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Don’t let Speaker Pelosi sell us out!


Reform Immigration FOR America

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Tell Representative Jim McDermott, Senator Harry Reid, and Speaker Nancy PelosiApproving $600 million in enforcement-only spending won’t do anything to fix our broken immigration system. Oppose HR 5875. Stop promoting fear and pass comprehensive immigration reform NOW.

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This week, the House is going to vote on a “border protections” measure the Senate pushed through last week. After months of assurances that they stand with us, the politicians in Washington are selling us out to capitalize on a culture of fear. This money can only be used for enforcement – because the $17 billion we’re already spending on enforcement apparently isn’t enough1. It’s not a solution – it’s throwing money at a problem that doesn’t exist.

Despite what fearmongering politicians claim, crime along the border is down. Period. We don’t need to spend millions more of our tax dollars on enforcement-only policies. We need real solutions that protect families.

Click here to send a fax to Congress:

Approving $600 million in enforcement-only spending won’t do anything to fix our broken immigration system. Oppose HR 5875. Stop promoting fear and pass comprehensive immigration reform NOW.

The $600 million shoehorned through the Senate won’t protect the workers hiding in the shadows in places like Arizona. It won’t stop the raids that break up families. The only thing this money will do is worsen the culture of fear along our border.

Tell Congress: stop playing politics with people’s lives.

Thank you,
Marissa Graciosa
Reform Immigration FOR America

1 Source: America’s Voice

The White House …videos


ECONOMY: The Forgotten Foreclosure Crisis …from ThinkProgress.org


The economic meltdown of 2008 grew out of a foreclosure crisis, as Wall Street banks drove lenders to make loans that were then securitized and sold around the world, in an unregulated slew of credit products. This inflated a housing bubble that, when it burst, severely damaged an already weak economy, sent millions of homeowners into foreclosure, and put millions more out of work, leading to even more foreclosures as unemployed workers began to miss mortgage payments. Many homeowners who were able to stay in their homes now find themselves underwater — owing more on their mortgage than their home is currently worth. But so far, the foreclosure prevention efforts undertaken by Congress and the Obama administration, while well-intentioned, have failed to produce widespread results. This not only hurts homeowners but undermines economic recovery. Proposals for a variety of more aggressive, and potentially more effective, measures have so far not been taken up, as the programs unveiled have often lagged behind the heart of the problem. According to analysts at Morgan Stanley, “Without more intervention, the housing market will continue its ‘slow motion’ adjustment that will continue to inhibit economic growth and drag down consumer spending.” “It’s certainly a weight on the economy,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com. “Nothing works all that well in the economy when house prices are falling.”

FORECLOSURES RISE WITH UNEMPLOYMENT: Nearly three million homeowners received at least one foreclosure filing in 2009. As of July 2010, one in seven mortgages is delinquent or in foreclosure. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, one in 10 homeowners missed at least one mortgage payment between January and March, which is an all-time record and a 9.1 percent increase from last year. The number of homes foreclosed upon set a record for a second consecutive month in May, while banks had an inventory of approximately 1.1 million foreclosed homes as of March. According to the latest report from Realty Trac, foreclosures rose in 75 percent of the country’s metro areas during the first half of this year, and about 3.5 million homeowners have stopped paying their mortgages, but have yet to be foreclosed upon. “We’re not going to see real price appreciation probably until 2013,” said Realty Trac Senior Vice President Rick Sharga. “We don’t see a double dip in housing but we think it’s going to be a long painful recovery for the next three years.” And while subprime loans drove foreclosures early in the crisis, now high unemployment is the culprit behind missed payments. “Look at a place like Salt Lake City,” said Sharga. “The foreclosure rise there appears to be entirely related to the economy.” At the same time, almost 25 percent of homeowners are underwater.

HAMP DISAPPOINTS: The Obama administration’s signature foreclosure prevention program — the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) — was meant to keep 3 to 4 million troubled borrowers in their homes by lowering their mortgage payments to a sustainable level. However, according to the latest data, fewer than 400,000 borrowers have received a permanent mortgage modification, while more than 500,000, 40 percent of the total, have dropped out of the program. As the Huffington Post’s Shahien Nasiripour and Arthur Delaney laid out, HAMP “has fallen short of its goals — rather than significantly and permanently reducing home foreclosures, it is only delaying them,” as borrowers make lower payments for a few months but ultimately get dropped from the program. “HAMP has not put an appreciable dent in foreclosure filings,” noted a report from the Special Inspector General for TARP, the program that funds HAMP. “Foreclosure filings have increased dramatically while HAMP has been in place, with permanent modifications constituting just a few drops in an ocean of foreclosure filings.” HAMP’s problems stem from banks’ inability to process enrollments in a timely manner and a lack of incentive for banks to ensure that borrowers successfully complete the program. So far, only $250 million of the $50 billion available for HAMP has been spent.

TAKING SMALL STEPS: The Treasury Department has acknowledged that HAMP has shortcomings and has launched new measures in an attempt to deal with the realities of today’s housing crisis. Last week, it announced, “As many as 50,000 struggling homeowners in five U.S. states with high unemployment may receive help from a special $600 million federal fund,” called the “Hardest Hit fund,” which will “help unemployed or under-employed people keep up with their mortgage payments…[and] try to assist homeowners who are facing negative equity by reducing the principal of loans that they owe.” The Department of Housing and Urban Development has also announced $79 million in grants for foreclosure mitigation. These initiatives, while aimed at the right outcomes (as only 0.1 percent of HAMP modifications actually lower loan principle), are, as Firedoglake’s David Dayen noted, “not nearly enough to deal with the scale of the problem.” “Maybe with several of these droplets, you can actually start to fill the ocean,” he wrote. “But $79 million, while helpful to a targeted set of families, isn’t going to solve this mess.” Last week, the Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank released research showing that the implementation of judicial loan modification — known as “cram down” — is a good way to incentivize private loan modifications. Legislation giving judges the ability to modify mortgages in bankruptcy has come up for a vote in Congress multiple times, but has yet to become law.

