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Let’s Have that Debate on Surveillance, Mr. President

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( – promoted by lowkell)

(This will be running as an op/ed in some newspapers in the 6th District, where I live.)

When the NSA surveillance programs were revealed a few weeks ago, President Obama acknowledged that they raised the issue of “striking this balance between the need to keep the American people safe and our concerns about privacy.” And he declared further, “I welcome that debate.”

I wonder why, if the president thinks that “it’s good we’re having this discussion,” he waited for a whistleblower to bring the issue to national attention.  My suspicion is that he had been intimidated by the unelected powers behind what some call “the surveillance state.”

Be that as it may, I’d like the president to lead the way now.  It should be part of presidential leadership to see that the issues are aired in a way that enables the American people to come to a considered judgment on the right trade-off between security and  liberty in this new age we’ve entered.



Profound technological changes have compelled us to rethink the proper boundaries of privacy.
 Email, internet and other technology changed the ways ordinary Americans communicate with each other and their world.  Technology, such as the government’s Prism program, has enlarged the government’s means of surveillance.



It’s a new game. We need new rules.

This isn’t the first time technology has required working out new rules: The invention of the telephone led to the extension of our Fourth Amendment protections against “unreasonable search” to cover phone conversations.  The government, with its police power, cannot tap our phones unless a judge issues a warrant.

The government must “show cause” to an independent judiciary before it’s allowed to intrude into those parts of people’s lives where they have “a reasonable expectation of privacy.”

Are these standards being met by NSA’s huge data-gathering programs?  

In 1978, under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), a special court was set up to issue such warrants.  George W. Bush’s administration violated the law by by-passing that court.  Under President Obama, the government has obeyed the law and obtained approval for its surveillance from the FISA court. Nonetheless, there are reasons to suspect that this judicial oversight is inadequate.

The FISA court appears to be a rubber stamp.  Not one application has been denied in the past four years, out of thousands of requests, according to reports collected by the Federation of American Scientists.  Is there anywhere else in American law where the judiciary is so compliant?  How rigorously does the FISA court look into the government’s claims about the need for surveillance, and how does that compare with the usual standards for granting warrants?

Similar questions can be raised about congressional oversight.  It is not clear that the members of Congress whose job it is to “oversee” what the executive branch is doing in the realm of intelligence-gathering have more than a sketchy idea of what’s going on.

Our Founders  learned from history to be suspicious of unchecked power, and our own history — going back to the Watergate era – is that “national security” and secrecy can be cloaks under which power gets abused.  From Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia, we know that tyranny and the disappearance of any “reasonable expectation of privacy” go together.

Of course, some specifics about intelligence gathering need to be kept secret for national security.  But the “debate” that President Obama said he welcomed can be conducted without dealing with highly classified cases.  It should be possible for citizens to judge the basic principles we want to be applied in our name.  And it’s our right to be provided the knowledge on which to base such judgment.  It’s our security that the government is protecting, and it’s our privacy that’s being eroded.

Even if everything the government is doing now is proper, we need to make sure that today’s practices don’t lay the foundation for some future police state to assault our privacy and our liberties. Some workers in the surveillance programs have revealed that they’ve already chosen on their own to spy on individuals. The mechanisms now in place can be abused.

So yes, let’s have that debate.  Get it going, Mr. President.  

Let’s have it televised.

I propose that you choose two high-powered advocates, one for each side of the debate. For the side advocating greater privacy protections, a good choice might be Glenn Greenwald, the constitutional attorney turned journalist who helped to break the NSA story.  Presumably, Mr. President, you know someone who can argue that we’re already doing what we should be doing.

But one thing we should be doing is having that “discussion,” of which you spoke.  That’s not happening yet.

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Andy Schmookler, recently the Democratic nominee for Congress from Virginia’s 6th District, is an award-winning author, political commentator, radio talk-show host, and teacher.  His books include The Parable of the Tribes:  The Problem of Power in Social Evolution.   His website is at www.NoneSoBlind.org.

Why Women Support Mark Herring for AG

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( – promoted by lowkell)

Senator Mark Herring is the most capable and experienced candidate for Virginia Attorney General and the candidate most in tune with the needs of Virginia women and families. The Virginia NOW (National Organization for Women) PAC announced its endorsement of Herring today.

With years of experience in local and state government, Herring has an exceptional understanding of these issues and a commitment to represent the interests of all Virginians and to restore respect to the Office of Attorney General.  

In contrast to the controversy-riddled tenure of Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, Senator Herring will bring an even-handed and fair approach to the Office of Attorney General.

The Virginia National Organization for Women (NOW) PAC today announced its endorsement of Senator Mark Herring as the most capable and experienced candidate for the office of Virginia Attorney General and the candidate most in tune with the needs of Virginia women and families.  

The Attorney General is the Commonwealth’s lawyer and has a wide range of responsibilities on issues related to protecting the safety and welfare of Virginians and supporting the laws of the Commonwealth. With years of experience in local and state government, Senator Herring has an exceptional understanding of these issues and a commitment to represent the interests of all Virginians and to restore respect to the Office of Attorney General.  

In contrast to the controversy-riddled tenure of Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, Senator Herring will bring an even-handed and fair approach to the Office of Attorney General. On the issue of regulations for women’s clinics, Senator Herring has stated that he interprets the law as allowing current women’s health clinics to continue to operate under the licensing standards in place in 2011 rather than require them to meet the hospital-level standards put in place by Cuccinelli. Two clinics have already closed due to these unnecessary and unrealistic standards dealing with such matters as parking places and hall widths. On another highly controversial issue – health care reform  – Senator Herring led the General Assembly effort to implement the Affordable Care Act and fought to expand Medicaid to uninsured Virginians.

Virginia NOW welcomes Senator Herring’s pledge to keep Virginia families safe in practical ways that will have a positive effect on us all. In particular, we applaud Senator Herring’s focus on preventing gun violence, cracking down on designer drugs, protecting older adults from financial and other abuse, combating sexual and domestic violence, ensuring LGBT civil rights, arresting internet predators, and protecting voting rights.  

The Virginia NOW PAC was established in 1978. It endorses candidates at the state and local level who support NOW positions on a wide range of social justice issues affecting women and families. Virginia NOW is a membership organization with chapters in Alexandria, Arlington, Charlottesville, Fairfax County, Fredericksburg,  

MD Gov. Martin O’Malley: “we have a planet to save and we have jobs to create”

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Man, do we ever need a governor like Maryland’s Martin O’Malley here in Virginia. Yesterday, O’Malley laid out his plan (see video, also transcript on the “flip”) to cut his state’s greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent, to “reduce per capita electricity consumption and peak demand by Maryland consumers by 15 percent by 2015,” and to “require 25 percent renewable energy consumption by 2020” (up from the current goal of 22% by 2022).

Can you imagine Bob McDonnell giving this speech? How about Ken Cuccinelli, beholden as he is to the Koch brothers, Consol Energy, the coal companies, etc, etc? Yeah right. I have a lot more hope for Terry McAuliffe, who is passionate about clean energy, but even a Governor McAuliffe will need help from the Virginia General Assembly, and right now that body is controlled by a bunch of climate-science-denying, fossil-fuel-addicted Teapublicans. That has to change, starting on November 5 of this year, as we start the process of making Virginia’s government reflect the increasingly “blue” (and also “green”) political stance of the populace.

P.S. Also, can you imagine Ken Kookinelli stating the truth that climate change “is not an ideological issue any more than gravity is,” that it “is physics, pure and simple?”

Thank you very, very much for taking the time to be here today.  I look around at this audience and I see the great strength that is our state- people who rise to the tough challenges instead of running away from them.  Thank you to our Majority Leader Kumar Barve, our State’s Chairman of Progress. Thank you to all of the members of the General Assembly, Democrats and Republicans, who are with us today. And again I want to thank all of you.

We’ve been able to accomplish some really important things in some of the toughest economic times. And you all should take some heart in that in what you have in one another.  And what we have in each other.

There are not many states that have been able to make the progress that we’ve made. But part of the reason we’ve been able to make that progress is because we’ve been honest not only about the challenges we face but also in measuring them as openly and as accurately as we can; the pace of that progress, whether things are working or not working; and the degree to which they are working or not working.

This work is hard.  It is not easy. It is life and death hard.

We are here today because climate disruption is real. It is not an ideological issue any more than gravity is. [Applause]  It is physics, pure and simple. But our response to it is complex.

No state can escape the urgent responsibility of this moment.  In fact, throughout our Great Revolutionary history, it is in exactly in moments like these, when Marylanders have always chosen to step up and to move ahead and that’s why we are here today.

