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Monthly Archives: March 2009

NARAL Pro-Choice Missouri 40th Anniversary Speakers' Series Presents Kelli Conlin

26 Thursday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Kelli Conlin is president of the National Institute for Reproductive Health and a former president of NOW-New York City. Kelli and her colleagues at the Institute wondered why pro-choicers had begun to lose the public debate on abortion in the past 20 years. The result of Kelli’s vision, extensive polling, focus groups, and market research was political dynamite that helped drive pro-choice women to the polls in Ohio, Colorado, and other battleground states in 2008: “How Much Time Should She Do?” Join us to hear from one of the most influential messaging gurus in America!


When: April 22, 2009

           7 – 8 pm

           Q&A to follow

Where: First Unitarian Church

            5007 Waterman Blvd.

            St. Louis, MO 63108

Website: http://www.prochoicemissouri.o…


Image

Sam's Graves

26 Thursday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin | Filed under Uncategorized

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It's 11:40pm and

26 Thursday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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the Missouri State Senate is still in session.

The debate appears to be about a plan where teachers can choose to get extra money for performance. So, optional merit pay. No word on if unicorns are involved.

Reading Messenger’s twitter. Apparently Jane Cunningham’s performance-based pay amendment passed when “nobody was paying attention”. Senate’s are weird bodies.

Update: Also, it wouldn’t surprise me if quite a few House members began twittering today. In the future, twitter comments will fill books of History “as it happened”, and we will be drinking Brawndo.

Update (12:40AM): The Senate is still in session. Actually an error by Cunningham tripped up the amendment. But the amendment is on the floor to mandate merit pay in STL City schools.

1:15 AM: Senate still in session. Merit Pay amendment passes via voice vote. You could listen to the live feed or read Tony Messenger if you’re awake and intrigued by late night legislating.

1:40 AM: Via Jolie Justus’ Twitter: “Heard estimate that we will be here until 4-5 this AM.”

Update: It’s 2:30AM, and the Missouri Senate has adjourned. They will return at 10am with hopes of being out by noon.

House Republican Slippery Slopes

26 Thursday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 14 Comments

I’d love a transcript of Tim Flook’s slippery slope on the SCHIP debate. If I recall correctly.. it goes like this..

Adopting the amendment to allow for an SCHIP amendment leads to Adopting more SCHIP money leads to Everybody gets drunk on spending leads to Mass hysteria leads to Doing stupid things (swear he said that) leads to Hyperinflation ala post World War I Germany leads to cats and dogs marrying each other, leads to Doom

But the House Republicans reversed House Budget Committee cuts of Meals on Wheels with multiple anti-liasion amendments. Including several amendments to restore meals on wheels funding from a member who voted to cut Meals on Wheels in committee. So they can pat themselves on their backs.

Update: Tim Jones just said that the Democrats want to move the Mississippi River to the west so that Missouri can become part of the “Socialist Republic of Illinois”

Update 2: Rob Schaaf is indirectly comparing expanding SCHIP to slavery. Did they spike the tap water in the Capital? “Lincoln fought to end slavery, the Minority wants to bring it back” is the basic message of Schaaf there. Ugh.

Update 3: Republican budget shuffle. Cutting spending and saying you’re increasing spending.

Update 4: Here’s an interesting decrease/increase amendment from Jason Kander.

Decrease money from member expense accounts, coffee, and label pins. Increase money for kids for autism. Similar to his amendment earlier regarding kids with cancer. There’ll be a roll call vote on this.. Both amendments passed easily, but with 30+ against.

Update 5: Perfection votes for budget bills. With the added bonus of amusing voice votes. The Aye voters just yelled “Affirmative”. But no Nay voters have said “NOOOOOOOO”

Update 5 1/2: And we’re adjourned. My connection was down and I think an offer from the Dems to the Reps to concede their time was turned down in favor of an amendment spree. Fun resumes at 10am tomorrow.

Live, from Jeff City, it's Hotflash and Blue Girl!

25 Wednesday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 23 Comments

Yesterday I got an email from a friend in the state lege informing me that if I was only going to make one more trip to Jeff this session, today would be the day to do it, because the budget is being debated, and from all over the state, interest groups are showing up to raise their voices to protest proposed cuts to services for special needs individuals.  

We got here in time to see the demonstration in the rotunda (sorry – no pics – batteries was the one thing I left home without this morning) get started, then we made our way to the House gallery, where I was promptly called on the carpet for taking out my laptop.  Fortunately, Hotflash is a natural-born diplomat and she smoothed the ruffled feathers of the elderly gentleman who chastised me.

