Just Cast my Puma Vote!
Posted: November 4, 2008 Filed under: John McCain, New Orleans, No Obama, PUMA | Tags: Exit Polls, Helena Morena, Mary Landrieu, New Orleans, presidential election, Puma Vote 5 CommentsThose of you that know me, know I live in the ninth ward in New Orleans. I live in the inner city and we have the usual inner city problems including gang violence, a lot of drug-related crimes, and not enough money to rebuild our infrastructure and schools just for regular wear and tear. Let’s not even go into the Hurricane Katrina wear and tear. My neighborhood is close to the river, so when the city filled up, we stayed high and dry. However, they still haven’t rebuilt our police station. We also don’t have banks or grocery stores any more. That’s the upper ninth. The lower ninth has less, if that’s possible.
I vote in the local fire house. It was built in the 1920s and the old stables that used to house the horses that pulled the street car named desire and the fire carriages stand silently next to it. There are two precincts that vote in this building. I see the same little southern church ladies each time I vote. The know me because I vote in every election–even the odd ones with just a charter change or replacement for the latest politician caught up and drug off to jail. That’s the thing that makes me most sad about where I live at the moment.
My state senator just resigned for laundering money. Two school board members and a popular city councilman at large are sitting in jail for bribery. The entire country knows about Congressman Dollar Bill Jefferson. He looks like he’ll be re-elected pretty much along straight racial lines. Black folk seem to be mighty forgiving down here. It seems they’ll take any black face over a Hispanic, white or other face no matter what the circumstances. The mistrust of white hegemony makes me feel like the Jim Crow Laws disappeared just yesterday. Black politicians get a wide berth. I’ve learned that lesson over and over down here. In fact, our Mayor Ray Nagin lives more in Dallas than he does here. He comes in late on Monday and is out of here by Thursday night. That says something about the living conditions in your city when your own mayor won’t live in it full time. I have to say that I voted for him the first time, but I didn’t make that mistake again. We call him Mayor Na-GONE for a very good reason. I also think that he’ll eventually run for the Jefferson seat once the federal court finally throws the book at Ol’ Dollar bill. My guess is he’ll be just as worthless of a congressman as he was as a mayor until they wind up having to redraw the state of Louisiana to eliminate one congressional district. Then it might be another ball game.
Until then, we’ll suffer because very few of our leaders actually care about the city or the state it is in. They care about their political career and ability to live large. We’ll also suffer because a lot of the electorate thinks the only qualification one needs here to be effective is the right demographic. It has got me questioning the nature of racism these days. I think it’s all about who is in power and abusing that power for the benefit of ‘your own’. I now see that folks that once suffered from this can inflict it without much thought.
It makes voting disheartening when you’re actually interested in good government. I get tired of watching one person after another get hauled off to jail. I guess ex-Governor Edwards is getting a lot of new company. There’s plenty of folks from the various Louisiana political machines still running for office as well as sitting in jails right now. If you’ve never lived in a realm of political machines, there is no way you know what that does to the folks on the outs. It’s thuggery plain and simple.
Thuggery, abusing racial identities, and machines brings me to the topic of voting in the National Election for obvious reasons. I wore my orange sweater to show my unity with Pumas voting all over our country. I was really surprised that I didn’t have to wait in line. There were only two suprises awaiting me. The first one was this: after voting election after election, the church ladies had this conversation before I entered the booth. The one whose job it always is to clear out the previous vote, turned to the others and asked: “Should I ask her the question?’ Since voting here has become extremely routine, this gave me a bit of a jolt. The ladies nodded and I was asked “Democrat or Republican”? Since there are not two seperate ballots for this election, I found this a very odd question but smiled and said “Democrat”. I secretly smiled and thought, if you’re asking me if i voted Democrat at the top of the ticket, the answer would’ve been no. I guess folks are still thinking we will vote along party lines.
