Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Why Republicans should support Prop 89

When big money wants to get its way, it donates to the party in power. In California, that means the Democrats. Why should a Democratic incumbent--such as Bill Lockyer--have an unfair advantage over a Republican Challenger?

Imagine if Claude Parrish had as much money to spend as Bill Lockyer. How would that affect the race?

Under Proposition 89, Parrish could compete dollar for dollar with Lockyer. Or, if they both chose the voluntary Clean Money public finance option, they'd each have to stick to $2,000,000--unless the Green Party or Libertarian candidate outspent them, in which case both Clean Money candidates would get funds matching what the non-Clean Money candidate spent. From Proposition 89 Blog:

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

2006 California State Treasurer Race

ca attorney general One of my new favorite "first read" internet sites is the LA Times' Mother's Milk, which has this graphic posted today.

Bill Lockyer has 35 times as much money as Claude Parrish.

Who do you think will win?

This isn't even a real race. There is no real debate about the role of the office. There probably won't even be a single public debate. Claude Parrish has already lost, he can't afford the ante necessary to introduce himself to voters. Right now, the Parrish campaign is so broke that they can't even seem to afford a website and you can put up a website for free. I don't know if the Parrish campaign even has enough cash on hand to pay attention.

Under Proposition 89, this would be a far different campaign. There would be a level playing field when it comes to financing, allowing the Parrish campaign the resources necessary to talk to voters. Also, one requirement of public financing is for candidates to agree to publically debate. Under Prop 89, this would be a campaign instead of a blowout.

Friday, September 22, 2006

Indonesian executions spark violent protest

Don't these Muslims ever get tired of violence?

Oh, wait! Those are Christians:

PALU, Indonesia (Reuters) - Thousands protested over the execution of three Christians in Indonesia on Friday, torching an official's house and setting prisoners free in the hometown of one of the executed men.

The three militants were executed by a police firing squad early on Friday in Central Sulawesi province, despite appeals from Pope Benedict and rights groups.

Fabianus Tibo, Marianus Riwu and Dominggus Silva were sentenced to death in 2001, after being found guilty of leading a mob in an attack that killed more than 200 people at an Islamic boarding school during Muslim-Christian clashes in the province.

The three men had originally been scheduled to die in August but the executions were postponed after the Pope's appeal and demonstrations by thousands of Indonesians.

....

Silva's death triggered protests by thousands of Christians in Atambua. A local Red Cross official, Elli Mali, said the demonstrators broke into a jail and freed about 200 prisoners.

"The mob numbers in thousands. I ran into some of the prisoners and they said, 'I'm free!,"' Mali told Reuters.

The protesters threw rocks and burned the local prosecutors' house, Indonesian media and police said.

Julito Borges, a policeman in Atambua, told Reuters two policemen were injured but the crowd had begun to disperse.

....in the Poso area of Central Sulawesi, where many Christian-Muslim clashes have occurred in recent years, including the incident for which the men were prosecuted, hundreds of protesters rallied against the executions and burned tires on the street, said Minarta, Poso's deputy police chief.

The protesters threw rocks at anti-riot policemen, injuring an officer, Minarta told Reuters in the early afternoon.


Before you get pissed off, I'm not trying to imply that Christians are violent and Muslims aren't! It's just that violence by Muslims is a bigger story in the Western press, while Muslim countries hear stories we don't hear about Christian violence.

Unfortunately, the Biblical religions are prone to violence, to the shame of Jesus and Mohammed. And the closer they are in philosophy, the more strenuously they quibble over their differences. Look at all the violence throughout history between Catholic and Protestant, between Shia and Sunni. If you want to see a quarrel, ask a free-will Baptist and a non-free-will Baptist to discuss their differences.

Thursday, September 21, 2006

Conversion by the sword? Sorry, that's a Christian tactic

Guardian | We cannot afford to maintain these ancient prejudices against Islam

The Pope's remarks were dangerous, and will convince many more Muslims that the west is incurably Islamophobic
Karen Armstrong
Monday September 18, 2006

In the 12th century, Peter the Venerable, Abbot of Cluny, initiated a dialogue with the Islamic world. "I approach you not with arms, but with words," he wrote to the Muslims whom he imagined reading his book, "not with force, but with reason, not with hatred, but with love." Yet his treatise was entitled Summary of the Whole Heresy of the Diabolical Sect of the Saracens and segued repeatedly into spluttering intransigence. Words failed Peter when he contemplated the "bestial cruelty" of Islam, which, he claimed, had established itself by the sword. Was Muhammad a true prophet? "I shall be worse than a donkey if I agree," he expostulated, "worse than cattle if I assent!"

