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Monthly Archives: November 2007

Preserving Missouri Wilderness

28 Wednesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Jo Ann Emerson, Missouri Wilderness Coalition, Roy Blunt

That picture, taken in the Mark Twain National Forest, soothes me; and I don’t want to imagine bulldozers anywhere near Lower Rock Creek.  But the U.S. Forest Service has granted approval for salvage logging operations in that area.  Bulldozers will tear wide “fire lines” throught the forest, which will make it easier for ATVs and loggers to get in and will ultimately make it easier to have a de facto road in a roadless area.  The delicate ecology will be disturbed.

So the Missouri Wilderness Coalition has proposed protecting that site, has proposed designating an additional 50,000 acres as federal wilderness and thus immune to the intrusions the Forest Service is about to allow.  50,000 acres sounds like a lot, but actually, it’s a piddling amount.  Jim Scheff of the Missouri Forest Alliance working with the Wilderness Coalition says:

“A big part of this is that, right now, only 4.3 percent of the entire Mark Twain National Forest is designated as wilderness,” Scheff said. “Almost the entire rest of the forest, about 95 percent, is open to some form of logging and other really intensive management.”

In other words, the Coalition is only trying to protect an additional 3 percent of the Mark Twain National Forest and the Ozark National Scenic Riverways.  That’s 7 percent, all told.  As Kat Logan Smith, executive director of the Missouri Coalition for the Environment, points out:  “Even God asks for 10 percent.”

But it’s a hard sell.  Many of the local hunters and anglers have been well satisfied with how the land has been handled in the last fifty years and figure that if the system ain’t broke, don’t fix it. They see this proposal as something that interfering city folk came up with.

Others like horseback rider Shannon Campbell, seem surprised at the proposal and reject it at once.

Standing at the Bar-K Wrangler Camp, … Campbell worried that while a wilderness designation won’t prohibit horseback riding at Swan Creek, it might restrict his ability to drive horse trailers into the forest.

And seeing the proposal originate in St. Louis is aggravating, he said.

“I think they need to stay up there and take care of things up there,” he said.

In fact, the proposal did not come from “city folk”.  Kat Logan Smith says that whenever she leaves St. Louis for a meeting about this issue, she never drives less than an hour and a half.  The address of the Coalition is in Boss, MO, in the heart of the Ozarks.

But Campbell’s scorn for ideas that originate in St. Louis illustrates a strategic mistake that some St. Louis members of the Wilderness Coalition made.  They jumped at the chance to get the Post-Dispatch to write a story about their proposal instead of first talking to local hunter/angler groups, warning them about the changes that are in the works, and getting them on board.  Ken Midkiff, another member of the Coalition, says that the way to go would have been to get the local people making individual phone calls to their federal representatives and then to get the news in the media.

Unfortunately, when Roy Blunt and Jo Ann Emerson found out about the article in the P-D, they were immediately horrified, and many of their constituents pretty much felt the same way. Coalition members had been hoping to get Kit Bond, who often endorses environmental legislation, to sponsor the proposal.  Now, however, he is also expressing reservations.

The damage done by that strategic error will take time to undo. Years, perhaps.

   

Blogging Conventions

28 Wednesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Atlanta, Austin, Blogging While Brown, Daily Kos, Netroots Nation

http://farm2.static.flickr.com…

Blogging conventions are springing up all over the place. Lots of us netroots like to think of Daily Kos as the font of all that is good in organizing online, but the BlogHer women’s blogger conference came first in 2005, followed by the first Yearly Kos conference in 2006, and now Blogging While Brown, which will have its inaugural conference in 2008.

More details on each below the flip.

McCaskill (D) and Bond (r) approval -November – SurveyUSA

28 Wednesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

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Claire McCaskill, Kit Bond, poll, SurveyUSA

On November 20th SurveyUSA released a 600 sample poll taken in Missouri from November 9th through the 11th which shows the approval ratings for Senator Claire McCaskill (D) and Senator Kit Bond (r). The margin of error is 4.1%.

The poll was sponsored by KCTV in Kansas City.

Kit Bond is not doing so well.

Do you approve or disapprove of the job Claire McCaskill is doing as United States Senator?