We are here today because we understand deep in our hearts that we do have a moral obligation to our children and to our grandchildren to give to them a planet that is not on the trajectory that we currently find ourselves in. A planet that is becoming increasingly more damaged, more polluted, more unhealthy.

The fierce urgency of these times, calls on all of us to move forward in this great change in human history.  For all of our technological advances in transportation and the economies of extraction and depletion, the great challenge of our time is to move and shift especially when it comes to food and energy efficiency.  We need to move from global economies of extraction to local economies of renewal and local economies of regeneration.

In order to do this we have to embrace a different way forward.  Not ideological, hierarchical or bureaucratic but entrepreneurial, collaborative, performance-driven in terms of the way we live, in terms of the way we act and in terms of the way we lead.

If we want better results we have to make better choices.

The Problem

Facts are facts.  The carbon content of our earth’s atmosphere is higher now than it has been at any time in 3 million years.

And there’s no coincidence that last year, there were more than 3,500 national weather records broken for heat, rain, and snow.

Nationally, 12 of the hottest years on record have occurred in just the last 15 years.

In our northeastern region, last year we experienced the hottest year on record.

These are not opinions; these are measures. They are facts agreed upon by 98% of the scientific community regardless of party affiliation.

And this is not only about icebergs melting, or polar bears drowning.

It’s also, more locally, about the 168 Marylanders we’ve lost in severe weather events over the past decade and a half.

It’s about children who suffer from Asthma, a leading cause of absenteeism in our elementary schools.  It’s about moms and dads rushed to the emergency room with heat stress.  And it’s about the 700 Americans who lose their lives each year in heat-related deaths.

It’s also about the economic hits we take as family farms are literally burned out of business in record droughts that are happening with increased frequency and breadth.  And the hits we will take if rising sea-levels swallow up a third of the Port of Baltimore, devastate Ocean City, and claim thousands upon thousands of Maryland homes that are scattered all around this long coastline of ours.

It’s also about economic opportunity and job creation- two critical imperatives. Together, we have established Maryland as a regional leader in green job creation.  That did not happen by accident, it happened because of the choices so many of you have made, through the actions you take, the votes you have cast and the choices you make.

We create more jobs when we work to advance cleaner, greener, more renewable energy sources like wind and solar than the alternative of importing  and burning fossil fuels from other places.

According to the US Chamber of Commerce, Maryland has been named two years in a row the #1 state in America for innovation and entrepreneurship.

And with our miles of coastline, we also have the lesser distinction of being one of America’s most vulnerable states to the effects of climate change in particular the effects of sea level rise.  Sea-levels along our 3,200 miles of coastlines are rising three – and in some cases four – times faster than the global average.  Thirteen islands in the Chesapeake have been swallowed up entirely.

As things stand, we lose 1.6 acres of our State’s lands every day.  And we’re not alone.  Louisiana loses even more land every day and Florida is in the same boat.

On a global level, climate change means an accelerated loss of bio-diversity, if unabated, will take entire species of plants and animals off the planet forever. “Great Hungers” of famine death in continental proportions.

Better Choices

In Maryland, together, we can use the prospect of a carbon constrained world as the means to invent a more prosperous future, and to drive innovation, and education, and industry, and jobs, and expansion of opportunity.

For the past six, going upon seven years, we in Maryland have set a number of goals. The most important goal we set is job creation.  We have now recovered over 99% of the jobs we lost in the recession. We are moving forward not back.

But the goals we have set all feed and fuel our job creation goal. And among them are our sustainability goals. Three of those 16 goals pertain to energy. The one that we are here to talk primarily about today is reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 25% by 2020.  Another is to increase our Renewable Portfolio Standard by 20% by 2022. And the third is to reduce electricity consumption by 15% by 2015.

Working together, we’ve created one the largest cluster of green jobs in the region. And we’ve partnered with our community colleges and partners in labor- thank you Fred Mason [Applause]- to get more of our citizens the skills they need to compete and succeed in these green jobs;

Together, we’ve raised fuel economy standards.  We have advanced electric car technology. And we have worked with GM to create hundreds of jobs building green electric motors in White Marsh;

We’ve reformed our tax code to better incentivize green building and sustainable development, we’ve insisted on building more energy efficient public buildings, and we’ve embraced the International Green Construction Code – in fact, we were the first state to do so.

What’s more, we’ve made tough choices to secure the revenue to fix our roads and bridges, decrease traffic and with it, the poisonous emissions pumped into our atmosphere.  We are moving forward together with those things we can only do together like the Red and Purple Line.   And we’ve advanced Transit Oriented Development strategies to further decrease traffic and build more livable communities.

Together, we’ve advanced solar energy, on-shore wind, and off-shore wind. We’ve created tax incentives to help families install green energy systems in their homes, and to help entrepreneurs install them in their businesses.  We’ve raised our Renewable Energy Portfolio – RPS – standards at times when other states have attempted to lower theirs.

Through EmPOWER Maryland, we’ve set some of the most ambitious goals in America for reducing consumption 15% by 2015.

And while other states, like New Jersey, are walking away from RGGI, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative ,… we in Maryland continue to believe that cap-and-trade is not an ideological, left-right issue; it’s common sense and it’s a smarter way forward.

Last, but not least, we passed landmark legislation which called upon our State to put together a Greenhouse Gas Reduction Plan – more on this in a moment.

Progress and Challenges Ahead

How are we doing?  In some areas, we’re making real and measurable progress.  And in others we’re falling short.  Such is the nature of human progress.

We have, for example, increased the percentage of electricity we produce from renewable sources by nearly 40% since 2007.

We’ve grown our solar power sector from virtually non-existent eight years ago into an industry which employs 2,000 Marylanders and is estimated to create 10,000 more jobs in the years ahead.

We’ve increased light rail ridership by 44%, and overall public transit ridership 18%.  All graphs that are clearly moving in the right direction.

We’ve decreased peak electricity demand by nearly 11% and consumption by more than 9%.

And we’ve partnered with 35 local governments throughout our state, including eight counties and Baltimore City, to promote energy efficiency, renewable energy and transportation petroleum reduction at the local-level.

But so far we are falling short of our goals to reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions 25% by 2020.  Right now, we are at only 5%.  At this current pace, we will fall short.

Greenhouse Gas Reduction Plan

So how will we close this gap?  That’s what we have been working collaboratively on with all sorts of stakeholders hearing every voice to come up with a Greenhouse Reduction Plan.

Our Greenhouse Gas Reduction Plan is a set of initiatives, a roadmap, for how we move forward.  Our Plan will create an estimated 37,000 jobs – and perhaps more.   It will generate $1.6 billion into Maryland’s economy.  And it will move us closer toward our goals for reducing greenhouse emissions.

Better choices; better results.

A few of the choices in this plan:

We will advance cleaner, greener energy by raising, once again, our RPS [Applause] – the portion of our electric load that electric suppliers purchase from renewable sources. Today our RPS goal is 20%.  We will get to at least 18% by 2020 and should hit the 20% goal by 2022.

Given this progress, we have everyone reason to believe we can raise our goal to 25%, achieve that goal and make up a large part of the gap in greenhouse gas reductions.

We will work together to exceed the EmPOWER Maryland goal of saving Maryland families money on their electric bills by reducing per capita electricity consumption and peak load demand by 15% by 2015. Our Maryland Energy Administration is actively working to learn what other states who are making progress towards these goals are doing to save their citizens money and reduce electricity consumption at a faster rate than we are in Maryland.

We will make good on the agreement we made with other states in our region through RGGI, to lower the cap from 165 million tons of poisonous carbon dioxide pumped into our atmosphere to 91 million tons.

We will take further action to double Maryland transit ridership by 2020.  When I used to mention that goal before it seemed like a pipe dream but because of the tough choices that your legislators have made we are moving forward with the Red and Purple lines. But it’s also about the way we choose to grow in smarter and more sustainable ways.  To encourage Transit Oriented Development, I signed an Executive Order instructing state agencies to put new facilities near transit stations.  We added more multilevel MARC trains to grow capacity. We are also making it easier and more convenient for Marylanders to take public transit with new electronic card readers at transit stations and more reliable, cleaner, greener locomotives.

We will improve the way we manage Maryland’s forests working with nature to capture carbon pollution before it reaches our atmosphere.  We will do this by enrolling the forests we don’t yet manage into our nation-leading, award-winning management regimes.

We will team with families throughout our State to plant more trees [Applause]: 43,030 acres worth by 2020.  That is a big task, we are all going to have to work together to achieve it but we have created the tools that will allow us to accomplish it like GreenPrint and AgPrint.

