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Photos, Video: Immigration Reform Rally at the White House

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Earlier this afternoon, I attended an immigration reform rally at Lafayette Park next to the White House. Hundreds of people, if not more, were on hand to peacefully protest Arizona’s anti-immigrant law and to demand that Congress pass comprehensive immigration reform – including the DREAM Act – now. I was extremely impressed with the speakers, as well as the friendly, peaceful, racially diverse, and passionate crowd of protesters. Among others, I heard several “Trail of Dreams” students talk about their 1,500-mile walk from Miami, FL to bring their immigration message to Washington. Along the way, “they documented their journey on Facebook and Twitter, gathered 30,000 signatures to bring to the president and marshaled support and shelter.”

In addition to the photos after the “flip,” check out the video (below) of Margie (spelling?), a junior from T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria, VA. I think you’ll agree that she’s very impressive – in Spanish and in English!

UPDATE: Another video for your viewing and listening pleasure – “El Pueblo Unido”.

























Fimian: “Herrity Votes to Raise Property Tax Rate 13%”

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Although he’s almost certain to lose to Pat Herrity in the 11th CD Republican primary on June 8, Keith Fimian isn’t going down without a fight.

On April 27, 2009, Pat Herrity voted to raise the real property tax rate from $.92 to 1.04 per $100 assessed. A whopping 13% tax increase in just one year! This amounted to an increase of about $550 on the average Fairfax County home.

Pat Herrity and other politicians say that because Fairfax County homes went down in value, the tax rate increase was not a tax increase at all.  More political double speak. Fairfax homeowners are now paying as much or more in taxes on homes worth far less.

From sane peoples’ perspectives, of course, raising the property tax rate to compensate for a decline in home values is simply prudent fiscal management of a county budget (which must, of course, be balanced). With Republicans, however, it might as well be “communist” or “socialism” or “unAmerican” or something heinous like that. Over at the aptly named Too Conservative blog, head honcho Vince Harris seems to think that Herrity might fall into one of those infamous categories, but the Too Conservative commenters strongly disagree (sample comment: “How ugly. Shame on Keith. Day by day, he’s losing all respect that we had for him. No matter how low he goes, he’ll never be our Congressman. How sad.”).

Meanwhile, Democrats are enjoying sitting back, popping some popcorn, and watching these two Republican’ts savage each other. 🙂

Virginian-Pilot: “Gulf oil spill drifts to Virginia”

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Superb editorial by the Virginian-Pilot, here’s an excerpt but definitely read it all!

Since the beginning of the debate about offshore drilling, it has been clear that the promises are as concrete as petroleum fumes across the Gulf of Mexico. Inland lawmakers are lining up to prevent coastal states from getting any royalty money from offshore drilling. They outnumber Virginia’s advocates.

[…]

But the most important assurance to residents of Virginia’s coast was the one about the environment. Oil drilling, we were assured repeatedly by its advocates, is really safe these days. It won’t damage the beaches, or the air, or our marshes. It certainly won’t affect the wildlife.

Tell that to the people who live along the coast in Mississippi and Louisiana.

Message to Cooch: “When you ask to be ridiculed, it usually happens”

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Ken Cuccinelli, what a boob, covering up Virtus’ bosom with an armored breastplate.  As UVA political science professor Larry Sabato notes, “When you ask to be ridiculed, it usually happens. And it will happen here, nationally…This is classical art, for goodness’ sake.



h/t: Not Larry Sabato

Ken Kookynelli demands UVA turn over papers of noted climate scientist

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Cooch is at it again — spending taxpayers’ money on another wild goose chase — and the “base” will just eat it up.

Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli has demanded that the University of Virginia turn over documents related to a former UVa climatology professor at the center of the so-called “climategate” scandal.

Cuccinelli, a Republican from Fairfax County, is challenging in court the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions as a contributor to climate change.

