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Monthly Archives: February 2017

You think Sen. Claire McCaskill (D) has been smiling a lot this week?

23 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

4th Congressional District, Claire McCaskill, Congress, missouri, town halls, Vicky Hartzler

We live in the world the republicans have created. Unfortuntely for them, so do they.

Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) [2016 file photo].

Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) [2016 file photo].

Columbia Daily Tribune
Protesters urge Hartzler to meet with local groups
U.S. representative says town halls would not be a good use of time
Rudi Keller

Meeting with constituents opposed to Republican plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act would not be a good use of time, U.S. Rep. Vicky Hartzler said Wednesday.

[….]

“I want to hear their ideas but town hall forums have not been a good forum to get that accomplished, to have a productive dialogue,” Hartzler said. “So I invite their ideas, they can call my office, they can write, they can email me and I will listen.”

[….]

Hartzler has not scheduled any events to meet with the general public during the recess. Two members of Hartzler’s staff spent more than two hours answering constituent questions Friday in Ashland.

“You know, it wasn’t the most pleasant experience for them and I think there’s better ways to communicate,” Hartzler said.

[….]

In response to Hartzler criticizing how her staff was treated, Wiggs said she attended the Ashland session and disagreed with Hartzler’s description.

“That’s not true,” she said. “We were very fair minded and very upfront.”

Hartzler is trying to divert attention by saying a town hall meeting would not be productive, Wiggs said.

“I don’t buy into that,” she said. “I think she’s just a big chicken.”

That would pretty much describe most republicans in Congress right now.

This is now, that was then:

In August 2009 we covered a number of Senator Claire McCaskill’s (D) health care town halls in Missouri. The most dissonant ones were in Hillsboro and Jefferson City.

Across the country right wingnut astroturf organizations like Americans for Prosperity promoted their opposition to the health care bill.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) - speaking at a town hall in Hillsboro, Missouri - August 11, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking at a town hall in Hillsboro, Missouri – August 11, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) - speaking with the press in Hillsboro after a town hall -  August 11, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking with the press in Hillsboro after a town hall – August 11, 2009.

“…I just hope that the word goes out that every member of Congress can and should have these kinds of meetings. I don’t think we should shy away from public discourse just because it gets a little rocky…”

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): open forum in Hillsboro – photos (August 12, 2009)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): open forum in Hillsboro – press conference (August 12, 2009)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) - speaking at a town hall in Kansas City, Missouri - August 24, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking at a town hall in Kansas City, Missouri – August 24, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) - speaking with the press in Kansas City after a town hall -  August 24, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking with the press in Kansas City after a town hall – August 24, 2009.

“…No, I mean I’m hearing many of the same questions. I mean there’s a lot of misinformation out there about, you know, what’s in the bill, what isn’t in the bill. A lot of distrust about government being further involved in people’s  health care. So, no, there wasn’t anything that I heard today at this particular forum that, there, there’s some common themes that are coming up. There are people that are frustrated that want, feel like that Barrack Obama won the election and the Democrats control Congress. Get it done already. And then there’s other people who feel very strongly that Congress needs to back away and do absolutely nothing. And everything in between…”

A healthcare town hall done right (August 25, 2009)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): health care town hall in Kansas City – press conference, part 1 (August 25, 2009)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): health care town hall in Kansas City – press conference, part 2 (August 26, 2009)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) - speaking at a town hall in Warrensburg, Missouri - August 26, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking at a town hall in Warrensburg, Missouri – August 26, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) - speaking with the press in Warrensburg after a town hall -  August 26, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking with the press in Warrensburg after a town hall – August 26, 2009.

