Cindy Sheehan was telling the truth on Anderson Cooper.

TocqueDeVille’s diary suggested that Cindy Sheehan may have lied on the August 15th Anderson Cooper show about the letter she wrote to Nightline. However, a careful reading of the Cooper transcript and the original letter, still posted at Bullyard, show she was telling the truth.

The letter in question was sent from Sheehan’s email to Skeeter Gallagher to Tony Tersch to Bullyard. Here is the controversial passage in question:

Am I emotional? Yes, my first born was murdered. Am I angry? Yes, he was killed for lies and for a PNAC Neo-Con agenda to benefit Israel. My son joined the Army to protect America, not Israel.

However, that was not what Anderson Cooper asked her. Cooper asked her if she had said:

You were also quoted as saying, “My son joined the Army to protect America, not Israel. You get America out of Iraq and Israel out of Palestine and you’ll stop the terrorism.” How responsible do you believe Israel is for the amount of terrorism in the world?

In the Bullyard post, she did not say, “You get America out of Iraq and Israel out of Palestine, and you’ll stop the terrorism.” Therefore, she was telling the truth when she denied saying that.

Here are her other statements on Cooper:

I didn’t — I didn’t say — I didn’t say that my son died for Israel. I’ve never said that. I saw somebody wrote that and it wasn’t my words. Those aren’t even words that I would say.

Let’s go back to the Bullyard post; here are the two sentences she was talking about.

Yes, he was killed for lies and for a PNAC agenda to benefit Israel.

Saying that Casey died for an agenda which included the defense of Israel is different from implying that our forces were somehow at Israel’s beck and cell.

My son joined the army to protect America, not Israel.

This sentence indicates ambiguity, not certainty. She may very well have wondered in her mind if Casey had died for Israel back in March. But it is clear from her recent statements that she does not think that now.

Now, regarding her suggestion that her email was somehow broken into and altered:

I wrote the letter to Ted Bettag and cc’d a copy to the person who gave me Ted’s address. I believe he changed the email and sent it out to capitalize on my new found notoriety by promoting his own agenda. Enough about that.

It would be totally reasonable for her to think that, given the known exaggerations about her statements, of which Cooper’s question contained one.

So, the bottom line is, Cindy Sheehan is telling the truth, accusations of her being an anti-semite are smokescreens designed to detract from her real message, and we should stay on message. Furthermore, we should continue to cover demonstrations like last night’s Salt Lake protests and continue to highlight other families who have lost friends and loved ones in Iraq. This is not just about Cindy, but about them as well.

The new American religion: George Bush as a cult figure.

A reader on my blog comments that George Bush is like God to the right-wingers. She makes a very good point; the new American religion is the belief that George Bush is the most infallible person since the Bible was completed 2000 years ago.

This religion, which I will call Bushism, is a logical extension of fundamentalist Christianity. Fundamentalist Christianity is a belief system in which the Bible is infallible and the final authority by which to determine right from wrong. Derived from the Bible is a set of beliefs by which fundamentalists determine who is really Christian and who is not:
–Belief in the Trinity, or three co-equal persons with a godhead: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

–Belief in the death, burial, and actual physical resurrection of Jesus.

–The miracles in the Bible were real and happened exactly as described.

–The world did not evolve from a Big Bang; God created it in seven days.

–God finished writing the Bible after Revelation.

–Salvation is only obtainable through acceptance in the fact that Jesus died and paid the penalty for your sins; some believe baptism is essential for salvation as well.

–The Bible is the final authority for what is right and wrong.

–A final judgement day upon the return of Christ; Christians go to heaven while non-Christians go to hell.

——————————————————————————–

Bushism is an extension of this belief system. It is an apolcalyptic belief system which goes beyond normal fundamentalism and into the realm of politics. Before we continue, we shoud make clear that not all fundamentalists are Bushists. This belief system holds that George Bush is the greatest man to arise since the Bible was finished 2000 years ago and the Apostle John passed away. Therefore, according to this belief system, George Bush is infallable and anything he says is gospel truth.

Tied in with the belief in the infallability of George Bush is the belief that the end times are about to come. This is a belief made popular by such books as the Left Behind Series by Tim LaHaye, husband of Concerned Women for America’s Beverly LaHaye. The latter is a right-wing group which believes that the woman’s place is in the home.

Therefore, the 9/11 attacks “confirmed” for a lot of people that the end times were indeed taking place. Among the core beliefs of Bushism are as follows:

–The endtimes are about to come; therefore, we need a strong leader like George Bush to protect our American way of life.

–This is the final struggle of good versus evil; therefore, either you are with George Bush or against him.

–Gays, immigrants, liberals, and other such opponents of George Bush are against him; therefore, they must support Saddam and Bin Laden.

–Terrorism is the force of evil; there is a grand conspiracy of terrorists conspiring to destroy our way of life.

–The end times will be marked by a struggle for the hearts and minds of our children; therefore, we must make sure they are only indoctrinated with Christian values. Others would go so far as to support indoctrination in ID or Creationism.

–Gays have a secret agenda to recruit new members to fuel their evil perversions.

–Welfare, Social Security, and Medicare are unnecessary, because we must depend on God to provide for us and not the government.

–The woman’s place is in the house; they are to cook dinner for their husbands and raise their children.

–Fetuses are people with the same kind of rights as other people; therefore, abortion is a sin.

–There is a grand conspiracy of New Agers attempting to corrupt our children and teach them non-Christan practices such as Wicca and Paganism.

–George Bush’s wars are right and just because they open up new doors for missionaries to convert people.

–Liberals are elitist snobs who thumb their noses up at you and say, “That’s not PC,” when you say something out of line.

For any religion to work, there must be a compelling narrative for new converts to latch on to and make sense of their world. For example, Christianity has a long and broad narrative starting from the beginning of time to the days of the early church. Every historical event mentioned in the Bible is used to fit in to that narrative; for instance, Abraham’s sacrifice of Issac presages God’s sacrifice of Christ on the cross thousands of years later.

Islam uses many of the same stories along with the life and times of Mohammed and the strife between the Christians and Jews to construct a whole new narrative. Buddhism constructs a narrative based on Buddha’s birth into unlimited luxury and subsequent discovery of human suffering and his enlightenment. The Greeks constructed a narrative based on the gods controlling the forces of nature and unleashing them at every whim.

These events do not actually have to be factually true to be meaningful to the faithful adherent. Therefore, when you try to tell a Bushist follower that Saddam had nothing to do with 9/11, it will go inside one ear and out the other because it does not fit their narrative. The facts that Iraq had no WMD’s or that gays are not out to recruit followers or that there is no grand New Age conspiracy trying to corrupt our youth or that laws against abortion do not reduce abortions will similarly go in one ear and out the other. Facts do not matter to these people. Only their religious narrative, as dictated by their master George Bush does.

This explains why George Bush refuses to admit error — if he were to meet with Cindy Sheehan or to admit that he made a mistake in invading Iraq, he would lose face with the legions of cult followers who voted for him in November. He is more afraid of losing his devotees than he is of Cindy Sheehan or any of his other critics.

Religious figures — good or bad — have the kind of appeal they do because they have an aura of certainty about them. Jesus, Mohammed, Abraham, Moses, Buddha, Confucius, Lao-Tse, and other religious figures communicated to their followers with a near-absolute degree of certainty the meaning of life to people who were lost and looking for answers in an uncertain world. The gift of being able to communicate certainty to an uncertain world is a rare gift which cannot be taken lightly. It can be used for great good as well as great harm.

George Bush has such a gift of communicating certainty. However, he has grossly misused that gift and has wreaked great harm on this world as a result. The hundreds of thousands of people killed in Iraq along with the many broken lives that have taken place are a direct result of the fanaticism of his legions of followers, Congressional enablers, and appointees who allowed themselves to be seduced by Bush’s cult of personality and check their brains at the voting booth.

The best way I know of to combat this religious cult is for us to weave a narrative that is even more compelling and attention grabbing than Bush’s narrative is to his followers. This will allow us to peel off followers who had their doubts about Bush, but who didn’t vote Democratic last time because we failed to offer a better alternative.

Russ Feingold’s opposition to No Child Left Behind.

In a new report released today, over 700 Missouri schools have failed to meet the Adequate Yearly Progress standards of the draconian No Child Left Behind bill. That number was up from around 400 last year.

No great man fails to make mistakes, and Senator Ted Kennedy is no exception. The original intent of the bill was to get minority schools up to the same standards of education as non-minority schools are. But that has failed; here in Missouri, schools are not improving fast enough to meet the standards.
We all agree on the notion of holding schools accountable for the student’s performance. However, the way this bill does it is by requiring schools to undergo a drill-and-kill regimen of testing. Students do not learn by memorizing a bunch of answers for a fill-in-the-blank test. They learn best through development critical thinking skills, writing about their experiences, and actually doing the work they are preparing for.

