Posts Tagged country

Erin Steva: In The Public Interest : Public Transportation, The Wave Of The Future

Posted by on Friday, 17 September, 2010

High-maintenance, tech-savvy and outspoken are just a few of the terms describing Generation Y. But car free? According to Ad Age , the millennial cohort is laying off the gas pedal when it comes to driving with a third fewer 17-year olds driving now than 30 years ago. Theories abound on why this shift is occurring, but no one can explain it with certainty. While I can’t claim to have the answer, I do know one thing – youth are on board with public transportation . We’re seeing it time and time again in the Golden State of California. In 2008, 50 CALPIRG students were so excited about the prospect of a bullet train that they gave up the usual spring break trip to Mexico for an alternative trip . They toured the projected route of the rail line, holding 9 press events with elected officials along the way, to show how enthused young adults were for the proposal. They held visibility events across the state and got out the vote. As one of the few groups organizing around Proposition 1A , it was the high-hopes of youth that helped pass the crucial ballot measure. We’re seeing it again, this time in the country’s “autotopia” of Los Angeles. In the face of endless traffic and smog, two-thirds of young and older Los Angeles County voters passed Measure R. This half-cent, 30-year sales tax will generate up to $40 billion with 65 percent of this revenue expected to fund an ambitious expansion of the region’s subway, light rail and bus services. Through the 30/10 initiative , Los Angeles Mayor Villaraigosa is working to build 12 Measure R funded public transit projects in just 10 years, rather than the planned 30 years, by leveraging again long-term Measure R funds. This policy is so sound that both Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Republican U.S. Senate candidate Carly Fiorina have endorsed it . It garners support from other strange bedfellows including labor and business groups, environmentalists and people in the entertainment industry, largely due to the organizing achievements of groups such as Move LA . And once again, youth are biting at the bit to push this great initiative forward. CALPIRG students at Santa Monica College, University of Southern California, and University of California Los Angeles have held press conferences , secured small business endorsements, turned out to Metro Board meetings, published letters to the editor, and gathered hundreds of written comments of support from their peers. The charge is on amongst young Angelenos to build the region’s public transit now. This growing support could not have come soon enough. We’re in a jam literally and figuratively. We need efficient ways to travel around the state that cut traffic and pollution, but we have far too few transportation options today. Investing in clean and modern public transportation projects, from rapid buses to high-speed rail, is critical to keeping our country moving in the 21st century. Let’s hope we don’t have to wait another generation before America invests in first-class public transportation. The California Public Interest Research Group (CALPIRG) is a statewide non-profit, non-partisan public interest advocacy organization. CALPIRG is one of 26 state Public Interest Research Groups (PIRGs) a part U.S. PIRG, the federation of state PIRGs .

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Erin Steva: In The Public Interest : Public Transportation, The Wave Of The Future


Demand grows for Pakistan to tax the rich to pay for flood reconstruction

Posted by on Friday, 17 September, 2010

Pakistan’s plea for billions of dollars to recover from this summer’s floods has sparked pressure on the country to reform its dysfunctional tax system, which collects very little money, even from the rich. The country’s biggest donor, the United States, has issued one of the strongest warnings, saying the…

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Demand grows for Pakistan to tax the rich to pay for flood reconstruction


Jillian Bandes: Palin’s In Iowa Tonight

Posted by on Friday, 17 September, 2010

If she’s not running for President, she’s certainly doing a great job of keeping all of us on edge. Palin, who has been an inspiration to Tea Party forces around the country, is heading to the Hawkeye State to speak at…

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Jillian Bandes: Palin’s In Iowa Tonight