On April 23, Cuccinelli sent a “civil investigative demand” to UVa seeking documents related to the work of Michael Mann, a researcher who worked at UVa between 1999 and 2005 and is now at Penn State.

http://www2.dailyprogress.com/…

I’m not an attorney and have no idea what a “civil investigative demand” is — but — could UVA tell Cooch to GFY?

Justice probe of Goldman goes beyond deals cited by SEC

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is the title of this breaking story which went up on the Washington Post web site at 8:43 EDT this evening. Citing law enforcement sources, the article notes in its second graf:

The Justice Department probe began weeks ago and is essentially on a parallel track with the SEC investigation, the sources said. While prosecutors and investigators are focusing on some of the same mortgage-related transactions as the SEC, the sources said, the Justice Department has cast a wider net.

Further down we read

The U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan and the FBI are conducting the criminal probe, which sources said has been underway for weeks. Sources said a decision on whether to file any charges has not been made.

Nothing in the story is specific about what other transactions/activities are under scrutiny.    Meanwhile, the value of Goldman is taking a beating:  

Banking analysts at Standard & Poor’s and Bank of America-Merrill Lynch downgraded Goldman’s stock on Friday.

 The stock is down 20% since the SEC probe was announced, a loss for shareholders of more than $20 billion.

One more brief quote:

The threat of criminal prosecution can doom a business. A criminal case ruined the Wall Street firm Drexel Burnham Lambert in the 1980s even though it settled.

The story discusses some overlap between Bear, Stearns and Goldman, particularly with respect to Abacus, the program that was involved in the failed Justice prosecution of Bear, Stearns.

Goldman is of course a much larger entity.  It is also incredibly well connected politically, its top officials having included over the years prominent Republicans like John Whitehead (#2 at State under George Schultz) and Henry Paulson,  and such Democrats as Jon Corzine and Robert Rubin.

If the firm turns out to be corrupt, then the question will be raised how far back that corruption goes, and who gets tainted.

This is a story worth watching as it develops.

Let me add a few observations/reactions:

1.  As a Haverford Alumnus, I have long been aware of Goldman Sachs.  John Whitehead was the long time chair of our Board of Managers, I have known him for three decades.  People with whom I attended Haverford have gone on to work at Goldman.  Whitehead and others have been very generous to the College.

2.  I have long felt that the investment banking sector of the economy needed regulation.   And I was concerned at the number of people who wound up in top positions, particularly at Treasury, who had come out of that environment.  I mentally go back to the one Republican in Kennedy’s original cabinet, Douglas Dillon of Dillon, Read.  I think we should have concern that such people may be overly concerned with the industry from which they have come possibly at the expense of the interests of the American people.  Here I am reminded of Eisenhower’s Sec Def, a man named Wilson who had headed GM, who once said that when he ran GM he operated on the basis that what was good for GM was good for the country.  As one who values the labor movement I cannot agree with that sentiment, and certainly not at the time the statement was made.

3.  We are long overdue for rolling back the accumulated power of the wealthy.  It is critical that we use the current moment to do as much of that as is possible.

Peace.

What’s Behind the AZ Immigration Bill (Part 2)

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Yesterday I wrote of some of the subtext underlying the AZ bill, the Brewer role in the GOP plot to lop off millions of voters across this land.  In AZ hundreds of thousands have been wrongly purged from the voter roles, most of them brown-skinned.  Today I address some of the more obvious issues, which nonetheless bear repeating. First, let it be said, that I vigorously oppose the new Arizona immigration law.  Should it spread to other states, and to the nation at-large, it would further a human rights outrage.  This is so because it targets people by domestic law enforcement without probable cause.  Most of all, asking American citizens, legal immigrants and, yes, even undocumented persons, to produce their “papers,” hearkens back to the days of Nazi Germany or the heyday of the USSR. We do not want to go there.  Combined with the 2010 Census questions honing in on Hispanic country of origin, with specificity not afforded any other ethnicity, the AZ law must seem threatening to Hispanic peoples.  The hostile climate will ill serve all Americans.

