Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Two parties, Democrats and Republicans; same racist agenda.
Notice: This is not a Republican initiated piece of legislation; this comes from the Minnesota Democrats with a super majority.
Anyone not reading this proposed legislation does so at their own risk:
https://www.revisor.mn.gov/bills/status_result.php?body=Senate&search=basic&session=0882013&location=Senate&bill=1417&bill_type=bill&rev_number&submit_bill=GO&keyword_type=all&keyword&keyword_field_text=1&titleword
I wonder which lobbyists are behind this little "gem?"
Perhaps Occupy Wall Street and Idle No More should consider a joint action to occupy the Minnesota State Legislature?
Is some kind of "Summit" bringing together people of color, women and the handicapped along with all those for fairness and justice in order?
Here is the description of this legislation:
Bill Name: SF1417
Requiring the commissioner of transportation (DOT) to submit a waiver request to
the United States department of transportation, federal highway administration,
from the requirements of the federal disadvantaged business enterprise
program.
Here is the proposed legislation:
1.1A bill for an act
1.2relating to transportation; requiring a waiver request concerning the federal
1.3Disadvantaged Business Enterprise program.
1.4BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
1.5 Section 1. WAIVER; DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS ENTERPRISE PROGRAM.
1.6(a) By October 1, 2013, the commissioner of transportation shall submit to the United
1.7States Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, a request under
1.8Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, section 26.15, for a waiver from the requirements
1.9of the federal Disadvantaged Business Enterprise program. The waiver request must
1.10seek establishment of separate participation goals for disadvantaged business enterprises
1.11at least 51 percent owned by the following socially and economically disadvantaged
1.12individuals: (1) women; and (2) all other individuals meeting the definition.
1.13(b) For purposes of this section, "socially and economically disadvantaged
1.14individual" has the meaning given in Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, section 26.5.
1.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
Note: Instead of enforcing Affirmative Action we get a request for a "waiver" from the Democrats with their super majority who previously attributed such racist behavior to the Republicans--- two parties, same racist agenda.
--
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
58891 County Road 13
Warroad, Minnesota 56763
Phone: 218-386-2432
Cell: 651-587-5541
Primary E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net
E-mail: alan.maki1951mn@gmail.com
Blog: http://thepodunkblog.blogspot.com/
Anyone not reading this proposed legislation does so at their own risk:
https://www.revisor.mn.gov/bills/status_result.php?body=Senate&search=basic&session=0882013&location=Senate&bill=1417&bill_type=bill&rev_number&submit_bill=GO&keyword_type=all&keyword&keyword_field_text=1&titleword
I wonder which lobbyists are behind this little "gem?"
Perhaps Occupy Wall Street and Idle No More should consider a joint action to occupy the Minnesota State Legislature?
Is some kind of "Summit" bringing together people of color, women and the handicapped along with all those for fairness and justice in order?
Here is the description of this legislation:
Bill Name: SF1417
Requiring the commissioner of transportation (DOT) to submit a waiver request to
the United States department of transportation, federal highway administration,
from the requirements of the federal disadvantaged business enterprise
program.
Here is the proposed legislation:
1.1A bill for an act
1.2relating to transportation; requiring a waiver request concerning the federal
1.3Disadvantaged Business Enterprise program.
1.4BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
1.5 Section 1. WAIVER; DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS ENTERPRISE PROGRAM.
1.6(a) By October 1, 2013, the commissioner of transportation shall submit to the United
1.7States Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, a request under
1.8Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, section 26.15, for a waiver from the requirements
1.9of the federal Disadvantaged Business Enterprise program. The waiver request must
1.10seek establishment of separate participation goals for disadvantaged business enterprises
1.11at least 51 percent owned by the following socially and economically disadvantaged
1.12individuals: (1) women; and (2) all other individuals meeting the definition.
1.13(b) For purposes of this section, "socially and economically disadvantaged
1.14individual" has the meaning given in Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, section 26.5.
1.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
Note: Instead of enforcing Affirmative Action we get a request for a "waiver" from the Democrats with their super majority who previously attributed such racist behavior to the Republicans--- two parties, same racist agenda.
--
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
58891 County Road 13
Warroad, Minnesota 56763
Phone: 218-386-2432
Cell: 651-587-5541
Primary E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net
E-mail: alan.maki1951mn@gmail.com
Blog: http://thepodunkblog.blogspot.com/
Monday, March 18, 2013
Democratic super majorities taking a stand; Where?
My response to another article in In These Times suggesting Democratic super majorities are the way forward:
Link: http://inthesetimes.com/article/14715/taking_a_stand/
There is nothing "progressive" about this "Congressional Progressive Caucus"other than how the Democrat's head hack, George Lakoff, has used linguistics to pervert and bastardize the word "progressive" to mean creating "progressive sounding policy directives" framed in a way to make people think something "progressive" is going to be done when Lakoff explicitly warns Democrats not to bring forward specific progressive solutions to any problems. (Lakoff, "Don't think of an Elephant.")
In his follow-up book ("Blueprint"); Lakoff goes on to red-bait, in typical Hubert Humphrey (author of the Communist Control Act) fashion, real progressive solutions to the problems working people and the working class are experiencing.
When it comes to "jobs;" Keith Ellison, Raul Gijava, John Conyers and Bernie Sanders play this card to the hilt--- never missing an opportunity to talk about "jobs, jobs, jobs."
Along comes Conyers with something he calls a "full employment act" when this proposed legislation has nothing what-so-ever to do with full employment other than creating some jobs, in the larger scheme of things only a few jobs, when the unemployed working people of this Nation need over fifteen-million new jobs at real living wages to achieve real full employment.
(See my suggestions in the header of my blog for what it will take to get America to work.)
Why hasn't the "Congressional Progressive Caucus" brought forward a real "Full Employment Act" which would require and mandate the President and Congress to attain and maintain full employment along the lines of the Wright Patman proposed, labor pushed--- U.S. Senate passed--- and Wall Street opposed, House defeated, "Full Employment Act of 1945" when Wall Street drew the line-in-the-sand and said, "enough!" as massive repression was initiated against the labor movement under the guise of an anti-Communist driven which-hunt creating mass national hysteria followed up with Taft-Hartley and Hubert Humphrey's "Communist Control Act?"
None of the members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus have the moral and political courage of a Wright Patman, the populist liberal Democrat from Texas; nor do any of today's labor "leaders" have the class consciousness required to mobilize the working class for such a battle.
The only thing we get from the so-called "progressive" Democrats is talk, talk, talk instead of "jobs, jobs, jobs."
If just one job was created every-time one of these politicians uttered the words, "jobs, jobs, jobs" we wouldn't have any unemployed people in this country but the dirty imperialist wars--- as Mark Twain properly called them--- which these members of the "Congressional Progressive Caucus" haven't mustered the courage nor attempted to fully mobilize the American people in opposition to, are killing jobs the same way these barbaric wars are killing people... not to mention that the wealth of our Nation needed to solve all these social and economic problems might as well be tossed into the deepest depths of the oceans rather than funding this insanity of militarism and war after war.
Is the solution to be found in electing a Democratic super majority as this article and the members of the "Congressional Progressive Caucus" are suggesting?
Well, we gave Obama a Democratic super majority which bailed out Wall Street instead of Main Street.
And look at Keith Ellison's home state of Minnesota where I live--- a huge Democratic super majority with a Democratic governor, a Democratic majority in the State House and a Democratic majority in the Minnesota State Senate and we can't even get the attention of these Democrats to repeal and rescind "At-will Employment" and replace it with "Just Employment."
This Democratic super majority refuses to pass anti-scab legislation and anti-lockout legislation.
This Democratic super majority refuses to pass Minimum Wage legislation that makes the Minimum Wage a real living wage instead of a miserly poverty wage; these Democrats don't seem to understand what my 8 year old granddaughter understands that poverty wages cause poverty.
All of these things--- real reforms--- are what politicians like to call "revenue neutral;" they cost tax-payers nothing.
But, don't we all know that massive unemployment drives all wages down and corporate profits up? Wall Street loves massive unemployment. Massive unemployment enables employer lockouts and makes the recruiting and hiring of "replacement workers" (scabs) easy.
This Democratic super majority sees an employer lockout here in the Red River Valley going on well over a year at American Crystal Sugar--- a tax-payer subsidized business/industry where scabs are working as the workers who voted these Democrats into office are suffering the consequences... this employer lockout is not "revenue neutral" it is tax-payer subsidized to the hilt.
Anyone who thinks electing more Democrats is a solution to the mess this country is in is living in some kind of "la-la land" of the make-believe; not a Nation where Wall Street dominates with a strangle-hold the social, political and economic life of this country through the creation of this two-party trap.
What is required if we are to move progressive politics forward--- the politics and economics of livelihood--- is the creation of a working class based progressive people's party with the patience, stamina and courage to challenge Wall Street for power--- Democrats will never be up to this task, they never have been. It is utterly foolish to even think that a party which is owned lock, stock and barrel by Wall Street, and beholden to Wall Street, is going to turn and defeat Wall Street's thoroughly reactionary agenda of imperialist wars abroad paid for with austerity measures here at home.
In typical George Lakoff instructed fashion, these so-called "progressive" Democrats propose a "defiant anti-austerity budget" which boils down to no specific solutions to the problems being experienced by the working class. It is mere nice-sounding words and political hyperbole without any organized fight back; a gimmick to once again hoodwink workers into thinking Democrats with super majorities are going to solve our problems when time and time again we have seen these Democratic super majorities refuse to bring forward even the most minute reforms intended to initiate the road to massive reforms required to tide the working class over as this rotten capitalist system goes through its death throws and convulsions of economic collapse before our very eyes.
Make no mistake about this: capitalism now in its highest stage of imperialism which has grown barbaric and cannibalistic is on the skids to oblivion placing us on a dangerous road leading straight to hell with no stops for a breather in purgatory.