Constitution Day

Posted by on Friday, 17 September, 2010

Today marks Constitution Day. On 17 September 1787, in Philadelphia, the Framers of the American Constitution added their signatures to the document they had produced, and soon thereafter it was dispatched to the Continental Congress for consideration by the states. On this day, it is appropriate that we, their heirs, reconsider their handiwork and ask whether ours is still a constitutional government. In their deliberations, the Framers confronted one great question, and it was largely on this question that the debate between the Federalists and the Anti-Federalists during the ratification period turned. Can one establish an enduring republic on an extended territory? This is the question that Americans in this crucial period wrestled with. As I have argued in earlier posts here and here and, in much greater detail, in my recent books Montesquieu and the Logic of Liberty and Soft Despotism, Democracy’s Drift , the Americans had reason to worry. In the late eighteenth century, it was almost universally agreed that what they were attempting could not succeed. Such was the argument that Montesquieu advanced in the first part of his authoritative book The Spirit of Laws , and he had grounds for advancing such a claim. Athens and Sparta were situated on territories of no great size, and the same could be said for early Rome and for Lucca, Florence, and Venice in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Of course, late republican Rome was an exception to the rule. Under the late republic, nearly everyone in Italy was a citizen, and that polity ruled the Mediterranean and beyond. But – as both Machiavelli in his Discourses on Livy and Montesquieu in his Considerations on the Causes of the Greatness of the Romans and their Decline and Spirit of Laws had pointed out — Rome was also the exception that proved the rule. It was a small republic that, by dint of conquest, came to be situated on an extended territory; and soon after it had expanded, it collapsed. The Framers of the American constitution faced a great challenge, and this they and their opponents among the Anti-Federalists knew all too well. The challenge was straightforward. Polities situated on extended territories sit at a great distance from the vast majority of the people whom they rule. This is consistent with despotism; and if the distance is not too great, history suggests, it is consistent with legitimate monarchy and the rule of law as well. But for republics it poses a seemingly insuperable challenge. Governments located at a considerable distance from the people they rule tend to be invisible; and when human beings armed with authority are invisible, they tend rightly to suppose that they can get away with a lot. Moreover, large polities tend to face emergencies more often than small polities, and emergencies require from rulers vigor, alacrity, and decisiveness of the sort most easily provided by a man authorized to act alone. The challenge facing the American Framers was to devise a constitutional structure capable of producing a government fit for meeting emergencies but unlikely to become, as James Madison once delicately put it, “ self-directed .” To meet this challenge, the Framers turned to the second and third parts of Montesquieu’s Spirit of Laws – where he sketched out two different ways in which a republic can overcome this limitation on its magnitude. It was, he realized, necessary that it do so because – at least in modern times – no small republic could hope to marshal the resources necessary for its self-defense when attacked by monarchies intermediate or despotisms immense in size. The first expedient suggested by Montesquieu was federalism. By means of federalism, a group of republics could project power in the manner of a monarchy while remaining small enough to be genuinely self-governing. Montesquieu’s second expedient was the separation of powers. By distinguishing along functional lines between the executive power, the legislative power, and the judicial power and by distributing these three powers to different bodies in such a fashion as to render them separate and quasi-autonomous, the English had managed to transform a monarchy into a republic capable of sustaining itself on an extended territory. For emergencies, they had an executive capable of vigor, alacrity, and decision. To prevent this executive from becoming a tyrant, they had a House of Commons responsible to the electorate and capable of calling the executive’s servants to account. To avoid populist excesses, they had a House of Lords capable of checking the House of Commons; and to protect the liberty of the citizens, they had judges who could not easily be removed from office and juries selected from among the peers of those accused. The Americans combined both expedients. To begin with, they instituted a federation, building on the remnants of the old colonial system and on the structure that existed under the Articles of Confederation. At the center, they established a government of limited powers – capable of defending the nation, of guaranteeing to every state a republican government, of regulating commerce between the states, and of responding to emergencies. To the states and local governments, where the territory was comparatively small, they left all other legitimate powers. To make the federal government in some measure independent of the states, they provided for direct popular election of the House of Representatives; and to enable the states to protect their own prerogatives from federal encroachment, they had the state legislatures elect the federal senate. At both the state and federal level, the American founders instituted a separation of powers, giving to the executive, the legislators, and the judiciary the means by which to defend their own prerogatives and the motives for doing so – and, by dividing and separating the powers, the Founders sought to make the government and its operations visible to the citizens. Each branch served the general public as a watchdog with regard to the others. As I attempted to show in earlier posts linked here and archived here and in my two books, we have – over the last one hundred years – gone astray. In a massive fashion, the national government has encroached on the prerogatives of the states, substituting its jurisdiction for theirs and, by dint of mandates both funded and unfunded, reducing them to instruments for the pursuit of public policy dictated from the center. Something similar has been done to the separation of powers. Congress, in clear breach of the Constitution, has conferred on administrative agencies within the executive branch the power to issue regulations that have the force of law – which is to say, the power to legislate. And these agencies combine all three of the putatively separated powers – devising and promulgating regulations which have the force of law, enforcing these regulations, and adjudicating disputes that arise with regard to these regulations. This is, Montesquieu asserted and the Framers believed, the essence of despotism. It means that most of what the federal government does it does in camera, behind closed doors, out of the public view. And not surprisingly, as we have seen in dramatic fashion in the last twenty-one months, the federal government has become what Madison most feared: an entity self-directed . If we are to pass our legacy of self-government on to our progeny, we will have to re-establish constitutional government in this country by rolling back the administrative state, restoring legislative accountability, and returning to the states the prerogatives that are rightly theirs.