I’m glad he didn’t boot me on spec…I got to see my friend Jason Kander’s amendment to restore some S-CHIP coverage to cover children with cancer pass the house.  (Good on ya, Jason!  Keep up the good work!)

Anyway, we are here and we are doing our so-called jobs, and we will have more later  

In hoc signo vinces

24 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 18 Comments

On a state university campus, no less.

The Alumni Memorial Chapel (non-denominational) is in the background.

I received a copy of the following e-mail sent to an administrator:

…I believe you have some supervisory authority over…[b]uilding, however I am not sure whether your authority would extend to the adjacent grounds. Nevertheless, I have spotted what appears to be recent landscaping on the south side….  Sod has been planted in a patch of mulch that is surrounded by sidewalk.

The sod appears to be in the form of a Pentecostal cross. Perhaps this is an attempt at a formal garden effect, but the timing of this landscaping being shortly before Easter seems curious. Further, the scale of the sod used will require the use of a pushmower to care for this, instead of the wide track mowers that are used on the campus lawns.  So it appears that someone is willing to use some additional equipment for its maintenance, or it is only a temporary, seasonal display.

Perhaps the planting is innocuous, but the effect is disturbing to have at a public university that promotes diversity.  Hopefully this is something for which you can get some satisfactory answers…

The view from the third floor of an adjacent building.

As I’ve shown the photographs to various individuals the reactions I get range from “Too funny” to “I think it’s a sign!” to “It doesn’t even follow the aesthetic of the rest of the campus.”

Maida's Website Revisited

24 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 58 Comments

Tags

Maida Coleman

maida site.jpg

I got a couple of e-mails in response to my snarky comment about Maida Coleman’s campaign blog the other day. The first, oblivious to the sarcasm, thanked for giving Maida some attention in her bid for Saint Louis mayor. The other, oblivious to the fact that Maida has an awful website, accused me of being a Republican in disguise trying to knock down the true progressive in the race. I think the readers here know that I am no Republican, and I don’t have to knock down a candidate who’s doing that all by herself. But perhaps it would be more constructive to explain why it’s awful, rather than just offering an offhanded remark. And it is indeed awful, independent on what you think of the candidate herself.

The website design itself is actually not bad at all. A lot of content is on display without it looking too busy or confusing. The colors are nice, and the graphics are all relatively crisp.  A lot of campaign websites get this entirely wrong, the campaign apparently thinking that they have to throw a lot of link, buttons and headers at the visitor right off the bat and hope that something sticks. So on first glance, there’s some promise.

Below the flip, I’ll explain what’s wrong with the website.

That quickly fades once you actually start looking at content. The campaign blog that I mocked has only five entries, one in January and four total in March (each one posted several days apart.) The whole point of a blog is to record your thoughts for a public audience, and in a campaign context, to give your campaign website a little more personality and possibly even interactivity, if comments are allowed. To host a blog on your website but fail to regularly update it, well, that tells readers that you either don’t care or that you’ve got nothing to say. You’ve got to update each and every single day, even multiple times a day. If the candidate doesn’t have time to do it, she can use a staffer to write something in their own voice (not the candidate’s) that focuses on the themes of the campaign.

The problem isn’t just with the blog. The website as a whole has little substance for someone who stops by to see where she stands on the issues. She actually promises at one point to offer a “detail-specific” plan to in the future fight crime in an issues section littered with platitudes and lacking any detail or reference to Maida Coleman’s record as a state senator.

This isn’t a trivial point. Coleman is a challenger fighting an uphill battle – she needs everyone she can get. If someone stops by her website to see what she’s all about, there’s less specifics to drive someone into her camp than there might be on a campaign brochure.

I’m not saying she needs to list a 20 point plan or overwhelm the reader with paragraphs detailing your record, but at least something should be there, something the reader can take away and even persuade friends and family with. A few hyperlinks to news articles about specific proposals that Maida carried through the Senate, or two or three bullet points specifically outlining what she would do as mayor would help to make it more convincing.

The other side of this is that it serves as a poor vehicle for supporters who are already convinced that Maida is a better choice. The lack of specifics about Maida’s record and her plans for the city keeps supporters from being able to tell others those same specifics.

And this website isn’t a hub. There are two links to how you can contribute, one for donations and one for volunteering, but there’s nothing even driving you to that point on the front page of the website, which is dominated by a giant banner with a slogan and picture of Maida. You have to scroll down the front page to find the links to contribute and volunteer. And once you get to the volunteer page, you click off boxes denoting how you can help out, add your contact information, and wait for the campaign to contact you when needed. There’s nothing on the website that tells people where to go or how to help out when they have time, not just when the campaign comes calling.

