Sunday, September 19, 2010

Guns for Butter Program

Michelle Obama is now using the cover of protecting kids to pitch for yet another reason to redistribute the wealth. This time, in order to save the kids from future fatness, Michelle wants restaurants to replace butter with carrots and apples.  The Federal Government is now moving in on the restaurants for new oversight laws?

In the real world, such guns or butter, or militarization/peacetime trade-offs can be crucially important to how a country spends for its resources.   But, as the pop-culture language of Ebonics now calls "too much treasure in the booty" or too much "junk in the trunk", what better person to illustrate the effects of too much butter in the diet than Michelle Obama? 


Please observe "Exhibit A" at a European Conference this Summer:

        1st Ladies - To the Rears March!
        Princess Letizia, Spain   1st Lady Carla Bruni, France  Michelle Obama, U.S. 

SKIP THE BUTTER!!
 PASS THE CATSUP & FRIES??








Saturday, September 4, 2010

The Sting: Absentee Voter Ballots - Anytown, USA

The Sting - Bait & Switch...

This Swindle sucks you in before you know it and may get you to switch parties, candidates, ballot measures and  voter issues on your own mail-in ballot. Read on...

Today, I decided to check online for my local state of Texas upcoming Presidential Election schedule on the dates to apply for an absentee ballot.

Whoa Nellie!..Get ready for the barrage of every website listed first with a whole assortment of misleading hyperlinks to mislead you to click on their site way before you reach the real official Texas State web site.



What I found interesting was one particular site that interwove its site into other sites either as a direct URL address like  longvoterdistance.org or longvoterdistance.org/texas and longvoterdistance.org/files/voters as add-on forward slash address links. These are ways that websites get your "click-through" into their site as an unsuspecting visitor and hopefully get you to "sign-in" or "sign-up" for information that they will email you. Congratulations!  You now are on an email list that will be shared with every affiliated organization for their campaigns.  

The website prominently displays this legal disclaimer at the very beginning to disarm the reader: Long Distance Voter is a registered non-profit organization and does not support or oppose any political candidate or party. Our application for 501c(3) tax exemption is under IRS review.

This looks very official and it is indeed official, but are not what they seem after you become aware is that they inform, educate and extricate you from your core conservative beliefs by "organizing your voter information into easy-to-read voter guides". They go on to explain that "The staff realized that voter registration is an essential part of the absentee process, and incorporated voter registration information and tools into the site, and into each voter guide". (An exact quote from their own web site)

I can only guess that many types of people who are uneducated, simple-minded, otherwise-lazy, looking-for-a-hand-out,  unscrupulous-minded and disenfranchised are not the voters targeted.  Instead, it is the conscientious, well-meaning, civic-minded, hard-working individuals that just want to locate a web site about absentee ballots early voting and maybe "take advice" on what information they need to make up their minds on key issues and candidates way before election day because the newspapers and media don't get up to speed on the details until closer up to election day.  OOPs!  This is the Wrong Place to go!


Now read the "mission statement" and their staff in who's who on the site.  

Where are the names of Obama and Soros?


CAVEAT EMPTOR! - Buyer Beware! 


PLEASE SHARE MY  BLOG SITE SO THAT OTHERS WILL BE AWARE TOO!

About Long Distance Voter.Org

Long Distance Voter is a registered non-profit organization and does not support or oppose any political candidate or party. Our application for 501c(3) tax exemption is under IRS review.

Mission and Background

Long Distance Voter is the internet's most comprehensive resource for registering and voting by mail.  Long Distance Voter aims to simplify the absentee voting process by gathering all available information in one place and organizing the data into easy-to-read voter guides.  Prior to Long Distance Voter's launch, there was no centralized resource for absentee voting information.  The founders of Long Distance Voter spent over 10 months gathering forms, writing absentee voter guides, and building the site.  The staff realized that voter registration is an essential part of the absentee process, and incorporated voter registration information and tools into the site, and into each voter guide

Methodology and Site Accuracy

We started gathering our information in January 2008. The bulk of our information was taken directly from the Secretary of State websites, and when information was lacking or confusing, we called the states directly.  The information on Long Distance Voter is rigorously fact-checked.  Long Distance Voter volunteers work with Local Election Officials across the country to make sure every form and is current, and that every legal requirement is up-to-date.

