice in this case: They must either accept a basic change in the nature of Medicaid, or risk losing all Medicaid funding. The remedy for that constitutional violation is to preclude the Federal Government from imposing such a sanction."
For their part, the dissenters were not impressed with Roberts’ parsing of the law. "The Court regards its strained statutory interpretation as judicial modesty. It is not. It amounts instead to a vast judicial overreaching," wrote the four other conservatives.
They then looked to the political future: The majority’s decision, they argued, "creates a debilitated, inoperable version of health-care regulation that Congress did not enact and the public does not expect. It makes enactment of sensible health-care regulation more difficult, since Congress cannot start afresh but must take as its point of departure a jumble of now senseless provisions, provisions that certain interests favored under the Court’s new design will struggle to retain. And it leaves the public and the States to expend vast sums of money on requirements that may or may not survive the necessary congressional revision."
Summarizing his delicate decision from the bench, Roberts reminded his listeners that it is "not our job to save the people from the consequences of their political choices." Still, the decision appeared to do just that.
By narrowing Congress’ commerce and spending powers, Roberts moved the law in a decidedly conservative direction. Yet by invoking the taxing power, he saved not only the people but also Congress, the president and the Supreme Court itself from the consequences of their political choices that had seemed so evident at oral argument three months ago.

Careful legal parsing aside, the bottom line is: The Affordable Care Act has survived.

"OBAMACARE” UPHELD!

"oh-yeah" from democratic underground

The Supreme Court has upheld the individual mandate in Obamacare, paving the way for full implementation of the law in the states and ensuring that millions of uninsured Americans haves access to affordable coverage. The court upheld the provision as a tax. The Medicaid expansion is limited, but not invalidated, the court found. In short: “the entire ACA is upheld, with the exception that the federal government’s power to terminate states’ Medicaid funds is narrowly read.” Roberts joined Sotomayor, Breyer, Ginsburg, and Kagan.
Source: Think Progress

READ MORE HERE

of course, cnn and fox, mired in their  usual “wishful thinking mode” got it wrong …
”Dewey defeats Truman!!!”
err …
oops …

 

cnn dewey moment

cnnfail-S

“We have breaking news here on the Fox News Channel," anchor Bill Hemmer said.
"The individual mandate has been ruled unconstitutional." …

fox fux up againfox-news-wrong

darryl issa … trash and spurious

the truth about the fast and furious scandal …

darryl issa by hip is everything

A Fortune investigation reveals that the ATF never intentionally allowed guns to fall into the hands of Mexican drug cartels. How the world came to believe just the opposite is a tale of rivalry, murder, and political bloodlust.

In the annals of impossible assignments, Dave Voth’s ranked high. In 2009 the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives promoted Voth to lead Phoenix Group VII, one of seven new ATF groups along the Southwest border tasked with stopping guns from being trafficked into Mexico’s vicious drug war.
Voth’s mandate was to stop gun traffickers in Arizona, the state ranked by the gun-control advocacy group Legal Community Against Violence as having the nation’s "weakest gun violence prevention laws." Just 200 miles from Mexico, which prohibits gun sales, the Phoenix area is home to 853 federally licensed firearms dealers. Billboards advertise volume discounts for multiple purchases.
By 2009 the Sinaloa drug cartel had made Phoenix its gun supermarket and recruited young Americans as its designated shoppers or straw purchasers. Voth and his agents began investigating a group of buyers, some not even old enough to buy beer, whose members were plunking down as much as $20,000 in cash to purchase up to 20 semiautomatics at a time, and then delivering the weapons to others.

On Dec. 14, 2010, a tragic event rewrote the narrative of the investigation. In a remote stretch of Peck Canyon, Ariz., Mexican bandits attacked an elite U.S. Border Patrol unit and killed an agent named Brian Terry. The attackers fled, leaving behind two semiautomatic rifles. A trace of the guns’ serial numbers revealed that the weapons had been purchased 11 months earlier at a Phoenix-area gun store by a Fast and Furious suspect.
Ten weeks later, an ATF agent named John Dodson, whom Voth had supervised, made startling allegations on the CBS Evening News. He charged that his supervisors had intentionally allowed American firearms to be trafficked—a tactic known as "walking guns"—to Mexican drug cartels. Dodson claimed that supervisors repeatedly ordered him not to seize weapons because they wanted to track the guns into the hands of criminal ringleaders.
After the CBS broadcast, Fast and Furious erupted as a major scandal for the Obama administration. The story has become a fixture on Fox News and the subject of numerous reports in media outlets from CNN to the New York Times. The furor has prompted repeated congressional hearings—with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder testifying multiple times—duelling reports from congressional committees, and an ongoing investigation by the Justice Department’s inspector general.
The conflict has escalated dramatically in the past ten days. On June 20, in a day of political brinkmanship, Issa’s committee voted along party lines, 23 to 17, to hold Holder in contempt of Congress for allegedly failing to turn over certain subpoenaed documents, which the Justice Department contended could not be released because they related to ongoing criminal investigations.
Holder now faces a vote by the full House of Representatives this week on the contempt motion (though negotiations over the documents continue). Assuming a vote occurs, it will be the first against an attorney general in U.S. history.

There’s the rub.

Quite simply, there’s a fundamental misconception at the heart of the Fast and Furious scandal. Nobody disputes that suspected straw purchasers under surveillance by the ATF repeatedly bought guns that eventually fell into criminal hands. Issa and others charge that the ATF intentionally allowed guns to walk as an operational tactic. But five law-enforcement agents directly involved in Fast and Furious tell Fortune that the ATF had no such tactic. They insist they never purposefully allowed guns to be illegally trafficked. Just the opposite: They say they seized weapons whenever they could but were hamstrung by prosecutors and weak laws, which stymied them at every turn.
Indeed, a six-month Fortune investigation reveals that the public case alleging that Voth and his colleagues walked guns is replete with distortions, errors, partial truths, and even some outright lies. Fortune reviewed more than 2,000 pages of confidential ATF documents and interviewed 39 people, including seven law-enforcement agents with direct knowledge of the case. Several, including Voth, are speaking out for the first time.
How Fast and Furious reached the headlines is a strange and unsettling saga, one that reveals a lot about politics and media today. It’s a story that starts with a grudge, specifically Dodson’s anger at Voth. After the terrible murder of agent Terry, Dodson made complaints that were then amplified, first by right-wing bloggers, then by CBS. Rep. Issa and other politicians then seized those elements to score points against the Obama administration.
"Republican senators are whipping up the country into a psychotic frenzy with these reports that are patently false," says Linda Wallace, a special agent with the Internal Revenue Service’s criminal investigation unit
who was assigned to the Fast and Furious team (and recently retired from the IRS). A self-described gun-rights supporter, Wallace has not been criticized by Issa’s committee.
The ATF’s accusers seem untroubled by evidence that the policy they have pilloried didn’t actually exist.
A spokesman for Issa denies that politics has played a role in the congressman’s actions and says "multiple individuals across the Justice Department’s component agencies share responsibility for the failure that occurred in Operation Fast and Furious." Issa’s spokesman asserts that even if ATF agents followed prosecutors’ directives, "the practice is nonetheless gun walking." Attorneys for Dodson declined to comment on the record.
Irony abounds when it comes to the Fast and Furious scandal. But the ultimate irony is this: Republicans who support the National Rifle Association and its attempts to weaken gun laws are lambasting ATF agents for not seizing enough weapons—ones that, in this case, prosecutors deemed to be legal.
Issa has alleged on Fox News that Fast and Furious is part of a liberal conspiracy to restrict gun rights: "Very clearly, [the ATF] made a crisis and they are using this crisis to somehow take away or limit people’s Second Amendment rights." (Issa has a personal history on this issue: In 1972, at age 19, he was arrested for having a concealed, loaded .25-calibre automatic in his car; he ultimately pleaded guilty to possession of an unregistered gun.)
Issa’s claim that the ATF is using the Fast and Furious scandal to limit gun rights seems, to put it charitably, far-fetched. Meanwhile, Issa and other lawmakers say they want ATF to stanch the deadly tide of guns, widely implicated in the killing of 47,000 Mexicans in the drug-war violence of the past five years. But the public bludgeoning of the ATF has had the opposite effect. From 2010, when Congress began investigating, to 2011, gun seizures by Group VII and the ATF’s three other groups in Phoenix dropped by more than 90%.

read entire article here

the gop … taking you back to the good old days

“know your gop” – part one

whether it’s global warming, evolution, abortion, gun rights, education, health care, stem cell research, women’s health and rights, religion in schools, voter suppression disguised as “fair voting practices”, or a multitude of other issues, the gop is trying to pull america back from the brink …
of the 21st century …
all the way back to the 1860’s …
and if you think this bat shit crazy agenda is just happening in texas (see examples below), well then, you really do need to wake up and smell the coffee people …
this, or worse, is being pushed by the gop in nearly every “red state” in the nation …
and if you listen closely, this IS the national gop platform …
gop taking you back by hip is everything

texas gop platform calls for repeal of voting rights act of 1965

The Republican Party of Texas released its platform this month, calling on Congress to repeal the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965. “We urge that the Voter {sic} Rights Act of 1965 codified and updated in 1973 be repealed and not reauthorized,” the platform reads. Texas is one of nine states with a history of racial discrimination that must get clearance from the Department of Justice before altering its voting laws.

other “goodies” included in their document included:
(and this is where it really starts to get ugly folks)

Affirmative Action  – Inasmuch as the Civil Rights Movement argued against using race as a factor in
American life, affirmative action reintroduces race as a divisive force in American life. To that end,
we oppose affirmative action

Reparations – We oppose any form of reparation.

Protection from Extreme Environmentalists  – We strongly oppose all efforts of the extreme environmental
groups that stymie legitimate business interests.  We strongly oppose those efforts that attempt to use the environmental causes to purposefully disrupt and stop those interests within the oil and gas industry. We strongly support the immediate repeal of the Endangered Species Act.  We strongly oppose the listing of the dune sage brush lizard either as a threatened or an endangered species. We believe the Environmental Protection Agency should be abolished.

Driver Licenses – We propose that every Texas driver license s hall indicate whether the driver is a U.S. citizen.

Free Speech for the Clergy  – We urge amendment of the Internal Revenue Code to allow a religious
organization to address issues without fear of losing its tax-exempt status. We call for repeal of
requirements that religious organizations send the government any personal information about their contributors.

Government Regulation of Religious Institutions – The State should withdraw all imposed regulations.
– The Republican Party of Texas supports the historic concept, established by our nations’ founders, of limited civil government jurisdiction under the natural laws of God, and repudiates the humanistic doctrine that the state is sovereign over the affairs of men, the family and the church.
– We support the right of local entities to determine their own policies regarding religious clubs  and meetings on all properties owned by the same without interference.

Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA)  – We oppose this act through which the federal government
would coerce religious business owners and employees to violate their own beliefs and principles by affirming what they consider to be sinful and sexually immoral behaviour.

Fairness Doctrine  – We oppose any attempt by Congress or  any federal agency to implement any policy comparable to the “fairness doctrine” as terminated in 1987.

Qualified Juror Service – Jury service should be limited to registered voters.

Remedies to Activist Judiciary – We call Congress and the President to use their constitutional powers to 
restrain activist judges. We urge Congress to adopt the Judicial Conduct Act of 2005 and remove judges
who abuse their authority. Further, we urge Congress to withhold Supreme Court jurisdiction in cases
involving abortion, religious freedom, and the Bill of Rights
.

Unions – We support legislation requiring labor unions to obtain consent of the union member before that member’s dues can be used for political purposes.  We strongly oppose card check.

Voter Registration – We support restoring integrity to the voter registration rolls and reducing voter fraud.
We support repeal of all Motor Voter laws; re-registering voters every four years; requiring photo ID of all
registrants; proof of residency and citizenship, along with voter registration application; retention of the 30-day registration deadline; and requiring that a list of certified deaths be provided to the election
administrator in order that the names of deceased voters be removed from the list of registered voters.

Fair Election Procedures  – We support modifications and strengthening of election laws to ensure ballot integrity and fair elections. We strongly urge the Texas attorney general to litigate the previously passed voter ID legislation. We support increased scrutiny and security in balloting by mail; prohibition of internet voting and any electronic voting lacking a verifiable paper trail; prohibition of mobile voting; prosecution for election fraud with jail sentences; repeal of the unconstitutional “Help America Vote Act”; and assurance that each polling place has a distinctly marked and if possible separate location for Republican and Democratic primary voting.

Campaign Finance Reform  – We urge immediate repeal of the McCain-Feingold Act.

AWOL Legislators – We urge the Texas House and Senate to compel attendance of absent members and
penalize those who attempt to break the quorum by not being in attendance.

Consolidated Elections – All public elections, should be consolidated to Primary and General election days and locations.

Rights Versus Products – We oppose calling welfare and other income and product redistribution schemes “rights” or “entitlements”.  We know that fundamental human rights are inherent to individuals and are granted by God and are protected by the Declaration of Independence and U.S. Constitution.  They are not products of others labor.  Unalienable rights, such as life, liberty, pursuit of happiness, property rights, free speech, religious freedom, self-defense, etc. do not impose on others rights whereas income and product redistribution invariably do so. 

Religious Symbols – We oppose any governmental action to restrict, prohibit, or remove public display of
the Decalogue or other religious symbols.

American English  – We support adoption of American English as the official language of Texas and of the
United States.

Confederate Widows Plaque – We call for restoration of plaques honouring the Confederate Widow’s Pension Fund contribution that were illegally removed from the Texas Supreme Court building.

Family and Defense of Marriage  – We support the definition of marriage as a God-ordained, legal and
moral commitment only between a natural man and a natural woman
.

Neither the United States nor any state shall recognize or grant to any unmarried person the legal
rights or status of a spouse. We oppose the recognition of and granting of benefits to people who represent themselves as domestic partners without being legally married.

gop repeal it all by hip is everything

Homosexuality ― We affirm that the practice of homosexuality tears at the fabric of society and contributes to the breakdown of the family unit. Homosexual behaviour  is contrary to the fundamental, unchanging truths that have been ordained by God, recognized by our country’s founders, and shared by the majority of Texans. Homosexuality must not be presented as an acceptable “alternative” lifestyle, in public policy, nor should “family” be redefined to include homosexual “couples.” We  believe there should be no granting of special legal entitlements or creation of special status for homosexual  behaviour, regardless of state of origin.  Additionally, we oppose any criminal or civil penalties against those who oppose homosexuality out of faith, conviction or belief in traditional values.

Pornography   ― We encourage the enforcement of laws regarding all forms of pornography, because
pornography is detrimental to the fabric of society.

Right To Life – All innocent human life must be respected and safeguarded from fertilization to natural death;
therefore, the unborn child has a fundamental individual right to life which cannot be infringed. We affirm our
support for a Human Life Amendment to the Constitution and to make clear that the Fourteenth Amendment’s protection applies to unborn children. We support the Life at Conception Act. We oppose the use of public revenues and/or facilities for abortion or abortion-related services. We support the elimination of public funding for organizations that advocate or support abortion.
We are resolute regarding the reversal of Roe v. Wade.
We affirm our support for the appointment and election of judges at all levels of the judiciary who respect
traditional family values and the sanctity of innocent human life. We insist that the U.S. Department of Justice needs to prosecute hospitals or abortion clinics for committing induced labor (live birth) abortion. We are opposed to genocide, euthanasia, and assisted suicide. We oppose legislation allowing the withholding of nutrition and hydration to the terminally ill or handicapped. Until our final goal of total Constitutional rights for the unborn child is achieved, we beseech the Texas Legislature in consideration of our state’s rights, to enact laws that restrict and regulate abortion.

RU 486 – We urge the FDA to rescind approval of the physically dangerous RU-486 and oppose limiting the manufacturers’ and distributors’ liability.
Morning After Pill – We oppose sale and use of the dangerous “Morning After Pill.

We oppose any public funding for Planned Parenthood or other organizations/facilities that provide, advocate or promote abortions.

Stem Cell Research  – We oppose any legislation that would allow for the creation and/or killing of human embryos for medical research.

UN Treaty on the Rights of the Child  ― We unequivocally oppose the United States Senate’s ratification of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Foster Care  – We support eliminating bureaucratic prohibitions  on corporal discipline and home schooling in foster homes.

Welfare Reform  – The current system encourages dependency on government and robs individuals and generations of healthy motivation and self-respect. It should be limited in scope. We encourage welfare reform in the following areas:
1.  Denying benefits to individuals who cannot prove citizenship; 
2. Welfare reforms should require recipients to work, learn, and train;
3.  Reforms should require recipients to remain substance abuse free in exchange for temporary benefits not exceeding two years. 
4.  Recipients should be required to submit to random drug testing in order to receive benefits;
5.  Welfare cards should be confined to food and vital essentials, not cigarettes, lottery purchases, or alcohol or drugs of any kind;
6.  Prisoners should be removed from welfare rolls; and
7.  A nominal co-pay should be required to encourage judicious utilization of health care services.

Social Security  ― We support an immediate and orderly transition to a system of private pensions based on the concept of individual retirement accounts, and gradually phasing out the Social Security tax.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”)   ― We demand the immediate repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which we believe to be unconstitutional.

Food Choice   – We support the right of individuals to make their own dietary decisions.  We oppose any laws regarding the production, distribution or consumption of food.  Government should not restrict non-genetically engineered seeds.

American Identity Patriotism and Loyalty  – We believe the current teaching of a multicultural curriculum is divisive. We favor strengthening our common American identity and loyalty instead of political correctness that nurtures alienation among racial and ethnic groups. Students should pledge allegiance to the American and Texas flags daily to instil patriotism.

Controversial Theories – We believe theories such as life origins and environmental change should be taught as challengeable scientific theories.

Early Childhood Development – We believe that parents are best suited to train their children in their early
development and oppose mandatory pre-school and Kindergarten.  We urge Congress to repeal government-sponsored programs that deal with early childhood development.

Sex Education – We recognize parental responsibility and authority regarding sex education. We believe that parents must be given an opportunity to review the material prior to giving their consent. We oppose any sex education other than abstinence until marriage.

