Tag Archives: politics
Isla Presidencial: Episodio 5 – El Avión
GENIAL!!!
¡Viva Venezuela!
A pesar de que estoy lejos, el amor por mi pais no disminuye. Y hoy siento un gran orgullo!
Venezuela decidio ayer. Y como resultado la nueva Asamblea Nacional es una mas digna representacion de la diversidad que tenemos en nuestro pais y no un monolitico amontonamiento de votos a favor del presidente, que solo contribuia a amasar mas y mas poder en manos de menos y menos personas.
Vean la nueva composicion de la Asamblea Nacional.
Why FOX News is stupid… or evil
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| The Parent Company Trap | ||||
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Agreed!!!
“We must together as a nation STOP WATCHING FOX NEWS!”
Howard Zinn: "You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train"
Sunday afternoon is always a good time for a good documentary. Today, it was time to sit down and watch Howard Zinn: You Can’t Be Neutral on a Moving Train. Until not too long ago, I admit my ignorance: I had no clue who Howard Zinn was… until I walked into a local Berkeley coffee shop with one of our new advisors at the Diabetes Hands Foundation and saw her pointing at his image on the wall, saying: “Howard Zinn! He’s one of my heroes…” I knew I had to find out more about him.
It turns out Howard Zinn wrote a seminal book titled A People’s History of the United States, a book where he sought:
“…to present American history through the eyes of working people, rather than political and economic elites.”
I learned there was a 2004 documentary about his life (good that he was alive at the time -he passed away in early 2010) so I decided to watch it today. As I watched the documentary, I live tweeted it:
Here’s a POWERFUL thought from Zinn, not unlike what Ghandi said in the day:
“To be hopeful in bad times is not just foolishly romantic. It is based on the fact that human history is a history not only of cruelty, but also of compassion, sacrifice, courage, kindness.”
He inspired me to write this:
Forget about trying to please everyone and focus on doing the right thing.
I would love to hear your thoughts on Howard Zinn. Have you read about him/his work?
Vote For What Is Right: A few words to people in the House
Reading many of these week’s commentaries about the upcoming health care bill vote this weekend, I find so many people alluding to the “political cost” of voting one way or the other. People in the House are being pressured to vote for or against the bill in part based on the chances of getting re-elected this Fall.
Heck! I even got an email yesterday about a doctor that threatened reps in his district to do everything in his power to make sure they loose their job next Fall depending on their vote on this bill.
I get it. I see how some politicians will still continue to think that way… well, perhaps MOST politicians. But what I am trying to get at is: THAT IS NOT WHY YOU WERE VOTED INTO OFFICE. You were voted to do what was right.
Regardless of how I feel about the current health care bill up for vote this weekend (I am for it): I want people in the House to think about what is RIGHT and then VOTE for the bill based on that.
If it costs you re-election in the Fall, you will go down as having done the right thing. If you vote for or against the bill and get re-elected BECAUSE of your vote, SHAME on you. You are not worthy of being an elected representative because you’ve sold your soul to the highest bidder and forgotten what it means to be a public servant.
Education in California: It's a Priorities Problem
Today, I took part in a local protest along with dozens of teachers, parents and children facing the (new) potential budget cuts to education in California.
I took lots of photos, which you can see on my Facebook page. However, the most revealing one in my opinion was the one I included here, which had a father of a student holding up a sign that read “It’s a Priorities Problem.”
The state Government doesn’t have a spending problem. It has a PRIORITIES problem: what it’s valuing most and what it’s willing to do for that vs. what it’s willing to do to maintain (and improve) public education.
What can YOU do?
- Call your state legislators (1-888-268-4334): tell them to think like Oregonians! In Oregon, on January 26, to protect public education and other vital social services, voters passed two ballot measures that raised taxes on those with the highest incomes and corporations.
- Read about progressive tax alternatives to cuts: www.cft.org
- Talk to everyone around you (family, neighbors, friends) about the issues.
- Support the 48-day March for California’s Future and follow it.
Who moved my healthcare reform?
