Category Archives: Politics

Political commentary, observations, rants, and ramblings

Van Jones and 911 truther, you decide.

There are claims circulating that Van Jones believes that high level US government officials were implicit in the 911 attacks.  Here is an unbiased take on the background for these allegations.

 

Controversial Obama Administration Official Denies Being Part of 9/11 “Truther” Movement, Apologizes for Past Comments*

September 4, 2009

By ABCNEWS.COM

A top environmental official of the Obama administration issued a statement Thursday apologizing for past incendiary statement and denying that he ever agreed with a 2004 petitionon which his name appears, a petition calling for congressional hearings and an investigation by the New York Attorney General into “evidence that suggests high-level government officials may have deliberately allowed the September 11th attacks to occur.”

Van Jones, the Special Advisor for Green Jobs at the White House Council on Environmental Quality, is Number 46 of the petitioners from the so-called “Truther” movement which suggests that people in the administration of President George W. Bush “may indeed have deliberately allowed 9/11 to happen, perhaps as a pretext for war.”

In a statement issued Thursday evening Jones said of “the petition that was circulated today, I do not agree with this statement and it certainly does not reflect my views now or ever.”

He did not explain how his name came to be on the petition. An administration source said Jones says he did not carefully review the language in the petition before agreeing to add his name.*

“My work at the Council on Environmental Quality is entirely focused on one goal: building clean energy incentives which create 21st century jobs that improve energy efficiency and use renewable resources,” Jones said in his statement tonight.

Jones also said in his statement that “In recent days some in the news media have reported on past statements I made before I joined the administration – some of which were made years ago. If I have offended anyone with statements I made in the past, I apologize.”

With a history of incendiary and provocative remarks, many of them dealing with his view of how whites exploit minorities, Jones has emerged as the subject of much conservative scrutiny in recent days, particularly from Fox News’ Glenn Beck. (Jones defenders point out that most of Beck’s criticism came after a group Jones helped found, Color of Change, began pushing advertisers to boycott Beck after he accused President Obama of being a racist.)

Jones is the best-selling author of The Green Collar Economy and a leader in the “green jobs” movement — the idea that clean energy jobs can create jobs, especially in poor communities. He has been praised from leaders ranging from Al Gore to former eBay CEO (and Republican) Meg Whitman, who in May said that Jones is doing “a marvelous job… I’m a huge fan of his. He is very bright, very articulate, very passionate. I think he is exactly right.”

Earlier this year a profile of Jones in the New Yorker, author Elizabeth Kolbert wrote that “the basic premise of Jones’s appeal—that combating global warming is a good way to lift people out of poverty—is very much open to debate. … it’s not at all clear that the number of jobs created by, say, an expanding solar industry would be greater than the number lost through, say, a shrinking coal-mining industry. Nor is it clear that a green economy would be any better at providing work for the chronically unemployed than our present, ‘gray’ economy has been.”

But those theories aren’t the ones that have made Jones a lightning rod in the past few weeks.

In 2005 Jones told the East Bay Express that the acquittal of Rodney King’s assailants in 1992 in that infamous police brutality case changed him significantly. “I was a rowdy nationalist on April 28th, and then the verdicts came down on April 29th,” he said. “By August, I was a communist.”

Jones and other young activists in 1994 formed a group called Standing Together to Organize a Revolutionary Movement, or STORM, rooted in Marxism and Leninsm. Two years later, Jones launched the Ella Baker Center, an Oakland, Calif., based “strategy and action center” which states that it tries to “promote positive alternatives to violence and incarceration.”

In February during a discussion on energy at Berkeley, Calif., (and prior to his joining the Obama administration) Jones referred to Republicans using an epithet for a proctological orifice, which he called “a technical, political science term.”

Asked why Republicans asserted more control of the Senate when they had a smaller majority before 2006, Jones said “the answer to that is, they’re a–holes.” He added that President Obama is not an a–hole, but, “I will say this. I can be an a–hole, and some of us who are not Barack Hussein Obama are going to have to start getting a little bit uppity.”

“I apologize for the offensive words I chose to use during that speech,” Jones said in a different written statement to Politico on Wednesday. “They do not reflect the views of this administration, which has made every effort to work in a bipartisan fashion, and they do not reflect the experience I have had since I joined the administration.”