Peter was writing at the time of the Crusades. Even when Christians were trying to be fair, their entrenched loathing of Islam made it impossible for them to approach it objectively. For Peter, Islam was so self-evidently evil that it did not seem to occur to him that the Muslims he approached with such "love" might be offended by his remarks. This medieval cast of mind is still alive and well.

Last week, Pope Benedict XVI quoted, without qualification and with apparent approval, the words of the 14th-century Byzantine emperor Manuel II: "Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." The Vatican seemed bemused by the Muslim outrage occasioned by the Pope's words, claiming that the Holy Father had simply intended "to cultivate an attitude of respect and dialogue toward the other religions and cultures, and obviously also towards Islam".

But the Pope's good intentions seem far from obvious. Hatred of Islam is so ubiquitous and so deeply rooted in western culture that it brings together people who are usually at daggers drawn. Neither the Danish cartoonists, who published the offensive caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad last February, nor the Christian fundamentalists who have called him a paedophile and a terrorist, would ordinarily make common cause with the Pope; yet on the subject of Islam they are in full agreement.

Our Islamophobia dates back to the time of the Crusades, and is entwined with our chronic anti-semitism. Some of the first Crusaders began their journey to the Holy Land by massacring the Jewish communities along the Rhine valley; the Crusaders ended their campaign in 1099 by slaughtering some 30,000 Muslims and Jews in Jerusalem. It is always difficult to forgive people we know we have wronged. Thenceforth Jews and Muslims became the shadow-self of Christendom, the mirror image of everything that we hoped we were not - or feared that we were.

The fearful fantasies created by Europeans at this time endured for centuries and reveal a buried anxiety about Christian identity and behaviour. When the popes called for a Crusade to the Holy Land, Christians often persecuted the local Jewish communities: why march 3,000 miles to Palestine to liberate the tomb of Christ, and leave unscathed the people who had - or so the Crusaders mistakenly assumed - actually killed Jesus. Jews were believed to kill little children and mix their blood with the leavened bread of Passover: this "blood libel" regularly inspired pogroms in Europe, and the image of the Jew as the child slayer laid bare an almost Oedipal terror of the parent faith.

Jesus had told his followers to love their enemies, not to exterminate them. It was when the Christians of Europe were fighting brutal holy wars against Muslims in the Middle East that Islam first became known in the west as the religion of the sword. At this time, when the popes were trying to impose celibacy on the reluctant clergy, Muhammad was portrayed by the scholar monks of Europe as a lecher, and Islam condemned - with ill-concealed envy - as a faith that encouraged Muslims to indulge their basest sexual instincts. At a time when European social order was deeply hierarchical, despite the egalitarian message of the gospel, Islam was condemned for giving too much respect to women and other menials.

In a state of unhealthy denial, Christians were projecting subterranean disquiet about their activities on to the victims of the Crusades, creating fantastic enemies in their own image and likeness. This habit has persisted. The Muslims who have objected so vociferously to the Pope's denigration of Islam have accused him of "hypocrisy", pointing out that the Catholic church is ill-placed to condemn violent jihad when it has itself been guilty of unholy violence in crusades, persecutions and inquisitions and, under Pope Pius XII, tacitly condoned the Nazi Holocaust.

Pope Benedict delivered his controversial speech in Germany the day after the fifth anniversary of September 11. It is difficult to believe that his reference to an inherently violent strain in Islam was entirely accidental. He has, most unfortunately, withdrawn from the interfaith initiatives inaugurated by his predecessor, John Paul II, at a time when they are more desperately needed than ever. Coming on the heels of the Danish cartoon crisis, his remarks were extremely dangerous. They will convince more Muslims that the west is incurably Islamophobic and engaged in a new crusade.

We simply cannot afford this type of bigotry. The trouble is that too many people in the western world unconsciously share this prejudice, convinced that Islam and the Qur'an are addicted to violence. The 9/11 terrorists, who in fact violated essential Islamic principles, have confirmed this deep-rooted western perception and are seen as typical Muslims instead of the deviants they really were.

With disturbing regularity, this medieval conviction surfaces every time there is trouble in the Middle East. Yet until the 20th century, Islam was a far more tolerant and peaceful faith than Christianity. The Qur'an strictly forbids any coercion in religion and regards all rightly guided religion as coming from God; and despite the western belief to the contrary, Muslims did not impose their faith by the sword.