By-the-way; I have seen first hand here in Minnesota how Congressman Keith Ellison is just one more Humphrey-Mondale knock-off playing the working class for chumps and suckers.
Minnesota's more than 40,000 casino workers workers forced to work in this hideous Indian Gaming Industry in loud, noisy, smoke-filled casinos at poverty wages without any rights under state or federal labor laws as the wealthy white mobsters run off with all the profits leaving behind greater poverty as they make huge campaign contributions to Ellison and his Minnesota Democratic super majority as a payoff for these worthless politicians to turn their backs on injustice--- if anyone thinks these Democrats are going to stand up and fight for worker's rights or the livelihoods of workers ask a worker employed at one of the more than three-hundred casinos now comprising this hideous Indian Gaming Industry which Keith Ellison, Raul Grijava, John Conyers, Bernie Sanders and those "progressives" like Senator Ben Cardin helped to create--- the very kind of workforce Scott Walker and Rick Snyder drool over and dream about for all workers.
Have we already forgotten that each and every member of this so-called "Congressional Progressive Caucus" bailed on single-payer universal health care and have backed the Israeli killing machine to the hilt with Minnesota Congressman Keith Ellison being a no-show.
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
The "housing question" and "unemployment" continue to dog the capitalist economy over one-hundred and fifty years after Karl Marx said capitalists couldn't solve these basic and fundamental problems.
Something to think about:
A new study has revealed that a minimum waged worker would have to work 89 hours a week when only a few other cost of living factors are figured in to pay for an average apartment renting for $836.00 a month in Minneapolis.
The same bankers who have foreclosed on and evicted families from their homes are banking on those they have evicted from their homes will have to rent apartments or turn to condo living--- but, this might end up a bust, too, because of poverty wages:
http://finance-commerce.com/2012/12/hot-twin-cities-apartment-market-shows-signs-of-cooling-off/
The banking crowd, ever attuned to quick short-term profits, is oblivious to the pain and suffering experienced by working class families trying to keep a roof over their heads--- it's all about profits.
Which brings us to another problem Karl Marx said the capitalists could not overcome: the problem of workers not being able to purchase what they produce.
And Karl Marx pointed out that when workers can't purchase what they have produced because their wages are too low economic depressions which begin as recessions occur.
Capitalism is having difficulties with:
- Housing.
- Unemployment.
- Wages.
- Economic collapse.
And did I mention: WAR?
What about: PRICES?
Was Karl Marx really wrong?
Our much celebrated Keynesian economists advising Obama base their economic theories for a properly functioning economy on a smooth flow and interaction between investments and consumption. Nothing seems to be working out for these fellows no matter what they try and no matter how much they tinker--- and, of course, as Alan Greenspan has now acknowledged, the free market left on its own didn't fair too well, either... remember the beginning of the Depression of 2008 which just won't end?
And as liberal economist, John Kenneth Galbraith pointed out: "we can't have guns and butter at the same time"--- no doubt if Galbraith were alive today he would frame his "guns v butter" declaration somewhat differently:
Wars kill jobs the same way they kill people.
Karl Marx pointed out that when Nations spend their wealth on militarism and wars this is tantamount to dumping the Nation's wealth into the deepest depths of the oceans. (True or False?)
It seems no matter how hard Wall Street's over-paid economists and pundits try, they can't manage to win in the battle of ideas against a long dead Karl Marx.
Pretty bad when an entire intellectual Wall Street financed establishment of economists and intellectuals dedicated to saving capitalism can't figure out what to do to get us out of this economic mess... and can't even win a debate with a dead man.
http://www.graphicwitness.org/contemp/marxtitle.htm
Perhaps this guy needs a "Forever Stamp?"
Mille Lacs Band buys Crowne Plaza, DoubleTree hotels in St. Paul
Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe purchases hotels with wealth derived from paying casino workers poverty wages
Of course the issue and question becomes:
Who is really purchasing these hotels with the wealth derived by paying casino workers poverty wages?
The answer to this question is very simple:
The same mobsters who own the slot machines and every aspect of Mille Lacs' casinos/hotels/restaurant/bar/ entertainment/resort business.
St. Paul politicians have a long history of being bribed by these same mobsters so this is nothing new for them; it will just mean more campaign contributions for the thoroughly corrupt and racist Democratic Party now headed up by a pill-popping billionaire governor.
The undemocratic, red-baiting Nancy Goldman of Unite-HERE will now have a new vicious anti-labor management to deal with... and, quite possibly, a lockout and scabs are in store with the next contract down the road... no doubt her St. Paul Democratic Party buddies so thrilled with this deal will provide the same support they did to the 2,000 St. Paul Ford Twin Cities Assembly Plant workers and the 1,300 currently locked out American Crystal Sugar workers.
Interesting how such a "poverty stricken" casino management who complain they can't afford to pay its casino workers real living wages manages to come up with the tens of millions of dollars for what is nothing but a slick money-laundering deal and scheme.
Alan L. Maki
http://www.startribune.com/ local/stpaul/196898791.html? refer=y
Rarely is an announcement about a hotel deal accompanied by an invocation in Ojibwe and ceremonial drum music, but then, the Mille Lacs Band is not a typical hotel owner. At least not yet.
On Monday, tribal leaders formally announced they had closed on the purchase of two of downtown St. Paul’s largest hotels, the Crowne Plaza Riverfront and the DoubleTree by Hilton, for an undisclosed amount of money. The band took charge of the hotels Thursday.
“Hello, St. Paul!” said Joseph Nayquonabe Jr., CEO and chairman of the board for the band’s economic development corporation, making the announcement at the Crowne Plaza’s Great River Ballroom.
“The Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe is checking into downtown, and we plan on being here for a while.”
He said that St. Paul was just the first step in a long-term strategy to diversify the band’s investments beyond gambling, the industry the band has pursued with success since building the first Grand Casino on Lake Mille Lacs near Garrison 22 years ago.
That’s why, he said, there are no plans now or in the future to build a casino in connection with the St. Paul hotels.
“We’re really excited about creating new revenue streams for the band, so that’s really what this investment is all about,” he said.
The Crowne Plaza and the DoubleTree, which together have more than 700 rooms — nearly half the hotel rooms in the city — will be managed by Graves Hospitality Corp., the Minneapolis-based company that operates the Graves 601 in downtown Minneapolis and is run by Ben Graves, son of hotel magnate Jim Graves.
Both hotels will get makeovers that include new “destination dining experiences” that cater to locals as well as visitors, they said.
The DoubleTree will get a new entrance on Minnesota Street, and the Crowne Plaze will be “transform[ed] … both from the room side and from the public spaces,” Nayquonabe said. He didn’t put a price tag on the renovation work.
The band also is looking at possibly rebranding the hotels to drive more convention business to St. Paul, he said.
Melanie Benjamin, the band’s chief executive, said the band had been looking for a business that could build on its experience running its two Grand Casinos, their affiliated hotels and other businesses that include a lake resort.
“We intend to be good business people, good neighbors and good citizens. … Together we hope to create jobs, tax revenue for the city, and most importantly for us, two truly great hotels,” she said.
The purchase won’t take the hotels off the tax rolls. The band formed two limited-liability corporations to buy the hotels and will pay property taxes like any other business owner. Tribal officials said there were no plans to apply for tax-exempt trust status.
City leaders hailed the deal as a sign of revived interest in downtown investment building on upcoming attractions, such as the light-rail line and the Lowertown ballpark.
In a statement, Mayor Chris Coleman (who was out of town) said he was “thrilled” by the news.
“The band is looking for new, unique investment opportunities throughout the country and they chose to invest in St. Paul first. … I look forward to what is to come with both properties,” he said.
Matt Kramer, president and CEO of the St. Paul Area Chamber of Commerce, said the fact that the hotels were purchased by “fellow Minnesotans who know the market, know this area” was “incredibly good news for St. Paul.”
Kirby Payne, president of HVS Motel Management consultants, said the upgraded hotels will help the city compete for convention business.
“The change of ownership, in itself, will not generate additional demand in St. Paul for room nights,” Payne said. “However, their remodeling and improving of the hotels, along with the other things going on that are positive in St. Paul, will certainly generate additional interest.”
Nayquonabe said that the band is looking at other possible properties in New York, Washington, San Antonio and Los Angeles, as well as in Minneapolis and the Bloomington strip near the Mall of America.
“We’re thinking big, and that’s really what drives us every day,” he said.
Kevin Duchschere • 651-222-2732
Email: kduchschere@startribune.com
--
Mille Lacs Band buys Crowne Plaza, DoubleTree hotels in St. Paul
- Article by: KEVIN DUCHSCHERE , Star Tribune
- Updated: March 11, 2013 - 11:45 PM
Rarely is an announcement about a hotel deal accompanied by an invocation in Ojibwe and ceremonial drum music, but then, the Mille Lacs Band is not a typical hotel owner. At least not yet.
On Monday, tribal leaders formally announced they had closed on the purchase of two of downtown St. Paul’s largest hotels, the Crowne Plaza Riverfront and the DoubleTree by Hilton, for an undisclosed amount of money. The band took charge of the hotels Thursday.
“Hello, St. Paul!” said Joseph Nayquonabe Jr., CEO and chairman of the board for the band’s economic development corporation, making the announcement at the Crowne Plaza’s Great River Ballroom.
“The Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe is checking into downtown, and we plan on being here for a while.”
He said that St. Paul was just the first step in a long-term strategy to diversify the band’s investments beyond gambling, the industry the band has pursued with success since building the first Grand Casino on Lake Mille Lacs near Garrison 22 years ago.
That’s why, he said, there are no plans now or in the future to build a casino in connection with the St. Paul hotels.
“We’re really excited about creating new revenue streams for the band, so that’s really what this investment is all about,” he said.
The Crowne Plaza and the DoubleTree, which together have more than 700 rooms — nearly half the hotel rooms in the city — will be managed by Graves Hospitality Corp., the Minneapolis-based company that operates the Graves 601 in downtown Minneapolis and is run by Ben Graves, son of hotel magnate Jim Graves.
Both hotels will get makeovers that include new “destination dining experiences” that cater to locals as well as visitors, they said.
The DoubleTree will get a new entrance on Minnesota Street, and the Crowne Plaze will be “transform[ed] … both from the room side and from the public spaces,” Nayquonabe said. He didn’t put a price tag on the renovation work.
The band also is looking at possibly rebranding the hotels to drive more convention business to St. Paul, he said.
Melanie Benjamin, the band’s chief executive, said the band had been looking for a business that could build on its experience running its two Grand Casinos, their affiliated hotels and other businesses that include a lake resort.
“We intend to be good business people, good neighbors and good citizens. … Together we hope to create jobs, tax revenue for the city, and most importantly for us, two truly great hotels,” she said.
The purchase won’t take the hotels off the tax rolls. The band formed two limited-liability corporations to buy the hotels and will pay property taxes like any other business owner. Tribal officials said there were no plans to apply for tax-exempt trust status.
City leaders hailed the deal as a sign of revived interest in downtown investment building on upcoming attractions, such as the light-rail line and the Lowertown ballpark.
In a statement, Mayor Chris Coleman (who was out of town) said he was “thrilled” by the news.
“The band is looking for new, unique investment opportunities throughout the country and they chose to invest in St. Paul first. … I look forward to what is to come with both properties,” he said.
Matt Kramer, president and CEO of the St. Paul Area Chamber of Commerce, said the fact that the hotels were purchased by “fellow Minnesotans who know the market, know this area” was “incredibly good news for St. Paul.”
Kirby Payne, president of HVS Motel Management consultants, said the upgraded hotels will help the city compete for convention business.
“The change of ownership, in itself, will not generate additional demand in St. Paul for room nights,” Payne said. “However, their remodeling and improving of the hotels, along with the other things going on that are positive in St. Paul, will certainly generate additional interest.”
Nayquonabe said that the band is looking at other possible properties in New York, Washington, San Antonio and Los Angeles, as well as in Minneapolis and the Bloomington strip near the Mall of America.
“We’re thinking big, and that’s really what drives us every day,” he said.
Kevin Duchschere • 651-222-2732
Email: kduchschere@startribune.com
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
58891 County Road 13
Warroad, Minnesota 56763
Phone: 218-386-2432
Cell: 651-587-5541
Primary E-mail: amaki000@centurytel.net
E-mail: alan.maki1951mn@gmail.com
Cc'ed:
To: rep.phyllis.kahn@house.mn, rep.tom.anzelc@house.mn, sen.bev.scalze@senate.mn, sen.bill.ingebrigtsen@senate.mn, sen.bobby.champion@senate.mn, sen.carla.nelson@senate.mn, sen.chuck.wiger@senate.mn, sen.dan.sparks@senate.mn, sen.dave.thompson@senate.mn, sen.david.tomassoni@senate.mn, sen.foung.hawj@senate.mn, sen.greg.clausen@senate.mn, sen.jeff.hayden@senate.mn, sen.jim.carlson@senate.mn, sen.jim.metzen@senate.mn, sen.john.hoffman@senate.mn, sen.kathy.sheran@senate.mn, sen.katie.sieben@senate.mn, sen.kent.eken@senate.mn, sen.kevin.dahle@senate.mn, sen.lyle.koenen@senate.mn, sen.matt.schmit@senate.mn, sen.melisa.franzen@senate.mn, sen.melissa.wiklund@senate.mn, sen.michelle.benson@senate.mn, sen.rod.skoe@senate.mn, sen.roger.chamberlain@senate.mn, sen.roger.reinert@senate.mn, sen.scott.dibble@senate.mn, sen.terri.bonoff@senate.mn, sen.tony.lourey@senate.mn, sen.vicki.jensen@senate.mn, sen.warren.limmer@senate.mn, Alice Hausman, Andrea Kieffer
, Andrew Falk
, Anna Wills
, Barb Yarusso
, Ben Lien
, Bob Barrett
, Bob Dettmer
, Bob Gunther
, Brian Johnson
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, Connie Bernardy
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, Erin Murphy
, Ernie Leidiger
, Frank Hornstein
, Gene Pelowski
, Glenn Gruenhagen
, Greg Davids
, Jason Isaacson
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, Jean Wagenius
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, Jenifer Loon
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, Jim Abeler
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, Jim Newberger
, JoAnn Ward
, Joe Atkins
, Joe Hoppe
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, Joe Radinovich
, Joe Schomacker
, John Benson
, John Lesch
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, Joyce Peppin
, Karen Clark
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, Kelby Woodard
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, Lyndon Carlson
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, Pat Garofalo
, Paul Anderson
, Paul Marquart
, Paul Rosenthal
, Paul Thissen
, Paul Torkelson
, Peggy Scott
, Peter Fischer
, Raymond Dehn
, Rena Moran
, "rep.ann.lenczewski@house.mn"
, "rep.dan.fabian@house.mn"
, "rep.joe.mullery@house.mn"
, "rep.patti.fritz@house.mn"
, Rick Hansen
, Rod Hamilton
, Roger Erickson
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, Sheldon Johnson
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, Tim Sanders
, Tina Liebling
, Tom Hackbarth
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, Tony Cornish
, Will Morgan
, Yvonne Selcer
, Zachary Dorholt
, ZZZ Ellison Keith
, Karen Monahan
, ddjohnson@startribune.com,
dtice@startribune.com, jfriedmann@startribune.com,
jmoore@startribune.com, nstanthony@startribune.com,
sgillespie@startribune.com, sknutson@mnaflcio.org
To: rep.phyllis.kahn@house.mn, rep.tom.anzelc@house.mn, sen.bev.scalze@senate.mn, sen.bill.ingebrigtsen@senate.mn, sen.bobby.champion@senate.mn, sen.carla.nelson@senate.mn, sen.chuck.wiger@senate.mn, sen.dan.sparks@senate.mn, sen.dave.thompson@senate.mn, sen.david.tomassoni@senate.mn, sen.foung.hawj@senate.mn, sen.greg.clausen@senate.mn, sen.jeff.hayden@senate.mn, sen.jim.carlson@senate.mn, sen.jim.metzen@senate.mn, sen.john.hoffman@senate.mn, sen.kathy.sheran@senate.mn, sen.katie.sieben@senate.mn, sen.kent.eken@senate.mn, sen.kevin.dahle@senate.mn, sen.lyle.koenen@senate.mn, sen.matt.schmit@senate.mn, sen.melisa.franzen@senate.mn, sen.melissa.wiklund@senate.mn, sen.michelle.benson@senate.mn, sen.rod.skoe@senate.mn, sen.roger.chamberlain@senate.mn, sen.roger.reinert@senate.mn, sen.scott.dibble@senate.mn, sen.terri.bonoff@senate.mn, sen.tony.lourey@senate.mn, sen.vicki.jensen@senate.mn, sen.warren.limmer@senate.mn, Alice Hausman
Monday, March 11, 2013
Hugo Chavez: Lest We Forget
Conn Hallinan
March 11, 2013 Dispatches From The Edge
"Charismatic and idiosyncratic, capable of building friendships. Communicating to the masses as few other leaders ever have, Mr. Chavez will be missed."
| |||
In early December 2001, I was searching through my files looking
for a column topic. At the time I was writing on foreign policy for the
San Francisco Examiner, one of the town's two dailies. A back page clip
I had filed and forgotten caught my attention: on Nov. 7 the National
Security Agency, the Pentagon, and the U.S. State Department had
convened a two-day meeting on U.S. policy vis-Ã -vis Venezuela. My first
thought was, "Uh, oh."