This week has brought several pieces of political news that have left me wondering about the future of life in the US.
One of them has to do with the election of the GOP candidate in Massachusetts, which resulted in the disappearance of the filibuster-proof majority the Democrats had in the Senate. While having a balance in power is good, one big concern I now have is what will this do to health care reform.
I can’t think of better words to express this concern than the ones written by this gentleman in his letter to the editor of his local newspaper:
… the results of the special election to fill Ted Kennedy’s Senate seat threatens to undermine the health care reform process in our country. It is ironic that Massachusetts has led the nation in providing for the health care of 99 percent of state residents but the majority of people in our commonwealth reject health care coverage to 30 million of our fellow citizens.
This is the situation as the Senate awaits for a merged bill to come from the House. However, even the prospects for a combined version to pass through the House are bleak as indicated by Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Quoting from the Financial Times report:
In its present form, I don’t think it’s possible to pass the Senate bill in the House,” Ms Pelosi told reporters yesterday, after struggling to persuade liberal Democrats in the House to support the Senate’s healthcare plan, which is not as expansive as their own. “I don’t see the votes for it at this time.”
The second piece of news that concerns me this week is last Thursday’s ruling by the US Supreme Court. This is even more concerning because, unlike elections, decisions by the Supreme Court have a very long term impact on the country and the direction things take as a whole over a long time, as opposed to during a shorter period.
In short, as the New York Times explains:
Overruling two important precedents about the First Amendment rights of corporations, a bitterly divided Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that the government may not ban political spending by corporations in candidate elections.
If you want to read the 183-page long decision document, look for Citizens United v. Federal Election Comm’n in the Supreme Court 2009 Decisions page.
The decision is largely based on free-speech principles, under the assumption that corporations are like individuals. There’s something fundamentally wrong about this conception, because it gives corporations benefits like those of an individual (free-speech, for instance) while not giving the same more obligations (tax obligations, for example).
It’d be naive to argue that this benefits for-profit corporations on an equal basis as not-for-profit corporations for simple mathematical reasons: for-profit companies, by definition (in order to have money left at the end of the day to distribute among shareholders) will have deeper pockets from which to draw to spend supporting political campaigns. Period!
So, I agree with the President’s criticism of the decision (quoting from Huffington Post):
“This ruling opens the floodgates for an unlimited amount of special interest money into our democracy,” the president said in his weekly radio and Internet message. “It gives the special interest lobbyists new leverage to spend millions on advertising to persuade elected officials to vote their way — or to punish those who don’t.”
Don’t believe this? Read this article… this article… and go to the Money Trail page on OpenCongress, and see for yourself the volume of pre-2009 campaign contributions pouring from special interest groups into congress (ironically, two of the top recipients of contributions in 2008 were John McCain and Hillary Clinton). Do you honestly think this will improve with this week’s court decision? I personally doubt it.
So will healthcare reform take a backseat? Absolutely. But when it’s picked up a few weeks from now, what will come out of the debate? I have lost the few hopes I had for something meaningful to result from healthcare reform. Even more so, I am fundamentally saddened by our future prospects as individuals and as patients (insured or not) in the United States.
So, who moved my healthcare reform? I don’t know… perhaps it wasn’t there in the first place.
How to become a Twitter Trending Topic?
Nearly 20,000 outraged (or inspired) people that feel deprived from their freedom of expression will do it!
The chart from WhatTheHashTag? says it all:
The Twitter hashtag #FreeMediaVE made it to the list of Twitter Trending Topics today (shortly followed by the hashtag #Venezuela) as a result of the decision by the Chavez administration to silence 34 Venezuelan radio stations.
On this other screenshot, from the home page of #hashtags, you can see how #FreeMediaVE was the third most popular hashtag today, with nearly 4,300 occurrences:
Harvey Milk
Just finished watching Milk. What an incredible story! Leaves you kinda sad but inspired: make sure to watch it!
Until you do and, even if you have seen it, here is the 1984 documentary that preceded it, The Times of Harvey Milk: