I am angry.
I’m tired of pundits and know-nothing media gasbags. I’m tired of snarky “inside politics” programming. I am sick of the bigotry and hatred of “birthers” and faux patriotic cranks and their GOP puppet masters. And I’m really pissed at the Democratic Party that confuses having a plate of limp noodles with having a spine.
I’m going to vomit if I hear the word “bipartisanship” one more time.
It was “bipartisanship” that gave us this activist conservative Supreme Court. A Supreme Court that says money is free speech and corporations are persons except when real people try to hold them accountable for their greed and poisonous ways.
“Bipartisanship” gave us the Patriot Act and FISA and illegal wiretaps and two wars and “free speech zones” and “no fly” lists. God bless bipartisan America.
I get nauseated every time the Senate explains how it takes a super majority to do anything for the American people. Tell you what Senate Bozos, if it takes 60 votes to pass legislation than it should take 60% of the popular vote to get you elected.
When some Tea Party crank says, “I want my country back,” I respond, “No madam, you want your country backward.”
When a deficit-mongering politician says, “How do we pay for this?” Why not ask, “What did you Republicans do with the surplus we Democrats left you?”
When a compassionate conservative says, “Healthcare reform is socialism,” why not answer, “No, sir it is the moral and American way to care for people.”
Yes, I can hear it now: “You are naïve and simplistic. These are complicated matters and require sophisticated solutions. Democrats are a big tent and strive for balance. But Republicans block our path at every turn. We are thinking and considering new ways to work in harmony with everyone.”
Bite me.
The only thing you get with “harmony” is a Barbershop Quartet.
Democrats stop being Republican Lite. Stop whining about that mean GOP and their nasty messaging. Grow a pair, get a message, get a bumper sticker and hang it out there. Get some strong vivid talking points.
G-O-P = Greed Over People.
Greed Kills – jobs, people and the economy.
Terrorism is Viagra for Republicans: The more fear – the more excited they get.
When a soldier dies for America, who dares ask if they were gay or straight?
Don’t act so shocked, Democratic Party. Have you looked around lately?
You’re losing the young vote that showed up to elect Obama. You’re losing those old enough to remember real Democrats. Why? Because you don’t talk to them any more than you talk to me. You talk at me. You talk around me. You talk down to me. You talk about me. You don’t talk with me. And you don’t inspire and you don’t champion and without that you are nothing more than an arbitrator of compromise and abdication.
You are facing a bully. Deal with it!
Republicans want the country backwards. They champion superstition over science because it entrenches ignorance and bigotry and captures the easily frightened.
Republicans treat the Constitution the way they treat the Bible, with selective interpretation and selective application to others while exempting themselves from judgment and accountability.
Republicans preach the gospel of fear because fear is darkness and darkness covers their theft of civil liberties and Constitutional principles.
For thirty years the Republican Party has claimed the mantel of law and order but now quake in dread of the American judicial system when putting terrorists on trial. How criminal is that?
Torture is illegal. Period. John Wayne and Jack Bauer were not our Founding Fathers – only in the make-believe world of Republican drugstore-patriots.
DADT needs to be repealed. Now. It is unconscionable, immoral, and disgusting.
Empathy, compassion and equality are not pejoratives. They are American values proven again and again throughout our history.
Republicans believe that bake-sales and cookies for chemotherapy best determine the value of life and healthcare because life is a pre-existing condition and the “free market” should not have to take on such a high risk – after all, no one gets out alive, so why should the corporation be left holding the bag? Unless of course the price is right.
Republicans believe that government should keep its hands off healthcare but should put its hands inside a woman’s body.
Republicans believe in small government – small enough to hold the “right” people and small enough to be owned and operated by the “right” people. And who are the “right” people? Them. Not you.
Democratic Party, DNC, DLCC, DSCC or whatever your acronym – I have only one question for you: Really?
You can’t win against these guys? You can’t get your message out against these guys? You can’t give America leadership against these guys?
Really?
I really like the Coffee Party so far. I have only one problem with it. Don’t misunderstand me, I am totally in favor of civil discourse. My problem is that I am fundamentally opposed to taking oaths and pledges and the Coffee Party requires that you take a pledge to become a member. Oaths and pledges have historically been the tool of conservatives and have been used to discredit their opponents. If an organization is to cater to people who are independent I see no reason to limit their independence by requiring them to take a pledge forcing them to give up a measure of that independence.
One example: I was attacked on my twitter account yesterday by someone claiming I was being uncivil for pointing out that the Tea Party supporters were spamming the Coffee Party’s twitter site with name calling and misinformation about the Coffee Party. One person’s logical criticism on the facts will be construed or at least portrayed as incivility by extremists.