The next thing that happened when I walked out of the fire station was also unique for me. I was asked to fill out an exit poll form for the news agencies. I never vote really early in the morning as a rule but I was trying to avoid lines so I got out the door the minute I’d walked the dog. It was a simple one sheet form with the logos of nearly all the news affiliates across the top. I was asked the usual demographic questions, age, sex, religion, income level, party affiliation, and education level. I was also asked which issues most concerned me ( I said energy policy) and when I made my decision to vote (within the last three days). I was asked to rank what I thought of the George Bush presidency. (Disaster wasn’t available so I had to settle for saying I was extremely dissatisfied). I said I was very worried about the future of the economy–another situation I had to rank. There were also the candidate listing of President, Senator, and House Rep. I put McCain, Landrieu, and Moreno. So when they are slicing and dicing the last minute voters … and they find the democrats for McCain in the exit polls, you will find me in that number. I hope you find me representin’ in the ninth ward for a lot of you out there.
Protest Voting 101
Posted: October 7, 2008 Filed under: Action Memo, Hillary Clinton: Her Campaign for All of Us, New Orleans, No Obama, PUMA, Women's Rights | Tags: No Obama, Protest vote, PUMA, Sexism 4 CommentsPlayer Queen:
Both here and hence pursue me lasting strife,
If once I be a widow, ever I be a wife!
Player King:
‘Tis deeply sworn. Sweet, leave me here a while,
My spirits grow dull, and fain I would beguile
The tedious day with sleep.Player Queen:
Sleep rock thy brain,
And never come mischance between us twain!Hamlet:
Madam, how like you this play?Queen:
The lady doth protest too much, methinks.Hamlet Act 3, scene 2, 222–230
Puma is a protest movement. Our blogs outline our strategies. Our votes are our tactics. I’m not exactly sure how much clearer I can make this but it appears that we have to repeat these simple facts over and over. If we don’t, no one gets us.
The nature of our protest vote is that is exactly that a PROTEST. This means that our friends who can’t understand why we might vote for a candidate that doesn’t have a chance (McKinney or Nader) or a ticket that we may not agree with on many issues (McCain Palin) don’t understand what a PROTEST vote means. Protests voting means your vote is a protest. It simply doesn’t have to make sense to any one else.
I started thinking about this today due to a post by Masslib on Alegre’s blog and a response by Or what Vahalla said.
The premise of a protest vote is that it’s not issues-related.
What I meant to say, put more succintly 🙂
This also hit me in the face when I saw a response to my own posting “The No NO Sisterhood”. A post by Ben Kilpatrick assumed I voted all women during the democratic run-off in Louisiana just because I was woman who votes for women as a means to discriminate against men.
Just voting for women is the same as just voting for the black guy, or the republican guy, or or or
And it’s about as smart a move as all of those.
My vote was a protest against the treatment of women candidates this year. I did not vote for all women because as a woman, I was voting for ALL women. I voted for all women as a protest. I did not like the way Hillary was treated. I do not like the way Sarah Palin is being treated. I will not stand for Helena Morena being treated similarly either. Already, it is starting. A blog for the local New Orleans business newspaper picked up one quote from my two day postings concerning the second congressional race and all my comments about Ms. Moreno. You can read it here. The only line the blog picked up from me about Helena was that most folks here were calling her the “little white girl in the race” which I view as confusing folks on her mixed white/Latina heritage and belittling her status as a woman by calling her ‘girl’.
I’m still thinking about what kind of protest vote I will make this year when I step in the booth to vote for President. I know I will not vote for Obama. I will not vote for the issues, for once, because I am protesting how he got the nomination, I am protesting how the DNC actively and underhandedly promoted him over a much more qualified and able woman, and how he has been given a HUGE pass by the MSM. I know many of my PUMA friends will vote for McCain Palin, others will just skip the vote, others will still vote for Hillary, and some will vote for third party candidates.
We do not have to explain the ‘logic’ of our vote over and over and over again. It’s not about the issues (like Roe v. Wade), it’s not about the economy, and it’s certainly not about voting party lines. It’s a protest vote. As such, it only has to make sense to us!
I think we need to take some time and rethink why we view our votes as protests this year. This is especially true if you’re thinking of drinking that koolaid and falling prey to the logic of voting on issues at this point. Puma ceases to become a protest movement at that point. It’s effectiveness at supporting reform within the democratic party has no teeth at the point we stop protesting.
