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Reckless and Irresponsible: Today’s Virginian Pilot Editorial on McDonnell

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by Paul Goldman

Today’s Virginian Pilot editorial, saying new newspaper “revelations” require Governor Bob McDonnell to resign, should strike anyone who believes in American constitutional values as totally unfair, indeed the height of hypocrisy. Calling on Bob McDonnell to resign at this point is not an act of journalistic courage or principle: PRECISELY THE OPPOSITE. It is an act of journalistic cowardice wrapped in phony morality.

Setting yourself up as a moral censor may have been okay for Cato The Elder in times of the Roman Empire: but political correctness is a thin reed in a democracy.

Earlier this year, the Virginian Pilot backed McDonnell’s transportation plan that only works because it takes billions of dollars meant to help poor minority kids get a decent education, and use them instead to help real estate speculators make a bunch of money on roads. Don’t take my word for it: Democrats and education advocates praised by the Pilot point this out.

But the Pilot editorial board chose roads for real estate developers over schools for poor minority kids because they made a cold calculation. It was the best they could get. And, I’d note, real estate developers have big bucks and advertise in the newspaper. Poor minority kids have no money and don’t advertise in newspapers.

I get it: the poor pay more, the middle class pays for all of it, and newspaper editorial boards get to claim a morality for convincing Bob McDonnell to do stuff, break his no-tax pledge. None of it bothers me really, we all make our peace with our own imperfections. I don’t judge, but I do report, and so when I see hypocrisy masking as journalistic morality, we at 200-proof comment.

Right now, Bob McDonnell isn’t popular. If he were to resign as Governor, most Virginians would probably say: good riddance. Myself included. He is the lamest of lame duck Governors in modern history.  He has disgraced his office. The McDonnells have disgraced the Governor’s Mansion.

I get all that: I voted against him twice. But there is larger, more important truth, indeed aspect of the McDonnell Mess: the American belief in fair play, in having the trial BEFORE THE HANGING. If a politician wants to call for the Governor to resign, that’s politics, the good the bad the ugly. But a newspaper’s editorial board is supposed to rise above politics, rise above the mob mentality and the passions of the moment.

Those news “revelations” which led the Pilot to call for McDonnell’s head have to do with actions taken by the First Lady as regards the buying/selling of Star Scientific Stock. According to McDonnell, he knew nothing about it until after the fact. This still leaves a lot of time unaccounted for, and this plays directly into what he knew or didn’t know when filing his disclosure forms as required by state law. Moreover, unconfirmable press reports say Jonnie Williams disputes the Governor and First Lady on what they knew and what they told him they wanted to do to help him.

It all looks Bad for Bob, and deservedly so: “what a web we weave when we practice to deceive” is the adage that comes to mind. Bob says he wasn’t trying to deceive, at least not criminally and indeed not at all in this particular instance. He says he was kept in the dark by his wife. This seems a little hard to believe given the facts confirmed by the Governor’s defense team and the First Lady’s new defense lawyer. BUT there is no way for the Pilot to know any more than they read in other newspaper accounts!

The point being: The Pilot’s call for resignation is a reaction to press reports, not prosecutorial evidence. It may all be true, the Pilot’s speculation included. But again: Call me old fashioned, but this idea of having the hanging BEFORE we know all the evidence doesn’t work for me.

Moreover, the Pilot’s logic as to why McDonnell is not capable of cleaning up the ethical mess required as Job #1 of any governor suggests they believe both Cuccinelli and McAuliffe are unqualified to be the next Governor, and should probably quit the race the way McDonnell should quit the Governorship.  This is an absurd result, not unexpected from irresponsible and reckless editorializing. How can the Pilot possibly back either man for Governor at this point without a cleverly constructed argument to justify why their political preference should be held to a lower standard? That’s the problem with such moralizing: you put yourself in an untenable posture for political, not moral, reasons.

Bottom line: This is not the 14th century, women are not the property of their fathers or husbands or the state. Mrs. McDonnell is an independent person who surely has the right to buy and sell stock without telling her husband. Ergo, her husband doesn’t automatically get blamed for such activity.  The Governor says he didn’t know about his wife’s actions. Furthermore, the Governor’s lawyers, along with the First Lady’s counsel, say Mr. Williams is a liar willing to say anything to avoid prosecution.

As of this moment, there is no way for the Pilot to know the truth. And as of this moment, American values require giving the Governor the benefit of the doubt. Surely we can agree on this: no one should be hounded out of office by a media mob stirring up the mob mentality in the court of public opinion on such “evidence.”

It is one thing for the Pilot to lay out their case as to why they believe the Governor might consider stepping down for the good of the commonwealth. That’s fair. But they choose another line of attack. Politics masquerading as morality is not a petty sight, whether coming from the McDonnells or from the Pilot. Bob McDonnell should not resign no matter the future if he truly believes he is innocent. He needs to trust the fairness of Virginians. But at the same time, he needs to be brutally honest with himself through a focused reflection, for he knows what he was thinking at all relevant times.