Traditional Principles in Education – We support school subjects with emphasis on the Judeo-Christian
principles upon which America was founded and which form the basis of America’s legal, political and
economic systems. We support curricula that are heavily weighted on original founding documents, including the Declaration of Independence, the US Constitution, and Founders’ writings.

School Health Care  – We urge legislators to prohibit reproductive health care services, including counselling, referrals, and distribution of condoms and contraception through public schools. We support the parents’ right to choose, without penalty, which medications are administered to their minor children. We oppose medical clinics on school property except higher education and health care for students without parental consent.

U.S. Department of Education – Since education is not an enumerated power of the federal government, we
believe the Department of Education (DOE) should be abolished.

gop-thought-e

Right to Keep and Bear Arms – America’s founding fathers wrote the 2nd amendment with clear intent – no level of government shall regulate either the ownership or possession of firearms.  Therefore we strongly oppose all laws that infringe on the right to bear arms.  We oppose the monitoring of gun ownership, and the taxation and regulation of guns and ammunition.

Transportation Security Administration (TSA)  – We call for the disbanding of the TSA

State Militia – We support the establishment and maintenance of a volunteer Constitutional State Militia with assistance from County Sheriffs.

Freedom of Access Act – We urge repeal of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Law. Those who assault peaceful protesters acting under the Constitution should be vigorously prosecuted.

Judeo-Christian Nation – America is a nation under God founded on Judeo-Christian principles.

Capital Punishment – Properly applied capital punishment is legitimate, is an effective deterrent, and should be swift and unencumbered.

Unborn Victims of Violence – We believe a person who injures or kills an unborn child should be subject to criminal and civil litigation.

We support the principles regarding the public economy as stated in the Republican Party Platform of 1932 to wit:
Resolution Regarding the Public Economy
Whereas, constructive plans for financial stabilization cannot be completely organized until our
national, State and municipal governments not only balance their budgets but curtail their current
expenses
as well to a level which can be steadily and economically maintained for some years to
come.
We urge prompt and drastic reduction of public expenditure and resistance to every appropriation not
demonstrably necessary to the performance of government, national or local.
The Republican Party established and will continue to uphold the gold standard and will oppose any
measure which will undermine the government’s credit or impair the integrity of our national currency.
Relief by currency inflation is unsound in principle and dishonest in results. The dollar is impregnable
in the marts of the world today and must remain so. An ailing body cannot be cured by quack
remedies. This is no time to experiment upon the body politic or financial.
Source: Republican Party Platform of 1932
June 14, 1932

i told ya’ these guys were taking ya’ back …

Downsizing the Federal Government – We support abolishing all federal agencies whose activities are not specifically enumerated in the Constitution; including the Departments of Education and Energy.  We support a sunset provision law at the federal level. All non-military spending should be returned to at least pre-2008 levels.

Budget and Appropriations  – We urge Congress to adopt balanced budgets by cutting spending and not increasing tax rates. 

Funding Special Interest Organizations – We oppose any government support of special interest organizations, such as ACORN and the ACLU.

Education Spending  – Since data is clear that additional money does not translate into educational
achievement, and higher education costs are out of control, we support reducing taxpayer funding to all levels of education institutions.

Workers’ Compensation – We urge the Legislature to resist making Workers’ Compensation mandatory for all Texas employers.

Minimum Wage  – We believe the Minimum Wage Law should be repealed.

Sarbanes Oxley – We support the repeal of Sarbanes Oxley legislation.

Dodd Frank – We support the immediate repeal of Dodd Frank legislation.

Community Reinvestment Act – We support the repeal of the Community Reinvestment Act

United Nations – We support the withdrawal of the United States from the United Nations and the removal of U.N. headquarters from U.S. soil.


and finally, dealing with every bagger’s favorite issue …
taxes …

Permanent Tax Cuts – We urge the income tax, capital gains tax, estate tax, and all other tax reductions be made permanent. The death tax is immoral and should be abolished forever.

Capital Gains Tax  – We favor abolishing the capital gains tax.

there is also a whole slew of regressive and bat shit crazy ideas based on the whole “drill, baby drill” theme included in their platform … you can read all about them here

.

mittens likes to play dress up

we all knew mitt likes to fire firemen …
but did ya’ know he also likes to impersonate them? …

as if his bullying of gay people (and enforced haircuts), walking blind teachers into doors, impersonating state troopers and bullying his own kids wasn’t enough, now we get this little tidbit from mitten’s past …

fireman mitt by hip is everything

Shop owners recall more teen Romney pranks:
fake stickups and impersonating firefighters …

On a Friday evening in 1962, or perhaps 1963, Ben Shaw and his sales employees at the Princeton Prep Shoppe in Birmingham, Mich., were watching traffic roll by as an ordinary work day wound down. But with young Mitt Romney around, Shaw recalls, nothing was ordinary. The future presidential candidate and three friends dressed in what Shaw calls “gangland fashion” hopped out of a 1930s vintage Ford that was double-parked across the street, in front of City Hall and the police station.
The four teens wore “trench coats with turned-up collars and wide-brimmed fedoras,” Shaw told The Daily Caller in an interview.
The pretend gangsters made a beeline for the storefront. One knocked the door open while two others “stood menacingly with their hands in their pockets.” Shaw instantly pegged the fourth member of the team as Romney. The boy “shoved his way in,” he said, wielding a toy Tommy gun.
“This is a stick-up,” Shaw recalls Romney saying, adding that he “proceeded to ‘spray’ the entire store as sparks from the toy flew from the muzzle.”
In the blink of an eye, the pranksters jumped into their getaway car and sped away.
In Shaw’s re-telling of the story, one employee of his clothing store knew the young Romney and remarked, “What a crazy goofball.”
Mitt Romney is now the presumptive GOP presidential nominee, but his youthful shenanigans keep surfacing as November nears.

He recalled another staged stunt, “the fireman story,” that happened around the same year during the Christmas season. As holiday business picked up, Shaw kept the store open until 9:00 p.m. during the week, he said, and routinely received truck shipments around closing time.
So when he heard a “loud banging” on the metal delivery door in the back of the shop as he was preparing to lock the front door, he thought it was just another late-night delivery.
But when Shaw opened the door, he explained, he suddenly stood face-to-face with Mitt Romney “in full Bloomfield Township fireman’s regalia.”
“He had on the waterproof cape, the fire helmet, and he was carrying a bona fide fire ax,” Shaw told TheDC, and barged into the store screaming, “Where’s the fire? Where’s the fire?”


read more here
and …
read more here

in my neighbourhood, you would have been arrested for this stuff…
ahh, it must be nice to be a “rich kid” whose daddy has so much influence …
just what “amercia” needs right now, a clown who likes to dress up and impersonate people in positions of authority, taking office as president …
wait, that’s what his whole campaign is already based on …
as disturbing as the man himself …
just saying …

.

yup, no voter suppression here

i’m sure the gop will say “must have been a clerical error”, or “it’s just a liberal talking point”, or “it’s just a software glitch”, or maybe they’ll juts go with the old standby …
“it’s all an obama plot to take away your guns!” …
lincoln davis, a former four-term DEMOCRAT congressman from tennessee, was denied the right to vote in his hometown after poll workers said he had been purged from the voting rolls …
and a whole whack of right wing talking heads will parade by on t.v. and “swear to jesus” that there is no such thing as voter suppression …
and everyone from hannity the manatee to billo the clown and rush limbough will scream and yell that “the left is just picking on them” …
face it people, they’re setting things up to steal another election …
only this time they’re not even trying to hide the fact …
it’s just another example in a long, long line of voter suppression tactics, designed to hinder the very groups that came out in great numbers to put obama in the white house …
they did their homework and figured out exactly which groups to target this time ..
voter suppression is a strategy to influence the outcome of an election by discouraging or preventing people from exercising their right to vote …
especially democratic leaning voters, hispanics, black voters, students, the poor, and anyone else who might vote democrat …
combine that with the blatant state by state efforts to bust the unions and make it harder for them to organize or raise money and the gop will be able to steal another election …
and add in the attempts to limit who can vote, where they can vote and the times they can vote and you have “bush v. gore – 2000” all over again, while making sure that unions, who are the only “cash block” left for the democrats are hindered at every step in the process …
at the same time the supreme court is doing everything it can to make sure that corporate money has no impediments to it’s influence …
aren’t the american people getting tired of having their votes just go in the dustbin? …
if this was happening any where else on the planet the gop would be screaming “coup!” and “fascism!” and demanding that the military saddle up and go put a stop to it …
i guess carl rove will get his wish and the republicans will have their “permanent republican majority” …
a coup without guns … slick guys, slick …

 

in a related “incident” …

Pennsylvania GOP Leader: Voter ID Will Help Romney Win State

Pennsylvania House Majority Leader Mike Turzai (R) said that the voter ID law passed by the legislature would help deliver the state for Mitt Romney in November.
“Pro-Second Amendment? The Castle Doctrine, it’s done. First pro-life legislation – abortion facility regulations – in 22 years, done. Voter ID, which is gonna allow Governor Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania, done,” Turzai said at this weekend’s Republican State Committee meeting , according to PoliticsPA.com.
A spokesman for Turzai confirmed the accuracy of the quote for TPM but argued that people were reading too much into it.
“The fact is that while Pennsylvania Democrats don’t like it to be talked about, there is election fraud,” Turzai spokesman Stephen Miskin told TPM. “Protecting the integrity of an individual vote is the purpose of any election reform.

read entire article here


.

roberts’ court says “f*ck you” to democracy

Supreme Court Reversed Anti-Citizens United Ruling From Montana

roberts by donkey hotey

The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday struck down Montana’s century-old limits on corporate political spending, putting an end to the state’s resistance to Citizens United and effectively expanding that controversial ruling to the state and local elections.
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, decided in January 2010, struck down federal limits on campaign spending by corporations and unions as violations of the First Amendment. Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing on behalf of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, reached the bold conclusion that "independent expenditures, including those made by corporations, do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption," and therefore "[n]o sufficient governmental interest justifies limits on the political speech of non-profit or for-profit corporations."
In December 2011, the Montana Supreme Court disagreed. It found that the state’s Gilded Age history of business-driven corruption was sufficient to justify the state’s Corrupt Practices Act. Passed by voter referendum in 1912, the law decrees that a "corporation may not make … an expenditure in connection with a candidate or a political party that supports or opposes a candidate or a political party."
By summarily reversing the case, American Tradition Partnership v. Bullock, the justices refused to reconcile their sweeping statement of free speech principles in Citizens United with the real-world facts — from Montana’s history to today’s super PACs — put forward by Montana and its supporters to demonstrate that independent expenditures do, indeed, corrupt or create the appearance of corruption. Instead, the majority, in an unsigned opinion, wrote that "there can be no serious doubt" that Citizens United applies to Montana’s law.
"Montana’s arguments in support of the judgment below either were already rejected in Citizens United, or fail to meaningfully distinguish that case," the majority wrote.
Justice Stephen Breyer, joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, wrote to dissent from the summary reversal. "Montana’s experience, like considerable experience elsewhere since the Court’s decision in Citizens United, casts grave doubt on the Court’s supposition that independent expenditures do not corrupt or appear to do so," Breyer wrote. "Were the matter up to me, I would vote to grant the petition for certiorari in order to reconsider Citizens United or, at least, its application in this case."
from huffington post

and to the roberts court we say …

hip is everything salute

scotus strikes down most of “papers please” law


Supreme Court strikes down most SB 1070 provisions

Police allowed to check immigration status

from Dylan Smith
TucsonSentinel.com

Supreme Court 2012 by Donkey Hotey

The U.S. Supreme Court struck down most of Arizona’s controversial SB 1070 anti-illegal immigration law on Monday, invalidating most of its provisions. The justices did allow police to check the immigration status of those they arrest.
The high court in a 4-3 vote that most of SB 1070’s provisions are pre-empted by federal authority.
Justice Anthony Kennedy delivered the opinion, which was joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor. Dissenting were Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito. Justice Elena Kagen recused herself from the case because of work she did while U.S. solicitor general.
The 2010 law made it a state crime to be in the country illegally. It requires that police check immigration status if they have reasonable suspicion to believe someone is here illegally.
The court heard oral arguments on SB 1070 in April. Justices were sceptical of several of the U.S. Justice Department’s arguments for continuing to block the law, enforcement of which was stayed by a federal judge in 2010.
Similar laws have since passed in a handful of states.
But a federal judge blocked parts of Arizona’s law after the Justice Department sued, claiming the state was trampling on federal authority to regulate immigration.
That July 2010 preliminary injunction kept most of the law’s provisions from being enforced. In April 2011, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the injunction, setting the stage for the Supreme Court case.


UPDATE

UPDATE:

The Supreme Court did not rule on
the constitutionality of President Obama’s
health care law Monday, pushing the
announcement of the decision to Thursday morning.

d-bag of the week … it’s a tie!

dbagweek

again, another week full of lying politicians and incoherent, ass kissing, windbag broadcasters …
a week that was full of some of the slimiest, slithering, scuzzball serpents the world of partisan politics, religion and big business has to offer …
and this week was even busier than usual, with more than it’s fair share of douche bag manoeuvres, especially by the right wing and it’s bat shit crazy proponents … 
in a week that saw Indiana gop senate candidate richard mourdock proclaim that employers should not have to cover cancer  or contraception in their insurance plans if they don’t want to, and arguing in a newspaper interview last week that not only should employers not have to cover health care services that they oppose, but they also should be exempt from paying for anything else they do not want to include, based on costs …
or john “the grumpiest man alive” mccain on t.v. railing against citizens united and big corporate money being allowed into elections, then heading off to join romney on his koch brothers funded “tour of lies” across america … or how about rick scott down florida way, who despite being told that his voter purges are illegal by the department of justice, insists on continuing them anyways, to the point of suing the justice department … or even ex car thief and arsonist, now head of the republicans ethics committee, darryl “mccarthy” issa and his nra/fox news funded and driven witch hunt against eric holder, and their claims that it’s all a secret plot by obama to take away everyone’s guns … or the montana gop/tea party zealotry that went into the “obama-bullet riddled outhouse” that they called the “obama library”, and the fact that no-one in the gop stood up on their hind legs and denounced this blatant and over the top racism …
there was chris “i’m not fat, i’m enormously girthed” christie and his ongoing half way house corruption scandal … the usual lies of the week by mittens “etch a sketch” romney, this week featuring the usual ton of lies about the economy and obama, some “no comments”, vagaries and out and out lies on the dream act and immigration, and his suggestions to gop governors that they NOT talk about how the economies are improving in their states as it conflicts with his “obama is ruining the world, and only a guy named mittens can fix it” campaign lie strategy …
even the emerging story regarding mittens and the bullying of his own sons and grandson was worthy of an entry into this week’s douche-bag cage match … oh, and lest we forget, the harper government of canada and it’s memo to federal park employees informing them that they are no longer allowed to talk about their bosses OR the harper government in a derogatory way without being fired …now there’s some fascism for ya’, eh? … we also had john of orange and cantor the ranter deep sixing the transportation bill so as to kill 3-4 million jobs at the expense of the country’s economy (can’t have obama getting ANY credit for helping out the country now can we?) …or what about ron “bat shit crazy” paul admitting on “morning joe” that even though he wants younger people to opt out of, or go without any future social security, as he believes social security to be “un-constitutional”, that he himself collects social security cheques, ‘because he’s entitled to them”, and he did this only moments after railing on that younger people should “opt out of the payments … and paul ryan is still going on about how social security is un-constitutional even though he collected his dearly departed father’s cheques all through high school and college just so that he could pay for that very schooling … even sister sarah, the “helicopter hunter edition alaskan barbie” herself popped up with a few of her usual inanities and absurdities …
yup, quite a week …
oh, the hypocrisy and douche-baggery abounds to be sure …
and trust me, there were a whole bunch more just as worthy contenders, but i’m getting a little carpal here, so on with the show …
even with all the contenders for this week’s award, and the obviously enormous impact many of them would have on the citizenry of the “good ole’ us of a” should any of them be allowed to put their ideas to work, there was still two guys who managed to out-douche the competition …
and they managed that amazing feat by making beyond the pale, truly disgusting and sickening statements, both designed to get themselves another 15 minutes of fame …
yup! … it’s a tie! …
and rather deserving winners, if I do say so myself …
true masters of douche-baggery, ignorance, bigotry, racism and all out lust for attention …
and without a doubt, true douche bags to the core …
taking good ole’ boy, redneck bigotry, and self-serving bullshit and bloviating to a whole new level …

so without further ado …

ladies and gentlemen …

the envelope please …

our latest winners …
of the sometimes coveted, always deserved …

golden d-bag award

and this weeks award goes to …
drum roll please …

two guys who brought you the best bullshit and bile that right wing bigotry can bring you …
true interlocutors of ignorance,inanity,insanity and ineptitude … 
brazen, back biting, brokers of barefaced, blatant, bold and bald faced bigotry …
those cheating, conniving,con-artist cretins of the coming confederacy …
moronic mealy mouthed minions of malevolence, maliciousness, malignity and malice …
those self serving, superficial, senseless, self aggrandizing, seers of sophomoric stupidity …
holier than thou hyper-whores for the high and mighty and haughty …
envoys of the entitled elite and their exaggerated, exclusive elegance …
those bloviating and boneheaded blockheads and bumbling baggers for backwardness …
malicious masters of moronic misleading and mendacity …
the very lowest of the very low …
the least significant of the truly insignificant …
those wingnuts from wannabeville …

michael “somebody, please pay attention to me” reagan
and joe “i’m not really a plumber and my real name is sam” wurzelbacher

Michael Reagan Manages to Trivialize Child Rape

michael reagan by hip is everythingMichael Reagan, who’s cashed in being the adopted son of St. Ronald of California for a career as a professional wingnut, is very concerned about the president’s executive overreach.

“For more than three years Emperor Obama has been behaving as if the separation of powers is a pesky fly to be swatted away whenever it becomes too annoying.
If you don’t like something or want to get something done, you don’t let little things like the Constitution get in your way.”


Yeah, Emperor Obama has been totally out of control. Starting wars that never end, torturing people, ripping up treaties, disappearing them in foreign gulags, illegally spying on U.S. citizens. Oh wait,
that was Emperor Bush.
Anyway, Michael – continue.