We are implementing an Adaption Strategy to make our state more resilient and prepared for the likelihood of climate-related weather events.  As part of this strategy, last year, I signed an Executive Order which directs new and reconstructed state structures, to be planned and constructed to avoid or minimize future flood damage.  This is an area where we may need to do more work in next year’s General Assembly. We need to better and more directly articulate that sea level rise inundation and the threat it poses to human health and human life needs to be in consideration as we seek to protect our other living systems in our wetlands and our shorelines.

We will set the aspirational goal of becoming a “zero-waste state.” [Applause]  If companies like Walmart can set the goal of zero waste and make tangible progress towards achieving it  we believe there is no reason that a great corporation like Maryland cannot do this as well,… and to get there, we will work to advance strategies like composting and greater recycling.  The good news is we already have one of the highest recycling rates in the nation. There is a lot of methane in our ozone that comes out of our landfills- that is the traditional way we used to live. But in order to reach our goals we must come up with smarter, more innovative, more sustainable ways to deal with our waste.  Zero waste is a strategy that will bring together the various actions that many of us are already taking.

Conclusion

In conclusion: we have a planet to save and we have jobs to create.

We need, as a People, to create greater opportunities to work and earn a decent living.  And what we stand for is what we stand on.

One of the great ironies of these times is that the very immensity of the challenges posed by climate change are the same forces driving a new wave of innovation.  Innovation in building net zero homes.  Innovation in harnessing the sun and wind to power our state, and empower our small and family owned businesses.  Innovation that we can use to create jobs and expand opportunity now and in the future.

As America’s #1 state for public education, and America’s #1 state for innovation and entrepreneurship, we have all of the tools and talent we need to be #1 in green-sector job creation.

As Marylanders we embrace the “fierce urgency of now”.  We make better choices in order to achieve better results.  And with trust in God and faith in the world we move forward not back.

Thanks very much.

Virginia News Headlines: Friday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, July 26. Also, see President Obama speaking in Jacksonville about “rebuilding an economy that grows from the middle out, not the top down, which includes creating jobs by investing in our nation’s infrastructure” I couldn’t agree more. The LAST thing we should be doing is cutting crucial investment in our future; we should be massively increasing it instead!

*Justice Department to challenge states’ voting laws (“The decision to challenge state officials marks an aggressive effort to continue policing voting issues and is likely to spark a new round of politically contentious litigation that could return consideration of the 1965 Voting Rights Act to the high court.”)

*2 Va. lawmakers want to ditch congressional recess over budget (Agreed. Get the budget done, or NO VACATION!)

*Halliburton to admit destroying evidence in spill (Yes, these people are slime.)

*White House prepares for budget showdown with GOP (Do NOT give in to these hostage takers. The LAST thing we should be doing is cutting spending at this point. In fact, with interest rates so low, we should be borrowing heavily to invest in our infrastructure. It’s essential anyway, and it’s only going to be more expensive to do so in the future…)

*Christie goes after libertarians – hard (“N.J. governor offers broadside against Republicans drifting toward a libertarian view on foreign policy.” Fascinating.)

*Sen. Kaine visits Guantanamo Bay (This thing’s a disgrace, should have been shut down a long time ago.)

*George Zimmerman Juror Says He ‘Got Away With Murder’ (Gee, ya think?!? Just like OJ Simpson got away with murder, so did George Zimmerman. In the former case, though, it was in large part the jury’s fault. In this case, it was the Florida state legislature’s fault, as well as the prosecution team’s.)

*A missed opportunity (“The governor’s apology isn’t enough to show remorse for gifts he took from a businessman involved in a tax dispute” Nope, not even close to being enough. Bob doesn’t get it.)

*McDonnell giving no thought to resignation

*Obenshain shies away from social issues, seeks to offer “inclusive message” (Riiiight, after a career as a social warrior, and after calling Ken Cuccinelli a role model for being Attorney General, Obenshain’s suddenly now changed his stripes when he’s running for AG? How stupid and gullible does Obenshain think we are?)

*Cuccinelli Attempting to Link McAuliffe to Visa Scandal (Why does the media insist on labeling things “scandals” before it’s even a “scandal?” Like the phony IRS and Benghazi “scandals,” for instance? So much for unbiased, “objective” reporting. But then again, we knew that…)

*Eco-friendly delegate fined for bulkhead with no permit (“Appearing before the Virginia Marine Resources Commission this week in Newport News, Morrissey was fined $1,000 for building a bulkhead along the James River without obtaining a wetlands permit.” Don’t you love hypocrites?)

*Bob Goodlatte on Steve King: ‘Not helpful’ (Right, but…how do King’s views on immigration policy substantively differ from Goodlatte’s?)

*Conservation group buys 443 acres of forest, swamp

*Recycle, reuse, tax? Norfolk tries to get handle on plastic bags

*Virginia authorities probe threats to AG Cuccinelli (That’s NEVER acceptable. Period.)

*Va. woman dies in Spanish train crash

*Lovely day before humidity returns

*For Washington Nationals this season, maybe a walk-off is a good idea

Vote Suppression, Thy Name is North Carolina

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North Carolina moved closer late tonight to passing a massive 56-page vote suppression law Here is the latest version of the bill. You see, photo ID isn’t the half of it. This vast 56-page bill is geared toward keeping Dems from ever winning again.

The irony of “Welcome to North Carolina” is amazing. As I write this, North Carolina’s controlling party conspires to destroy democracy for those living here now and in the future, indeed for all time. The state I love and reside in is lost. I am not an Eric Holder fan but today I say TGFEH. After Texas, come on down to NC.

Here’s what the News and Observer says about the effort:


Voting statistics in North Carolina show Democrats are more likely to vote early and vote straight ticket, two of the practices targeted by the bill. A state study also estimated more than 300,000 registered voters lack driver’s licenses or other forms of state-issued ID, most of them elderly or low-income minorities. A Democratic amendment to add student ID cards from universities and community colleges was rebuffed.

Read more here.

I will write in more detail when the final bill passes, but so far this is what is included (You have to read the length and breadth of this to believe it):

*Allows vigilante vote suppressionists whether the GOP, True the Vote or vengeful individuals to challenge any voter from voting. Anyone who resides within one’s county may challenge a voter’s right to vote at the polls.  Can you imagine what voting will be  like with the Tea Party vote suppressionists of 2012 enabled by this law?

*Expands the scope of when voters may be challenged and purged.

*Purges voters more frequently (at least twice a year).

*Cuts number of early voting days from 17 to 10, while keeping number of hours total the same.

*Changes rules for special elections.

*Ends same-day registration.

*Eliminates language assuring the voter can verify their vote before casting it (we were previously able to print a complete ballot from a voting machine and then handle it (and even check it before putting it in the vote counting machine).

*Another provision on P 42 appears to eliminate paper ballots altogether, thus eliminating a paper trail.

*Eliminates straight ticket voting.  When there are many races including federal, state and local candidates, voters can save time by voting for all state races by marking one box.  More Dems than Republicans vote straight ticket.  

* Raises to $5,000 the amount candidates can solicit from voters per individual per candidate, but essentially allow any amount of donation.

*Eliminates limits on corporate donations to candidates.

*Repeals the requirement for candidate to stand by their ads.

*Allows attack ads without providing the attacking organization must identify itself.

*Forbids polls from staying open longer for unusual circumstances.  Voters can vote if they are already in line when polls close.

*Eliminates pre-registration of 16 and 17 year olds.

*Requires photo ID

*Bans student IDs from state colleges or private universities for identification.  Also bans local government Ids.

*Eliminates provisional ballots.

*Eliminates paid voter registration drives -paying per registration (the only thing I agree with).

*Moves up primary day for North Carolina. God forbid it should be last in absolutely everything.

*Eliminates instant runoffs for judicial races.

* Eliminates public funding of judicial races. Better to have judges owned by corporations! (Snark.)

It pains me to once again have to say, don’t North Carolina Virginia.  Of course, some of the 21st Century improvements now being eliminated have never been part of Virginia’s voting.  Even so, North Carolina now moves to the bottom in terms of nearly everything.  As Ari Berman says, this is a four-step plan.  You win with buckets of corporate money, you severely gerrymander the districts, you do corporate bidding and try via voter laws to keep voters from ever voting you out.  

Video: Top VA GOP Donor Mocks “Climatism,” Hopes We Don’t “burn the officials of VEPCO”

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The latest lunacy from top Virginia GOP donor (and good friend of “Bobby” McDonnell) Marion “Pat” Robertson.

