Tag Archives: stimulus

wacky Wednesday &some News


Among the good things going on today include the President’s signing of the  Wall Street reform bill, Congress with the additional vote of Carte Goodwin and a couple of Republicans have advanced the UI benefits bill  through cloture. Though Republicans used the 30hr cloture process to delay the vote …Unemployment Bill HR4213 and possibly the Jobs Bill HR5297 will both pass though watered down significantly. The President has done plenty that will improve the lives of Americans. We the People need to be reminded of the accomplishments and so, going back 18 months and remember that the President signed the lily Ledbetter bill, the treaty with Russia to reduce nuclear weapons, same sex couples working for the government have more rights than before and working laws that cover everyone not just a select few, he is working on DADT and the GM bailout helped millions of people keep their jobs and President Obama should be commended for it.

My rant for today is the wacky behavior and comments though not limited to folks on the right is definitely more disingenuous, and seems much more dangerous typical hater rhetoric. I may not agree with how people on the left of center act or independents who seem willing to throw our President under the bus but people on the right and or Republicans have been the least compassionate in this time of need.  As for folks on the left acting wacky in my opinion. I am very upset that the Stupak amendment is still alive and women, sisters and daughters need to rise up against any legislation that refuses to recognize us as responsible people of the United States who should have the right to choose. It is the 21st Century and this whole abortion thing should not even be on anyones table of well we cannot let women have the right to make their own decisions even if they agree to pay for that right with their own money.  They call people names when they don’t get their way, they race-bait, provoke fear whenever they can and not only is it wacky don’t they get it, the things they refuse to give Americans also effects their constituents. Yes,  i did vote for Obama and will again because Republicans/Conservatives proved themselves useless. Republicans have no one in charge, no solutions only complaints and the solutions they do have are only for the top 2% and that 2% has been getting breaks for too long it’s obvious that Bush, Cheney and Paulson all f’d us and because of that i personally am subscribing to what works and that is the government right now. If you watch the movie, “House of Cards.” you would understand why Wall Street types, capitalists like Bernie madoff and others like him engaged in creative accounting. The big Wall Street folks such as AIG created a monster and the pay out by aig to various Banks was great, it worked its way overseas to become something too big to fail … Is that the kind of Capitalism you want? Then you are foolish… Capitalism does not mean firms should engage in cooking the books, secret transactions and or becoming bigger than their sum value or investing in schemes … that — is what happened …

We the People need capitalism with a small c and a lot more regulation … with a huge R


Other News …

**US declares new sanctions against N.Korea


C-SPAN ..

President Obama to Sign Wall Street Bill into Law

President Obama will sign into law today the financial regulation bill (H.R. 4173), the Restoring American Financial Stability Act of 2010, which has been one of the White House’s top domestic priorities after the passage of health care legislation. The Senate passed the bill last week by a vote of 60-39, with the support of three Republicans: Sen. Brown (R-MA), Sen. Collins (R-ME) and Sen. Snowe (R-ME). The House voted and approved the bill by 237–192 last month, also with support of three Republicans. The measure became a priority of Democratic leadership in congress after the 2008 financial collapse. The legislation creates a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, as well as other provisions to protect consumers from predatory lending.

Lawmakers Review Progress of TARP

Special Inspector General for the Treasury Department, Neil Barofsky, along with Elizabeth Warren, the chairwoman of the Congressional Oversight Panel, are testifying before the Senate Finance Committee to investigate the progress of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Committee Chairman, Max Baucus (D-MT) is asking the witnesses about government efforts to pay back TARP losses, as well as the effects of the recently passed Wall Street Reform legislation.

Bernanke to Provide Semiannual Economic Report

Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke will present his biannual testimony on monetary policy this afternoon to the Senate Banking Committee and Thursday before the House Financial Services Committee.
Lawmakers are likely to press Bernanke on the status of the economic recovery, with a focus on whether he believes another round of fiscal stimulus is required. His testimony comes at a time when there is concern that economic growth may be slowing due to the high unemployment rate.
The Fed meets regularly to consider its policy, which influences the availability and cost of money and credit.

Workers can and should be protected at work


Brave New Foundation
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Click  here to watch the video

Do you know it is legal for cosmetics manufacturers to use chemicals linked to cancer and reproductive harm in their products?

These toxic chemicals are used in nail salons every day and as a result, nail salon workers are at risk. It’s time to STAND UP for workers rights!

The Safe Cosmetics Act is a piece of legislation that will help protect workers in nail salons from unsafe chemicals in salon products. The legislation will also give these workers more information about the chemicals used in the products that they work with everyday. In order for this to pass, we need you to TAKE ACTION!

Workers can and should be protected from exposure to toxic chemicals in their workplaces.

Tell your Congress member to protect nail salon worker health by supporting safe cosmetics legislation! Sign the Petition!