“…I think, by and large, most Missourians are pretty well mannered. I think, by and large, the proponents of health care reform had been sitting on the sidelines. And then all of a sudden, you know, because it was raucous and conflict and the last time I looked you guys liked that stuff, it got a lot of coverage because it was good visuals and it was different and it was big crowds. So all of a sudden everybody sittin’ at home who wanted health care reform go wait a minute, we, we want health care reform. And I think they’ve woken up now. I think they’re showing up. I think they’re getting more engaged. And I think it, it, I will be surprised if we don’t continue to see, I think there’ll be town halls that’ll be pretty rough, depending on where we are. But, it was interesting to me here in Warrensburg, I wasn’t shocked in Kansas City where you have a, it’s generally a more Democratic area of the state. But, today was, I thought was interesting that, that the proponents outweighed the opponents…”

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – health care town hall – Warrensburg (August 26, 2009)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): health care town hall in Warrensburg – press conference (August 28, 2009)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) - speaking at a town hall in Jefferson City, Missouri - August 26, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking at a town hall in Jefferson City, Missouri – August 26, 2009.

The town hall in Jefferson City - August 26, 2009.

The town hall in Jefferson City – August 26, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) - speaking with the press in Jefferson City after a town hall -  August 26, 2009.

Senator Claire McCaskill (D) – speaking with the press in Jefferson City after a town hall – August 26, 2009.

Gee, Steven Walsh, who else is in that picture. Kind of ironic, don’t you think?

“…You know, they, there were clearly a lot of people here that were more interested in disrupting and showing their anger than listening or having any kind of discourse. But that’s okay. You know, this is, we have this great big giant healthy First Amendment in this country. I just, I feel for the people who come that want to listen. They can’t when people start screaming out and, it is bad manners. And by the way, I don’t think it’s particularly persuasive. I don’t think, being the loudest doesn’t make you right. And it generally doesn’t work very well in terms of convincing other people. So, but they have a right to do it, and I respect their right to do it, and, you know, there were moments of very, did you notice, there were times it was very quiet? I got the sense that maybe people actually were learning some things they didn’t know and even if there are just a couple of those it certainly makes it worth it…”

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): health care town hall in Jefferson City – press conference (August 29, 2009)

Senator Claire McCaskill (D): health care town hall in Jefferson City – prayer and first Q and A (August 30, 2009)

That listening to and directly engaging constituents thing is so old school. Apparently it’s not in the republican political play book.

Yep, we’re pretty certain Claire’s been smiling a lot this week. And maybe taking a happy dance step or two.

There is only resistance

23 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#resist, missouri, sunrise

Another day. In west central Missouri:

Sunrise.

Sunrise.

Previously:

No Zen, only Resistance (February 13, 2017)

There is only resistance (February 21, 2017)

HB 1014: the exhibit should include pre 1973 medical devices

22 Wednesday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

abortion, General Assembly, HB 1014, Mike Moon, missouri, right wingnuts

Pre 1973 medical devices.

Pre 1973 medical devices.

A bill, introduced today:

HB 1014  
Requires the Missouri State Museum to include a display on the history of abortion
Sponsor: Moon, Mike (157)
Proposed Effective Date: 8/28/2017
LR Number: 1932H.01I
Last Action: 02/22/2017 – Introduced and Read First Time (H)
Bill String: HB 1014
Next Hearing: Hearing not scheduled
Calendar: HOUSE BILLS FOR SECOND READING
[….]

Ladies and gentlemen, the priorities of your right wingnut controlled Missouri General Assembly.

Eric Greitens and the conservative agenda in higher education

22 Wednesday Feb 2017

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Board of Curators, David Horowitz, Eric Greitens., higher education, Intellectual diversity, Jamie Farmer, Jay Layman, missouri, University of Missouri

Eric “The Kid” Greitens may be gunning for MU. A couple of weeks ago Missouri’s new, young Governor took out his budget spleen on Missouri’s higher education system, hitting already lean institutions with the loss of a considerable amount of state support – while planning even more of the corporate and higher bracket income cuts responsible for the budget shortfall that prompted the cuts in the first place. Recently he announced the appointment of three new members to the University of Missouri Board of Curators, two of whom come from the business community. In his comments he remarked that higher education needed to be “improved,” specifically by encouraging “more intellectual diversity,” and bringing “real world experience to the table.”

