The fuckers at the Wisconsin Department of Health Services have proposed as part of their money saving scheme to slash the amount of recipients to the Badgercare system. The inhumane bastards care little for the concept of government providing for the welfare of the people. In this new age, government officials care more about turning a profit or balancing the budget rather than about the people the government has been created to protect.
These officious pricks are busy taking largess salaries and claiming nice benefits while denying the rest of us equal benefits. This is utterly outrageous. They are the pigs lining the rest of us up for slaughter.
"Dear Dennis Smith, you dirty rat,
I am shocked to hear that this proposal includes eliminating hard working families with employment but unaffordable health coverage through their employers.
This seems to me beyond comprehension and terribly malicious. I work a full time job but my employer only covers 75% of the cost of my premiums. The rest of my family receives no employer benefits. The result of this is that my annual premium is $12,000 with a $3,000 deductible. The Wisconsin DHS has now determined that I should pay this outrageous premium. This ridiculous sum totals nearly half of my annual salary. Although this egregious blackmail is not yet illegal, it is positively primeval and unethical. Because while my family suffers the fat fucking coffers of health care executives grow ever fatter like pus filled zits.
The DHS would have me believe that I am on my own then to find affordable health care? As it has happened, our saving grace through this great recession has been the government's care and oversight of health care through BadgerCare. Without the very effective BadgerCare system my family would find itself in dire straits (evidently the great asshole of Wisconsin would like this to be so).
One of the roles of government is to provide for the welfare of the people. BadgerCare accomplished that mission. Removing people from the program is tantamount to a calamitous offense committed against the citizenry of Wisconsin.
Rather than cutting hardworking citizens tending to their families from their health care provisions, how about addressing some of the outrageous monetary gains made by local hospitals and health care providers. Yet, it is far easier to attack the weakest among us than it is to address the real problems in our society - greed and avarice of the wealthy capitalist glutton pigs.
Well it's appalling to think that my family and others in the same situation as us will lose health care coverage only to find out what so many other families in America already know too well that no affordable health care option exists.
Although there is nothing I can probably do to convince this agency of the inherent error in its ways, I sincerely hope that these methods of saving a buck over protecting people will be seriously rethought. In addition I invite you all to kiss my ass and get thee with godspeed to hell."
You sons of bitches. We all get the message being transmitted: All animals are equal but some are more equal than others.
30 September 2011
Calling all progressive candidates for president
It has become abundantly clear that Barack Obama is a cut off the same block as GW Bush. The killing of Anwar al-Awlaki is just another in a long line of politically disastrous actions approved by Pres. Obama.
The presidential race of 2012 is shaping up to be a selection process for the next conservative/republican president. The order to kill al-Awlaki betrays Obama's progressive and liberal base. The only people who could be impressed with this murder weren't voting for Obama anyway. They belong to the group of fanatics cheering on the pack of lunatics vying for the republican nomination.
How will the White House spin look on this one? Pres. Obama has given orders for the killing of a US citizen. Watch out for the tilted message on this one.
Even more startling is the idea that since the end of WWII the US has had a succession of presidents who could legitimately be tried for war crimes, from Johnson to Nixon to Reagan and Clinton and of course GW. We could already stake a claim on Obama for the terrorist drone attacks, the assassination of bin Laden, and now the murder of an American overseas. It's sounding more and more like a brutal regime currently in power. America's own SAVAK.
The US is engaged in a war on terror but not as a deterrent of it. Instead the US blatantly functions as an active perpetrator of terrorism. Is this the United States that Americans want?
Clearly, electing any of the republican candidates means that our current policies will be continued and perhaps made more drastic. Electing the democratic candidate also means the current policies will continue.
The American people have been essentially, and effectively, eliminated from the electoral process.
Those who argue that there exists the option of a third party candidate, have no basis. Third parties obviously are not competitive. No one can offer any credibility for the argument that third party candidates stand a chance. Third party candidates have not fared well and simply cannot win a general election in the current state of our electoral system.
Much like our economic system, which limits social mobility and raises inequality, our political system is broken. The infrastructure of our political system is severely limited to the two party system. The money that pours into the system behind each candidate of the two major parties makes their influence insurmountable for a third party candidate.
All of this means that we are left with the unenviable 2012 decision between a conservative candidate or a more conservative candidate.
Voter apathy makes a lot of sense.
Is there a reasonable solution? Is there an alternative?
The presidential race of 2012 is shaping up to be a selection process for the next conservative/republican president. The order to kill al-Awlaki betrays Obama's progressive and liberal base. The only people who could be impressed with this murder weren't voting for Obama anyway. They belong to the group of fanatics cheering on the pack of lunatics vying for the republican nomination.
How will the White House spin look on this one? Pres. Obama has given orders for the killing of a US citizen. Watch out for the tilted message on this one.
Even more startling is the idea that since the end of WWII the US has had a succession of presidents who could legitimately be tried for war crimes, from Johnson to Nixon to Reagan and Clinton and of course GW. We could already stake a claim on Obama for the terrorist drone attacks, the assassination of bin Laden, and now the murder of an American overseas. It's sounding more and more like a brutal regime currently in power. America's own SAVAK.
The US is engaged in a war on terror but not as a deterrent of it. Instead the US blatantly functions as an active perpetrator of terrorism. Is this the United States that Americans want?
Clearly, electing any of the republican candidates means that our current policies will be continued and perhaps made more drastic. Electing the democratic candidate also means the current policies will continue.
The American people have been essentially, and effectively, eliminated from the electoral process.
Those who argue that there exists the option of a third party candidate, have no basis. Third parties obviously are not competitive. No one can offer any credibility for the argument that third party candidates stand a chance. Third party candidates have not fared well and simply cannot win a general election in the current state of our electoral system.
Much like our economic system, which limits social mobility and raises inequality, our political system is broken. The infrastructure of our political system is severely limited to the two party system. The money that pours into the system behind each candidate of the two major parties makes their influence insurmountable for a third party candidate.
All of this means that we are left with the unenviable 2012 decision between a conservative candidate or a more conservative candidate.
Voter apathy makes a lot of sense.
Is there a reasonable solution? Is there an alternative?
Labels:
Politics
29 September 2011
Why the big suit? David Byrne interviews David Byrne
This is from the Stop Making Sense tour:
Labels:
Interviews
26 September 2011
In Texas, Clues to Gov. Perry's Science Agenda
From The Chronicle of Higher Education
September 25, 2011
By Paul Basken
Gov. Rick Perry of Texas, the current front-runner for the GOP's presidential nomination, toured parts of his state destroyed by wildfires. The governor asked Texans to pray for rain to end the months-long drought that caused the fires, but he did not consult scientists. Erich Schlegel, Getty Images |
Republicans in recent years have often been portrayed as antiscience. In that regard, their front-runner for the 2012 presidential race, Gov. Rick Perry of Texas, seems straight out of central casting.
The prominent reasons are his high-profile refusals to accept the scientific consensus on human evolution and global warming. He also leads one of the nation's worst-performing states in terms of elementary- and secondary-school achievement, and has questioned basic rationales for a robust public-university system.
And yet for university researchers wondering what the Perry approach would mean on a national scale, there's at least some cause for guarded optimism. Cancer researchers are chief among the pockets of Texas researchers enjoying flush times. Scientists at midsize research institutions are also getting positive attention. And Mr. Perry stood with scientists, and against some in his own party, in promoting a vaccine to prevent cervical cancer.
Even the many Texas scientists who oppose their governor's stances on evolution and climate change agree that—unlike the Republican state leaders investigating climate research at the University of Virginia, or the Georgia governor who fired the state climatologist at the University of Georgia—Mr. Perry largely leaves them alone.
"I am unaware of any direct interference from Governor Perry with scientists at state universities," said David M. Hillis, a professor of natural sciences at the University of Texas at Austin who has criticized Mr. Perry for his skepticism toward evolution.
"As far as they're concerned," Andrew Dessler, a professor of atmospheric sciences at Texas A&M University, said of Mr. Perry and his administration, "we don't exist."