On the 700 Club today, Pat Robertson followed a segment mocking “climatism” with an interview with Steve Goreham of the climate change denying Heartland Institute. Goreham is not a climate scientist (his degree is in electrical engineering) and the Heartland Institute regularly pushes misinformation about climate change.

[…]

Goreham lamented that SUV owners and power company officials may be treated like witches who were burnt at the stake in the Middle Ages: “There were many people in the Middle Ages that were blamed for causing the cold temperatures and the poor crops and they labeled them witches, they burned them. And so today we blame it on our neighbor’s SUV or a power plant, it’s a little bit of a medieval thing.”

Let’s hope we don’t burn the officials of VEPCO,” Robertson joked, referring to the Virginia Electric and Power Company.

Video: Ken Cuccinelli Say Racist Nutjob Steve King’s One of His Favorite Congressmen

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Yep, THIS Steve King (see flip for the video of his recent comments claiming undocumented immigrants mostly ‘130-pound’ drug runners. Also note that King has been condemned for these remarks by Republican leaders like John Boehner, Eric Cantor (who called the remarks “inexcusable”), etc. Yet he’s one of Ken Cuccinelli’s favorite congressmen.

By the way, it’s not just on immigration that Steve King is actually one of the most egregious members of Congress. This is a guy who’s said things likeUnicorns, leprechauns, gay marriages in Iowa – these are all things you will never find because they don’t exist;” “It turns out to be the best vote that I cast, was my ‘no’ vote to the $51.5 billion to Hurricane Katrina;” “The argument that diversity is our strength has really never been backed up by logic;” “Well, I just haven’t heard of [ child getting pregnant from statutory rape or incest] being a circumstance that’s been brought to me in any personal way;” President Obama is a “Marxist” who “surely understands the Muslim culture” and “doesn’t have an American experience;” and of course that “the notion of manmade climate change ‘not rational’ but ‘a religion” like “the modern version of the rain dance.'”

In short, Steve King is one of the biggest embarrassments in Congress, really just an evil/racist/homophobic/xenophobic man when it comes down to it, yet Ken Cuccinelli says he’s one of his favorite Congressmen. That really says it all about Kookinelli, huh?

P.S. Oh yeah, Steve King is also horrendous when it comes to animal welfare and protection: for instance, he defended the horrendous practice of dogfighting. He’s also ” a longtime advocate for legalizing dogfighting, cockfighting, and other forms of animal torture. Most recently, he fought legislation that would make it illegal to bring a child to an animal fight. He has also set aside his love for states’ rights in order to forbid localities from enacting anti-animal torture standards.”

P.P.S. McAuliffe spokesperson Josh Schwerin says: “There is simply no place where this kind of hurtful and offensive rhetoric is okay. Ken Cuccinelli’s favorite Congressman is so extreme that even his own party leadership is publicly denouncing him. This is just another example of Ken Cuccinelli and his allies being far outside the mainstream and wrong for Virginia.”

Ken Cuccinelli-Related Graphics du Jour

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First, here’s a graphic about how young people see climate science deniers (like Ken Kookinelli): 73% say they are “ignorant,” “out of touch,” and/or “crazy.”

Second, here’s what the “Welcome to Virginia” sign would look like if Ken Cuccinelli (god forbid) became governor – gays, lesbians, women’s health providers, climate scientists, Latinos, etc. stay out!

Finally, here’s the door hanger we’ll all need if Cuccinelli ever becomes governor – keep out of our bedrooms, you perverted freakazoid!

Seen any other good graphics recently? Please add them in the comments section if you can. Thanks!

Virginia News Headlines: Thursday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Thursday, July 25. Also check out President Obama speaking at the University of Central Missouri about his “vision for rebuilding an economy that puts the middle class and those fighting to join it front and center, which includes investing in education.”

*New Research Finds Melting Arctic May Cost Global Economy $60 Trillion (So…when humans melt the Arctic, they also melt their jobs and businesses along with it. You’d think “pro-business” Republicans would care about this and take urgent action, but noooooo….)

*Another Drilling Rig Explodes in The Gulf Of Mexico (Meanwhile, anyone who thinks that offshore oil and gas drilling can be done safely anywhere, let alone in the Arctic, is nuts.)

*Plan to restrict NSA program fails in the House (In Virginia, Democratic Representatives Connolly, Scott and Moran all voted “aye.” All Republicans voted “nay” except for Morgan Griffith.)

*Senate votes to tie student loan rates to markets

*Obama goes big (“Three reasons why his latest economic effort will be different.” I’m highly skeptical, but let’s hope!)

*North Carolina Gun Owners Will Soon Be Able To Carry Firearms At Bars And Playgrounds (Just remember, the insanity happening in formerly moderate/reasonable North Carolina is coming soon to Virginia if we’re stupid enough to elect Cuccinelli/Jackson/Obenshain!)

*Gov. McDonnell launches aggressive campaign to improve his reputation (This is a joke, right?)

*Race may sway Virginia Medicaid expansion (An absolutely CRUCIAL reason to vote for Terry McAuliffe this year!)

*Virginia Businesses Aren’t Buying Cuccinelli, McAuliffe (“‘Most of the Virginia business leaders who I know are moderate Republicans,’ says Bill Crutchfield, the founder of his eponymous consumer electronics retailing company based out of Charlottesville. ‘We believe that Ken Cuccinelli is far to the right of our philosophical comfort zone…Our state’s economic development could be adversely impacted if socially extreme candidates take over our government.’ Crutchfield supported the Romney-Ryan ticket and spoke at one of their rallies last year.”)

*Virginia near bottom in spending for health care law outreach (Another big Bob McDonnell #FAIL)

*Ken Cuccinelli immigration stand varies with venue (So much for Cuckoo being a straight shooter, if anyone ever believed that crap in the first place.)

*Gov. Bob McDonnell visits with troops in Middle East (McDonnell goes to one of the few places on earth where his type of petty corruption is not only tolerated, but widely approved of – Afghanistan!)

*Probe of visa program affects Virginia governor’s race

*Some educators give F to state’s plan to grade public schools (Yep, Bob McDonnell should get an “F” for this as well…)

*Cuccinelli, McAuliffe agree to just 2 more debates

*Candidates for governor to appear at Virginia Farm Bureau forum

*McDonnell apology is a good start (“He must do more.” Yeah, a LOT more!)

*Accreditor begins probe of NSU

*Sumptuous summer weather in store today and nearly as good Friday

*Strasburg gets no help as Nats’ skid reaches six (This team can’t hit its way out of a wet paper bag, sorry to say…)

Video, Transcript: President Obama Speaks on the Economy

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Transcript on the “flip.” Overall, this was a very strong speech. The problem, as always, is the Teapublicans. Boot them from power, and this country would be in a far, far better place…investing for the future, strengthening our human and physical capital, transitioning to a clean energy economy, dealing with climate change, etc, etc. But, sadly, this country went completely insane in 2010 and put these wackos in charge of the House (plus a lot of states), and we’re going to be suffering for it for a looong time to come… 🙁

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT

ON THE ECONOMY

Knox College

Galesburg, Illinois

12:13 P.M. CDT

    THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Galesburg!  (Applause.)  Well, it’s good to be home in Illinois!  (Applause.)  It is good to be back. It’s good to be back.  Thank you.  Thank you so much, everybody. (Applause.)  Thank you.  Everybody, have a seat, have a seat.  Well, it is good to be back.

I want to, first of all, thank Knox College — (applause) — I want to thank Knox College and your president, Teresa Amott, for having me here today.  Give Teresa a big round of applause.  (Applause.)   I want to thank your Congresswoman, Cheri Bustos, who’s here.  (Applause.)  We’ve got Governor Quinn here.  (Applause.)  I’m told we’ve got your Lieutenant Governor, Sheila Simon, is here.  (Applause.)  There she is.  Attorney General Lisa Madigan is here.  (Applause.)

I see a bunch of my former colleagues, some folks who I haven’t seen in years and I’m looking forward to saying hi to.  One in particular I’ve got to mention, one of my favorites from the Illinois Senate — John Sullivan is in the house.  (Applause.)  John was one of my earliest supporters when I was running for the U.S. Senate, and it came in really handy because he’s got, like, 10 brothers and sisters, and his wife has got 10 brothers and sisters — (laughter) — so they’ve got this entire precinct just in their family.  (Laughter.)  And they all look like John — the brothers do — so he doesn’t have to go to every event.  He can just send one of his brothers out.  (Laughter.)  It is good to see him.