– jpt

UPDATE: It’s worth pointing out that Ben Smith at Politico has spoken to two signatories of that petition, Rabbi Michael Lerner and historian Howard Zinn, who say they were misled about what they were signing. And the conservative website Little Green Footballs points out that Rachel Ehrenfeld, author of “Funding Evil; How Terrorism is Financed and How to Stop It” has posted on her website, the American Center for Democracy: “PLEASE NOTE: Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld is not a signatory of the 911Truth.org. She has asked several times to have her named removed from the list, but the organization failed to comply.”

Faux News Part 2.

 

Conspiracy Theorist Arrested for Death Threats Against Sandy Hook Parent

by DANIELLA SILVA

A Florida woman who said the Sandy Hook massacre of 26 people was a hoax has been indicted for making death threats to one of the shooting victim’s parents, the Department of Justice announced Wednesday.

Lucy Richards, 57, was indicted on four counts of transmitting threats in interstate commerce, the Department of Justice announced Wednesday. Each count carries a maximum of five years in prison.

Richards, of Tampa, Florida, was arrested Monday, the DOJ said.

Lucy Richard Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office

Richards is accused of making a series of death threats to a parent of one of the children killed in the mass shooting on or around Jan. 10 of this year, according to the DOJ statement.

Richards’ arrest came just one week before the fourth anniversary of the Dec. 14, 2012 shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, where 20 children and six adults were killed.

Authorities allege Richards sent the individual messages saying “you gonna die, death is coming to you real soon” and “LOOK BEHIND YOU IT IS DEATH,” according to the indictment.

The DOJ did not release the name of the parent, but said the individual lives in South Florida.

Play

Columbine, Newtown, Orlando: The names seared on Americans’ minds 2:41

Richards’ belief that the school shooting never occurred was the motivation behind the death threats, the DOJ said.

In the years since the shooting, various online conspiracy website have falsely claimed the shooting was a massive hoax concocted to erode Second Amendment gun rights.

Richards is scheduled for initial court appearance on Dec. 19.

Conspiracy theorist and Trump supporter Alex Jones has repeatedly and falsely claimed the shooting never happened on his website Infowars.

Image: One week anniversary of shooting at elementary school in Newtown, Connecticiut

A woman kneels in front of a fence with the names of the 20 children killed at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in Dec. 2012. JUSTIN LANE / EPA file

Last month, the daughter of a victim of the shooting called on Trump to disavow the radio host. Jones has said that the president elect called him to thank him for his support.

Richards’ case is similar to an incident over the weekend, where an armed North Carolina man traveled to a Washington D.C. pizzeria while trying to investigate an unfounded conspiracy theory that the restaurant was involved in a child sex trafficking tied to the Clintons, according to court documents

Trump Twitter war with Carrier Steel Union Boss

From NBC News

Trump Launches Tweet Attack on Carrier Steel Union Boss for Fact-Checking Him
by PHIL MCCAUSLAND
President-elect Donald Trump pledged to be “so presidential you will be bored” during the election, but he continues to keep Americans on their toes after again taking to Twitter to battle his most recent critic.

Chuck Jones, president of United Steelworkers 1999, has not been shy about telling publications that Trump broke his promise to save jobs at the Carrier plant, a pledge on which the president-elect campaigned.

Trump recently proclaimed that he saved 1,000 jobs at the plant, which is untrue. Instead, the deal saves 800 positions. Carrier’s parent company gets $7 million in tax cuts and incentives over 10 years.

Three hundred Carrier jobs are still slated to be sent to Mexico.

Trump did not address the reasons for the feud directly, but instead — with no evidence — stated via a tweet that Jones had done a “terrible job” and suggested that he was the reason companies were leaving the country.

Follow
Donald J. Trump ? @realDonaldTrump
Chuck Jones, who is President of United Steelworkers 1999, has done a terrible job representing workers. No wonder companies flee country!
4:41 PM – 7 Dec 2016
6,740 6,740 Retweets 23,532 23,532 likes
The national union responded not long after, calling Jones a “hero” who’d tried to save all of the imperiled jobs.

Follow
United Steelworkers @steelworkers
Chuck is a hero not a scapegoat: you, others know about Carrier because of his, members’ tireless work since day 1 to save ALL jobs there. https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump/status/806660011904614408
7:12 PM – 7 Dec 2016
2,461 2,461 Retweets 3,518 3,518 likes
More than an hour later, Trump returned to Twitter to say the lost jobs were the fault of the local union. Trump said the union should “spend more time working-less time talking. Reduce dues.”

Follow
Donald J. Trump ? @realDonaldTrump
If United Steelworkers 1999 was any good, they would have kept those jobs in Indiana. Spend more time working-less time talking. Reduce dues
5:56 PM – 7 Dec 2016
5,555 5,555 Retweets 20,720 20,720 likes
The union replied that members’ dues were used to save jobs.