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Constitution Day


Castle should do the right thing for Delaware: Endorse Chris Coons

Posted by on Thursday, 16 September, 2010

Political campaigns can be unpredictable — just ask the eight Republican incumbents who have been defeated in surprise outcomes across the country. In Delaware, Read more…

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Castle should do the right thing for Delaware: Endorse Chris Coons


Russell Simmons: Dear Sen. Feinstein & Sen. Hatch, Let’s Stop Sending Our Kids To Prison!

Posted by on Thursday, 16 September, 2010

Dear Senator Diane Feinstein and Senator Orin Hatch, Societies are judged on how they treat their elderly, their sick and their children. For far too long we have failed all three. The two of you have the opportunity and the responsibility to take a step in changing this course by passing the Youth PROMISE Act. I write to urge you to work with the House and to pass legislation once and for all to prevent and reduce youth gang violence in this country. Congress has a critical opportunity and, I believe, a corresponding obligation, to use the small window remaining in this legislative session to make this country safer and more hopeful for our young people. In focusing for too many years on predominantly “tough on crime” strategies to address crime, Congress has neglected to focus on prevention. As a result, the United States now has the highest average incarceration rate of any nation in the world, with 2.3 million people behind bars. The impact of these “tough on crime” approaches falls disproportionately on minorities, particularly African-American and Latino young men. While the average incarceration rate in the United States is 7 times the international average, for blacks the average rate is over 22 times the international average. For black boys who are born today, the Sentencing Project estimates that one in every three will end up incarcerated in their lifetime without an appropriate intervention. The problem is so bad that the Children’s Defense Fund has launched a campaign to address what it calls the “cradle-to-prison pipeline.” In addition to being racially discriminatory and counterproductive, this increase in incarceration is stunningly expensive. Since 1982, the cost of incarceration in this country has risen from $9 billion annually to over $60 billion a year. The good news is that we now have an abundance of evidence demonstrating how we can move young people from a “cradle to prison pipeline” to a “cradle to college” or “cradle to jobs” pipeline. Scientific research reveals that a continuum of promising and evidence-based prevention and intervention programs for youth who are involved in, or at risk of becoming involved in gangs, crime and delinquency can significantly prevent and reduce crime in a cost-effective manner. Evidence-based and promising programs for teen pregnancy prevention, pre-natal care, new parent training, nurse home visits, Head Start, quality education, after-school programs, mentoring, job training, summer jobs and recreation, and college scholarships save more money than they cost when we account for the reduced incarceration, law enforcement and social welfare expenditures. The Youth PROMISE Act brings together all of the stakeholders in the juvenile and criminal justice systems to develop locally-based comprehensive plans to implement promising and evidence-based prevention and intervention strategies to target young people who are involved in, or are at risk of becoming involved in gangs or the juvenile or criminal justice system, and to redirect them toward productive and law-abiding alternatives. This bill simply addresses what research and analysis, as well as common sense, tells us – no matter how tough we are on the people we prosecute today, unless we simultaneously address the underlying reasons that they develop into serious criminals, nothing will change. We need prevention to reduce crime in the long term. The Youth PROMISE Act does not spend more money than we already pay for criminal justice expenses and collateral consequences, like gunshot wounds. Instead, it saves money by reducing the need for many of these expenses. With the proven ability to generate such savings and reduce crime, we have to ask our elected officials why they would refuse to support programs we all know would work to both keep our kids on the right track and save victims and taxpayers from the impact of crime. You have a critical opportunity to work in a bi-partisan fashion and make a critical difference for our country’s youth. The Youth PROMISE Act now has 235 bi-partisan co-sponsors in the House, 15 co-sponsors in the Senate, and is supported by over 250 national, state and local organizations. Cities and counties across the country have passed resolutions in support of the Act, as well as the National Association of Counties and the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Testifying about the Youth PROMISE Act before the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security last summer, Los Angeles Sheriff Leroy Baca stated, “The Youth PROMISE Act is the single most important bill ever to come before the United States Congress.” There is absolutely no excuse for not passing the Youth PROMISE Act this Congress, but there are very few legislative days remaining. Act now. We must show our young people that we care about them too. Sincerely, Russell Simmons

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Russell Simmons: Dear Sen. Feinstein & Sen. Hatch, Let’s Stop Sending Our Kids To Prison!