Dick Durbin couldn’t make it today, but he sends his best. And we love Dick.  (Applause.)  He’s doing a great job.  And we’ve got one of my favorite neighbors, the Senator from Missouri, Claire McCaskill, in the house, because we’re going to Missouri later this afternoon.  (Applause.)

And all of you are here, and it’s great to see you.  (Applause.)  And I hope everybody is having a wonderful summer.  The weather is perfect.  Whoever was in charge of that, good job. (Laughter.)

So, eight years ago, I came here to deliver the commencement address for the class of 2005.  Things were a little different back then.  For example, I had no gray hair — (laughter) — or a motorcade.  Didn’t even have a prompter.  In fact, there was a problem in terms of printing out the speech because the printer didn’t work here and we had to drive it in from somewhere.  (Laughter.)  But it was my first big speech as your newest senator.

And on the way here I was telling Cheri and Claire about how important this area was, one of the areas that I spent the most time in outside of Chicago, and how much it represented what’s best in America and folks who were willing to work hard and do right by their families.  And I came here to talk about what a changing economy was doing to the middle class — and what we, as a country, needed to do to give every American a chance to get ahead in the 21st century.

See, I had just spent a year traveling the state and listening to your stories — of proud Maytag workers losing their jobs when the plant moved down to Mexico.  (Applause.)  A lot of folks here remember that.  Of teachers whose salaries weren’t keeping up with the rising cost of groceries.  (Applause.)  Of young people who had the drive and the energy, but not the money to afford a college education.  (Applause.)  

So these were stories of families who had worked hard, believed in the American Dream, but they felt like the odds were increasingly stacked against them.  And they were right.  Things had changed.

In the period after World War II, a growing middle class was the engine of our prosperity.  Whether you owned a company, or swept its floors, or worked anywhere in between, this country offered you a basic bargain — a sense that your hard work would be rewarded with fair wages and decent benefits, the chance to buy a home, to save for retirement, and most of all, a chance to hand down a better life for your kids.

But over time, that engine began to stall — and a lot of folks here saw it — that bargain began to fray.  Technology made some jobs obsolete.  Global competition sent a lot of jobs overseas.  It became harder for unions to fight for the middle class.  Washington doled out bigger tax cuts to the very wealthy and smaller minimum wage increases for the working poor.

And so what happened was that the link between higher productivity and people’s wages and salaries was broken.  It used to be that, as companies did better, as profits went higher, workers also got a better deal.  And that started changing.  So the income of the top 1 percent nearly quadrupled from 1979 to 2007, but the typical family’s incomes barely budged.

And towards the end of those three decades, a housing bubble, credit cards, a churning financial sector was keeping the economy artificially juiced up, so sometimes it papered over some of these long-term trends.  But by the time I took office in 2009 as your President, we all know the bubble had burst, and it cost millions of Americans their jobs, and their homes, and their savings.  And I know a lot of folks in this area were hurt pretty bad.  And the decades-long erosion that had been taking place — the erosion of middle-class security — was suddenly laid bare for everybody to see.

Now, today, five years after the start of that Great Recession, America has fought its way back.  (Applause.)  We fought our way back.  Together, we saved the auto industry; took on a broken health care system.  (Applause.)  We invested in new American technologies to reverse our addiction to foreign oil.  We doubled wind and solar power.  (Applause.)  Together, we put in place tough new rules on the big banks, and protections to crack down on the worst practices of mortgage lenders and credit card companies.  (Applause.)  We changed a tax code too skewed in favor of the wealthiest at the expense of working families — so we changed that, and we locked in tax cuts for 98 percent of Americans, and we asked those at the top to pay a little bit more.  (Applause.)

So you add it all up, and over the past 40 months, our businesses have created 7.2 million new jobs.  This year, we’re off to our strongest private sector job growth since 1999.

And because we bet on this country, suddenly foreign companies are, too.  Right now, more of Honda’s cars are made in America than anyplace else on Earth.  (Applause.)  Airbus, the European aircraft company, they’re building new planes in Alabama.  (Applause.)  And American companies like Ford are replacing outsourcing with insourcing — they’re bringing jobs back home.  (Applause.)

We sell more products made in America to the rest of the world than ever before.  We produce more natural gas than any country on Earth.  We’re about to produce more of our own oil than we buy from abroad for the first time in nearly 20 years.  (Applause.)  The cost of health care is growing at its slowest rate in 50 years.  (Applause.)  And our deficits are falling at the fastest rate in 60 years.  (Applause.)

So thanks to the grit and resilience and determination of the American people — of folks like you — we’ve been able to clear away the rubble from the financial crisis.  We started to lay a new foundation for stronger, more durable economic growth. And it’s happening in our own personal lives as well, right?  A lot of us tightened our belts, shed debt, maybe cut up a couple of credit cards, refocused on those things that really matter.

As a country, we’ve recovered faster and gone further than most other advanced nations in the world.  With new American revolutions in energy and technology and manufacturing and health care, we’re actually poised to reverse the forces that battered the middle class for so long, and start building an economy where everyone who works hard can get ahead.

But — and here’s the big “but” — I’m here to tell you today that we’re not there yet.  We all know that.  We’re not there yet.  We’ve got more work to do.  Even though our businesses are creating new jobs and have broken record profits, nearly all the income gains of the past 10 years have continued to flow to the top 1 percent.  The average CEO has gotten a raise of nearly 40 percent since 2009.  The average American earns less than he or she did in 1999.  And companies continue to hold back on hiring those who’ve been out of work for some time.

Today, more students are earning their degree, but soaring costs saddle them with unsustainable debt.  Health care costs are slowing down, but a lot of working families haven’t seen any of those savings yet.  The stock market rebound helped a lot of families get back much of what they had lost in their 401(k)s, but millions of Americans still have no idea how they’re going to be able to retire.

So in many ways, the trends that I spoke about here in 2005 — eight years ago — the trend of a winner-take-all economy where a few are doing better and better and better, while everybody else just treads water — those trends have been made worse by the recession.  And that’s a problem.

This growing inequality not just of result, inequality of opportunity — this growing inequality is not just morally wrong, it’s bad economics.  Because when middle-class families have less to spend, guess what, businesses have fewer consumers.  When wealth concentrates at the very top, it can inflate unstable bubbles that threaten the economy.  When the rungs on the ladder of opportunity grow farther and farther apart, it undermines the very essence of America — that idea that if you work hard you can make it here.

And that’s why reversing these trends has to be Washington’s highest priority.  (Applause.)  It has to be Washington’s highest priority.  (Applause.)  It’s certainly my highest priority.  (Applause.)

Unfortunately, over the past couple of years, in particular, Washington hasn’t just ignored this problem; too often, Washington has made things worse.  (Applause.)

And I have to say that — because I’m looking around the room — I’ve got some friends here not just who are Democrats,  I’ve got some friends here who are Republicans — (applause) — and I worked with in the state legislature and they did great work.  But right now, what we’ve got in Washington, we’ve seen a sizable group of Republican lawmakers suggest that they wouldn’t vote to pay the very bills that Congress rang up.  And that fiasco harmed a fragile recovery in 2011 and we can’t afford to repeat that.

Then, rather than reduce our deficits with a scalpel — by cutting out programs we don’t need, fixing ones that we do need that maybe are in need of reform, making government more efficient — instead of doing that, we’ve got folks who’ve insisted on leaving in place a meat cleaver called the sequester that’s cost jobs.  It’s harmed growth.  It’s hurt our military.  It’s gutted investments in education and science and medical research.  (Applause.)

Almost every credible economist will tell you it’s been a huge drag on this recovery.  And it means that we’re underinvesting in the things that this country needs to make it a magnet for good jobs.

Then, over the last six months, this gridlock has gotten worse.  I didn’t think that was possible.  (Laughter.)  The good news is a growing number of Republican senators are looking to join their Democratic counterparts and try to get things done in the Senate.  So that’s good news.  (Applause.)  For example, they worked together on an immigration bill that economists say will boost our economy by more than a trillion dollars, strengthen border security, make the system work.

But you’ve got a faction of Republicans in the House who won’t even give that bill a vote.  And that same group gutted a farm bill that America’s farmers depend on, but also America’s most vulnerable children depend on.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  And if you ask some of these folks, some of these folks mostly in the House, about their economic agenda how it is that they’ll strengthen the middle class, they’ll shift the topic to “out-of-control government spending” — despite the fact that we’ve cut the deficit by nearly half as a share of the economy since I took office.  (Applause.)