Google’s about to be really evil …boldprogressives.org


Google: Don’t be evil!

Sign the letter to Google. Tell them to stop being evil and protect the free and open Internet.

Hi — this is Jason Rosenbaum, a new campaigner at the PCCC. I’ve got some urgent news.

Google, who’s corporate motto is “Don’t be evil,” is about to do something really, awfully evil: kill Net Neutrality, the First Amendment of the Internet.

As reported on the front page of the New York Times, they’re in secret talks with Verizon “to speed some online content to Internet users more quickly if the content’s creators are willing to pay for the privilege.”

Click here to stand up for a free and open Internet and sign an open letter that we’ll deliver to Google’s DC headquarters next week.

The more people who sign by next week’s delivery, the more pressure Google will feel — so please pass this email to friends.

Many groups that organize over the Internet are joining together to save the Internet. This includes the PCCC, Free Press, MoveOn, CREDO, and Color of Change. Josh Silver at Free Press writes at Huffington Post:

The deal marks the beginning of the end of the Internet as you know it. Since its beginnings, the Net was a level playing field that allowed all content to move at the same speed, whether it’s ABC News or your uncle’s video blog. That’s all about to change…

A problem just for Internet geeks? You wish. All video, radio, phone and other services will soon be delivered through an Internet connection. Ending Net Neutrality would end the revolutionary potential that any website can act as a television or radio network.

This Google-Verizon deal, this industry-captured FCC, and the way this is playing out is akin to the largest banks and the largest hedge funds writing the regulatory policy on derivative trading without any oversight or input from the public, and having it rubber stamped by the SEC. It’s like BP and Halliburton ironing out the rules for offshore oil drilling with no public input, and having MMS sign off.

Google can still stop this deal — click here to sign the open letter to Google and stand up for the free and open Internet.

Along with this letter, we’re launching an ad campaign targeting Google, so they know people all over the country are watching this deal.

We need you to stand with us and tell Google to stop being evil.

Click here to sign the letter to Google.

Thanks for being a bold progressive,

Jason Rosenbaum and the PCCC team

Sell Target?


Target is one of the first corporations to take advantage of Citizens United. It donated over $150,000 to an anti-gay, anti-immigration candidate in Minnesota. We need to hold Target accountable—and show other corporations that they will pay a price if they follow Target’s lead in hijacking our democracy. Can you chip in $5?

Breaking news: After Target’s contribution to a far-right candidate in Minnesota ignited a public outcry, the company’s stock took a hit. In one day, it lost $1.3 billion in value—and some observers said the threat of a boycott was one cause.1

But Target won’t stop trying to buy elections. In fact, Target’s CEO is already talking about “future donations.”2 Maybe he’s listening to the analysts who are “downplaying” the downsides of Target’s political activity.3 So we need to turn up the heat to make sure that Target—and ALL corporations—understand that Americans won’t tolerate corporations hijacking our elections.

We’ve been working round-the-clock on new, visible ways to get our message across—including skywriting above Target’s headquarters, viral videos from angry customers, and live events outside stores around the country. We need to hold Target accountable, and help show other corporations that they better not follow Target’s example.

Target gave a right-wing candidate $150,000. We need to raise at least that much right away to keep fighting back.

That’ll take 64 donations from Seattle—can you chip in $5? Just click here:

https://pol.moveon.org/donate/target.html?bg_id=hpc5&id=22407-9640874-r0UfT.x&t=3

It’s clear that we’ve got real momentum. A Facebook group protesting Target ballooned to over 40,000 members in less than a week. A woman with a gay son went to her local Target to protest respectfully—and the resulting video racked up over 200,000 views on YouTube.4 Target was forced to set up a special phone line to handle the volume of customers’ phone calls.

But Target CEO Gregg Steinhafel hasn’t promised that the company will stop intervening in elections. He emailed Target employees and defended the donation as focused on “business objectives”—and, later, pledged to set up a “review process” for future donations.5

Future donations? As long as corporations like Target think that it’s OK to plow money into political campaigns, we’re in trouble. Corporations are not people. We need to make sure that Target and each and every corporation in the country gets this message: Stay out of our elections!

To bring that lesson home, we need to use all our movement’s creativity and energy. So on Friday, MoveOn members at over 1,100 Target stores around the country (!) dropped by with letters expressing their disappointment. And we’re getting ready to display our message in the sky overhead Target’s headquarters!

We need resources to pay for these high-profile tactics. If we can raise $150,000—the same amount as Target donated to a right-winger—we’re confident we can break through the media chatter and spin.

That’ll take 64 donations from Seattle—can you chip in $5? Just click here:

https://pol.moveon.org/donate/target.html?bg_id=hpc5&id=22407-9640874-r0UfT.x&t=4

Thanks for helping us bring home this message to Target and other corporations—and for all you do.

–Ilyse, Robin, Anna, Milan, and the rest of the team