Nor does it allow supporters to contact each other to find out how they might be able to organize something themselves, if they have different skills and ideas that the campaign might be overlooking. This last bit I can’t really single Maida out on, because it’s rare that campaigns actually encourage this kind of behavior. But the guy who was just elected president (you might have heard of him) owes his election in part to building this sort of functionality into his own campaign website. You think others might start catching on.

I’ll do a review of Slay’s website later this week, as it certainly isn’t perfect, either.

China calls for new reserve currency

24 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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From the Financial Times today,

China calls for new reserve currency

By Jamil Anderlini in Beijing

Published: March 23 2009 12:16 | Last updated: March 24 2009 00:06

China’s central bank on Monday proposed replacing the US dollar as the international reserve currency with a new global system controlled by the International Monetary Fund.

In an essay posted on the People’s Bank of China’s website, Zhou Xiaochuan, the central bank’s governor, said the goal would be to create a reserve currency “that is disconnected from individual nations and is able to remain stable in the long run, thus removing the inherent deficiencies caused by using credit-based national currencies”.

In the hearing before the House, Michelle Bachman (R-Minnesota 6th), goaded Geithner and Bernanke to disavow this Chinese proposal after quizing the Fed Reserve Chair and Sec Treasury about where in the US Constitution does it allow for the authority to conduct these bailouts. They replied ‘under the laws of the land’ passed by this body (Congress).

Time to get our house in order. When the Chinese start balking on this level, it’s akin to calling in their chits — a shot off America’s economic bow.

Beholden to bankers is not independence, nor is it desirable inter-dependence. Especially when it has seen our nation invest in a culture of unbridled consumerism at the expense of hard fought for values like worker’s rights and environmental standards.  We have to get our stories straight, are our values about people? Or just cash and the next quarterly business report?

Spring ritual

24 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

missouri, voter i.d.

It’s spring! Robins are bursting with song, the Bartlett Pear trees look like huge bouquets, and another voter i.d. bill is sitting in a House committee. Guess which two of those spring rituals are good news.

In 2006, the Missouri Supreme Court struck down the voter i.d. law Republicans had passed as unconstitutional, but last year SCOTUS upheld an even stricter voter i.d. law in Indiana, so Missouri’s right wingers have decided it’s time to try again. They will, more than likely, get the bill out of committee on a party line vote, and if they do, House Republicans will flip the Democratic party the bird without a second thought.

Their “yea” votes will be saying in effect: You know all those tight elections, those squeakers you managed to pull off? Kiss those victories goodbye in the future, because we’re about to rob you of 240,000 of your voters. If this bill had been law last November, Brad Lager would be the State Treasurer instead of Clint Zweifel and Mike Gibbons would have defeated Chris Koster.

Chris Kelly, D-Columbia, is on the committee hearing the bill, and he tells me that scads of people testified against it from diverse political groups: The League of Women Voters, the ACLU … all those groups who recognize that this is an expensive solution to a non-problem. Those who testified for it were all closely tied to the GOP, either working directly for the party or for connected groups like Eagle Forum.

One of the points the proponents raised was the necessity of keeping illegal immigrants from voting. Right. Because we’re so deluged with news articles about hordes of illegal immigrants showing up at polling places with their fake i.d.s. As if. Those folks want nothing more than to work and not. get. noticed. The few we have, that is. They’re going to give polling places a wide berth–if they’re even aware of when the elections are and where they’re held.

No, it isn’t immigrants this law will affect; it’s poor people, blacks, women, and the elderly. You’re going to find a very high proportion of Democrats in that demographic. And you can assume that any elderly poor black woman is a Democrat. Lillie Lewis, pictured at left, was 78 when the photo was taken last year. She is holding up a letter from the state of Mississippi saying it has no record of her birth. If this ballot initiative passes, she won’t be able to vote anymore.

I don’t know whether Lillie is poor, but based on the fact that she fits the profile otherwise, I’d bet my bank account that she’s a Democrat.

Of course, just because HJR 9 gets out of the House doesn’t make it a slam dunk. Senators are sometimes more sensible than their House counterparts, and we might get some R’s to cross the aisle on this. If not, it goes to the ballot in 2010, and we will have our work cut out for us.

It does get tiresome scrambling to redefeat all the bad Republican ideas in Missouri.

photo courtesy of The New York Times

And McCaskill continues…

24 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

This sort of talk by our junior senator is absolutely infuriating.

Entitlemnt reform is making sure Medicare & Soc Sec don’t devour every penny of our budget leaving nothing for education or other services.

12 minutes ago from web  

Just came from bipartisan meeting on fiscal discipline. We must deal with entitlement reform. Very hard, but absolutely essential.

20 minutes ago from web

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