Emperor Obama obviously could not care less about helping the Latino population. When Democrats had control of both houses of Congress he did absolutely nothing for them.
Now he’s doing to Latinos what Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky allegedly did to the children of Pennsylvania – using and abusing them. With his short-sighted politicking, Emperor Obama has hurt the Latino cause in the long run.

Yes, not forcibly deporting the children of immigrants is totally the same thing as raping them.

EDITOR’S NOTE: In the wake of the news Sandusky raped his adopted son, this Cult of Reagan barnacle seems particularly grotesque.
from crooks and liars

and this is coming  from the intellectual giant who gave you this …mreagan

and our co-winner this week …

Joe the Plumber links the deaths of Jews in Nazi Germany to gun control in Ohio campaign video

15 minsTOLEDO, Ohio — The Ohio congressional candidate known as “Joe the Plumber” is running a campaign video in which he suggests that Nazi gun controls contributed to deaths during the Holocaust because Jews didn’t have firearms to defend themselves.
The ad drew strong rebukes from Democrats and Jewish organizations.
In the video, Samuel Wurzelbacher loads a shotgun and fires at lemons and tomatoes placed on wooden posts. “In 1939, Germany established gun control,” he says. “From 1939 to 1945, six million Jews and seven million others, unable to defend themselves, were exterminated,” he says before ending the video by saying “I love America.”
Gun control opponents have long held that Adolf Hitler was able to seize power in Germany in part because of controls on firearms.
Ohio Democratic Party Chairman Chris Redfern said the video was “incredibly offensive.” He called on Republicans and Democrats to condemn “the despicable actions of this very desperate man.”
“Using the memories of the six million Jews killed in the Holocaust to make a political point is never appropriate, under any circumstances,” said David A. Harris, president of the National Jewish Democratic Council.
Wurzelbacher also said in the video that gun control laws in Turkey preceded the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians from 1915 to 1917.
He defended his statements Wednesday, saying that he did not say that gun control caused the Holocaust. He accused liberals of twisting his words for political gain.
Wurzelbacher, running as a Republican in Ohio’s 9th district, became known as “Joe the Plumber” after questioning Barack Obama about his economic policies during the 2008 presidential campaign.
from the washington post


michael “somebody, please pay attention to me” reagan
and joe “i’m not really a plumber and my real name is sam” wurzelbacher

this week’s winners of the  golden d-bag award

and to both of these wannabes, we give the hip is everything salute …

hip is everything salute

 

where’s the outrage now?

this just in from the …

bat-shit-crazy-dept by hip is everything

more treason from the gop …
more proof that the gop’s only plan is “gop first, america last”
and that the baggers now completely own john of orange, and the gop …

following is a great post on what’s really going on with these gop/tp grifters …
and their true motivations …

John Boehner Is Deliberately Killing 3 Million Construction Jobs

from politicususa
by Rmuse June 18, 2012            see more posts by Rmuse

In the lead-up to the 2010 midterm elections, Republicans, led by John Boehner (R-OH) promised their highest priority was “jobs, jobs, jobs,” and despite offering no concrete plans to stimulate hiring, the nation anticipated some kind of sweeping legislation to get Americans back to work. It is now the lead-up to the 2012 General Election, and Speaker of the House John Boehner says the American people want to know; “where are the jobs?” It has been a year-and-a-half since Boehner and Republicans took control of the House of Representatives and besides not producing any jobs, Boehner has revealed himself to be the most incompetent House leader in recent memory. What Boehner has accomplished, is attacking women’s right to choose their own reproductive health, attempted to pass legislation purposely designed to kill millions of Americans’ jobs, as well as push the Keystone XL pipeline to enrich the oil industry and himself. If the American people want to know where the jobs are, they can look no farther than John Boehner’s desk.
In a rare bipartisan move, the Senate passed a highway and transportation bill that saves 1 million construction jobs and creates 2 million more, but led by Speaker John Boehner, the tea bagger extremists in the House are failing to hold a vote on the transportation bill to keep unemployment numbers high and damage President Obama’s re-election chances. What Republicans in the House did propose was an economically short-sighted bill that kills a half-a-million jobs next year alone. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka
said, “It defies imagination that the Republican leadership and chairman of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee would turn their backs on the needs of our country and pretend it is good government.” Even the ultra-conservative U.S. Chamber of Commerce blasted the Republican version of the transportation bill as being “devastating to construction and related industries—materials, equipment, design, engineering. As important, in the long run, disinvestment results in a less competitive economy and a drag on GDP due to underperforming infrastructure.” In an even rarer letter to Rep. John Mica (R-FL), author of the Republican measure, two Democratic and two Republican representatives wrote, “Reducing investment in America’s transportation system at this time will have a negative impact on the construction, engineering, manufacturing and materials companies which are already struggling with high unemployment. Transportation infrastructure is one of the most cost efficient and effective ways to reduce unemployment and stimulate the economy. Studies suggest that for every $1 billion spent on transportation projects more than 35,000 jobs are created.” The Senate’s transportation bill, worth $109 billion creates 3,815,000 construction jobs and yet, Republicans like Speaker John Boehner are asking; “where are the jobs?”
They are sitting on your desk Speaker Boehner
and you cannot see fit to hold a vote on helping the construction industry, the hardest hit by Bush-Republicans economic catastrophe, by creating over three-million construction jobs.
Republicans in the House are refusing to hold a vote on the Senate’s transportation bill for myriad reasons, but chief among them are bicycle lanes, the Keystone XL pipeline, and their incessant attempt to kill as many Americans’ jobs as possible to keep unemployment numbers high. It is obvious Republicans want to prevent construction workers unemployed because they are primarily union jobs, and their aversion to bicycle lanes are rooted in keeping Americans guzzling gasoline to bolster the oil industry’s profits, but the
Keystone XL pipeline obsession is a devious ploy by Boehner to manipulate share prices in Canadian tar sand companies and enrich the foreign oil market.
This column has
reiterated several times that Boehner invested in seven Canadian tar sand companies in 2010 in anticipation of construction of the Keystone pipeline and it prompted the SEC to look into the issue of share manipulation based on their fallacious job creation numbers provided to the U.S. government that Speaker Boehner parroted without pause. Boehner and Republicans are well aware that the pipeline will only provide about 2,500 two-year jobs for pipeline construction specialists and that since the oil belongs to a foreign company, TransCanada, after refining in Texas the oil will be sold on the foreign market but, regardless, they are willing to hold hostage 3 million American jobs to enrich the oil industry and Speaker John Boehner. The presumptive Republican presidential candidate, Willard Romney, says if elected, he “would immediately approve the project if elected because of the construction jobs it would create and the oil it would bring from Canada.” It is no surprise that pathological liar, Willard Romney, touts the fallacy of construction jobs, or that Americans would ever see one drop of Canada’s oil, because he will say anything to win the presidency. In fact, in February, Romney promised that, “I’ll get us that oil from Canada that we deserve.” When Willard says “we,” he means the oil industry that has invested $3.5 million in his general election effort across the country, and that is in addition to the $200-million pledge from oil barons Charles and David Koch. It is astounding that to enrich one industry that American taxpayers already give $4 billion annually in subsidies and tax breaks, Republicans are willing to hold hostage 3 million construction jobs, but that is the Republican Party in 2012.
Americans should be irate that Republicans are deliberately killing 3 million jobs for any reason, but that they are holding them hostage to enrich big oil, Willard Romney, and Speaker of the House John Boehner is the depth of depravity. Boehner exemplifies greed and underhanded politics by asking “where are the jobs,” when they are sitting on his desk, and if the corporate media would do their jobs, the American people would rise up and end the Republican’s reign of terror and job killing agenda, but they stand to benefit greatly if a corporate whore like Willard Romney wins the White House. However, as despicable as Romney is, his corporate pandering pales to the incompetence of Speaker of the House John Boehner who continues asking, “where are the jobs” when they are sitting on his desk.

john of orange

FINAL NOTE:
johnny, you cowardly, lying hypocrite …
how ya’ doing on those keystone shares? …
are ya’ making lotsa money at the public’s expense, ya grifter? …
you sir, are corrupt, in every sense of the word …
and you should immediately resign …
after all, if a democrat behaved this way, you and your treasonous buddies would be screaming like a drunken high school girl on a bad date and demanding that he/she resign immediately …
and truth be told, if the dems actually had ANY balls at all, you’d be under investigation and facing indictment for your treasonous and corrupt behaviour of the last three years …

get yer’ tin foil hats out before it’s too late people!

car thief and arsonist darryl issa ... the angriest man in americaif the following videos and pdf document, explaining the events leading up to darryl issa’s unprecedented move of charging attorney general eric holder with contempt of congress, don’t convince you that this whole “fast and furious” episode is nothing more than a sham driven by the nra to finally bring down eric holder for the nra’s future power and profit, then nothing will … 
it is also, without any doubt, designed to whip their wingnut “conspiracy theory” driven followers into an ignorance fuelled  frenzy so as to get their way yet again, by duping the most gullible and fearful into doing the nra’s political bidding …
plus, as an added bonus, it has the benefit of giving the gop a stepping off point from where they and faux noise can start the “obama must have known all about it” campaign, just in time for the election season ahead …
in fact, a quick, 2 minute drive by of the faux noise channel will show you that that particular piece of low information, bullshit and innuendo fuelled speculation has already begun in earnest …
as well, john of orange boehner has already begun the “how high up does this go?” propaganda/talking points tour of right wing media …
even though the whole “fast and furious” operation was begun and carried out by the bush administration and it’s minions, and was stopped by holder when he found out about it, this is somehow now “all obama and holder’s fault” …
and even though NOBODY from the bush administration was even questioned about any of this …
this whole "scandal" began as another loony toons conspiracy-theory on the fringes of the far right, moved into the halls of congress (or rather “pushed into congress by the nra) and eventually culminated in the overtly partisan and utterly ridiculous spectacle that we all witnessed yesterday …
it is the latest episode of darryl “car thief/arsonist” issa’s latest “get my 15 minutes of fame” ploy …
can you say kenneth starr
i guess no-one could prove obama was getting “some oral service in the oval office”, so this ginned up and fake story will have to suffice …
with all the problems in the usa today, and the dire need to make things better for their fellow citizens, this is what the gop are going to spend their time on …
pathetic …
the republicans are playing it like the spanish inquisition …
it seems that there is no low too low, or crazy conspiracy theory too crazy for these dullards and grifters…

click on the car thief's face for the maddow on issa video

and here is the letter that the nra sent to the gop to get them on board …
basically it’s the usual nra “get on board or we’ll mow ya’ down” letter they are famous for …

NRA-letter-to-issa-1

 

NRA-letter-to-issa-2

and just to make their point, the nra letter ends with the threat of retribution against any gop that don’t fall in line, with the following blurb …

The American people – including millions of NRA members and tens of millions of NRA supporters – deserve the truth about these issues, and we will support any effort that leads us to that truth. This is an issue of utmost seriousness and the NRA will consider this vote in future candidate evaluations.

the truth is that this whole sham is nothing more than the usual “obama is coming to take away your guns” diatribe that the gop like to run with so as to inspire fear amongst the “tin foil hat crowd” and low information faux noise viewers on the right that they so desperately need in their quest for more power …

LINK TO PDF OF NRA LETTER HERE

 


UPDATEUPDATE

2008: Darrell Issa Voted "YES" to Fund Project Gunrunner & Merida Initiative

The Merida Initiative is the, and was the, basis for the 2008 HR-6028 Bill which specifically funded "Project Gunrunner."

PDF HERE

Darrell Issa pretends he has never heard of Project Gunrunner, yet in 2008 he specifically voted to fund Project Gunrunner.
Apparently, there is more than just a huge connection between Merida Initiative and Project Gunrunner whereby Project Gunrunner funding, per HR-6028, is directly enveloped into the Merida Initiative.
In October 2007, President Bush and President announced the Mérida Initiative, is a Billions of dollar aid package to support Mexico’s President Calderón’s war on drugs by, among other things, sending military grade weapons and helicopters to Mexico. Project Gunrunner was Legislated into the Merida Initiative through HR-6028 in 2008. After ample Congressional debate on conditionality and appropriations, the US Congress approved the initiative in HR-6028 without any strings attached.

read the entire article here


scott brown is a pussy

and a liar, and a coward, and your typical misogynistic teathuglican thug …
oh yeah, i forgot “grifter” …

coward of the county by hip is everything
Sen. Scott Brown demands conditions to join Elizabeth Warren in accepting Vicki Kennedy’s invitation to debate …
from MassLive.com

U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., today said he will join his Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren in accepting an invitation to debate, as proposed by Vicki Kennedy, the widow of the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, as long as certain conditions are met.
More than a week ago, Kennedy invited the two Senate race rivals to go head-to-head in a debate sponsored by the University of Massachusetts Boston and the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate, which is currently being built.
Warren
accepted on June 11 and Monday, Brown’s Campaign Manager Jim Barnett, sent Kennedy a letter saying they would accept the invitation if certain conditions were agreed upon.
For starters, Kennedy has to pledge to remain neutral for remainder of the contentious Senate race for the seat held by her husband from 1962 until his death from brain cancer in 2009. While it is not entirely clear what this condition involves, an endorsement of a particular candidate would almost certainly be out of bounds.
Barnett said that while they accept Kennedy’s proposal to have
Tom Brokaw moderate, they prefer local journalists to ask the questions in such forums.
"In order to proceed, we need to know that in keeping with the spirit of neutrality expressed in Vicki Kennedy’s letter that she will not endorse or otherwise get involved in this race," Barnett wrote. "Furthermore, while we accept Tom Brokaw as a moderator, we prefer debates with local media sponsors, not out-of-state cable networks with a reputation for political advocacy. We are confident that issue can be easily addressed as there are a number of Massachusetts media outlets that would be willing to sponsor a debate such as the one you are proposing for the Kennedy Institute, and I’m sure they would be pleased to have Mr. Brokaw as moderator."
While this debate is tentatively scheduled to take place on Sept. 27, the dates for the other two debates Brown and Warren have mutually agreed to participate in have not been decided.
Both candidates have agreed to take part in a televised debate in Boston to be hosted by CBS affiliate WBZ-TV and another televised debate in Springfield,
hosted by a consortium of media outlets in Western Massachusetts.

The full text of Barnett’s letter responding to the invitation from Vicki Kennedy is below.


June 18, 2012
Dear Ms. McBirney:
First, let me say how much we appreciate the invitation from Vicki Kennedy to participate in a debate at the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate. Ever since we received Mrs. Kennedy’s invitation, we have been giving it serious consideration and thought. We are hopeful that you will agree to conditions that will allow us to accept.
As the President of the Board of Trustees, Vicki Kennedy assured us in her June 8 letter that the Kennedy Institute is "non-partisan" and would therefore be an appropriate setting for a Senate debate. In order to proceed, we need to know that in keeping with the spirit of neutrality expressed in Vicki Kennedy’s letter that she will not endorse or otherwise get involved in this race.
Furthermore, while we accept Tom Brokaw as a moderator, we prefer debates with local media sponsors, not out-of-state cable networks with a reputation for political advocacy. We are confident that issue can be easily addressed as there are a number of Massachusetts media outlets that would be willing to sponsor a debate such as the one you are proposing for the Kennedy Institute, and I’m sure they would be pleased to have Mr. Brokaw as moderator.
We look forward to your response.

Sincerely,
Jim Barnett
Campaign Manager
Scott Brown for U.S. Senate

 

UPDATE:

APPARENTLY SCOTT’S CHICKEN SHIT REQUESTS AND DEMANDS WERE MET WITH A NO, SO …

debate cancelled

THE DEBATE HAS BEEN CANCELLED …

TOLD YA’, THE GUY’S A PUSSY …
AND A COWARD …

vagina! … scarin’ the hell outta the gop since 1960

here’s one for mittens, john of orange, cantor the ranter, snitch mcconnell, hannity the manatee, glenn beck, paul “the lyin’” ryan, scott walker, rick “the dick” snyder, scott brown, and rush limpbough …

lisa’s site is HERE
go check it out …
ya’ know ya’ wanna! …


vagina monologues wisconsin

After two female legislators were banned from the Michigan House floor last week after saying “vagina” during a debate about an anti-abortion measure, a massive crowd has gathered at the state capitol for a reading of “The Vagina Monologues.” There are an estimated 5,000 people in attendance.

more here

after all, this is really about women’s health care and about elected representatives being able to address legislation restricting women’s health care choices …
and it’s about control …
by silencing the representatives from speaking on the house floor in opposition of the bill, they prevent them from representing the people who elected them …
standard operating procedures for the gop …
the gop, taking you back to “the good old days” … the 1850’s …

gop knows by hip is everything

aelita andre: a secret universe

sometimes in my travels i stumble across something that brings joy and awe to my heart …
and as such, i believe it should be shared …
this made my day! …

i’ve seen a lot of nay sayers and people who say there’s nothing great going on with aelita’s art since stumbling into this little girl’s work …
to them i say …
jealous? …
ill informed? …
to the rest of you i say …
enjoy! …
personally, i love her art, and i think she’s brilliant …
i think her sense of color, her sense of texture and contrast are stunning for an artist of any age …
and she’s 5 years old …
i can’t wait to see what she’s painting in the years to come …
and imho, anyone who can’t see just how great she already is wouldn’t know great art if it jumped up and bit them on the ass …
so let the haters hate …
this little girl is the real mccoy …
she is, as one commentator noted “scary good” …

AndreAelita Andre‘s first exhibition was at only 22 months old. It was a group show, so the pressure was lessened, we imagine. From her incredibly glossy website, one learns the Melbourne-based toddler speaks Russian and English, and has been painting since her artist father fortuitously placed a canvas on the floor. Now, at the ripe old age of five, she is presenting her Abstract Expressionist-influenced work at her second solo show at Agora Gallery in New York.

her site is here

AELITA%20SOLO%20EXHIBITION_PrintPROOF-1-filtered

 

congress … the best buy in town

dumb and dumber 2 by hip is everything


Repeal Anything That Is Left Standing …
And Make Some Decent Cash While You’re At It