I knew something about those kinds of meetings. There was one in 1953 just before the CIA and British intelligence engineered the coup in Iran that put the despicable Shah into power. Same thing for the 1963 coup in South Vietnam and the 1973 coup against Salvador Allende in Chile. Chavez had reaped the ire of the Bush administration when, during a speech condemning the 2001 attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, he asked if bombing Afghanistan in retaliation was a good idea? Chavez called it "fighting terrorism with terrorism," not a very good choice of words, but, in retrospect, spot on. The invasion of Afghanistan and the subsequent Iraqi War have been utterly disastrous for the U.S. and visited widespread terror on the populations of both countries. Upwards of a million Iraqis died as a direct and indirect effect of the war, five million were turned into refugees, and the bloodshed is far from over. Much the same-albeit on a smaller scale-is happening to the Afghans. Would that we had paid the man some attention. But for the Bush administration, Chavez's statement presented an opportunity to rid itself of a troublesome voice. In came the White House's Latin America "A Team." The top gun in that odious outfit was Otto Reich, assistant secretary of state for western hemispheric affairs and former Reagan Administration point man for the 1981-87 Contra War against Nicaragua. The General Accounting Office had nailed Reich during the 1986 Iran-Contra scandal for "prohibited convert propaganda," planting false stories and opinion pieces in newspapers. A Cuban exile, Reich had helped spring Orlando Bosch in 1987 from a Venezuelan prison where Bosch was in jail for bombing a civilian Cuban airliner and killing 73 people. Rogelio Pardo-Maurer, deputy assistant secretary of defense for western hemisphere affairs, also a Cuban exile and former chief of staff for the Contras, was the Pentagon side of the team. While Reich met with civilian opponents of Chavez and conservative businessman Pedro Carmona, Pardo-Maurer huddled with military leaders, including Gen. Lucas Romero Rincon. Carmona and Rincon would play a key role in the April 11, 2002 coup against Chavez. The National Endowment for Democracy and United States Agency for International Development were also supporting Chavez's opponents with money and advice, and both organizations have long histories of subversion and covert operations. I had no special information about the possibility of a coup but it didn't take a crystal ball to see that the armies of the night were on the move. So I wrote a column titled "Coup in the Wind" that laid out the meetings, identified the actors, and reminded readers that the U.S. has a long and sordid history of organizing and supporting coups in Latin America. A little more than three and a half months later, the plotters struck, arrested Chavez, suspended the constitution, dissolved the legislature, dismissed the Supreme Court, the Attorney General and the National Election Commission, and fired provincial governors. We had seen this all before, and I flinched at what I thought would inevitably follow: executions, death squads, "disappeared" opponents, smashed unions, and a cowed population. But April 11, 2002 was not 1954 in Guatemala, 1964 in Brazil, 1973 in Chile, or 1976 in Argentina. Chavez had lifted millions of people out of poverty, opened schools, increased literacy, and tackled malnutrition. In vast numbers those people rose up, and, for the first time in Latin American history, a coup was overturned. Three days after Chavez was returned to office, Martha Honey at Foreign Policy In Focus sent me an email saying she liked the coup column and would I consider writing a follow-up for the think tank? I knew all about Martha Honey and her husband, Tony Avirgan. As reporters for the Costa Rican Tico Times, they had uncovered much of the Iran-Contra plot and were legends among those of us in the alternative press. I also knew about FPIF. It is hard to write sensible things about U.S. foreign policy without it. So I did a piece called "Anatomy of a Coup," detailing U.S. support for the plotters. Since then I have written over 200 columns, so in a way it was Hugo Chavez that landed me at FPIF. Vhavez became the president of a country where 70 percent of the population was considered "poor," in spite of $30 billion in yearly oil revenues. It was a country where two percent of the population owned 60 percent of the land, and where the gap between rich and poor was among the widest on the continent. Today, according to the Gini Coefficient, Venezuela has the lowest rate of inequality in Latin America. Poverty has been reduced to 21 percent, and extreme poverty from 40 percent to 7.3 percent. Illiteracy has been eliminated and, proportionally, Venezuela is number two in Latin America for the number of university students. Infant mortality has dropped from 25 per 1,000 to 13 per 1,000, the same as it is for Black Americans. Chavez's government increased the number of health clinics by 169.6 percent, and hands out free food to five million Venezuelans. Take a moment to read "The Achievements of Hugo Chavez" by public health experts Carles Muntaner, Joan Benach, and sociologist Maria Paez Victor in CounterPunch. Comparing the man's accomplishments to his U.S. obits was like taking a trip through Alice's looking glass. Virtually none of the information about poverty and illiteracy was included, and when it was grudgingly admitted that he did have programs for the poor, it was "balanced" with claims of soaring debts, widespread shortages, rampant crime, economic chaos, and "authoritarianism." Venezuela's debt as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product is lower than that of the U.S. and Europe. Inflation has fallen to a four-year low. There is crime, but neighboring Colombia is far more dangerous, particularly if you happen to be a trade unionist. And more people in Venezuela are eating better than they have ever eaten in the history of the country. Over the past decade growth has averaged 4. 3 percent, and joblessness dropped from 11.3 percent to 7.7 percent. Americans would kill for those figures. As for being an "authoritarian," most the country's media is venomously anti-Chavez and publishes regularly, and his opponents hold weekly rallies and protests. Want to try that in U.S. ally Honduras (or Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, etc.)? The old Venezuelan elites-aided by the U.S.-will now attempt to turn the clock back to 1997, the year before Chavez took over. But that will not be easy. Quite literally millions of people have been brought into the democratic process and they will not cede power without a fight. Once people have better housing, schools, nutrition, jobs and health care, it is very difficult to take those things away. Chavez handed a better life to the vast majority of Venezuelans, and, as they demonstrated in April 2002, they are perfectly able to defend those gains. "Charismatic and idiosyncratic, capable of building friendships. Communicating to the masses as few other leaders ever have, Mr. Chavez will be missed," is the way former Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva put it. He will be missed, indeed. | |||
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Statement From Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter on the Death of Hugo Chavez
Link: http://thepodunkblog.blogspot.com/2013/03/statement-from-former-us-president.html
Link: http://www.cartercenter.org/news/pr/hugo-chavez-030513.html
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 5, 2013
Contact: dcongil@emory.edu
Statement From Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter
Rosalynn and I extend our condolences
to the family of Hugo Chávez FrÃas. We met Hugo Chávez when he was
campaigning for president in 1998 and The Carter Center was invited to
observe elections for the first time in Venezuela. We returned often,
for the 2000 elections, and then to facilitate dialogue during the
political conflict of 2002-2004. We came to know a man who expressed a
vision to bring profound changes to his country to benefit especially
those people who had felt neglected and marginalized. Although we have
not agreed with all of the methods followed by his government, we have
never doubted Hugo Chávez's commitment to improving the lives of
millions of his fellow countrymen.
President Chávez will be remembered for his bold assertion of autonomy and independence for Latin American governments and for his formidable communication skills and personal connection with supporters in his country and abroad to whom he gave hope and empowerment. During his 14-year tenure, Chávez joined other leaders in Latin America and the Caribbean to create new forms of integration. Venezuelan poverty rates were cut in half, and millions received identification documents for the first time allowing them to participate more effectively in their country's economic and political life.
At the same time, we recognize the divisions created in the drive towards change in Venezuela and the need for national healing. We hope that as Venezuelans mourn the passing of President Chávez and recall his positive legacies — especially the gains made for the poor and vulnerable — the political leaders will move the country forward by building a new consensus that ensures equal opportunities for all Venezuelans to participate in every aspect of national life.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Link: http://www.cartercenter.org/news/pr/hugo-chavez-030513.html
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 5, 2013
Contact: dcongil@emory.edu
Statement From Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter
on the Death of Hugo Chavez
Rosalynn and I extend our condolences
to the family of Hugo Chávez FrÃas. We met Hugo Chávez when he was
campaigning for president in 1998 and The Carter Center was invited to
observe elections for the first time in Venezuela. We returned often,
for the 2000 elections, and then to facilitate dialogue during the
political conflict of 2002-2004. We came to know a man who expressed a
vision to bring profound changes to his country to benefit especially
those people who had felt neglected and marginalized. Although we have
not agreed with all of the methods followed by his government, we have
never doubted Hugo Chávez's commitment to improving the lives of
millions of his fellow countrymen.President Chávez will be remembered for his bold assertion of autonomy and independence for Latin American governments and for his formidable communication skills and personal connection with supporters in his country and abroad to whom he gave hope and empowerment. During his 14-year tenure, Chávez joined other leaders in Latin America and the Caribbean to create new forms of integration. Venezuelan poverty rates were cut in half, and millions received identification documents for the first time allowing them to participate more effectively in their country's economic and political life.
At the same time, we recognize the divisions created in the drive towards change in Venezuela and the need for national healing. We hope that as Venezuelans mourn the passing of President Chávez and recall his positive legacies — especially the gains made for the poor and vulnerable — the political leaders will move the country forward by building a new consensus that ensures equal opportunities for all Venezuelans to participate in every aspect of national life.
#####
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Declaración del ex-presidente de los Estados Unidos Jimmy Carter
sobre la muerte de Hugo Chávez
sobre la muerte de Hugo Chávez
Rosalynn y yo expresamos
nuestras condolencias a la familia de Hugo Chávez FrÃas. Conocimos a
Hugo Chávez durante la campaña presidencial de 1998 cuando el Centro
Carter fue invitado, por primera vez, a observar las elecciones en
Venezuela. Desde entonces, hemos regresado con frecuencia, primero para
las elecciones de 2000 y luego para facilitar el diálogo durante el
perÃodo de conflicto polÃtico entre los años 2002 y 2004. Conocimos
entonces a un hombre que expresaba una visión de profundo cambio en su
paÃs para favorecer a aquellos sectores que se sentÃan ignorados o
marginados. Si bien no siempre hemos coincidido con los métodos seguidos
por su gobierno, nunca hemos dudado del compromiso de Hugo Chávez para
mejorar las vidas de millones de sus compatriotas.
El presidente Chávez será
recordado por su audaz defensa de la autonomÃa e independencia de los
gobiernos de América Latina, asà como por sus extraordinarias
habilidades de comunicación y su capacidad para establecer una estrecha
relación con sus seguidores en el paÃs y en el extranjero, a quienes
transmitió esperanza y empoderamiento. Durante sus 14 años en la
presidencia, Chávez se unió a otros lÃderes de América Latina y el
Caribe para establecer nuevas formas de integración. La tasa de pobreza
en Venezuela se redujo dramáticamente y millones de venezolanos
recibieron documentos de identidad por primera vez en sus vidas, lo que
les permitió participar más efectivamente en la vida polÃtica y
económica de su paÃs.
Al mismo tiempo,
reconocemos las divisiones producidas en este proceso de cambio y la
necesidad de promover un proceso de reconciliación nacional. Esperamos
que mientras los venezolanos lamentan el fallecimiento del presidente
Chávez y recuerdan su legado positivo -especialmente el vinculado a los
avances en favor de los pobres y vulnerables-, los lÃderes polÃticos
encaminen el paÃs hacia adelante, impulsando la construcción de un nuevo
consenso que asegure iguales oportunidades para todos los venezolanos
para participar en todos los aspectos de la vida nacional.
####
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Report: Dentists underpaid by state for low-income patient care.
The poor, poor dentists...
