Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category
200610 – What Dan Rather said..
Posted in Politics on June 10, 2020| Leave a Comment »
What Karen Haard said: With all of the protests going on, I would like to point out some historical facts concerning privilege. Black men were allowed to vote Feb, 3, 1870 and the first black in congress was Rep Joseph Rainy in 1870. Women did not get the right to vote until August 18,1920 and the first woman in congress was Rep. Jeannette Rankin of Montana in 1917 Native Americans did not get citizenship until June 2, 1924 and even then did not get the right to vote. This was decided by individual states and the last state to grant it was Utah in 1962. The first native American in congress was Sen Hiram Revels in 1870. An additional note. Women could not have a bank account in their name until 1960 and a single woman could not borrow money without a man to cosign until 1974.
Posted in Politics on June 6, 2020| Leave a Comment »
With all of the protests going on, I would like to point out some historical facts concerning privilege. Black men were allowed to vote Feb, 3, 1870 and the first black in congress was Rep Joseph Rainy in 1870. Women did not get the right to vote until August 18,1920 and the first woman in congress was Rep. Jeannette Rankin of Montana in 1917 Native Americans did not get citizenship until June 2, 1924 and even then did not get the right to vote. This was decided by individual states and the last state to grant it was Utah in 1962. The first native American in congress was Sen Hiram Revels in 1870. An additional note. Women could not have a bank account in their name until 1960 and a single woman could not borrow money without a man to cosign until 1974.
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Tuesday Reads: Trump Declares War On American Citizens
Posted in Politics on June 2, 2020| Leave a Comment »

Good Morning!! Yesterday was one of the most surreal days in the nearly four years of the Trump “presidency.” and worse days are very likely coming. …
Tuesday Reads: Trump Declares War On American Citizens
A Plea to Journalists – Wildfires in California: please investigate poor land planning rather than denigrating the region’s iconic, native ecosystem
Posted in Politics on October 31, 2017| Leave a Comment »
171031 – Yes, thank you, this!
Many in the fire science community are disappointed by the recent reporting in High Country News (HCN) on the tragic fires in northern California (Shrub-choked wildlands played a role in California fires, HCN 10/24/2017).
Portraying the ecology of the region as “choked” by native shrublands not only demonizes California’s richly biodiverse, characteristic habitat, the chaparral, but fails to come close to explaining why and how the fires occurred. Little effort was made in the article to help readers understand the situation. Instead, the article simply repeated hackneyed phrases over-used to describe fires in the western US.
Every fire is different. Large, high-intensity wildfires have long been a natural feature of these chaparral landscapes. What has changed is that we have put people in harm’s way.
A quick overview on Google Earth of what burned in the devastating Tubbs Fire would have revealed that it was not “shrub-choked wildlands,”…
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It’s Official: GOP Hates Women — Scamcare Edition
Posted in Politics on September 20, 2017| Leave a Comment »
170920 – From Desert Beacon, Source: It’s Official: GOP Hates Women — Scamcare Edition
Something you should know about that Bernie allegation
Posted in Politics on June 24, 2017| Leave a Comment »
170624 – from “The Vermont Political Observer”. If you have been reading about the allegations of misdeeds by the Sanderss read this too. The FBI didn’t initiate this, but they will have to investigate now. This does appear to take a page from the playbook of The group Judicial Watch. You can’t believe any of these last century right wing attack groups will quietly into the night now that Clinton is permanantly off the public payroll.
The Vermont Political Observer.
The Burlington College closure has a chance of causing trouble for the Bernie Sanders campaign, since his wife Jane played a key role in sinking the college under a mountain of debt. There are whispers of a federal probe, and now Seven Days’ Terri Hallenbeck reports that VTGOP Vice Chair Brady Toensing claims to have “new information” linking Senator Sanders to the case.
“I was recently approached and informed that Senator Bernie Sanders’ office improperly pressured People’s United Bank to approve the loan application,” Toensing said in letters to U.S. Attorney Eric Miller and to Fred Gibson Jr., the acting inspector general of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
There is cause for skepticism aplenty; Toensing is a Republican official, and he refuses to say anything more about his sources or his new information.
But there’s one more thing you should know, and Hallenbeck didn’t catch it.
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It’s Going to be Fabulous!
Posted in Politics on June 14, 2017| Leave a Comment »
170614 – From Desert Beacon…Some of you retirees might want to reconsider California. Source: It’s Going to be Fabulous!
Hillary Clinton at CodeCon 2017
Posted in Politics on May 31, 2017| Leave a Comment »
053117 – From Still for Hill. Watch the video!
For the first few minutes in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, it seemed that Hillary might be embarking on an apology tour wherein every public speaking event for the next X number of months would have to consist of Hillary enumerating reasons why she is not president. After the initial, compulsory mea culpas, however, the interview, moderated by Kara Swisher and Walter Mossberg, got into the real meat of how technology writ large including data collection and analysis, social media, and hacking affected both the running of the campaign and how people received and viewed information.
Hillary, as always, was informed and informative. She knows a lot about where the holes were, and it was fascinating to hear her explain what went wrong, what went right, and how to move forward.
A moment that was particularly gratifying was her response to a question about her Goldman Sachs speeches which, infamously, were…
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It’s About More Than Just The Ariana Grande Concert by Karen Leslie Hernandez
Posted in Politics on May 25, 2017| Leave a Comment »
170525 – Reblogged from Feminism and Religion, Karen Hernandez
Manchester.
It’s not just about this one act of violence.
It is horrific, there is no doubt, and I am in no way belittling this act of terror, but, I am always perplexed when these things happen, and how it turns into something so horrible that we forget how many children die every day around the world from other things, including terror.
Just yesterday, dozens of toddlers drowned off the coast of Libya.
One can easily find the statistics (which do vary) – an estimated 19,000 children die every day around the world due to effects of malnutrition and disease mostly in non-descript villages. Many of these young children die alone – they are unseen and forgotten.
Trafficking of children is higher than it has ever been with approximately 400,000 children trafficked worldwide every year, with an estimated 50% of these children trafficked for sex.
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‘Putting sustainable food production into context’; Jerry Coleby-Williams, Patron, National Toxics Network Inc.
Posted in Politics on May 11, 2017| Leave a Comment »
170511 – Reblogged from Jerry Coleby-Williams, his presentation in Geneva, Switzerland.
Key aspects of sustainable food production
‘Putting sustainable food production into context’ by Jerry Coleby-Williams, Patron, National Toxics Network Inc.
At the Meetings of the conferences of the parties to the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm conventions, Geneva, Switzerland, 24th April to 6th May 2017.
“There is no economy without food.
I am here to tell you that industrial chemicals – pesticides and fertilisers – are unnecessary for food production.
The food growers I mix with are interested in reducing the cost of operating a farm. They are not interested in spending money unnecessarily on industrial chemicals or fossil fuels.
The growers I work with are the opposite of industrial monocultures, they create productive, resilient landscape mosaics.
Such growers are interested in increasing productivity and profitability of their business by reducing the operating costs of food production.
No farming system is more productive than a mixed, one hectare family run…
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