There is no such thing for PUMAs as ladies (or gentlemen) protesting too much at this point. Afterall, it is our democracy at stake.
(cross-posted at The Confluence)
Join the NO NO Sisterhood!
Posted: October 5, 2008 Filed under: Action Memo, New Orleans, PUMA, Women's Rights | Tags: Helena Moreno, New Orleans Congress Race, No NO Sisterhood, Second District Congressional Race in Louisiana, Women Politicians 15 CommentsI voted in the Democratic run-off yesterday in Louisiana. I did something that I haven’t done for a long time. I went down the list of candidates for judgeships and the various other races and voted for all the women. Something tells me I wasn’t alone in this when I heard second congressional district candidate Helena Moreno’s speech after she placed second after $Bill Jefferson and ahead of five well known black male politicians vying for the position. She had a lot of cross-over vote here in a city where the politics of race is pervasive. She’s a latina and has been frequently labelled as “that little white girl” in the race. Her cross-over vote came from black women. This year may yet be known as the REAL year of the woman when a female awakening turns the tide against misogyny and sexism.
Our mantra could be something to the effect of “We’re bitter, we vote, get out of office!”
Helena Moreno has been in New Orleans about 8 years. She quit her job as a news anchor in March to run for office. As a journalist, she was frequently out on the beat looking for corruption and places where things don’t quite work for people. Since this is New Orleans, Moreno never ran out of material. Moreno also lived through Hurricane Katrina and learned its lessons well.
While she does have great name recognition and quite a presence, she is considered the underdog in this race because of the politics of racial identity. That is unless the politics of being a woman in what has arguably been a brutal year for women creates a NO NO sisterhood. That is what I want to see: a movement where all women stand up together and say “NO, he didn’t!” I hope this year we just don’t wag our fingers and speak our indignation then vote for folks who promise to be marginally less worse on the issues we care about. In the No NO Sisterhood, we vote our interests and write checks to support women’s campaigns to ensure our voices our heard and acted on. I’m thinking we should adopt that old women’s fist raised in the symbol of woman with a slight change. The middle finger should be raised to the media and politicians who practice the politics of beating up on women.
During the primary, Moreno had a number of typical dirty tricks pulled on her–including the usual things like hiring Robo phone calls that say you’re from her campaign at all hours and times of day to harass folks and turn them off. She also became the victim of a whisper campaign that went more public. During a televised debate an exchange between Moreno and State Rep. Cedric Richmond turned into a shouting match. Richmond is currently fighting against a suspension of his law license for using a nonprimary residence to run for a city council seat. This exchange happened shortly after Moreno called him out on the pending case. Here’s the script as reported by the Times Picayune.
“Would everyone up here, Miss Moreno specifically, would you be willing to submit to a random drug test?” Richmond asked, noting that many job applicants face such screening…The nasty confrontation ended with Moreno, stung by what she called Richmond’s outrageous “suggestion” that she uses drugs, marching out of WDSU-TV’s downtown New Orleans’ studios and into a nearby clinic, where she voluntarily submitted to a drug test.She quickly delivered the results — a clean reading — to The Times-Picayune.
There’s been a lot of interesting coverage of this race, and as Ms. Moreno takes on $Bill Jefferson, it is bound to get a whole lot more interesting. That is why I am asking you to not only follow what happens, but to help Helena. She’s running in New Orleans and in Louisiana. Politics down here are not only interesting, but can be very brutal.
Here’s her website: Moreno for Congress
Please join me at the NO NO Sisterhood at Act Blue to support Helena Moreno and other fine women candidates.
I think this year has taught us that we cannot rely on many of the current members of the DNC to protect our interests. We need to send some more women to congress, now.
(Cross-posted at the Confluence)
Speaking of Down Ticket …or is that a Downer Ticket?