These three facts, budget cuts, loading the university governing structure with business people, and pointedly stressing “intellectual diversity” – shorthand in rightwing circles for inculcating conservative viewpoints in higher education – reflect the influence of both the shadowy and the more overt conservative supporters of Kid Greitens, the folks he needs to please if he expects them to fund his future presidential aspirations.

Intellectual Diversity: While intellectual diversity in academia is an admirable value, the phrase itself has taken on a life of its own in conservative circles. Most notably, it has been popularized in rightwing circles by the reprehensible bigot and conservative provocateur, David Horowitz – who is funded by the Scaife family foundations, the Koch brothers’ DonorsTrust, and the Bradley Foundation, all of which, according to Jane Meyer in her book, Dark Money, have attempted to establish conservative beachheads in American universities. Horowitz has used the term to justify witch-hunts to eliminate what he deems undue leftist influence on campus as well as his demands for what amounts to affirmative action for conservative academics in humanities and social sciences faculties.

In the mouth of Kid Greitens, recipient of over two million dollars of that same “dark money,” likely from one or the other of the same spigots that fund folks like Horowitz, the phrase should raise the hackles of all fair-minded advocates for higher education. Responsible apologists for conservative thought such as Mark Lilla have noted that the “hysteria” whipped up by the intellectual McCarthyism of those like Horowitz who agitate for one-sided “intellectual diversity” contributes “to the dumbing down” of higher education.

Market-based educational priorities: At least two of the appointees to the Board of Curators are drawn from the business world.  Jeff Layman, who was also the finance chair for the Greitens campaign, is a senior vice-president at Morgan Stanley. Jamie Farmer runs a company that supplies materials for fracking operations. Both supported Eric Greitens’ campaign financially, and it’s safe to assume that they’re hunky-dory with his intimation that he wants to introduce “intellectual diversity” to the University, very likely to the detriment of the more traditional understanding of diversity, intellectual or otherwise.

It is also likely that, as at other institutions with governing boards that are top heavy with business types, they will try to move the University into more of a supporting role for business and corporate interests, giving priority  to the training of engineers, accountants and other cogs of industry – and, incidentally, to disciplines where the dreaded “liberal bias” is less pronounced.

Another goal may be to decrease the institutional control of faculty and administrators who are viewed as untrustworthy by many wealthy conservatives. Greg Lewis at The Century Foundation  observes that public universities are now predominantly governed by boards that skew toward businessmen and women who are often at odds with the values of the institutions they oversee. He claims that their approach fails to “reflect the broad diversity of fields and experiences at public institutions,” and instead emphasize decision-making that is hasty, top-down, often uninformed and reflecting market-driven rather than intellectual priorities.

Cracking the Budget Whip: So it seems that Greitens has hinted at his goals for MU: “intellectual diversity” that emphasizes conservative philosophy and values, the elevation of intellectually neutral, technical disciplines, and the devaluing of more traditionally liberal areas such as humanities and social sciences. His appointees to the board seem likely to find these goals simpatico. He only needs one more thing to facilitate the type of change he seems to be promising to initiate: a crisis.

Budget cuts can be just such a crisis. Lack of funds decreases options and makes institutions more open to rapid change. Fear of even more budget cuts are also effective when it comes to whipping recalcitrant administrators into shape. And finally, scarce state resources opens the door to conservative donors who have long been seeking to assert a stronger presence in public higher education. For example, John Warner observes that:

Arizona has reduced its spending on higher education by 41%, zeroing out its contributions to two community colleges entirely. Meanwhile, the libertarian Koch Foundation has stepped into the void, offering funding to Arizona State in return for favorable treatment of their ideas inside the institution.

Conservademia: Jane Meyer remarks in her book that the 1969 Columbia University protests by Afican-American students were the catalyst that helped initiate conservative efforts to turn American universities rightward. Similarly the complaints of the MU African-American Concerned Student 1950 group stirred latent racist indignation in the state and left Missouri right wingers fuming at what they saw as administrative capitulation to the demands of the Black students.