That’s what the Pilot should be asking from the Governor. They shouldn’t be calling for the hanging. Truth crushed to earth, as the saying goes, will rise. That’s what McDonnell needs to know this morning.

Virginia News Headlines: Tuesday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Tuesday, August 20. Also check out the discussion of “McDonnell and Christie: A tale of two governors.”

*Climate Panel Cites Near Certainty on Warming (Not that diehard science deniers and fossil fuel tools like Ken Kookinelli care, but this is the reality.)

*UN Climate Change Report Draft Warns Of 3 Foot Sea Level Rise By 2100

*Egypt arrests spiritual leader of Muslim Brotherhood

*The fuzzy math of Ken Cuccinelli’s economic plan (“At the heart of the Cuccinelli vision is the same fantasy that animated the McDonnell plan four years ago – sacrifice is for suckers; popular and vital services can be had for free; and Virginia voters are saps. In fact, revenue cannot be summoned from thin air, either by Mr. McDonnell or by Mr. Cuccinelli.”)

*Meet Mark Obenshain, the Republican who wants to replace Ken Cuccinelli (Not a pretty picture, to put it mildly, unless of course you LOVE Ken Kookinelli and his unending crusade against Washington, climate science, LGBT people, women’s reproductive rights, etc. Nope, didn’t think so.)

*Virginian-Pilot: Gov. McDonnell should step aside (“McDonnell’s failure to completely disclose his family’s financial ties to Star Scientific has diminished his credibility and drained his capacity to lead the commonwealth. The latest revelations, even without the possibility of an indictment of the commonwealth’s chief executive, make the prospect of his continued leadership untenable. He must devote his full attention to sorting out his personal and legal problems.”)

*From bad to worse in Virginia

*Prosecuting Bob McDonnell no slam dunk

*Virginia Medicaid panel leader cites progress in overhaul efforts (“Virginia is making progress in an effort to reform – and then possibly expand – its Medicaid program, the leader of a legislative panel overseeing the process said today.”)

*At town hall, Rep. Bob Goodlatte opposes immigration bill (“Pro-immigration reform organizations such as Virginia Organizing turned out to try to sway him.”)

*Bolling: Race for governor could discourage moderate and independent voters

*A surplus of caution (“Virginia finished the last fiscal year in the black, but fiscal challenges loom on the horizon.”)

*Bobby Scott, in Norfolk, praises health law as critics rally in Richmond (“Without the law, Scott said, the uninsured will rely on expensive care, including emergency rooms. Protesters from around the state offered varied reasons why they’re opposed.”)

*McDonnell touts Virginia’s budget surplus as lawyers huddle (“Governor addresses legislative money committees on same day his legal team meets with prosecutors.”)

*Virginia gubernatorial candidates attack each other’s ethics again

*Higher jobless rates in D.C. area signal sequester’s toll on region (Thanks Republicans!)

*Virginia bottlenose dolphin deaths skyrocket in August

*Warmth and humidity on the rise, storm risk Thursday, but a nice weekend

*Nats dismantled in Chicago (“Jordan Zimmermann allows three home runs, tying a career high, and gives up eight runs in five innings of work.”)

Is Virginia a “Tin Horn Dictatorship?”

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I’ve been meaning to write about this for a couple days now, but have been finding it difficult to motivate myself. Perhaps it’s just that I’m feeling a bit burned out right now, with this seemingly endless governor’s race from hell and the 24/7 lies/nastiness/idiocy from Ken Cuccinelli. At times, it’s truly enough to make me want to turn off my TV (which I rarely watch anyway, but the other night during the Nats game, I saw Cuccinelli’s absurd attack ad against Terry McAuliffe three times – ugh!), radio, and internet connection. It also could be that the subject of DJ Rippert’s comment at Bacon’s Rebellion is so…I dunno, depressing? Is Virginia a “tin horn dictatorship?” Are we at the point where we’re seriously even asking that question?

Well, yes. We are. Let’s face it, this state’s political system is one of legalized corruption, pretty much from top to bottom. It really hit me a couple years ago, when Virginia Uranium – a company that, no matter what you think of it, most  certainly stands to gain or lose a LOT based on actions (or inaction) by the Virginia General Assembly – unabashedly, and more to the point legally, offered to fly any and all members of the Virginia General Assembly to France, at a cost of $10k per legislator, to inspect a closed uranium mining operation hang out at Parisian cafes for three (free) days. At the time, I checked into ethics laws in other states to see whether this type of thing would be kosher there. The bottom line: in many (most?) other states, this trip would be blatantly illegal. In many others it would be less-than-blatantly illegal, but certainly unethical. Here in the Old Dominion? It’s of course wildly unethical by any standard of good government, but it’s also 100% legal. And that, my friends, is FUBAR.

