Wingnuts and Geography Lessons

Well, yet another Republican debate went down tonight. This one was held in Las Vegas and broadcast by CNN.  High winds took out my electricity earlier so I’ve had to play catch up.  Here’s some of the more memorable moments.  Some one woke Perry up for this one.

The former pizza company CEO is the latest and unlikeliest phenomenon in the race to pick a Republican rival for President Barack Obama. A black man in a party that draws few votes from Africans Americans, he had bumped along with little notice as Romney sought to fend off one fast-rising rival after another.

That all changed in the past few weeks, after Perry burst into the race and then fell back in the polls. However unlikely Cain’s rise, Tuesday night’s debate made clear that none of his rivals are willing to let him go unchallenged.

“Herman, I love you, brother, but let me tell you something, you don’t need to have a big analysis to figure this thing out,” Perry said to Cain. “Go to New Hampshire where they don’t have a sales tax and you’re fixing to give them one,” he said, referring to the state that will hold the first primary early next year.

Mitt pulled a power body move.

The two men talked over one another, and at one point, Romney placed his hand on Perry’s shoulder.

“It’s been a tough couple of debates for Rick. And I understand that so you’re going to get nasty,” he said.

As Perry continued to speak, Romney stopped him: “You have a problem with allowing someone to finish speaking, and I suggest that if you want to become president of the United States, you’ve got to let both people speak,” he said.

Michelle Bachmann seems to have managed to get through a number of schools without knowing  that Libya is  in Africa.

Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) criticized President Obama’s foreign policy during Tuesday night’s CNN debate, saying, “Now with the president, he put us in Libya. He is now putting us in Africa. We already were stretched too thin, and he put our special operations forces in Africa,” she said.

Libya, it should be noted, is in Africa.

Ron Paul doesn’t too be concerned about Jewish voters or for that matter, about North Korea.

Foreign policy took a secondary role in the debate, and the new strain of Republican isolationism quickly surfaced.

Paul said U.S. troops should be withdrawn from Korea — where they have been stationed for more than 50 years — and foreign aid to Israel cut.

Perry said it was “time to have a very serious discussion about defunding the United Nations.

Huntsman wasn’t there (not that any one noticed) because he’s boycotting Nevada. I’m assuming Santorum and Gingrich were there, but I can’t be sure since no one seems to have written anything about them.

The opener for Saturday Night Live should be great this week.  I wonder if I’ll be able to catch in on the airplane coming back from Denver.

Whatever has happened to the party of Eiswenhower, Teddy Roosevelt and Lincoln!


The outlook wasn’t brilliant for the Mudville nine that day

Just a quick post before I go underground for a few days.  It’s a long way to November 2012 in political years, but what does this headline say to you and to Team Obama?  It looks like Mighty Barrack is up to bat to me.

Poll: Herman Cain, Rick Perry, Mitt Romney All Beat Obama

Here’s how much political trouble President Obama is in: A new poll by the authoritative Evolving Strategies firm finds that Herman Cain, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, and Mitt Romney would all beat Obama it the election were held today.

Worse for Obama: the poll, which showed some 1,000 Americans videos of both Obama and the candidates speaking on the economy, backed up recent analysis that the president has lost his mojo when it comes to tackling the deepening recession and blaming Republicans for standing in his way.

Evolving Strategies put the video spin on their poll because most of the Republican presidential candidates still aren’t known outside of Washington, the early primary and caucus states and to political junkies. Their idea was to show respondents a video clip and have them read a short 120-word biography.

From Evolving Stratgies and it’s from FOX so I apologize for the brain burn that logo will inflict.

You have to realize that none of these folks probably have been paying attention to some of the crazier things that folks like Herman Cain and Rick Perry have been saying.  Voters probably haven’t been attention to the debates, blogs, or Sunday Talk shows.  It’s foot ball season and the lead up to the World Series after all.  The one thing this shows is that Republicans are still trying to find some one other than Romney.
 