Congressional Republicans intend to seek quick repeal of any parts of the health care law that survive a widely anticipated Supreme Court ruling, but don’t plan to push replacement measures until after the fall elections or perhaps 2013.
Instead, GOP lawmakers cite recent announcements that some insurance companies will retain a few of the law’s higher-profile provisions as evidence that quick legislative action is not essential. Those are steps that officials say Republicans quietly urged in private conversations with the industry.
Once the Supreme Court issues a ruling, "the goal is to repeal anything that is left standing," said Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., a member of the party’s leadership.
Republicans say they have no plans for assuring continuity of a provision that reduces out-of-pocket costs for seniors with high drug expenses. This coverage gap is known as "doughnut hole."
"I don’t think anybody intends to get involved" in the portion of Medicare that provides prescription drug coverage. The program is "working better than we designed it," said Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., referring to studies that show the program’s cost is lower than was originally estimated.
House Republicans have voted 30 times to eliminate, defund or scale back parts or all of the health law, most recently approving a measure to wipe out a tax on medical devices.
The House of Representatives moved to help save
$30 million dollars for medical device companies while defunding programs designed to expand health coverage for ordinary Americans. The House took action on legislation to “repeal a 2.3 percent excise tax on gross sales receipts in excess of $5 million for manufacturers and importers of certain medical devices, including defibrillators, pacemakers and prosthetic limbs.” The tax, originally part of the Affordable Care Act, was set up to pay for an expansion in health programs to cover the uninsured in America, which studies have linked to over 45,000 deaths a year.
The medical device lobby had several advantages in this fight. For one thing, they had a man in the inside. In late 2010, as Congressman John Boehner (R-OH) prepared to take the gavel as Speaker, he
hired a lobbyist named Brett Loper as his new policy chief. Loper left his job at the Advanced Medical Technology Association, a lobby group for medical device-makers, to join Boehner.
Republic Report reviewed ethics forms disclosed filed with the House clerk’s office, and noticed that Loper actually received a $100,147 bonus in 2011 for leaving his medical device lobbying group and becoming a public servant.
A story from
Politico in 2010 notes that Loper, as a medical device lobbyist, was “deeply involved” in fighting the medical device tax that was ultimately repealed.


the truth about the “job creators”

jobs?, what jobs?, you don’t need no stinking jobs! …

jobsyou know that speech that the guys who run TED Talks said wasn’t worth seeing? … 
here it is …
and it’s definitely worth seeing …
i’ve covered nick hanauer and his campaign to enlighten the people about how corporate america really operates in previous posts, and how the right has lied about it for years …
and as usual, the man has a way of getting his message across in a simple, honest and accurate way …
and the message is important …
it blows apart the whole republican “job creators” mythology and shows it for what it truly is …
bullshit and self serving propaganda/excuses …

if you didn’t catch the previous post on nick and this subject, please have a look at this post for a much more detailed breakdown of what is really going on …

Nick Hanauer, self described "super-rich" entrepreneur, gave a fantastic TED Talk about how the middle class—not the super-rich—are the real job creators. But TED, which has released over 100 different political videos in the past, thought this one was too partisan and refused to release it. We normally love TED, and were surprised they didn’t think this talk was TEDworthy. Under pressure from the internets, TED finally relented and released the video. Watch it and decide for yourself if it’s really all that controversial to say that the "super-rich are not job creators." Then share it like crazy.

and the perfect time to share this is … right now!

 

d-bag of the week … the merry misogynists o’ michigan

dbagweek

again, another week full of lying politicians and incoherent, ass kissing, windbag broadcasters …
a week that was full of some of the slimiest, slithering, scuzzball serpents the world of partisan politics, religion and big business has to offer …
we’ve seen these soldiers of the new confederacy wreak their wrath on the state of michigan for some time now …
what with their attempts at killing democracy with their “emergency managers”, their attempts to put women’s right back 50 years with their truly victorian and misogynistic approach to women’s health, contraception and abortion, and their 1940’s approach to voter suppression and bigotry and anti-democracy inspired management style …
but this past week they truly outdid themselves, making even florida’s favorite health care fraud, governor rick scott look moderate …
introducing some of the most regressive legislation in the free world with regards to abortion, women’s health, voter suppression, and tax breaks for the right wing wealthy, these bagger shills have shown the teathuglican party to be what many have suspected for some time …
petty, arrogant, condescending and greedy hypocrites and liars, intent on preserving a “permanent republican theocracy beholding to no-one except their oligarchic overlords and benefactors” …
shills for the 1% and corporate whores with no peer … 
but, after this week’s performance of true misogyny, racism, fear mongering, election manipulation, vote rigging, lying, arrogance, condescension and pure fascist behaviour in which our winners  were shown for the tiny, scared, petty little men they truly are, and have always been, we really can only have one winner …
and rather deserving winners, if I do say so myself …
true masters of douche-baggery, ignorance, sexism and all out lust for power  …
and without a doubt, true douche bags … 
taking good ole’ boy, redneck bigotry and plantation owner condescension to a whole new level …

so without further ado …

ladies and gentlemen …

the envelope please …

our latest winner …
of the sometimes coveted, always deserved …

golden d-bag award

and this weeks award goes to …
drum roll please …

the guys who brought you the new plantation bosses or as they like to call them – “emergency managers”… 
the new overlords of hypocrisy and bigotry …
the new emissaries of the “old confederacy” …
the zealots who brought you the “death of democracy in detroit”  dressed up as an exercise in voter fraud defense …
the leaders of their own imaginary kingdom where only what they believe in is allowed …
where democracy, voter’s rights and fair representation is a thing of the past … 
those brazen, back biting, brokers of barefaced, blatant, bold and bald faced bigotry …
the kings of “rosaries for your ovaries” …
those baggers for backwardness …
those minsters of malevolence, maliciousness, malignity and malice  …
the prevaricating and pirating, priggish proctors of purge for profit …
holier than thou whores for the haughty …
envoys of the entitled elite and their exaggerated, exclusive elegance …
those rectors of regression, relapse, and retro-gradation …
those malicious masters of misogyny and mendacity …
those fuckers from flint, demons of detroit, bastards from benton harbour and letches from lansing …

 

rick “we like to call him dick” snyder and the the michigan state republicans …

rick snyder michigan

head d-bag and corporate lackey, governor rick snyder

 

Voter suppression is the new law of the land in michigan and democracy is out …

a transcript from the rachel maddow show on msnbc

Here’s the story in a nutshell: In the early 1960s, the state adopted a constitutional amendment that slowed the implementation of new laws so that they wouldn’t take effect until three months after the end of the legislative session in which they were passed. They did, however, allow for passage of emergency legislation, provided the legislature could get a two-thirds majority vote on the legislation. With a two-thirds vote, a law could go into effect immediately. In an emergency.

As Maddow reported last night, that’s not how it’s been working lately.

The Democrats in Michigan say that since Republicans took over the Michigan house, they’ve passed 566 bills. We have looked into that count ourselves. It does seem accurate and the Republicans are not contesting it.

Of those 566 bills, 546, all about 20 of them, were passed under the immediate effect clause — 96 percent of the bills they’ve passed have essentially been an emergency. Almost everything they’ve done has been done under this provision of the constitution that let’s you put things into effect immediately because you’ve got a super majority. They’ve been designed to rush from the legislature to Governor Snyder for a quick signature and into full immediate effect that day, that minute, right now.

This is new in Michigan governance. This is not the way Michigan was set up. This is not the way it was supposed to be.

They have used that procedure to pass massively undemocratic legislation: the emergency manager law that lets the state take over towns, boot out the elected town or city officials, and just take over; the stripping of public employee benefits to domestic partners; blocking the expansion of the graduate students’ union. They will almost certainly use it to pass pending voter suppression laws.

And how they’ve done this is remarkable. These "immediate effect" laws are supposed to get a two-thirds majority. That’s numerically impossible in the House, because Republicans don’t have two-thirds majority and Democrats have remained united as a bloc against them. The House Republicans simply ignore the two-thirds part of the law. They hold a separate "immediate effect" vote after voting in a bill, and rather than doing a roll call vote, just simply eyeball the assembly and call it two-thirds.

Michigan Democrats, after a year of this, finally sued, and on Monday got a county judge to issue "a temporary injunction ordering Michigan House Republicans to follow the law, to follow the constitution, to let the minority vote even though the minority are Democrats." Why it took state Democrats so long to figure that one out is a bit of mystery, but they did, and they got the attention of the courts which is going to be critical in the next steps of the fight.

But what is remarkable here is the extent to which a democratically elected legislature and governor have overturned democracy. They have stripped the votes of all of the people living in the cities and towns who have been taken over by emergency managers by removing the officials they elected. They have stripped the votes of legislators in their very state government. They are about to prevent untold thousands from even being able to cast a ballot in November.

Undoubtedly, all in the name of freedom.

Lawmaker barred for speaking up for women …

Lansing – House Republicans prohibited state Rep. Lisa Brown from speaking on the floor Thursday after she ended a speech Wednesday against a bill restricting abortions by referencing her female anatomy.
Brown, a West Bloomfield Democrat and mother of three, said a package of abortion regulation bills would violate her Jewish religious beliefs that pregnancy be aborted to save the life of the mother.
“Finally, Mr. Speaker, I’m flattered that you’re all so interested in my vagina, but ‘no’ means ‘no,’” Brown said Wednesday.
Brown’s comment prompted a rebuke Thursday by House Republicans, who wouldn’t allow her to voice her opinion on a school employee retirement bill.
“What she said was offensive,” said Rep. Mike Callton, R-Nashville. “It was so offensive, I don’t even want to say it in front of women. I would not say that in mixed company.”
Brown’s comments were published in Thursday’s Detroit News.
Majority Floor Leader Jim Stamas, R-Midland, determined Brown’s comments violated the decorum of the House, said Ari Adler, spokesman for the Republican majority.
“If I can’t say the word vagina, why are we legislating vaginas?” Brown asked Thursday at a hastily called Capitol press conference. “What language should I use?”
Brown noted “vagina” is the “medically correct term.”

Lawmakers barred from speaking … for disagreeing with the baggers …

LANSING – Majority Floor Leader Jim Stamas (R-Midland) today banned two Democratic women legislators from speaking on the House Floor as the House of Representatives takes up its final legislation before the summer recess. State Representatives Lisa Brown (D-West Bloomfield) and Barb Byrum (D-Onondaga) were not told why the ban was put in place, but it is widely believed it stems from their opposition to radical anti-choice legislation that passed the House yesterday.
"Both Representative Byrum and I were gaveled down without cause yesterday while voicing our opposition to the Republican’s war on women here in Michigan, "said Rep. Brown. "Regardless of their reasoning, this is a violation of my First Amendment rights and directly impedes my ability to serve the people who elected me into office. I was either banned for being Jewish and rightfully pointing out that House Bill 5711 was forcing contradictory religious beliefs upon me and any other religion. Or it is because I said the word ‘vagina’ which is an anatomically, medically correct term. If they are going to legislate my anatomy, I see no reason why I cannot mention it."
HB 5711 which passed 70-39 with one Representative abstaining addresses treatment of fetal remains, coercive abortion screening, physician liability and rules for certain abortion facilities

and the people of michigan are impressed too …


Chart from MSU Institute for Public Policy and Social Research

Here’s the trend. It’s not pretty.


Chart by Eclectablog


rick “we like to call him dick” snyder and the the michigan state republicans …

this week’s golden d-bag award winner !

it’s time to take down the “for sale” sign

Obama Trade Document Leaked, Revealing New Corporate Powers And Broken Campaign Promises

A draft agreement leaked Wednesday shows the Obama administration is pushing a secretive trade agreement that could vastly expand corporate power and directly contradict a 2008 campaign promise by President Obama. A U.S. proposal for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade pact between the United States and eight Pacific nations would allow foreign corporations operating in the U.S. to appeal key regulations to an international tribunal. The body would have the power to override U.S. law and issue penalties for failure to comply with its ruling. We speak to Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch, a fair trade group that posted the leaked documents on its website. "This is not just a bad trade agreement," Wallach says. "This is a ‘1 percent’ power tool that could rip up our basic needs and rights."
more here

take down the “for sale” sign …

the re-upping of the patriot act; the constant gifts and giving in to the banksters; the ndaa; indefinite detentions; guantanamo still going strong; drone killings; off shore assassinations of american citizens; continued spying on american citizens; continuance of the “bush tax cuts”; H.R. 347’s weakening of the first amendment; making it legal for police and military to use drones to spy on americans in america; pointless wars and military police actions; gutting of the constitution; avoiding the prosecution of the war criminals from the bush cabal; appointing geithner, paulson, et al to fix the economic mess they created; ceding a “single payer option” to the giant pharmas and insurance industry so as to get a health care act that hands over every single american to the insurance conglomerate’s rolls; re-upping the offshore drilling; giving in on the keystone pipeline project even though it will only benefit the oil industry, and may actually do grave harm to the environment world-wide; little or no action on the housing and mortgage crises; and on, and on, and on …the list seems to grow daily
and it’s the same in canada, britain and europe … and it’s spreading fast …

is it any wonder that the american public can’t tell the difference between the two parties any more? …
is there any difference between the two parties? …
or, are they the same party with two different faces, designed to just fool the electorate for the benefit of the oligarchy that seems to have a stranglehold on the country? …
do they just differentiate in their path to destruction, while the outcome remains the same? …
some days, one really has to wonder …
don’t get me wrong, even with all of this, i still wouldn’t vote for a republican if my life depended on it …
i honestly believe that their path to the future is not one i would wish on my children …
hell, i wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemies …

but, maybe it is time that the public stood up in the usa, canada, britain, europe and everywhere else and just said “fuck you, we’re sick of this, we DEMAND you either change immediately, and represent OUR interests, or we want someone new” …
maybe it is time for the people to do something other than just choose the “lesser of two evils” …
maybe it’s time for the people to actually take control of this situation before it is too late …
and that time IS fast approaching, i have no doubt …

and how does the public do that, against the backlash of all the corporate power and money? …
by standing up and being counted …
by each and every one of us repeatedly telling our already elected officials exactly what we want …
by refusing to take no for an answer from them …
by refusing to believe that it can’t change …
by each and every one of us DEMANDING that these things change, and change NOW …
and if they don’t, by removing these people from office and ONLY replacing them with people who will represent us and our wishes …
and if the new guy doesn’t follow through with our wishes, replace him too …

it won’t fix things over night, but if each and every one of us, no exceptions, makes our wishes heard, and our anger felt, then sooner or later, and i’m betting sooner, we will get representatives that listen to us and not the moneyed interests …
and how do we do this? …
by getting in the face of your elected officials, regularly, and consistently … and incessantly …
by being armed with information and facts …
by calling the liars “liars” and the shills “shills” …
by refusing to quit, until we get real representation …
by VOTING! …
so, get informed …
get upset …
get involved in any way you can …
get relentless …
mobilize, organize and take action … 
and get at it …

and if you get tired, or disillusioned, then stop, look over at your children or your grand children, remember why this is the most important thing you will EVER do, and get back to it …
and start now! …
”we are the many, they are the few” 

 

apples and oranges – duelling speeches in ohio today

the romney speech  …
1. drill, drill, drill, then drill some more …
2. get rid of obamacare but keep romneycare in massachusetts.
3. limit the size of government. (cut, cut, cut)
4. crack down on china … somehow.
5. obama is bad, america is great.
6. a woman went out of business because obama said something about vegas.
7. and um, marco rubio said something positive about something.
8. a guy opened a new factory and he’s rich now.
9. and he went to san diego on memorial day and met some great americans.
10. told a slew of lies about obama and his record..
11. he knows how to lead cause he’s um, been in the private sector
12 said that he would “lay some pipe himself”, if he had to, when speaking about the keystone pipeline project.
(he might want to clear that with anne first)

though billed by aides as a major address, romney largely stuck to his standard remarks, speaking to the small crowd of about 200 …
oh yeah, and while obama was speaking, romney had his tour bus driving around the obama event honking it’s horn and taunting the president and his supporters …
stay classy mittens, stay classy ….

the obama speech …
in a speech that was nearly twice as long as romney’s, obama offered a crowd of over 1,500 cheering supporters an expansive explanation for how his economic vision differed from that of romney …
during his speech, obama cast the election as a choice between two “fundamentally different” economic views, rattling off a long list of spending cuts that would affect americans if romney and his party succeed in implementing their ideas …
at one point, he addressed undecided voters watching his remarks on television, telling them that romney advocates the policies of the past that he said brought prosperity to the nation’s wealthiest at the expense of middle-income americans …

“If you want to give the policies of the last decade another try, then you should vote for mr. romney,” obama said
and followed later with
"I’m not going to stand by while a minority in the Senate puts party ideology ahead of the people they were elected to serve. Not when so much is at stake."