Now, fast forward to 2013, and we’ve got a potential indictment against Governor McDonnell for Blagojevich-level corruption involving lavish gifts to the McDonnells by slimeball/grifter Jonnie Williams, owner of the comically absurd company known as “Star Scientific” (among other things, this outfit made celebrity “tobacco candy”). As if that’s not bad enough, there’s also the whole Governor’s Mansion/Chef scandal, in which “Virginia Gov. Robert F. McDonnell repeatedly used state assets for personal and political purposes, including directing state employees to work at private and political events, according to new allegations from McDonnell’s former chef.”

Oh, and as an added bonus, the guy running to succeed McDonnell as governor, Ken Cuccinelli, is also up to his neck in the chef/mansion scandal, while taking gifts – including a lavish Thanksgiving dinner, $7k in dietary supplements, etc. – from their mutual friend Jonnie Williams. Plus, Cuccinelli also bought stock in Williams’ comically absurd company, “Star Scientific.”

So alright, you say, the state’s Governor and Attorney General are both corrupt as sin, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the entire state is a “tin horn dictatorship,” right? Perhaps not, but here’s the problem: this situation is not an aberration, nor is it limited to a couple of bad actors (in this case, McDonnell and Cuccinelli — both clearly – in a moral, if not legal, sense – corrupt). Instead, it’s systemic and pervasive — essentially legalized corruption, in which corporations and wealthy individuals get to run amok, wine and dine (and fly to Paris, treat to a Homestead weekend, etc.) our legislators, give unlimited campaign donations to them (even if – ESPECIALLY if – those legislators are in positions to help or hurt the corporate/wealthy individual bottom line), etc, etc.

Of course, there’s a thin veneer of respectability and even “democracy” laid on top of this stinking cesspool. But that doesn’t make it any better, simply more insidious and difficult to root out. As DJ Rippert puts it over at Bacon’s Rebellion, “Instead of a single ‘strong man’ or ‘strong woman’ we have an inbred cadre of state legislators and crony capitalists operating in a symbiotic effort to loot the commonwealth.” Not with bags of cash in the freezer, perhaps, but instead with boatloads of 100% legal “gifts” and contributions (as long as you “disclose” them – what a joke; as if that’s a sufficient “check and balance” in the system!)

Making matters even worse, that “cadre of state legislators” are paid almost nothing, have almost no staff resources, are in Richmond for just a few weeks each year (not nearly enough time to master one or two complicated issues, let alone dozens or hundreds of ’em), and yet are expected to legislate on any and every issue affecting the Commonwealth.

Given that these are part-time legislators with barely any resources to independently scrutinize/analyze legislation, guess who’s really in charge of making the laws in our fine Commonwealth? That’s right, the corporations, wealthy individuals, and lobbyists who represent their interests (plus groups they put together, like ALEC), are deliriously happy to fill the vacuum. And into that vacuum they rush, writing and promoting legislation that advances their selfish interests while screwing the rest of us over.

So why would any sane individual want to be a member of the Virginia General Assembly? The following paragraphs by DJ Rippert are classic, and well worth quoting:

Being a politician in Virginia is a lot more lucrative that the salary you draw from the state. There are countless big companies looking for favors who will fund your jet setting lifestyle. There are plenty of crony capitalists around to give you a taste of the high life. Drop a hint to your friendly Dominion lobbyist that you are a Redskins fan. Bada-bing, you’re watching the next game from a suite.

But don’t lose that office! All of the perks of being a politician go away if you ever leave politics.

If you want to preserve the lifestyle, you must continue to hand out the political favors in return for big campaign contributions. God knows, nothing crushes the competition like a big war chest. And make sure you get into a gerrymandered district. The only thing better than money is to set up political boundaries dominated by your political friends. Keep the off-year elections! The last thing you need is a high rate of voter turnout. Make sure Virginia remains the most difficult state for getting onto the ballot. You certainly don’t need some independent challenging you.

But most of all – for God’s sake – do NOT agree to a special session of the General Assembly to discuss ethics directly ahead of an election. God forbid. The political pressure might actually require that the session do something concrete about lax ethics laws. And then what? Live your life like an average Virginian without all expense paid first class trips to Paris and tickets to NHL playoff games? Perish the thought.

So, is Virginia a “tin horn dictatorship?” Or do you prefer “Third-World despotism?” Whatever it is, it most certainly ain’t pretty, it most certainly ain’t progressive (in the early 20th century Progressive movement sense), and it most certainly ain’t the type of government (or governance) any of us should expect (demand!) as Americans.