Furthermore, NCLB, as documented above, sets impossible standards for our schools to meet. Missouri schools have been making improvements. But they have not improved enough to meet these standards. We all agree that high expectations make students better learners. However, the problem is that impossible expectations do not lead to better learning, but frustration. As an illustration, I am sure everyone here will know of a jerk parent who is always screaming at their child for not doing well in sports while the child is in tears. That is what NCLB is like.

The right, of course, has bought into NCLB because they want to see our schools fail. They want nothing more than to see our public schools fail so that they can get vouchers to send their children off to religious private schools where their kids can be taught creationism instead of evolution.

There is another problem with standardized testing, and that is cultural. The people who write the tests for our students are normally White and middle-class. They will tend to reflect middle-class terminology. Therefore, a poor Black student who is not familiar with a certain word will have more trouble with the test than a White middle-class student.

As reflected by the numbers for Missouri, the numbers show that NCLB is too much of a cookie-cutter approach that leaves students who are different out. It is possible to design a test that is applicable to many students. However, there are others who simply don’t see the testing as relevant.

Some students, especially some who are talented and gifted, do not see the work they do as relevant. All they want to do, for example, is be an airline mechanic, for instance. So, they may be brilliant when it comes to science class, OK in math class, and then completely clueless when it comes to English. Standardized testing simply doesn’t fit students whose knowledge is specialized as opposed to students whose knowledge is broad-based.

Now, Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings is backing off of the most draconian provisions of NCLB. So, the question becomes, what was the point of the law in the first place?

The answer is a classic case of Monkey-see, Monkey-do from the Bush administration. The Bush administration did a classic trick straight out of The Magician’s Handbook: If you look at your left hand, the whole audience will look at your left hand. Then, your right hand can be busy with the illusion.

The only real point of the law was the provision that required all schools to open their records to the military and allow military recruiters the run of the school in an effort to recruit our students or lose federal funding. So, while Bush was boasting about how NCLB would boost our education scores and schools would finally be held accountable, the only real point was the rampant and unsuccessful attempt to saturate our students with military recruiters.

This next primary election highlights a clear choice between Russ Feingold and Hillary Clinton and shows the superior judgement of Feingold as opposed to Hillary Clinton. Feingold saw through the lies of the Bush administration and voted against No Child Left Behind. On the other hand, Hillary Clinton voted for it.

Clinton may rant about how the Bush administration failed to fund NCLB by $12 billion. But the fact was, she voted for it. She did not recognize the Bush administration for the liars that they are when they promised to fully fund NCLB; she also did not recognize the political sleight of hand at work.

On the other hand, Russ Feingold takes pride in reading every single bill filed in Congress. He saw through the administration’s sleight of hand and furthermore saw them for the liars that they are.

Voting for a bill and then saying you were lied to afterwards does not do Clinton any good. All that does is cause people to question your judgement skills. Feingold, on the other hand, had the judgment skills to recognize a bondoggle when he saw one.

In fact, the reason he voted against NCLB was that he knew at the time that it would not be fully funded:

I did not support this education bill because I do not believe it is the best approach for Wisconsin students, teachers, and school districts. In particular, I could not support a new, largely unfunded federal mandate for annual testing in grades 3-8. I believe that the federal government should leave decisions about the frequency of using student testing to measure and increase student academic achievement up to the states and local school districts that bear the responsibility for educating our children.

I also regret that the final bill did not include a Senate provision that would have led to the full funding of the federal share of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) with specified, mandatory funding increases.

Opposing NCLB was not popular at the time. Feingold was one of only 10 senators to vote against it. But it was right. Feingold had this caustic remark about NCLB during a Green Bay area listening session:

“I was one of 10 people to vote against No Child Left Behind and teaching to the tests,” Feingold said. “I don’t care if the president and Ted Kennedy hugged, which they did.”

Feingold understands that teaching to the tests is not the best way to educate a child. Information that might be useful to one child will not be useful to another. Furthermore, some students learn at much different paces than others do. Standardized testing does not take that into account.

Feingold, in a February 18th letter cosigned by five other Senators, detailed other problems he has with NCLB. All of these problems were problems raised by their constituents:

–The difficulty rural schools like mine would have in transporting students to other schools if they get unaccredited under NCLB;

–The fact that NCLB imposes sanctions but fails to give schools resources for succeeding;

–The financial cost of school districts in collecting the relevant data;

–The lack of funding necessary for schools to train teachers to administer NCLB;

–The psychological toll NCLB takes on students and teachers in preparation time for NCLB;

–The time NCLB testing takes away from other relevant subjects that are not tested;

–The conflicts NCLB has with the Individuals with Disabilities Act;

–The difficulty non-English students have in taking the NCLB test.

In order to improve the quality of education for our students, here is what Russ Feingold would do as President:

–Feingold would expand Wisconsin’s highly successful SAGE program to the national level. SAGE is a program designed to reduce class sizes down to 15. When I student taught in PE, junior high was the most difficult class for me to manage. The reason was because there were almost 30 students in my class. It was almost impossible for me to monitor every single student in that classroom.

The government’s own figures support reduced class sizes:

The benefits of class-size reduction are seen in kindergarten and through grades 1-3, and the effects are long lasting.

Analyses of the STAR results confirm statistically significant differences in achievement among students who attended small classes for one, two, three or four years. Although one year in smaller classes resulted in increased achievement, the benefits of smaller class sizes in the early grades increased as children spent more years in the smaller classes. In addition to initial benefits, there are long lasting effects on student achievement that result from reducing class sizes. Recent findings from Tennessee’s Project STAR study demonstrate that students attending small classes in grades K-3 outperformed their counterparts on standardized tests in grades 4, 6 and 8; continued to outperform classmates at the high school level; took more advanced classes; were less likely to be retained a grade or drop out of high school; and were more likely to prepare for college by taking college entrance exams. Additionally, black students who attended smaller classes in the early grades were more likely to take the ACT or SAT, raising their prospects of attending college and cutting the black-white gap in numbers of students taking college entrance exams in half.

However, researchers have found that in order to optimize the carryover benefits of small classes in the early grades through the later grades, it is necessary for students to spend at least three years in small classes. The advantages of attending a small class for the four years encompassing kindergarten through third grade are equivalent to receiving an additional six months to fourteen months of schooling.

Here is how the SAGE program works:

Participating districts receive $2,000 per student and are required to meet specific “contractual” requirements with the Department of Public Instruction and also to take part in an extensive evaluation of the program conducted by the Center for Urban Initiatives and Research at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

In addition, districts agree to turn schools into “lighted schoolhouses” that are open for extended hours, to develop rigorous academic programs, and to establish and implement plans for staff development and accountability.

In other words, schools get extra money to hire more teachers in exchange for developing high expectations for teachers and students and keeping the school open after-hours.

Incidentally, the latter provision would also reduce juvenille crime, as research shows that most of it occurs between the hours of 3 and 8 P.M. Also, it would allow single mothers to not have to choose between keeping their jobs and supervising their children when they come home. It would also leave them more money, as they would not have to hire a babysitter for these hours.

–Feingold would support the increase in Pell Grants:

Higher education is one of the most vital keys to open the door to success in this country. Without a college degree, or significant post-secondary education, it is a lot harder to find a successful path through today’s labor market– and without Pell grants from the Federal Government, many individuals simply can’t consider college. I am proud to have successfully expanded the size and availability of Pell grants and will continue this work so that every American can realize the dream of a college education.”

Without the dream of college, students will not be motivated to study during high school unles they have enough money to go; Feingold’s plan addresses that issue.

–Feingold supports the waiver of certain provisons of NCLB for schools that have demonstrated academic success and improvement in a number of areas:

This bill would allow States and school districts that meet the same specific accountability criteria outlined for school-level excellence under the State Academic Achievement Award Program to apply to the Secretary of Education for a waiver from the new annual reading or language arts and mathematics tests for students in grades 3-8. The waiver would be for a period of three years and would be renewable, so long as the state or school district meets the criteria.

To qualify for the waiver, the State or school district must have significantly closed the achievement gap among a number of subgroups of students as required under Title I, or must have exceeded their adequate yearly progress, AYP, goals for two or more consecutive years. The bill would require the Secretary to grant waivers to states or school districts that meet these criteria and apply for the waiver. Individual districts in states that have waivers would not be required to apply for a separate waiver.

–Increased funding for WIC and Head Start;

–Increased scholarship opportunites for students who wish to study abroad;

–$22 billion more funding to repair decaying school buildings;

–Increased supervision of how schools treat gay students;

–More IDEA funding for schools.

While the Bush administration has done nothing for our schools except implement drill-and-kill testing that takes five weeks out of school time, and Hillary Clinton voted for NCLB and then ranted that she was misled, Senator Feingold has been offering countless proposals to make our schools better places for our children to learn in.