President Barack Obama speaks in Shaker Heights Wednesday

 

President Barack Obama speaks in Shaker Heights Wednesday

 

President Barack Obama speaks in Shaker Heights Wednesday

NOTE: i tried for more than half an hour to find a picture of romney’s ohio speech today, but i can’t find any pictures of it anywhere … not even his own website had one …
so, hopefully this will suffice …
i think it probably captures the spirit of the event anyways …

romney crowd

 

mittens says NO! to sick people … “look after yourselves!”

gopfather by hip is everything

"While the Affordable Care Act would prevent insurers from denying coverage to anyone with a pre-existing condition beginning in 2014, Romney’s provision is far more limited – and would only protect Americans who already have coverage."

and to the rest of you …
you’re shit out of luck amigos! …
in other words, if you are born with any health issues, you will be then be uninsurable because of "pre existing conditions” …
if you have a health issue, and need insurance, too freakin’ bad … 
"We’ve discriminated against you in the past so that gives us the right to continue doing it."
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
and let’s not forget who else he’s lining up against … by his own words …

firemen, teachers and policemen
 
“he (obama) wants another stimulus, he wants to hire more government workers. He says we need more fireman, more policeman, more teachers. Did he not get the message of Wisconsin? The American people did. It’s time for us to cut back on government and help the American people.”
(even though all three were exempted from Scott Walker’s crackdown on public employee bargaining rights, which enabled him to “divide and conquer” labor)

anyone with a pre-existing condition …
see article below

people who are against the mistreatment of family pets … 
"PETA is not happy that my dog likes fresh air."
(NOTE: where I come from, dogs ride inside asshole!)

the unemployed …
"I like being able to fire people who provide services to me."

the very poor, hanging on by their finger nails to their already crumbling safety net …
"I’m not concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there."

people who cannot afford a car, a house, or even food on their tables …
“and Anne drives a couple of Cadillacs."

people who are disgusted by self serving hypocrites who cry “Poor-Me” …
"I get speaker’s fees from time to time, but not very much." (over 400k per year)
and "I should tell my story. I’m also unemployed." (let’s just hope we can keep it that way)

people who have zero tolerance for “morans” who speak gibberish trying to sound intelligent or deep …
"I believe in an America where millions of Americans believe in an America that’s the America millions of Americans believe in. That’s the America I love."
(wtf? … for christ’s sake, even alaskan barbie makes more sense than that)

voters in general …
"Corporations are people, my friend … of course they are”
(i’ll believe that when rick “oops” perry executes one in texas)

NASCAR fans …
"I like those fancy raincoats you bought. Really sprung for the big bucks."
(not everyone shops at brooks brothers willard) 

women  …
”I’d get rid of Planned Parenthood”
and "Do I believe the Supreme Court should overturn Roe v. Wade? Yes, I do,"

students … re: student loans … 
“If you want to get an education, borrow money from your parents
(your grifter buddies already stole all their money, that’s why they need student loans)

immigrants …
”i think they should self-deport”

and lest we forget …
seniors,
blacks,
hispanics,
gay, lesbian, transgendered and bisexual people,
supporters of public schools (he wants to voucherize the whole system),
and the list grows daily …
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

 

Romney Confirms He Will Deny Insurance To Millions With Pre-Existing Conditions If Obamacare Is Struck Down

By Igor Volsky on Jun 12, 2012 at 11:03 am

Mitt Romney confirmed on Tuesday that he would allow insurers to deny coverage to millions of Americans with pre-existing conditions if the Supreme Court strikes down Obamacare later this month. During a speech at Con-Air Industries in Orlando, Florida, the former Massachusetts governor said that Americans who have not been “continuously insured” would not be protected from discrimination if they suffer from pre-existing conditions:

ROMNEY: So let’s say someone has been continuously insured and they develop a serious condition. And let’s say they lose their jobs or they change jobs or they move and go to a different place, I don’t want them to be denied insurance because they have some pre-existing conditions. So we’re going to have to make sure that the law that we replace Obamacare with, ensures that people who have a pre-existing condition, who have been insured in the past, are able to get insurance in the future so they don’t have to worry about that condition keeping them from getting the kind of health care they deserve.

While the Affordable Care Act would prevent insurers from denying coverage to anyone with a pre-existing condition beginning in 2014, Romney’s provision is far more limited — and would only protect Americans who already have coverage.
As The New Republic’s Jonathan Cohn has
pointed out, the federal government already forbids insurers from denying coverage to the continuously covered through the 1996 Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). But the measure has been seen as a failure because “there is no limit on what insurers can charge under HIPAA” and the law does “little to regulate the content of coverage, leaving the door open to insurers to offer bare-bones policies. In addition, HIPAA notice requirements are weak, making it hard for people to know about this protection.”
Romney could offer to bolster the existing law, but given his general laissez-faire approach to health care and opposition to “government interference” in the private sector, it’s unlikely that he would want to impose new regulations on insurers. Without a mandate for everyone to purchase coverage, the protection would also attract sicker people who need care and increase premiums for all enrolees. In other words, it’s a poor solution that will leave millions still searching for coverage.

it’s deja vu, all over again … time to wake up america

as those of you who regularly come by this site will know, i don’t often repost an article, written by someone else, in it’s entirety …
unless i feel that it is extremely important, well researched and credited, and extremely accurate in it’s writings and findings …
in my opinion, the following piece meets those qualifiers in every way …
and i feel that it is important enough that it be spread around as much as possible, to the widest possible audience …
please read it, and if you feel the same, please repost, share and spread around in any way you can …
here is that article …

note: while the original article is now a couple of years old, the similarities to the situation today are striking, and the problems addressed here are problems that have not been addressed in any substantial way, nor are they problems that have been “fixed” …

ROBERT F KENNEDY JR:
The 2004 Presidential election was stolen via institutional fraud

May 13, 2012
(originally published on June 1st, 2006)

Like many Americans, I spent the evening of the 2004 election watching the returns on television and wondering how the exit polls, which predicted an overwhelming victory for John Kerry, had gotten it so wrong. By midnight, the official tallies showed a decisive lead for George Bush — and the next day, lacking enough legal evidence to contest the results, Kerry conceded. Republicans derided anyone who expressed doubts about Bush’s victory as nut cases in ”tinfoil hats,” while the national media, with few exceptions, did little to question the validity of the election. The Washington Post immediately dismissed allegations of fraud as ”conspiracy theories,”(1) and The New York Times declared that ”there is no evidence of vote theft or errors on a large scale.”(2)

But despite the media blackout, indications continued to emerge that something deeply troubling had taken place in 2004. Nearly half of the 6 million American voters living abroad(3) never received their ballots — or received them too late to vote(4) — after the Pentagon unaccountably shut down a state-of-the-art Web site used to file overseas registrations.(5) A consulting firm called Sproul & Associates, which was hired by the Republican National Committee to register voters in six battleground states,(6) was discovered shredding Democratic registrations.(7) In New Mexico, which was decided by 5,988 votes,(8) malfunctioning machines mysteriously failed to properly register a presidential vote on more than 20,000 ballots.(9) Nationwide, according to the federal commission charged with implementing election reforms, as many as 1 million ballots were spoiled by faulty voting equipment — roughly one for every 100 cast.(10)

The reports were especially disturbing in Ohio, the critical battleground state that clinched Bush’s victory in the electoral college. Officials there purged tens of thousands of eligible voters from the rolls, neglected to process registration cards generated by Democratic voter drives, shortchanged Democratic precincts when they allocated voting machines and illegally derailed a recount that could have given Kerry the presidency. A precinct in an evangelical church in Miami County recorded an impossibly high turnout of ninety-eight percent, while a polling place in inner-city Cleveland recorded an equally impossible turnout of only seven percent. In Warren County, GOP election officials even invented a nonexistent terrorist threat to bar the media from monitoring the official vote count.(11)

Any election, of course, will have anomalies. America’s voting system is a messy patchwork of polling rules run mostly by county and city officials. ”We didn’t have one election for president in 2004,” says Robert Pastor, who directs the Center for Democracy and Election Management at American University. ”We didn’t have fifty elections. We actually had 13,000 elections run by 13,000 independent, quasi-sovereign counties and municipalities.”

But what is most anomalous about the irregularities in 2004 was their decidedly partisan bent: Almost without exception they hurt John Kerry and benefited George Bush. After carefully examining the evidence, I’ve become convinced that the president’s party mounted a massive, coordinated campaign to subvert the will of the people in 2004. Across the country, Republican election officials and party stalwarts employed a wide range of illegal and unethical tactics to fix the election. A review of the available data reveals that in Ohio alone, at least 357,000 voters, the overwhelming majority of them Democratic, were prevented from casting ballots or did not have their votes counted in 2004(12) — more than enough to shift the results of an election decided by 118,601 votes.(13) (See Ohio’s Missing Votes) In what may be the single most astounding fact from the election, one in every four Ohio citizens who registered to vote in 2004 showed up at the polls only to discover that they were not listed on the rolls, thanks to GOP efforts to stem the unprecedented flood of Democrats eager to cast ballots.(14) And that doesn’t even take into account the troubling evidence of outright fraud, which indicates that upwards of 80,000 votes for Kerry were counted instead for Bush. That alone is a swing of more than 160,000 votes — enough to have put John Kerry in the White House.(15)

”It was terrible,” says Sen. Christopher Dodd, who helped craft reforms in 2002 that were supposed to prevent such electoral abuses. ”People waiting in line for twelve hours to cast their ballots, people not being allowed to vote because they were in the wrong precinct — it was an outrage. In Ohio, you had a secretary of state who was determined to guarantee a Republican outcome. I’m terribly disheartened.”

Indeed, the extent of the GOP’s effort to rig the vote shocked even the most experienced observers of American elections. ”Ohio was as dirty an election as America has ever seen,” Lou Harris, the father of modern political polling, told me. ”You look at the turnout and votes in individual precincts, compared to the historic patterns in those counties, and you can tell where the discrepancies are. They stand out like a sore thumb.”

I. The Exit Polls
The first indication that something was gravely amiss on November 2nd, 2004, was the inexplicable discrepancies between exit polls and actual vote counts. Polls in thirty states weren’t just off the mark — they deviated to an extent that cannot be accounted for by their margin of error. In all but four states, the discrepancy favored President Bush.(16)

Over the past decades, exit polling has evolved into an exact science. Indeed, among pollsters and statisticians, such surveys are thought to be the most reliable. Unlike pre-election polls, in which voters are asked to predict their own behavior at some point in the future, exit polls ask voters leaving the voting booth to report an action they just executed. The results are exquisitely accurate: Exit polls in Germany, for example, have never missed the mark by more than three-tenths of one percent.(17) ”Exit polls are almost never wrong,” Dick Morris, a political consultant who has worked for both Republicans and Democrats, noted after the 2004 vote. Such surveys are ”so reliable,” he added, ”that they are used as guides to the relative honesty of elections in Third World countries.”(18) In 2003, vote tampering revealed by exit polling in the Republic of Georgia forced Eduard Shevardnadze to step down.(19) And in November 2004, exit polling in the Ukraine — paid for by the Bush administration — exposed election fraud that denied Viktor Yushchenko the presidency.(20)

But that same month, when exit polls revealed disturbing disparities in the U.S. election, the six media organizations that had commissioned the survey treated its very existence as an embarrassment. Instead of treating the discrepancies as a story meriting investigation, the networks scrubbed the offending results from their Web sites and substituted them with ”corrected” numbers that had been weighted, retroactively, to match the official vote count. Rather than finding fault with the election results, the mainstream media preferred to dismiss the polls as flawed.(21)

”The people who ran the exit polling, and all those of us who were their clients, recognized that it was deeply flawed,” says Tom Brokaw, who served as anchor for NBC News during the 2004 election. ”They were really screwed up — the old models just don’t work anymore. I would not go on the air with them again.”

In fact, the exit poll created for the 2004 election was designed to be the most reliable voter survey in history. The six news organizations — running the ideological gamut from CBS to Fox News — retained Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International,(22) whose principal, Warren Mitofsky, pioneered the exit poll for CBS in 1967(23) and is widely credited with assuring the credibility of Mexico’s elections in 1994.(24) For its nationwide poll, Edison/Mitofsky selected a random subsample of 12,219 voters(25) — approximately six times larger than those normally used in national polls(26) — driving the margin of error down to approximately plus or minus one percent.(27)

On the evening of the vote, reporters at each of the major networks were briefed by pollsters at 7:54 p.m. Kerry, they were informed, had an insurmountable lead and would win by a rout: at least 309 electoral votes to Bush’s 174, with fifty-five too close to call.(28) In London, Prime Minister Tony Blair went to bed contemplating his relationship with President-elect Kerry.(29)

As the last polling stations closed on the West Coast, exit polls showed Kerry ahead in ten of eleven battleground states — including commanding leads in Ohio and Florida — and winning by a million and a half votes nationally. The exit polls even showed Kerry breathing down Bush’s neck in supposed GOP strongholds Virginia and North Carolina.(30) Against these numbers, the statistical likelihood of Bush winning was less than one in 450,000.(31) ”Either the exit polls, by and large, are completely wrong,” a Fox News analyst declared, ”or George Bush loses.”(32)

But as the evening progressed, official tallies began to show implausible disparities — as much as 9.5 percent — with the exit polls. In ten of the eleven battleground states, the tallied margins departed from what the polls had predicted. In every case, the shift favored Bush. Based on exit polls, CNN had predicted Kerry defeating Bush in Ohio by a margin of 4.2 percentage points. Instead, election results showed Bush winning the state by 2.5 percent. Bush also tallied 6.5 percent more than the polls had predicted in Pennsylvania, and 4.9 percent more in Florida.(33)

According to Steven F. Freeman, a visiting scholar at the University of Pennsylvania who specializes in research methodology, the odds against all three of those shifts occurring in concert are one in 660,000. ”As much as we can say in sound science that something is impossible,” he says, ”it is impossible that the discrepancies between predicted and actual vote count in the three critical battleground states of the 2004 election could have been due to chance or random error.” (See The Tale of the Exit Polls)

Puzzled by the discrepancies, Freeman laboriously examined the raw polling data released by Edison/Mitofsky in January 2005. ”I’m not even political — I despise the Democrats,” he says. ”I’m a survey expert. I got into this because I was mystified about how the exit polls could have been so wrong.” In his forthcoming book, Was the 2004 Presidential Election Stolen? Exit Polls, Election Fraud, and the Official Count, Freeman lays out a statistical analysis of the polls that is deeply troubling.

In its official post-mortem report issued two months after the election, Edison/Mitofsky was unable to identify any flaw in its methodology — so the pollsters, in essence, invented one for the electorate. According to Mitofsky, Bush partisans were simply disinclined to talk to exit pollsters on November 2nd(34) — displaying a heretofore unknown and undocumented aversion that skewed the polls in Kerry’s favor by a margin of 6.5 percent nationwide.(35)

Industry peers didn’t buy it. John Zogby, one of the nation’s leading pollsters, told me that Mitofsky’s ”reluctant responder” hypothesis is ”preposterous.”(36) Even Mitofsky, in his official report, underscored the hollowness of his theory: ”It is difficult to pinpoint precisely the reasons that, in general, Kerry voters were more likely to participate in the exit polls than Bush voters.”(37)

Now, thanks to careful examination of Mitofsky’s own data by Freeman and a team of eight researchers, we can say conclusively that the theory is dead wrong. In fact it was Democrats, not Republicans, who were more disinclined to answer pollsters’ questions on Election Day. In Bush strongholds, Freeman and the other researchers found that fifty-six percent of voters completed the exit survey — compared to only fifty-three percent in Kerry strongholds.(38) ”The data presented to support the claim not only fails to substantiate it,” observes Freeman, ”but actually contradicts it.”

What’s more, Freeman found, the greatest disparities between exit polls and the official vote count came in Republican strongholds. In precincts where Bush received at least eighty percent of the vote, the exit polls were off by an average of ten percent. By contrast, in precincts where Kerry dominated by eighty percent or more, the exit polls were accurate to within three tenths of one percent — a pattern that suggests Republican election officials stuffed the ballot box in Bush country.(39)

”When you look at the numbers, there is a tremendous amount of data that supports the supposition of election fraud,” concludes Freeman. ”The discrepancies are higher in battleground states, higher where there were Republican governors, higher in states with greater proportions of African-American communities and higher in states where there were the most Election Day complaints. All these are strong indicators of fraud — and yet this supposition has been utterly ignored by the press and, oddly, by the Democratic Party.”

The evidence is especially strong in Ohio. In January, a team of mathematicians from the National Election Data Archive, a nonpartisan watchdog group, compared the state’s exit polls against the certified vote count in each of the forty-nine precincts polled by Edison/Mitofsky. In twenty-two of those precincts — nearly half of those polled — they discovered results that differed widely from the official tally. Once again — against all odds — the widespread discrepancies were stacked massively in Bush’s favor: In only two of the suspect twenty-two precincts did the disparity benefit Kerry. The wildest discrepancy came from the precinct Mitofsky numbered ”27,” in order to protect the anonymity of those surveyed. According to the exit poll, Kerry should have received sixty-seven percent of the vote in this precinct. Yet the certified tally gave him only thirty-eight percent. The statistical odds against such a variance are just shy of one in 3 billion.(40)

Such results, according to the archive, provide ”virtually irrefutable evidence of vote miscount.” The discrepancies, the experts add, ”are consistent with the hypothesis that Kerry would have won Ohio’s electoral votes if Ohio’s official vote counts had accurately reflected voter intent.”(41) According to Ron Baiman, vice president of the archive and a public policy analyst at Loyola University in Chicago, ”No rigorous statistical explanation” can explain the ”completely non-random” disparities that almost uniformly benefited Bush. The final results, he adds, are ”completely consistent with election fraud — specifically vote shifting.”

II. The Partisan Official
No state was more important in the 2004 election than Ohio. The state has been key to every Republican presidential victory since Abraham Lincoln’s, and both parties overwhelmed the state with television ads, field organizers and volunteers in an effort to register new voters and energize old ones. Bush and Kerry traveled to Ohio a total of forty-nine times during the campaign — more than to any other state.(42)

But in the battle for Ohio, Republicans had a distinct advantage: The man in charge of the counting was Kenneth Blackwell, the co-chair of President Bush’s re-election committee.(43) As Ohio’s secretary of state, Blackwell had broad powers to interpret and implement state and federal election laws — setting standards for everything from the processing of voter registration to the conduct of official recounts.(44) And as Bush’s re-election chair in Ohio, he had a powerful motivation to rig the rules for his candidate. Blackwell, in fact, served as the ”principal electoral system adviser” for Bush during the 2000 recount in Florida,(45) where he witnessed firsthand the success of his counterpart Katherine Harris, the Florida secretary of state who co-chaired Bush’s campaign there.(46)

Blackwell — now the Republican candidate for governor of Ohio(47) — is well-known in the state as a fierce partisan eager to rise in the GOP. An outspoken leader of Ohio’s right-wing fundamentalists, he opposes abortion even in cases of rape(48) and was the chief cheerleader for the anti-gay-marriage amendment that Republicans employed to spark turnout in rural counties(49). He has openly denounced Kerry as ”an unapologetic liberal Democrat,”(50) and during the 2004 election he used his official powers to disenfranchise hundreds of thousands of Ohio citizens in Democratic strongholds. In a ruling issued two weeks before the election, a federal judge rebuked Blackwell for seeking to ”accomplish the same result in Ohio in 2004 that occurred in Florida in 2000.”(51)

”The secretary of state is supposed to administer elections — not throw them,” says Rep. Dennis Kucinich, a Democrat from Cleveland who has dealt with Blackwell for years. ”The election in Ohio in 2004 stands out as an example of how, under color of law, a state election official can frustrate the exercise of the right to vote.”

