June 2007


Liberalgeek blogged this yesterday, but my take is saddness.

It is sad to me that my Republican friends* care so little about our history and traditions that they can, even today, they can defend Bush’s illegal and unAmerican eavesdropping operations on the grounds that it promotes “security”.

Now it is official: Bush has told Congress (ie you & me) to get lost over those subpeonas:

President Bush, moving toward a constitutional showdown with Congress, asserted executive privilege Thursday and rejected lawmakers’ demands for documents that could shed light on the firings of federal prosecutors.

Bush’s attorney told Congress the White House would not turn over subpoenaed documents for former presidential counsel Harriet Miers and former political director Sara Taylor.

I think at this point we can all agree that the Bush Administration is interested in “security” only as a word that can be used for PR purposes in their drive to create and consolidate extra-constitutional powers for the President and Vice President.

*TPN being the exception.

For those who do not believe in moderation in all things: This month’s installment of Drinking Liberally is tonight, Thursday, June 28th at 8:00 pm at Kid Shelleen’s, 14th & Scott Streets in Wilmington.

For all the freaking out going all about HB177 (Fusion) I wonder why Mike Castle , who scuttled the bill last time, has been silent?

According to Castle the bill was an afront to Democracy last June. Now…not so much. One wave of his mighty hand and HB177 would be history. Has he flip flopped? If not, what is he waiting for? Why hasn’t the News Journal asked him since he was so out front on killing the bill last time?

Celia had the scoop…

The long arm of Mike Castle

U.S. Rep. Michael N. Castle has been out of Dover for 14 years, but the two-term Republican ex-governor still knows how to kill a bill.

Before Castle intervened, it looked in June as though the Democrats and Republicans had found common ground on legislation that would prohibit “fusion” candidates — people running on more than one ticket.

There was nothing in state law to prevent it. The bill proposed that candidates be allowed to file only with the party where they were registered. It would mean no more dual candidates like Karen M. Hartley-Nagle, currently running for the U.S. House of Representatives on the tickets of the Democratic Party and the Independent Party of Delaware.

From the perspective of the major parties, dual candidates were gaming the system. Hartley-Nagle could lose the Democratic primary to Dennis Spivack, the endorsed candidate, as widely expected, but still be around for the general election as a minor-party candidate.

The bill looked like a lock. Then the bill stalled. Castle had done it in.

Good times, good times…

Subpoena. Today Dick Cheney and the White house were issued subpoenas directing them to turn over documentation the the illegal wiretapping program. Please don’t be stupid and say that they were not illegal. If the reports are correct, the actions are illegal. The White House has never denied that this program existed as described. The program has supposedly been suspended, but Bush has claimed the right to restart the program at will.

They have until July 18th to comply.

Dog lovers are funny. When this story gets out that Flippster strapped his dog to the roof of his car it could mean the end of this Presidential dreams.

Before beginning the drive, Mitt Romney put Seamus, the family’s hulking Irish setter, in a dog carrier and attached it to the station wagon’s roof rack. He’d built a windshield for the carrier, to make the ride more comfortable for the dog.

[snip]

As the oldest son, Tagg Romney commandeered the way-back of the wagon, keeping his eyes fixed out the rear window, where he glimpsed the first sign of trouble. ”Dad!” he yelled. ”Gross!” A brown liquid was dripping down the back window, payback from an Irish setter who’d been riding on the roof in the wind for hours.

I love this quote.

“In the case of the dog on the roof of the car, if this is true, quite remarkably it obviously wasn’t for show as only his own children were watching, a lesson in cruelty that was also wrong for them to witness. There was also the obviousness of the situation. Thinking of the wind, the weather, the speed, the vulnerability, the isolation on the roof, it is commonsense that any dog who’s under extreme stress might show that stress by losing control of his bowels: that alone should have been sufficient indication that the dog was, basically, being tortured.

If you wouldn’t strap your child to the roof of your car, you have no business doing that to the family dog! I don’t know who would find that acceptable.”

SB 164:

Superior Court shall only count a write-in vote for a person who has declared himself/herself a write-in candidate for the office for which he/she was written-in in accordance with this chapter. Superior Court shall count a write-in vote for a candidate on a general or special election ballot if the write-in vote is for the office for which the person is a candidate. (emphasis mine) (link)

This is pure bullshit

you are wrong, yes, oh yes, you are.  It is like calling all illegal aliens Mexican.

But this guy is only a retired Major General and a former division commander in Iraq. Most likely he is a liberal, a pussy, works for the enemy and hates this country!

I also believe we cannot attribute all the violence in Iraq to al-Qaeda. There’s a tendency now to lump it all together, and call it al-Qaeda. We have to be very careful with that. This is a very complex region. al-Qaeda is certainly a component. But there’s larger components. al-Qaeda is a worldwide organization. It recognizes no national boundaries. And it’s in areas where we ought to be focused. 