Meet the Staff - Union Management - Municipal & Teachers; ACLU Members; Voter Advocacy Groups; Election Donor Fundraisers; Jesse Jackson Campaigner; Labor Union Lawyer; Community Organizer; Radical Muslim Madrassa trained Advocacy Volunteer; and Civil Rights Lawyer. (All documented Below)

Long Distance Voter is a volunteer run organization staffed by committed folks who happily donate their nights and weekends to voter outreach efforts.
Debra CleaverDebra Cleaver, Founder & Executive Director
Debra cut her political teeth in 2004 working with Swing the State, a voter outreach and mobilization group.  From 2004-2008, she investigated allegations of police misconduct for the City of New York, and concurrently served as the Union Shop Steward for DC37, the nation's largest municipal employee union.  Debra filed and won a group grievance, which lead to the largest settlement payout in the agency’s history. Debra has since fled New York for Los Angeles, where the weather is nicer and the public transportation is less reliable.  Debra manages the technical aspects of the site, handles our online advertising campaigns, secures strategic partnerships, and coordinates our day-to-day activities.  Debra holds a BA from Pomona college, and is proud of her status as a permanent absentee voter.
Carl SnodgrassCarl Snodgrass, Associate Director
Carl Gavin Tewksbury Snodgrass (yes, that's his real name) just moved from Brooklyn to Missoula MT for the year -- which means he now has an entire house and backyard.  He met Debra and other LDV members during his tenure investigating police misconduct for New York City.  This is his first official voter mobilization project, but his heart's always been in voter advocacy.
Tom RiccobonoTom Riccobono, Chief Financial Officer
Tom handles the accounting for Long Distance Voter. He holds a B.A. in Mathematics from the State University of New York at Buffalo and an M.S. in Applied Mathematics from New York University.  When he's not balancing the books for LDV, Tom puts his degrees to use by teaching math at a public high school in Brooklyn, NY, where he has also has served as his school's representative to the Delegate Assembly of the United Federation of Teachers.  In the past, Tom has worked with Swing the State, a voter outreach and mobilization group, and is extemely excited to once again be helping voters excercise one of their most important rights.
Cassie Gruenstein, Director of Communications
A nonprofit professional with 12 years of experience, Cassie Gruenstein is an expert in development and communications strategy and major donor fundraising. She is President of Cassie Gruenstein Consulting, specializing in communications and fundraising campaign planning for organizations and individuals working creatively to make change for the common good. Considering how far women have come in politics since winning the vote in 1920, Cassie is tickled to use the power of the wondrous internet in the present day to help bring Long Distance Voter's online resources to oodles of new voters. Cassie organized LDV's first fundraising drive before the 2008 election, paying for advertising that directed more than 16,000 visitors to the site. She joined Long Distance Voter as Communications Director in 2010. Cassie is a graduate of Pomona College and the Marin Center for Volunteer and Nonprofit Leadership’s Emerging Leaders Program. With roots in the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles, she is currently exploring her cowgirl side in Austin, Texas.
Sheena Otto
Sheena Otto, National Coordinator
Sheena made her first splash into politics at her mother's side as they volunteered for Jesse Jackson's 1988 Presidential Campaign.  She continued along her political path in 1997 as a White House Intern, and a White House Volunteer through 1998.  From 2001 - 2007 she was an investigator for New York City, investigating allegations of police misconduct.  Upon leaving city service, she aided the NYCLU in their research and recommendations to improve civilian oversight of the New York City Police Department.  In 2006 she joined Swing the State, a voter outreach and mobilization group.  Sheena has been a core member of Long Distance Voter since its inception.  When she is not expending every effort to make Long Distance Voter a household name, she teams up with local animal rescue shelters for adoption events, and balances her philanthropy by working for a private investment fund.