The most extensive investigation of what happened in Ohio was conducted by Rep. John Conyers, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.(52) Frustrated by his party’s failure to follow up on the widespread evidence of voter intimidation and fraud, Conyers and the committee’s minority staff held public hearings in Ohio, where they looked into more than 50,000 complaints from voters.(53) In January 2005, Conyers issued a detailed report that outlined ”massive and unprecedented voter irregularities and anomalies in Ohio.” The problems, the report concludes, were ”caused by intentional misconduct and illegal behavior, much of it involving Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell.”(54)

”Blackwell made Katherine Harris look like a cupcake,” Conyers told me. ”He saw his role as limiting the participation of Democratic voters. We had hearings in Columbus for two days. We could have stayed two weeks, the level of fury was so high. Thousands of people wanted to testify. Nothing like this had ever happened to them before.”

When ROLLING STONE confronted Blackwell about his overtly partisan attempts to subvert the election, he dismissed any such claim as ”silly on its face.” Ohio, he insisted in a telephone interview, set a ”gold standard” for electoral fairness. In fact, his campaign to subvert the will of the voters had begun long before Election Day. Instead of welcoming the avalanche of citizen involvement sparked by the campaign, Blackwell permitted election officials in Cleveland, Cincinnati and Toledo to conduct a massive purge of their voter rolls, summarily expunging the names of more than 300,000 voters who had failed to cast ballots in the previous two national elections.(55) In Cleveland, which went five-to-one for Kerry, nearly one in four voters were wiped from the rolls between 2000 and 2004.(56)

There were legitimate reasons to clean up voting lists: Many of the names undoubtedly belonged to people who had moved or died. But thousands more were duly registered voters who were deprived of their constitutional right to vote — often without any notification — simply because they had decided not to go to the polls in prior elections.(57) In Cleveland’s precinct 6C, where more than half the voters on the rolls were deleted,(58) turnout was only 7.1 percent(59) — the lowest in the state.

According to the Conyers report, improper purging ”likely disenfranchised tens of thousands of voters statewide.”(60) If only one in ten of the 300,000 purged voters showed up on Election Day — a conservative estimate, according to election scholars — that is 30,000 citizens who were unfairly denied the opportunity to cast ballots.

III. The Strike Force
In the months leading up to the election, Ohio was in the midst of the biggest registration drive in its history. Tens of thousands of volunteers and paid political operatives from both parties canvassed the state, racing to register new voters in advance of the October 4th deadline. To those on the ground, it was clear that Democrats were outpacing their Republican counterparts: A New York Times analysis before the election found that new registrations in traditional Democratic strongholds were up 250 percent, compared to only twenty-five percent in Republican-leaning counties.(61) ”The Democrats have been beating the pants off us in the air and on the ground,” a GOP county official in Columbus confessed to The Washington Times.(62)

To stem the tide of new registrations, the Republican National Committee and the Ohio Republican Party attempted to knock tens of thousands of predominantly minority and urban voters off the rolls through illegal mailings known in electioneering jargon as ”caging.” During the Eighties, after the GOP used such mailings to disenfranchise nearly 76,000 black voters in New Jersey and Louisiana, it was forced to sign two separate court orders agreeing to abstain from caging.(63) But during the summer of 2004, the GOP targeted minority voters in Ohio by zip code, sending registered letters to more than 200,000 newly registered voters(64) in sixty-five counties.(65) On October 22nd, a mere eleven days before the election, Ohio Republican Party Chairman Bob Bennett — who also chairs the board of elections in Cuyahoga County — sought to invalidate the registrations of 35,427 voters who had refused to sign for the letters or whose mail came back as undeliverable.(66) Almost half of the challenged voters were from Democratic strongholds in and around Cleveland.(67)

There were plenty of valid reasons that voters had failed to respond to the mailings: The list included people who couldn’t sign for the letters because they were serving in the U.S. military, college students whose school and home addresses differed,(68) and more than 1,000 homeless people who had no permanent mailing address.(69) But the undeliverable mail, Bennett claimed, proved the new registrations were fraudulent.

By law, each voter was supposed to receive a hearing before being stricken from the rolls.(70) Instead, in the week before the election, kangaroo courts were rapidly set up across the state at Blackwell’s direction that would inevitably disenfranchise thousands of voters at a time(71) — a process that one Democratic election official in Toledo likened to an ”inquisition.”(72) Not that anyone was given a chance to actually show up and defend their right to vote: Notices to challenged voters were not only sent out impossibly late in the process, they were mailed to the very addresses that the Republicans contended were faulty.(73) Adding to the atmosphere of intimidation, sheriff’s detectives in Sandusky County were dispatched to the homes of challenged voters to investigate the GOP’s claims of fraud.(74)

”I’m afraid this is going to scare these people half to death, and they are never going to show up on Election Day,” Barb Tuckerman, director of the Sandusky Board of Elections, told local reporters. ”Many of them are young people who have registered for the first time. I’ve called some of these people, and they are perfectly legitimate.”(75)

On October 27th, ruling that the effort likely violated both the ”constitutional right to due process and constitutional right to vote,” U.S. District Judge Susan Dlott put a halt to the GOP challenge(76) — but not before tens of thousands of new voters received notices claiming they were improperly registered. Some election officials in the state illegally ignored Dlott’s ruling, stripping hundreds of voters from the rolls.(77) In Columbus and elsewhere, challenged registrants were never notified that the court had cleared them to vote.

On October 29th, a federal judge found that the Republican Party had violated the court orders from the Eighties that barred it from caging. ”The return of mail does not implicate fraud,” the court affirmed,(78) and the disenfranchisement effort illegally targeted ”precincts where minority voters predominate, interfering with and discouraging voters from voting in those districts.”(79) Nor were such caging efforts limited to Ohio: The GOP also targeted hundreds of thousands of urban voters in the battleground states of Florida,(80) Pennsylvania(81) and Wisconsin.(82)

Republicans in Ohio also worked to deny the vote to citizens who had served jail time for felonies. Although rehabilitated prisoners are entitled to vote in Ohio, election officials in Cincinnati demanded that former convicts get a judge to sign off before they could register to vote.(83) In case they didn’t get the message, Republican operatives turned to intimidation. According to the Conyers report, a team of twenty-five GOP volunteers calling themselves the Mighty Texas Strike Force holed up at the Holiday Inn in Columbus a day before the election, around the corner from the headquarters of the Ohio Republican Party — which paid for their hotel rooms. The men were overheard by a hotel worker ”using pay phones to make intimidating calls to likely voters” and threatening former convicts with jail time if they tried to cast ballots.(84)

This was no freelance operation. The Strike Force — an offshoot of the Republican National Committee(85) — was part of a team of more than 1,500 volunteers from Texas who were deployed to battleground states, usually in teams of ten. Their leader was Pat Oxford, (86) a Houston lawyer who managed Bush’s legal defense team in 2000 in Florida,(87) where he warmly praised the efforts of a mob that stormed the Miami-Dade County election offices and halted the recount. It was later revealed that those involved in the ”Brooks Brothers Riot” were not angry Floridians but paid GOP staffers, many of them flown in from out of state.(88) Photos of the protest show that one of the ”rioters” was Joel Kaplan, who has just taken the place of Karl Rove at the White House, where he now directs the president’s policy operations.(89)

IV. Barriers to Registration
To further monkey-wrench the process he was bound by law to safeguard, Blackwell cited an arcane elections regulation to make it harder to register new voters. In a now-infamous decree, Blackwell announced on September 7th — less than a month before the filing deadline — that election officials would process registration forms only if they were printed on eighty-pound unwaxed white paper stock, similar to a typical postcard. Justifying his decision to ROLLING STONE, Blackwell portrayed it as an attempt to protect voters: ”The postal service had recommended to us that we establish a heavy enough paper-weight standard that we not disenfranchise voters by having their registration form damaged by postal equipment.” Yet Blackwell’s order also applied to registrations delivered in person to election offices. He further specified that any valid registration cards printed on lesser paper stock that miraculously survived the shredding gauntlet at the post office were not to be processed; instead, they were to be treated as applications for a registration form, requiring election boards to send out a brand-new card.(90)

Blackwell’s directive clearly violated the Voting Rights Act, which stipulates that no one may be denied the right to vote because of a registration error that ”is not material in determining whether such individual is qualified under state law to vote.”(91) The decision immediately threw registration efforts into chaos. Local newspapers that had printed registration forms in their pages saw their efforts invalidated.(92) Delaware County posted a notice online saying it could no longer accept its own registration forms.(93) Even Blackwell couldn’t follow the protocol: The Columbus Dispatch reported that his own staff distributed registration forms on lighter-weight paper that was illegal under his rule. Under the threat of court action, Blackwell ultimately revoked his order on September 28th — six days before the registration deadline.(94)

But by then, the damage was done. Election boards across the state, already understaffed and backlogged with registration forms, were unable to process them all in time. According to a statistical analysis conducted in May by the nonpartisan Greater Cleveland Voter Coalition, 16,000 voters in and around the city were disenfranchised because of data-entry errors by election officials,(95) and another 15,000 lost the right to vote due to largely inconsequential omissions on their registration cards.(96) Statewide, the study concludes, a total of 72,000 voters were disenfranchised through avoidable registration errors — one percent of all voters in an election decided by barely two percent.(97)

Despite the widespread problems, Blackwell authorized only one investigation of registration errors after the election — in Toledo — but the report by his own inspectors offers a disturbing snapshot of the malfeasance and incompetence that plagued the entire state.(98) The top elections official in Toledo was a partisan in the Blackwell mold: Bernadette Noe, who chaired both the county board of elections and the county Republican Party.(99) The GOP post was previously held by her husband, Tom Noe,(100) who currently faces felony charges for embezzling state funds and illegally laundering $45,400 of his own money through intermediaries to the Bush campaign.(101)

State inspectors who investigated the elections operation in Toledo discovered ”areas of grave concern.”(102) With less than a month to go before the election, Bernadette Noe and her board had yet to process 20,000 voter registration cards.(103) Board officials arbitrarily decided that mail-in cards (mostly from the Republican suburbs) would be processed first, while registrations dropped off at the board’s office (the fruit of intensive Democratic registration drives in the city) would be processed last.(104) When a grass-roots group called Project Vote delivered a batch of nearly 10,000 cards just before the October 4th deadline, an elections official casually remarked, ”We may not get to them.”(105) The same official then instructed employees to date-stamp an entire box containing thousands of forms, rather than marking each individual card, as required by law.(106) When the box was opened, officials had no way of confirming that the forms were filed prior to the deadline — an error, state inspectors concluded, that could have disenfranchised ”several thousand” voters from Democratic strongholds.(107)

The most troubling incident uncovered by the investigation was Noe’s decision to allow Republican partisans behind the counter in the board of elections office to make photocopies of postcards sent to confirm voter registrations(108) — records that could have been used in the GOP’s caging efforts. On their second day in the office, the operatives were caught by an elections official tampering with the documents.(109) Investigators slammed the elections board for ”a series of egregious blunders” that caused ”the destruction, mutilation and damage of public records.”(110)

On Election Day, Noe sent a team of Republican volunteers to the county warehouse where blank ballots were kept out in the open, ”with no security measures in place.”(111) The state’s assistant director of elections, who just happened to be observing the ballot distribution, demanded they leave. The GOP operatives refused and ultimately had to be turned away by police.(112)

In April 2005, Noe and the entire Board of Elections were forced to resign. But once again, the damage was done. At a ”Victory 2004” rally held in Toledo four days before the election, President Bush himself singled out a pair of ”grass-roots” activists for special praise: ”I want to thank my friends Bernadette Noe and Tom Noe for their leadership in Lucas County.”(113)

V. ”The Wrong Pew”
In one of his most effective maneuvers, Blackwell prevented thousands of voters from receiving provisional ballots on Election Day. The fail-safe ballots were mandated in 2002, when Congress passed a package of reforms called the Help America Vote Act. This would prevent a repeat of the most egregious injustice in the 2000 election, when officials in Florida barred thousands of lawfully registered minority voters from the polls because their names didn’t appear on flawed precinct rolls. Under the law, would-be voters whose registration is questioned at the polls must be allowed to cast provisional ballots that can be counted after the election if the voter’s registration proves valid.(114)

”Provisional ballots were supposed to be this great movement forward,” says Tova Andrea Wang, an elections expert who served with ex-presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford on the commission that laid the groundwork for the Help America Vote Act. ”But then different states erected barriers, and this new right became totally eviscerated.”

In Ohio, Blackwell worked from the beginning to curtail the availability of provisional ballots. (The ballots are most often used to protect voters in heavily Democratic urban areas who move often, creating more opportunities for data-entry errors by election boards.) Six weeks before the vote, Blackwell illegally decreed that poll workers should make on-the-spot judgments as to whether or not a voter lived in the precinct, and provide provisional ballots only to those deemed eligible.(115) When the ruling was challenged in federal court, Judge James Carr could barely contain his anger. The very purpose of the Help America Vote Act, he ruled, was to make provisional ballots available to voters told by precinct workers that they were ineligible: ”By not even mentioning this group — the primary beneficiaries of HAVA’s provisional-voting provisions — Blackwell apparently seeks to accomplish the same result in Ohio in 2004 that occurred in Florida in 2000.”(116)

But instead of complying with the judge’s order to expand provisional balloting, Blackwell insisted that Carr was usurping his power as secretary of state and made a speech in which he compared himself to Mohandas Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr. and the apostle Paul — saying that he’d rather go to jail than follow federal law.(117) The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Carr’s ruling on October 23rd — but the confusion over the issue still caused untold numbers of voters across the state to be illegally turned away at the polls on Election Day without being offered provisional ballots.(118) A federal judge also invalidated a decree by Blackwell that denied provisional ballots to absentee voters who were never sent their ballots in the mail. But that ruling did not come down until after 3 p.m. on the day of the election, and likely failed to filter down to the precinct level at all — denying the franchise to even more eligible voters.(119)

We will never know for certain how many voters in Ohio were denied ballots by Blackwell’s two illegal orders. But it is possible to put a fairly precise number on those turned away by his most disastrous directive. Traditionally, anyone in Ohio who reported to a polling station in their county could obtain a provisional ballot. But Blackwell decided to toss out the ballots of anyone who showed up at the wrong precinct — a move guaranteed to disenfranchise Democrats who live in urban areas crowded with multiple polling places. On October 14th, Judge Carr overruled the order, but Blackwell appealed.(120) In court, he was supported by his friend and campaign contributor Tom Noe, who joined the case as an intervener on behalf of the secretary of state.(121) He also enjoyed the backing of Attorney General John Ashcroft, who filed an amicus brief in support of Blackwell’s position — marking the first time in American history that the Justice Department had gone to court to block the right of voters to vote.(122) The Sixth Circuit, stacked with four judges appointed by George W. Bush, sided with Blackwell.(123)

Blackwell insists that his decision kept the election clean. ”If we had allowed this notion of ?voters without borders’ to exist,” he says, ”it would have opened the door to massive fraud.” But even Republicans were shocked by the move. DeForest Soaries, the GOP chairman of the Election Assistance Commission — the federal agency set up to implement the Help America Vote Act — upbraided Blackwell, saying that the commission disagreed with his decision to deny ballots to voters who showed up at the wrong precinct. ”The purpose of provisional ballots is to not turn anyone away from the polls,” Soaries explained. ”We want as many votes to count as possible.”(124)

The decision left hundreds of thousands of voters in predominantly Democratic counties to navigate the state’s bewildering array of 11,366 precincts, whose boundaries had been redrawn just prior to the election.(125) To further compound their confusion, the new precinct lines were misidentified on the secretary of state’s own Web site, which was months out of date on Election Day. Many voters, out of habit, reported to polling locations that were no longer theirs. Some were mistakenly assured by poll workers on the grounds that they were entitled to cast a provisional ballot at that precinct. Instead, thanks to Blackwell’s ruling, at least 10,000 provisional votes were tossed out after Election Day simply because citizens wound up in the wrong line.(126)

In Toledo, Brandi and Brittany Stenson each got in a different line to vote in the gym at St. Elizabeth Seton School. Both of the sisters were registered to vote at the polling place on the city’s north side, in the shadow of the giant DaimlerChrysler plant. Both cast ballots. But when the tallies were added up later, the family resemblance came to an abrupt end. Brittany’s vote was counted — but Brandi’s wasn’t. It wasn’t enough that she had voted in the right building. If she wanted her vote to count, according to Blackwell’s ruling, she had to choose the line that led to her assigned table. Her ballot — along with those of her mother, her brother and thirty-seven other voters in the same precinct — were thrown out(127) simply because they were, in the words of Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-Ohio), ”in the right church but the wrong pew.”(128)

All told, the deliberate chaos that resulted from Blackwell’s registration barriers did the trick. Black voters in the state — who went overwhelmingly for Kerry — were twenty percent more likely than whites to be forced to cast a provisional ballot.(129) In the end, nearly three percent of all voters in Ohio were forced to vote provisionally(130) — and more than 35,000 of their ballots were ultimately rejected.(131)

VI. Long Lines
When Election Day dawned on November 2nd, tens of thousands of Ohio voters who had managed to overcome all the obstacles to registration erected by Blackwell discovered that it didn’t matter whether they were properly listed on the voting rolls — because long lines at their precincts prevented them from ever making it to the ballot box. Would-be voters in Dayton and Cincinnati routinely faced waits as long as three hours. Those in inner-city precincts in Columbus, Cleveland and Toledo — which were voting for Kerry by margins of ninety percent or more — often waited up to seven hours. At Kenyon College, students were forced to stand in line for eleven hours before being allowed to vote, with the last voters casting their ballots after three in the morning.(132)

A five-month analysis of the Ohio vote conducted by the Democratic National Committee concluded in June 2005 that three percent of all Ohio voters who showed up to vote on Election Day were forced to leave without casting a ballot.(133) That’s more than 174,000 voters. ”The vast majority of this lost vote,” concluded the Conyers report, ”was concentrated in urban, minority and Democratic-leaning areas.”(134) State-wide, African-Americans waited an average of fifty-two minutes to vote, compared to only eighteen minutes for whites.(135)

The long lines were not only foreseeable — they were actually created by GOP efforts. Republicans in the state legislature, citing new electronic voting machines that were supposed to speed voting, authorized local election boards to reduce the number of precincts across Ohio. In most cases, the new machines never materialized — but that didn’t stop officials in twenty of the state’s eighty-eight counties, all of them favorable to Democrats, from slashing the number of precincts by at least twenty percent.(136)

Republican officials also created long lines by failing to distribute enough voting machines to inner-city precincts. After the Florida disaster in 2000, such problems with machines were supposed to be a thing of the past. Under the Help America Vote Act, Ohio received more than $30 million in federal funds to replace its faulty punch-card machines with more reliable systems.(137) But on Election Day, that money was sitting in the bank. Why? Because Ken Blackwell had applied for an extension until 2006, insisting that there was no point in buying electronic machines that would later have to be retrofitted under Ohio law to generate paper ballots.(138)

”No one has ever accused our secretary of state of lacking in ability,” says Rep. Kucinich. ”He’s a rather bright fellow, and he’s involved in the most minute details of his office. There’s no doubt that he knew the effect of not having enough voting machines in some areas.”

