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Virginia News Headlines: Saturday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Saturday, January 12. Also, check out President Obama’s weekly address, this one on ending the war in Afghanistan.

*Senate Dems tell Obama to bypass GOP on debt (“President should take ‘all legal steps’ to avoid default if lawmakers cannot agree to raise the debt ceiling, they say, even ‘without Congressional approval.'”)

*A likely end to the Rockefeller dynasty

*Gun control proposals hardly draconian (Nope, they’re just no-brainer, commonsense things like background checks on anyone buying a gun. Duh.)

*Virginia must take lead in fighting sea level rise, report says (Duh! And no, Virginian Pilot, global warming isn’t “politically charged,” it’s a scientific matter that only a few wackos and fossil fuel industry “deniers” work to turn into a “controversy.”)

*The Dumb and Dumber Transportation Funding Policy (Let’s face it, Bob McDonnell simply isn’t a very bright guy. Nor is he a leader. Other than that, he rawks!!! LOL)

*One Mile Forward, Two Miles Backwards

*Kaine: Common ground can be found as lawmakers consider gun control

*Virginia, still running on fumes (Interesting point, that cutting Virginia’s gasoline tax might not result in lower gasoline prices, at least not significantly lower, in Virginia.)

*Gov. Bob McDonnell will not stop Virginia killer’s execution

*Many drivers would face higher sales tax – and no break on fuel

*Cuccinelli Won’t Have To Submit Petitions, But McAuliffe Will (And So Would Bolling)

*Rights restoration finds new support (What are the chances, though, of this idea making it anywhere in the crazy/nasty Teapublican House of Delegates?)

*Roanoke chamber gets behind McDonnell transportation plan (Dumb and dumber.)

*McDonnell declines to block execution of prisoner who said he wants to die

*McAuliffe hits Cuccinelli on “go to jail” contraception protest remarks

*AG outlines legislative agenda

*Ruff: Hunters should be out of season for drones

*The good ones make it back (“Yes, Robert Griffin III suffered a horrific injury. But his career is hardly in jeopardy – historical evidence says so. “)

The trouble with natural gas

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Natural gas was supposed to be the answer to all our energy dreams. It’s produced in America, cheap, plentiful, and guilt-free, like the fuel version of Diet Coke. In the dream, it is a lifeline for struggling family farms that can make money leasing their mineral rights. It will wean us off dirty coal for generating electricity, and yet be so cheap that poor people don’t have to be cold at night. It will power the American manufacturing renaissance. It will bring down carbon emissions and stop global warming from happening, making it the savior of the whole world, including Greenland’s glaciers, the coral reefs, the polar bears, and civilization itself.

The new technique of natural gas extraction known as hydraulic fracturing with horizontal drilling, or “fracking,” has unlocked vast supplies of methane trapped in shale formations across the country, driving down the price of natural gas to historic lows and promising a supply that the government estimates will last 92 years at current consumption levels. Electric utilities have been switching from dirty coal to “clean natural gas” at record rates.

But instead of ushering in a future of boundless clean energy, natural gas has been setting off alarm bells all over the country. First, there are those family farmers and other landowners who leased their land for fracking and now say it has contaminated wells and surface water, polluted the air, killed farm animals, ruined crops, and made their lives a living hell with all-day, all-night truck traffic.

The heck with them. They signed contracts. Caveat greedy landowner, right?

Let’s offer a little more sympathy to their neighbors who suffer the consequences without getting lease payments. But keep in mind that the gas industry denies all charges. None of this happened. Or if it did, the ruined water wells were due to naturally-occurring methane or other chemicals in the area, and it is an unlucky coincidence that the pollutants reached hazardous levels in the drinking water aquifer shortly after a gas company drilled down through it en route to the natural gas thousands of feet below, with impenetrable rock layers in between.

I once heard a gas industry lobbyist inform a room full of conference attendees that it was impossible for a fracking operation to contaminate drinking water. I was reminded of the way the computer geeks in college used to insist there was no such thing as a computer error. “I’m sure you’re right,” the rest of us would answer humbly. “Now can you help us recover the data?”

At least the computer geeks would then get busy fixing the bugs so that the next time the system crashed, it was from an entirely different cause. Gas company lobbyists have been stuck at denial, and it has only done them damage with the public. Admitting to a bad well casing seems far preferable to driving a now-widespread belief that methane is migrating up through rock fissures caused by fracking.