There are clear signs that Kid Greitens is going to try to ameliorate such conservative criticism of the university’s administration while furthering the educational agenda of his conservative supporters. Indications are that he will be just as willing to take aim at liberal campus culture and try to shift it rightwards as he has been to go gunning for labor unions. The guy who in his campaign ads literally aimed a big gun on what he metaphorically designated Jefferson City political culture, may soon declare open season on campus liberals.

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (r): Well, you asked.

21 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in social media

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

4th Congressional District, missouri, social media, town hall, Twitter, Vicky Hartzler

With predictable results.

Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) [2016 file photo].

Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) [2016 file photo].

Yesterday, via Twitter, from Representative Vicky Hartzler (r):

vickyhartzler022017

Rep. Vicky Hartzler ‏@RepHartzler
Happy President’s Day and Happy Birthday to the Father of our Nation, George Washington! Who is your favorite president? Tell us here!
6:36 AM – 20 Feb 2017

And some of the responses:

@RepHartzler I’ll tell you my favorite once you schedule a #TownHall.

@RepHartzler Vic! I’m worried about you, girl. It’s district work week and you’re nowhere to be found!

Ah, no open public town halls. Sad.

@rephartzler “Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism.” -George Washington (George would say this about you & Trump)

@RepHartzler disappointed that you said the women’s March had pornography yet you support a president who has been immoral. Don’t be fake

Really? Representative Hartzler (r) said something like that?

@RepHartzler Barack Obama.

Yep. That was predictable. Well, she did ask.

@RepHartzler Obama

@RepHartzler Barack Obama

And, then:

@RepHartzler. When are you going to stand-up and tell the fake President to get to the business of running this country.

@RepHartzler I think my favorite was Harry S Truman.

Heh. Another Democrat.

@RepHartzler Obama! Rated 12th best President ever.

@RepHartzler I’m a Boomer, and parent of Millennials… In my lifetime, I have most respected Barack Obama, for his wisdom and integrity.

I sense a consensus.

Interestingly, dubya didn’t get a mention.

HB 151: HA 5 – we’re all kneeling before the right wingnuts in the General Assembly now

21 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

General Assembly, HA 5, HB 151, missouri, Real ID, right wingnuts, Robert Ross

Via Twitter this afternoon, from Representative Stacey Newman (D):

staceynewman022117

RepStaceyNewman ‏@staceynewman
REAL ID debate has gone into Alternate Reality. MIssourians, Good luck flying with your driver license after Jan 2018. #moleg
1:56 PM – 21 Feb 2017

No kidding?

An amendment [pdf] to HB 151 offered by Representative Robert Ross (r):

hb151failed-amendment

AMEND House Committee Substitute for House Bill No. 151 Page 1 Section A Line 2 by inserting immediately after all of said section and line the following:

“115.016 Any elected official who votes for takes an action to support a measure seeking compliance with the federal REALID Act of 2005 shall display in a prominent location in bold font with a text height not less than one-tenth of the article being circulated at each and every election the member files for after the affirmative vote for action the following description of his or her allegiance:

I WOULD RATHER KNEEL TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT THAN STAND STRONG PROTECTING MY CONSTITUENTS’ RIGHT TO PRIVACY”; and

Further amend said bill by amending the title enacting clause and intersectional references accordingly.

The amendment failed in a roll call vote [pdf] of 21 YES, 119 NO, 12 PRESENT, and 10 ABSENT.

Think about it. Thirty-three state representatives thought enough of this amendment to either vote for it or stand by and not oppose it.

So, if Missouri doesn’t conform to federal REAL ID requirements are Robert Ross (r), the twenty others who voted for this amendment, and the twelve who were “present” going to take calls, kneeling or not, from their upset constituents who can’t travel on domestic commercial flights without a passport after January 2018? Just asking.

Previously:

HB 361 (2009): creating a REAL ID mess for Missourians – HB 151 and HB 166 (2017): sort of try to fix it (December 14, 2016)

HB 954: “That’s not how it works. That’s not how any of this works.” (February 21, 2017)

What’s wrong with this picture?