All

48% – approve

46% – disapprove

7% – not sure

Democrats [40% of sample]

71% – approve

24% – disapprove

5% – not sure

republicans [28% of sample]

29% – approve

69% – disapprove

2% – not sure

Independents [26% of sample]

35% – approve

55% – disapprove

9% – not sure

Interesting. Not much change from October’s numbers for republicans and Democrats, but those self identified Independents are not happy campers.

Do you approve or disapprove of the job Kit Bond is doing as United States Senator?

All

43% – approve

45% – disapprove

12% – not sure

Democrats [40% of sample]

29% – approve

58% – disapprove

13% – not sure

republicans [28% of sample]

59% – approve

32% – disapprove

9% – not sure

Independents [26% of sample]

48% – approve

41% – disapprove

11% – not sure

Lions and tigers and bears (plus a few mules), oh my! There’s serious erosion in republican and Democratic numbers for the podium pounder. Maybe this is an indication that even a long history of applying liberal quantities of pork won’t be able to save the damaged republican brand. Curiously, the Independent numbers haven’t changed much.  

“baby” Blunt – November approval ratings – SurveyUSA

28 Wednesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

approval rating, Blunt, missouri, SurveyUSA

On November 15th SurveyUSA released a 600 sample poll taken in Missouri from November 9th through the 11th which shows that “baby” Blunt still does not have the best of approval ratings in Missouri. The margin of error is 4.1%.

The poll was sponsored by KCTV in Kansas City.

Do you approve or disapprove of the job Matt Blunt is doing as Governor?

All

44% – approve

50% – disapprove

6% – not sure

Democrats [40% of sample]

23% – approve

70% – disapprove

7% – not sure

republicans [28% of sample]

68% – approve

30% – disapprove

2% – not sure

Independents [26% of sample]

47% – approve

45% – disapprove

8% – not sure

Since the October poll “baby” Blunt’s numbers have continued to decline among republicans, but remain almost the same among Democrats. His numbers have improved among Independents. The “not sure” responses among Democrats and Independents increased.

Kansas Anti-Abortion Crusader in Hot Water

27 Tuesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Johnson County, Phil Kline, Planned Parenthood

Just across the Kansas-Missouri line, butted up against Kansas City, is Johnson County and its anti-abortion wingnut district attorney, Phil Kline.  Turns out that Kline likes to claim the moral high ground (fighting abortion!) while doing something slightly illegal–and being overpaid to do it.

Not only does he go after abortion clinics, he’s the one who tried to get abortion records made public.  When he lost the run for Attorney General, Kansas Republicans installed him as District Attorney for Johnson County, and he immediately filed criminal charges against Planned Parenthood.  Now Kline is finding his own records made public, and he must be squirming.  A local TV station has been investigating him for months.  The station can prove …

Let The KC Blue Blog tell you the story.

Annapolis

27 Tuesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Israel, Palestine

After seven years of diplomatic neglect, George Bush has set aside a day – yes, one day – today – to try to work out the intractable six-decades-long Israel/Palestine problem.

What, pray tell, do they think they can accomplish in one day?  Ask the people in the Middle East and you discover that Arabs and Jews can indeed agree on at least one thing:  When asked that question, they all answer “Not much.”

Oy vey.  Even the choice of location is damning:  The United States Naval Academy is the setting, and the motto of the Navy is “Don’t give up the Ship” – invoking tenacity and determination, not diplomatic acumen and compromise.   In Arabic, “Ana” means “I” and people the world over know the word “police.”  A Saudi humorist joked that the choice of location was an arrogant  message from Bush to the Middle East “I am the police.”

The question of borders has plagued both Israel and the neighbors for over 40 years,  since June 4, 1967; and the implementation of the Six Day War armistice.   Since then, conservative, some would say fundamentalist whack-job, settlers have made the occupied territories their home.  Kicking them out of the West Bank will not be as easily achieved as the same feat was two years ago, when the settlers were evicted from Gaza.  The Gaza Strip is not biblically significant.  Jews do not have deep emotional or historical attachments to Gaza.  Not so the West Bank, which is historically, theologically and emotionally significant to most Jews worldwide – let alone the “fundamentalist whack jobs” I just referenced.  I can’t see removing them without violence.  The issue of borders certainly isn’t going to be achieved in a day.

And you can’t talk about the borders without acknowledging the 800-pound-gorilla playing the zither in the  sitting room:  Jerusalem.

On paper, the equation balances.  The Arab neighborhoods would fall under Palestinian control, and the Jewish neighborhoods would be controlled by Israel.  Except it gets dicey real quick – the neighborhoods are intertwined.