Republican Waterloo

Well, I’d say it’s about over for Rick Perry.  Who on earth is preparing this man for these debates?  Guess who his concluding comment came from?  The funny thing is that he actually ripped the phrase off from Rick Santorum who ran away from it once he figured out its source; Langston Hughes.

Rick Perry turned in another underwhelming performance at tonight’s GOP presidential debate in Dartmouth on Tuesday night and signed off by quoting the title of a pro-union, pro-racial justice, and pro-immigrant poem written by Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes, titled “Let America Be America Again.”

The debate format was meant to be a ’round table’ but all I could see were square pegs.  A lot of the focus was on Mitt Romney who just earned the endorsement of Chris Christie.  Christie also defended Mitt’s faith against earlier value voters hatred.  Cain offered up a plan that is bound to put the economy into a tail spin and make the deficit worse.  Republican and Reagan adviser Bruce Bartlett criticized it today.  Most economists are appalled.

Herman Cain, the former chief executive of the Godfather’s Pizza chain, has been enjoying a surge in polls, buoyed by his victory in a Florida straw poll and by wary conservatives who are seeking an alternative to Mr. Romney and Mr. Perry. He calls his signature economic proposal his “9-9-9 Plan”; as described on his website, it would eliminate the capital gains tax, the payroll tax and the inheritance tax and put in place a flat 9 percent tax on businesses, a 9 percent tax on personal income, and a new 9 percent federal sales tax on top of existing state and local sales taxes.

Mr. Cain’s frequent invocations of his “9-9-9 Plan” often get applause, but some economists warn that it would likely increase the deficit without providing many benefits. Bruce Bartlett, who held senior policy roles in the administrations of President Ronald Reagan and President George H.W. Bush and who has become a critic of much recent Republican economic thinking, examined the Cain plan in a post on The New York Times’s Economix blog. He concluded that “the poor would pay more while the rich would have their taxes cut, with no guarantee that economic growth will increase and good reason to believe that the budget deficit will increase.”

Rumors about Bachmann’s campaign and its lack of funds led to speculation that this might be her last debate appearance.  She offered up some even nuttier economics plans.  I have no idea why these folks haven’t figured out that sustained tax cuts do nothing but make the deficit worse. Evidently they only took courses in voodoo and faith-based economic policy because not one of them has anything that’s based in empirical evidence.

Representative Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, who catapulted herself into contention in the race with a well-received debate performance over the summer but who has struggled to capture attention as her standing in the polls has ebbed, released her own economic plan Tuesday, before the debate. Its first provision calls for letting American companies repatriate the cash they have parked abroad without paying taxes. Her Web site maintains that such a tax holiday, which many companies are lobbying hard for, would “provide valuable capital for the job creators in this country and pump tremendous amounts of money into our economy.”

But when Congress and the Bush administration offered companies a similar tax incentive to repatriate money in 2005, studies found, it did not spur employment. The vast majority of the money that was brought back to the United States was returned to shareholders in the form of dividends and stock buybacks, according to a study by the nonpartisan National Bureau of Economic Research. So far, all of the Republican presidential candidates have taken a hard line against any tax increases, putting them at odds with what many voters have been telling pollsters this year. But the people most likely to vote in Republican primaries are also most likely to oppose tax increases.

Santorum’s economic plan is to go “to war with China”.

At Tuesday’s The Washington Post/Bloomberg Republican presidential debate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum declared that he actually wanted “to go to war with China.”

Fellow candidate Mitt Romney promised that if elected, he would immediately label China as a currency manipulator, but added, “I don’t want a trade war with anybody.”

“You know, Mitt, I don’t want to go to a trade war,” Santorum remarked. “I want to beat China. I want to go to war with China and make America the most attractive place in the world to do business.”

I’ll say one thing for this group of nitwits.  They sure are making Mitt Romney look sane. Just one more question.  Does any one really know why Newt Gingrich is still there?