Mr. Perry, who became governor in December 2000, when George W. Bush resigned to become president, announced his own presidential candidacy last month. Nationwide polls since then have shown him to be the top choice among Republicans, and in a close matchup with President Obama.
The country's economic troubles have brought an end to years of steady and sometimes strong increases in federally financed scientific research, and that trend may continue regardless of whether Mr. Obama or a Republican nominee wins the presidency next year.
Still, a replacement of Mr. Obama by Mr. Perry could have important implications for how hard the White House presses to rebuild the federal commitment to science, and under what conditions. In the overall need to cut the federal budget, Mr. Obama has repeatedly called for protecting scientific research spending
"The things of nature cause nothing" under such a philosophy, said Gerald D. Skoog, a professor emeritus and co-director of the Center for the Integration of Science Education & Research at Texas Tech University, "and the need to study science is reduced or eliminated."
The last three people selected by Mr. Perry to serve as chairs of the State Board of Education—Don McLeroy, Gail Lowe, and Barbara Cargill—have all made statements critical of the theory of evolution. The chairmanships of Dr. McLeroy and Ms. Lowe ended after the State Senate refused to support their appointments; Ms. Cargill won't be subject to the confirmation process until 2013.
Dr. McLeroy is a dentist. Ms. Lowe is a co-publisher of a semiweekly newspaper. Ms. Cargill is the founder of a science camp for children run by the United Methodist Church. Their selection by Governor Perry for the leadership of the education board, which sets statewide curriculum standards, "may not have been made on the basis of the selected person's view on science and evolution in particular, but it is difficult to perceive otherwise," Mr. Skoog said.
Led by gubernatorial appointees whose qualifications are political rather than educational, the board has "done a very poor job of promoting sound, modern science" in Texas classrooms, said Mr. Hillis, who was appointed by the Board of Education in 2008 to help review science-curriculum standards. "As a result," he said, "many Texas students are arriving at college very poorly prepared to major in the sciences." Texas students rank 49th in the nation in average verbal SAT scores, 46th in mathematics SAT scores, 47th in literacy, and 36th in high-school graduation rates.
At the university level, faculty are concerned by Governor Perry's questioning of the role of research, Mr. Skoog and others said. One recent high-profile example was the controversial hiring by the University of Texas system of Rick O'Donnell, a consultant from a foundation with close ties to the governor, who challenged the usefulness of much of the research conducted in universities. Mr. O'Donnell was dismissed after six weeks.
He also championed the approval by Texas voters in November 2009 of a ballot initiative to spend $500-million trying to turn seven Texas universities into top-level research institutions comparable to the University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University.
A spokeswoman for the governor, asked whether his record reflected support for scientific discovery, gave a written response that did not deal with matters of evolution and climate change. Lucy Nashed, the spokeswoman, instead emphasized Mr. Perry's work to align public-school curricula with the needs of colleges and employers, and his record of support for "hundreds of millions of dollars in the development of cutting-edge technologies" to reinforce Texas' status as a global research leader.
"As Governor Perry has said, he believes Texas has the potential to become the next Silicon Valley," Ms. Nashed said.
In terms of its financial commitment to high-tech research, Texas is clearly a leader, said Dan Berglund, president and chief executive of the State Science and Technology Institute, which tracks state spending on technology-based economic development.
"Texas is where Texas likes to be, which is either leading the nation or at the front of the pack," Mr. Berglund said.
Money, in fact, lurks as a central factor in much of Mr. Perry's attitude toward science and education. While a sharp critic of federal spending, the governor has criticized cuts in the U.S. space program, through which NASA's Johnson Space Center, in Houston, supports some 3,000 civilian employees and 12,000 contract workers at outside companies.
And his controversial support for mandatory vaccinations of girls against the human papillomavirus, despite his and his party's general advocacy of individual freedoms, has been overshadowed by suggestions that he may have been largely motivated by political and financial support from the drug maker Merck, which has exclusive rights to the HPV vaccine.