Ask any chemist – when you are working with volatile compounds, the slightest variation from the recipe and it will blow up in your face.  And what cocktail could be more volatile than the 35 acres of the walled city of Old Jerusalem?  All three of the major monotheistic religions consider Old Jerusalem and the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount to be sacred ground.

The problems are exacerbated by Christianist  Zionists (who should make with the butting out already) who stick their noses where they don’t belong and urge their constituencies to pressure the Israeli government to take Jerusalem off the negotiating table.   Fortunately, we are making headway, and even the occasional Zionist Rabbi Is waking up and smelling the coffee.   But before any Jew throws in with that lot, remember they are mentally ill.  They want to precipitate Armageddon and damn us all to their hell.  Those Jews who wake up pissed every morning that the Messiah didn’t come last night find natural allies in them.   The rest of us find ulcers, migraines and anxiety.  Again we have a problem that’s going to take more than a day to sort out.

And then you have nearly four and a half million Palestinians living in limbo, many still in refugee camps.  And everyone, Jew and Arab alike, needs to be scolded by my grandmother for being obstinate jackasses and using the Palestinian people as pawns, especially the Arab world.  They really screwed the Palestinians in 1948, the bastards.    All of the Arab neighboring states should be held accountable.  They are every bit as culpable as Israel in contributing to the suffering of the Palestinian people  and need to be called out on that publicly.  There is plenty of sin and blame to go around.  Everyone has behaved abominably and nobody gets a pass.   This can’t even be mentioned at Annapolis.  Hell, it  would take a good 6 months of Arabs storming the door every time that little bit of reality comes up and is said aloud.  I shake my head in disbelief.  They offer a day?  Oh, the humanity…

And how the hell do they even bring up security in the time allowed?

This is why I don’t often write about Israel and Palestine. It’s damned infuriating. No one is asking me, but if anyone did, I would say Frost was employing irony;  good fences do NOT make good neighbors.  The first order of business should be to tear down that damned fence and fill in the trenches, and restore the 10% of the territory that it’s construction seized.

Then I would say let Gaza go to Egypt. Give the West Bank to Jordan.   Give the Golan Heights to Syria, and let a disinterested third party settle the border with Lebanon, and nobody would get to whine about it. And suck it up.  Learn to live with a divided Jerusalem.Until everyone concerned learns how to act, I would make Old Jerusalem a U.N. protectorate.  Don’t like it?  Learn how to act.

Robin Wright Jones Officially Declares Today

27 Tuesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Maida Coleman, Robin Wright Jones, Rodney Hubbard

So much for rumors that Robin Wright Jones was holding out on announcing that she is running for Maida Coleman’s state senate seat (district 5) in hopes of getting some concession from Mayor Slay.  

Robin is officially announcing her candidacy today at 10:30.  

That means that two people are definitely in the race, Robin and Rodney Hubbard.  Robin is a progressive straight down the line (as I’ve written here and here.)  Rodney, popular in his district, is taking flack from lots of Democrats for accepting cash from Rex Sinquefield and for supporting pro-voucher legislation (as I wrote about here and here).

Robin has lined up endorsements from state senators Maida Coleman, Joan Bray, and Rita Days.  Representatives endorsing her are Jeanette Mott-Oxford, Juanita Wilson, Pat Yeager and Esther Haywood.

Before Robin even got going good, Rodney had sewed up a big endorsement:  Lacy Clay.

Everybody seems to assume that Representative Tom Villa, a socially conservative Democrat (pro-life, anti-stem cell) will run as a spoiler in that race, but who knows?  He hasn’t said he plans to, and he’s likely to play it close to the vest, perhaps right up until filing time in February.  

But his possible candidacy isn’t even the only other one to consider.  Representative Connie Johnson is also taking under consideration the possibility of running.  If she does, though, she too is likely to wait until the February filing date to announce her intentions.

If she and Villa both run, that would mean that all four representatives from Maida Coleman’s senate district are running for the seat.