Searching for that New Brand of Crazy that will Sell

You have to hand it to today’s Republican Party.  They still want the crazy and they’re just looking for it in all the right places.  Much of it has been on display at the values (sic) voters hatefest, the recent presidential debates, and Sunday news talk shows.  The problem is that when it gets exposed to daylight there’s so much crazy that the mainstream runs.  They’ve got to find a brand of crazy that sells.

Every time one of these folks burbles up towards Mitt Romney we get to see the new crazy flavor of the month. They’ve already been there done that with Bachmann and Perry.  The Bachmann-in-your-face-kind-of-crazy has led to a complete implosion of a campaign that went surprisingly well until Iowa.  Perry has been wilting under the spotlight.  His debate performances have been terrible and all kinds of his nutjob supporters have been doing a great job horrifying the country by speaking out for him and introducing him proudly.  Let’s not forget Ron Paul.  He’s the perpetual nutty nut flavor of each campaign season. The Republican presidential contenders have been just one big bowl of Granola full of fruits, flakes and nuts.

So, the deal is that they really really don’t want Mitt Romney who they don’t trust for a variety of reasons.  Hence, we’re seeing product testing.  So, the next nutty goodness to rise to the top of the taste test is Herman Cain.  He’s been a perfect tool for a party trying to prove that it’s not racist.  That’s been hard to do given the presence of Ron Paul and Rick Perry. Then there was Haley Barbour who spent part of his time inkling a presidential run by defending a hate group.  Well, let’s not be coy.  Those last three are the loci of hate group central.

Ron Paul has a long history of being supported by Storm Front and using state’s rights to argue that the Jim Crow laws really shouldn’t have been removed. He’s got a long line of writing racist memes in his news letters and has a well  stated position on getting rid of the 1964 civil rights act.  Here’s just one recent example of his toe-dipping into the realm of white supremacists group.  He actually invited a long time activist in the League of the South to testify to his subcommittee overseeing the Fed.

One of the witnesses invited to testify was Thomas DiLorenzo, a longtime activist in the neo-Confederate hate group, League of the South (LOS). The LOS advocates for a second Southern secession and a society dominated by “Anglo-Celts” – that is, white people. LOS leaders have called slavery “God-ordained” and described segregation as necessary to the racial “integrity” of black and white alike. DiLorenzo also is an economics professor at Baltimore’s Loyola College.

According to the Washington Post, “when Paul opened up the hearing to questions from committee members, Rep. Lacy Clay (D-Mo.) directly took on DiLorenzo for his membership in the League of the South,” pointing to the designation of the LOS as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Clay also cited DiLorenzo’s many revisionist works about the Civil War and Lincoln, including “More Lies about the Civil War,” “In Defense of Sedition,” and “The First Dictator-President,” which examines “how Lincoln’s myth has corrupted America.

I suppose we don’t need to go into Perry since stuff is coming out on him more and more all the time.  The ranch name thing is just the latest of the dirty laundry hitting the light of day.  He’s often been heard touting secession for Texas and supports the Sons of Confederate Veterans in their search to put Confederate symbols on everything.

So, it’s only convenient that the next great Republican crazy flavor is Herman Cain. Maybe he can prove that the Republicans have left Nixon’s Southern Strategy in the History Books.  He’s being used to inoculate racists in the party.  Notice that I’m not saying all Republicans support institutional racism or are personally racist.  Cain can get away with saying things like black people are “brainwashed” and racism isn’t a problem.  He does this all while ginning up fear of sharia’h law and Muslims.  Oh, and he’s not too friendly on immigration either.  Can we please extend the racism conversation to include a few more folks of color so we can add him into the Republican’s mix of homophobia, gynophobia, islamophobia, and xenophobia?  Let’s just show a few of his recent hits via Susie Madrak at C&L and the Christine Amanpour interview.  Here’s example one.

AMANPOUR: Let me move on to some things that you’ve said. Right after the debate in Florida, you told Wolf Blitzer of CNN that, basically, African-Americans, blacks in this country had been brainwashed over the years into supporting Democrats.

CAIN: Yes.