Did you ever notice when the issue of raising the Minimum Wage comes up the media always has to have a "balanced" approach with interviewed guests "for" and "against" raising the Minimum Wage? Public Radio has become really good at giving us this "balanced" approach to the news.But--- why don't we get this same "balance" when it comes to dentists being "under-paid" for treating the poor?
http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2013/03/08/health/legislative-auditor-dentist-reimbursement
Notice in this story that it is never mentioned how much dentists are being paid.
When I talked to Governor Dayton about this issue a few days ago and asked him to provide me with all the facts and figures, he said, "Alan, I'm concerned with what you will do with this information. I think you should make a Data Practices Act request."
I then called Lorna Benson the reporter who did this story and asked her why she didn't include these details in her story. Her reply was, "I don't consider this pertinent information. The minute details are too much to get into; people wouldn't understand."
Governor Dayton won't provide me with the details because he knows the same thing Lorna Benson knows: Most Minnesotans would think dentists are already being paid too much and they are viewed, and rightly so, by the public as greedy and selfish for turning away the poor.
The same Democrats who refuse to pass anti-lockout legislation and anti-scab legislation and who "raise" the Minimum Wage to keep it a miserly, poverty minimum wage allow themselves and the people of Minnesota to be held hostage to a bunch of greedy, profit seeking selfish dentists who are the first to complain about the Minimum Wage being increased to a real living wage.
What I want to know, and I am pretty sure I speak for most Minnesotans, is: In posting these so called "losses" from treating the poor, how much did these dentists actually get paid from the government?
This is a very interesting approach to democracy because the last time I made a Data Practices Act request it took over two years to get the information I was requesting and I didn't even get the information from the "request." A woman "leaked" me the documents and was demoted as a result.
It is my understanding that in submitting a tax write-off of $800,000.00, dentist Michael Flynn made over twelve-million dollars at tax-payer expense. Interesting that Minnesota Public Radio did not ask dentist Michael Flynn to see his tax filings.
I called dentist Michael Flynn to ask him what he thought the Minimum Wage should be if it was in line with people having to be paid his dental bills; the woman in his office who refused to provide her name said, "He will get back to you." I haven't heard from dentist Flynn nor have I heard back from the Minnesota Dental Association after being forwarded to a voice mail.
I have noticed in doing a little research over the years on this issue that the Minnesota Dental Association is very generous in its campaign contributions to Minnesota politicians and contributes very generously to Minnesota Public Radio, too... not that I am insinuating this causes any discrepancies between how the Minimum Wage issue and pay for dentists is handled by the politicians or the way the two stories get covered by Minnesota Public Radio; but, there does seem to be greater sympathy from both the politicians and Minnesota Public Radio towards extremely wealthy dentists than towards the working class poor.
The heart-wrenching story of dentist Michael Flynn---
Transcript of MPR story:
Report: Dentists underpaid by state for low-income patient care
by Lorna Benson, Minnesota Public Radio
March 8, 2013
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Minnesota doesn't pay dentists enough to treat patients enrolled in the state's Medical Assistance program, says a report issued Friday by the Minnesota Office of the Legislative Auditor.
The report says the state should increase the base rate for dentists treating MA patients and it should simplify the claims process, so dentists will be more willing to continue serving these low-income patients.
Dentists have long complained that Medical Assistance, the state's program for the poor, doesn't cover their expenses.
"That needs to be addressed," says Legislative Auditor James Nobles. "If we want dentists to serve MA patients, I think we have to be more fair in our payments to them."
FORMULA OUTDATED
Minnesota's dental payment rate is based on how much dentists charged in 1989 and not the costs of current dental services. The rate ranks among the bottom third of states, according to the report.
The low payments have prevented patient access to dental care because many dentists have either dropped out of the program or restricted the number of MA patients they will treat, Nobles said.
"Ultimately they are the provider network and we have to entice them to participate. We have to be fair with them," said Nobles. "And we have to have a system that is not as complicated as it currently is."
Twenty-four percent of Minnesota dentists who responded to the Legislative Auditor's survey said they stopped serving MA patients after 2010.
"It's heartbreaking that I can't see the patients that I desire to see because I don't have the financial ability to do it."
- Dentist Michael Flynn
The report says among all MA recipients, people with special needs and those in sparsely populated areas have experienced the greatest challenges finding a dentist.
Dentist Michael Flynn, who has a part-time practice in Lewiston, closed his other practice located in Winona because he was losing too much money on his Medical Assistance patients.
"Unfortunately our clinic in a given year had to write off over $800,000 in unpaid claims just because of the difference in reimbursement," said Flynn. "We just weren't affordably able to do it. So the entire staff from the Winona office is currently unemployed."
Flynn, who is president of the Minnesota Dental Association, said he has limited new MA patients since 2010 due to the reimbursement situation.
"I find it very hard to turn them down. To me it's heartbreaking that I can't see the patients that I desire to see because I don't have the financial ability to do it," said Flynn.
COMMUNITY CLINICS FILL IN GAPS
Patients in urban areas have better access to dental care because there are more community dental clinics willing to serve MA patients. Six-year-old Essense Ridley of north Minneapolis got her teeth cleaned this week at a Children's Dental Services clinic in her neighborhood. Last year, the private non-profit served just over 30,000 low-income children and pregnant women in Minnesota.
Even at her young age, Essense has already had more dental work than many adults. She has four fillings and two crowns due to cavities. And her mother said she has another cavity that is scheduled to be filled soon.
"Essense has an issue with brushing her teeth for some reason," says Shanika Ridley. "She just says she don't want to do it. But we make her do it, though. And then they love candy. And that's a killer to teeth."
Shanika Ridley said her daughter's tooth decay was a wakeup call for her family. She has since banned gummy fruit snacks and pop in her home. Ridley said her two younger children have healthier teeth — but they each have at least one cavity.
Sarah Wovcha, executive director of Children's Dental Services, said her organization sees a lot of children with extensive oral disease and the problem is getting worse.
"We have seen a tenfold increase in the need for general anesthesia, hospital cases," Wovcha said. "These are cases in which there's severe dental disease in all four quadrants of the mouth and really the only way that the child can be comfortably treated is in a general anesthesia setting."
Wovcha attributes some of the increase in emergency care to the challenges families face in getting access to care. She said her clinics have a four-month wait for patients who need hospital-based emergency care.
Children's Dental Services raises money from many sources to cover the costs of treating its MA clients and other patients who have no insurance. But Wovcha said it's getting harder and harder to do that. Last year, for the first time in its 94-year history, Children's Dental Services posted a loss of around $100,000.
Bills have been introduced in the Minnesota House and Senate this session that would raise the state's dental payment rates. The legislation would take the median fees dentists charged in 2011 and reimburse providers at 75 percent of that rate.
The Department of Human Services said in a letter that it supports the Legislative Auditor's key recommendations and has included a dental rate increase in the Gov. Mark Dayton's budget.
Friday, March 8, 2013
International Women's Day
Often when we celebrate important days people associate "famous" people with these events.
On this International Women's Day I would like to remember the work of Virginia Glenn, who, with her husband William Glenn, was active in the movements for civil rights, peace, social and economic justice for many decades and never gave up.
Virginian Glenn was a civil rights, peace and labor activist who ran for office on the Progressive Party ticket and was involved for many years with the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
On this International Women's Day I would like to remember the work of Virginia Glenn, who, with her husband William Glenn, was active in the movements for civil rights, peace, social and economic justice for many decades and never gave up.
Virginian Glenn was a civil rights, peace and labor activist who ran for office on the Progressive Party ticket and was involved for many years with the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
Can Civilization Survive Capitalism?
Noam Chomsky wrote a most interesting and informative article published by In These Times, "Can Civilization Survive Capitalism?" which is making the rounds through all the liberal, progressive and leftist web sites and it is being posted all over on FaceBook and blogs.
This is good this article is getting the widespread distribution it deserves but the discussion of this article seems to kind of just end with praise rather than moving to "What needs to be done?"
As usual, Chomsky makes an excellent case against capitalism and in defense of democracy; but, also, as usual, Chomsky fails to follow through on his anti-capitalist thinking leaving the solution and our movement building to others to discuss--- those others are us.
Chomsky articulated the problems with capitalist democracy fairly well but failed to point out that Wall Street is our enemy and it is this Wall Street enemy of ours we need to challenge for power; not only to defend democracy (and Chomsky failed to point out exactly what is required to defend democracy) but to be successful in bringing about many other needed reforms.
What has changed in this country since we have won all other reforms is not that capitalism has "improved" or even that it has become so much worse--- even though it has become the epitome of everything evil and disgusting; but, the real change is that Wall Street is now so much more powerful that it can resist and stand up to any challenge people bring forward with one exception: Wall Street will not be able to withstand a challenge to its power from a people united intent on bringing Wall street down.
A defense of democracy is like all of our other problems we face and experience in this "new world" dominated by Wall Streets raw power--- in order to protect, defend and expand democracy requires challenging Wall Street for power.
With Occupy Wall Street, Idle No More and the climate change movement, why is it still so difficult to have this discussion about the need to challenge Wall Street for power?
The answer to Chomsky's question is becoming more obvious to all of humanity by the hour:
No, civilization can't survive under capitalism. So why are we waiting to abolish capitalism? Why are we being so timid in bringing forward the socialist solution as advocated by Albert Einstein over 60 years ago:
http://socialismtheoryandpractice.blogspot.com/2009/04/why-socialism.html
Here is Chomsky's article. I would encourage everyone reading Chomsky's article to read Albert Einstein's article on "Why Socialism?" because Einstein answers Chomsky's question PLUS he provides an answer which Chomsky only implies. In addition, Einstein provides the socialist alternative to capitalism which Chomsky does not.
http://inthesetimes.com/article/14684/can_civilization_survive_capitalism/
I made this comment in response to Chomsky, not as a criticism; but, to add in what he has missed in this article published on the In These Times web site:
Wall Street is our enemy. Capitalist power is concentrated in monopolies at the helm of Wall Street. Every single movement for peace (and the military industrial complex has the largest carbon footprint of all), movements for jobs and full employment, the movements for health care reform and the movement trying to halt global warming--- no matter how large and powerful these movements become which advocate reforms that would benefit people, Mother Nature and society as a whole--- all come up against a brick wall. That brick wall--- our common enemy is Wall Street. So, why aren't we advocating challenging Wall Street for political and economic power instead of throwing up our arms in bewilderment and exasperation in defeat when we aren't following through with the struggle we need to wage: the struggle for working class people's power.
We create peace movements, health care movements, labor movements, jobs/full employment movements, civil rights movements and now climate change movements but we don't follow through in bringing all of these movements together into a huge anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist, anti-monopoly movement bringing people into the streets and to the ballot box.
In fact, we don't even have a political party taking up the demands of our movements. Instead, the major tendency has been to use the Democratic Party which is one of Wall Street's parties to advance demands for reforms. Really, how likely is it that a party like the Democratic Party which is controlled and manipulated by our Wall Street enemies is going to allow us to use their party to solve the very problems Wall Street in quest of maximum profits has created for us?
As I see it, we have two tasks confronting us--- bring all of our movements together so we can take our struggles into the streets in a more powerful way and we need to create some kind of working class based peoples party capable of being the voice of the people in the streets and we need to begin the challenge to Wall Street's power.
I doubt most of the present "leaders" of any of our movements are up to the task of challenging Wall Street for political and economic power since most are now the products of the foundation-funded think tanks.
And who are the "philanthropists" who fund these foundations which in turn fund all these "think tanks" providing the "knowledge" to all of these movement "leaders?"
Aren't these "philanthropists" the very same Wall Street capitalist parasites who profit from the exploitation of our labor and the rape of Mother Nature?
Capitalism has become an barbaric and cannibalistic imperialist monster only capable of breeding wars, destroying our ecosystems and our entire living environment.
Society needs these Wall Street capitalists about as much as my dog Fred needs ticks and fleas.
Our movements, if they are going to achieve the successes--- solutions to our many common problems--- which we seek are going to have to step up the struggle to a new phase: working together united in challenging Wall Street for power.
Think anti-capitalist/anti-imperialist education.
Think organizing to challenge Wall Street for power.
This is good this article is getting the widespread distribution it deserves but the discussion of this article seems to kind of just end with praise rather than moving to "What needs to be done?"
As usual, Chomsky makes an excellent case against capitalism and in defense of democracy; but, also, as usual, Chomsky fails to follow through on his anti-capitalist thinking leaving the solution and our movement building to others to discuss--- those others are us.
Chomsky articulated the problems with capitalist democracy fairly well but failed to point out that Wall Street is our enemy and it is this Wall Street enemy of ours we need to challenge for power; not only to defend democracy (and Chomsky failed to point out exactly what is required to defend democracy) but to be successful in bringing about many other needed reforms.
What has changed in this country since we have won all other reforms is not that capitalism has "improved" or even that it has become so much worse--- even though it has become the epitome of everything evil and disgusting; but, the real change is that Wall Street is now so much more powerful that it can resist and stand up to any challenge people bring forward with one exception: Wall Street will not be able to withstand a challenge to its power from a people united intent on bringing Wall street down.
A defense of democracy is like all of our other problems we face and experience in this "new world" dominated by Wall Streets raw power--- in order to protect, defend and expand democracy requires challenging Wall Street for power.
With Occupy Wall Street, Idle No More and the climate change movement, why is it still so difficult to have this discussion about the need to challenge Wall Street for power?
The answer to Chomsky's question is becoming more obvious to all of humanity by the hour:
No, civilization can't survive under capitalism. So why are we waiting to abolish capitalism? Why are we being so timid in bringing forward the socialist solution as advocated by Albert Einstein over 60 years ago:
http://socialismtheoryandpractice.blogspot.com/2009/04/why-socialism.html
Here is Chomsky's article. I would encourage everyone reading Chomsky's article to read Albert Einstein's article on "Why Socialism?" because Einstein answers Chomsky's question PLUS he provides an answer which Chomsky only implies. In addition, Einstein provides the socialist alternative to capitalism which Chomsky does not.
http://inthesetimes.com/article/14684/can_civilization_survive_capitalism/
I made this comment in response to Chomsky, not as a criticism; but, to add in what he has missed in this article published on the In These Times web site:
Wall Street is our enemy. Capitalist power is concentrated in monopolies at the helm of Wall Street. Every single movement for peace (and the military industrial complex has the largest carbon footprint of all), movements for jobs and full employment, the movements for health care reform and the movement trying to halt global warming--- no matter how large and powerful these movements become which advocate reforms that would benefit people, Mother Nature and society as a whole--- all come up against a brick wall. That brick wall--- our common enemy is Wall Street. So, why aren't we advocating challenging Wall Street for political and economic power instead of throwing up our arms in bewilderment and exasperation in defeat when we aren't following through with the struggle we need to wage: the struggle for working class people's power.
We create peace movements, health care movements, labor movements, jobs/full employment movements, civil rights movements and now climate change movements but we don't follow through in bringing all of these movements together into a huge anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist, anti-monopoly movement bringing people into the streets and to the ballot box.
In fact, we don't even have a political party taking up the demands of our movements. Instead, the major tendency has been to use the Democratic Party which is one of Wall Street's parties to advance demands for reforms. Really, how likely is it that a party like the Democratic Party which is controlled and manipulated by our Wall Street enemies is going to allow us to use their party to solve the very problems Wall Street in quest of maximum profits has created for us?
As I see it, we have two tasks confronting us--- bring all of our movements together so we can take our struggles into the streets in a more powerful way and we need to create some kind of working class based peoples party capable of being the voice of the people in the streets and we need to begin the challenge to Wall Street's power.
I doubt most of the present "leaders" of any of our movements are up to the task of challenging Wall Street for political and economic power since most are now the products of the foundation-funded think tanks.
And who are the "philanthropists" who fund these foundations which in turn fund all these "think tanks" providing the "knowledge" to all of these movement "leaders?"
Aren't these "philanthropists" the very same Wall Street capitalist parasites who profit from the exploitation of our labor and the rape of Mother Nature?
Capitalism has become an barbaric and cannibalistic imperialist monster only capable of breeding wars, destroying our ecosystems and our entire living environment.
Society needs these Wall Street capitalists about as much as my dog Fred needs ticks and fleas.
Our movements, if they are going to achieve the successes--- solutions to our many common problems--- which we seek are going to have to step up the struggle to a new phase: working together united in challenging Wall Street for power.
Think anti-capitalist/anti-imperialist education.
Think organizing to challenge Wall Street for power.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
When wealth creates poverty.
Hoarding the wealth created by the working class:
http://www.forbes.com/billionaires/
The wealth they hoard amongst such massive poverty across the world is not the end of their criminality... it is their ownership and control of the mines, mills and factories where workers collectively labor to continue producing this wealth that is the real crime.
The crime is capitalism.
The criminals are the parasitical Wall Street capitalist coupon clippers who hoard this tremendous wealth they derive from exploiting labor and raping Mother Nature--- the only two sources of wealth.
Minnesota Democrats have declared war on those who hoard junk when we should be declaring war on those Minnesota millionaires and billionaires who hoard wealth.
A look at the companies listed on the various stock exchanges gives us a better understanding of who owns the wealth created by the working class but the very fact that a political and economic system of capitalism which enables the few to hoard such massive wealth while so many people who create this wealth live in such poverty without even the access to the very necessities of life as articulated in the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights is what we need to be considering: http://unudhr.blogspot.com/
Justice requires these billionaires should be behind bars for grand theft but most people would be satisfied just to see them relieved of their wealth and provided with a job working alongside those they have been exploiting daily with their wealth and all future wealth being used to improve the lives and livelihoods for the rest of the people in the world.
There simply is no excuse for the continued toleration of this kind of obscene and insane hoarding of so much wealth, which, ironically--- and as this rotten capitalist system works--- creates so much poverty.
Something to think about:
These billionaires are so wealthy BECAUSE so many people are so poor.
Question:
What is the definition of "insanity?"
Answer:
Doing something over and over expecting different results
-Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein presented the solution to this "insanity" over 60 years ago in his essay--- Why Socialism?
http://socialismtheoryandpractice.blogspot.com/2009/04/why-socialism.html
http://www.forbes.com/billionaires/
The wealth they hoard amongst such massive poverty across the world is not the end of their criminality... it is their ownership and control of the mines, mills and factories where workers collectively labor to continue producing this wealth that is the real crime.
The crime is capitalism.
The criminals are the parasitical Wall Street capitalist coupon clippers who hoard this tremendous wealth they derive from exploiting labor and raping Mother Nature--- the only two sources of wealth.
Minnesota Democrats have declared war on those who hoard junk when we should be declaring war on those Minnesota millionaires and billionaires who hoard wealth.
A look at the companies listed on the various stock exchanges gives us a better understanding of who owns the wealth created by the working class but the very fact that a political and economic system of capitalism which enables the few to hoard such massive wealth while so many people who create this wealth live in such poverty without even the access to the very necessities of life as articulated in the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights is what we need to be considering: http://unudhr.blogspot.com/
Justice requires these billionaires should be behind bars for grand theft but most people would be satisfied just to see them relieved of their wealth and provided with a job working alongside those they have been exploiting daily with their wealth and all future wealth being used to improve the lives and livelihoods for the rest of the people in the world.
There simply is no excuse for the continued toleration of this kind of obscene and insane hoarding of so much wealth, which, ironically--- and as this rotten capitalist system works--- creates so much poverty.
Something to think about:
These billionaires are so wealthy BECAUSE so many people are so poor.