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United Steelworkers @steelworkers
Dues have helped us file 45+ cases against bad trade; saving jobs in tire, paper, steel, etc. We walk the walk. #imwithchuck #wearewithchuck https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/806678853305384960
8:03 PM – 7 Dec 2016
294 294 Retweets 361 361 likes
The argument started 20 minutes after Jones appeared on CNN and said 550 jobs were still heading for Mexico from Carrier’s Indianapolis facility, while 700 jobs from its Huntington facility would also be sent to Mexico.

Jones later told NBC News: “I tried to correct some of his math, and he took exception to it.”

“For him to say I’m a horrible labor leader, I take it as a positive, because that must mean that we’re doing something so people can earn a decent living wage-wise and benefit-wise,” Jones added.

Jones said some of Trump’s passionate Twitter followers are now harassing him.

“I’m getting threats and everything else from some of his supporters,” Jones said. “I’m getting them all day long — now they’re kicked up a notch.”

Follow
Donald J. Trump ? @realDonaldTrump
Nobody should be allowed to burn the American flag – if they do, there must be consequences – perhaps loss of citizenship or year in jail!
3:55 AM – 29 Nov 2016
73,778 73,778 Retweets 215,630 215,630 likes
Since winning the election, Trump has used the social media platform to criticize China, Boeing, the cast of “Hamilton,” the news media in general, the Green Party and its presidential nominee, Jill Stein, “Saturday Night Live,” Cuba, protesters and more.

He also tweeted that cases of voter fraud caused him to lose the popular vote, a claim for which there is no evidence.

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Donald J. Trump ? @realDonaldTrump
In addition to winning the Electoral College in a landslide, I won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally
12:30 PM – 27 Nov 2016
54,105 54,105 Retweets 163,769 163,769 likes
On Twitter, Trump also took credit for saving a Ford plant that was never slated to close.

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Donald J. Trump ? @realDonaldTrump
I worked hard with Bill Ford to keep the Lincoln plant in Kentucky. I owed it to the great State of Kentucky for their confidence in me!
6:15 PM – 17 Nov 2016
29,630 29,630 Retweets 119,226 119,226 likes
The president-elect’s transition team has not apologized or produced any corrections.

Seabourn day 13, Dubrovnik

There is no getting around it, today Dubrovnik is a tourist destination. In the 1990’s the city was 60% destroyed in the Croatian-Serbian war. It has been stunningly rebuilt. There is one single museum that documents the horror of the war, the 400 dead, and the destruction. We did not visit the museum, not consciously, but because we wandered the city and did not stumble upon it. Jim, a fellow Seabourn guest, described the museum when we happened upon him during an epicurean pool side event. That Yugoslavia has fractured as it has, and that Scotland is pushing for secession, and Venice is pushing for secession from Italy, all these things portend trouble at best for Europe. Once fractured, petty differences can become cause bellum. Rather than seeing the causes that bind us, the world is seeking issues to differentiate us. Politicians use this tearing of the fabric of society to further their own ends and destroy what we, as humans, have in common.

That Greece may be thrown out of the EU, may make sense to some. If you cannot pay your loans, some punishment is due. But in leaving the EU, would not Greece turn to Russia or China? What then for geopolitical stability in the Eastern Europe?

Dubrovnik is a beautiful city. Ellen and I were standing at an intersection and I noticed the word uncial. I studied Russia and the Russian language and know enough of the language to recognize the similarities between Russian and Croat. In many instances the difference is in the alphabet only. Street, good evening, good morning are all identical phonetically (or nearly so). Ulitca is the Russian word for street, phonetically transcribed into the Roman alphabet. I mentioned to Ellen that the word was Russian and I had a local Croatian walk up to me and say, “NO. Not RUSSIAN, is CROATIAN word. We fought war over this.”

Did I feel one inch tall. I mean these people had just fought a war and this fellow could well be a survivor or perhaps had born arms against the Serbs. My sense of righteous indignation that the fellow did not see the similarity between Russian and Croatian did a 180. Even if I was correct, there was no reason to antagonize this fellow and no telling what he was capable of if I had chosen to “be correct”. I apologized as best; I could and fled the scene vowing not to speak Russian, talk of Russian or even think Russian for the nest 24 hours.