Or they’ll talk about government assistance for the poor, despite the fact that they’ve already cut early education for vulnerable kids.  They’ve already cut insurance for people who’ve lost their jobs through no fault of their own.  Or they’ll bring up Obamacare — this is tried and true — despite the fact that our businesses have created nearly twice as many jobs in this recovery as businesses had at the same point in the last recovery when there was no Obamacare.  (Applause.)

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  My daughter has insurance now!

THE PRESIDENT:  I appreciate that.  (Applause.)  That’s what this is about.  That’s what this is about.  (Applause.)  That’s what we’ve been fighting for.  

But with this endless parade of distractions and political posturing and phony scandals, Washington has taken its eye off the ball.  And I am here to say this needs to stop.  (Applause.) This needs to stop.

This moment does not require short-term thinking.  It does not require having the same old stale debates.  Our focus has to be on the basic economic issues that matter most to you, the people we represent.  That’s what we have to spend our time on and our energy on and our focus on.  (Applause.)

And as Washington prepares to enter another budget debate, the stakes for our middle class and everybody who is fighting to get into the middle class could not be higher.  The countries that are passive in the face of a global economy, those countries will lose the competition for good jobs.  They will lose the competition for high living standards.  That’s why America has to make the investments necessary to promote long-term growth and shared prosperity — rebuilding our manufacturing base, educating our workforce, upgrading our transportation systems, upgrading our information networks.  (Applause.)  That’s what we need to be talking about.  That’s what Washington needs to be focused on.

And that’s why, over the next several weeks, in towns across this country, I will be engaging the American people in this debate.  (Applause.)  I’ll lay out my ideas for how we build on the cornerstones of what it means to be middle class in America, and what it takes to work your way into the middle class in America:  Job security, with good wages and durable industries.  A good education.   A home to call your own.  Affordable health care when you get sick.  (Applause.)  A secure retirement even if you’re not rich.  Reducing poverty.  Reducing inequality.  Growing opportunity.  That’s what we need.  (Applause.)  That’s what we need.  That’s what we need right now.  That’s what we need to be focused on.  (Applause.)  

Now, some of these ideas I’ve talked about before.  Some of the ideas I offer will be new.  Some will require Congress.  Some I will pursue on my own.  (Applause.)  Some ideas will benefit folks right away.  Some will take years to fully implement.  But the key is to break through the tendency in Washington to just bounce from crisis to crisis.  What we need is not a three-month plan, or even a three-year plan; we need a long-term American strategy, based on steady, persistent effort, to reverse the forces that have conspired against the middle class for decades. That has to be our project.  (Applause.)

Now, of course, we’ll keep pressing on other key priorities. I want to get this immigration bill done.  We still need to work on reducing gun violence.  (Applause.)  We’ve got to continue to end the war in Afghanistan, rebalance our fight against al Qaeda. (Applause.)  We need to combat climate change.  We’ve got to standing up for civil rights.  We’ve got to stand up for women’s rights.  (Applause.)

So all those issues are important, and we’ll be fighting on every one of those issues.  But if we don’t have a growing, thriving middle class then we won’t have the resources to solve a lot of these problems.  We won’t have the resolve, the optimism, the sense of unity that we need to solve many of these other issues.

Now, in this effort, I will look to work with Republicans as well as Democrats wherever I can.  And I sincerely believe that there are members of both parties who understand this moment, understand what’s at stake, and I will welcome ideas from anybody across the political spectrum.  But I will not allow gridlock, or inaction, or willful indifference to get in our way.  (Applause.)

That means whatever executive authority I have to help the middle class, I’ll use it.  (Applause.)  Where I can’t act on my own and Congress isn’t cooperating, I’ll pick up the phone — I’ll call CEOs; I’ll call philanthropists; I’ll call college presidents; I’ll call labor leaders.  I’ll call anybody who can help — and enlist them in our efforts.  (Applause.)

Because the choices that we, the people, make right now will determine whether or not every American has a fighting chance in the 21st century.  And it will lay the foundation for our children’s future, our grandchildren’s future, for all Americans.

So let me give you a quick preview of what I’ll be fighting for and why.  The first cornerstone of a strong, growing middle class has to be, as I said before, an economy that generates more good jobs in durable, growing industries.  That’s how this area was built.  That’s how America prospered.  Because anybody who was willing to work, they could go out there and they could find themselves a job, and they could build a life for themselves and their family.

Now, over the past four years, for the first time since the 1990s, the number of American manufacturing jobs has actually gone up instead of down.  That’s the good news.  (Applause.)  But we can do more.  So I’m going to push new initiatives to help more manufacturers bring more jobs back to the United States.  (Applause.)  We’re going to continue to focus on strategies to make sure our tax code rewards companies that are not shipping jobs overseas, but creating jobs right here in the United States of America.  (Applause.)

We want to make sure that — we’re going to create strategies to make sure that good jobs in wind and solar and natural gas that are lowering costs and, at the same time, reducing dangerous carbon pollution happen right here in the United States.  (Applause.)

And something that Cheri and I were talking about on the way over here — I’m going to be pushing to open more manufacturing innovation institutes that turn regions left behind by global competition into global centers of cutting-edge jobs.  So let’s tell the world that America is open for business.  (Applause.)  I know there’s an old site right here in Galesburg, over on Monmouth Boulevard — let’s put some folks to work.  (Applause.)

Tomorrow, I’ll also visit the Port of Jacksonville, Florida to offer new ideas for doing what America has always done best, which is building things.  Pat and I were talking before I came  — backstage — Pat Quinn — he was talking about how I came over the Don Moffitt Bridge.  (Applause.)  But we’ve got work to do all across the country.  We’ve got ports that aren’t ready for the new supertankers that are going to begin passing through the new Panama Canal in two years’ time.  If we don’t get that done, those tankers are going to go someplace else.  We’ve got more than 100,000 bridges that are old enough to qualify for Medicare. (Laughter and applause.)

Businesses depend on our transportation systems, on our power grids, on our communications networks.  And rebuilding them creates good-paying jobs right now that can’t be outsourced.  (Applause.)

And by the way, this isn’t a Democratic idea.  Republicans built a lot of stuff.  This is the Land of Lincoln.  Lincoln was all about building stuff — first Republican President.  (Applause.)  And yet, as a share of our economy, we invest less in our infrastructure than we did two decades ago.  And that’s inefficient at a time when it’s as cheap as it’s been since the 1950s to build things.  It’s inexcusable at a time when so many of the workers who build stuff for a living are sitting at home waiting for a call.

The longer we put this off, the more expensive it will be and the less competitive we will be.  Businesses of tomorrow will not locate near old roads and outdated ports.  They’ll relocate to places with high-speed Internet, and high-tech schools, and systems that move air and auto traffic faster, and not to mention will get parents home quicker from work because we’ll be eliminating some of these traffic jams.  And we can watch all of that happen in other countries, and start falling behind, or we can choose to make it happen right here, in the United States.  (Applause.)

In an age when jobs know no borders, companies are also going to seek out the countries that boast the most talented citizens, and they’ll reward folks who have the skills and the talents they need — they’ll reward those folks with good pay.

The days when the wages for a worker with a high school degree could keep pace with the earnings of somebody who got some sort of higher education — those days are over.  Everybody here knows that.  There are a whole bunch of folks here whose dads or grandpas worked at a plant, didn’t need a high school education. You could just go there.  If you were willing to work hard, you might be able to get two jobs.  And you could support your family, have a vacation, own your home.  But technology and global competition, they’re not going away.  Those old days aren’t coming back.

So we can either throw up our hands and resign ourselves to diminishing living standards, or we can do what America has always done, which is adapt, and pull together, and fight back, and win.  That’s what we have to do.  (Applause.)

And that brings me to the second cornerstone of a strong middle class — and everybody here knows it — an education that prepares our children and our workers for the global competition that they’re going to face.  (Applause.)  And if you think education is expensive, wait until you see how much ignorance costs in the 21st century.  (Laughter and applause.)

If we don’t make this investment, we’re going to put our kids, our workers, and our country at a competitive disadvantage for decades.  So we have to begin in the earliest years.  And that’s why I’m going to keep pushing to make high-quality preschool available for every 4-year-old in America.  (Applause.) Not just because we know it works for our kids, but because it provides a vital support system for working parents.

And I’m going to take action in the education area to spur innovation that don’t require Congress.  (Applause.)  So, today, for example, as we speak, federal agencies are moving on my plan to connect 99 percent of America’s students to high-speed Internet over the next five years.  We’re making that happen right now.  (Applause.)  We’ve already begun meeting with business leaders and tech entrepreneurs and innovative educators to identify the best ideas for redesigning our high schools so that they teach the skills required for a high-tech economy.  