I challenge anybody else to show me that their candidate has done more for education than Senator Feingold.

Is anti-Immigration equivalent to White supremacy?

In order to discuss this question, I will take a news release by the Conservative Party, change one word, and let you decide for yourself. The excerpts below:
Here you go:

Michael Howard has promoted the cause of “Whiteness” and called for a stronger sense of national identity.

And the Conservative Leader has also pressed for allegiance to the White race to be made more meaningful, with the wider use of existing powers to cancel the citizenship and right to remain in the UK of those who pose a threat to national security.

He declared: “We should be White first and White last, while staunchly adhering to our respective faiths. You have to have allegiance to our values and the White way of life. We must build on and strengthen our shared sense of Whiteness while recognising it is not incompatible with a continuing attachment to other traditions.”

<snip>

He went on: “Perhaps one of the mistakes that we have made in recent years is a tendency to place too much emphasis on the need to encourage the retention of attachment to other traditions, and not enough on the White identity that we all share. By celebrating our differences, we have neglected our common interests and shared values.”

He stated: “If we can establish a strong sense of shared White identity it will fill the void that to some extent exists, which is often filled by philosophies and views that are utterly alien to our society, which breed hatred and which ultimately lead to the kind of catastrophe we saw on July 7.”

Stressing the need to inculcate a sense of allegiance to the values that are the hallmark of White England – decency, tolerance and a sense of fair play – Mr Howard declared: “This sense of allegiance needs to be made more meaningful. For example, the Government has powers to revoke the citizenship and right to remain in this country of those who acquired those privileges by naturalisation.

All I did was change all instances of “British” to “White” and I came up with a White supremacist tract.

When I, or many other people think of someone from the UK, we immediately think of a white person in my mind. Despite its respect for diversity, the UK is still around 90% White.

Although I am not suggesting that Mr. Howard is a racist, I do think that him and other such leaders are not different enough from the British Nationalist Party and other such White Supremacist parties. And I do think Mr. Howard is pandering to the worst elements of UK Society in a desperate attempt to gain vote share before the next election.

He has failed utterly to increase his share of the vote despite the unpopularity of Tony Blair. The Liberal Democrats were the ones who gained the most at the expense of the Blair government. So, despite the fact that Howard hates Bush and Rove almost as much as he does Blair, this could be the start of Howard engaging in the same kind of dirty politics that Rove is infamous for here.

Senator Feingold’s voting record on Hispanic issues.

The National Hispanic Leadership Agenda has given Senator Russ Feingold a 100% rating for his votes on six key issues affecting Hispanics during the 2003-2004 Congressional session. In addition to the immigration issues discussed last night, he has consistently fought for the well-being of Hispanic voters who work hard and play by the rules.

Below, I will discuss each of the six votes and discuss some of the other work he has done for the Hispanic community. Winning this group over is important if we wish to win the West in 2008, as this was a region which trended Blue in the last election.
2004 Budget, March 26th 2003: This budget cut back funding for Hispanic education and other programs. In addition, administration officials, during the election campaign, touted programs that they had cut funding for, lying to the Hispanic voters about their concern for their welfare. For instance:

Tommy G. Thompson, the secretary of health and human services, announced recently that the administration was awarding $11.7 million in grants to help 30 states plan and provide coverage for people without health insurance. Mr. Bush had proposed ending the program in each of the last three years.

The administration also announced recently that it was providing $11.6 million to the states so they could buy defibrillators to save the lives of heart attack victims. But Mr. Bush had proposed cutting the budget for such devices by 82 percent, to $2 million from $10.9 million.

Whether they involve programs Mr. Bush supported or not, the grant announcements illustrate how the administration blends politics and policy, blurring the distinction between official business and campaign-related activities.

This was also the budget which included the notorious Bush Tax Cut.

Among other things, the 2004 Bush budget:

–Cut Small Business Administration funding. Many Hispanic immigrants do not work for farms at low wages, but have the skills to start their own business. Over 1 million have done so. Bush’s budget cuts have forced more to work at farms for sub-minimum wages.

–Bush broke a promise to fund $9.4 billion for education; many Hispanics do not have a diploma or GED.

–Bush froze the funding for ESL programs even though non-English speakers are a rapidly growing  group.

Here is Feingold’s discussion of the budget:

This budget resolution is a prescription for fiscal disaster. The tax cut and spending policies it provides are grossly irresponsible. The budget enforcement rules included in the resolution are no better. Instead of extending the budget rules that have helped impose some fiscal restraint on Congress and the White House since 1990, this resolution rips a $1.5 trillion loophole in them for this year, and opens the door for unlimited fiscal mischief in future years.

Over the 11 years covered by this document, from FY 2003 through FY 2013, the budget resolution produces annual deficits that by themselves would cause concern in any one year. In total, their effect is far worse. The additional debt run up over the 11 years covered by this resolution is an absolutely astounding $4.5 trillion. It will be extremely difficult to recover from this budget resolution. As we have seen, our economy is resilient, but the damage done by this resolution will be with us for many years.

The question we must now ask is who will pay for all of this? As the Nobel Prize winning economist Milton Friedman famously said, “there is no free lunch.” Someone will be stuck with the credit card tab this budget runs up. The answer is that our children and grandchildren will have to pay for all of this. The tax cuts and spending increases we pass today will be paid for by our children and grandchildren. That is precisely the tradeoff this budget makes. Tax cuts and increased spending for us, and our kids will have to pay the bill.

Feingold voted against this budget and also voted for an amendment on September 3rd, 2003 which would have restored funding for Hispanic programs to the budget.

Immigrant Health Care, June 26th, 2003: Feingold voted against an amendment sponsored by Jeff Sessions which would have prohibited states from granting funding for legal, pregnant immigrants and children. This was a very irresponsible amendment which is typical of the right wing’s attempt to control women and their bodies.

I suggest that race and xenophobia is at the bottom of this irresponsible amendment as well. This blatant power play is just one more proof that the right is not really concerned with the welfare of the fetus; they are concerned with controlling the woman’s body.

2005 Budget, March 12th 2004: Feingold voted against this budget, which further cut funding for the programs listed above.

In addition:

The House resolution would provide a modest increase over FY04 levels; however, spending levels for programs including Head Start, job training, some child care funding, housing programs, as well as several other programs that serve low-income families would be cut due to a cap the resolution places on discretionary spending. The measure would also result in cuts as high as $2.2 billion from entitlement programs, which would likely result in cuts for Medicaid. An amount of $138 billion in new tax cuts over the next five years would also be assumed in the House budget resolution.

This is typical doublethink from the right — First they demand that welfare recipients work, and then they cut the tools necessary for people to go to work. And then, when they get fired, they right blames the welfare recipients for not working hard enough or other such nonsense.

Snowe/Dodd Childcare amendment, March 30th 2004: This amendment to the TANF bill provided $6 billion in funds to help welfare recipients get daycare for their children so they can keep their jobs. Latinos consist of 26% of welfare recipients. Feingold voted for this amendment.

Carolyn Wylie for the Children’s Defense Fund explains the need for this amendment:

By imposing increased work requirements, without adequate child care funding, states will be forced to make even deeper cuts in child care programs that will have profound effects on low-income families.  These effects will be as extreme for many families as forcing them to choose between leaving their jobs and leaving their children in unsafe environments.  It is unacceptable to put families in that position – we must not force families to make a choice between employment and the safety or well-being of their children.  Federal policy should safeguard both the long-term self-sufficiency and employment of parents and the well-being of their children.  Work requirements become punitive and counterproductive when there is inadequate child care funding to assist families in meeting those requirements, especially for single parents with children under six who are required by H.R. 240 to double their hours worked from twenty to forty hours per week.

The right oversimplifies the problem of welfare recipients; they are frequently caught in a catch-22: They can’t get a job because they don’t have the money to pay a baby-sitter. And they can’t hire a baby-sitter because they don’t have a job so they can get the money to pay the baby-sitter.

And here are the direct consequence of the Bush budget cuts to Hispanics welfare recipients and others:

Jacksonville, FL–“Kelli Gunter, a single mom who works full time, has been looking for help with day care for her son, Keilan. Gunter told Channel 4’s Jim Piggot that she’s doing all she can to keep off welfare, but she keeps getting turned down for child-care assistance…Funding for day care has not increased for the city since 2001…`More people are living here, more people are needing support with child care, but the dollars have remained the same,’ said Linda Lanier, the [Jacksonville Children’s] commision’s executive director.”–News4Jax.com, January 5, 2004

Arizona–“Parents of nearly 8,000 children on a waiting list for help with child-care costs are making tough choices about what to do with their kids while they’re at work. One in 11 families is leaving children home alone,…other parents are putting 9- and 11-year olds in charge of younger siblings,…A third of families had to change their work hours, and nearly one out of eight had to quit jobs because of the high costs of child care.”–The Arizona Republic, January 14, 2004

Internet tax non-discrimination act, April 29th 2004: Supported by Feingold, this bill banned Internet access taxes by any federal, state, or local authority. Only 32% of Hispanics have Internet access according to the Hispanic Leadership Agenda, compared to 70% of Whites; such a tax would have made those numbers even lower.