In the end, that emphasis on the financial benefits of science and education, along with the governor's tendency to question research that doesn't fit his political agenda, is part of an attitude that university researchers in Texas see as statewide and deeply troubling.
Outside of areas where research is believed to drive economic growth, public education at all levels in Texas labors under a tight-budget approach. In this year's State of the State address, Mr. Perry pressed colleges to create programs through which students could earn bachelor's degrees for no more than $10,000.
And while Texas is one of the top-ranked states in overall research support, its activity is less impressive when adjusted for its size. Data compiled by the National Science Foundation show Texas near the bottom when its research-and-development expenditures are measured as a share of gross domestic product.
A jobs-based approach to science spending also has its limits if not accompanied by strong support for basic research, experts said. Some of the most successful states, in terms of converting science spending into economic growth, were led by governors such as Richard F. Celeste of Ohio, John M. Engler and Jennifer M. Granholm of Michigan, Michael S. Dukakis of Massachusetts, and James B. Hunt Jr. of North Carolina, Mr. Berglund said. "None of those people are scientists," he said, "but that doesn't stop them from appreciating the importance of science in higher education."
Mr. Nielsen-Gammon, the state climatologist, who was appointed by Mr. Bush late in his final term as governor, said he is grateful that during 10 years of the Perry administration, he hasn't been pressured to change his position on the burning of fossil fuels, which he believes contributes to climate change.
Seasonal occurrences like El Niño and La Niña clearly bear the largest share of responsibility for cycles of floods and drought in Texas, including this year's especially dry conditions through much of the state, Mr. Nielsen-Gammon said. But man-made climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of extreme wet and dry conditions, and it's likely to become an even stronger factor in the future, he said. The Perry administration, so far, has chosen not to listen to his advice.
"I'm puzzled," Mr. Nielsen-Gammon said. "I would think that with climate change being an important issue, that he'd want to consult with the best scientists available. I'm not saying I'm the best, but I've been appointed for that purpose."
The prominent reasons are his high-profile refusals to accept the scientific consensus on human evolution and global warming. He also leads one of the nation's worst-performing states in terms of elementary- and secondary-school achievement, and has questioned basic rationales for a robust public-university system.
And yet for university researchers wondering what the Perry approach would mean on a national scale, there's at least some cause for guarded optimism. Cancer researchers are chief among the pockets of Texas researchers enjoying flush times. Scientists at midsize research institutions are also getting positive attention. And Mr. Perry stood with scientists, and against some in his own party, in promoting a vaccine to prevent cervical cancer.
Even the many Texas scientists who oppose their governor's stances on evolution and climate change agree that—unlike the Republican state leaders investigating climate research at the University of Virginia, or the Georgia governor who fired the state climatologist at the University of Georgia—Mr. Perry largely leaves them alone.
"I am unaware of any direct interference from Governor Perry with scientists at state universities," said David M. Hillis, a professor of natural sciences at the University of Texas at Austin who has criticized Mr. Perry for his skepticism toward evolution.
"As far as they're concerned," Andrew Dessler, a professor of atmospheric sciences at Texas A&M University, said of Mr. Perry and his administration, "we don't exist."
Mr. Perry, who became governor in December 2000, when George W. Bush resigned to become president, announced his own presidential candidacy last month. Nationwide polls since then have shown him to be the top choice among Republicans, and in a close matchup with President Obama.
The country's economic troubles have brought an end to years of steady and sometimes strong increases in federally financed scientific research, and that trend may continue regardless of whether Mr. Obama or a Republican nominee wins the presidency next year.
Still, a replacement of Mr. Obama by Mr. Perry could have important implications for how hard the White House presses to rebuild the federal commitment to science, and under what conditions. In the overall need to cut the federal budget, Mr. Obama has repeatedly called for protecting scientific research spending
'Prayer for Rain'
Mr. Perry, like Mr. Bush, is known for unimpressive grades in college and is reputed to have little curiosity about the world of scientific exploration. In response to record drought conditions this year in Texas, Mr. Perry issued a proclamation calling for three days of "prayer for rain," but has not consulted with his state climatologist, John W. Nielsen-Gammon, a professor of atmospheric sciences at Texas A&M University who believes man-made climate change to be a contributing factor."The things of nature cause nothing" under such a philosophy, said Gerald D. Skoog, a professor emeritus and co-director of the Center for the Integration of Science Education & Research at Texas Tech University, "and the need to study science is reduced or eliminated."