The old city does not have facilities for a cruise ship to dock, even a small one. Smaller ships anchor and ferry passengers ashore. With only two cruise ships in port, Dubrovnik was fun. The main street which is also the main shopping street was crowded, but walk one block off that street and you could be by yourself. I thought there were only two cruise ships in port. Jim (from above) also mentioned that there were two or three huge cruise ships docked in the new port in the new city and that a team of busses was ferrying some of them to the gates of the old city! I don’t know where they went, but I did not see hoards teeming in the streets. It could be that many were waking the town’s ramparts which are organized as a one way walk high above the city. Because it is one way, while walking the battlements you’ll only see the small group of people walking with you.

There are very many small taverns and restaurants all over the city, most are in narrow streets or alleyways just a block or two from the main street. The food is mild, not spicy, and quite good. Lamb, fish, and shell fish dominate the menus.

Dubrovnik’s main draw is the quaintness of the town. The medieval walls are mostly intact. Ruins of a much older city wall are visible from the western ramparts. We walked the ramparts all the way around the old city. That was fun though we took far too many photos. Dubrovnik, Mykonos, and Oia are among the most photogenic we have ever visited The walk around the city takes about two hours if you meander and enjoy the views. It can be done in half that time if you rush or twice that time if you have issues walking.

Dubrovnik sits at the base of a modest mountain. A tram runs from the back of the city to the top of the mountain and the view over Dubrovnik and out to the sea. This is well worth doing. I suggest going early in the morning ahead of the crowds. Jim said they took a taxi to the top which was less expensive and afforded better views of the city.

We are now off to a small fishing village for a taste of small town Croatia.

Ron

Texas and Tesla

While reviewing information about Tesla on-line, I came across this article:

http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/08/23/why-did-texas-put-the-brakes-on-tesla-motors/ which is amazing to me. It amazing not because it presents new information about Tesla, but because it demonstrates how political the issue of electric cars and government has become in the U.S.

The article is pretty straight forward. The video was stripped, but it can be viewed here: http://www.boykotx.org/why-texas-banned-tesla-motors-spoiler-because-we-dont-have-campaign-finance-reform/ (along with a similar, but slanted article).

What I find most facinating is the commentary. It includes detractors who spew outright lies. Libertarians who want no government intervention in anything. Anti-electric folks. 10th ammendment folks. The full gambit of political opinion.

Some anti-arguments seem to make sense until you think about it. Like the fellow who states the car is environmentally unfriendly because the battery can only be charged 1000 times. That’s 1000 full cycle charges (or many more short cycle charges). It translates into 300,000 miles. Yes at 300,000 miles the battery may have to be replaced. Seems reasonable to me. Also the batteries are fully recycleable. The lithium will be recovered.

Or there’s the guy who called Tesla a “government welfare case”. There is some truth there: Tesla took a government loan, made all the milestones for the loan, and repaid the loan. Yes it was repaid in part with monies garnered from the sales of energy credits. That however is not “welfare”, it is making use of a government program and providing other companies with energy credits that they need. The fellow implied that the entire $500M loan was repaid with energy credits, which is absurd.

One fellow stated “The government should not be giving money or benefits to any corporation, company, or business”. Sounds reasonable, but GM would have gone out of business but for government intervention. And the government had a hand in both the railroad expansion in the 1800s and the interstate freeway system in the 1940’s and 50’s. The government exists to provide for its people and from time to time that requires aiding business sectors.

One bozo stated the car costs $300,000.00, right! Another stated “Tesla Motors is a pet project of Obama’s” ??? Another suggests “this (Tesla not selling through dealers) is COMMUNISM-100%”

All this vitriol over a new U.S. automobile company that is producing last year’s car of the year.

How can people be so badly misinformed, or self delusional? The comments are a facinating read and a statement about American political polarization.

Ron

“nuclear option” revisited (this from nbcnews.com)

*** Changing the rules because the rules had already changed: But there was something else that triggered yesterday’s rules change. It used to be that the up-or-down vote was what ultimately mattered. But over the last few years, interest groups and partisan media began holding senators accountable for their cloture votes. It was no longer good enough to simply vote against a nominee on final passage; you also had to vote to deny that nominee the 60 votes needed to even consider the nomination. Just look at the number of cloture votes on presidential nominees (both executive and judicial) by president, according to data from the Congressional Research Service:

Lyndon Johnson: 1
Richard Nixon: 1
Jimmy Carter: 3
Ronald Reagan: 6
George Bush 41: 1
Bill Clinton: 18
George Bush 43: 38
Barack Obama (through five years): 80-plus

Bottom line: This trend wasn’t going to end. As the numbers show, Republicans dabbled in this obstruction with Clinton; Democrats escalated this during the Bush 43 years; and then Republicans took it to ANOTHER level during the Obama presidency. As special interest groups, left and right, have become more sophisticated with their scorecards and their expectations, 60-vote thresholds were going to become impossible. By the way, another reason Reid may have decided now was the time to pull this trigger: If Republicans do take control of the Senate in 2014, it would mean judicial nominations would probably come to a screeching halt in 2015 and 2016, so this is essentially the Democrats’ last year to impact the makeup of the federal courts.