AMANPOUR: I mean, isn’t that really an inflammatory thing to say? I mean, do you really believe that African-Americans, blacks, are so easily manipulated?

CAIN: I also said in that same interview…

AMANPOUR: No, but let me you ask about that. That word is very inflammatory.

CAIN: It is. I’m going to answer your question. I also said the good news is a large percentage of black people are thinking for themselves. Now, I think that — if the word is inflammatory, that’s too bad. It is true. And here’s why: because some black people won’t even listen to someone who appears to be a conservative or a Republican. I call that brainwashing.

Here’s example two.

CAIN: Some people would infuse Sharia law in our court system if we allow it. I honestly believe that. So even if he calls me crazy, I am going to make sure that they don’t infuse it little by little by little. It’s not going to be some grand scheme, little by little. So I don’t mind if he calls me crazy. I’m simply saying…

AMANPOUR: You’re sticking to it?

CAIN: I’m sticking to it. American laws in American courts, period.

Any one who insists that “judeo-christian” traditions be put into law would essentially be arguing for sharia law too given that things like prohibition against usury is based in shared Abrahamic traditions.  That’s just one example.  I doubt Cain or most of his friends even know the huge tenets implied in sharia. They only assume it’s not “American” when their pet religious traditions are acceptable.  This wreaks of the same kinds of arguments they used to use on Jewish and Catholic faiths.  Right now, Cain and all his Republican pals are trying to avoid the attacks by their base on Mormons.

Perhaps most astounding to me is Herman Cain’s joke that our immigration policies should consist of a great wall of china and an alligator moat. This was as telling to me as Bobby Jindal’s pedophilia joke.  There’s jokes and then there’s tasteless jokes at other people’s expense.

Transcript: “I just got back from China. Ever heard of the Great Wall of China? It looks pretty sturdy. And that sucker is real high. I think we can build one if we want to! We have put a man on the moon, we can build a fence! Now, my fence might be part Great Wall and part electrical technology…It will be a twenty foot wall, barbed wire, electrified on the top, and on this side of the fence, I’ll have that moat that President Obama talked about. And I would put those alligators in that moat!”

So, here’s the statement on his policy outside the context of that strange joke in terms of a slap in the face to Rick Perry.  Oh, btw, we’re supposed to get a sense of humor to understand the joke.  Isn’t that what they all say?  This isn’t an immigration policy per se, it’s more like a paramilitary strategy.

Cain’s suggestion that immigration law enforcement should simply be turned over to the states is just another example of his naive understanding of both foreign policy and the Constitution.

As the Supreme Court established almost 70 years ago, the states have very little business weighing into immigration policy because “[e]xperience has shown that international controversies of the gravest moment, sometimes even leading to war, may arise from real or imagined wrongs to another’s subjects inflicted, or permitted, by a government.” If a single state mangles an immigration prosecution, for example, or directs disparate resources against the citizens of one nationality, it will impact the foreign relations of the entire United States — potentially even thrusting America into a needless war. The Constitution leaves these kinds of decisions up to a leader who has actually been elected by the whole nation, and not to the governor of just one state.

Nevertheless, Cain’s weak understanding of law and policy is apparently quite appealing to the kind of voters who cheer death and boo U.S. servicemembers. A new Fox News poll shows previous frontrunner Rick Perry hemorrhaging support — more than one third of his previous supporters ditched his candidacy in the wake of Perry’s defense of humane treatment for immigrants — while Cain has surged 11 points to third place in the GOP primary.

Perry, like the Chamber of Commerce, loves him some cheap labor.  Cain’s strategy is to let states use law enforcement to “repel the invader”.  I think we can safely say that the invader is still that age old use of “other” as tribe enemy.

At this point, you should be asking yourself why Herman Cain talks so much about race if it’s not such a big deal in this country.  Aren’t an awful lot of Cain’s comments aimed at race and continually saying it’s no big deal? So what I want to know is why is it  okay for Herman Cain to play the race card?  Is Cain seeing that this is some kind of trump card that Republicans can use against the Obama campaign’s prior use? What does this buy him?  Do I have to give my mom’s lecture on two wrongs not making a right?