And we’re also going to keep pushing new efforts to train workers for changing jobs.  So here in Galesburg, for example, a lot of the workers that were laid off at Maytag chose to enroll in retraining programs like the one at Carl Sandburg College.  (Applause.)  And while it didn’t pay off for everyone, a lot of the folks who were retrained found jobs that suited them even better and paid even more than the ones they had lost.

And that’s why I’ve asked Congress to start a Community College to Career initiative, so that workers can earn the skills that high-tech jobs demand without leaving their hometown.  (Applause.)  And I’m going to challenge CEOs from some of America’s best companies to hire more Americans who’ve got what it takes to fill that job opening but have been laid off for so long that nobody is giving their résumé an honest look.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  More talent!

THE PRESIDENT:  That, too.

I’m also going to use the power of my office over the next few months to highlight a topic that’s straining the budgets of just about every American family — and that’s the soaring cost of higher education.  (Applause.)  Everybody is touched by this, including your President, who had a whole bunch of loans he had to pay off.  (Laughter.)

Three years ago, I worked with Democrats to reform the student loan system so that taxpayer dollars stopped padding the pockets of big banks, and instead helped more kids afford college.  (Applause.)  Then, I capped loan repayments at 10 percent of monthly incomes for responsible borrowers, so that if somebody graduated and they decided to take a teaching job, for example, that didn’t pay a lot of money, they knew that they were never going to have to pay more than 10 percent of their income and they could afford to go into a profession that they loved.  That’s in place right now.  (Applause.)  And this week, we’re working with both parties to reverse the doubling of student loan rates that happened a few weeks ago because of congressional inaction.  (Applause.)

So this is all a good start — but it isn’t enough.  Families and taxpayers can’t just keep paying more and more and more into an undisciplined system where costs just keep on going up and up and up.  We’ll never have enough loan money, we’ll never have enough grant money, to keep up with costs that are going up 5, 6, 7 percent a year.  We’ve got to get more out of what we pay for.

Now, some colleges are testing new approaches to shorten the path to a degree, or blending teaching with online learning to help students master material and earn credits in less time.  In some states, they’re testing new ways to fund college based not just on how many students enroll, but how many of them graduate, how well did they do.

So this afternoon, I’ll visit the University of Central Missouri to highlight their efforts to deliver more bang for the buck to their students.  And in the coming months, I will lay out an aggressive strategy to shake up the system, tackle rising costs, and improve value for middle-class students and their families.  It is critical that we make sure that college is affordable for every single American who’s willing to work for it.  (Applause.)

Now, so you’ve got a good job; you get a good education — those have always been the key stepping stones into the middle class.  But a home of your own has always been the clearest expression of middle-class security.  For most families, that’s your biggest asset.  For most families, that’s where your life’s work has been invested.  And that changed during the crisis, when we saw millions of middle-class families experience their home values plummeting.  The good news is over the past four years, we’ve helped more responsible homeowners stay in their homes.  And today, sales are up and prices are up, and fewer Americans see their homes underwater.

But we’re not done yet.  The key now is to encourage homeownership that isn’t based on unrealistic bubbles, but instead is based on a solid foundation, where buyers and lenders play by the same set of rules, rules that are clear and transparent and fair.

So already, I’ve asked Congress to pass a really good, bipartisan idea — one that was championed, by the way, by Mitt Romney’s economic advisor — and this is the idea to give every homeowner the chance to refinance their mortgage while rates are still low so they can save thousands of dollars a year.  (Applause.)  It will be like a tax cut for families who can refinance.

I’m also acting on my own to cut red tape for responsible families who want to get a mortgage but the bank is saying no.  We’ll work with both parties to turn the page on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and build a housing finance system that’s rock-solid for future generations.

So we’ve got more work to do to strengthen homeownership in this country.  But along with homeownership, the fourth cornerstone of what it means to be middle class in this country is a secure retirement.  (Applause.)  I hear from too many people across the country, face to face or in letters that they send me, that they feel as if retirement is just receding from their grasp.  It’s getting farther and farther away.  They can’t see it.

Now, today, a rising stock market has millions of retirement balances going up, and some of the losses that had taken place during the financial crisis have been recovered.  But we still live with an upside-down system where those at the top, folks like me, get generous tax incentives to save, while tens of millions of hardworking Americans who are struggling, they get none of those breaks at all.  So as we work to reform our tax code, we should find new ways to make it easier for workers to put away money, and free middle-class families from the fear that they won’t be able to retire.  (Applause.)

And if Congress is looking for a bipartisan place to get started, I should just say they don’t have to look far.  We mentioned immigration reform before.  Economists show that immigration reform makes undocumented workers pay their full share of taxes, and that actually shores up the Social Security system for years.  So we should get that done.  (Applause.)

Good job; good education for your kids; home of your own; secure retirement.

Fifth, I’m going to keep focusing on health care — (applause) — because middle-class families and small business owners deserve the security of knowing that neither an accident or an illness is going to threaten the dreams that you’ve worked a lifetime to build.

As we speak, we’re well on our way to fully implementing the Affordable Care Act.  (Applause.)  We’re going to implement it.  Now, if you’re one of the 85 percent of Americans who already have health insurance either through the job or Medicare or Medicaid, you don’t have to do anything, but you do have new benefits and better protections than you did before.  You may not know it, but you do.  Free checkups, mammograms, discounted medicines if you’re on Medicare — that’s what the Affordable Care Act means.  You’re already getting a better deal.  No lifetime limits.

If you don’t have health insurance, then starting on October 1st, private plans will actually compete for your business, and you’ll be able to comparison-shop online.  There will be a marketplace online, just like you’d buy a flat-screen TV or plane tickets or anything else you’re doing online, and you’ll be able to buy an insurance package that fits your budget and is right for you.

And if you’re one of the up to half of all Americans who’ve been sick or have a preexisting condition — if you look at this auditorium, about half of you probably have a preexisting condition that insurance companies could use to not give you insurance if you lost your job or lost your insurance — well, this law means that beginning January 1st, insurance companies will finally have to cover you and charge you the same rates as everybody else, even if you have a preexisting condition.  (Applause.)  That’s what the Affordable Care Act does.  That’s what it does.  (Applause.)  

Now, look, I know because I’ve been living it that there are folks out there who are actively working to make this law fail.  And I don’t always understand exactly what their logic is here, why they think giving insurance to folks who don’t have it and making folks with insurance a little more secure, why they think that’s a bad thing.  But despite the politically motivated misinformation campaign, the states that have committed themselves to making this law work are finding that competition and choice are actually pushing costs down.

So just last week, New York announced that premiums for consumers who buy their insurance in these online marketplaces will be at least 50 percent lower than what they’re paying today — 50 percent lower.  (Applause.)  So folks’ premiums in the individual market will drop by 50 percent.  And for them and for the millions of Americans who’ve been able to cover their sick kids for the first time — like this gentlemen who just said his daughter has got health insurance — or have been able to cover their employees more cheaply, or are able to have their kids who are younger than — who are 25 or 26 stay on their parents’ plan — (applause) — for all those folks, you’ll have the security of knowing that everything you’ve worked hard for is no longer one illness away from being wiped out.  (Applause.)  

Finally, as we work to strengthen these cornerstones of middle-class security — good job with decent wages and benefits, a good education, home of your own, retirement security, health care security — I’m going to make the case for why we’ve got to rebuild ladders of opportunity for all those Americans who haven’t quite made it yet — who are working hard but are still suffering poverty wages, who are struggling to get full-time work.  (Applause.)

There are a lot of folks who are still struggling out here, too many people in poverty.  Here in America, we’ve never guaranteed success — that’s not what we do.  More than some other countries, we expect people to be self-reliant.  Nobody is going to do something for you.  (Applause.)  We’ve tolerated a little more inequality for the sake of a more dynamic, more adaptable economy.  That’s all for the good.  But that idea has always been combined with a commitment to equality of opportunity to upward mobility — the idea that no matter how poor you started, if you’re willing to work hard and discipline yourself and defer gratification, you can make it, too.  That’s the American idea.  (Applause.)  

Unfortunately, opportunities for upward mobility in America have gotten harder to find over the past 30 years.  And that’s a betrayal of the American idea.  And that’s why we have to do a lot more to give every American the chance to work their way into the middle class.

The best defense against all of these forces — global competition, economic polarization — is the strength of the community.  So we need a new push to rebuild rundown neighborhoods.  (Applause.)  We need new partnerships with some of the hardest-hit towns in America to get them back on their feet.  And because no one who works full-time in America should have to live in poverty, I am going to keep making the case that we need to raise the minimum wage — (applause) — because it’s lower right now than it was when Ronald Reagan took office.  It’s time for the minimum wage to go up.  (Applause.)