Posted: October 4, 2008 Filed under: New Orleans | Tags: Dollar Bill Jefferson, New Orleans politics, Second District Race 4 CommentsSo you think the candidates at the top of the ticket look like Hobson’s choice? Let me show you what’s going on with the 2nd District of Louisiana Congressional District. That district would be $Bill Jefferson’s district and the folks trying to unseat him. I’m supposed to vote some time before 7 p.m today in the run-off. As usual, I watch the debates to try to look for clues. I remain clueless. But here’s some of the highlights so you can feel better about where EVER it is that you live.
Of course, you remember cold cash Jefferson. He’s the congressman found with all that money stashed in the refrigerator in his Georgetown house. He’s currently trying to get the case thrown out because the FBI was interfering with his Congressional duties so his indictment, he argues, is unconstitutional. (For more of his escapades you can read the Gambit link below. He and family members are quite entangled with the law at the moment.) He’s rated below all the freshmen congressman in terms of efficacy and finally, New Orleans appears ready for a change. Here’s the alternatives to Dollar Bill.
The group of contenders: Kenya Smith, front left to right, Helena Moreno, andJames Carter, Cedric Richmond, back left to right, Troy Carter, and Byron Lee listen to moderator Norman Robinson during a debate at the WDSU studios for the candidates in the race for the 2nd Congressional District on Friday.
Let me just mention first, that Cedric Richmond was once a protege of $Bill Jefferson and is currently the state rep from the northeastern side of New Orleans. He endorsed Jefferson last time but is challenging him this time. He has quite a following in New Orleans East and is fairly well thought of in the legislature. Here’s some of the interesting back ground on him, however.
Step taken to suspend Richmond’s law license
Posted by The Times-Picayune October 23, 2007 4:54PM
By Gwen Filosa
Staff writerA committee of the Louisiana Attorney Disciplinary Board has recommended a one-year suspension of State Rep. Cedric Richmond’s law license as punishment for falsely claiming in 2005 that he lived in New Orleans’ District D in a failed attempt to run for the City Council.
The committee concluded that Richmond filed a sworn statement reflecting his home address in the 2005 council race “which most fitted his need at the time but which was not accurate.”
Helena Moreno quit her job as a news anchor recently to run for this position. She doesn’t need to fund raise since her family is quite wealthy and underwriting her campaign. Here’s a kicker. She’s Hispanic and is best known for being “that little white girl in the race”. Richmond and Moreno got into at the debate. She took a swipe at him for the action under consideration by the state supreme court mentioned above. His retort later?
“Would everyone up here, Miss Moreno specifically, would you be willing to submit to a random drug test?” Richmond asked, noting that many job applicants face such screening…The nasty confrontation ended with Moreno, stung by what she called Richmond’s outrageous “suggestion” that she uses drugs, marching out of WDSU-TV’s downtown New Orleans’ studios and into a nearby clinic, where she voluntarily submitted to a drug test.She quickly delivered the results — a clean reading — to The Times-Picayune.
Evidently, rumor had it that Ms. Moreno enjoys cocaine. I wouldn’t know but she vehemently agreed to take any test given. I don’t even pretend to run with the beautiful people down here so this was news to me. However, a local political talking head calls Morena Jefferson’s dream candidate … basically because she is Hispanic which puts voting by racial identity into play.
I did see the exchange on WDSU as well as read comments later. It didn’t put Richmond in the best light as far as I was concerned. I will admit that I was leaning towards him before that or Morena simply because I like supporting women candidates. The two of them appear very close to Jefferson in the polls and one or two of them may make it through tonight.
James Carter is my city councilman and just got the position two years ago. He seems to be attracting some of the endorsements Moreno hasn’t received basically because he’s really done nothing that any one can take a swing at. In other words, he has little accomplishments under his belt and has done little to offend any one as a result. He basically goes along and gets along. Did I mention James failed out of Southern University Law School and had to take the bar six times before passing it?
Next up is Bryon James who is the cousin of my state senator, Derrick Shephard. Shepard just got arrested for some domestic squabbling and is now living in his mother’s house under house arrest due to the fact he is also under indictment for money laundering and getting into fist fights with your girl friend violates your parole terms. He supposedly money laundered for a client that was sent to him by none other than $Bill Jefferson in what seemed to be a pay-off for supporting Jefferson’s run against State Senator Karen Carter (no relation to James or Troy) in 2006. Shephard also ran against Jefferson and Carter and was peeved he didn’t make the run-off. Bryon’s a city councilman from Jefferson Parish and considered a “political ally” of Shepard. Whatever that means.