As for the other complaints-the 24-7 truck traffic, extra air pollution from operations, polluted wastewater, and occasional surface spills-the response from the gas industry and its friends has been that this is the price of progress. Industry is not pretty. Get over it. Who entitled you to a quiet life in the countryside?

But another alarm bell has been ringing, and it gets progressively louder. This one warns that drilling for natural gas, far from being the answer to climate change, may actually be making it worse. The problem is one of  “fugitive” emissions, which sounds vaguely criminal and exciting, but simply refers to the small percentage of natural gas that escapes into the atmosphere at drilling sites. Methane, the major ingredient of natural gas, is a greenhouse gas that is much shorter-acting than carbon dioxide but twenty-five times more powerful. If recent analyses prove correct, the amount of methane that escapes during the fracking process may be enough to make natural gas worse than coal as a driver of climate change. This is especially unhappy news given that natural gas integrates well with more variable energy sources like wind and solar, and environmentalists had been counting on it to help in the transition to a future powered mainly by renewable energy.

The trillion-dollar question is whether all these problems are inherent in natural gas drilling, or whether the gas companies could solve them if they put their minds to it. After all, wind energy companies have shown they can be responsive to environmental concerns and still grow as an industry. Environmentalists have turned from being the biggest critics of wind energy to its biggest advocates. There’s no rule saying gas drillers have to stonewall, or that the companies with the best operations have to support those drillers whose operations threaten communities and the climate.

Drilling companies don’t want methane to escape, obviously, because that is lost revenue for them. But neither do they seem to be making heroic efforts to monitor and prevent fugitive emissions. A few companies have been using innovative approaches to solve other problems, however. One has developed a method that uses propane as the fracking fluid, saving millions of gallons of fresh water for every well. The propane returns to the surface with the gas to be reused in a virtuous cycle.

Unfortunately, this method turns out to be more expensive than using water, which is often free if you grab it before anyone else realizes they might need it. So while you have to admire the elegance of the propane solution, you can’t really expect any self-respecting capitalist to adopt it just because it is better for society in general.

The same is true of an experimental approach that uses CO2 as the fracking medium. When water is the medium, most of what is injected remains underground permanently. CO2 seems to behave the same way, suggesting that the fracking wells might be able to sequester enough carbon underground to offset much of the CO2 that is emitted when the gas is burned. Coupled with carbon capture technology at plants burning natural gas for electricity, this technique would significantly lower the carbon footprint of natural gas. Whether it is enough to offset the problem of fugitive methane emissions is unclear.

But CO2 is already used in oil extraction, and drilling companies can’t get enough of it as it is, because carbon capture is expensive. Sure, it’s not as expensive as adapting our coastal cities to rising sea levels caused by climate change, but that’s a cost to society; carbon capture is a cost to industry. Any gas company or utility that adopts more expensive methods than its competitors, just because it’s better for society, won’t be around for long.

Capitalism can’t solve this problem alone, or any of the other pollution issues posed by natural gas extraction. Nor are individual states able to regulate practices effectively, because companies that face higher costs in a well-regulated state will move to states with more lax regulations in order to retain their competitive position.

The only effective answer is for the federal government to impose a set of best practices that apply to all members of the industry nationwide, so the good actors aren’t placed at a competitive disadvantage. The requirements would include extraction practices that minimize the risk of groundwater and surface water contamination, reduce air pollution, and prevent the escape of methane into the air. They would provide for monitoring and analysis, so regulators and industry would know where, when and how to take corrective measures. They would also cover the consumption end of the cycle, requiring carbon capture technology for all new fossil-fueled electric generation, and ensuring that the costs to society are borne by the industry.

This isn’t a radical idea, by the way. It is how we used to approach industry-wide problems, back before fossil fuel lobbyists reframed regulation as a dirty word that meant we were no longer a free people. The natural gas industry is now in a hugely dominant position over other fossil fuels. They can afford to implement rigorous best practices across the board and still retain a competitive edge. They should be lobbying to make them universal, not fighting efforts to regulate.

The alarms bells are growing louder. Will the gas industry rise to meet the emergency, or just keep trying to cut the wires?

Sen. Mark Herring: No Way I’ll Be Part of Any “Grand Bargain” on Hushing Up GOP War on Women

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The HuffPo is out with a potentially explosive story, assuming that it’s accurate. Check this out.

Republican state legislators in Virginia want so badly for the public to forget about the state’s recent legislative battles over abortion that they have tried to strike a deal with Democrats to keep them quiet, a Democratic aide told The Huffington Post on Friday.