The last three people selected by Mr. Perry to serve as chairs of the State Board of Education—Don McLeroy, Gail Lowe, and Barbara Cargill—have all made statements critical of the theory of evolution. The chairmanships of Dr. McLeroy and Ms. Lowe ended after the State Senate refused to support their appointments; Ms. Cargill won't be subject to the confirmation process until 2013.
Dr. McLeroy is a dentist. Ms. Lowe is a co-publisher of a semiweekly newspaper. Ms. Cargill is the founder of a science camp for children run by the United Methodist Church. Their selection by Governor Perry for the leadership of the education board, which sets statewide curriculum standards, "may not have been made on the basis of the selected person's view on science and evolution in particular, but it is difficult to perceive otherwise," Mr. Skoog said.
Led by gubernatorial appointees whose qualifications are political rather than educational, the board has "done a very poor job of promoting sound, modern science" in Texas classrooms, said Mr. Hillis, who was appointed by the Board of Education in 2008 to help review science-curriculum standards. "As a result," he said, "many Texas students are arriving at college very poorly prepared to major in the sciences." Texas students rank 49th in the nation in average verbal SAT scores, 46th in mathematics SAT scores, 47th in literacy, and 36th in high-school graduation rates.
At the university level, faculty are concerned by Governor Perry's questioning of the role of research, Mr. Skoog and others said. One recent high-profile example was the controversial hiring by the University of Texas system of Rick O'Donnell, a consultant from a foundation with close ties to the governor, who challenged the usefulness of much of the research conducted in universities. Mr. O'Donnell was dismissed after six weeks.
Valuing Science
Clearly, however, Mr. Perry sees some value in science. He pushed for creation of the Texas Emerging Technology Fund, which since 2005 has given more than $360-million to private companies and more than a dozen universities. He also established the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas, which began giving awards for cancer research in 2010, with plans to spend $3-billion in state money over 10 years.He also championed the approval by Texas voters in November 2009 of a ballot initiative to spend $500-million trying to turn seven Texas universities into top-level research institutions comparable to the University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University.
A spokeswoman for the governor, asked whether his record reflected support for scientific discovery, gave a written response that did not deal with matters of evolution and climate change. Lucy Nashed, the spokeswoman, instead emphasized Mr. Perry's work to align public-school curricula with the needs of colleges and employers, and his record of support for "hundreds of millions of dollars in the development of cutting-edge technologies" to reinforce Texas' status as a global research leader.
"As Governor Perry has said, he believes Texas has the potential to become the next Silicon Valley," Ms. Nashed said.
In terms of its financial commitment to high-tech research, Texas is clearly a leader, said Dan Berglund, president and chief executive of the State Science and Technology Institute, which tracks state spending on technology-based economic development.
"Texas is where Texas likes to be, which is either leading the nation or at the front of the pack," Mr. Berglund said.
Money, in fact, lurks as a central factor in much of Mr. Perry's attitude toward science and education. While a sharp critic of federal spending, the governor has criticized cuts in the U.S. space program, through which NASA's Johnson Space Center, in Houston, supports some 3,000 civilian employees and 12,000 contract workers at outside companies.
And his controversial support for mandatory vaccinations of girls against the human papillomavirus, despite his and his party's general advocacy of individual freedoms, has been overshadowed by suggestions that he may have been largely motivated by political and financial support from the drug maker Merck, which has exclusive rights to the HPV vaccine.
In the end, that emphasis on the financial benefits of science and education, along with the governor's tendency to question research that doesn't fit his political agenda, is part of an attitude that university researchers in Texas see as statewide and deeply troubling.