P.S. I should also emphasize that we should have a special session of our General Assembly on ethics reform IMMEDIATELY, not next year when McDonnell (and hopefully Cuckoo) are gone and things have quieted down. NOW, when the public is paying at least SOME attention. Oh wait, I almost forgot – that is EXACTLY when our legislators LEAST want to hold such a session, because then they might be pressured to actually enact real reforms, not just window dressing as they’ll do in 2014 (if they even do that!).

P.P.S. To put it mildly, I disagree with my friend Paul Goldman that the McDonnells shouldn’t be indicted. To the contrary, our laws should be changed so that anyone who engages in the type of crap we’ve seen the past few months does the “perp walk,” and possibly shares a jail cell with Rod Blagojevich.

NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia Announces Endorsements in House of Delegate Elections

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From NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia:

Endorsements highlight organization’s dedication to building a pro-choice majority in the Virginia House of Delegates

(Alexandria, VA) – Today, NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia PAC, the Commonwealth’s leading political action arm of the pro-choice movement, announced its first round of endorsements in Virginia’s 2013 House of Delegate races.

Tarina Keene, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia, stated that the endorsements of these outstanding pro-choice candidates are part of her organization’s plan to protect and elect pro-choice leaders in the state’s General Assembly this fall. NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia and its PAC will marshal its resources to protect pro-choice allies in Richmond, while electing even more pro-choice candidates to the House of Delegates and state Senate. In 2011, 89% percent of NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia-backed candidates won their races.

“I am confident our endorsed pro-choice candidates will continue to stand up to attacks on women’s health and help protect and expand access to

comprehensive reproductive healthcare for all Virginia women,” said Keene. “They stand between Virginia women and continued anti-choice attacks on reproductive health – and we are thrilled to support them.”

NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia PAC is pleased to announce the following endorsed candidates:

Endorsed Pro-Choice Challengers:

*        Monte Johnson, District 10

*        James Harder, District 12

*        Atif Qarni, District 13

*        Freeda Cathcart, District 17

*        Elizabeth Miller, District 32

*        Kathleen Murphy, District 34

*        Ed Deitsch, District 42

*        Richard Cabellos, District 50

*        Linda Bryant, District 78

*        Jennifer Boysko, District 86

*        John Bell, District 87

*        Monty Mason, District 93

*        Robert Farinholt, District 94

Endorsed Pro-Choice Incumbents:

*        Mark Keam, District 35

*        Ken Plum, District 36

*        Kaye Kory, District 38

*        Vivian Watts, District 39

*        Eileen Filler-Corn, District 41

*        Mark Sickles, District 43

*        Scott Surovell, District 44

*        Rob Krupicka, District 45

*        Charniele Herring, District 46

*        Patrick Hope, District 47

*        Robert Brink, District 48

*        Alfonso Lopez, District 49

*        David Toscano, District 57

*        Betsy Carr, District 69

*        Jennifer McClellan, District 71

*        Jeion Ward, District 92

*        Mayme BaCote, District 95        

       NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia and its PAC support candidates who are dedicated to family planning, preventing unintended pregnancy, and

increasing access to reproductive healthcare for women and families.  The organization’s powerful statewide network of 22,000 activists will mobilize pro-choice voters throughout Virginia to help elect pro-choice candidates in November.

Another Ethical Mess for Cooch?

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We all know by now that Bob McDonnell and Ken Cuccinelli both suffer from a form of Republican temporary amnesia caused by being found out about gifts given to them by a sleaze ball trying to curry favor. And, when it comes to stock in a dubious corporation being investigated by the Feds for possible stock manipulation, one having multiple class-action lawsuits against it, McDonnell got a unique form of that amnesia known as “I don’t know what my wife did with $50,000.” Cooch, on the other hand, just “forgot” that he bought $12,000 worth of Star Scientific stock, which he sold at a profit. (Funny, selling stock at a profit isn’t something I’ve ever forgotten.)

There may be yet another scandal waiting for the memory-impaired twins of Virginia GOP politics. In late July, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) sought an IRS investigation into whether McDonnell and Cuccinelli violated the Internal Revenue Code by failing to report income received from Jonnie R. Williams and Star Scientific Inc. and failing to pay taxes on said income. Now, Cooch will certainly do a “McDonnell” and claim that these were “gifts,” but the IRS code isn’t as forgiving as Virginia’s non-existent ethics laws.

If Cooch claims that a big box of Star Scientific’s Anatabloc given to him, worth more than $6,000, was a gift that he didn’t have to report as income, he will have to explain away a statement by William’s’ attorney that the product given to Cuccinelli was “part of the company’s regular marketing practices.”  That is not a “gift.” He also will have to explain away the fact that Jonnie Williams provided Cooch and family with vacations at the specific request of Cooch. That doesn’t sound like a gift that meets the criteria of the IRS for exemption from taxes. To be exempt, gifts have to be made with a “detached and disinterested generosity,” not at the request of the recipient. An additional problem is that Cuccinelli has admitted  Williams talked to him about the tax case the state has against Star Scientific and Cooch recommended Terry KIlgore as a lawyer knowledgeable about the state tax code. Is that a quid pro quo??