Pictured above:  top left–Wright Jones, top right–Hubbard, bottom left–Villa, bottom right–Johnson

Mannies cites irregularities in Blunt’s Press Release

27 Tuesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Last Wednesday, Jo Mannies posted a press release from Blunt’s office about the email scandal on the Post-Dispatch’s blog “Politcal Fix.”  Initially, she noted that certain statements in the release, “run counter to some statements initially made by members of the governor’s staff.”  In response to prompting for specifics in the comments from myself and The Oracle, she updated the entry with her replies in parenthesis noting the irregularities in the release.  First of all, Mannies took some flack on Fired Up! last week for doing the whole “Republican scandal is actually good for Republicans” meme in her column, so I’d like to give her props for responding to her readers in this case and explicitly addressing the problems of Blunt’s press release.  Second, the update would have been easy to miss, since there was no big flashing “UPDATE” sign anywhere and it was changed over Thanksgiving break, so I’m re-sharing the relevant bits here.

First there is this statement from the Blunt Press Release:

FACT: Governor Blunt’s administration has retained and released more documents and e-mails than any other elected official.

In reply, Mannies notes:

(According to spokeswoman Jessica Robinson, this is an observation by his staff, based on what they believe has been released by other offices. That assertion appears to include what other offices have released to the Missouri Republican Party, in response to Sunshine Law requests.)

That’s nice.  So basically they’re asserting the gut feeling of Blunt staffers as a FACT.  Steven Colbert would be proud, and we can all rest easy knowing that the people running the state don’t need to bother to actually count anything or develop objective measurements for their facts, they can just eyeball the state of the world from their desks.

Next Up:

“FACT: The Blunt Administration has never said that e-mails were never public records. It has said, in accordance with law, that e-mails can be public records, but not every e-mail is a public record.”

And the reply:

(Following is the official statement e-mailed out REPEATEDLY by the governor’s staff in mid-September. In fact, communications director Rich Chrismer asked several times – notably in emails sent on Sept. 13 – that the following be used by the Post-Dispatch in its entirety: “There is no statute or case that requires the state to retain individual’s emails as a public record. However, even though they are not a public record, if we have emails that are relevant to a Sunshine request, we always provide them in compliance with the law.”)

This seems like a flat out contradiction.  The claim that “there is not statue or case that requires the state to retain individuals emails…” basically is stating that such emails are never public records.  In fact, even the next sentence seems a little strange since if no individual emails are public records then it is necessarily true that “if we have emails that are relevant to a Sunshine requires, we always provide them” given that, by definition, there are no emails that are relevant to Sunshine requests.

Lastly, not necessarily leastly, theres this:


“FACT: After a Sunshine request was filed, Jay Nixon’s Chief of Staff only provided approximately 200 e-mails during a three year period. It is hard to believe the Chief of Staff for an attorney general receives, on average, only one e-mail every four days. Even more unbelievable is that not one of these emails was to his boss, the Attorney General.”

Mannies:

(The Post-Dispatch sent out Sunshine requests to Nixon and Blunt in late Sept. for six weeks worth of emails from each of them, and their chiefs of staff. Neither batch sent to the Post-Dispatch included any emails between Blunt and chief of staff Ed Martin, or Nixon and chief of staff John Watson.)

Since “hard to believe” is such a wishy-washy term, I guess we can’t call contradiction on this one.  But it’s still funny that, by their own logic, Blunt’s office must find it unbelievable that Blunt and Martin didn’t provide any email exchanges to the P-D.  Even they don’t believe themselves!!

Chris Koster – campaign to return contributions in excess of current limits

27 Tuesday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

2008 election, campaign finance, Chris Koster, Missouri AG, Missouri Senate

Chris Koster’s campaign issued the following press release today:

Missourians for Koster Statement on Missouri Ethics Commission Ruling

ST. LOUIS-In response to the Missouri Ethics Commission ruling that political candidates who received contributions in excess of current contribution limits must either return the contributions or file a claim of hardship, the Koster campaign released the following statement:

“Today, Missourians for Koster notified the Missouri Ethics Commission that they intend to begin the process of returning contributions from individuals in excess of current contribution limits.”

 

We may be spinning our wheels trying to save our democratic system

26 Monday Nov 2007

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Remember how, in elementary school, we used to have “mock elections”?  According to some pretty smart folks, we may just be doing that now as “grown ups.”  (I’ll leave the definition of “grown up” to you after seeing the Black Friday frenzy.)

Robert Reich’s new book is  Supercapitalism: The Transformation of Business, Democracy and Everyday Life.

This is what the pres candidates should be talking about.  If we’re spinning our wheels trying to save our democratic system, let’s at least be honest about it.  

See excellent review of this book at

http://www.nybooks.com/article…

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