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Category Archives: ~ politics petitions pollution and pop culture
BoldProgressives.org
| Neck-and-neck race for lL-Sen!
Read Alexi’s answers to our PCCC questionnaire — then sign up to make calls for him this week! |
After 48,000 calls to voters for Sen. Russ Feingold last night, we broke the record again tonight: over 53,000 for Rep. Alan Grayson!! Amazing!
Also tonight, we added 2 emergency call shifts for Alexi Giannoulias, the progressive running for President Obama’s open Senate seat in Illinois. The last 3 polls show Alexi neck-and-neck with former Republican Congressman Mark Kirk.
Let’s win this seat for progressives! Can you join folks across the nation making calls for Alexi this Wed or Sat? Click here to sign up.
(Or donate $3 to Alexi’s campaign here.)
Alexi supports a public option, proudly writing on our PCCC questionnaire that it’s the “best way to increase competition in the health insurance market.”
He also supports breaking up the big banks, protecting Net Neutrality, and taking on corporate influence, telling us:
“Every Democrat running for office says they want to change the Washington game. But few have gone beyond words and embraced action. I so fiercely believe in getting corporate influence out of politics that in my own campaign, in the midst of a recession when donations are down, I chose to reject contributions from corporate PACs and federal lobbyists. I won’t take their money, and I won’t vote their way.”
Don’t you want this guy in the Senate? Let’s do it!
(Or donate $3 to Alexi’s campaign here.)
Together, we’re making a huge difference. Thanks for being a bold progressive.
— Stephanie Taylor, Michael Snook, Keauna Gregory, Forrest Brown, Matt Wall, and the PCCC team
Breaking Poll Numbers
There are just hours left before our most critical deadline of the election. The amount of money in the bank tonight determines tomorrow’s television spending — this is the FINAL time we can make adjustments to our ad buy for the final week.
I have met with the staff here at headquarters. They have showed me promising early vote and new developing poll numbers including some critical surges for some of our challengers, and a continued list of neck and neck polls where additional television time could be the push we need to victory.
I want to spend in more races tomorrow, but I can’t without your help tonight. Everything is on the line and we are just $21,699 away from our goal. Please contribute $5, $10 or more right now to make sure tomorrow’s spending has the largest impact.
Will you join us? If you do, a group of generous Democrats who are committed to retaining our Majority will match all online gifts tonight with two dollars of their own. Please contribute now.
Our Majority can hold strong in the face of the onslaught of special interest spending and Sarah Palin and her tea party express — but not without these last minute resources. Thank you for all that you do.
Onward to Victory,

Chris Van Holllen
DCCC Chairman
P.S. Our field operation is the most impressive a midterm election has ever implemented — and we can see it already as early voting is showing promising results. Our path to victory is clear but I need you with me every step of the way. If you have already given, thank you, but I need you to give again. If you have not given, this is no time to sit on the sidelines, please give as generously as you can tonight.
Google …official blog
Trip report: Google and YouTube in Iraq
Posted: 26 Oct 2010 08:06 AM PDT
(Cross-posted from the YouTube Blog)
Earlier this month, a small team from Google and YouTube spent a week in Iraq on a trip arranged by the Department of Defense’s Task Force for Business and Stability Operations (TFBSO). Our goals were to explore opportunities for Google in Iraq, to understand the landscape of Internet access and connectivity in the country during this critical transition period and to bring top-voted questions from YouTube to Iraqi leaders in a series of interviews. We met with students, private sector companies, NGOs and Iraqi leadership in the Kurdish city of Erbil in the north, and in Baghdad.
Pictures taken by the Google/YouTube team in Iraq: Harry Wingo (Policy), Carrie Farrell (Google.org), Debu Purkayastha (Corp Dev), Olivia Ma (YouTube), Mary Himinkool (Business Development) and Steve Grove (YouTube).
Regardless of your feelings about the Iraq War, it’s immediately evident upon arrival just how completely the country missed the Internet boom during Saddam Hussein’s regime. Internet penetration rates in Iraq are among the lowest in the Middle East—somewhere between one and eight percent. Only 15 percent of Iraqis say they use the web, and the largest percentage of them live in Baghdad. There are no commercial data centers in Iraq and much more fiber connectivity is needed to meet consumer needs. Most connections are via satellite, and those who do have connections pay dearly for it—we heard estimates of up to $150 U.S. dollars per month for a 512kb connection. To incentivize and enable private companies to lay more fiber in Iraq, a complex set of roadblocks must be addressed—from security concerns to regulatory frameworks to licensing structures. As the country is still struggling to form a government more than seven months after its last election, much of this progress has been stalled.
There are signs of progress, however. Mobile penetration has skyrocketed in Iraq in the past seven years, from effectively zero percent in 2003 to over 70% today. And the Iraqi people are highly educated. We met with dozens of computer science students at Salahaddin University in Erbil and at Baghdad University, and though they lack equipment and resources, they’re highly motivated to innovate and believe the web is a critical component of their economy’s future.
