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Fairfax County JJ Dinner: Dick Durbin Jokes About Bob McDonnell, Cooch

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I just got back from the Fairfax County Democratic Party Jefferson Jackson Dinner.  The keynote speaker was Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, and he was very funny. Durbin’s biggest laugh lines poked fun at Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell (about Confederate History Month) and Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli (about being a “birther”). Great stuff!

UPDATE: Here are a few photos from the dinner, starting with Susan Mariner, who is running for Democratic Party of Virginia 1st Vice Chair. Tonight, Susan demonstrated her tremendous energy and enthusiasm, driving all the way from Virginia Beach, then working the crowd at the JJ Dinner for several hours, meeting (and making) a lot of friends.  Go Susan!

Susan Mariner talking with another Democrat

Terry McAuliffe, Levar Stoney and Sue Langley.

Del. Mark Keam

Rep. Jim Moran

Rep. Gerry Connolly

Does Charity Breed Poverty?

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Charity breeds poverty, according to most libertarians, if I am reading correctly what many authors of investment news letters say, and what Tea Party-Republican candidates like Rand Paul indicated (before the Republican Establishment muzzled him). Hear what Doug Casey, wealthy investor, said about Gates’ amd Buffets’ well-publicized charities in an interview by Louis James in “Whiskey and Gunpowder” for 15 May 2010: (sorry, no link available)

“Charities are largely unproductive. Their main beneficiaries are not the intended recipients, but the giver. They get some tax benefits, but mainly get the holy high of do-goodism.  Frankly, the idea of charity itself is corrupting to both parties in the transaction….. they {Bill Gates and Warren Buffet}…. should continue…. accumulating wealth—- as opposed to dissipating it by giving it away.  Giving money away breaks up a capital pool that could have been used productively by those who built it for making new wealth (which increases the amount of wealth that exists in the world).

Worse, giving money away usually delivers it into the hands of people who don’t deserve it. That sends the wrong moral message…. You deserve things because you earn them….. Endowing groups, or individuals, because they happen to have had some bad luck, or are perpetual losers, is actually immoral.”

“The wrong moral message?” This puts one in mind of the popular Republican stereotype of the Welfare Queen, and of the implicit corollary to the Republican conflation of God with earthly benefits: the righteous are due wealth (“God wants you to be rich”); it confuses affluence with righteousness. In other words, if you are poor or down and out—- well, you deserve to be. This is the Republican form of entitlements.

Mr. Casey continues, with an explanation right out of the Republican catechism:

“When money is given away, it’s almost as bad as government welfare. It makes it unnecessary for the recipient to produce, and that tends to cement him to his current station in life. The very act of making an urgent situation non-urgent takes away the incentive, the urgency, to improve. Morally speaking, charity is not a virtue, it’s a vice.”

Is this what Jesus would say?  

Maybe what Jesus might have said does not matter here, in the face of the impeccable internal logic of the conservative Republican doctrine. Here is a perfect example of creating a separate universe for a private reality, and utterly ignoring what have been turned into externalities, no matter how big or how important. Externalities such as what might have caused the existing problem of poverty in the first place, for example: past history, lack of education, a globalization policy which made local farmers unable to compete with imported products, deliberate suppression by another class, so poor they are unable to accumulate a surplus to provide seed capital, cultural inhibitions against today’s ruthless form of capitalism.

There is no doubt that, in the Republican-libertarian universe described by Mr. Casey, the entire world is divided into those who have the gumption and self-discipline to save and make money, and the lazy unworthy who want to steal the “wealth” of those productive few—- a kind of karma, except such a Christian man as Mr. Casey would probably not believe in reincarnation as a form of pay-back.

This neat trick of creating a special reality which then conveniently can ignore externalities is a particularly Republican trick for dealing with life. It is how they can promulgate the Free Market theory which turns corporations loose to do whatever they choose to make a short-term profit, with the idea that the hidden hand of the market will resolve any problems, and simultaneously ignores environmental costs and social costs inherent in whatever the corporations are doing.  