We’re not a people who allow chance of birth to decide life’s biggest winners or losers.  And after years in which we’ve seen how easy it can be for any of us to fall on hard times — folks in Galesburg, folks in the Quad Cities, you know there are good people who work hard and sometimes they get a bad break.  A plant leaves.  Somebody gets sick.  Somebody loses a home.  We’ve seen it in our family, in our friends and our neighbors.  We’ve seen it happen.  And that means we cannot turn our backs when bad breaks hit any of our fellow citizens.

So good jobs; a better bargain for the middle class and the folks who are working to get into the middle class; an economy that grows from the middle out, not the top down — that’s where I will focus my energies.  (Applause.)  That’s where I will focus my energies not just for the next few months, but for the remainder of my presidency.

These are the plans that I’ll lay out across this country.  But I won’t be able to do it alone, so I’m going to be calling on all of us to take up this cause.  We’ll need our businesses, who are some of the best in the world, to pressure Congress to invest in our future.  And I’ll be asking our businesses to set an example by providing decent wages and salaries to their own employees.  And I’m going to highlight the ones that do just that.

There are companies like Costco, which pays good wages and offers good benefits.  (Applause.)  Companies like — there are companies like the Container Store, that prides itself on training its employees and on employee satisfaction — because these companies prove that it’s not just good for the employees, it’s good for their businesses to treat workers well.  It’s good for America.  (Applause.)

So I’m going to be calling on the private sector to step up. I will be saying to Democrats we’ve got to question some of our old assumptions.  We’ve got to be willing to redesign or get rid of programs that don’t work as well as they should.  (Applause.) We’ve got to be willing to — we’ve got to embrace changes to cherished priorities so that they work better in this new age.  We can’t just — Democrats can’t just stand pat and just defend whatever government is doing.  If we believe that government can give the middle class a fair shot in this new century — and I believe that — we’ve an obligation to prove it.  And that means that we’ve got to be open to new ways of doing things.

And we’ll need Republicans in Congress to set aside short-term politics and work with me to find common ground.  (Applause.)

It’s interesting, in the run-up to this speech, a lot of reporters say that, well, Mr. President, these are all good ideas, but some of you’ve said before; some of them sound great, but you can’t get those through Congress.  Republicans won’t agree with you.  And I say, look, the fact is there are Republicans in Congress right now who privately agree with me on a lot of the ideas I’ll be proposing.  I know because they’ve said so.  But they worry they’ll face swift political retaliation for cooperating with me.

Now, there are others who will dismiss every idea I put forward either because they’re playing to their most strident supporters, or in some cases because, sincerely, they have a fundamentally different vision for America — one that says inequality is both inevitable and just; one that says an unfettered free market without any restraints inevitably produces the best outcomes, regardless of the pain and uncertainty imposed on ordinary families; and government is the problem and we should just shrink it as small as we can.

In either case, I say to these members of Congress:  I’m laying out my ideas to give the middle class a better shot.  So now it’s time for you to lay out your ideas.  (Applause.)  You can’t just be against something.  You got to be for something.  (Applause.)

Even if you think I’ve done everything wrong, the trends I just talked about were happening well before I took office.  So it’s not enough for you just to oppose me.  You got to be for something.  What are your ideas?  If you’re willing to work with me to strengthen American manufacturing and rebuild this country’s infrastructure, let’s go.  If you’ve got better ideas to bring down the cost of college for working families, let’s hear them.  If you think you have a better plan for making sure that every American has the security of quality, affordable health care, then stop taking meaningless repeal votes, and share your concrete ideas with the country.  (Applause.)

Repealing Obamacare and cutting spending is not an economic plan.  It’s not.

If you’re serious about a balanced, long-term fiscal plan that replaces the mindless cuts currently in place, or if you’re interested in tax reform that closes corporate loopholes and gives working families a better deal, I’m ready to work.  (Applause.)  But you should know that I will not accept deals that don’t meet the basic test of strengthening the prospects of hardworking families.  This is the agenda we have to be working on.  (Applause.)

We’ve come a long way since I first took office.  (Applause.)  As a country, we’re older and wiser.  I don’t know if I’m wiser, but I’m certainly older.  (Laughter.)  And as long as Congress doesn’t manufacture another crisis — as long as we don’t shut down the government just because I’m for keeping it open — (laughter) — as long as we don’t risk a U.S. default over paying bills that we’ve already racked up, something that we’ve never done — we can probably muddle along without taking bold action.  If we stand pat and we don’t do any of the things I talked about, our economy will grow, although slower than it should.  New businesses will form.  The unemployment rate will probably tick down a little bit.  Just by virtue of our size and our natural resources and, most of all, because of the talent of our people, America will remain a world power, and the majority of us will figure out how to get by.

But you know what, that’s our choice.  If we just stand by and do nothing in the face of immense change, understand that part of our character will be lost.  Our founding precepts about wide-open opportunity, each generation doing better than the last — that will be a myth, not reality.  The position of the middle class will erode further.  Inequality will continue to increase. Money’s power will distort our politics even more.

Social tensions will rise, as various groups fight to hold on to what they have, or start blaming somebody else for why their position isn’t improving.  And the fundamental optimism that’s always propelled us forward will give way to cynicism or nostalgia.

And that’s not the vision I have for this country.  It’s not the vision you have for this country.  That’s not the America we know.  That’s not the vision we should be settling for.  That’s not a vision we should be passing on to our children.

I have now run my last campaign.  I do not intend to wait until the next campaign or the next President before tackling the issues that matter.  I care about one thing and one thing only, and that’s how to use every minute — (applause) — the only thing I care about is how to use every minute of the remaining 1,276 days of my term — (laughter) — to make this country work for working Americans again.  (Applause.)  That’s all I care about.  I don’t have another election.  (Applause.)

Because I’ll tell you, Galesburg, that’s where I believe America needs to go.  I believe that’s where the American people want to go.  And it may seem hard today, but if we’re willing to take a few bold steps — if Washington will just shake off its complacency and set aside the kind of slash-and-burn partisanship that we’ve just seen for way too long — if we just make some common-sense decisions, our economy will be stronger a year from now.  It will be stronger five years from now.  It will be stronger 10 years from now.  (Applause.)

If we focus on what matters, then more Americans will know the pride of that first paycheck.  More Americans will have the satisfaction of flipping the sign to “Open” on their own business.  More Americans will have the joy of scratching the height of their kid on that door of their brand-new home.  (Applause.)  

And in the end, isn’t that what makes us special?  It’s not the ability to generate incredible wealth for the few; it’s our ability to give everybody a chance to pursue their own true measure of happiness.  (Applause.)  We haven’t just wanted success for ourselves — we want it for our neighbors, too.  (Applause.)

When we think about our own communities — we’re not a mean people; we’re not a selfish people; we’re not a people that just looks out for “number one.”  Why should our politics reflect those kinds of values?  That’s why we don’t call it John’s dream or Susie’s dream or Barack’s dream or Pat’s dream — we call it the American Dream.  And that’s what makes this country special  — the idea that no matter who you are or what you look like or where you come from or who you love, you can make it if you try. (Applause.)  That’s what we’re fighting for.

So, yes, Congress is tough right now, but that’s not going to stop me.  We’re going to do everything we can, wherever we can, with or without Congress, to make things happen.  We’re going to go on the road and talk to you, and you’ll have ideas, and we want to see which ones we can implement.  But we’re going to focus on this thing that matters.

One of America’s greatest writers, Carl Sandburg, born right here in Galesburg over a century ago — (applause) — he saw the railroads bring the world to the prairie, and then the prairie sent out its bounty to the world.  And he saw the advent of new industries, new technologies, and he watched populations shift.  He saw fortunes made and lost.  And he saw how change could be painful — how a new age could unsettle long-held customs and ways of life.  But he had that frontier optimism, and so he saw something more on the horizon.  And he wrote, “I speak of new cities and new people.  The past is a bucket of ashes.  Yesterday is a wind gone down, a sun dropped in the west.  There is only an ocean of tomorrows, a sky of tomorrows.”

Well, America, we’ve made it through the worst of yesterday’s winds.  We just have to have the courage to keep moving forward.  We’ve got to set our eyes on the horizon.  We will find an ocean of tomorrows.  We will find a sky of tomorrows for the American people and for this great country that we love.

So thank you.  God bless you.  And God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)

                       END                1:17 P.M. CDT