In addition to these votes, here are some other positions and actions by Feingold in fighting for Hispanics:

–Voted for the filibuster of extremist judge Miguel Estrada, despite the smear campaign of three right-wing Hispanic businessmen claiming to represent the Hispanic community. They claimed Feingold was being racist by opposing Estrada. Two national Hispanic groups repudiated their smear campaign.

Fought against predatory lending practices in low-income Hispanic communities.

–Opposes “English-only” legislation for schools.

–In other education issues:

On education, Feingold says he supports legislation that would allow undocumented children who have lived in the U.S. for a significant period of time to obtain legal status and give them the opportunity to attend college. In addition, he supports bilingual education, parent assistance programs, and early college awareness programs for low-income youths.

Feingold has shown a consistent pattern of helping the Hispanic community far above and beyond the six votes mentioned in this diary. I challange anybody else to show me that their candidate has done more.

Feingold on immigration — One of the key 2008 issues.

Immigration will be one of the key issues on the table in the 2006 and 2008 elections. Russ Feingold’s stance on immigration is that if you come to this country illegally, but you work hard and play by the rules, you should be able to earn legalization and eventually citizenship. He has consistently stood up for the rights of immigrants to raise children in this country as well, recognizing that they should be treated just like any other person born in the US.

One paradox is that if we had adopted Russ Feingold’s policies, we would have had a lot fewer immigrants come to this country. I say that because NAFTA and other such agreements, which Feingold opposed, have allowed companies to engage in massive pollution, set up toxic waste dumps, and create conditions in which workers can only work at their sweatshops for $1 a day.
As for me personally, I would not want to live near a toxic waste dump. I would also not want to live where I could only get $1 a day; I would want to work somewhere where I can make $5.15 an hour. That is like a King’s ransom to someone who has only known poverty. NAFTA and other such free trade agreements made living conditions much worse in Mexico, sparking a massive tidal wave of immigration here.

To remedy this problem, Russ Feingold is proposing a plan which would establish a process for illegal immigrants to become legal immigrants if they have worked hard and played by the rules. This is a fairness issue because not only are the immigrants affected, their wives (who could be a US citizen) and children are affected as well. To totally focus on the illegal immigrant without focusing on their immediate families is narrow and short-sited.

And many of these immigrants are not paid fair wages. Feingold would seek to remedy that. Here is his statement from a speech he gave at the Judiciary Committee:

Today, millions of undocumented workers live in and contribute to our communities and economy, in Wisconsin and across the country. But while they work hard and contribute in many ways, these immigrants live in fear, each and every day, of deportation and often of exploitation by unscrupulous employers. Both for our nation’s security, and to be true to basic American values of fairness and justice, we should bring these workers out of the shadows. We will all be better off if we create a realistic immigration system that recognizes that we need these workers, that allows them to come into the United States legally, and that ensures the government knows who is entering the country. If we permit these workers to enter the country legally, border agents can focus their efforts on terrorists and others who pose a serious threat to this nation.

We also need to recognize that foreign workers who have paid their dues should be treated fairly and deserve the same protections as other workers. All workers will be better off if guest workers are paid fair wages and are covered by adequate workplace protections.

Furthermore, creating a system for allow illegal immigrants to stay here legally is good for business:

This is an issue that affects not only these workers, but American employers as well. The law should acknowledge the reality that American businesses need access to foreign workers for jobs they cannot fill with American workers. In Wisconsin, I have heard from many business owners about the need for Congress to fix the broken immigration system. These hard-working Americans want to play by the rules, and cannot fathom why Congress has dragged its feet on this issue for so long. Whether we are talking about agriculture, or tourism, or landscaping, or any of the other industries where foreign workers make valuable contributions, businesses will suffer more than they already have if we fail to enact meaningful, comprehensive, long-term immigration reform.

The problem for American businesses is that most American people are not willing to do the kind of grunt work that is necessary to make businesses succeed. We would rather go into debt to go to college for 4-8 years and get a high-paying job of our choice rather than just take something that is available, like, say, a newspaper carrier for a daily paper and live a frugal lifestyle.

But most immigrants are different. They would love to do the kind of work that we moan and groan about and would be willing to do it for much less pay than we would demand as the price for doing such a task.

That is why businesses are willing to risk getting into trouble with the law in order to hire undocumented aliens. They are frequently the only people willing to do certain kinds of work. I worked at a cap factory which paid minimum wage and did not pay health insurance once. In fact, a local hog farm paid more that what this place did. They had an extremely high turnover rate, as people were simply not willing to sit in a hot, sweaty factory in summertime for just $5.15 an hour. In addition, there was all kinds of dust floating around which could build up in your lungs and cause lung problems later in life.

There were only two kinds of people willing to work there for any length of time — older people who could not find another job, or young people looking to make an extra buck for the summer. There were some people who would work there for 1-2 weeks and them simply quit. One girl started work there and then simply walked off the job after just half a day’s work. That is why hiring immigrants and risking trouble with the INS is so attractive to such businesses.

All people are equal and deserve a chance in life. Feingold’s views on immigration are heavily influenced by Justice Arthur Goldberg. Feingold, discussing his vote against the Patriot Act, said in a speech:

During those first few hours after the attacks, I kept remembering a sentence from a case I had studied in law school. Not surprisingly, I didn’t remember which case it was, who wrote the opinion, or what it was about, but I did remember these words: “While the Constitution protects against invasions of individual rights, it is not a suicide pact.” I took these words as a challenge to my concerns about civil liberties at such a momentous time in our history; that we must be careful to not take civil liberties so literally that we allow ourselves to be destroyed.

But upon reviewing the case itself, Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, I found that Justice Arthur Goldberg had made this statement but then ruled in favor of the civil liberties position in the case, which was about draft evasion. He elaborated:

“It is fundamental that the great powers of Congress to conduct war and to regulate the Nation’s foreign relations are subject to the constitutional requirements of due process. The imperative necessity for safeguarding these rights to procedural due process under the gravest of emergencies has existed throughout our constitutional history, for it is then, under the pressing exigencies of crisis, that there is the greatest temptation to dispense with fundamental constitutional guarantees which, it is feared, will inhibit governmental action. “The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers and people, equally in war and peace, and covers with the shield of its protection all classes of men, at all times, and under all circumstances…. In no other way can we transmit to posterity unimpaired the blessings of liberty, consecrated by the sacrifices of the Revolution.”

Feingold goes on to discuss the most notorious instances of xenophobia in our nations’ history:

There have been periods in our nation’s history when civil liberties have taken a back seat to what appeared at the time to be the legitimate exigencies of war. Our national consciousness still bears the stain and the scars of those events: The Alien and Sedition Acts, the suspension of habeas corpus during the Civil War, the internment of Japanese-Americans, German-Americans, and Italian-Americans during World War II, the blacklisting of supposed communist sympathizers during the McCarthy era, and the surveillance and harassment of antiwar protesters, including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., during the Vietnam War. We must not allow these pieces of our past to become prologue.

As a result, Feingold supports the setup of a commission to review the way we have treated immigrants during WW2:

Earlier this year, I introduced legislation to set up a commission to review the wartime treatment of Germans, Italians, and other Europeans during that period. That bill came out of heartfelt meetings in which constituents told me their stories. They were German-Americans, who came to me with some trepidation. They had waited fifty years to raise the issue with a member of Congress. They did not want compensation. They came to me with some uneasiness. But they had seen the government’s commission on the wartime internment of people of Japanese origin, and they wanted their story to be told, and an official acknowledgment as well.

And as for the right-wing claim that no innocent victims have been unfairly detained under the Patriot Act, Feingold debunks them with this case. It is a case very similar to the government’s xenophobia during WW2:

For example, the FBI arrested as a material witness the San Antonio radiologist Albader Al-Hazmi, who has a name like two of the hijackers, and who tried to book a flight to San Diego for a medical conference. According to his lawyer, the government held Al-Hazmi incommunicado after his arrest, and it took six days for lawyers to get access to him. After the FBI released him, his lawyer said, “This is a good lesson about how frail our processes are. It’s how we treat people in difficult times like these that is the true test of the democracy and civil liberties that we brag so much about throughout the world.”