That is how we get oil, coal, or products like steel, for example, whose market price does not include cleaning up toxic waste or rehabilitating a raped landscape; or factory farms, whose market price of their chickens or pork does not cover the cost of cleaning up polluted streams or public health problems related to the factory farm; or industrial fishing which blindly over-fishes the oceans until there are insufficient stocks of food fish left to feed our growing populations, and no way to restore species they have killed off. That is also how, in pursuit of godly profit, we lost much of our industrial base to China, India, Indonesia, or Korea, with devastating effects on American workers, but had absolutely no industrial policy to deal with the devastation. After all, this outsourcing increased bottom line profit for the prudent and affluent, who had no obligation (in Republican theory) to consider externalities like people who had jobs in their factories, and were presumably part of the same society.

There is nothing in Republican policy, doctrine, or theory that addresses “the next step,” or even asks the question, “after that, then what?” It is all about profit now. It is all about the fortunate ones who have, not the have-nots (who are invisible in Republican theories, except when they are to be used as scapegoats or as inconvenient labor which is paid as little as possible, since they believe that labor contributes nothing to the value of the product, because the product and the job would not exist without the capital investment in the first place).

This is true: there is nothing wrong with making a profit; there are lazy individuals who have a bad attitude; and badly administered charitable giving can create a “learned dependence.”

The problem is when these data become the basis or excuse for social and economic policies, like those of the Republicans, which freeze everything in a flash frame, and solidify inequities forever—- there is no vision for a better future, or, indeed, for any kind of improvement for the society as a whole, despite some mumbo-jumbo about the future promise that free market capitalism will raise everyone’s living standards.  It actually becomes a self-fulfilling and self-perpetuating prophecy of a static social system, where the only way to break the rigid mold is through violent revolution.

Is there an answer to such jungle-based so-called free market capitalism, tied as it is into a frame of sanctified greed which protects the status quo of the currently comfortable affluent (or would-be affluent)? This is an important question as we head into the fall elections, with the Tea Party-Republican and libertarian philosophy appearing to have a death grip on public discourse.

Unwary Democrats and conservaDems have bought into one or more elements of the Republican frame—– but the fact is, if you accept even one little assumption or data point of that frame, you have inexorably bought into the whole thing, and you can present no better alternative, so voters will naturally ignore the Republican Lite Democrat, and vote for the real deal Republican. And, why not?

There is an answer, but Democrats have to express it and re-frame the debate on their terms, and do it fast.  Unlike the doom and gloom of Republicans, Democrats have a vision of a society and a system which treats all its components as valuable, protects and defends the whole, observes the Social Contract, creates a level playing field opening up broadly-based opportunity, protects the weaker elements, enforces social and financial accountability even from the rich or powerful, husbands the treasures of the earth for future generations—– in other words:

“….establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity….”

Rex Simmons, Pete Frisbie: GOP Cancels Convention to Avoid “Rand Paul Moment”

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Are Keith Fimian and Pat Herrity “Rand Paul” Republicans? According to the chairmen of the Fairfax County (Rex Simmons) and Prince William County (Pete Frisbie) Democratic Committees, quoted in this press release from the 11th CD Democratic Committee, it’s quite possible.

GOP Cancels 11th CD Convention to Shield Bickering Primary Candidates’ Views from Public Scrutiny — and Avoid a Rand Paul Moment

Democrats Say Fimian and Herrity Taking Extreme Positions in their Race to the Right

Eleventh District Republicans canceled their biennial Convention this weekend — two weeks before their congressional primary — to shield the public from the extreme views, bare-knuckles brawling, and increasingly nasty attacks that have marked the race to the right between congressional challengers Keith Fimian and Pat Herrity, Democrats said.

The Republicans announced they canceled the event, which could draw more than 2,600 delegates, because “scheduling problems” precluded the appearance of either candidate at the convention and they had no races for party offices, but the chairs of the Democratic party organizations in the 11th CD had a different take.

“In most primaries, candidates would salivate at the chance to speak to a couple of thousand party activists and throw them some red meat to win votes just two weeks before a low turnout primary,” Fairfax County Democratic Committee Chair Rex Simmons said. “Unfortunately, what they are saying to the GOP party faithful now is definitely not what they want to public to hear in November.”

more after the “flip”

Fimian and Herrity have been espousing extreme positions on numerous issues that are way out of the mainstream here in Northern Virginia, the Democratic leaders said.