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Saturday Morning Reads: Our Future. Our Selves.

Leymah Gbowee

Good Morning!

I admit to a growing fascination with Leymah Gbowee since hearing several interviews with her after the announcement that she is one of three women sharing the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize.  She is just one of those take charge and get it done women if there ever was one!  I am now itching to see “Pray the Devil Back to Hell”.  This is a documentary by  filmmaker Abigail Disney.  Here is a link to a 2009 report from Bill Moyers Journal on the 2008 film.  Yes, Abigail Disney comes from THAT family but the movie is a long ways away from animated princesses and singing animals.  You can watch the Moyers piece here to get a feel for Gbowee’s commitment to social justice in Liberia.

Women’s News Network updated their recent interview with Gbowee on her work to secure reproductive and sexual rights of African women as well as her efforts to assure peace in Liberia.  She also addresses the needs of American women in the interview.  Yes.  We can learn many things from the struggles of women in developing nations for basic rights as we see the daily erosion of our own.  Did you ever believe you would live a country where the whims of a druggist can dictate your access to prescribed medicine?

In Gbowee’s estimation, American women also have challenges that need to be addressed. This topic came up in response to our conversation about CEDAW, and the inability for the agreement to get national traction. She referenced the disadvantages that come from not signing the international treaty. Totally frank in her assessment questioning America’s ability to provide cogent leadership on women’s issues, Gbowee pointed to matters that leaders “don’t want to tackle.”

She said, “If a President or Secretary of State is standing up and making statements about the rapes in Congo, and that same country has not signed a document that is so important to the lives of their women —what other name do you give it but hypocrisy?”

Part of our exchange included how important it was for those working to help women under siege, to truly engage in an equal dialogue. “There is a need to speak to the women of these countries,” Gbowee said. She told me a story about a trip she had taken to Congo where she had spoken with women on the ground, and learned that for them “rape was at the bottom of the list.”

At the top — was “political participation.” For those women, “rape is a symptom of an actual issue.” She continued, “We want to help. But we need to step out of our donor driven issues and step into what it is that these communities actually want.”

Yes. Gbowee’s  got me thinking on how United States women are losing ground daily. She is right.  Our country has not signed on to CEDAW.  What does this say about a President that MS magazine labelled a feminist?  This link takes you to the Text of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women.   Why is our country not a signatory? Why are our rights not a priority?

The Convention defines discrimination against women as “…any distinction, exclusion or restriction made on the basis of sex which has the effect or purpose of impairing or nullifying the recognition, enjoyment or exercise by women, irrespective of their marital status, on a basis of equality of men and women, of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural, civil or any other field.”

By accepting the Convention, States commit themselves to undertake a series of measures to end discrimination against women in all forms, including:

  • to incorporate the principle of equality of men and women in their legal system, abolish all discriminatory laws and adopt appropriate ones prohibiting discrimination against women;
  • to establish tribunals and other public institutions to ensure the effective protection of women against discrimination; and
  • to ensure elimination of all acts of discrimination against women by persons, organizations or enterprises.

 The Convention provides the basis for realizing equality between women and men through ensuring women’s equal access to, and equal opportunities in, political and public life — including the right to vote and to stand for election — as well as education, health and employment.  States parties agree to take all appropriate measures, including legislation and temporary special measures, so that women can enjoy all their human rights and fundamental freedoms.

It seems that a country as advanced as ours would consider the rights of half of its citizens to be extremely important, wouldn’t it?  However, that doesn’t appear to be the priority of many folks in government outside of the US State Department.  Here is a youtube of SOS Clinton saying that the treaty is a priority of the Obama administration.  Why haven’t we signed it?

American women are experiencing an incredible set back in rights.  Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius spoke at an  abortion rights  fundraiser on Wednesday where she issued a strong warning against moves by Republicans to roll back women’s health gains by 50 years.  Women are being sent back to chattel status in state after state.