Sincerely,
Robert Greenwald
and the Brave New Foundation team

ENVIRONMENT: The Gulf’s Murky Future


July 20, 2010

Three months after BP’s Deepwater Horizon exploratory rig exploded, the Gulf of Mexico faces a murky future of imperfect solutions to intractable problems. The new cap installed on the gushing wellhead has for the first time stopped the flow of oil into the ocean, though there remains serious concerns about the wellbore’s integrity. If the cap holds, the region will still have to deal with the millions of gallons of oil spread throughout the Gulf and along hundreds of miles of shoreline as the peak hurricane season approaches. Over one third of the Gulf is closed to fishing, and investigators still do not know what caused the April 20 explosion. In the coming months and years, thousands of scientists will attempt to assess the damage done to the valuable ecosystems of the region, although many will be working for BP. Also unknown are the health effects to the region and the tens of thousands of hired cleanup workers who are handling the toxic oil and dispersants. For many, the BP disaster is just the latest of many heavy blows. The region awaits solutions to its endemic poverty, eroding coast, and dependence on the oil industry that is killing the Gulf. The Obama administration is attempting to brighten this future, announcing yesterday a “new national policy for strengthening the way the U.S. manages its oceans and coasts.” Furthermore, “the Senate now must provide additional safeguards for offshore oil production, slash oil consumption, and reduce global warming pollution.”

CAPS, SEEPS, AND LEAKS: “New problems arose in the struggle to contain the Gulf of Mexico oil spill as bubbles and seepage appeared in four areas around the damaged BP well, but Obama administration and company officials agreed to keep the new well cap closed for at least 24 more hours as they weigh the gravity of the developments.” “It’s the collective opinion of folks that these small seepages do not indicate there is any threat to the well bore,” incident commander Thad Allen said at a briefing in Washington. Even if these leaks prove inconsequential and the gusher is plugged, the region still faces the ongoing degradation and risk of catastrophe from its ties to Big Oil. “Our national response must drive a sustained effort to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels,” write Center for American Progress analysts Bracken Hendricks, Kate Gordon, and Tom Kenworthy. “We must target the structural causes of our vulnerability to oil in an effort to rebuild and strengthen our national economy while restoring the economic health of oil-dependent regions.” One of the first steps is capping the gusher of billion-dollar subsidies for the oil industry, including the write-off for punitive damages in cases like the BP disaster. The United States must also finally cap the global spill of greenhouse gas pollution and direct energy investment into green jobs instead of toxic disasters.

ERODING HOPES: Since early May, Gov. Bobby Jindal (R-LA) has pushed a crash effort to build artificial “barrier islands” from dredged sand to prevent BP’s toxic oil from reaching Louisiana’s fragile coastline. He and other Louisiana politicians excoriated the federal government for waiting until June 3 to authorize the $360 million project, even though “categorically, across the board, every coastal scientistquestioned its wisdom. In mid-May, Jindal justified the barrier-island construction by saying it was the “obvious” thing to do. “We know it works, we have seen it work, but if they need to see it work, they need to do that quickly,” argued Jindal. On May 27, Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) attacked President Obama, calling the administration’s caution “absolutely outrageous.” In reality, photographs released by Louisiana scientist Leonard Bahr and the US Army Corps of Engineers show that the artificial island E-4 — intended to reach an 18-mile length — is struggling to survive at 1,100 feet. Jindal is pressing for the federal government to approve the emergency construction of 125 miles of sand berms, arguing the 0.2 miles constructed are “are doing what they were intended to do.” That plan would use up valuable resources and take too much time, notes Climate Progress’ Joe Romm. However, Jindal has offered no “obvious” answer for the long-term threats to Louisiana’s eroding coastline — rising seas fueled by global warming, rivers killed by agricultural pollution, and decades of oil industry development.

BP COVERUP: Meanwhile, BP is hard at work minimizing the damage to its bottom line, not to America’s coastline and gulf economy. BP’s legal and public-relations maneuvering has increased as it faces tens of billions of dollars in damages and fines. BP is on a spending spree, buying the silence of Gulf Coast scientists. Scientists from Louisiana State University, Mississippi State University, and Texas A&M have “signed contracts with BP to work on their behalf in the Natural Resources Damage Assessment (NRDA) process” that determines how much ecological damage the Gulf of Mexico region is suffering from BP’s toxic black tide. The contract, the Mobile Press-Register has learned, “prohibits the scientists from publishing their research, sharing it with other scientists or speaking about the data that they collect for at least the next three years.”  “Testimony before a panel investigating the cause of the Deepwater Horizon explosion grew heated Monday as lawyers for various companies connected to the rig attempted to place blame on one another and angled to expose maintenance problems they say existed before the April 20 accident.” Fortunately for BP, Vitter is attacking “trial lawyers” who could threaten its bottom line. BP was even caught posting a doctored photograph of its crisis response center by blogger John Aravosis. “I guess if you’re doing fake crisis response,” Aravosis commented, “you might as well fake a photo of the crisis response center.” “Apparently BP is no more adept at doctoring photos than it is at plugging deep-sea oil leaks,” the Washington Post’s Steven Mufson jabbed.