“These candidates want to abolish the Department of Education and turn back transportation dollars.  Those are not what’s needed in Northern Virginia as we work to protect our quality schools and find ways to solve some of the worst traffic congestion problems in the nation,” Prince William County Democratic Committee Chair Pete Frisbie said.

“The Fimian and Herrity campaigns want to run their primary campaigns underneath the radar,” said Simmons. “They don’t want mainstream voters who will cast ballots in November to hear their far-right rhetoric about who is more pro-gun or pro-life, and who would refuse the most funding for our schools, our roads, and our public transit systems.”

The Democrats suspect that Republicans canceled the event because they didn’t want to draw media attention at their congressional convention to Fimian and Herrity’s extreme campaign platforms or a catfight between the two candidates, particularly in light of Kentucky Republican Senate candidate Rand Paul’s recent controversial remarks in the media disparaging civil rights.

Virginia Should “Take Aim At New Texas Standards” As Well

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This is a great idea that Virginia should adopt as well.

…A new bill introduced in the state Senate by Sen. Leland Yee (D-San Francisco) seeks to ensure that none of the Texas standards are allowed to be used in California in any fashion.

Under Yee’s bill, SB1451, the California Board of Education would be required to look out for any of the Texas content as part of its standard practice of reviewing public school textbooks. The board must then report any findings to the legislature and to the secretary of education.

Among other lunacy, the new Texas “standards” “say that the McCarthyism of the 1950s was later vindicated — something most historians deny — draw an equivalency between Jefferson Davis’s and Abraham Lincoln’s inaugural addresses, say that international institutions such as the United Nations imperil American sovereignty, and include a long list of Confederate officials about whom students must learn.” As I said, “lunacy.”

So, which delegate(s) and which state senator(s) are going to introduce this legislation in the next Virginia General Assembly session?

Virginia is one of most corrupt states in the Union!

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Hard to believe isn’t it? After so much hot air about Virignia’s good government and healthy environmemnt for business, this is quite a shock from the Daily Beast!

Virignia is the second most corrupt state in the U.S.!

According to the objective standards used in the survey, Virignia is the second most corrupt state in the U.S.! Lots of good company, too. Tennessee is number 1 and Mississippi is number 3. But shouldn’t we be happy that with the Cooch as A.G. all the corruption will be rooted out? (haha)

more below the fold

The Daily Beast examined a wide range of available data to rank the level of corruption in all 50 states. Each of the following data sets was weighted equally:

•Public corruption, 1998-2008: Convictions of elected and other public officials investigated by federal agents over an 11-year period, from the Department of Justice.

•Racketeering and Extortion, 1998-2008: Code for organized crime convictions, also investigated by federal agents over an 11-year period, from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

•Forgery and Counterfeiting, 1999-2008: Arrest numbers for producing or distributing fake money and goods over a 10-year period, from the FBI.

•Fraud, 1999-2008: Arrests for false statements or documents produced for personal gain over a 10-year period, from the FBI.

•Embezzlement, 1999-2008: Arrests for surreptitious theft of money over a 10-year period, from the FBI.

By using a decade’s worth of federal data, we were able to minimize changes in local law enforcement efficacy, though some flaws remain: local cases go undocumented, and the FBI data is self-reported by local law enforcement. When combined, however, the data provides a fairly deep look into which jurisdictions are uncovering the most corruption. We leveled the playing field by calculating the numbers on a per-100,000 people basis.

Some states show particular prowess in one area of corruption or another. New York leads with racketeering and extortion, Delaware is tops in embezzlement, while the nation’s capital leads the pack in public corruption. But only one state is consistent across the board. Click here for the results.

For details go here:

http://www.thedailybeast.com/b…

Virginia is one of most corrupt states in the Union!

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Hard to believe isn’t it? After so much hot air about Virignia’s good government and healthy environmemnt for business, this is quite a shock from the Daily Beast!

Virignia is the second most corrupt state in the U.S.!

According to the objective standards used in the survey, Virignia is the second most corrupt state in the U.S.! Lots of good company, too. Tennessee is number 1 and Mississippi is number 3. But shouldn’t we be happy that with the Cooch as A.G. all the corruption will be rooted out? (haha)

more below the fold

The Daily Beast examined a wide range of available data to rank the level of corruption in all 50 states. Each of the following data sets was weighted equally:

•Public corruption, 1998-2008: Convictions of elected and other public officials investigated by federal agents over an 11-year period, from the Department of Justice.