Question:
What is the definition of "insanity?"
Answer:
Doing something over and over expecting different results
-Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein presented the solution to this "insanity" over 60 years ago in his essay--- Why Socialism?
http://socialismtheoryandpractice.blogspot.com/2009/04/why-socialism.html
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
What are we getting from the Democratic super majority here in Minnesota?
Except for higher taxes what are working people getting from the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party's new super majority?
![Photo: 23legi0503.JPG
Governor Mark Dayton and DFL leaders Thomas Bakk and Paul Thissen spoke to media after their meeting with the GOP leadership Monday afternoon. Earlier in the day the Governor called the new GOP stadium plan a "hare-brained scheme." Wednesday, May 2, 2012. ] GLEN STUBBE * gstubbe@startribune.com DML - Star Tribune](http://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/c44.0.200.200/p200x200/602006_10151541993971337_643763516_n.jpg)
![Photo: 23legi0503.JPG
Governor Mark Dayton and DFL leaders Thomas Bakk and Paul Thissen spoke to media after their meeting with the GOP leadership Monday afternoon. Earlier in the day the Governor called the new GOP stadium plan a "hare-brained scheme." Wednesday, May 2, 2012. ] GLEN STUBBE * gstubbe@startribune.com DML - Star Tribune](http://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/c44.0.200.200/p200x200/602006_10151541993971337_643763516_n.jpg)
Perhaps if we put them on the Minimum Wage, locked them out of the State Capitol, and brought in replacements from the ranks of the unemployed and made them work as servers in a smoke-filled casino without any rights under terms of at-will employment for a couple years they might come back and do what is right and just by working people by:
- Passing a Minimum Wage that is a real living wage based on all cost of living factors indexed to inflation.
- Passing anti-scab legislation.
- Passing anti-lockout legislation.
- By legislating an end smoking in casinos like all other workplaces.
- By Rescinding and repealing "At-will Employment" legislation.
And, guess what?
None of these reforms would require a tax increase because none of these very modest reforms would cost tax-payers one single penny.
So; why would a party with "labor" and "democratic" in its name, if it were for democracy and working people, not use its newly handed super majority status to make these reforms for the majority--- the working class?
Plus, the simple act of raising the Minimum Wage to a real living wage based on all cost of living factors would solve ALL budget problems the state is experiencing while enabling tax decreases because tens of thousands of working people would be paying taxes based on their improved standard of living rather than being liabilities costing tax payers money.
Interesting; Democrats are CHOOSING to squeeze the working class just like the Republicans do--- kind of makes you wonder if they aren't both working for the same class which profits from the exploitation of labor?
I could ask why these same Democrats with their new super majority have not chosen to substantially increase the taconite tax and stumpage fees on the mining and forestry industries like former governor Rudy Perpich proposed when these Democrats decided to start calling him "Red Rudy" and helped the Republicans drive their own Democrat from office.
The bronze monument on the Minnesota State Capitol grounds honoring Minnesota's first socialist governor, Floyd B. Olson, stands as an example of the kind of socialist politicians we need if we are going to win real meaningful reforms to improve the livelihoods and rights of working people as we gear up to get rid of this rotten capitalist system.
- This MNDFL super majority could also lead the Nation by passing a resolution calling on Obama and Congress to put an end to militarism and these dirty imperialist Wall Street wars squandering the wealth of our Nation.
See: http://www.mnasap.org/ - This MNDFL super majority could also pass a resolution calling for Congress to pass a real "Full Employment Act" to make it mandatory the president and Congress attain and maintain full employment consistent with all these campaign promises of "jobs, jobs, jobs."
See: http://fullemploymentnow.blogspot.com/
Again, none of this requires one single penny from Minnesota tax-payers so what is preventing the MNDFL with its super majority from acting?
If we can't expect and count on these very basic and simple initiatives from the Democrats what can we expect from them?

In memory of Hugo Chavez.
Hugo Chavez' death is very sad; but Chavez did everything he could to make sure the socialist revolution in Venezuela will continue... an all too short life but a life fully and courageously lived.
Alan L. Maki
Statement of condolences about the passing away of the President of the Bolivarian
Republic of Venezuela Hugo Rafael Chávez FrÃas
The World Peace Council expresses its profound grief and sorrow about
the physical disappearance of the leader of the Bolivarian Revolution
and President of Venezuela Hugo Rafael Chávez FrÃas.Statement of condolences about the passing away of the President of the Bolivarian
Republic of Venezuela Hugo Rafael Chávez FrÃas
The entire membership of the WPC and its leadership wish to convey the condolences of the peace loving people and their organisations to the people and government of Venezuela, to our member Organisation, the “Comité de Solidaridad Internacional- COSI” and the family of the late President.
Hugo Chavez served and led the Venezuelan people firmly, improving the life of the workers, peasants, women and youth, using the natural resources of the country for the benefit of the people and proving genuine internationalist solidarity with the peoples of Latin America and the world against the aggressiveness and domination of Imperialism.
With the massive support of the Venezuelan people he resisted the subversive actions and manoeuvres of the local oligarchy and of imperialism, got 4 times elected President of State.
During all his terms the WPC stood by in solidarity with Hugo Chavez, supported the achievements and advances of the peoples’ movement, denouncing the plans and actions like the Coup d’ état of 2002 organized by local and foreign reactionary forces.
Hugo Rafael Chávez FrÃas and the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela stood on the side of the International Anti-imperialist Movement all these years, hosting dozens of international congresses and events, amongst them the Assembly of the WPC where we proclaimed with Hugo Chavez Caracas as the “Capital of Peace and anti-imperialist
struggle” in 2008.
Hugo Chavez will be remembered always by the peoples of world as a genuine and dynamic leader by the future generations.
We express our feelings of sympathy and condolences to his family, the government and people of Venezuela.
Secretariat of World Peace Council
Athens 6th March 2013
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
A Wisconsin Democratic Party politician, Kelley Dee Albrecht, tries to defend the hideous Indian Gaming Industry.
Is
there a reason not one single progressive in Wisconsin has raised
their voices objecting to another 3,000 casino workers being forced to
work in loud, noisy, smoke-filled casinos at poverty wages and without
any rights under state and federal labor laws as a bunch of corrupt
tribal politicians conspire with a bunch of mobsters who own all the
slot machines and table games run off with the profits as most Native
Americans are forced further into the abyss of racist, genocidal
poverty?
Has silence in the face of this kind of massive
injustice become a characteristic of what passes for "progressivism" in
Wisconsin?
Just asking...
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
http://www.jsonline.com/ business/ any-of-states-11-tribes-can-vet o-offreservation-casino-gov-sc ott-walker-7g8vf4k-193869241.h tml
Has silence in the face of this kind of massive injustice become a characteristic of what passes for "progressivism" in Wisconsin?
Just asking...
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council
http://www.jsonline.com/
Like · · · Share · Sunday at 3:11pm
- Dee Ives likes this.
Kelley Dee Albrecht your comments are not factual - "Native American tribal casinos sometimes get excluded from federal laws because the casinos fall under Indian Tribal Government laws. But most federal labor laws do apply to casinos run by the tribes.
Read more: Federal Labor Laws That Apply to Native Casinos | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/list_6603181_federal-laws-apply-native-casinos.html#ixzz2MbzkksNp"
www.ehow.com
Native American tribal casinos sometimes get excluded from federal laws because the casinos fall under Indian Tribal Government laws. But most federal labor laws do apply to casinos run by the tribes. To keep up to date, tribal employers should carefully review these laws and ensure that all policie...- Alan Maki No; you are wrong. Don't give me articles, give me cases. You just go work in a casino and try to get the United States Department of Labor to enforce any law.
In fact, the State of Minnesota was recently cited, as a result of a complaint filed with the United States Department of Labor, for violation of the Family Leave and Medical Act--- the Department of Labor found in their investigation the employer--- the State of Minnesota--- flagrantly not only violated the FMLA but punished workers for availing themselves of the Act. What was done? The United States Department of Labor said they were out of funds and for the workers to hire their own attorney.
I am well aware of how these casinos operate maybe you should go to work in one of these casinos to learn what really goes on instead of running for public office so you know what life is really like for working people.
What is on paper and what is done with what is on paper is two different things.
Try working in one of these hideous casino operations and file a complaint against management with the US Department of Labor and see how long you have a job.
Kelley Dee Albrecht Alan you are generalizing and stereotyping as usual. You stated that there are no laws covering casino employees - I gave you the laws.- Alan Maki Show me where such laws have ever been enforced. Yes, on paper the United States Constitution and Bill of Rights apply, too. In practice it is another matter.
In fact, the mobsters who own the slot machines and the corrupt tribal politicians who have been bought off just like all the other state and federal politicians who created these "Compacts" creating this hideous "Indian Gaming Industry" from which everyone except Indians profit (oh, yes, you are going to say I am generalizing here, too, because for a few very small tribes every member is a millionaire).
The reason there are NO state or federal laws no matter what is being claimed in the article you posted which cites no enforcement of such laws, is because the Indian Gaming Industry is protected just like the mining, power generating and forestry industries by the "Doctrine of Discovery" backed by the United States Supreme Court ruling of "Johnson versus M'Intosh" which assure and protects the stealing of wealth from Indian Nations--- like all wealth, only labor with quite a little help from Mother Nature, the wealth is created by the labor of those employed in the Indian Gaming Industry.
As such, the "Doctrine of Discovery" enforced by "Johnson versus M'Intosh" renders any and all laws regarding protection of workers in this hideous industry null and void and this is why if you ask the United States Department of Labor to see their records relating to their enforcement of federal laws in the Indian Gaming Industry they can't show you one single enforcement on their part of their own laws, rules and regulations.
You picked up an article on the Internet written and published by someone who, like you, has not an inkling of the situation.