“We’ve come a long way in women’s health over the last few decades, but we are in a war,” Sebelius said at a NARAL Pro-Choice America luncheon attended by about 300 people, who gave some of their loudest applause at her mention of the Obama administration’s support for requiring insurance plans to cover birth control without copays.

Sebelius said women have suffered discrimination by insurance companies that considered “Viagra an essential medication and birth control a lifestyle choice.”

Her message resonated with some at the event who acknowledged doubts about Obama’s leadership on a variety of liberal issues.

“I’m a little disappointed with his force, his forcefulness, pretty much across the board,” Chicagoan Bamboo Solzman said of Obama. Sebelius’ remarks at Wednesday’s event solidified Solzman’s support of Obama’s re-election, she said. “He was forward enough to choose her, so that does help,” Solzman said.

We are clearly losing ground.  While women in the administration are being sent out to do heartfelt speeches, nothing is being done to protect our rights.  Speeches do not protect women and children from the brutalities of fundamentalist religions and the economic realities of sex-based discrimination.  Neoconfederate Ron Paul is just one among many Republican presidential contenders that wants to eliminate access to something as simple as basic birth control.  The fight is not just for our right to abortion.  It is for our right to birth control and self determination.

“I am deeply troubled by the flippancy with which President Obama recently discussed regulations that are alarming and troublesome for many Americans,” Paul said. “Not all Americans are comfortable with the Obama administration’s decision to mandate coverage of birth control and morning-after pills, and the considerations of these people, many of them Christian conservatives, are worthy of careful consideration – not mockery.”

“Many, like me, view this rigid regulatory overstep from which there is inadequate opportunity to self-exempt as payback to Planned Parenthood and big pharmaceutical companies for their support of Obamacare,” Paul added. “Many others oppose it out of strict moral conviction and their voices should be heard at least to the extent that an authentic opportunity to exempt be provided. That is, until Obamacare is repealed in its entirety.”

“As this mandate violates the conscience of millions of pro-life Americans, I have introduced in Congress H.R. 1099, the Taxpayer Freedom of Conscience Act, which removes all federal funding for domestic and international family planning,” Paul continued. “As President, I plan to defund Obamacare and all federal programs that use tax money taken from the American people to promote abortion and provide abortion services domestically and globally. I pledge also to veto any bill with funding for Planned Parenthood or any other international family planning regimes.”

Any of us can have deeply felt beliefs against the death penalty, against invasions of nations, and against assassination without due process of American citizens, yet none of our concerns are met with similar angst and pearl clutching.  Only the fetus fetishists get to object to using their puny tax dollars for every one.  If they don’t want abortions or birth control, they just shouldn’t get them.  That should have nothing to do with our access  Their views preclude the findings of modern science and medicine and they are ruling the day.

Most Republican presidential wannabes spent their week pandering to so called “values voters” at a summit cum hatefest.   Clearly, this political movement is out to define every one’s personal choices to meet their maxims. They have declared an open war on women’s rights.  Rick Perry’s Endorser called Mitt Romney’s faith a “cult” and referred to Planned Parenthood as “a slaughterhouse for the unborn”.  This is nothing more than hate speech dressed up in a pastor’s robe.

It was no ordinary opener from the prominent Southern Baptist Convention leader, Pastor Robert Jeffress, who endorsed Perry on Friday. Jeffress praised Perry for defunding Planned Parenthood in Texas, calling the provider of women’s health and abortion services, “that slaughterhouse for the unborn.”

He also lauded Perry’s “strong commitment to biblical values.”

“Do we want a candidate who is skilled in rhetoric or one who is skilled in leadership? Do we want a candidate who is a conservative out of convenience or one who is a conservative out of deep conviction?” Jeffress said. “Do we want a candidate who is a good, moral person — or one who is a born-again follower of the lord Jesus Christ?”

Jeffress called Perry a “genuine follower of Jesus Christ.” The pastor did not mention Perry’s rival Mitt Romney by name, but he told reporters after his remarks on Friday that Mormonism was a “cult.”