The early conquests in Persia and Byzantium after the Prophet's death were inspired by political rather than religious aspirations. Until the middle of the eighth century, Jews and Christians in the Muslim empire were actively discouraged from conversion to Islam, as, according to Qur'anic teaching, they had received authentic revelations of their own. The extremism and intolerance that have surfaced in the Muslim world in our own day are a response to intractable political problems - oil, Palestine, the occupation of Muslim lands, the prevelance of authoritarian regimes in the Middle East, and the west's perceived "double standards" - and not to an ingrained religious imperative.

But the old myth of Islam as a chronically violent faith persists, and surfaces at the most inappropriate moments. As one of the received ideas of the west, it seems well-nigh impossible to eradicate. Indeed, we may even be strengthening it by falling back into our old habits of projection. As we see the violence - in Iraq, Palestine, Lebanon - for which we bear a measure of responsibility, there is a temptation, perhaps, to blame it all on "Islam". But if we are feeding our prejudice in this way, we do so at our peril.

· Karen Armstrong is the author of Islam: A Short History

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Frank Rich reveals what we wingnuts knew all along

A relative recently told me that I didn't know the whole story about what's going on in the world because I only read leftwing news. Despite the fact that I read three mainstream newspapers, I was a little stung by the remark. I probably should hold my nose and read more rightwing stuff.

Then along comes this article by Frank Rich, which I've excerpted below. The interesting thing is that everything he says in his article, I ALREADY KNEW. So did my leftie friends. We knew it when we marched against the war three times in early 2003. We knew that Saddam had no terrorist ties, and that indeed he was at odds with Islamic terrorists; that he had no nukes; that Al Zarqawi was in a part of Kurdistan Saddam had no control over and that our government at least twice declined to take him out when we had the opportunity.

The one area where I was fooled was in the matter of chemical weapons. Since everyone in the world was treating that as a given, I was disposed to agree with it. I just didn't see it as a reason to fear Iraq. Many countries, including the U.S., have chemical weapons. Of course, former weapons inspector Scott Ritter did say there were no chemical weapons in Iraq, but I distrusted him because he contradicted what he had said in 1998, and he seemed like a publicity-hunting hothead. Well, it turns out he was right.

But the most interesting thing about Rich's article is the part I've reprinted below. He asks the question, If Bush is so convinced that Iraq is as dire a threat as our enemies in World War II, why is he still trying to fight this war on the cheap?

The Longer the War, the Larger the Lies
by Frank Rich, New York Times
September 17, 2006

...On Monday night, for instance, Mr. Bush flatly declared that “the safety of America depends on the outcome of the battle in the streets of Baghdad.” He once again invoked Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman, asking, “Do we have the confidence to do in the Middle East what our fathers and grandfathers accomplished in Europe and Asia?”

Rather than tune this bluster out, as the country now does, let’s try a thought experiment. Let’s pretend everything Mr. Bush said is actually true and then hold him to his word. If the safety of America really depends on the outcome of the battle in the streets of Baghdad, then our safety is in grave peril because we are losing that battle. The security crackdown announced with great fanfare by Mr. Bush and Mr. Maliki in June is failing. Rosy American claims of dramatically falling murder rates are being. Perhaps most tellingly, the Pentagon has now stopped including in its own tally the large numbers of victims killed by car bombings and mortar attacks in sectarian warfare.

And that’s the good news. Another large slice of Iraq, Anbar Province (almost a third of the country), is slipping away so fast that a senior military official told NBC News last week that 50,000 to 60,000 additional ground forces were needed to secure it, despite our huge sacrifice in two savage battles for Falluja. The Iraqi troops “standing up” in Anbar are deserting at a rate as high as 40 percent.

“Even the most sanguine optimist cannot yet conclude we are winning,” John Lehman, the former Reagan Navy secretary, wrote of the Iraq war last month. So what do we do next? Given that the current course is a fiasco, and that the White House demonizes any plan or timetable for eventual withdrawal as “cut and run,” there’s only one immediate alternative: add more manpower, and fast. Last week two conservative war supporters, William Kristol and Rich Lowry, called for exactly that — “substantially more troops.” These pundits at least have the courage of Mr. Bush’s convictions. Shouldn’t Republicans in Congress as well?

After all, if what the president says is true about the stakes in Baghdad, it’s tantamount to treason if Bill Frist, Rick Santorum and John Boehner fail to rally their party’s Congressional majority to stave off defeat there. We can’t emulate our fathers and grandfathers and whip today’s Nazis and Communists with 145,000 troops. Roosevelt and Truman would have regarded those troop levels as defeatism.