•Racketeering and Extortion, 1998-2008: Code for organized crime convictions, also investigated by federal agents over an 11-year period, from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

•Forgery and Counterfeiting, 1999-2008: Arrest numbers for producing or distributing fake money and goods over a 10-year period, from the FBI.

•Fraud, 1999-2008: Arrests for false statements or documents produced for personal gain over a 10-year period, from the FBI.

•Embezzlement, 1999-2008: Arrests for surreptitious theft of money over a 10-year period, from the FBI.

By using a decade’s worth of federal data, we were able to minimize changes in local law enforcement efficacy, though some flaws remain: local cases go undocumented, and the FBI data is self-reported by local law enforcement. When combined, however, the data provides a fairly deep look into which jurisdictions are uncovering the most corruption. We leveled the playing field by calculating the numbers on a per-100,000 people basis.

Some states show particular prowess in one area of corruption or another. New York leads with racketeering and extortion, Delaware is tops in embezzlement, while the nation’s capital leads the pack in public corruption. But only one state is consistent across the board. Click here for the results.

Susan Mariner for DPVA 1st Vice Chair!

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On June 12, 2010, the Democratic Party of Virginia (DPVA) will select a new 1st Vice Chair. The purpose of this newly-created Facebook page is to (strongly) support Susan Mariner for that position. Some background on Susan follows. Thanks for your help!

Currently, Susan Mariner serves as Virginia Beach Democratic Committee (VBDC) Chair. As VBDC Chair, Susan has been focused on uniting and growing her committee, in part through the use of cutting-edge grassroots and social networking techniques and tools. In addition, Susan has focused on grassroots training to strengthen the VBDC and make it more effective. She has worked tirelessly to generate support for Democratic candidates in the 2nd Congressional District.

Susan in an inclusive leader who brings people into the party. As VBDC Chair, Susan has worked with urban, rural, and suburban committees in the Hampton Roads area, collecting and sharing “best practices,” doubling membership in the committee this year, as well as diversifying the VBDC in age and minority participation. In addition, Susan has professionalized VBDC communications and its website, increased the committee’s visibility, and created an active and effective public service committee.

Many of us know Susan from 2006, when she was one of the most important – and effective – leaders in Jim Webb’s 10,000-strong “ragtag army” of grassroots volunteers. Hard working. Personable. Professional. Organized. Motivated. Passionate. Dedicated. Articulate. Creative. Inclusive. Progressive. Experienced. New media savvy. Effective. What more could you want from a Democratic activist and leader in the year 2010?

In 2007 and 2008, Susan was a 50-State Organizer and Deputy Political Director for Hampton Roads. She also served as political director for Barack Obama’s general election campaign in Hampton Roads. By all accounts, Susan did an excellent, highly professional job for the Democratic Party and for the Obama campaign. Susan worked closely with Deputy Political Directors from across Virginia, which gave her an excellent understanding of the issues and concerns facing Democrats in all regions of the Commonwealth.

The bottom line: Susan Mariner will make a superb 1st Vice Chair for the Democratic Party of Virginia. She’s done a superb job as a member of Jim Webb’s “ragtag army,” as a DNC 50-State organizer, as Deputy Political Director for Hampton Roads, and as political director for Barack Obama’s general election campaign in Hampton Roads. Now, it’s time to promote Susan to the next level – DPVA 1st Vice Chair. Go Susan!

UPDATE: See after the “flip” for a segment from my book (co-authored with Nate Wilcox), Netroots Rising, on Susan’s stroke of genius – the “Webb Wagons” – and why that one episode epitomizes all the reasons why Susan Mariner should be the next DPVA 1st Vice Chair!


Another successful grassroots initiative came from Susan Mariner, one of the best Webb volunteers of the entire campaign.  Her clever invention — some would say stroke of genius — was the “Webb Wagons.”  On August 7, Mariner took a Roadmaster red steel-bed children’s wagon, decorated it with Webb stickers, and filled it with Webb goodies.   That weekend, Virginia Beach was holding a large event, the Princess Anne Park Arts and Crafts Festival.  No political “tabling, was allowed, which prevented Allen’s campaign from showing up and campaigning.   Fortunately, it didn’t stop the Webb volunteers led by Susan Mariner.   As Mariner wrote on Raising Kaine, “Allen’s camp didn’t show at this major event,” but Webb volunteers “spread the word about Jim to thousands of people at the event this weekend, distributing smiles, literature, bumper stickers [which] we put into our newly constructed ‘Webb Wagons.'”