Cooch brags that he “released” several years of tax returns, but that’s not quite the truth. He allowed selected reporters to look at the tax returns and make notes, but he did not allow copies to be made public. He’s good enough a lawyer to know that if the IRS finds he has willfully misrepresented information on his tax returns, he faces felony charges. We can only hope….

Another Ethical Mess for Cooch?

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We all know by now that Bob McDonnell and Ken Cuccinelli both suffer from a form of Republican temporary amnesia caused by being found out about gifts given to them by a sleaze ball trying to curry favor. And, when it comes to stock in a dubious corporation being investigated by the Feds for possible stock manipulation, one having multiple class-action lawsuits against it, McDonnell got a unique form of that amnesia known as “I don’t know what my wife did with $50,000.” Cooch, on the other hand, just “forgot” that he bought $12,000 worth of Star Scientific stock, which he sold at a profit. (Funny, selling stock at a profit isn’t something I’ve ever forgotten.)

There may be yet another scandal waiting for the memory-impaired twins of Virginia GOP politics. In late July, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) sought an IRS investigation into whether McDonnell and Cuccinelli violated the Internal Revenue Code by failing to report income received from Jonnie R. Williams and Star Scientific Inc. and failing to pay taxes on said income. Now, Cooch will certainly do a “McDonnell” and claim that these were “gifts,” but the IRS code isn’t as forgiving as Virginia’s non-existent ethics laws.

If Cooch claims that a big box of Star Scientific’s Anatabloc given to him, worth more than $6,000, was a gift that he didn’t have to report as income, he will have to explain away a statement by William’s’ attorney that the product given to Cuccinelli was “part of the company’s regular marketing practices.”  That is not a “gift.” He also will have to explain away the fact that Jonnie Williams provided Cooch and family with vacations at the specific request of Cooch. That doesn’t sound like a gift that meets the criteria of the IRS for exemption from taxes. To be exempt, gifts have to be made with a “detached and disinterested generosity,” not at the request of the recipient. An additional problem is that Cuccinelli has admitted  Williams talked to him about the tax case the state has against Star Scientific and Cooch recommended Terry KIlgore as a lawyer knowledgeable about the state tax code. Is that a quid pro quo??

Cooch brags that he “released” several years of tax returns, but that’s not quite the truth. He allowed selected reporters to look at the tax returns and make notes, but he did not allow copies to be made public. He’s good enough a lawyer to know that if the IRS finds he has willfully misrepresented information on his tax returns, he faces felony charges. We can only hope….

EW Jackson [HEARTS] Ken Kookinelli’s Plan to Destroy Virginia Public Education

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Anything else you need to know about Cuckoo’s crazy “education plan?” I mean, seriously, if EW Jackson likes it, you KNOW it’s nuts!

Jackson Endorses Cuccinelli Education Plan

Constitutional Amendment is the Key to Parental Choice

For Immediate Release

August 19, 2013

Contact: Chip Tarbutton

CHESAPEAKE, VA – Republican nominee for Virginia Lieutenant Governor E.W. Jackson spoke out today in support of Republican Gubernatorial Nominee Ken Cuccinelli’s Education Plan.

Ken Cuccinelli’s K-12 education plan is a much needed game changer in empowering parents with the means to ensure their children have the opportunity to receive a world-class education,” Jackson said. “I am thrilled to see that parental choice is one of the cornerstones of Ken’s educational reform plan. While all elements start a much needed conversation on how we can best help our children, the most crucial is Ken’s proposal to amend the state Constitution to allow parents the ultimate choice of where their children are educated.

“Parental choice has always been the centerpiece of my campaign’s educational platform. As Ken correctly points out, there are areas of our state where the public school systems are failing. Currently, only some Virginians have the means to move their children out of these failing schools. But what becomes of those who can’t afford to send their kids to private school? Parental choice allows every family to make the educational decisions that best meet their needs.

“No one’s intention is to harm the public school system – my wife is one of many excellent public school teachers who help shape young minds every day. But we must seek solutions that expand and improve educational opportunity for all of our students. My opponent and his family have had the luxury to afford options other than public school for his children, as have my wife and I. That same choice should be available to all Virginians, no matter what their economic status.

“”As Lieutenant Governor, I look forward to partnering with Ken to begin the fight to give educational choice back to parents in Virginia.”

P.S. DPVA chimes in: “Today E.W. Jackson informed Virginians that he supports Ken Cuccinelli’s anti-public education plan, further underscoring how dangerous the plan would be for Virginia students, teachers and communities.