Read the whole thing.


Friday, September 15, 2006

Here we go again...

Get ready for another bunch of lies leading to another unnecessary war:

Nuclear Agency for U.N. Faults Report on Iran by U.S. House
By David E. Sanger
New York Times
September 15, 2006

WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 — The International Atomic Energy Agency has complained about a staff report from the House Intelligence Committee, saying that it “contains erroneous, misleading and unsubstantiated information’’ about Iran’s nuclear program. Agency officials said Thursday that their concerns had echoes of their arguments with the Bush administration over Iraq three years ago.

The charges were contained in a letter dated Sept. 12 and sent to Rep. Peter Hoekstra, the Michigan Republican who is chairman of the committee. Its unclassified staff report, released in mid-August, was widely seen as an effort to prod American intelligence agencies to be more aggressive in their examination of Iran’s nuclear program, amid charges from some conservatives that the mistakes made in assessing Iraq’s programs four years ago had bred an overly cautious atmosphere.

But the staff report immediately came under criticism, especially from Democrats on the committee, who said it overstated aspects of the threat posed by Iran’s nuclear program. The committee’s vice chairman, Representative Jane Harman of California, accused the staff of taking shortcuts that inflated the Iranian threat.

The report was overseen by Fredrick Fleitz, a former C.I.A. officer who worked for John R. Bolton, the ambassador to the United Nations, when he was the State Department’s leading hawk on Iran.

The letter from the atomic energy agency, the United Nations’ nuclear monitoring agency, was first disclosed in The Washington Post on Thursday. It charges that a caption under a picture of Iran’s main nuclear site at Natanz falsely states that Tehran is “enriching uranium to weapons grade’’ with a small collection of centrifuges, the high-speed machines that are used to turn uranium into a fuel usable in nuclear power plants — or bombs. The letter says the uranium was enriched only to 3.6 percent — a level suitable for producing power, but far short of the 90 percent or so commonly associated with fuel for weapons.

A spokesman for the committee, Jamal Ware, said that while “there may be an issue with the caption, the substance of the report is clear, that Iran is working toward the ability to produce weapons grade uranium, but they are not there yet.’’ He said the report was intended to begin a discussion on Iran intelligence.

A senior European diplomat, speaking on the condition of routine diplomatic anonymity, said, “The view at the I.A.E.A. was that this House report exaggerated the evidence, and people had to put a marker down fast.’’

“No one wants a repeat of 2003,’’ the official said, a reference to the open dispute between the Bush administration and the director general of the atomic energy agency, Mohamed ElBaradei, over whether there was evidence of nuclear activity in Iraq.

Dr. ElBaradei was ridiculed by administration officials at the time; in recent months, though, the administration has cited his reports in pressing their case against Iran.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

A change in the weather

The hot weather returned for one last fling, and we reached 97 on Tuesday. But it was a brief fling, dropping to the 70s by late afternoon. And today the fog hung around till noon; the temperature barely broke 70 all day.

Yes, the weather is changing. Last week I gathered a record crop of tomatoes and cucumbers; today, the first bean crop. Tomorrow, the winter squash. I expect the tomatoes will taper off from here on out as the nights grow cooler.

The creek is barely a trickle in this, California's dryest season. Six deer--two does and 4 fawns--huddle in my back yard, their ribs showing, denied the bounty of my newly fenced, irrigated garden where the tomatoes still flourish. The deer are right up against the fence, and I go outside to make sure they are not getting in. Unlike predators, which limit their population growth when prey is scarce, deer go on multiplying until actual starvation takes its toll.

When I came here 30 years ago, there were no deer within the city limits, and no need to fence the garden. Now the deer are part of the scene, trotting down city streets at dusk to feed on freshly watered suburban landscaping. Did you know that deer were once an endangered species? The predators are also returning--there have been mountain lion sightings near the edge of town and the occasional blood-curdling cry of coyotes.

So not just the weather is changing. There is a years-long cycle of change in the animal landscape, the creatures reclaiming the land that they lost over the past 200 years. We see more possums, more raccoons, skunks, foxes and badgers. Interlopers have also claimed territory: flocks of marauding turkeys and raucous crows add to the din of leafblowers on early mornings. The turkeys represent the conquest of a continent by an east coast native that was nearly wiped out by the 20th century.

Now we learn that the weather is in a longer cycle of change--one that will be irreversible in our lifetime and perhaps in the span of mankind's lifetime. And the latest news is that it's happening faster than we ever thought possible. The beloved landscape of northern California--redwoods, firs and oaks--will give way to some new ecosystem--whether tropical or desert, we don't yet know. Probably the centuries-old redwoods will last our lifetimes and maybe our children's, but the oaks are already dying. Disease has decimated groves here already stressed by a falling water table and increasing air pollution.