I have often been criticized and have offended people by being, “too independent.” I, personally, do not believe there is any such thing as being too independent. This is just who I am and am not likely to change at my age. I can be civil without taking a pledge.
Should we hitch our wagon to this star? Comments invited. http://www.coffeepartyusa.com
Georgia Up For Grabs
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CNN) - Republican Rep. John Linder of Georgia won’t seek re-election in November’s midterm election, a National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman said. |
This is another great place for a spoiler to run in the Republican primary.
This is a very improtant study that should inform your choices in deciding to run or supporting particular candidates. This should not, of course, be your only consideration but one of the criteria to be considered.
(CNN) — Political, religious and sexual behaviors may be reflections of intelligence, a new study finds.
Evolutionary psychologist Satoshi Kanazawa at the the London School of Economics and Political Science correlated data on these behaviors with IQ from a large national U.S. sample and found that, on average, people who identified as liberal and atheist had higher IQs. This applied also to sexual exclusivity in men, but not in women. The findings will be published in the March 2010 issue of Social Psychology Quarterly.
The IQ differences, while statistically significant, are not stunning — on the order of 6 to 11 points — and the data should not be used to stereotype or make assumptions about people, experts say. But they show how certain patterns of identifying with particular ideologies develop, and how some people’s behaviors come to be.
The reasoning is that sexual exclusivity in men, liberalism and atheism all go against what would be expected given humans’ evolutionary past. In other words, none of these traits would have benefited our early human ancestors, but higher intelligence may be associated with them.
“The adoption of some evolutionarily novel ideas makes some sense in terms of moving the species forward,” said George Washington University leadership professor James Bailey, who was not involved in the study. “It also makes perfect sense that more intelligent people — people with, sort of, more intellectual firepower — are likely to be the ones to do that.”
Bailey also said that these preferences may stem from a desire to show superiority or elitism, which also has to do with IQ. In fact, aligning oneself with “unconventional” philosophies such as liberalism or atheism may be “ways to communicate to everyone that you’re pretty smart,” he said.
The study looked at a large sample from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health), which began with adolescents in grades 7-12 in the United States during the 1994-95 school year. The participants were interviewed as 18- to 28-year-olds from 2001 to 2002. The study also looked at the General Social Survey, another cross-national data collection source.
Kanazawa did not find that higher or lower intelligence predicted sexual exclusivity in women. This makes sense, because having one partner has always been advantageous to women, even thousands of years ago, meaning exclusivity is not a “new” preference.
For men, on the other hand, sexual exclusivity goes against the grain evolutionarily. With a goal of spreading genes, early men had multiple mates. Since women had to spend nine months being pregnant, and additional years caring for very young children, it made sense for them to want a steady mate to provide them resources.
Religion, the current theory goes, did not help people survive or reproduce necessarily, but goes along the lines of helping people to be paranoid, Kanazawa said. Assuming that, for example, a noise in the distance is a signal of a threat helped early humans to prepare in case of danger.
“It helps life to be paranoid, and because humans are paranoid, they become more religious, and they see the hands of God everywhere,” Kanazawa said.
Participants who said they were atheists had an average IQ of 103 in adolescence, while adults who said they were religious averaged 97, the study found. Atheism “allows someone to move forward and speculate on life without any concern for the dogmatic structure of a religion,” Bailey said.
“Historically, anything that’s new and different can be seen as a threat in terms of the religious beliefs; almost all religious systems are about permanence,” he noted.
The study takes the American view of liberal vs. conservative. It defines “liberal” in terms of concern for genetically nonrelated people and support for private resources that help those people. It does not look at other factors that play into American political beliefs, such as abortion, gun control and gay rights.
“Liberals are more likely to be concerned about total strangers; conservatives are likely to be concerned with people they associate with,” he said.
Given that human ancestors had a keen interest in the survival of their offspring and nearest kin, the conservative approach — looking out for the people around you first — fits with the evolutionary picture more than liberalism, Kanazawa said. “It’s unnatural for humans to be concerned about total strangers.” he said.
The study found that young adults who said they were “very conservative” had an average adolescent IQ of 95, whereas those who said they were “very liberal” averaged 106.
It also makes sense that “conservatism” as a worldview of keeping things stable would be a safer approach than venturing toward the unfamiliar, Bailey said.
Neither Bailey nor Kanazawa identify themselves as liberal; Bailey is conservative and Kanazawa is “a strong libertarian.”
Vegetarianism, while not strongly associated with IQ in this study, has been shown to be related to intelligence in previous research, Kanazawa said. This also fits into Bailey’s idea that unconventional preferences appeal to people with higher intelligence, and can also be a means of showing superiority.
None of this means that the human species is evolving toward a future where these traits are the default, Kanazawa said.
“More intelligent people don’t have more children, so moving away from the trajectory is not going to happen,” he said.