The wagons were a big hit and highly effective; they functioned as mobile tabling units and “generated a lot of attention for Webb from folks of all ages.”   Mariner added, “There’s something magical about a wagon, isn’t there?”  Yes, and there’s something magical about passionate, committed citizen-activists equipped with Webb Wagons and other homemade products of their creativity and enthusiasm.   People pick up on this kind of enthusiasm in a way that they never would through a traditional mailing or the 500th TV ad you’ve seen about Candidate X.  A Webb Wagon is far more memorable.

The Webb Wagons were also important in helping to boost morale among Webb volunteers.  On August 8, Mariner wrote to Lowell, that “there are huge numbers of people who are extremely motivated by the bottom up concept,” which is exactly “what the Webb Wagon represents.”   “A ‘Webb Wagoneer’,” Mariner added, “is the epitome of the grassroots taking on a powerful, monied, Republican machine,”  saying to the volunteers, “You can make a difference. It’s not ALL about money. You are important, and you have power.  Hit the road, and together we’ll take Allen down.”

Fortunately, the Allen-Webb race was not all about money.  If it had been, Webb probably would have lost, given Allen’s huge cash edge for most of the campaign.  “People power” — epitomized by Mary Detweiler, Susan Mariner, Todd Smyth, Jan-Lars Mueller, Marc Greidinger, Dave Leichtman, C.W. Dean, Peter Churchill, Annabel Park, Eric Byler, Barbara Kreykenbaum, Cassie Arnold, Ken Kukovich, Tom Counts and thousands of others — ultimately defeated George Allen.   But as of early August 2006, victory was still just a dream; there was a lot of work yet to be done to make dream reality.

Will 10th CD Republicans Elect “Loudmouth Malcontent” Today?

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The 10th CD Republican Committee convention just started. The question is, as “Loudoun Insider” at Too Conservative puts it, whether Republicans will “have a competent, well qualified statesman as Chairman in Dave Schmidt, or a loudmouth malcontent in Howie Lind.”  

Among other things, Lind is reportedly (according to Dave Schmidt) a big fan of “Republican loyalty” tests, has “a record of causing party divisions and excluding coalitions that could forge majorities in November,” has “one of the worst attendance records on the 10th District Committee,” and was “asked by Congressman Wolf to withdraw from the Tenth District chairman race because he could divide the party.” The “end result” of all this? “Victory for the Democrats,” according to Schmidt.

Bottom line: I strongly endorse Howie Lind for 10th CD Republican Committee chair, as I sincerely believe he would best for the Republican Democratic Party in the 10th CD. Go “loudmouth malcontent!” Heh.

UPDATE 1:30 pm: Hahahahahah, it looks like good news, “Howie Lind wins.” Exxxxcellent. 🙂

UPDATE 3:02 pm:  One big happy family, nice to see! 🙂

UPDATE 9:20 pm: Gotta love this!

Frank Wolf is lucky he has long term incumbency on his side because he is now majorly marginalized in northern Virginia GOP politics. The 10th District Committee (and its largest component, the LCRC) are firmly in Cuccinelli camp, and completely beholden to him, and that is absolutely at odds with someone like Frank Wolf (you know, thoughtful and non-confrontational). Wolf didn’t want to get involved at all in this contest and he will now have to deal with these people. Good luck, Congressman.

President Obama on the BP Spill Independent Commission

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I strongly agree with President Obama that we need to hold both BP and Washington accountable. Unfortunately, I doubt that much will change in the cozy relationship between regulators and Big Oil, until what John McCain used to call the “iron triangle” – special interests, campaign finance and lobbying – is seriously addressed.  Also, we need to keep a much closer eye on the “revolving door” between private industry and government regulators of that same industry.  As President Obama says, we “need to take a comprehensive look at how the oil and gas industry operates and how we regulate them.” Hopefully, this commission will come up with recommendations that address these issues, plus make strong recommendations for offshore oil drilling that ensure that disasters like this never happen again.