Now, if he was in a theatre company and said this I’d believe him

The General Assembly has before it a bill, House Substitute 1 to House Bill 146, that would create a meaningful statewide recycling program in Delaware. A competing bill, HB 159, while not as far reaching, would still go a long way to creating the infrastructure for statewide recycling. While either would be good for Delaware, the more comprehensive bill would create the greater environmental and economic benefits.

Here’s why:

First, landfills are expensive. As I pointed out in this analysis last year, the modest capital cost of a single stream recycling facility creates savings by postponing the need for siting and building an expensive new landfill down the road. I have calculated the present value savings to be at least three dollars for each dollar invested in a recycling facility.

As for the cost of a new landfill, the Delaware Solid Waste Authority (DSWA) has put the cost of raising the Cherry Island landfill by 23 feet at $86 million. For those keeping score, that’s $3.7 million for each additional foot of capacity. Now do I have your attention?

Second, successful recycling depends on economies of scale in capital investment and in collecting. As more material goes through a recycling facility, the facility become more cost effective; increasing the throughput in a fixed cost facility improves its operating efficiency.

As for collecting, consider the relative costs of Wilmington’s city-wide program versus the DSWA’s voluntary program. The city now collects recyclables from 28,000 households, at a maximum cost to the city of $150,000 which comes to roughly $6 per household per year (which is not charged to residents by the way). In contrast, the DWSA offers curbside recycling, requiring residents to sort their material, for $3 a month.

Why such a difference? Economies of scale. The DSWA has tried incremental recycling, with incremental benefits at best. Wilmington has tried single stream recycling, and achieved a 37 percent diversion rate in less than a year.

The way to create greatest statewide benefits from recycling is to mandate the most comprehensive practicable program, which the General Assembly can do, not next year, but this week. But if you agree, you need to say so and now.

The General Assembly provides phone numbers and e-mail addresses for all senators and representatives. If you don’t know who represents you, you can call to find out. Your call or e-mail doesn’t have to be complicated; all you have to say is that you want the General Assembly to adopt comprehensive statewide recycling in Delaware this week, and not next year.

I will be following the issue during the week over at TommyWonk.

I realize this is a political blog and that the editor in chief may have a problem with this post but oh well.  I am sure many of our readers don’t only need political guidance but maybe some familial as well.   So today I would like to share with you one valuable lesson I have yet to learn:
(more…)

How the People are that run this country

After you read this article ask yourself how funny it is that the VP goes to such lengths to save a few farmers “livelihoods”, but does nothing about all the people that get laid off by Bank of America, Astra Zeneca, Chrysler or GM. Let alone cares about the fishing industry he crippled.

great article for all you angry green people out there.

Here it is folks the new GOP Presidential 08 Slogan:

 ”Oh well, Integrity is over-rated.  We still sound good.”

Von Cracker had a nice little nugget yesterday in the standard “guy running for President got several deferrments for the war” post, he said this:

Mitt had me at Gitmo! He’s soooo hot and oozes REAGANMONESall over the place! We serious and smart people all know that in the court of world opinion, musky manliness destroys competence and conviction.

I asked him for the definition of REAGANMONES:

Reaganmone, (n): Phantom emanation of competence, leadership, and charm; always packaged and released by wealthy, white males over the age of fifty in the attempt of reaping personal glory; only susceptible to men and women within the same demographic.

Feel free to amend….

Thanks Cracker! We are all wiser now

Dana writes…

As of yesterday, HB 177, the anti-fusion candidacy bill, was dead. Speaker Terry Spence worked to keep it off the agenda. Delaware Watch learned over 2 hours ago that the bill has been placed back on the agenda and is expected to pass.

Not long afterwards, Delaware Watch learned that a group of 20 citizens opposed to the anti-fusion bill has pledged to cause primary races “for the significant Delaware offices” open in 2008. Those offices will include leadership positions in the Delaware Legislature. According to my source, who wishes to remain anonymous, “If the Democrats and Republicans want to play hardball with our voters rights, we will primary them to death.”

There is no way to deny that this is fantastic news. It is the very outcome that I’ve dared to dream of from the begining. Busting out of the self imposed isolation of third party irrelevancy, a bunch of activists are threatening to shake things up.

Awesome! This is long overdue.

UPDATE: If it is true that the Fusionites are going to become Fission-ites we’ll have some real democracy going on around here and the twists and turns could be dizzying for instance…

Consider what would happen if Dana Garrett decided to primary his sitting State Rep.

He would ace the PDD endorsement questionnaire based process that John Tobin set up and get endorsed by the very organization that he and others an evil blot on our Democracy.

As I said over at DelawareWatch, it would be like a brightly colored Van Gogh of irony and the result would be a more vibrant Democracy.

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