At liberal Kenyon College, where students had registered in record numbers, local election officials provided only two voting machines to handle the anticipated surge of up to 1,300 voters. Meanwhile, fundamentalist students at nearby Mount Vernon Nazarene University had one machine for 100 voters and faced no lines at all.(139) Citing the lines at Kenyon, the Conyers report concluded that the ”misallocation of machines went beyond urban/suburban discrepancies to specifically target Democratic areas.”(140)

In Columbus, which had registered 125,000 new voters(141) — more than half of them black(142) — the board of elections estimated that it would need 5,000 machines to handle the huge surge.(143) ”On Election Day, the county experienced an unprecedented turnout that could only be compared to a 500-year flood,” says Matt Damschroder,(144) chairman of the Franklin County Board of Elections and the former head of the Republican Party in Columbus.(145) But instead of buying more equipment, the Conyers investigation found, Damschroder decided to ”make do” with 2,741 machines.(146) And to make matters worse, he favoured his own party in distributing the equipment. According to The Columbus Dispatch, precincts that had gone seventy percent or more for Al Gore in 2000 were allocated seventeen fewer machines in 2004, while strong GOP precincts received eight additional machines.(147) An analysis by voter advocates found that all but three of the thirty wards with the best voter-to-machine ratios were in Bush strongholds; all but one of the seven with the worst ratios were in Kerry country.(148)

The result was utterly predictable. According to an investigation by the Columbus Free Press, white Republican suburbanites, blessed with a surplus of machines, averaged waits of only twenty-two minutes; black urban Democrats averaged three hours and fifteen minutes.(149) ”The allocation of voting machines in Franklin County was clearly biased against voters in precincts with high proportions of African-Americans,” concluded Walter Mebane Jr., a government professor at Cornell University who conducted a statistical analysis of the vote in and around Columbus.(150)

By midmorning, when it became clear that voters were dropping out of line rather than braving the wait, precincts appealed for the right to distribute paper ballots to speed the process. Blackwell denied the request, saying it was an invitation to fraud.(151) A lawsuit ensued, and the handwritten affidavits submitted by voters and election officials offer a heart-rending snapshot of an electoral catastrophe in the offing:(152)

From Columbus Precinct 44D:
”There are three voting machines at this precinct. I have been informed that in prior elections there were normally four voting machines. At 1:45 p.m. there are approximately eighty-five voters in line. At this time, the line to vote is approximately three hours long. This precinct is largely African-American. I have personally witnessed voters leaving the polling place without voting due to the length of the line.”

From Precinct 40:
”I am serving as a presiding judge, a position I have held for some 15+ years in precinct 40. In all my years of service, the lines are by far the longest I have seen, with some waiting as long as four to five hours. I expect the situation to only worsen as the early evening heavy turnout approaches. I have requested additional machines since 6:40 a.m. and no assistance has been offered.”

Precinct 65H:
”I observed a broken voting machine that was not in use for approximately two hours. The precinct judge was very diligent but could not get through to the BOE.”

Precinct 18A:
”At 4 p.m. the average wait time is about 4.5 hours and continuing to increase?. Voters are continuing to leave without voting.”

As day stretched into evening, U.S. District Judge Algernon Marbley issued a temporary restraining order requiring that voters be offered paper ballots.(153) But it was too late: According to bipartisan estimates published in The Washington Post, as many as 15,000 voters in Columbus had already given up and gone home.(154) When closing time came at the polls, according to the Conyers report, some precinct workers illegally dismissed citizens who had waited for hours in the rain — in direct violation of Ohio law, which stipulates that those in line at closing time are allowed to remain and vote.(155)

The voters disenfranchised by long lines were overwhelmingly Democrats. Because of the unequal distribution of voting equipment, the median turnout in Franklin County precincts won by Kerry was fifty-one percent, compared to sixty-one percent in those won by Bush. Assuming sixty percent turnout under more equitable conditions, Kerry would have gained an additional 17,000 votes in the county.(156)

In another move certain to add to the traffic jam at the polls, the GOP deployed 3,600 operatives on Election Day to challenge voters in thirty-one counties — most of them in predominantly black and urban areas.(157) Although it was billed as a means to ”ensure that voters are not disenfranchised by fraud,”(158) Republicans knew that the challengers would inevitably create delays for eligible voters. Even Mark Weaver, the GOP’s attorney in Ohio, predicted in late October that the move would ”create chaos, longer lines and frustration.”(159)

The day before the election, Judge Dlott attempted to halt the challengers, ruling that ”there exists an enormous risk of chaos, delay, intimidation and pandemonium inside the polls and in the lines out the doors.” Dlott was also troubled by the placement of Republican challengers: In Hamilton County, fourteen percent of new voters in white areas would be confronted at the polls, compared to ninety-seven percent of new voters in black areas.(160) But when the case was appealed to the Supreme Court on Election Day, Justice John Paul Stevens allowed the challenges to go forward. ”I have faith,” he ruled, ”that the elected officials and numerous election volunteers on the ground will carry out their responsibilities in a way that will enable qualified voters to cast their ballots.”(161)

In fact, Blackwell gave Republican challengers unprecedented access to polling stations, where they intimidated voters, worsening delays in Democratic precincts. By the end of the day, thanks to a whirlwind of legal wrangling, the GOP had even gotten permission to use the discredited list of 35,000 names from its illegal caging effort to challenge would-be voters.(162) According to the survey by the DNC, nearly 5,000 voters across the state were turned away at the polls because of registration challenges — even though federal law required that they be provided with provisional ballots.(163)

VII. Faulty Machines
Voters who managed to make it past the array of hurdles erected by Republican officials found themselves confronted by voting machines that didn’t work. Only 800,000 out of the 5.6 million votes in Ohio were cast on electronic voting machines, but they were plagued with errors.(164) In heavily Democratic areas around Youngstown, where nearly 100 voters reported entering ”Kerry” on the touch screen and watching ”Bush” light up, at least twenty machines had to be recalibrated in the middle of the voting process for chronically flipping Kerry votes to Bush.(165) (Similar ”vote hopping” from Kerry to Bush was reported by voters and election officials in other states.)(166) Elsewhere, voters complained in sworn affidavits that they touched Kerry’s name on the screen and it lit up, but that the light had gone out by the time they finished their ballot; the Kerry vote faded away.(167) In the state’s most notorious incident, an electronic machine at a fundamentalist church in the town of Gahanna recorded a total of 4,258 votes for Bush and 260 votes for Kerry.(168) In that precinct, however, there were only 800 registered voters, of whom 638 showed up.(169) (The error, which was later blamed on a glitchy memory card, was corrected before the certified vote count.)

In addition to problems with electronic machines, Ohio’s vote was skewed by old-fashioned punch-card equipment that posed what even Blackwell acknowledged was the risk of a ”Florida-like calamity.”(170) All but twenty of the state’s counties relied on antiquated machines that were virtually guaranteed to destroy votes(171) — many of which were counted by automatic tabulators manufactured by Triad Governmental Systems,(172) the same company that supplied Florida’s notorious butterfly ballot in 2000. In fact, some 95,000 ballots in Ohio recorded no vote for president at all — most of them on punch-card machines. Even accounting for the tiny fraction of voters in each election who decide not to cast votes for president — generally in the range of half a percent, according to Ohio State law professor and respected elections scholar Dan Tokaji — that would mean that at least 66,000 votes were invalidated by faulty voting equipment.(173) If counted by hand instead of by automated tabulator, the vast majority of these votes would have been discernable. But thanks to a corrupt recount process, only one county hand-counted its ballots.(174)

Most of the uncounted ballots occurred in Ohio’s big cities. In Cleveland, where nearly 13,000 votes were ruined, a New York Times analysis found that black precincts suffered more than twice the rate of spoiled ballots than white districts.(175) In Dayton, Kerry-leaning precincts had nearly twice the number of spoiled ballots as Bush-leaning precincts.(176) Last April, a federal court ruled that Ohio’s use of punch-card balloting violated the equal-protection rights of the citizens who voted on them.(177)

In addition to spoiling ballots, the punch-card machines also created bizarre miscounts known as ”ballot crawl.” In Cleveland Precinct 4F, a heavily African-American precinct, Constitution Party candidate Michael Peroutka was credited with an impressive forty-one percent of the vote. In Precinct 4N, where Al Gore won ninety-eight percent of the vote in 2000, Libertarian Party candidate Michael Badnarik was credited with thirty-three percent of the vote. Badnarik and Peroutka also picked up a sizable portion of the vote in precincts across Cleveland — 11M, 3B, 8G, 8I, 3I.(178) ”It appears that hundreds, if not thousands, of votes intended to be cast for Senator Kerry were recorded as being for a third-party candidate,” the Conyers report concludes.(179)

But it’s not just third-party candidates: Ballot crawl in Cleveland also shifted votes from Kerry to Bush. In Precinct 13B, where Bush received only six votes in 2000, he was credited with twenty percent of the total in 2004. Same story in 9P, where Bush recorded eighty-seven votes in 2004, compared to his grand total of one in 2000.(180)

VIII. Rural Counties
Despite the well-documented effort that prevented hundreds of thousands of voters in urban and minority precincts from casting ballots, the worst theft in Ohio may have quietly taken place in rural counties. An examination of election data suggests widespread fraud — and even good old-fashioned stuffing of ballot boxes — in twelve sparsely populated counties scattered across southern and western Ohio: Auglaize, Brown, Butler, Clermont, Darke, Highland, Mercer, Miami, Putnam, Shelby, Van Wert and Warren. (See The Twelve Suspect Counties) One key indicator of fraud is to look at counties where the presidential vote departs radically from other races on the ballot. By this measure, John Kerry’s numbers were suspiciously low in each of the twelve counties — and George Bush’s were unusually high.

Take the case of Ellen Connally, a Democrat who lost her race for chief justice of the state Supreme Court. When the ballots were counted, Kerry should have drawn far more votes than Connally — a liberal black judge who supports gay rights and campaigned on a shoestring budget. And that’s exactly what happened statewide: Kerry tallied 667,000 more votes for president than Connally did for chief justice, outpolling her by a margin of thirty-two percent. Yet in these twelve off-the-radar counties, Connally somehow managed to outperform the best-funded Democrat in history, thumping Kerry by a grand total of 19,621 votes — a margin of ten percent.(181) The Conyers report — recognizing that thousands of rural Bush voters were unlikely to have backed a gay-friendly black judge roundly rejected in Democratic precincts — suggests that ”thousands of votes for Senator Kerry were lost.”(182)

Kucinich, a veteran of elections in the state, puts it even more bluntly. ”Down-ticket candidates shouldn’t outperform presidential candidates like that,” he says. ”That just doesn’t happen. The question is: Where did the votes for Kerry go?”

They certainly weren’t invalidated by faulty voting equipment: a trifling one percent of presidential ballots in the twelve suspect counties were spoiled. The more likely explanation is that they were fraudulently shifted to Bush. Statewide, the president outpolled Thomas Moyer, the Republican judge who defeated Connally, by twenty-one percent. Yet in the twelve questionable counties, Bush’s margin over Moyer was fifty percent — a strong indication that the president’s certified vote total was inflated. If Kerry had maintained his statewide margin over Connally in the twelve suspect counties, as he almost assuredly would have done in a clean election, he would have bested her by 81,260 ballots. That’s a swing of 162,520 votes from Kerry to Bush — more than enough to alter the outcome. (183)

”This is very strong evidence that the count is off in those counties,” says Freeman, the poll analyst. ”By itself, without anything else, what happened in these twelve counties turns Ohio into a Kerry state. To me, this provides every indication of fraud.”

How might this fraud have been carried out? One way to steal votes is to tamper with individual ballots — and there is evidence that Republicans did just that. In Clermont County, where optical scanners were used to tabulate votes, sworn affidavits by election observers given to the House Judiciary Committee describe ballots on which marks for Kerry were covered up with white stickers, while marks for Bush were filled in to replace them. Rep. Conyers, in a letter to the FBI, described the testimony as ”strong evidence of vote tampering if not outright fraud.” (184) In Miami County, where Connally outpaced Kerry, one precinct registered a turnout of 98.55 percent (185) — meaning that all but ten eligible voters went to the polls on Election Day. An investigation by the Columbus Free Press, however, collected affidavits from twenty-five people who swear they didn’t vote. (186)

In addition to altering individual ballots, evidence suggests that Republicans tampered with the software used to tabulate votes. In Auglaize County, where Kerry lost not only to Connally but to two other defeated Democratic judicial candidates, voters cast their ballots on touch-screen machines. (187) Two weeks before the election, an employee of ES&S, the company that manufactures the machines, was observed by a local election official making an unauthorized log-in to the central computer used to compile election results. (188) In Miami County, after 100 percent of precincts had already reported their official results, an additional 18,615 votes were inexplicably added to the final tally. The last-minute alteration awarded 12,000 of the votes to Bush, boosting his margin of victory in the county by nearly 6,000. (189)

The most transparently crooked incident took place in Warren County. In the leadup to the election, Blackwell had illegally sought to keep reporters and election observers at least 100 feet away from the polls. (190) The Sixth Circuit, ruling that the decree represented an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment, noted ominously that ”democracies die behind closed doors.” But the decision didn’t stop officials in Warren County from devising a way to count the vote in secret. Immediately after the polls closed on Election Day, GOP officials — citing the FBI — declared that the county was facing a terrorist threat that ranked ten on a scale of one to ten. The county administration building was hastily locked down, allowing election officials to tabulate the results without any reporters present.

In fact, there was no terrorist threat. The FBI declared that it had issued no such warning, and an investigation by The Cincinnati Enquirer unearthed e-mails showing that the Republican plan to declare a terrorist alert had been in the works for eight days prior to the election. Officials had even refined the plot down to the language they used on signs notifying the public of a lockdown. (When ROLLING STONE requested copies of the same e-mails from the county, officials responded that the documents have been destroyed.) (191)

The late-night secrecy in Warren County recalls a classic trick: Results are held back until it’s determined how many votes the favored candidate needs to win, and the totals are then adjusted accordingly. When Warren County finally announced its official results — one of the last counties in the state to do so (192) — the results departed wildly from statewide patterns. John Kerry received 2,426 fewer votes for president than Ellen Connally, the poorly funded black judge, did for chief justice. (193) As the Conyers report concluded, ”It is impossible to rule out the possibility that some sort of manipulation of the tallies occurred on election night in the locked-down facility.” (194)

Nor does the electoral tampering appear to have been isolated to these dozen counties. Ohio, like several other states, had an initiative on the ballot in 2004 to outlaw gay marriage. Statewide, the measure proved far more popular than Bush, besting the president by 470,000 votes. But in six of the twelve suspect counties — as well as in six other small counties in central Ohio — Bush outpolled the ban on same-sex unions by 16,132 votes. To trust the official tally, in other words, you must believe that thousands of rural Ohioans voted for both President Bush and gay marriage. (195)

IX. Rigging the Recount
After Kerry conceded the election, the Green and Libertarian parties launched a recount of all eighty-eight counties in Ohio. Under state law, county boards of election were required to randomly select three percent of their precincts and recount the ballots both by hand and by machine. If the two totals reconciled exactly, a costly hand recount of the remaining votes could be avoided; machines could be used to tally the rest.

But election officials in Ohio worked outside the law to avoid hand recounts. According to charges brought by a special prosecutor in April, election officials in Cleveland fraudulently and secretly pre-counted precincts by hand to identify ones that would match the machine count. They then used these pre-screened precincts to select the ”random” sample of three percent used for the recount.

”If it didn’t balance, they excluded those precincts,” said the prosecutor, Kevin Baxter, who has filed felony indictments against three election workers in Cleveland. ”They screwed with the process and increased the probability, if not the certainty, that there would not be a full, countywide hand count.” (196)

Voting machines were also tinkered with prior to the recount. In Hocking County, deputy elections director Sherole Eaton caught an employee of Triad — which provided the software used to count punch-card ballots in nearly half of Ohio’s counties (197) — making unauthorized modifications to the tabulating computer before the recount. Eaton told the Conyers committee that the same employee also provided county officials with a ”cheat sheet” so that ”the count would come out perfect and we wouldn’t have to do a full hand-recount of the county.” (198) After Eaton blew the whistle on the illegal tampering, she was fired.

(199) The same Triad employee was dispatched to do the same work in at least five other counties. (200) Company president Tod Rapp — who contributed to Bush’s campaign (201) — has confirmed that Triad routinely makes such tabulator adjustments to help election officials avoid hand recounts. In the end, every county serviced by Triad failed to conduct full recounts by hand. (202)

Even more troubling, in at least two counties, Fulton and Henry, Triad was able to connect to tabulating computers remotely via a dial-up connection, and reprogram them to recount only the presidential ballots. (203) If that kind of remote tabulator modification is possible for the purposes of the recount, it’s no great leap to wonder if such modifications might have helped skew the original vote count. But the window for settling such questions is closing rapidly: On November 2nd of this year, on the second anniversary of the election, state officials will be permitted under Ohio law to shred all ballots from the 2004 election. (204)

X. What’s At Stake
The mounting evidence that Republicans employed broad, methodical and illegal tactics in the 2004 election should raise serious alarms among news organizations. But instead of investigating allegations of wrongdoing, the press has simply accepted the result as valid. ”We’re in a terrible fix,” Rep. Conyers told me. ”We’ve got a media that uses its bullhorn in reverse — to turn down the volume on this outrage rather than turning it up. That’s why our citizens are not up in arms.”

The lone news anchor who seriously questioned the integrity of the 2004 election was Keith Olbermann of MSNBC. I asked him why he stood against the tide. ”I was a sports reporter, so I was used to dealing with numbers,” he said. ”And the numbers made no sense. Kerry had an insurmountable lead in the exit polls on Election Night — and then everything flipped.” Olbermann believes that his journalistic colleagues fell down on the job. ”I was stunned by the lack of interest by investigative reporters,” he said. ”The Republicans shut down Warren County, allegedly for national security purposes — and no one covered it. Shouldn’t someone have sent a camera and a few reporters out there?”

Olbermann attributes the lack of coverage to self-censorship by journalists. ”You can rock the boat, but you can never say that the entire ocean is in trouble,” he said. ”You cannot say: By the way, there’s something wrong with our electoral system.”

Federal officials charged with safeguarding the vote have also failed to contest the election. ”Congress hasn’t investigated this at all,” says Kucinich. ”There has been no oversight over our nation’s most basic right: the right to vote. How can we call ourselves a beacon of democracy abroad when the right to vote hasn’t been secured in free and fair elections at home?”

Sen. John Kerry — in a wide-ranging discussion of ROLLING STONE’s investigation — expressed concern about Republican tactics in 2004, but stopped short of saying the election was stolen. ”Can I draw a conclusion that they played tough games and clearly had an intent to reduce the level of our vote? Yes, absolutely. Can I tell you to a certainty that it made the difference in the election? I can’t. There’s no way for me to do that. If I could have done that, then obviously I would have found some legal recourse.”

Kerry conceded, however, that the widespread irregularities make it impossible to know for certain that the outcome reflected the will of the voters. ”I think there are clearly states where it is questionable whether everybody’s vote is being counted, whether everybody is being given the opportunity to register and to vote,” he said. ”There are clearly barriers in too many places to the ability of people to exercise their full franchise. For that to be happening in the United States of America today is disgraceful.”

Kerry’s comments were echoed by Howard Dean, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee. ”I’m not confident that the election in Ohio was fairly decided,” Dean says. ”We know that there was substantial voter suppression, and the machines were not reliable. It should not be a surprise that the Republicans are willing to do things that are unethical to manipulate elections. That’s what we suspect has happened, and we’d like to safeguard our elections so that democracy can still be counted on to work.”

To help prevent a repeat of 2004, Kerry has co-sponsored a package of election reforms called the Count Every Vote Act. The measure would increase turnout by allowing voters to register at the polls on Election Day, provide provisional ballots to voters who inadvertently show up at the wrong precinct, require electronic voting machines to produce paper receipts verified by voters, and force election officials like Blackwell to step down if they want to join a campaign. (205) But Kerry says his fellow Democrats have been reluctant to push the reforms, fearing that Republicans would use their majority in Congress to create even more obstacles to voting. ”The real reason there is no appetite up here is that people are afraid the Republicans will amend HAVA and shove something far worse down our throats,” he told me.

On May 24th, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) tried unsuccessfully to amend the immigration bill to bar anyone who lacks a government-issued photo ID from voting (206) — a rule that would disenfranchise at least six percent of Americans, the majority of them urban and poor, who lack such identification. (207) The GOP-controlled state legislature in Indiana passed a similar measure, and an ID rule in Georgia was recently struck down as unconstitutional. (208)

”Why erect those kinds of hurdles unless you’re afraid of voters?” asks Ralph Neas, director of People for the American Way. ”The country will be better off if everyone votes — Democrats and Republicans. But that is not the Blackwell philosophy, that is not the George W. Bush or Jeb Bush philosophy. They want to limit the franchise and go to extraordinary lengths to make it more difficult to vote.”

The issue of what happened in 2004 is not an academic one. For the second election in a row, the president of the United States was selected not by the uncontested will of the people but under a cloud of dirty tricks. Given the scope of the GOP machinations, we simply cannot be certain that the right man now occupies the Oval Office — which means, in effect, that we have been deprived of our faith in democracy itself.

American history is littered with vote fraud — but rather than learning from our shameful past and cleaning up the system, we have allowed the problem to grow even worse. If the last two elections have taught us anything, it is this: The single greatest threat to our democracy is the insecurity of our voting system. If people lose faith that their votes are accurately and faithfully recorded, they will abandon the ballot box. Nothing less is at stake here than the entire idea of a government by the people.

Voting, as Thomas Paine said, ”is the right upon which all other rights depend.” Unless we ensure that right, everything else we hold dear is in jeopardy.

EDITOR’S NOTE: This story has been updated to clarify a statement in the published version. The article originally stated that John Kerry’s campaign "helped the Libertarian and Green parties pay for a recount of all eighty-eight counties in Ohio." In fact, the Green Party paid the state recount fee, and the Kerry campaign paid for its own attorney as a party to the litigation surrounding the recount.

footnotes, credits and references can be found here

finally arizona does something right … says NO to g.i. joe

Ron Barber wins special election to fill Gabrielle Giffords’s seat

By Jennifer Oldham and Amanda J. Crawford

giffords-barberJune 13 (Bloomberg) — Democrat Ron Barber, an aide to former U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords, won a special election to fill the remaining term of the congresswoman who resigned after being shot in the head last year.
Barber, Giffords’ district director from 2007 through January, led Republican Jesse Kelly 52 percent to 45 percent, with 100 percent of precincts reporting, according to the Arizona Secretary of State’s website. Green Party candidate Charlie Manolakis collected 2 percent of the vote.
“We say no to extreme politics,” Barber said in remarks prepared for delivery at a victory celebration in Tucson. “We say yes to working across party lines to secure a strong future for Arizona.”
The Republican-leaning 8th Congressional District elected Democrat Giffords to a third term in 2010 over Kelly, an Iraq war veteran. Giffords won by less than 2 percentage points, or 4,000 votes.
The election to fill the six months remaining in Giffords’s term is considered a test – following a contest on June 5 in which Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, a Republican, beat back a recall attempt – of trends that may influence the race between President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.
“After Wisconsin, if Kelly wins, the Republicans are going to say, ‘The wind is at our back and this is a harbinger of what’s going to happen in the general election,’” Brint Milward, director of the National Institute for Civil Discourse at the University of Arizona, said before the vote. “If Barber wins, the Democrats are going to say ’Wisconsin was an isolated case.’”

Social Issues

Social issues such as Social Security, Medicare and health care reform, along with the economy, dominated the campaign. Arizona posted the nation’s eighth-highest foreclosure rate in April, according to RealtyTrac Inc. Unemployment, at 8.2 percent in April, was higher than the national rate of 8.1 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Giffords endorsed Barber, 66, who was injured in the Jan. 8, 2011, attack and still exhibits a dimple on his cheek from a gunshot wound. The shooting during a community meeting in Tucson left six people dead and sparked a national debate about the incivility of politics.
Barber raised more money than Kelly for most of the campaign, bringing in 37 percent more through May 23, or about $1.19 million to Kelly’s $756,173, according to the Washington- based Center for Responsive Politics.

Outside Financing

Outside groups, including the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, the National Republican Campaign Committee, the pro-Democratic super PAC House Majority PAC and the pro- Republican super PAC American Crossroads, poured more than $2.2 million into the race, according to documents on the center’s website.
The special election is for a term that lasts only through early January. Both candidates are expected to start campaigning now for a full two-year term in a reconfigured district known as District 2. The primary is Aug. 28 with a Nov. 6 general election.
District boundaries, which currently cover about 9,000 square miles in southeast Arizona and include part of Tucson and a 114-mile border with Mexico, will remain largely the same. What will change is the composition of the electorate, with District 2 shifting a bit more toward Democrats, Milward said.

romney-o … puppet or human?

romney-o by hip is everything

this is a sad, sad tale of a puppet who desperately wants to appear human …
some might call him a mannequin, a robot or a automaton, and they might be right to some extent or other …
but mostly he’s just a puppet …
he just couldn’t convince people he was human …
no matter how much he tried …
no matter how much he lied …
and he tried, and he lied, at every opportunity …
but, alas …
no-one really believed him to be human …
so …
he sought outside help for his dilemma …
and this is where our tale really begins …

first he turned to a cartoonist, because, well, when in paris …

so, mittens got some great advice from brian mcfadden …advice 4 romney by brian mcfadden

but none of that turned his image around in the eyes of the human population …
sure, the puppet masters at faux noise and the like bought it, but not the general population …
and if our sad little puppet wanted to live out his dream and become president, he needed the ones he called “the little people” to believe that he was human …
so mittens turned to master thespian james lipton hoping that if anyone could make him seem more human, it would be the greatest acting coach of all time …
surely he could give him some advice on how to act more human …
after all, he had helped ronald reagan appear human …
and keanu reeves …
surely, if anyone could help, it would be james …

let’s let james describe how the following video advice came about in his own words …

A few months ago, Brian McFadden’s weekly comic strip in the Sunday Times offered ways for Mitt Romney to improve his image. One panel showed him with me on the set of Inside the Actors Studio, under the heading “Take Acting Lessons to Appear More Relatable.”
Initially amused by this unsolicited enlistment, I’ve found myself returning spontaneously and with increasing frequency to the task, sometimes starting awake in the middle of the night with acting advice for the candidate. Convinced that the only way to exorcise this possession is to confront it, I offer the following counsel.

but alas, like pinocchio, who was also “wooden” and something of a compulsive liar too, mittens could not make himself seem even remotely human to those around him …

so, i guess we’ll never really truly know if mittens romney, the “man from bain” can fool “the little people” and be seen as anything more than a puppet …
our money’s on nope …

after all, his strings ARE being pulled by the Koch brothers, David and Gepetto …


romney-o button by hip is everythingcan you tell the difference between our pal mittens and a puppet? …
take this quiz and find out …
we couldn’t find an actual puppet who wanted anything to do with this quiz, or romney for that matter, something about him giving puppets a bad name, but i digress …
so we did the next best thing and asked a robot …
close enough, we figured …
some questions are based on exchanges from interviews with the human(?) republican nominee …
the others were generated by plugging actual interview questions asked of romney into the artificial-intelligence app
known as cleverbot

go on, take the test

is it real or mormonex? …

Question 1 / 10

Q: Why haven’t you spent more time here in Iowa?
A: I have, I am just being coy.

A. Romney   B. Robot

Question 2 / 10

Q: If you’re hosting a New Year’s party, who would you be inviting that perhaps our viewers would like to know?
A: …We literally roll back the rug and put on the music and dance in our living room.

A. Romney B. Robot

Question 3 / 10

Q: [W]hat’s the most tone-deaf thing you’ve heard [President Obama] say recently?
A: Obama can’t keep a single campaign promise. He is running this nation into the ground by trying to spend his way out of a recession.

A. Romney B. Robot

Question 4 / 10

Q: What do you do about Newt Gingrich?
A: Oh, sticks and stones will break my bones, I’m not going to worry about what comes my way.

A. Romney B. Robot

Question 5 / 10

Q: Does that get you angry when people question your core like that?
A: In a sense, yes. But I try to not go off the wall about core.

A. Romney B. Robot

Question 6 / 10

Q: [Is Herman Cain] being forthcoming and transparent enough regarding the allegations that have surfaced that he sexually harassed two women?
A: I’m not sure … but you have to understand that sometimes words have two meanings.

A. Romney B. Robot

Question 7 / 10

Q: How can voters trust what they hear from you today is what you will believe if you win the White House?
A: I’ll tell you the truth, as brutal as it may be…This is a great country.

A. Romney B. Robot

Question 8 / 10

Q: What music do you enjoy listening and dancing to?
A: "Well, you think Eminem makes good songs?"
[nervous laughter]

A. Romney B. Robot

Question 9 / 10

Q: [D]o you believe public companies have any social responsibility to create jobs, or do you believe, as Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman, the most important, most influential conservative economist of the 20th century held, that corporations should exist solely to create maximum profit for their shareholders?
A: …I like jobs!

A. Romney B. Robot

Question 10 / 10

Q: Are President Obama’s actions inviting war?
A: Yes, absolutely, is that even a serious question? I have to go now.

A. Romney B. Robot

Answers:
1. robot : 2. romney : 3. robot : 4. romney : 5. robot
6. robot : 7. robot : 8. robot : 9. romney : 10. robot

to be fair though, it was kind of a trick quiz, as while romney is technically a human, he displays all the inherent qualities of a puppet or an automaton …
or, at least as close to human as modern science can muster up …
so don’t feel bad if you are constantly confused when seeing him “perform” …


but then there’s the real problem with mittens …
(after all, these gop guys are all puppets, so we really can’t hold that against mittens too much)

DISCLAIMER: as to the title of today’s quiz …
i have nothing against mormons, got a few in my family actually, nice people …
and even though i do find some of their beliefs more than a little “quirky”romney-magic-underwear
(as i do with ALL religions), i have generally found the individuals to be okay guys, all in all …
well, except for the whole magic underwear thing …
that, i’ll admit, is more than a little nuts, but hey, each to their own …
it is just THIS particular mormon i’m having difficulty with …
a lot of difficulty, t.b.h. …

p.s. okay, they do have some down right whacked out beliefs … i admit it …
p.p.s. thanx to mother jones for the quiz …

purge binge … baggers against democracy

Source: Think Progress

A Tea Party group is suing states to try to purge their voter rolls before November’s election. True the Vote, an arm of the King Street Patriots, has filed a suit against the state of Indiana, alleging that the state has poor “list maintenance” of its voters.
This suit kicks off a series of state-focused attempts by True the Vote, serving as a co-plaintiff with the conservative “watchdog” group Judicial Watch, to limit voter turnout this election season. Voter purges may be presented under the guise of fairer elections, but the idea of “cleaning” a list usually results in legal voters — overwhelmingly voters of color — being kicked off the rolls.
True the Vote’s agenda is clearly political, as can be evidenced from their website that lists Wisconsin’s recall election as a ‘victory’ (despite day-of claims of voter fraud) and Florida as an upcoming target. Other states on the list for lawsuits include more than half are swing states in play this election season:
According to a Judicial Watch investigation voter rolls in the following states appear to contain the names of individuals who are ineligible to vote: Mississippi, Iowa, Indiana, Missouri, Texas, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Florida, Alabama, and California. As part of its 2012 Election Integrity Project, Judicial Watch has put these states on notice that they must clean up their voter registration lists or face Judicial Watch lawsuits.
read more here …

firemen, face it, he’s just not that into you

our pal mittens just can’t help himself …
his “true self” just keeps popping out like that alien in the sigourney weaver flick
and just like that weaver flick, what pops out is usually horrifying to any sentient being …
and it’s mission is identical …
to take over the world for the benefit of a few misguided and hateful overlords …
face it folks,
the man is an out of touch, elitist, arrogant and narcissistic shill for the 1% …
and he scares me a hell of a lot more than that film ever did …

romney the alien within by hip is everything

ROMNEY’S ASSAULT ON FIREFIGHTERS

Mitt Romney came under fire this weekend from Democrats after he suggested that we shouldn’t hire more firefighters. Then top Romney surrogate John Sununu, the former governor of New Hampshire, doubled down on Romney’s firefighter comments today, telling MSNBC they were not a “gaffe.” This is hardly the first time the presumed GOP nominee has tangled with firefighters.
In fact, he has a long, bitter history with them. As governor of Massachusetts, Romney often ended up sparring with firefighters and their unions. He proposed stripping collective bargaining rights for firefighters and police officers in a city that needed a state bailout, and cut funding to a fire station to be built on the site where six firemen died. He also proposed tripling the state police budget to deal with homeland security concerns in the years after 9/11, but didn’t offer a dime for firefighters, angering many at the time.
In 2004, when the city of Springfield was facing bankruptcy, Romney proposed a $52 million bailout package that included suspending collective bargaining and civil service benefits for the city’s unions, including public safety officers. “He hates us,” Robert McCarthy, the president of the Professional Fire Fighters of Massachusetts, told the Associated Press at the time. “Unions are what made this state what it is,” he said, but Romney “won’t even talk to us.” Romney spokesperson Nicole St. Peter defended the suspension of union benefits, telling the AP that the “control board” the governor appointed to oversee the city’s finances “needs maximum flexibility to restore Springfield’s financial footing.” The Democratic-controlled state Legislature eventually overrode Romney and preserved the bargaining rights, though the control board remained controversial in the city.
It’s worth noting that stripping the union rights of firefighters was further than Wisconsin Gov. Walker was willing to go; he exempted public safety workers from his reforms. But when Walker’s fellow Republican Gov. John Kasich of Ohio went after police and firefighters’ union rights, he was rebuffed by voters in a referendum last year.
In Massachusetts, Romney also cut state funding for a new fire station to be built in Worcester on the site of a notorious building fire that killed six local firefighters in 1999. The state had earmarked $2 million for the project, but Romney cut it, saying the local governments, and not the state, should pay for such projects. Eventually, the governor agreed to $1 million of funds, but only after a local uproar.
Frank Raffa, president of local firefighters union, “said local firefighters were insulted by the governor’s action,” the Worcester Telegram & Gazette reported in September of 2004. Worcester Mayor Timothy Murray said Romney showed “a lack of understanding” about how the community was affected by the deaths of the firefighters at Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. building several years earlier. “This is the final resting site of our heroes,” said state Rep. Vincent Pedone, a Democrat from Worcester. “This site cannot be a drive-through McDonald’s.”
Before that, Romney proposed increasing the size of the state police’s homeland security budget from $850,000 to $2.7 million. But it gave nothing to firefighters, port security or other agencies involved in efforts to respond to disasters. Lexington Fire Lt. Ken Donnelly, then the secretary-treasurer of the state firefighters’ union, told the AP in January of 2004 that it was “outrageous” that fire services were being “ignored.” He noted that firefighters were critical in responding to terror attacks and the post-9/11 anthrax scares.

from salon.com
read entire article here