21 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

missouri, weather

West central Missouri - February 21, 2017.

West central Missouri – February 21, 2017.

Nothing to see here. Move along…

HB 954: “That’s not how it works. That’s not how any of this works.”

21 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

General Assembly, missouri, Real ID, right wingnuts, Robert Ross

Gee, propose a solution that’s not going to solve the problem.

The paranoid obstruction continues.

A bill, introduced last Thursday:

HB 954  
Conditions the consent given to the United States to acquire certain state lands on the state receiving an exemption to federal REAL ID requirements
Sponsor: Ross, Robert (142)
Proposed Effective Date: 8/28/2017
LR Number: 1959H.01I
Last Action: 02/20/2017 – Read Second Time (H)
Bill String: HB 954
Next Hearing: Hearing not scheduled
Calendar: Bill currently not on a House calendar
[….]

The bill summary:

HB 954 — ACQUISITION OF LAND [pdf]
SPONSOR: Ross This bill states that it will suspend state approval for the acquisition of state lands by the federal government until the federal government gives the state an exemption to the requirements of the federal REAL ID Act of 2005.

The bill text:

FIRST REGULAR SESSION
HOUSE BILL NO. 954 [pdf]
99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

INTRODUCED BY REPRESENTATIVE ROSS.
1959H.01I D. ADAM CRUMBLISS, Chief Clerk

AN ACT

To amend chapter 12, RSMo, by adding thereto one new section relating to the acquisition of land by the United States government.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Missouri, as follows:
Section A. Chapter 12, RSMo, is amended by adding thereto one new section, to be known as section 12.055, to read as follows:
12.055. The provisions of sections 12.010 to 12.050 granting consent of the state to the acquisition by the United States of any land in this state are hereby suspended unless and until the federal government grants an exemption to the state from the requirements of the federal REAL ID Act of 2005.

[emphasis in original]

Right.

In their infinite paranoid wisdom a past iteration of the Missouri General Assembly obstructed the compliance of Missouri Driver Licenses to federal REAL ID standards. The federal standards were one of the solutions and reactions to the loose ID standards that contributed to the 2001 terror attacks. It should be noted that the George W. Bush (r) administration proposed and implemented those federal ID standards.

As a consequence of this recalcitrance on the part of the Missouri General Assembly, citizens of our fair state currently possess state issued IDs which do not comply with the federal requirements and the state does not have a compliance waiver. Currently Missouri state issued IDs cannot be used for entrance to federal courthouses, federal military installation, or any nuclear facility. In January 2018 if this is not fixed for Missourians they will not be able to use their state issued ID to fly. Absent a passport, Missourians will not be able to travel on a commercial flight.

Think about that when you can’t fly to see grandma and grandpa after January 2018. And be sure to thank your state representative and state senator for their foresight and efficiency in addressing the issue.

Previously:

HB 361 (2009): creating a REAL ID mess for Missourians – HB 151 and HB 166 (2017): sort of try to fix it (December 14, 2016)

There is only resistance

21 Tuesday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

#resist, missouri, sunrise

Another day.

Sunrise.

Sunrise.

Previously:

No Zen, only Resistance (February 13, 2017)

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (r): just checking

20 Monday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

4th Congressional District, Constituents, missouri, town hall, Vicky Hartzler

Hold an open public town hall in the 4th Congressional District? Sure, why not? This is why:

With Town Hall Script Flipped On GOP, Will History Repeat Itself?
February 17, 20177:00 AM ET

Republicans know the scene well: angry constituents flood local town halls, upset over health care and other congressional issues.

It’s that energy that exploded eight years ago, birthing the Tea Party movement and helping the GOP take back Congress in the 2010 election. But now, they’re finding themselves on the receiving end instead of the giving end.
[….]

Facing constituents is a problem, eh?

Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) 2016 file photo].

Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) 2016 file photo].

From Representative Vicky Hartzler’s (r) congressional web site:

February 20, 2017.

February 20, 2017.

Nope, no open public meetings in the district. As far as we can tell.

Problem solved.

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