Write to your senator, congressman and to the White House and let them know that you will oppose this man’s election.
Antigay Rep to Run for Indiana Senate Seat
Indiana representative Brad Ellsworth, a conservative Democrat who has an antigay record, Friday announced his intention to seek the Senate seat being vacated by Evan Bayh.
Ellsworth, favored by the White House and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, rose to prominence after Bayh’s decision to not seek a third term, according to The Washington Post’s blog The Fix.
Ellsworth has a poor record on gay rights and received a score of only 30 out of 100 in the Human Rights Campaign’s scorecard for the 110th Congress, 2007-2008, his first term. The HRC ranked him one of the 10 worst Democratic Congress members.
Reacting to the possibility of Ellsworth’s candidacy, HRC spokesman Michael Cole told The Huffington Post, “We do not generally get involved in these types of state party decisions. During his 2006 campaign, Brad Ellsworth voiced his support for the federal marriage amendment, making him ineligible for our endorsement.”
Ellsworth voted against federal funding for stem cell research three years ago, voted for federal bailouts of businesses, voted against the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act, and voted against health care reform.
“He is as far to the right as you can get for a potential Senate Democrate,” Chris Cillizza wrote in The Fix. “He’s a virtual Parker Griffith, the right-wing Democrat who just switched parties.”
My last post was on Mardi Gras Day when I was preoccupied with holiday issues. It seems that I was less than clear on two issues: I do not recommend investment in solar stocks. I would never presume to give anyone advice about the stock market and certainly not online in a blog. I would not take such advice myself and would hope that readers would avoid doing so.
My suggestion that readers consider “investing” in solar panels was referring to capital investment such as starting your own company, a partnership, loans and such directly in individual businesses after taking all pros and cons into consideration including an evaluation of the business plan and checking into the history of all others involved in the business. I am very big on the idea of leasing solar panels if it is done using best business practices. The same is true of panel manufacturing and research and development as well as the manufacture and renting, leasing and sale of portable solar generators. In every case it is necessary to do your homework and due diligence before spending a penny.
The other matter was my statement that I am in favor of more use of nuclear power. Certainly there are problems involved, the primary one is the nuclear waste that is now being stored on sight at power plants. Reprocessing is only a partial answer and other solutions are needed. This is also not as clean as something like fusion would be but, compared to coal, it is a much better alternative. Coal is destroying this country in so many different ways and proposals for “clean coal technology” are so far mostly mythological. The containment and disposal of coal mining waste is an even greater threat, in my opinion, than nuclear waste because of weak regulation and the violation of existing regulations that go almost completely unenforced.
There are no energy production methods that will avoid all effects on the environment but I do believe that we have an obligation to find and use the methods that will make the least impact as we move to more energy independence and that we should continue to develop as many different methods as possible from finding cheaper ways to produce vegetable oil and hydrogen and the use of wind turbines wherever practicle.
Putting “global warming” or “global climate change” aside (and these things do concern me personally) energy independence is essential if we are to ensure the safety and health of future generations.
If you have any money to invest and want to do so in a way that will make money and be an asset to the country and the environment I suggest you consider investing in water, solar power and nuclear power plants ( yes, I am in favor of much greater use of nuclear power.) We also need to invest in the containment and storage of nuclear waste which could turn into a very lucrative business if handled responsibly. I am also in favor of wind turbines for certain uses and in certain places but I do believe that solar will be the money making business as the country moves toward energy independence.
Happy Mardi Gras!
Evan Bayh, Democratic Senator from Indiana has announced his retirement. A moderate, Senator Bayh seems to have become disenchanted with the role of Senator. Speculation is that he will run for Governor of the state in 2012, a position he is known to prefer.
This is a seat that must not be allowed to go Republican. This is a good place for a Gay candidate to run in a Republican primary in order to be a spoiler and then run as an Independent in the general election.
The primary issues in this race are likely to be fiscal policy, the deficit and the debt. Social issues are not as prominent in Indiana as in other mid-western states but are certainly a part of the dialogue. A plan for jobs, debt and deficit reduction and health care will all be necessary going in.
With the entry of hate radio’s former congressman, Hayworth into the the Republican primary opposing John McCain there is now every opportunity for a Democrat or Independent to slide into a seat that will be a symbolic victory for progressives if the GOP is squeezed out.
Talking point: Is Arizona going to turn the state over to Tea Party wing nuts?
The most important issue in Arizona is immigration. You will need to make a stand on this issue and if you subscribe to a liberal policy you will need to launch a powerful effort to energize the Hispanic vote. This might be tied to an effort to change the hearts and minds of anti-gay Hispanic attitudes. Gays are willing to fight for Hispanic equality with Hispanics that are willing to fight for Gay equality.
Vive el sueño