And Feingold recognizes that a lot of anti-immigrant bias in this country is really racism in disguise:

We who don’t have Arabic names or don’t wear turbans or headscarves may not feel the weight of these times as much as Americans from the Middle East and South Asia do. But as the great jurist Learned Hand said in a speech in New York’s Central Park during World War II: “[T]he spirit of liberty is the spirit which seeks to understand the minds of other men and women; the spirit of liberty is the spirit which weighs their interests alongside its own without bias . . . .”

Was it not at least partially bias, however, when passengers on a Northwest Airlines flight in Minneapolis three weeks ago insisted that Northwest remove from the plane three Arab men who had cleared security?

The Democratic Party is a party of unity. We are a party which brings all people together regardless of race, gender, religion, creed, nationality, or sexual orientation. We may disagree on how best to do it. But the true Democrats are uniters. People who seek to divide this party or this country on one of these things are not really Democrats.

Feingold goes on to say that it is always easier to want a police state where Big Brother is watching you and purging our society of the terrorists in our midst. It is always easier to look the other was as Bush repeals the 4th amendment than it is to do the work, get involved in politics, and defend our Constitution and our liberties.

I’ll be honest — I didn’t want to do this. I wanted to get a job, get married, and not have to worry about this stuff. But now, I recognize that our survival is at stake. We must either work together to create a new sustainable society in which everyone who works hard and plays by the rules will be financially secure and never have to worry about a medical crisis eating up their life savings OR allow the erosion of our civil liberties and the breakdown of our society once the world runs out of oil thanks to our excessive consumption.

The challenges are daunting. If this had been an ordinary period in our nation’s history, I could have cared less if Hillary ran for office. I voted for Bill Clinton in both 1992 and 1996. But with the challenges so daunting, we must not settle for a mediocre candidate like Hillary in the name of winning. We must find the best candidate for the job and campaign for that person. I believe that candidate to be Russ Feingold.

Currently Feingold, along with Senator Kennedy, is fighting for a bill which would allow for earned legalization of undocumented aliens. Senator Kennedy describes the bill here.

Kennedy also stressed that the bill is “a realistic alternative — not an amnesty.”

 “There is no free pass, no automatic pardon, no trip to the front of the line,” he said. “But we do provide a sensible plan that will persuade people to come forward to receive work permits and earn legal status. They will pay a substantial fine and go through rigorous security and criminal background checks. Those who want permanent status must pay all their back taxes, learn English, maintain a strong work record, stay out of trouble, and wait their turn.”

Feingold’s remarks:

Senator Russ Feingold also endorsed the call for earned legalization, stating,  “Today, millions of undocumented workers live in and contribute to our communities and economy, in Wisconsin and across the country. But while they work hard and contribute in many ways, these immigrants live in fear, each and every day, of deportation and often of exploitation by unscrupulous employers.

“Both for our nation’s security, and to be true to basic American values of fairness and justice, we should bring these workers out of the shadows. We will all be better off if we create a realistic immigration system that recognizes that we need these workers, that allows them to come into the United States legally, and that ensures the government knows who is entering the country.”

He urged Congress to act on the bill, which he said, “would vastly improve border security, and would bring meaningful reform to our immigration system in a way that reflects economic reality and the value of keeping families together.”

While the bill is not perfect — Kennedy does not specify how much in fines the immigrant would have to pay, or if they would have to pay it all at once — it still represents a welcome step in the right direction towards earned legalization.

Feingold also supports the Civil Liberties Restoration Act, a bill which would repeal many of the draconian provisions of the Patriot Act aimed at immigrants. This letter, signed by a diverse group of pro-immigrant groups, describes the provisions of the bill:

End the government’s ability to issue a blanket order closing all deportation hearings to the public and to family members of detainees, while permitting the closure of hearings or a portion of hearings on a case-by-case basis to preserve the confidentiality of asylum applications or when national security interests so require.

Provide minimum due process safeguards to individuals who are jailed on suspicion of immigration violations by giving them timely notice of the charges against them and assure that immigration authorities and judges make fair, individualized bond determinations.

Establish an independent immigration court within the Department of Justice and promote fair hearings by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal.

Facilitate better law enforcement practices by requiring that the National Crime Information Center database relied upon daily by state and local law enforcement complies with minimum accuracy requirements.

Terminate the troubled National Security Entry-Exit Registration System while encouraging fairness and a concentrated focus on those who pose a threat to the national security or safety of Americans.

Assign reasonable penalties, commensurate to the technical nature of the violations, for non-citizens’ failure to register or provide timely notification of address changes.

Ensure that people who are charged with a crime based upon national security surveillance will see the evidence against them in the same manner as people charged with a crime based upon other kinds of classified information.

Require the government to submit a public report to Congress on data-mining activities in order to protect the privacy and due process rights of individuals and to ensure accurate information is collected and used.

Feingold would also support elimination of some of the regressive provisions of a 1996 immigration law, passed by the Gingrich congress and signed by Hillary’s husband Bill Clinton, which has ripped families apart. From Wisdom member Tim Brown, a pro-immigrant group which has worked with Feingold on immigration issues:

Because of the 1996 law, any immigrant, including lawful permanent residents, who ever committed a deportable offense, even non-violent offenses, or an offense committed in the distant past and those for which no sentence was served, can be deported.

Immigration policy reform is more than just talk to me.  My family and I are immigrants from Canada, and our journey to permanent residence status has been at best frustrating, and at worst, humiliating. The INS agent asked our then 5-year old Leeanne if “Mommy and Daddy were bad people”.  My 7 year old, Shawna was asked if Mommy brought men home with her.  We all were then finger-printed. We have had a relatively easy time of it here, but there are many other immigrants out there who are weighing decisions about poverty vs separation of family members, despair in their homeland vs a life of hope in the US, horrendous working conditions vs deportation.  This ought not to be so.  People of justice know that the plight of the vulnerable touches all of society.

This draconian law, supported by Clinton, allows the deportation of children even if they have lived in the US all their lives:

Armando Garcia, a Mexican who lived here since 1994 spent years trying to legalize his status.  Immigration officials gave him and his wife permits to continue to work legally, but they were ordered to remove their 2 young daughters, 10 and 12, from the US within 120 days because they were here illegally.  The daughters lived all their lives in the US.  (Twin Cities Star Tribune, “INS agrees to help Spanish-speakers more.”).  Curtis Aljets, an INS director responded that he wasn’t aware of the family’s situation, but that the INS rarely deports children.  Well, I guess we must thank God for small mercies!

As I noted above, immigration does not just affect the immigrant; it affects the wives and children as well.

And the Bush and Clinton administrations have treated undocumented immigrants on a level similar to violent criminals:

It is estimated that are 13,500 INS detainees, most held in local jails housing violent criminals.  The Boston Globe recently reported cases of sexual abuse by guards at an INS detention center in Miami.  The woman was afraid to tell anyone.  “If you say anything about it, they try transferring you or you end up staying in the INS custody longer.”   The prison officer pled guilty.  

Brown goes on to debunk common myths about immigrants:

Myth:  Immigrants take jobs away from Americans.

Fact:   Studies have shown that the opposite is true.  Many immigrants create jobs.  Many immigrants are self-employed and start their own businesses.

Myth:  America is being overrun by immigrants.

Fact:  The percentage of immigrants in the total population is small.  So far, no single decade has topped 1901-1910 for immigration admissions.  

Myth:  Most immigrants are a drain on the U.S. economy.

Fact:  Each year immigrants earn $240 billion, pay $90 billion in taxes, and receive only $5 billion in welfare payments.

If you care about immigrants and their well-being, the choice is clear — Russ Feingold has consistently applied the principles of great legal minds like Arthur Goldberg and Learned Hand to the well-being of immigrants in this country. He has consistently worked to increase the rights of immigrants who work hard and play by the rules so their children can have a bright future here. Hillary Clinton`s husband Bill, on the other hand, signed a bill which would allow the Immigration authorities to deport children of immigrants even though they have lived in this country all their lives. Furthermore, she supports NAFTA, which led to the massive influx of immigrants in the first place.

BREAKING: Malaysia swamped by smog and smoke.

The Post reports that Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia has been swamped by smog and smoke. The Malay government has declared a state of emergency and shut down all non-essential functions. This is the worst smog ever for Malaysia, and possibly in the world.

This is a logical consequence of Bush’s reckless plunge towards global warming. First, the Siberian ice caps are melting, record hurricane activity is expected here, and now this.
Here are the graphic details:

–Hundreds of forest fires are choking Sumarta Island, leading to the haze.

–Malay and Indonesian officials are at each others throats over who is to blame.

–Residents are inhaling smoke.

–People are wearing surgical masks; however, they offer little protection.

–The city is darkened during broad daylight, forcing people to turn on lights.

–The PM is asking people to pray for help; a sure sign he has no idea what to do.

–Losses are expected to reach into the tens of billions.

–No respite is expected until October.