(Ironically, air pollution is one of the few things that counter global warming, the particulate matter deflecting sunlight even as it shortens the lives of those vulnerable to lung disease.)

Against this impending catastrophe, we blithely live our lives, driving wherever we please and in whatever vehicle we choose, buying vegetables shipped from Chile and plastic junk from China. We imagine life going on as always for our children. We are a short-attention-span nation; we will not pay heed until it's too late; then we will wish we had bought land in the Northwest Territories or Siberia. Perhaps in a couple of thousand years the redwoods will thrive again on the coast of Alaska. We will not be there to see it.

Monday, September 11, 2006

A Wedding: Ben and Christine

Today I'm putting all bad news on hold. My son got married on Friday!


In this time of chaos and fear, there is reason to rejoice: two lovely people have found their way to each other's hearts, and the world is a better place.

I spent the weekend surrounded by a suddenly doubled extended family of new daughters, sisters, parents, uncles, cousins and dear family friends. Ben has survived my decidedly uninformed parenting efforts to become a role model for many. (His new father-in-law related how he met Ben when Ben was 17 and was so impressed that he told his daughters that if they had one-tenth of Ben's drive they would go far. Not the best recommendation for endearment, but Ben and his future sister-in-law later became friends and roommates in college, and through her he met Christine--he actually asked her permission to date Christine.)

And Christine is one of a kind; it's hard to imagine that he found someone so right for him.

Am I proud!

Friday, September 08, 2006

Proposition 89: Take the “For Sale” sign off the State Capitol - California Progress Report

By Richard Holober, Executive Director
Consumer Federation of California

Since 2004, Chevron gave $3 million in political contributions in California. For a company that made a record $14 billion in profits last year, it was money well spent. Despite public indignation, big oil crushed a proposed state tax on windfall oil profits.

During one 18-month period, banks, insurance companies and other financial interests contributed $8.8 million to state politicians. They defeated financial privacy legislation that enjoyed the support of 90% of California voters.

Phone companies gave $20 million to the governor and Sacramento candidates since 2000. Their generosity bought them new Public Utilities Commissioners, which promptly buried telephone consumer protection regulations just after being adopted by their predecessors.

Our campaign finance system has produced the best government that money can buy.

State lawmakers of both parties salivate for assignments to “juice” committees such as insurance, banking, utilities, and government operations (which regulates gambling). These industries know that “money talks” in the capitol. Their checkbooks are always out to assist friendly lawmakers. Is it any surprise that elected officials end up as shills for the industries that they are supposed to regulate?

Gray Davis’ $30 million in fundraising in an election cycle seems a quaint reminder of a simpler time. Since 2003, Arnold Schwarzenegger has raised $100 million for his various campaign committees. The governor wields a steady veto pen when bills that upset his contributors survive the legislature and reach his desk.

Of course, there are principled elected officials who vote against these big money donors. Some even take the money, smile, and then vote their conscience. There are simply not enough of them to make a difference on issues that face major corporate opposition.

This November, we can take the “For Sale” sign off the state Capitol. The Consumer Federation of Californiasupports Proposition 89, the Clean Money Initiative, because we must change the rules of politics before ordinary Californians will have a chance to put our interests on an even footing with big corporate donors.

Prop 89 would create a Clean Money Election system similar to the ones that now exist in Arizona, Connecticut and Maine.

The Clean Money and Fair Elections Initiative allows candidates who run for state office, and who agree not to accept private contributions, to receive public campaign financing. The funding comes from a 0.2% increase in the corporate tax rate. That’s less than 20 cents for every $100 of profits. Personal income tax rates are not affected.

These funds are available to candidates who demonstrate widespread support. A “Clean Money” candidate for the State Assembly would have to collect 750 contributions of $5 each to qualify for the $250,000 in public financing to run in the primary election. If you won your party's primary election in June, you'd receive an additional $400,000 to run your general election campaign.

The initiative also dramatically reduces the amount that businesses and others can give to candidates who decide not to participate in the Clean Money system.

The real beauty of Proposition 89 is that it stops a candidate who takes special interest money from drowning out a Clean Money opponent. If a well-funded politician tries to buy the election by spending record amounts of PAC dollars, Proposition 89 increases the public financing of a Clean Money candidate by up to five times, keeping the playing field level.

Thanks to California Progress Report for this article.