Harry Reid Goes Nuclear

The Senate did it, a simple majority is what it takes for presidential nominees for government posts. I am not 100% behind this move. However, Mr. Obama has had far too many of his nominees filibustered and that needed to change.

The consumer protection agency has long been understaffed, judicial appointments have been blocked. That has changed.

The fallout over the next few months and years will be interesting and could be fun to watch.

Ron

Robert Reich & Inequality for All

This afternoon was a treat. It was a bright sunny warm day with a bit of fall chill in the air (the shade).

We visited a jeweler and at Amanda’s recommendation (the jeweler), we ate at Paul Martin’s American Grill and had a surprisingly good lunch. Then we drove to a movie theater to see “Inequality for All” by that “pinko communist socialist” Robert Reich. We had gelato ice cream before the movie (as all decadent bourgeoisie should).

Robert Reich is a renound economist who served first in the Ford administration, taught at Harvard, was secretary of labor under Clinton, and now teaches at Berkeley. His thesis in this movie is that the gap between the rich (top 1%) and the middle earners (the middle class) has been growing steeply since the late 1970s. There are a number of charts and graphs that he presents in the course of the film, but it is the interviews, news clips, and his sense of humor that sets the movie apart from most documentaries. Some very interesting factoids come out in the film.

Two short segments in the film are taken from the John Stewart Show:
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/entertainment/2011/08/jon-stewart-has-had-it-how-fox-talks-about-class-warfare/41474/

The first clip is very funny, but sadly the statistic says it all.

Ron

 

From Quora: Why do many Americans blame the House for the shutdown but never the Senate or the President?

My last blurb about the shutdown, really…. I mean it….

This is from www.quora.com . I highly recommend subscribing to quora.

_____________________________________________________________

Mark Rogowsky, Entrepreneur, raconteur, @maxrogo
Votes by Marc Bodnick, Scott Lowe, Nicholas Moyne, Jon Mixon, and 471 more.
Because the shutdown is entirely the fault of the House of Representatives.

You may agree with the policies of the House and that’s totally fine. In fact, if you do, you should support candidates who will vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act, demand the president approve the Keystone XL pipeline and anything else you wish.

Unfortunately, however, our system doesn’t allow one legislative body to get things passed into law by holding the government hostage over its wishes, petty or otherwise.

This isn’t about “getting over it” and letting Obamacare happen, as Marc Bodnick points out. It’s about the way the legislative process works. If you want a law passed (or repealed), you get it through both houses of Congress and get the President to sign it. If he won’t, you get a veto proof majority of both houses to pass the bill.

What you don’t do is decide that you don’t like a current law or policy and keep demanding it be removed in return for the actions of governing. If this method was acceptable, it would know absolutely no limits. When the Iraq war was polling at 34% with the American public in 2007, far below Obamacare, 140 Democrats voted to defund the war. No one said, “We aren’t raising the debt ceiling unless you do that.” In fact, Congress raised the debt limit without incident, as it always does, since the debt limit is an arbitrary, bogus construct that has nothing at all to do with appropriations or how much the government has agreed to spend.

Once a presidency moves to accept the idea that government policies that are law are open to negotiations simply to get a budget or a debt-ceiling increase, there is no purpose in passing laws or really even in having a presidency as part of a check-and-balance government. Let’s stop pretending this is about doing what’s right. It’s a bunch of children acting immaturely because they don’t like the rules of the game.

There is absolutely nothing wrong with the House repeatedly passing bills to repeal the ACA (although it’s pointless and makes them look ridiculous, it’s the purview of the majority). There is absolutely nothing right about the House — unable to get a repeal through the legislative process — trying an end run around any way it can come up with to change the law of the land. Today, it’s the ACA. Tomorrow what? Civil rights? Defending South Korea? Funding a weapons program in the speaker’s district the DoD doesn’t want? Not funding a weapons program the military demands because a future Speaker doesn’t like the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs? There is absolutely no end to this.