This is a precursor of what could happen to us if we fail to act now and throw the Republicans out of power in 2006.

God help us all.

What Hillary doesn’t get — the human cost of NAFTA.

This diary will discuss the human side of NAFTA and other such free trade agreements — the negative impact on people in third-world countries and the environmental degradations that happen as well.

Wal-Mart is one of the biggest beneficiaries of these free trade agreements. They have moved operations to China where in an effort to cut costs, they demand that suppliers create sweatshops which treat workers inhumanely and pay them subminimum wages.

Hillary Clinton served on the Board of Directors of Wal-Mart from 1985-1992. Bill’s free trade policies directly benefitted Wal-Mart, as they were able to expand their mammoth profits at the expense of turning humans into machines.
First of all, Free Trade agreements have cost people their livelyhoods. People have gone from making as much as $90,000 to completely unemployed as companies outsource their jobs for cheap labor. Some examples follow of people whose lives were ruined.

In Colorado, the wife of a man who lost his job to outsourcing shot herself and her two children:

The murder-suicide deaths of a Colorado Springs mother and her two young sons left a husband and father without a family. While depression is blamed, the fact is another American breadwinner lost his software engineering job and was forced to relocate to the East Coast to earn a living while his family stayed behind.

When his wife lost her temp job and expressed growing despair, friends called local police who took her to a hospital for evaluation. Jobless, probably without medical insurance, her husband thousands of miles away and aware her children were too young to be alone, she checked herself out of the hospital, bought a handgun, and chose a permanent solution to a growing problem: foreigners taking jobs Americans need with the blessing of our so-called “representatives”.

While I do not agree with the anti-immigrant undertones of the article, it illustrates the fact that we are dealing with human lives when we are dealing with free trade. The article goes on to describe how Governor Bill Owens killed a bill which would have prohibited the hiring of contractors who practice “offshoring.”

In fact, if the right is so serious about immigration, they why are they supporting NAFTA in the first place? NAFTA drives down wages in the third world, so that poor Mexicans feel they have no choice but to come here, where they will get paid more.

Here is the story of a woman who was lied to and told that her $90,000-a-year job was safe when it wasn’t. She was sent to India to train workers, and only after she come back did she find out she was training them to take over her job:

“The thing that frightens me most is the talk of outsourcing ultimately benefiting the American worker. Though we’ve been sending low wage jobs offshore for years, we have no historical reference for the effects of upper-level positions being offshored. The economy is not going to absorb people who used to make six figures as it did with low-paying jobs–so many people in California are working for fractions of their former wages.

“Losing my job has put a real strain on my family as well. I raise my six-year-old child alone. He suffers from sickle-cell anemia, and seeing the stress unemployment has put on me only makes things harder for him. When I asked him what his New Year’s resolution was he said, `To get Mommy a job so she’ll be happy again.'”

This illustrates a problem that high-paid workers experience when they lose their jobs — they have trouble finding work. They apply for lower-level jobs, but people refuse to hire them because they’re “overqualified.” Employers do not wish to hire people who they think will either leave the company for a step up the ladder in a few years or try to run things their own way and overwhelm the current employees.

This article from Stephen Bucaro of Sensible Software predicts that 14 million more jobs will be sacrificed in the future on top of the 3 million already lost, as the Clinton and Bush administrations are willing and able to outsource these jobs in order to keep the peace:

Over the past three years, 3 million American jobs have
been outsourced, primarily to China and India. A study by
UC Berkeley predicts that as many as 14 million more jobs
will be lost. Why doesn’t our government do something? Has
our government and the Bush administration been asleep on
the job? To the contrary, the government is using the
export of your job as a political tool.

He goes on to list a number of jobs which are seemingly secure, but which can be outsourced. His theory is that the US is exporting these jobs so that these countries will not become military powerhouses and pose a threat to the US. He says that, say, a war between India and Pakistan or the US and China would disrupt their economies, so it would not be in their interests to wage war.

The problem with this kind of thinking is that is reeks of mediocrity. We should be finding solutions to conflict that do not involve the needless expenditure of anybody’s jobs as the price of keeping peace. This approach simply sweeps the problems involved under the rug when bringing the parties to the table to forge a lasting peace and work out differences would be a much superior solution.

In addition to the hardships on American workers, free trade agreements turn third-world countries into toxic waste dumps. For example, the Mexican Action Network on Free Trade points out that many hazardous waste companies locate to Mexico because of their lax environmental laws and their low wages:

For example, in response to citizen complaints about the recurrent and highly hazardous pollution produced by Stephan Chemical’s pesticide plant in Matamorros, the Mexican Environment Protection Federal Attorney’s Office declared the plant and the surrounding area a “high risk” zone. Without considering any alternatives, it then ordered the displacement of the population of thirteen towns and five communal lands in the area in order to permit the company to continue operations.

Much of the increase in environmental contamination is accounted for by a few large firms that dominate the local economy. Approximately 80% of the total value of the Mexican export industry is controlled by two percent of the total number of companies in the country, most of which are transnational corporations. Many of these (particularly those in the electronics, textile and chemical sectors) are classified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as industries utilizing highly toxic and dangerous processes. Even official statistics, however, show that only 10% of the seven million tons of toxic waste these industries generate is properly treated.

This is typical right-wing behavior — make policies which make people poor and then blame the poor when they complain. The problem with the right-wing mentality is that it is based on the faulty premise that some people are more equal than others. You see that most blatantly in the Amway scam, where if you don’t get enough people signed up, it is somehow your fault and you are a loser.

Jennifer Clapp of the Basel Action Network, an anti-toxic waste group, writes that the amount of toxic waste going to Mexico has increased by over 1 1/2 times and the amount of toxic waste plants has doubled. Also:

The first troubling development is the doubling of hazardous waste imports into Mexico since 1994. Most of this waste comes from the US. The Texas Center for Policy Studies has reported that the US-to-Mexico waste flow increased from 143,800 tonnes in 1995 to 230,865 tonnes in 1999.(1)

These imports, including electric arc furnace dust (EAD), lead acid-batteries, containers from hazardous waste, and accumulators, have come primarily from the US and are destined for recycling operations in Mexico.(2) Trade liberalization has also made the cross-boundary movements easier, despite NAFTA’s explicit intent to improve the hazardous waste management situation in Mexico.

A second post-NAFTA development that affects hazardous waste burdens in Mexico is the sizeable increase in the number of maquiladora plants. These primarily US-owned factories were set up in the 1960s to produce goods for export to the US under a special program that gave them reduced import duties for parts processed in the plants.

The number of such plants in Mexico increased from 1704 in 1990 to 3297 in 1999. (3) The reason for this is not so much the introduction of NAFTA, but rather the devaluation of the peso in 1995, which made investment in such plants extremely attractive for US manufacturers.(4)

Again, if the Republicans are serious about stopping immigration from Mexico, the way to control it is not by carping and griping about the lack of border security and the lack of prisons. The way to do it is by addressing these pollution problems. After all, I would not want to live next to a toxic pollution factory; why should we make other people live near such a place?

The problems with NAFTA are so widespread, that whole college courses are being devoted just to going to Mexico and studying the effects of NAFTA on people. For instance, here is what NYU students found:

While in Mexico, students spoke with scholars, workers, activists and government officials. They also interviewed lawyers in Mexico City hired to represent the US before the NAFTA panel, interviewed indigenous people opposed to “maquiladora culture”; and investigated environmental effects of maquiladoras on towns and neighborhoods. Students found evidence of pollution in the Puebla region, including dye-stained rivers and loss of vegetation. In addition, they found that some 90 percent of the workers they interviewed had been left uninformed about the union that represented them, and that conversation between workers is strictly prohibited in most maquiladoras.

And here are the working conditions at these places as the result of NAFTA, which Bill Clinton so ardently worked to bring about:

In April, the students explored working conditions in New York City’s Garment District and Chinatown areas, interviewing sweatshop employees and day workers. They also explored the coalition of American and Mexican human rights organizations and unions that oppose sweatshops and the transnational communities made up of immigrants from Puebla in NYC. Students heard testimonial from day workers that they were paid less than minimum wage; were not allowed to take bathroom breaks during 10-hour days; were made to stand for their entire shift; and worked in stifled premises lacking rudimentary ventilation.

And similar conditions exist in the third world countries in the name of “free trade.”

Unable to work anywhere else, here is how much these workers are paid:

Unconstrained by safety regulations, multinational Maquiladoras suppress labor organization and pay their employees less then $1 per hour.

So, why do they work in these places? They have no choice:

NAFTA has destroyed the economic independence of many indigenous communities in Chiapas, Oaxaca and Guerrero. Numerous villages are devastated by government oppression and armed resistence. These rural Mexicans are forced to leave their homelands in hopes of finding jobs in maquiladoras and corporate factory farms along the border.