Jackson, whose own vision for Virginia education includes a constitutional amendment that would take millions of dollars out of public classrooms, obviously found plenty to like in a Cuccinelli plan that is based predominantly on spending taxpayer money on private schools instead of using it to make sure all Virginians have access to a world class education in a public school.

Cuccinelli and Jackson’s shared vision for education may work for their tea party backers, but it would be a disaster for Virginia’s students, teachers and economy.

Sen. Herring, Public Safety Advocate Lori Haas Call Out GOP Ticket’s Dangerous Public Safety Record

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I just got off a conference call with Virginia’s next Attorney General, Sen. Mark Herring and Lori Haas of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, calling out the Virginia GOP ticket’s “dangerous public safety record.” Here are a few highlights from the call, starting with Sen. Herring’s remarks:

Throughout his career in the State Senate and as AG, Ken Cuccinelli has a long record of putting his extreme agenda and personal interests ahead of what is best for Virginians’ safety. Mark Obenshain, who has said he and Ken Cuccinelli are “peas in a pod” philosophically, is just as if not further out of the mainstream as Cuccinelli when it comes to commonsense bills that would enact gun safety measures keep our communities safe…The two both wanted to expand the list of people who could bring firearms onto public school campuses…while in the State Senate both Ken Cuccinelli and Mark Obenshain even voted to allow guns and missiles in airport terminals…Obenshain voted against forbidding people with a protective order issued against them from carrying a firearm in the home of their alleged victim, then voted in committee against increasing the penalty for a person who is under the influence of alcohol or illegal drugs to carry a loaded firearm in a public place. These are positions that are completely out of the mainstream...Cuccinelli’s and Obenshain’s records speak for themselves. They have clearly put their own extreme agenda ahead of what is best for the safety of our children…If Ken Cuccinelli and Mark Obenshain’s records are any indication of how they would act as Governor and Attorney General, Virginians should beware…their positions are dangerous for our communities and will put public safety on the back burner.

Lori Haas of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence reiterated what Sen. Herring had to say. Haas added that “we need leaders who will find commonsense solutions to keep guns out of the hands of those who will do us harm…we need to keep guns off of school grounds and away from our children and out of the hands of…dangerous people.” Sadly, Haas noted that Cuccinelli and Obenshain “want to make it harder for our law enforcement officials to protect us.” The bottom line, in Haas’ view, is that Cuccinelli’s and Obenshain’s “extreme positions just endangers our communities, endangers our children, and endangers our families…[but instead] only promotes the sale of more guns.”  No argument here. Let’s make sure that Cuccinelli and Obenshain come nowhere near victory this November.

Why the McDonnells Should NOT Be Indicted

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by Paul Goldman

Our Gifted Governor and his W—-T—– First Lady have forced Virginians to look into the mirror and face reality: the growing money corruption in our politics can no longer be denied. “How many times can a man turn his head and pretend that he just doesn’t see” sang Bob Dylan many years ago. I can still remember today first hearing his voice and telling myself: “Damn Paul, you’ve got a better voice than that Jewish Zimmerman guy from the Ukraine.” Well, the band never quite worked out, the folk singing either. Still got the demo somewhere I think. Maybe not…it really isn’t important, at least for this column.

Recently, Bob Dylan had this to say about the state we are in here in Virginia:

“People are crazy and times are strange

I’m locked in tight, I’m out of range

I used to care, but things have changed”

Bob (Dylan, that is) has a point. The First Family of Virginia, their benefactor Jonnie Williams, are crazy to think they could fly under the radar forever. The Governor’s face of 2013 surely says times are strange, that 2013 politically is surely out of range of anything approaching the normative in GUV races.

So yes, it is easy not to care, to drop out, to tune out, saying “things have changed” and protest by not voting. I get it, sorta.

EXCEPT: Things have not changed, in truth the 2013 politics is the same, the only difference is the convergence of events, not the forces at play. Or as George Clooney might say: It is “A Perfect Storm” by the good movie of the same name. Clooney was believable in that movie the way he wasn’t in The American.  

Let’s be brutally honest:  More than the editorial writers want to admit, in VA politics today, Money Talks.

The same for Congress. The only difference is that the media can’t now both claim to be appalled by what they see in Washington and thankful about what they don’t see in Virginia. They could always see it in Virginia: but until the McDonnell Mess, they could alibi the situation by claims Virginia had never “jumped the shark.”

That excuse is gone. Let me ask you: Governor McDonnell raised over $23 million LARGE to run for Governor. Many of those who gave him big bucks have been appointed to sough-after public positions. Are you telling me that this was coincidental? I would hope you have more respect for my intelligence. But even if not, then at least give me credit for not being totally brain dead.

Let’s me honest: sleazy “business” guys like Williams – and in truth he isn’t a real business man so I apologize to legit business folks but it is what he calls himself – have long collecting their “cut” at the intersection where political power meets political access meets big money.