Most Americans believe some immigration reform is necessary.  That is not inherently racist.  It is how we conduct ourselves, for what reason, and what we seek to achieve that define who (and what) we are inside. How we behave and rationalize what we do forms a figurative charcoal sketch of our national character.  In one state, at least, citizens-at-large (on average–actually 73-75%) are flunking the character test.  I do not say all Arizonans do so.  Far too many fail, however.  They will tell you how horrible it is there (It isn’t).  They will tell you that the death of a single rancher justifies the overarching hysteria in recent weeks.  They, even many Obama supporters, will blame President Obama, who’s only been in office a little over a year, for the problems arising over three decades of neglect, as literally tunnels were built in a vast lattice-work at our southern border, even as almost everyone else has at some time been frisked/patted down in random airline searches.  They will say this new AZ immigration law is better than nothing, when in fact it is far worse.

Again, I do not believe that everyone who cares about immigration reform is a racist.  On the other hand, there are too many racists among those clamoring for Jan Brewer’s draconian  “legal” assault on people of color. Additionally, small minds always fearing the unknown also no-doubt factor into part of the extreme backlash against brown people.

I love the raw physical beauty of Arizona, one of my four favorite places to be.  If you have never seen Arizona when it’s all green for just a couple of weeks in spring, you have missed one of the most spectacular scenic trips you can imagine. I have traveled to Arizona over the past couple of decades.  I do not suppose myself an expert on things Arizona.  So my perspective is admittedly different from those living there.  I have family members there, whom I both love and want to be safe.  I believe that they are, at least as much as are residents of any other place.  I have driven around much of the state, with the exception of the Yuma region.  We have traveled the state by rental car, as passengers in family members’ and friends’ vehicles, and by bus. We have visited the usual tourist places and small stops and venues, both city and rural.  About two years ago, I stayed at a small B and B about 30 miles from the border in Tubac, a very small community of artists and retirees.  I did not fear, at least not any more than anywhere else.  Contrary to small-town mythology, you do have to lock your doors in small communities too.  While there, we also visited my former neighbors (from here in Virginia), who had moved to Tubac. Two couples I knew here in the Burg chose to live not far from the AZ border.  They do not fear (did not, in the case of one of the couples, dear friends, who have now passed away).  

We (my husband and I, along with my sister and brother in-law) traveled the arid back roads between Tubac and Nogales, AZ as my brother-in-law tried to visit the legendary “Hummingbird Man.”  It was a poignant and treasured visit, not that far from the border.  Ultimately we ended up near Nogales, AZ, which is right on the border with Nogales, Mexico.  Neither on back roads nor windy dirt roads did we fear.  Nor did we when we previously stayed in Green Valley, also with friends, on another visit. That time we drove up in the mountains, where the only thing I feared was our hosts’ very large car on narrow mountainous roads!  I know what fear is.  I do have fears of my own.  I do understand that there can be crime-related violence anywhere.  We learned that in Blacksburg.  But the day-to-day fear that has been ramped up in AZ is not rational. And those who allow fear to usurp their better “angels” should try harder to resist the manipulations of xenophobes.  Fear is no justification for the harm this new bill is causing and will cause.

Today’s border controversy doesn’t have to be so.  But there it is.  If there were the will, our borders could be secured, which makes more sense than, say, waging wars in distant countries and having 700 military bases around the world.  That would not solve the essential problem, though it would at least make sense.  However we choose to enforce our borders, with technology, personnel, communications etc, the “wall” makes a hideous symbolic first glimpse of a great nation.

The fundamental question, though, is why should/does all of this matter to the rest of America?  It matters because people of any color should never be “suspects” on the face of it.

Whatever it is, Jan Brewer is the archetype of the purportedly “good” governor, in her warped mind, sent by God to beat back Arizona’s minorities, with hyper aggressive, way-beyond-profiling bigotry.  She claims the new AZ bill isn’t profiling, though that would be bad enough.  She’s right.  This is far more than racial profiling, which is the enforcement of the law more against racial minorities. It’s worse when:

• Any person of color, indeed anyone whatsoever, can be swept up without probable cause and turned over to immigration, even deported if the person cannot prove they are US citizens. As I asked yesterday, can you prove your citizenship right now, this minute.  Could the Man with the Tan (Boehner) were he not a US Congressperson?