And women are particularly hard-hit; they are treated as property:

Sexual abuse is endemic. Most garment workers are women, the vast majority of them young women in their teens or twenties who have left their homes for the first time so that they can earn money to send back to their families.

According to Human Rights Watch, in the maquiladoras along the US-Mexico border, factory managers who want to weed out pregnant workers so they can avoid having to pay maternity benefits force women workers to prove they are menstruating, a demeaning procedure that is against Mexican laws. Mandatory pregnancy tests are also common in El Salvador, and women who test positive are fired, also in violation of that country’s laws.

And who are the biggest customers of such factories? Nike, Reebok, the NBA, and Hillary Clinton’s own Wal-Mart.

Wal-Mart is one of the biggest players in the sweatshop industry. Hillary Clinton served on the board until 1992. But long after she left, the Clintons were developing policies favorable to Wal-Mart, cumulating in the China Agreement in 2000. Bill Clinton’s free trade policies led to Wal-Mart badgering suppliers into moving to China to cut costs. These suppliers opened sweatshops and have repeated the cycle played out in Central America and Mexico.

With a little help from Bill and Hillary Clinton, here are some of the conditions documented at Wal-Mart sweatshops overseas:

Some of the abuses in foreign factories that produce goods for Wal-Mart include:

  • Forced overtime
  • Locked bathrooms
  • Starvation wages
  • Pregnancy tests
  • Denial of access to health care
  • Workers fired and blacklisted if they try to defend their rights

The National Labor Committee reported in September 1999 that the Kathie Lee clothing label (made for Wal-Mart by Caribbean Apparel, Santa Ana, El Salvador) conducted sweatshop conditions of forced overtime. Workers hours were Monday to Friday from 6:50 a.m. to 6:10 p.m., and Saturday from 6:50 a.m. to 5:40 p.m. There are occasional shifts to 9:40 p.m. It is common for the cutting and packing departments to work 20-hour shifts from 6:50 a.m. to 3:00 a.m. Anyone unable or refusing to work the overtime hours will be suspended and fined, and upon repeat “offenses” they will be fired. This factory is in an American Free Trade Zone.

And in some of the worst places, the level of treatment is no better than slavery:

Clothing sewn in China is usually done by young women, 17 to 25 year old (at 25 they are fired as `too old’) forced to work seven days a week, often past midnight for 12 to 28 cents an hour, with no benefits. Or that the women are housed in crowded, dirty dormitories, 15 to a room, and fed a thin rice gruel. The workers are kept under 24-hour-a-day surveillance and can be fired for even discussing factory conditions. The factories in China operate under a veil of secrecy, behind locked metal gates, with no factory names posted and no visitors allowed. China’s authorities do not allow independent human rights, religious or women’s groups to exist, and all attempts to form independent unions have been crushed.

In other words, women are treated like cattle. They cannot love, hang out, talk to each other, have their own lives outside the company, or start a family. If that is not anti-family values, then I want to know what is.

Businessweek exposed another Wal-Mart sweatshop and interviewed a former worker:

Liu quickly realized that the factory was even worse than its reputation. Chun Si, owned by Chun Kwan, a Macau businessman, charged workers $15 a month for food and lodging in a crowded dorm–a crushing sum given the $22 Liu cleared his first month. What’s more, the factory gave Liu an expired temporary-resident permit; and in return, Liu had to hand over his personal identification card. This left him a virtual captive. Only the local police near the factory knew that Chun Si issued expired cards, Liu says, so workers risked arrest if they ventured out of the immediate neighborhood.

HALF A CENT. Liu also found that Chun Si’s 900 workers were locked in the walled factory compound for all but a total of 60 minutes a day for meals. Guards regularly punched and hit workers for talking back to managers or even for walking too fast, he says. And they fined them up to $1 for infractions such as taking too long in the bathroom. Liu left the factory for good in December, after he and about 60 other workers descended on the local labor office to protest Chun Si’s latest offenses: requiring cash payments for dinner and a phony factory it set up to dupe Wal-Mart’s auditors. In his pocket was a total of $6 for three months of 90-hour weeks–an average of about one-half cent an hour. ”Workers there face a life of fines and beating,” says Liu. Chun Kwan couldn’t be reached, but his daughter, Selina Chun, one of the factory managers, says ”this is not true, none of this.” She concedes that Chun Si did not pay overtime but says few other factories do, either. In a face-to-face interview in August, she also admitted that workers have tried to sue Chun Si.

And all of this was aided and abetted by Hillary and Bill.

On the other hand, Russ Feingold has a vision of a global society where if you work hard and play by the rules, you should never have to worry about your job shipping out overseas or losing your life savings to exorbant medical bills. This vision is not just for White middle-class Americans, but for all people regardless of race, nationality, religion, gender, or sexual orientation.  

Feingold has been a champion of workers rights all his life because he understands what it is like to  lose a job and have it go overseas. And this is not just an ivory-tower theory. He has personally intervened to stop Wisconsin factories from shipping out overseas and getting them money so they can keep operating. In the 2004 debate with his opponent Bob Michaels, the latter seemingly used the word “leadership” every other time. But Feingold’s action constituted the highest form of leadership, that of being able to bring opposing sides together and working out solutions.

And I will not take lessons from Hillary supporters who claim that Hillary is “Progressive.” If you’re Progressive, that means you are actively working for the average person anywhere in the world who works hard and plays by the rules. Hillary, on the other hand, works for Wal-Mart and their regressive policies.

Russ Feingold for President in 2008!

Today, I am endorsing Russ Feingold for President in 2008. Currently, the Democratic Party is in a battle for its future between the pro-Walmart, pro-corporate influences of the 1990’s and the grassroots forces of ordinary people like you and me which shook up the party in 2004 and almost pulled off a win over George Bush. Russ Feingold is the people’s champion, favoring the average person over the corporations feeding at the trough of corporate welfare. On the other hand, Hillary Clinton served on the Wal-Mart board of directors between 1985 and 1992. We could easily refer to her as “Hillarycorp.”

The purpose of this diary is to compare and contrast Feingold’s and Hillary’s stances on the issues, followed by a brief comparison with the other candidates. I believe Feingold shares my values more than any other candidate. I also believe he is the most electable candidate. I will explain why below and talk about how I will campaign for Russ in these threads.
The most obvious comparison between Russ and Hillary is their stances on the war. I wrote about this in detail here. I wrote that Hillary supported the war, thinks things are going great there, and supports the building of permanent bases. By contrast, Russ opposed the war from the beginning. He supports an exit timetable. I would favor an immediate withdrawal, but can live with a timed exit strategy. Here are his remarks outlining his position:

“Disappointment about Iraq is deepening. The majority of Wisconsinites are very skeptical of the way the war is going,” Feingold, D-Wis., said in a telephone interview from Washington, D.C., on Thursday morning. “We didn’t sign up for an indefinite occupation of Iraq.”

Feingold said a clear plan would help in budgeting more responsibly for current and future military needs.

The resolution does not set up a time frame for troop withdrawal. Feingold said that’s something for the military commanders to decide. It does, however, call for a commitment by Bush to set a tentative schedule for withdrawal within 30 days of its passage.

The senator said he returns to Wisconsin almost every weekend. When he meets with his constituents, he has noticed the number of people who approach him asking when the U.S. government can bring their sons and daughters home has been on the rise.

“Soldiers are dying, the pace is increasing, and the people of Iraq are dying daily,” Feingold said. “Our defense is being weakened.”

With five more Wisconsin soldiers killed in Iraq in recent months, he said it’s time to give people a vision of a plan for U.S. troops coming home.

And Feingold worries about a draft:

“If it becomes a quagmire, it could force a draft,” he said. “I oppose a draft, but I do understand why they might need it if things go on as they are.”

Another major area of difference is in the area of free trade. Hillary’s husband, Bill, signed both NAFTA and the China Agreement, directly leading to the loss of millions of American jobs and forcing workers to take new jobs paying them as little as one-third of their previous pay. To her credit, Hillary voted against CAFTA. However, that is not good enough. She supported the other two agreements; the China agreement, in particular, benefited Wal-Mart, the company on whose BOD she served.

Feingold, on the other hand, opposed all three free trade agreements, and was one of only 16 senators to vote against the China Agreement. Here is his statement against CAFTA and other such agreements:

Our trade agreements should ensure that potential trading partners are subject to some minimum standards including enforceable provisions to protect workers, the environment, and public health and safety. Without some minimum standards, CAFTA will only further encourage the race to the bottom instigated by NAFTA and other trade agreements, and that’s a race which no one wins. I look forward to the upcoming debate on CAFTA and it’s my hope that this Administration will not ignore bi-partisan concerns and continue to promote the false promises and failed trade policies that have not worked for America’s working families. “

Feingold, in contrast to HillaryCorp, is one of the few elected officials who understands that these horrible agreements not only hurt our workers, but condemn third-world workers to work 16 hours a day in sweatshop conditions with few or no bathroom breaks.