Outside of areas where research is believed to drive economic growth, public education at all levels in Texas labors under a tight-budget approach. In this year's State of the State address, Mr. Perry pressed colleges to create programs through which students could earn bachelor's degrees for no more than $10,000.
And while Texas is one of the top-ranked states in overall research support, its activity is less impressive when adjusted for its size. Data compiled by the National Science Foundation show Texas near the bottom when its research-and-development expenditures are measured as a share of gross domestic product.
A jobs-based approach to science spending also has its limits if not accompanied by strong support for basic research, experts said. Some of the most successful states, in terms of converting science spending into economic growth, were led by governors such as Richard F. Celeste of Ohio, John M. Engler and Jennifer M. Granholm of Michigan, Michael S. Dukakis of Massachusetts, and James B. Hunt Jr. of North Carolina, Mr. Berglund said. "None of those people are scientists," he said, "but that doesn't stop them from appreciating the importance of science in higher education."
Mr. Nielsen-Gammon, the state climatologist, who was appointed by Mr. Bush late in his final term as governor, said he is grateful that during 10 years of the Perry administration, he hasn't been pressured to change his position on the burning of fossil fuels, which he believes contributes to climate change.
Seasonal occurrences like El Niño and La Niña clearly bear the largest share of responsibility for cycles of floods and drought in Texas, including this year's especially dry conditions through much of the state, Mr. Nielsen-Gammon said. But man-made climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of extreme wet and dry conditions, and it's likely to become an even stronger factor in the future, he said. The Perry administration, so far, has chosen not to listen to his advice.
"I'm puzzled," Mr. Nielsen-Gammon said. "I would think that with climate change being an important issue, that he'd want to consult with the best scientists available. I'm not saying I'm the best, but I've been appointed for that purpose."
09 September 2011
The Forgotten 9/11: An Act of US Terrorism
Salvador Allende (1908-1973) |
On September 11, 1973, while in the midst of a US led military coup the "world's first democratically elected Marxist leader" addressed his nation for the last time.
"Workers of my country, I have faith in Chile and its destiny. Other men will overcome this dark and bitter moment when treason seeks to prevail. Go forward knowing that, sooner rather than later, the great avenues will open again where free men will walk to build a better society.
Long live Chile! Long live the people! Long live the workers!"
When Allende was elected to office, he raised wages, lowered prices, implemented free education and healthcare and promised that "along with me, the people are entering La Moneda." But it was his economic decisions that offended the US and the Chilean right wing and led to his eventual downfall. Allende nationalized the banks and centralized the oil and mining industries including the monstrous US owned copper mines. By taking over the copper mines, Allende assured no sympathy nor support from Washington, and prompted Nixon's brash reprisal, "It's that son of a bitch Allende. We're going to smash him."
I invite you to watch the BBC documentary here.
Earlier this year, Allende's body was exhumed as part of an investigation to finally determine his cause of death. It had been assumed for the past thirty-eight years that he had committed suicide but there were some who believed he had been assassinated.
Two months after the exhumation, researchers confirmed what most had already come to accept, Salvador Allende had committed suicide.
On September 8, Salvador Allende was reburied in Santiago without fanfare, without public ceremony.
On September 11, the US and Chile are inextricably linked by the covert threads of political terrorism, one act committed by the US the other against. When we mourn the one, we cannot ignore the other. For Americans, most will remember the attacks of September 11 in New York yet we must not forget the US-led coup in Chile. For it is through this cognizance that we must hold our government accountable for its own acts of terrorism. Be not fooled by the apparition of democracy, the US government can, has, does, and will perpetrate war crimes and acts of terrorism far greater than the actions against it.
Find out more:
- Read the released censored US government documents here.
- Read the story of the day of the coup.
- Read Kenneth Maxwell's retelling for Foreign Affairs.
- Last September, The Guardian's Raúl Zibechi reminded readers of the US driven coup in Chile.
- And a simple search on the Internet will reveal hundreds of sites: The Other 9/11.
- Read a few of Allende's own words.
Labels:
Terrorism by the US
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)