According to the legislative aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity, Virginia Senate Majority Leader Tommy Norment (R) began meeting with Senate Minority Leader Dick Saslaw (D) in early December to discuss what state lawmakers have been referring to as a “grand bargain” on women’s issues. According to the terms of the alleged deal, Democrats would lay low on the abortion issue in the media and drop efforts to repeal controversial anti-abortion laws that the Virginia General Assembly has recently passed, and in return, Republican leadership would send one GOP vote over to the Democrats’ side on any new piece of anti-abortion legislation that is introduced in order to ensure that it does not pass. (The Virginia State Senate has 21 Republicans, including Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling, and 20 Democrats.)

“It’s about keeping media off the topic,” the aide said. “If Democrats came out swinging trying to repeal some of these laws, it’s going get media coverage. [Republicans] really just want a state of neutrality.”

Clearly, that makes ZERO (or less than ZERO if that’s possible) sense from the Democrats’ point of view. In terms of policy, of course, the last thing we want to do is to acquiesce in any way to Virginia Republicans’ incessant war on women’s health and reproductive freedom. Politically speaking, the last thing we want to do, as we head into a crucial gubernatorial election year against one of the poster boys for the war on women (presumptive Republican nominee Ken Cuccinelli), is to let Republicans off the hook for their “personhood” amendments; their “transvaginal ultrasounds;” their efforts to shut down women’s health, family planning and abortion clinics across the state; etc. We certainly DO NOT want to keep this out of the media, to hush it up, or to lay low on this subject. A thousand times NO!

Thankfully, Democratic Attorney General candidate, State Senator Mark Herring (D-Loudoun, Fairfax), is all over this one.

Update: 4:59 p.m. — Herring told The Huffington Post on Friday that no kind of bargain among Senate leadership could keep him from trying to repeal the abortion clinic regulations.

Nobody’s going to be able to muzzle me on these issues,” he said. “I wont be a part of any kind of a deal like that. This is about fighting for what’s right for women.”

That about sums it up right there, thanks to Sen. Mark Herring for putting it so clearly. The bottom line: no way in HELL should we agree to back off our defense of women’s reproductive freedom, health, and liberty! To the contrary, as Sen. Herring clearly understands, we should be redoubling our efforts to protect Virginia women’s health from extremists’ attacks. If you agree with this goal, please sign Sen. Herring’s petition, and “Tell Ken Cuccinelli and Bob McDonnell: Hands off women’s healthcare!” Thanks.

Washington Post: VA Less Interesting Politically Than VT, NH, RI, GA, etc, etc.

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As we wrote recently, despite a plea for more local political coverage from the Washington Post Ombudsman, that once-excellent paper’s coverage of Virginia politics has plummeted. Why has the Post decided to reduce coverage of one of the politics in one of its key markets, let alone one of the most fascinating states politically in the country? Perhaps because they don’t think Virginia’s interesting politically?

Thus, we have a Washington Post article entitled “The 10 most interesting states in politics,” which I turned to expecting to see Virginia either #1 or #2. I mean, this IS a state, after all, that is right next door to Washington, DC, where the Post is headquartered; which is a key “purple”/”swing state,” which holds elections every year; which has an extremely entertaining election coming up in 2013, featuring two of the most colorful characters around (T-Mac and Ken Kookinelli); which has a fascinating political history, from “massive resistance” to the first African American governor to Jim Webb’s victory over “Felix Macacawitz,” etc., etc.

So, was Virginia ranked #1 or #2 by “The Fix” column at the Post? No? How about #3? #4? #5? #6? #7? #8? #9? #10? No, no, no, no, no, no, no and no. Instead, we’ve got those ever-fascinating states, politically speaking, of solid-red South Carolina (yawn), solid blue Rhode Island and Vermont, and a bunch of other states that it would be hard, if not impossible, to argue are more interesting politically than Virginia, rounding out this Top 10 list. As for Virginia? Sorry, Washington Post subscribers in Virginia, but the Posties apparently are just not that into you. Just remember that the next time they decide to make an endorsement in our state, even as they barely ever show up to any political events, slash their coverage of Virginia politics, and even admit that they don’t consider Virginia interesting politically. And they wonder why they’re losing subscribers? I mean, at least FAKE it guys!  Duhhhh.

McAuliffe Rips “Extreme” Cuccinelli’s “attempt to set reproductive rights back 50 years”

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(UPDATE: THIS is the company Cuckoo thinks is so great. What we all need to do is NEVER SHOP AT THIS STORE! – promoted by lowkell)

I just received the following from Terry McAuliffe's campaign, am glad to see T-Mac pounding Kookinelli for his latest insanity. 

Why am I not surprised? 

Yesterday, Terry's opponent Ken Cuccinelli said that opponents of birth control “need to go to jail,” to oppose the Affordable Care Act's coverage of contraception. 

Tell Ken Cuccinelli: Stop attacking women's rights | SIGN THE PETITION

You read that correctly: Virginia's Attorney General is openly advocating that people break the law. But what's worse is he's publicly leading the charge to prevent women from being able to make their own healthcare decisions along with their doctor. 

Please join me and tell Ken Cuccinelli that this kind of inflammatory rhetoric has no place in Virginia. 

While Virginia is facing challenges to improve our transportation, education, and economy, Cuccinelli continues to draw from his extreme ideological agenda and attempt to set reproductive rights back 50 years. 

If Cuccinelli is going to focus on divisive social issues during his time as Attorney General, what can we expect from him if he's elected Governor? 

This is unacceptable. Sign our open letter condemning the Attorney General for his offensive remarks: 

http://act.terrymcauliffe.com/signup_page/cuccinelli-contraception 

In 2013, I hoped that we wouldn't have to keep fighting these old battles. But as long as politicians like Ken Cuccinelli are involved, they seem unavoidable. 

Thank you for joining Terry and me to fight back, 

Robby Mook
Campaign Manager
Terry McAuliffe for Governor

Why It’s Time for Boss Saslaw to Go

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My patience with Senator Dick Saslaw has officially run out.  It died a fitful death as I was reading this:

State Sen. Dick Saslaw does not mince words about his support for uranium mining. A Northern Virginia Democrat who is also the Senate minority leader, Saslaw says burying the radioactive byproduct known as tailings underground should be a solution to environmental concerns. And he says he can’t be concerned about what might happen 100 [years] from now.

“What about 10,000 years from now? I’m not going to be here,” Saslaw says. “I can’t ban something because of something that might happen 500 or 1,000 years from now.”

Here I thought the whole point of public service was to actually care about the legacy you leave.  Good thing the founding fathers cared enough to set up a Constitution and system designed to work 100 or 500 years after they were gone.  Good thing some foresighted people in history cared enough to preserve our national parks, our historical buildings, our water, land and air.  We could at least do the same for our descendants.

What Dick Saslaw’s doing here is actually pretty unusual in politics — not simply expressing an unpopular opinion or “showing independence” by “moving to the center” (in this case, I strongly suspect that the center is not wild about the idea of uranium mining in a wet, heavily populated state) — but wantonly and maliciously slapping his own constituency in the face.

It’s the sign of an official who thinks he can say or do whatever he wants because he thinks he can get away with it. It is therefore the exact opposite of what democracy is supposed to be about.  

The whole point of getting rid of royalty and nobility, and replacing them with elected officials, was to make our leaders accountable — not untouchable. An elected official acting like a landed earl lecturing the serfs is a democratic malfunction — and one crying out to be fixed.  

This is far from the first time Senator Saslaw has exhibited such behavior.  I wrote last year about a public event where he showed similar contempt for energy efficiency and renewables.  He has also been unfortunately successful in expanding predatory lending in the state and proud of it.

Coincidentally, Saslaw’s biggest donors are in the energy and finance industries.  I guess he’s been a good Democrat on issues on which he hasn’t been bought, and that’s good enough for some people.  

But the main reason he seems to cling to power is that he’s tough and knows Senate procedure and bullies anyone who dares question him. When I’ve asked a few state politicians and activists about the Saslaw problem, I generally get that head-cocked-to-one-side look your dog gives you when he thinks you’ve got a screw loose.  Most of his Democratic colleagues are afraid to cross him and I’ve heard the idea of running against him described as “suicidal.”

But some suicide missions are actually worthwhile.  What we have here is a classic “emperor has no clothes” moment. The climate of intimidation that Saslaw uses to protect himself is only effective as long as everybody around him keeps falling for it. As soon as that veil is pierced, it can disintegrate quicker than one might think. (See the great political documentary “Street Fight” on Cory Booker’s battle against the dictatorial Sharpe James in Newark about this phenomenon.)

Saslaw has been leader of Senate Democrats since 1996. At some point, you have to ask whether the point of a political party is to support its incumbents until they keel over — or whether the point is to stand for particular principles.  IMHO, that’s not a hard question.

As my BV colleague Elaine, former Arlington County Democratic chair Peter Rousselot, and others attest in the diary and comments below, it’s time for a good Democrat to give Mr. Saslaw a primary challenge for his progressive Northern Virginia district.  Many of us here at Blue Virginia will strongly support a credible challenger. It’s the democratic solution in a state whose motto remains “Sic semper tyrannis.”  And it would be nice to have a Democratic Senate leader who actually does care about what kind of state, country and planet we leave to future generations.  

Virginia News Headlines: Friday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Friday, January 11.

*Hot enough for you? (“All right, now can we talk about climate change? After a year when the lower 48 states suffered the warmest temperatures, and the second-craziest weather, since record-keeping began?”)

*Thinking About the Brink (Platinum coin anyone? According to Paul Krugman, “we need a strategy to deal with the crazies if they really do prove irredeemably crazy, which seems all too possible.”)

*The Mostly Solved Deficit Problem (“So you heard it here first: while you weren’t looking, and the deficit scolds were doing their scolding, the deficit problem (such as it was) was being mostly solved. Can we now start talking about unemployment?”)

*Anti-Gay Pastor Withdraws From Inaugural Program (Bottom line: there should be no room for bigots in our national life.)

*Poll: Warner holds early re-election lead

*Poll: Clinton tops 2016 Democrat field (“U.S. Sen. Mark Virginia of Virginia is not among the top Democratic contenders to be the next president, according to a poll released today.”)

*Virginia Makes Its Case To House New FBI Headquarters

*Governor’s bills on roads, voting rights face obstacles (“…it was apparent within hours of McDonnell’s speech that both face widespread skepticism from lawmakers – including many in the Republican chief executive’s own party.”)

*Virginia Democrats push to loosen voting rules (“Filler-Corn proposed keeping polling places open longer — until 8 p.m. instead of 7 p.m. — matching the closing times in D.C. and Maryland. Another Democratic bill would allow Virginians to cast their ballots before Election Day.”)

*Sen. Tim Kaine state on gun control reform (I have no idea what that headline means, but Kaine says, “As a gun owner who worked with others to constitutionally guarantee Virginians the right to hunt, I know that you can be a strong supporter of the Second Amendment without tolerating the gun tragedies that are too often a part of our daily lives.”)

*Gas-tax plan draws reaction from transportation world (“Critics ranging from conservatives to smart-growth advocates to environmentalists said eliminating the gas tax would do the opposite…”)

*Poll: Virginians favor stricter gun control

*Va. senator wants voter bill named for late Norfolk lawmaker (“A ranking African American state legislator Thursday said proposals to automatically restore civil rights to non-violent offenders should carry the name of deceased Sen. Yvonne Miller, a Norfolk Democrat who long championed that issue.”)

*Bolling and McAuliffe meet in Richmond (Intriguing…)

*Proposed Transportation Fee Targets Eco-Friendly Drivers

*McDonnell ‘Excited’ About 12 Oscar Nominations for ‘Lincoln’ (Ahhhh…corporate welfare Republicans, aren’t they grand?)

*Editorial: Upon paying one’s debt (“Are we, as the governor says, a people who believe in second chances? Here’s lawmakers’ chance at redemption.”)

*Mr. McDonnell moves to restore voting rights (I still can’t understand why this wasn’t done under the previous two administrations, but better late than never I guess…)

*Fairfax schools announces $2.5 billion spending plan that includes teacher raises

Time for Sane Republicans to Stop Being Intimidated by the Primary Threat

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( – promoted by lowkell)

One hears it all the time: many Republican lawmakers, in their gerrymandered districts, do not have to fear losing in a general election, but do have to worry that they’ll get primaried from the right if they don’t go along with the crazy and destructive ways of the present-day Republican Party.

OK. And where does that get them? Maybe they keep their deck chairs and maybe the Republican Party is becoming the Titanic. More important, where does that get the country — with one of its two major parties a virtual wrecking ball on every part of our political/economic/social/cultural structure it can reach?

People are saying nowadays that there’s a battle ongoing for the soul of the Republican Party. Here’s where that battle should be fought: the sane Republicans should say to the threat of a primary, “Bring it on.” And then they should go into battle for the hearts and minds of Republican primary voters.

OK. Maybe the craziness and deludedness — that the force that’s taken over the right has worked to effectively to create in the Republican base over the past 20 years – cannot be turned around overnight. But the defeat and disarray the party has suffered from is opening up an opportunity to turn that destructive force back.

The battle should be joined by all those Republican politicians whose political circumstances give them a very good chance of succeeding now (like New Jersey governor, Chris Christie) and also by all those who have the moral courage to fight the fight their country needs for them to fight.

The Republican base has been living in an alternate, phony reality sold to them by the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Fox and Republican politicians. But there is no necessary reason why the Republican voters need to stay in their present, deranged state. They are not, most of them, deranged people.

So there’s no necessary reason why the threat to reasonable and moderate Republicans to be destroyed by wacko primary opponents (as has been happening to people like Mike Castle of Delaware in 2010 and Richard Lugar in 2012) will continue indefinitely into the future.

The election of 2012 has put new forces into motion. It is important that the momentum of these forces be seized — by President Obama and the Democrats AND by those sane Republican office-holders who, until now, have allowed themselves to be intimidated by the sick and broken spirit that’s seized hold of their Party over the past generation.

It has long been time for good people to stand and fight. That now includes those Republicans whose preferred way of doing politics is to be sane and reasonable and constructive.

Andy Schmookler, an award-winning author, political commentator, radio talk-show host, and teacher, was the Democratic nominee for Congress from Virginia’s 6th District.  Among his books is The Parable of the Tribes:  The Problem of Power in Social Evolution.

Raising Revenue

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Mitch McConnell says revenue is off the table. That is the heart of the problem. Already the fixes which were purported to raise revenue actually increase the deficit by $4 trillion. That’s because beneath the surface of the recent tax “reform” was its opposite hidden from plain view.

Yet both before and after the “reform” we do not have a deficit problem as much as we have a revenue problem. More specifically, we have a tax avoidance problem, a profligate tax-cutting problem, and a tax unfairness problem.   This is one estimate of how much the rich avoid paying taxes, most legally. But some relatively easy fixes could make a huge difference. For example:

1. Reduce tax “expenditures” (i.e., tax breaks and tax preferential treatment): $1.25 trillion

2. Go after tax underpayments: $450 billion

3. Close illegal tax havens: $250 billion (probably a huge underestimate because between $21 and $32 trillion are parked in offshore accounts).

4. Corporate taxes, the bite (for those paying any at all) has dropped on average 12%: $250 billion.

5. Add a half-cent financial transaction tax: $500 billion.  Let those churning the market pay a tax for doing so.

6. Remove the payroll tax cap: $300 billion*

7. Keep the estate tax. $100 billion

And you’ve got over $3 trillion over 10 years.

Here’s another list from Connect the Dots USA:

1. Reduce overseas bases by 20%: $200 billion

2. Close Loopholes in capital gains tax law: $174 billion

3. Negotiate Medicare Drug prices: $220 billion

4. Return to more a progressive estate tax $330 billion

5. Return to Clinton era top tax rates: $442 billion

6. Raise Social Security tax cap to $170,000: $457 billion.*

7. Strategic cuts to DoD: $517 billion

8. Raise the top marginal tax rate for those making a million to a billion dollars a year to 49%. $872 billion

9. Eliminate Corporate tax loopholes: $1,240 billion

10. Wall St. transaction tax: $1,800 billion

This second list produces 6.2 trillion in cuts over 10 years.

According to the Center for American Progress, we can save $168 billion just by not rewarding the offshoring of US jobs. What stands between a more balanced budget and an unbalanced one are the Dumbo Twins, Mitch McConnell and John Boehner. They’ve done everything they can to continue to protect the rich. And they have proven unequivocally that they do not really care about the deficit–not that we should obsess about the deficit at this point in the recovery.

Right now, we have a jobs problem and a revenue problem. An improving economy and real fixes on the revenue side would solve much of the problem. But the Dumbo Twins have got an act going. And they’d rather play games than create real solutions.

* Note, though, that this is misleading because Social Security has its own funding stream and is not related to the deficit. Doing this fix would shore up Social Security’s future, but not solve the deficit unless it was wrongly directed away from Social Security, which would set a dangerous precedent.

Whose Religious Liberty?

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Women’s right to decide whether to use contraception and their right to have it as part of their health care should not even be an issue in 2013. But here we are fighting for women’s rights today as if we never fought on this turf before.

That most women use birth control is a fact of life.  That even most women of Cuccinelli’s faith use it in overwhelming numbers is an established fact.

Often rights are in conflict with the rights or perceived rights of others. Any primary right regarding women’s use of contraceptives belongs to individual women of childbearing age. It does not reside in those (wealthy patriarchs) who would try to prevent women from using contraception and/or making them pay out of pocket for them.  Yet today, some employers seem to believe not only should they be allowed to refuse to cover contraceptives in insurance policies, but even forbid their employees to use them.  

http://www.politico.com/story/…