This also raises an electability issue as well. In the last election, John Kerry did worse in Missouri and only gained 2 points in Ohio. These were two battleground states which experienced heavy manufacturing job losses between 2000 and 2004. The problem is that John Kerry supported NAFTA and the China agreement. People held the Democrats just as responsible for the job losses as they did the GOP, if not more.

In fact, in St. Joseph, MO, which had four plants close in 2004 alone, Kerry lost by 2,000 in a county in which Gore carried by 500 in 2000.

People who vote have long memories of how politicians acted a long time ago. For example, my mother, who hated Dole, told me stuff about him from 25 years before the 1996 election. This factor affects how people vote many years later. The long memories of voters 12 years later came back to haunt Kerry, a NAFTA supporter.

On the other hand, Feingold would not be affected; he opposed NAFTA, the China agreement, and CAFTA. He has made a long history of opposing free trade agreements by either party.

To be fair to Clinton, I wrote here that I was not sure whether I would vote for her because of her pro-war stance. However, there are two other issues in play; Bill Cinton’s record on picking judges and his record on the environment were much better than Bush’s records. For those reason, I would still vote for Hillary if she wins the primaries.

But we cannot give her a free ticket to the nomination. We must present a clear alternative to her in order to force her to listen to our views. If we don’t do so, she will be able to settle for mediocrity because there is no competition for her. That is like a company which doesn’t have to make high-quality products because it has no competition.

Here are by brief views on the other candidates:

Clark: My second choice; however, he is more pro-free trade and therefore less electable. Here is a summary of his position. He is believes in setting fair standards such as the rise in living standards. But he believes in globalization as contributing to American might and did not give a straight answer when asked if he would modify NAFTA. Russ Feingold would.

Feingold believes in peace more than Clark does as well. Clark was one of the architects of the Kosovo War; Feingold voted against authorizing air strikes against Yugoslavia.

I recognize that General Clark did an outstanding job running the Kosovo conflict. However, that war was a short-term success and a long-term disaster. I recognize the fact that Miloslovec was a dictatorial maniac; however, I feel he would have been deposed anyway without American intervention. In addition, Iraq was widely framed as a logical extension of Kosovo. I suggest that Hillary became enamoured of her husband’s success there and has come to rely way too much on the military as a means of solving problems.

Here is what Feingold had to say about Kosovo:

Clinton “has again failed to make the case to the American people and to the Congress for the deployment of U.S. ground troops in the Balkans,” Feingold charged in a March 22, 1999 speech.

“As with the Bosnia mission, there is no clear set of goals beyond `maintaining’ a currently nonexistent peace, no timetable for withdrawal, no cost estimate, and no exit strategy,” Feingold declared. “This proposed deployment to Kosovo is another in the long line of ill-fated and seemingly unending peacekeeping missions that this administration has chosen to undertake without the explicit authorization of the Congress.”

And Feingold said the bill authorized lots of pork that did not go towards Kosovo:

Feingold said both parties are falling into a trap where money is spent for all sorts of situations. Much of the spending is approved under so-called “emergency spending.”

“One senator said every natural disaster is an opportunity,” Feingold said.

When emergency spending is approved, money for many other issues is thrown into the package and also approved. Most politicians will not vote against an “emergency bill.” The problem, Feingold says, is that there are getting to be too many “emergency bills” and too much extra baggage.

“The president asked for $6 billion for the action in Kosovo,” Feingold said. “Congress ended up approving a $15 billion bill. Much of the money had nothing to do with Kosovo.”

He said emergency spending has become the new way to write blank check. He said this fall could see $30 billion in spending.

“It’s very dangerous and irresponsible,” Feingold said.

Kerry: He supported NAFTA and the China agreement as noted above. Also, he has displayed an remarkable inability to relate to rural voters.  He won most cities and lost most rural counties in the battleground states, including Missouri. By contrast, Feingold won many rural counties that Kerry lost in Wisconsin.

Also, Kerry voted for the Iraq War resolution, failing to foresee that the President was hell-bent on war. Feingold opposed the war.

Edwards: He supported the Iraq War and the Kosovo War, which Feingold opposed. Despite his emphasis on rural issues, he failed to give John Kerry a boost in rural areas in 2004.

Bayh: He reminds me of Milt Romney; his idea is that if he can win in a red state, he can win nationally. But math is not so simple. He takes the left for granted and panders to the right.

Warner: He supports NAFTA and has been a regular of the DLC, the pro-corporate engine trying to drive out the left.

Vilsak: The current president of the DLC.

Biden: So devoid of ideas, he had to plagiarize Neil Kinnock, the UK’s Labour leader in the 1980’s and early 1990’s. Kinnock, remember, threw away a sure victory in 1992 by hosting an American-style political convention and causing voters to vote for Major and throw up afterwards.

Richardson: His tenure as Secretary of Energy was scandal-ridden and Senators didn’t find him credible at the end. Another tool of the DLC.

Schweitzer: Needs more experience; has served only one term as Governor of Montana.

For the future, I will be actively campaigning for Feingold here in these threads. I will cover his stances on the issues and contrast them to Hillary’s. I will, on occasion, discuss the other candidates as necessary. In addition, I will be proposing and developing ideas for discussion that we can campaign on next year.

Current Iraqi Constitution draft could deny women suffrage.

The current Iraqi Constitution draft could deny women the right to vote. This is just one more reason why George Bush’s claim that Iraq is a democracy is a myth.

Here is a description of the law in question:

Iraq’s existing laws regarding women’s rights are some of the most progressive in the Middle East, guaranteeing women the right to vote, attend school, run for political office, and own property. But Article 14 of the new draft constitution aims to replace these laws with Islamic Sharia law – which could dramatically affect women’s rights in marriage, court, education and the political system. The draft constitution also does not guarantee Iraqi women a substantial representation in Parliament, as the current interim constitution does.

There are many different interpretations of Sharia, some of which can be interpreted as giving women equality. But the problem is, most Middle Eastern countries do not interpret it as such. Saudi Arabia is a prime example.

The Women’s Alliance for a Democratic Iraq is working to ensure that Sharia is only one of many interpretations:

Speaking July 25 at a National Press Club forum on women’s rights, Basma Fakri, co-founder and president of the Women’s Alliance For a Democratic Iraq (WAFDI) expressed concern that the constitutional process, "threatens to be enveloped by gender related bias … [which] has no place in a country striving to be a model of openness and rightness."

As I stated above, there are many different interpretations of Sharia. And that is exactly the fear — the fear of the unknown that these women fear. The type of Sharia being enforced in Basra, for instance, is a regressive version, with gangs of thugs making death threats against violators of their version.

A women’s convention in Baghdad drafted the following statement:

"After discussing the issue of women in the Iraqi draft constitution which has been recently put forward for national dialogue, a group of Iraqi women that represents Iraqi societal spectrum, agreed on the need for guaranteeing women rights in the constitution as an essential part of guaranteeing human rights of all members of Iraqi society, and to achieve the principle of equality for all, irrespective of gender, race, religion, sect, or any other consideration outside the principle of citizenship."

But all the words in the world are meaningless if they are circumvented by mob rule, as is happening in Basra, or by the arrest and torture of dissidents like Khalid.

Respect for law has been sorely lacking, as evidenced by Rove’s treason. So, how can we be a moral authority to Iraq and expect them to have a respect for law over there, when our own elected officials show such blatant disregard for law and order?

And here are some other examples of possible ugly scenarios:

Some interpretations allow for men to beat their wives, give men more inheritance rights than women, and consider a woman’s testimony to be worth less than a man’s when it comes to legal disputes.

And On Point Radio reports:

Working drafts have given a strong role to Islamic law and equal rights for men and women but only as long as equality does not violate Shariah law. That means women would take a back seat in personal matters like divorce. Drafts of the constitution have also dropped requirements that women hold a quarter of the seats in Parliament.

And the LA Times reports that women’s rights were stronger under Saddam than they are now:

Today, few Iraqi women would dare to wear such an outfit. Most cover their arms to the wrist. Only wisps of hair stray from their head scarves. Skirts are often nearly ankle-length.

Jinan Mubarak looked down at the photograph and shook her head.

"I can’t wear what my mother was wearing at that time. It’s really sad," she said. "Women had better conditions then. Now, they are challenged every day."

And the Bush administration has failed to speak out against these human rights outrages, even though the possibility exists that womens rights will get even worse in Iraq than they were under Saddam. It is clear that Bush is scared to be seen being too vocal about women’s rights for fear of offending Emperor Dobson and his crew.

You can sign a petition asking that Condolezza Rice speak out against these outrages here.