The New Orleans Weekly Paper Gambit also mentions this tidbit:
“He has one other weakness: his controversial handling of the distribution of hundreds of thousands in slush-fund dollars from a Jefferson Parish landfill. Some of his own constituents have griped that he gives too much to nonprofits with which he or his allies have ties.”
Troy Carter used to be a city councilman and his turned into a perpetual candidate recently. He has a very loyal following, but unfortunately for him, they never amount to more than about 10% of the electorate. This is mostly because he’s really not known for doing anything other than providing his services for partial ownership in a business. Sit in a bar room long enough and mention his name and dozens of folks will come up with a unique story about that. No kidding. I suppose this is quite entrepreneurial of him. However, I’m not sure that’s part of the above board benefits of being a city council member.
Kenya Smith is a former aide to New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin. He and the mayor are under some clouds at the moment for living a little too large off of the city’s credit cards. Plus, he’s an aide to Mayor Nagin. I think that just about does it for him. Mayor Nagin’sjudgement is about as solid as quicksand.
So, let me remind you, former Governor Edwin Edwards is still sitting in Federal prison. You remember him, David Duke was the candidate the Republicans ran against him that last time? Oh, speaking of Republicans, let’s not forget the little trysts of Bob Livingston and David Vitter. Republicans have such interesting sex lives for being so hyper-religious. Maybe there’s some genetic link between the two characteristics. Too bad it’s Mary’s turn to run this year, because I would really enjoy finding more about Vitter, his diaper fetish, and the hookers in Washington.
Oh, the joys of Louisiana politics. While, I have a few more hours to decide what to do, maybe you have better stories than me about your downticket candidates. I doubt it, but a girl can hope can’t she?
For more fun, follow this link. Some of the blog comments are just priceless.
Banksy’s Gifts to the Ninth Ward …
Posted: September 11, 2008 Filed under: New Orleans | Tags: banksy, graffiti art, New Orleans 5 CommentsIf you’ve followed any of my New Orleans-related posts, you know i live in the ninth ward and you’ve read
about NOLA rising, the Grey Ghost, and urban art. Well, in honor of the third anniversary of Katrina, infamous British grafitti artist Banksy blessed us with his incredible art. He even took on the Grey Ghost!!! Here’s a sampling of his work and links to give you some more information. Folks in the neighborhood are scrambling to ensure these whimsical marvels become permanent installations.
Banksy’s website:
http://www.banksy.co.uk/outdoors/horizontal_1.htm
Times Picayune on the works here by British Grafitti artist Banksy:
http://videos.nola.com/times-picayune/2008/09/banksy_i_presume.html
http://blog.nola.com/living/2008/09/graffiti_art_update.html
More On Banksy and the New Orleans Installations:
One of the works (the marching band shown at the bottom of this this thread) was already painted over by the custodian of the abandoned building. Say good bye to a great piece of art, let alone the price that original Banksy’s can fetch! Not only did it beautifully capture some of the best of New Orleans Culture, it was probably worth hundereds of thousands of dollars. The “National Looters” shown above was recently covered by plywood yesterday. Driving by it today, the plywood is down. My understanding is that the owner of the building is trying to protect this piece. (Smart and savvy person that one!) They are still searching out locations of several of the works seen on Banksy’s website–including a helmet morphed into a turtle and a little girl screaming from atop a chair at the trademark Banksy rat. This rat uses a crack in plaster exposing the bricks for its body. One of the Banksy’s has also been damaged. The link above to gawker talks about that senseless act.
Banksy’s sense of humor is in full play here. He obviously has used the Grey Ghost (Fred Radtke) for the basis of this statement on the anti-grafitti artists block out of grafitti in New Orleans with gray swaths of paint.










Recent Comments