Many young people in Iraq and around the world submitted questions in Arabic and English for three interviews we conducted in partnership with Middle Eastern news agency Al Arabiya. Google Translate enabled anyone to vote on their favorite questions regardless of language, and we brought the top five questions to current Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, the Prime Minister of the Kurdish Regional Government in Erbil, Dr. Barham Salih and Iraqi politician and once the interim Prime Minister of Iraq, Ayad Allawi. Here is the television special that Al Arabiya produced showcasing their answers:
The Iraqis we met consistently expressed their desire for increased access to the web and for more access to content and tools in both Kurdish and Arabic. We believe access to information and high-speed connectivity to the cloud will be key to the future of the country. The power of the web to change people’s lives grows the further one gets from Silicon Valley, and we look forward to continuing our work with companies, governments and citizens in Iraq and other countries in transition.
Posted by Mary Himinkool, New Business Development, and Olivia Ma, YouTube News & Politics
IRAQ: WikiLeaks’ Releases Iraq War Logs
On Friday, the international organization WikiLeaks release
d The Iraq War Logs, a “huge trove of secret field reports” — 391,832 documents in all — from the U.S. military in Iraq. The archive is the second such cache obtained by WikiLeaks and made available to news organizations. The first, released in July, was a trove of 77,000 reports covering six years of the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan. National Security Network’s Heather Hurlburt described the reports as “add[ing] a numbing amount of new, awful detail to what we already knew about the Iraq war.” The documents suggest that violence was reduced from 2007 “not only because the American military committed to more troops and a new strategy, but because Iraqis themselves, exhausted by years of bloody war, were ready for it.” According to the New York Times, the deaths of Iraqi civilians also “appear to be greater than the numbers made public by the United States during the Bush administration.”
ABUSE OF IRAQIS BY IRAQIS: While the newly released documents “offer few glimpses of what was happening inside American detention facilities, they do contain indelible details of abuse carried out by Iraq’s army and police.” The Guardian reports that the documents reveal that “U.S. authorities failed to investigate hundreds of reports of abuse, torture, rape and even murder by Iraqi police and soldiers whose conduct appears to be systematic and normally unpunished.” Britain’s Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg “said the allegations of killings, torture and abuse were ‘extremely serious’ and ‘needed to be looked at.'” Joel Wing noted that “Iraq’s political parties were quick to put [the Iraqi police] to work in their internal struggle to form a new Iraqi government,” with Iyad Allawi’s Iraqi National Movement saying “that the documents gave proof that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki should not stay in office.”
IRAN IN IRAQ: The reports “underscore the seriousness with which Iran’s role [in Iraq] has been seen by the American military.” According to the documents, Iran’s military “intervened aggressively in support of Shiite combatants, offering weapons, training and sanctuary and in a few instances directly engaging American troops.” Robert Farley, an Associate Professor of International Relations at the University of Kentucky, wrote that it is “utterly unsurprising” that Iran intervened in Iraq. “Attempting to manage the political situation in a neighboring country, while simultaneously weakening a potential enemy, is something that countries do.” Iran’s involvement in Iraq has not primarily been military, but rather political and economic. As Center for American Progress analysts Brian Katulis and Matthew Duss wrote in April 2008, depictions of Iran’s role in Iraq as purely military “ignore an inconvenient truth: The leaders in Iraq’s current government are closely aligned with Tehran and represent some of Iran’s closest allies in Iraq.” Iran has been similarly politically involved in neighboring Afghanistan. Afghan President Hamid Karzai “said Monday that his government receives as much as $1 million at least once or twice a year from Iran,” just as he said Washington doles out “bags of money” to his office.
COSTS AND CONSEQUENCES: While the documents reveal that coalition forces found traces of past Iraqi weapons programs, Wired Magazine reported that, the “war logs don’t reveal evidence of some massive WMD program by the Saddam Hussein regime,” as the Bush administration had claimed existed, but that “remnants of Saddam’s toxic arsenal, largely destroyed after the Gulf War, remained.” There are no earth-shattering revelations in the new cache, but they do deepen our understanding of the war’s disastrous consequences, both for the U.S. and for the region, particularly in regard to the wide-scale inter-community violence and sectarian cleansing that gripped the country in 2006-7. The violence led to the displacement of over 4.5 million Iraqis, both within and without the country, the vast majority of whom have been unable to return home, remaining displaced either inside Iraq or in neighboring countries. A February 2010 Center for American Progress report, The Iraq War Ledger, examined the costs and benefits of the Iraq intervention, and concluded “there is simply no conceivable calculus by which Operation Iraqi Freedom can be judged to have been a successful or worthwhile policy. The war was intended to show the extent of America’s power. It succeeded only in showing its limits.”


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