RADICAL RIGHT — CONSERVATIVES PREDICT A ‘CONFRONTATIONAL ATMOSPHERE’ WITH MUSLIMS OVER CONSTRUCTION OF MOSQUES:


UNDER THE RADAR

While President Obama has undertaken a series of valuable efforts to emphasize to the Muslim world that the U.S. is not at war with them, that message is being undercut by radical conservatives here at home who are hell-bent on opposing the construction of Muslim places of worship. The most prominent example of this hysteria has been conservatives — including Sarah Palin — rallying against the construction of a mosque near the Ground Zero site in New York because, as the New York Post put it, “where there are mosques, there are Muslims, and where there are Muslims, there are problems.” The Manhattan fear-mongering is just one example of a national trend. In Murfreesboro, TN, a local Republican candidate for Congress recently claimed a proposed mosque was “designed to fracture the moral and political foundation of Middle Tennessee.” Meanwhile, the planned construction of a mosque in Southern California is currently inspiring fierce opposition from the local, “mostly conservative community.” The pastor of a church “just across a cul-de-sac from the site of the mosque” said Islam and Christianity “mix like oil water” and anticipated a “confrontational atmosphere” if the mosque is built. He ominously mused, “Are we supposed to be complacent just because these people say it’s a religion of peace?” In an event at the Center for American Progress Action Fund last week on homegrown extremism in the U.S., Duke University Professor David Schanzer expressed concerns about “the tone of public discourse” alienating Muslims within American Society. He observed that people have been allowed to “say things about Muslim Americans and Islam that they couldn’t say about any other racial or ethnic group and still be respected or still hold a high position in their community.”

THIS WEEK on CHANGE.ORG: Racist Facebook App; Another BP Spill?; Rethinking Haiti Relief


Tell Sarah Palin: Start Telling The Truth

by Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee

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Require all Government Buildings to have Zero footprint by 2020

by Cherie Hunton

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Racist Facebook App

Plus: Another BP Spill?Rethinking Haiti Relief50% of Children MissingPrisons vs. SchoolsPoverty-Creating Jobs

This past week, Vaseline launched a controversial Facebook application that encouraged users to lighten the appearance of their skin. The application was targeted at users in India, who were asked to upload their profile photos and whiten their faces.

This isn’t the first time Unilever — which owns Vaseline — has used less-than-discreet attempts to market the virtues of white skin in India. Back in 2008, the multinational began hawking a skin-whitening product called “White Beauty.”

The difference now is that by using Facebook, Unilever has the potential to reach its more than 500 million users around the world, and spread its racially charged message that white is beautiful.

The skin whitening industry has taken off across India and other Asian countries, and creams are sold on shelves in black neighborhoods in the U.S. as well. The last thing we need is a tool on Facebook to extend this disturbing trend online.

While Unilever’s application is offensive, it gives Facebook the opportunity to draw a line in the sand of what sort of applications it is willing to host, and what kind of values it hopes to advance. As the largest social network in the world, the company has an unprecedented opportunity to advance tolerance and understanding. Let’s make sure it serves that purpose rather than serving as a platform for prejudice.

Join us in calling on Facebook to remove Unilever’s racially charged application today.

For more news and commentary on this week in change, see the summaries from your favorite causes below.

Another BP Spill? in ENVIRONMENT

There’s another disaster waiting to happen in the Gulf. The BP Atlantis — the world’s largest oil and gas platform – pumps out 200,000 barrels of oil every day, despite grave safety concerns a whistleblower brought to Food & Water Watch last year. Ever since, the group has been pushing for federal officials to shut down the facility until it can ensure proper safety plans. So far, even after the spill, their concerns have fallen on ears deafened by cozy relationships with the industry. The group’s director, Wenonah Hauter, asks you to join their campaign to prevent another catastrophe. Read more »

Rethinking Haiti Relief in GLOBAL POVERTY

Looks like Haiti’s “15 minutes of fame” are up. The journalists who flooded the zone following the earthquake have since fled, and donor patience is wearing thin. Meanwhile, rain floods Haiti’s rubble-strewn streets, and tent cities still house over a million survivors. Six months after the country was devastated by an earthquake, writes Changemaker Ruth Messinger, it’s time to re-think the relief effort. Read more »

50% of Children Missing in END HUMAN TRAFFICKING

How do you lose half the children in your care? Ask the United Kingdom. A recent study found that 50% of child trafficking victims in the U.K. have gone missing. that’s right, just “poof” disappeared. Except when these children disappear, it’s usually back into exploitation in human trafficking rings. Read more »

Prisons vs. Schools in CRIMINAL JUSTICE

They say your priorities are reflected in how you spend your money. If that’s the case, consider the fact that California spends $216,000 per incarcerated youth, and just $8,000 on each student in Oakland’s public schools. Nationwide, juvenile crime prevention programs are badly underfunded. Join Criminal Justice blogger Elizabeth Renter in telling Congress that it’s time to change this math. Read more »

Poverty-Creating Jobs in POVERTY IN AMERICA

Post-recession job creation is coming, the experts say. Unfortunately, many of these jobs will pay less than $10 an hour. We’ve already got plenty of those professions, writes Poverty in America blogger Josie Raymond, including fast food service, farm work and more. What they all have in common is that they’re all professions that almost guarantee you’ll live below the poverty line.  Read more »

Have a great week,

– The Change.org Team