Jeffress’ comments and his endorsement of Perry threatened to inject some tension into what has been a relatively quiet year for religion on the campaign trail and the Perry campaign sought to quiet the uproar.

The campaign’s official comment on Jeffress evolved quickly on Friday afternoon. When initially asked by ABC News whether Gov. Perry agreed that Mormonism is a cult, Perry spokesman Mark Miner said: “The governor doesn’t judge what is in the heart and soul of others. He leaves that to God.”

My horrible governor Bobby Jindal joked about pedophilia at this same hub of hatred.  What an inappropriate topic for jokes! Since so many folks were herded out of New Orleans and Southern Louisiana after Katrina, we can no longer even find a decent field of candidates to run against a man that’s trying to bring back the plantation system of government and economics.  He has spent tremendous amounts of money courting chicken evisceration plants to our state for a few horrible paying jobs while decimating our already fragile public health and education systems.

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) knows just how to crack up the audience at the Values Voter Summit: just make a joke about former Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-NY) being a pedophile.

After a long winded speech about all his accomplishments protecting children from sex offenders, Jindal brought it home.

“What I can do as governor is this: I can make Louisiana the last place that anyone who wants to in any way harm a child by exposing children to inappropriate material,” Jindal said. “I can make Louisiana a dangerous place for Congressman Weiner to relocate to.”

Louisiana is a dangerous place for teachers, nurses, and public employees right now because of this man and that clearly makes it a dangerous place for children.  After all, this is the same governor that foisted a creationist law on them.   He clearly doesn’t value children enough to educate them in science, protect their health, and provide them decent teachers and classrooms.  Our children need protection from our Governor.

The scientific community has long advocated that allowing anything but science in the teaching of evolution will be intellectually harmful. In an e-mail sent to the Associated Press, Harold Kroto, a Nobel Prize winner for chemistry in 1996, said voting against the repeal creates a situation that “should be likened to requiring Louisiana school texts to include the claim that the Sun goes round the Earth.”

While evolutionary biology is based in the work of Charles Darwin, which shows how humans evolved through natural selection, creationism is rooted in a fundamental reading of Biblical texts that say mankind is the product of a divine maker.

With the law intact, Louisiana is the state that has gone the furthest in approving legislation that opens the door to allowing alternatives to science taught in its schools.

American women are also not making much headway to influence corporate culture and business decisions through board appointments.  America’s top business women attended Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit in Laguna Niguel, California.  Board positions are key to efforts to break the glass ceiling because boards approve CEO pay and appointments.  One of the questions raised at the meeting was dealing with requests to become a board’s token woman. The topic was raised by Anne Mulcahy–former Xerox CEO and board member–who questioned if it was worth the effort to become the lone female on what has been an all boy board.

At the same time, female representation on boards is still a major issue. The percentage of female directors, which hovers around 20 percent, has been at a standstill over the past decade—Spencer Stuart finds that there has been no increase in that ratio since 2000. The research firm Catalyst reports an even lower number, 16 percent, putting the United States behind Finland, Sweden and Norway, which actually has a law requiring 40 percent of all board members at Norwegian companies to be women. Those low percentages persist despite the fact that study after study has shown that more diverse boards are associated with greater company performance.

I get what Mulcahy is saying. Why should women in positions of power join a club, as she puts it, that they may not want to be a part of? At that level, most women have multiple commitments, and joining a board where they’re treated like tokens rather than assets may not be the best use of their time. In addition, they may be able to have more of an impact on a board that is already forward thinking and receptive to diversity.

So, at a time when we are celebrating the progress made by women who have reached presidencies in countries in South America, Africa, Australia, and the East, we are seeing tremendous setbacks in women’s rights here in the United States.  Who are the Leymah Gbowee’s of North America?    Let us do more than just pray a few of our own devils back to hell.  Let’s be in their faces and all in their business just like Ms. Gbowee! (See youtube below.) Let’s be an entire population of women that won’t shut up!!!