Tara ManciniTara Mancini, National Coordinator
Tara, a Providence, Rhode Island native, is an alum of Rhode Island College, where she earned her B.A. both in Sociology and Justice Studies.  After serving the City of New York for a few years, she decided it was time to return to school.  She recently relocated to Washington D.C. where she is earning her M.A. in Sociology.
Suzanne MetzgerSuzanne Metzger, National Coordinator
Suzi, a Massachusetts native, now works as a labor attorney for a union in New York City. She is an alum of Smith College and Western New England College School of law, and has experience with grass-roots and union organizing. Suzi will be taking advantage of a NY absentee ballot this year, as her baby boy is due November 4th.
Corinne BallCorinne Ball, West Coast Coordinator
Corinne comes to Long Distance Voter with over a decade of experience connecting people with ideas and action.  Years of on-the-ground community organizing experience and a love all of all things tech have led to new love: furthering progressive campaigns online.  Corinne has worked on local, state-wide, national, and international campaigns with various organizations over the years.  She has been trained by organizations like MoveOn and Envirocitizen, served for four years as the executive director of Oregon ACORN, and currently serves as Online Communications Specialist for ForestEthics.  Corinne sporadically updates her blog, and has a soft spot for environmental justice, civic engagement, and taking in stray animals.  After running the largest voter registration drive in the state of Oregon in 2004--adding over 22,000 voters to the rolls--she is thrilled to again help connect voters to their ballots.
Elora MillerElora Miller, New Media Marketing
Elora hails from Apia, Samoa. She was educated at a radical Muslim madrassa in Saudi Arabia, and later obtained her BA in History from Brown University. Elora works in health care planning/strategy as an analyst & primary researcher, and has several years' experience volunteering with issue-based advocacy groups promoting public art and alternative transportation. She first connected with GOTV in 2004, recruiting poll workers and coordinating poll watchers in the Florida panhandle. Her cats are named She-Ra and Jacob, and she rides a Redline 925.
Elena MorinElena Morin, Northeast Coordinator
Elena is from New York City, where she is a public school aide and library worker. She is completing her BA in English and Spanish at CUNY Hunter Coilege. During the last national election, Elena organized voter outreach trips to Pennsylvania with Driving Votes. This year, she is voting absentee from Argentina, where she is currently on exchange, using the fabulous resources at Overseas Vote Foundation.
JP Reader, Northeast Coordinator
JP has lived his entire life in New England.  He completed a multidisciplinary degree at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston.  JP joined the staff at Brown University  in 2005.  There, he worked on the campaign to keep the Brown Bookstore an autonomous enterprise, and helped prevent absorption into a corporate chain.  In addition to his work at Brown, JP is a freelance graphic designer, cartoonist, writer and troubleshooter.  Off hours, he is an aggressive reader, ardent bicycler and dedicated vegan.  JP Reader lives and is active in Providence, Rhode Island.
Deborah Berkman, Counsel
A New York City native, Deborah is counsel for Long Distance Voter.  As her day job, Deborah works as a civil rights lawyer, litigating cases against city, state and the federal governments.She earned her B.A in Political Science and Women’s Studies from University of Wisconsin at Madison , and earned her J.D. from Fordham School of Law.Deborah has extensive experience in voter enfranchisement and worked as an election monitor to protect Florida voters in the 2004 presidential election.