•It’s an inhumane nightmare, for those who are undocumented, but who populate low-wage jobs at the behest of companies who brought them here, whether directly or indirectly through “coyotes.”  

• Those detained can be separated from their families, not even allowed to communicate where they are.  

• Immigration law, or other federal matters, get “Balkanized.”

• Police departments are ordered to spend their time not solving crimes.  

• Police can be sued if they do not enforce the new law.

• When even US citizens (who don’t carry a passport or birth certificate at all times) can be swept up, arrested and shipped of to ICE.

Pollsters tell us that our nation’s youth are our hope for the reduction of prejudice and bigotry in this land.  In AZ at least, their numbers weren’t enough.  That means it’s up to the rest of this nation to have the backs of people of color.  This time, those with Hispanic family roots need us.  They are our family members (mothers, fathers, sisters brothers, children, grandchildren); friends; neighbors; coworkers and fellow church members.  They are us.  And, yes, even those we call undocumented are us. How we work out our border conflict and controversies defines who we are.  I fear that the figurative charcoal sketch of our national character I mentioned earlier in this blog isn’t even much of a work in progress (so far to go).  We could start by looking in the mirror.  Who do we think we are?  What do we want to see when we see ourselves through the artists’ vision?  Most of us are immigrants or descendants of immigrants.  I do hear hopeful chords struck by people speaking out around this country.  I hope the voices well up to a chorus of tolerance and constructive solutions to our border/immigration issues.  I will write about some more of the hopeful signs in Part 3, immigrant-related crime issues in Part 4, and a call to action in Part 5.

Man, What A Failure That Obama Has Been!

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Click on the image to “embiggen,” see here for more.

Horrified at Bob McDonnell, Sheila Johnson “will never get involved in politics again”

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Don’t let anyone say you weren’t warned about this, Mrs. Johnson!

after McDonnell was sworn in, she watched in horror as the new governor enunciated a variety of socially conservative policies, especially regarding a constitutional ban on gay marriage and other civil rights issues, and then declared a celebration of Virginia’s “Confederate History Month” without any mention of slavery.

“Politics, oh gosh!” Johnson says with a groan. “I feel like I was thrown under the bus on that one… The lesson that I’ve learned in all of this is I will never get involved in politics again.”

What amazes me is that anyone, including a worldly woman like Sheila Johnson, would have believed Bob McDonnell’s lies about being a “moderate” focused on jobs and not Pat Robertson’s extremist social agenda.  Unfortunately, many Virginians, including Sheila Johnson, did believe Bob McDonnell’s b.s., and now we’re stuck with him – plus his ticketmates, including Crazy Cooch – for four years. Sadly for Virginia, Sheila Johnson isn’t the only one who’s watching this situation in “horror.”

UPDATE: I almost forgot why Sheila Johnson was so impressed with Bob McDonnell – his supposed ability to “communicate.”  Obviously, McDonnell “communicated” something to Johnson, like…oh, a bunch of outright lies that she bought, hook line and sinker. Duhhhh.

UPDATE #2: More reason to be horrified at Bob McDonnell.

While some Virginia leaders are urging the federal government to slow down or even reconsider drilling offshore after a fatal accident off the Gulf coast, Gov. Bob McDonnell will fly to Houston Monday to speak at a conference promoting offshore oil and natural gas drilling.

McDonnell will speak about “Jobs and the Economy: How the Energy Industry is Creating Jobs, Leading the Economy and Impacting Consumers” at the 2010 Offshore Technology Conference

At the absolute minimum, this shows a tin ear for politics. This guy seriously has national ambitions?  Sorry, but he’s not even close to being ready for prime time.