What Jonnie Williams did – pay to play, use his access to leverage public power for personal profit – isn’t new in Virginia. What is new, in terms of public perception, is the revelation of a Williams type having so much influence over the Governor. That’s new for us. However, in many states, there has been a Jonnie Williams type ELECTED GOVERNOR: Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Louisiana, the list goes on.

McDonnell is not Jonnie Williams: but he and his wife were a little too greedy for their own good, and have done great harm to a storied Office.

HOWEVER: The basis of our legal system is captured in this phrase: Better a 100 guilty men go free than 1 innocent man get convicted.

As a society, we have accepted that candidates have to raise a lot of money to run for high office. The public rejects public financing of said elections and in Virginia, we have rejected any caps of what an individual or business entity may contribute. We have laws that allow all kinds of perks and benefits to the elected elite. Given our political culture, and the de facto if not de jure right we give those with wealth to influence our leaders, it always comes down to the judgment of the person in the Mansion, and I guess now, his wife too.

Bob and Maureen crossed the line, they embarrassed themselves, they have held Virginia up to national ridicule in that regard.

BUT; Does this make them criminals?

I say NO, based on what is in the newspaper’s so far, and the logical inferences to be drawn therefrom. It may be that the federal prosecutors have more damaging hard facts, more witnesses, maybe they have phone taps, secretly recorded conversations, documentary evidence or the like. If so, then like any writer, I retain the common sense to process new information and arrive at a new conclusion.

BUT: As of right now – assuming nothing else of significance to be added – the McDonnell’s should NOT be indicted even though I believe they are legally guilty.

Why? Three reasons.

(1) The use of political access to public power to gain personal riches usually at the expense of the public [like selling stock for way above its value] is epidemic in America. Epidemic. Like it or not, Bob McDonnell is a conservative Republican. He is being investigated by a Democratic Administration. They need to have a slam dunk case against him because if they bring charges – and they lose – then the irony is that the culture of corruption could actually be benefited because of increased public cynicism with the system. So if all the feds have is what the papers are reporting, I say we leave it to the voters to meet out the punishment.

2) I refuse to engage in the fiction that a Governor doesn’t try as best he can to help those he considers a friend. So of course McDonnell is going to try and help Jonnie Williams, as he has dozens of legitimate business men and women. The only difference really: Williams is a quick-buck guy with a not-so-legit diet supplement product not ready for prime time. His business is merging political access and cash for personal profit. I am not a big fan of selective prosecution. McDonnell appears not to have directly given Williams anything unique, and while intentional, “gaming” the system to hide William’s gifts is not illegal per se.  

3) Like it or not, Governor McDonnell deserves the benefit of the doubt as to his criminal intent without a lot better hard proof than we have read in the newspaper. Without more, the key piece of evidence appears to be what Jonnie Williams’ had in mind when making the “gifts.” But making it a crime for X based on what Y might be thinking strikes me as a risky place for our prosecutors to go. It is too much of a gray area for me to allow the government to make it criminal with just the word of Jonnie the Rat.

BOTTOM LINE: We have tolerated, we continue to tolerate, the cozy, money grubbing associations of public offices with “business” hustlers and shady characters like Mr. Williams. We tolerate their using their access for personal gain at the expense of the public. As Bob Dylan said, this has been “blowing in the wind” for a long time.

Well, the wind storm is at the door of the Governor’s Mansion. We can indict McDonnell, hold a “Bob for Jobs” trial here in Richmond federal court. We can add his wife as a defendant, trot in Jonnie Williams, and see if he and the prosecutors can convince a jury that this has not been selective prosecution, that there is real outrage in the legal system, and that the McDonnells must be held to account as a symbol of such.

I get it: But I am not “down” with that, if I want to watch Blurred Lines, I will watch the x-rated video, and ask myself: “Why didn’t I return her phone call?” (Probably because she didn’t call.)

The point being: We have in Virginia accepted the Blurred Lines at the intersection of political access/influence and public power/personal gain. We pretend otherwise, but I write an adult column here, not one for teenagers. If we were sincere in our outrage, if the politicians really wanted to show they disapprove, then we would be having a Special Session PRIOR to the coming gubernatorial election to force those running to put it all out there: their associations, sources of money, the whole nine yards.

But the newspapers aren’t calling for that, the alleged outraged politicians are not doing that, and I could go down the line. Instead, they want a “show” trial of the Governor, of the ex-Mansion chief, and whatever else, even the First Lady. I think the public wants real reform far more than a show trial. Those running for office seems to disagree with me. We shall see. I think Deep Throat gave good advice during the Watergate Scandal: follow the money.

When the media gets serious about following the money, forcing all the people on the ballot – statewide, GA, local – to lay out their business connections, where the money comes from, to in effect expose any connection to a Jonnie Williams, then I will say: Indict the McDonnell’s if you have the proof.

But until then, until I feel this is not a really a show trial to pretend the leaders of the system “really care”: then count me out. We are already sending too many people to jail for “political correctness” to “show” we really are tough on stuff. I am not impressed, either was Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes.

McDonnell has disgraced himself. His alibi doesn’t hold up. But if we aren’t prepared to hold those who want to be Governor to the right standard prior to the 2013 election, then I see no courage nor honor in conducting all these show trials, I stand with John Adams on that, and John Marshall who had the courage to dismiss treason charges against Aaron Burr.

I am much more concerned about the values of the next Governor, and care nothing about the values of the McDonnell’s at this point. The people of Virginia, I believe, are on my side of this equation. That’s why Cuccinelli needs to return the Williams stuff despite what the Democratic prosecutor of Richmond said, and McAuliffe needs to answer the questions about GreenTech raised by the Kaine Administration.

To me, this is a no-brainer. If their advisors think this stuff can go away in light of the McDonnell Mess, then don’t listen to me: just read between the lines of the major editorial boards of the major state and national newspapers. It is going to come out, one way or another, the newspapers will force it out. That’s what they are saying. McDonnell thought he could hide the truth. In 2013, that option is no longer available to anyone.  

The Spirit that Drove Us to Civil War is Back– Who Chose War? I: Today’s Crisis

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( – promoted by lowkell)

If a force that is destructive, exploitative, sadistic, and willing to sacrifice people to get ever more wealth and power isn’t a force of evil, what would be?

And if a predilection for war over peace, for conflict over cooperation, isn’t one of the strongest indicators of the workings of evil, I don’t know what is.

Our religious and moral traditions tell us: Peace is better than war. Jesus is announced as representing “Peace on Earth, Good Will to Men.”  Blessed are the peacemakers, said he. Jews and Muslims greet each other with “Shalom” or “Salam,” indicating the holy nature of harmony. Swords may be necessary sometimes, but the vision of the world as it should be has them beaten into plowshares.

In this and the two subsequent postings, we’ll look at the question: “Who chose war over peace (or conflict over cooperation)?” First, here, with respect to the conflict-filled dynamics of America’s current politics. And in the next two postings, with respect to the process that drove the nation into a terrible Civil War.

Our politics in these times are more about conflict than at any time in living memory.  (Perhaps more so than any time since the era of the Civil War.)

With respect to this political pathology, no clear-eyed observer can doubt that it is the Republican Party that has chosen to make our politics almost all-out conflict. Politics in a democracy is always a combination of inter-party competition, in which the actors seek advantage in the quest for power, and inter-party cooperation to serve the national good. Clearly, the Republicans have chosen to discard the usual balance and to make a fight over virtually everything.

Republicans made that choice in 2002 when the Bush gang used the war on terror to divide Americans for political advantage.  

One dramatic example:  At the very time that the national trauma of 9/11 had prompted the Democratic Party, then in opposition, to rally round the president for the sake of national unity, the Republican president chose to use that same national emergency as a weapon against the other party.

The idea for a Department of Homeland Security had originated with Democrats.  After resisting the idea for months, that Republican president – George W. Bush — put forward a bill to establish the department.

But the Republicans set a trap. They amended the proposal to include a poison pill — an extraneous amendment undermining workers’ rights — to lure the Democrats into voting against the measure.  Then that “no” vote, against the poisoned version, could be used by the Republicans, in the upcoming 2002 elections. The Republicans could accuse Democrats of being “soft on terror.”(The most grotesque example was the campaign that defeated Senator Max Cleland –the war veteran who left three of his limbs in Vietnam. Republican campaign ads equated Cleland with Osama bin Laden.)

That the Republicans are animated by the spirit of conflict over cooperation was equally clear in 2009, when now out of power they made it their top priority not to get Americans back to work but rather to make the president fail. Even now, their repeated moves to repeal one of the president’s major accomplishments, and now also to sabotage its implementation, carry forward this spirit of war in ways unprecedented in the history of American politics.

This Republican pattern of choosing conflict over cooperation –  far beyond the American norm  — can be documented abundantly, but that should not be necessary.

Nor should it be difficult to see what this implies about the spirit that’s driving today’s Republican Party.  A political party that makes a fight over everything cripples the nation’s ability to solve its problems and meet its challenges. It degrades the country.  Making politics into a form of warfare is destructive, and a political force that insists on destructiveness reveals the evil nature of the spirit that animates it.

In the next installment, I’ll address the question of which side chose, back in the middle of the 19th century, to drive America into exceptionally fierce political conflict, polarization, and ultimately outright Civil War.  

The picture there is more complex, but ultimately, the thesis holds true:  The predisposition to foment conflict is one more indication of the kinship between the spirit of today’s Republican Party and that driving the South leading up to the Civil War.