Partners

Long Distance Voter has formal partnerships with RocktheVote.com, and CountMore.org.
We also work with the following organizations: Overseas Vote Foundation, Campus Compact, Public Agenda, Vote Back Home, The League of Young Voters, Planned Parenthood NYC, Vote18, and Progressive States.


Acknowledgements

We would like to thank the following people for their continued support: Kim Rogers and Heather Smith (RocktheVote.com); Matt Lerner and Jesse Kocher (CountMore.org); Michael Peshkin (VoteBackHome.com); Liba Rubenstein, Clea Driscoll-Shearer, Ben Goodman, Angie Allgood and Ryan Hartigan (MySpace.com); Will Yardley (technical support); and Yobie Benjamin (outreach).

Friday, September 3, 2010

Ground Zero Mosque in Notre Dame Cathedral

Anyone Awake in the U.S.A.?
Knock off your shoes and stay awhile!

Barry Hussein Soroto at his Mosque

Has Barrack Hussein Obama read it yet on his Blackberry?  Have you?

'Islamization' of Paris a Warning to the West




PARIS - Friday in Paris. A hidden camera shows streets blocked by huge crowds of Muslim worshippers and enforced by a private security force.

This is all illegal in France: the public worship, the blocked streets, and the private security. But the police have been ordered not to intervene.
It shows that even though some in the French government want to get tough with Muslims and ban the burqa, other parts of the French government continue to give Islam a privileged status.
An ordinary French citizen who has been watching the Islamization of Paris decided that the world needed to see what was happening to his city. He used a hidden camera to start posting videos on YouTube. His life has been threatened and so he uses the alias of "Maxime Lepante. " 
Lepante's View
His camera shows that Muslims "are blocking the streets with barriers. They are praying on the ground. And the inhabitants of this district cannot leave their homes, nor go into their homes during those prayers."
"The Muslims taking over those streets do not have any authorization. They do not go to the police headquarters, so it's completely illegal," he says.
The Muslims in the street have been granted unofficial rights that no Christian group is likely to get under France's Laicite', or secularism law.
"It says people have the right to share any belief they want, any religion," Lepante explained. "But they have to practice at home or in the mosque, synagogues, churches and so on."
Some say Muslims must pray in the street because they need a larger mosque. But Lepante has observed cars coming from other parts of Paris, and he believes it is a weekly display of growing Muslim power.
"They are coming there to show that they can take over some French streets to show that they can conquer a part of the French territory," he said.
France's Islamic Future?
If France faces an Islamic future, a Russian author has already written about it. The novel is called "The Mosque of Notre Dame, 2048," a bestseller in Russia, not in France.
French publisher Jean Robin said the French media ignored the book because it was politically incorrect.
"Islam is seen as the religion of the poor people, so you can't say to the poor people, 'You're wrong,' otherwise, you're a fascist," Robin explained.
The book lays out a dark future when France has become a Muslim nation, and the famous cathedral has been turned into a mosque.
Whether that plot is farfetched depends on whom you ask. Muslims are said to be no more than 10 percent of the French population, although no one knows for sure because French law prohibits population counts by religion.
But the Muslim birthrate is significantly higher than for the native French. Some Muslim men practice polygamy, with each extra wife having children and collecting a welfare check.
"The problem of Islam is more than a problem of numbers," said French philosopher Radu Stoenescu, an Islamic expert who debates Muslim leaders on French TV. "The problem is one of principles. It's an open question. Is Islam an ideology or just a creed?"
"It doesn't matter how many there are," he aded. "The problem is the people who follow Islam; they're somehow in a political party, which has a political agenda, which means basically implementing Sharia and building an Islamic state."
In Denial or Fed Up
From the 1980s until recently, criticizing or opposing Islam was considered a social taboo, and so the government and media effectively helped Islam spread throughout France.
"We were expecting Islam to adapt to France and it is France adapting to Islam," Robin said.
About the burqa controversy, one French Muslim man told a reporter that Europeans should respect Muslim dress. One Parisian woman wearing a headscarf said "the veil is in the Koran" and "we only submit to God and nobody else."
But even if many government elites are in France are in denial over Islam, the people in the streets increasingly are not. Some have become fed up with what they see as the growing Islamization of France.
They've started staging pork and wine "aperitifs," or cocktail parties in the street. They're patriotic demonstrations meant to strike back against Islam.  Another national demonstration is planned for Saturday, Sept. 4. 
A Warning to the West 
The French parliament is expected to debate the burqa law in September. Jean-Francois Cope, president of the Union for a Popular Movement political party, has a warning for the West and for America. 
"We cannot accept the development of such practice because it's not compatible with the life in a modern society, you see," he said. "And this question is not only a French question. You will all have to face this challenge. "
**Originally published September 1, 2010.