Of course, there is a reason why you and so many Democratic politicians try to distort the truth on this issue: you, personally, like other Democrats and more and more Republicans are receiving campaign contributions from this hideously racist, anti-labor industry.
Why don't you come forward showing all the campaign contributions you and other politicians receive in return for defending and promoting the Indian Gaming Industry?
By the way, if the few laws you brought forward were in fact being enforced, why wouldn't all state and federal labor laws be enforced?
And, since you claim you have found several laws supposedly protecting casino workers, why do you turn your back in indifference knowing none of the other laws are being enforced?
Even if I were to be "generalizing and stereotyping as usual" (quite a generalization in and of itself by you), the fact remains that the injustices in this hideously racist and anti-labor industry remain the norm--- something you are intent on denying; again, why would you do this if you are not gaining something from these injustices you are so intent on covering up that you will pick an article off the Internet without even checking to find out if it is factual and true?
I do hope a real progressive, which you are not, with the courage to stand up against racism and for workers' rights is found to run against Vos.
By the way, what is your position on smoking in these casinos? You don't care about the health of casino workers or casino patrons. Where was your voice when Wisconsin politicians were EXCLUDING the Indian Gaming Industry in banning smoking from workplaces?
Don't show me articles from the Internet you haven't even bothered to check if they are factually correct; just state what you did when you had a chance to make a real difference.
Are you aware the majority of casino employees are young women of child-bearing age? Who suffers the worst consequences from second-hand smoke?
Facts and workers' health don't matter to you; not when your campaign contributions are at stake... another one of my generalizations--- but, very true.
- Kelley Dee Albrecht You are not going to bully me into silence Alan. You said there were no laws, I simply corrected that, I said nothing about whether they were enforced or not, again generalizing and stereotyping.
- Alan Maki There are NO laws that are enforceable--- that means as far as workers are concerned there are NO laws.
- Alan Maki I'm curious, Kelley; why haven't you raised your voice to help assure the rights of casino workers are fully protected under state and federal labor laws and this new casino will be smoke-free with the noise levels in accordance with the legal requirements?
- Kelley Dee Albrecht Alan, as you have made clear in your attacks on me, you have no idea who I am and what I have "raised my voice" on at all.
- Alan Maki I know you have defended the Indian Gaming Industry and have NEVER raised your voice in support of casino workers.
If you have stated any support for casino workers post that support right here.
If you have called for the rights of casino workers under state and federal labor laws and that you are for it to be mandatory that this casino be smoke-free with sound levels in compliance with state and federal labor laws post your positions (and those of any other Democratic politicians in Wisconsin) right here for all to see.
Quite frankly, at this point in time, I am not real concerned about anything else you have said other than what you have to say on this specific subject.
And, let me make this very clear; I would not, and have no intent to try to "bully" you into silence. Quite the contrary; I would encourage you to state your position full and completely on the record right here so I can show it to voters should you run again.
You aren't opposed to accountability, are you?
But, whether or not you choose to run for public office, again, you claim to be a progressive public citizen and I am challenging whether or not you are a progressive when it comes to working class concerns, issues and problems since being for worker's rights is the touchstone of progressivism.a few seconds ago · Like
- Kelley Dee Albrecht I did not defend anything Alan, I merely posted a link refuting your claim that casino workers had no rights under state and federal laws. While you live in Minnesota and that may be the case - in Wisconsin Tribal-state compacts recognize the right of tribal casino employees to be represented by a union as their collective bargaining agent.
People in Wisconsin know full well that I fight every day for progressive issues, which includes workers rights, women's rights, the right to affordable health care, and every other battle we have going on here in Wisconsin. I also stand 100% with the Natives and their sovereign treaty rights. - Kelley Dee Albrecht http://www.doa.state.wi.us/section_detail.asp?linkcatid=694&linkid=117&locid=7
www.doa.state.wi.us
The State of Wisconsin has entered into gaming compact agreements with all eleve...See More - Alan Maki I am not concerned at this point with what you do every single day.
Where do you find this in the "Compacts:"
While you live in Minnesota and that may be the case - in Wisconsin Tribal-state compacts recognize the right of tribal casino employees to be represented by a union as their collective bargaining agent.
Begin with the Bad River "Compact."
For now I am concerned with what you do about defending the rights of casino workers in Wisconsin. What was your position when these casinos were allowed to remain full of second-hand smoke while other places of employment were designated as "smoke-free?"
As you are well aware there are no unions representing any casino workers in Wisconsin and I can assure you none of the casino managements in Wisconsin allow or tolerate union organizing.
Bring one single casino manager to this discussion stating they will allow casino workers to organize under the laws, rules and regulations of the National Labor Relations Act and agree to engage in collective bargaining should workers vote for union representation.5 minutes ago · Like
- Sara Johann Alan, honestly, your Podunk commentary about Kelley Albrecht is nothing but a personal attack and such attacks are not appropriate in a forum like this! I personally know that Kelley Albrecht is a VERY STRONG supporter of workers' rights so your claims are absurd!
- Alan Maki Sara; you may think my claims are "absurd" but the fact remains, Kelley Albrecht has INTENTIONALLY brought forward misinformation and outright lies in defense of this hideous Indian Gaming Industry.
I made a post and asked a very simple question.
Kelley Albrecht CHOSE to answer my question with deceit and lies all of her own volition.
For all I know, you may be correct that Kelley Albrecht supports the rights of SOME workers. She definitely does not support the rights of casino workers.
I would note that I can no longer see Kelley Albrecht's comments on here; did she delete her comments or did she block me.
This is not the first time Kelley Albrecht has come forward with this kind of misinformation, deceit and outright lies concerning the injustices casino workers are being subjected to in the Indian Gaming Industry.
As anyone can see and read for themselves, Kelley Albrecht made the claim the right of casino workers to organize is protected by the "Compacts" in Wisconsin--- I am waiting for someone to show me where this is stated; perhaps you, Sara, would like to point this out?
Someone show me where there is such protection.
I have made no personal attack on Kelley Albrecht; I have responded to her misinformation, deceit and outright lies.
Quite frankly, I see no difference between where Wisconsin Democrats stand in relation to the rights of casino workers than where Scott Walker and the Republicans stand in relation to casino workers and all other workers.
That you and Kelley Albrecht do not like me bringing this forward publicly has no bearing on the facts. The facts are what they are; just as I have stated.
I see no one coming forward to answer my original question nor bringing forward any facts to prove my statements wrong.
This is not the first time Kelley Albrecht has chosen to play this kind of dirty and mean game at the expense of the injustices casino workers are suffering which Wisconsin Democrats have done nothing to correct.
Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Councila few seconds ago · Edited · Like
- Richard Schwalb Alan, you and Kelley have a difference of opinion on interpreting laws and policies relevant to the very valid issue that you have raised. That is fine. Please refrain from personal attacks on this page, accusing individuals of lying, etc. Individuals may be misinformed and posting accordingly, or may believe correctly or incorrectly that others on this page are misinformed, and post accordingly. However, everyone active in this group clearly has progressive values at heart, and works in one way or another to promote those values. I don't believe that anyone active in this group is intentionally lying. If you disagree about that, please keep those comments to yourselves. Freely debate the facts and the issues, but please do not impugn each other's honesty or personal character. Many of us are passionate about our progressive activism, but personal attacks and accusations of lying only inflame emotions and divide us. We are attacked more than enough by the enemies of progressivism, and when we go beyond vigorous debate to personal attacks, we help them and hurt ourselves. The 1st amendment protects free speech from interference by government, but these Facebook pages may be moderated in order to keep discussions reasonably civil. As founder of this group, repeated personal attacks will not be tolerated, but I am hopeful that from now on the debate can remain vigorous without such attacks. Please remember, the people united will never be defeated. Solidarity!
- Alan Maki Ok; I am told Kelley Albrecht has blocked me since several other people tell me they can see her posts. I will leave it to others to judge Kelley Albrecht's very cowardly and intellectually dishonest behavior.
My original question stands as asked:
Is there a reason not one single progressive in Wisconsin has not raised their voices objecting to another 3,000 casino workers being forced to work in loud, noisy, smoke-filled casinos at poverty wages and without any rights under state and federal labor laws as a bunch of corrupt tribal politicians conspire with a bunch of mobsters who own all the slot machines and table games run off with the profits as most Native Americans are forced further into the abyss of racist, genocidal poverty?
Richard; we have been through this previously with Kelley Albrecht and many other Wisconsin Democrats.
Kelley's intent is to deceive. It was Kelley who made the claim that the "Compacts" protect the rights of casino workers to organize.
When I asked her to provide the proof of her statement she plunked down a link to the "Compacts;" for what purpose? Is there any mention of anything to do with the rights of casino workers to organize in any of these "Compacts?" NO there is not; and she knows it but plunked down the link to these "Compacts" anyways hoping people would believe her, and not me, while hoping they would not bother to read hundreds of pages. Do you call this kind of deceit when trying to get at the facts honest?
This kind of trickery might be fine in a high school debate class but in this debate people's lives are the issue.
Please don't suggest there is any basis for unity with those who support these casino managements because this makes a mockery of a very sacred progressive tradition.
As for your suggestion that the "First Amendment doesn't apply here on FaceBook" according to you, I think this is a very sad commentary on your part especially since it was Kelley who started feeding the misinformation and you made no attempt to challenge her.
Where is your responsibility as a moderator who wants to maintain civility when you don't step in to suggest people provide facts?
Where is your warning to Kelley asking her to now provide a reason why she plunked down the link to the "Compacts" knowing the question I asked was not answered in these "Compacts?"
Casino workers are walked all over and treated like crap every single day; to think that a person can't ask the original question that I did without being subjected to this kind of abuse is pathetic.
This is NOT about a "difference of opinion;" this about justice versus injustice.
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