A new Grand Old (Tea) Party

Posted by on Thursday, 16 September, 2010

The primary victory by Tea Party – backed candidate Christine O’Donnell in the Delaware Republican US Senate primary Tuesday probably diminishes the GOP’s chances of flipping a Democratic seat to a Republican one in the fall election, since she knocked out a moderate who was popular among the state’s broader electorate. That the same scenario is playing out elsewhere across the country points to a Republican Party in disarray. Republican – Christine O’Donnell – United States Senate – Delaware – Politics

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A new Grand Old (Tea) Party


‘Bienvenidos’ Street Artist Yote Puts His Art Where His Heart Is

Posted by on Thursday, 16 September, 2010

(From Brooklyn Street Art ) For Fall 2010, brown is the new black and Arizona is working the runway with Jan Brewer on the catwalk! But let’s not all lose our heads, neighbors. Street Artist YOTE is firing up the grill and putting the ignorance on ice to welcome the Spanish speakers for an Indian Summer barbecue in Arizona (which used to be part of Mexico). “Bienvenidos”; It’s Biblical, for those who profess to live by the teachings of that book. Judeo-Christian values. Welcome, Bienvenidos. The Pilgrims certainly relied on those values when arriving to Plymouth for a better life and the American Indians practiced hospitality even without reading the guests’ holy book.. Since this is campaign season in the US and Arizona symbolizes the most recent immigrant-bashing wave, Street Artist YOTE has created colorful messaging to at least divert some of the hate toward a more sane and healthy discussion about immigration in this country. The “Bienvenidos” Campaign posters are meant to remind the kind-hearted among us to speak up and practice hospitality to the newest immigrants in our midst. To raise funds for his signs (as all real campaigns must) he’s got a limited edition of signed posters for your house. The proceeds of the sales of this poster will help him fund his project. YOTE describes the campaign: “Over the summer of 2010 I have experienced very contradicting feelings for the state of Arizona. It was not hard to see how laws like 1070, 2281 and 287(g) have caused fear to spread through local communities, the state, and the rest of the country. By juxtaposing the Arizona state flag with the word “Bienvenidos”, I hope to spread a positive and affirming message throughout our communities. This symbol will appear as a political campaign sign leading to the November 2nd election. Additionally this symbol will appear as a sticker for residences, business and rebels who wish to express that all people are welcome in their homes, stores and communities. My intention is that the “Bienvenidos” symbol will spread throughout the state to be both a visible resistance to laws like 1070 and a representation of the hope for safer communities in the state of Arizona and beyond. All proceeds from the limited edition of signed posters will go to the production of “Bienvenidos” campaign signs and stickers. Thank you.”

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‘Bienvenidos’ Street Artist Yote Puts His Art Where His Heart Is


New Jersey Governor’s Planned Pension Overhaul Draws Ire From Unions

Posted by on Wednesday, 15 September, 2010

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s plan to roll back public pension benefits has opened a new front in his war with the country’s most powerful unions.

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New Jersey Governor’s Planned Pension Overhaul Draws Ire From Unions


What Does Citizens United Have to Do With the Republican Spending Advantage?

Posted by on Wednesday, 15 September, 2010

The New York Times reports that “outside groups supporting Republican candidates in House and Senate races across the country have been swamping their Democratic-leaning counterparts on television.” The Times cites “an array of Republican-oriented organizations that are set up so they can accept donations of unlimited size from individuals and corporations without having to disclose them.” It worries that “a relatively small cadre of deep-pocketed donors, unknown to the general public, is shaping the battle for Congress in the early going.” It says “Democratic officials” fear that “corporate interests, newly emboldened by regulatory changes,” are trying to “buy the election.” It says “the snapshot of early television spending would seem to be a fulfillment of Democrats' worst fears after the Supreme Court's ruling in the Citizens United case in January that lifted a ban on direct corporate spending on political campaigns.” Yet as the Times eventually concedes, “it is not clear…whether it is actually an influx of new corporate money unleashed by the Citizens United decision that is driving the spending chasm, or other factors, notably, a political environment that favors Republicans.” In fact, the spending cited in the story is almost entirely by rich individuals, 527 groups, and 501(c)(4) organizations—all of which was perfectly legal before Citizens United . Further undermining the notion that the decision explains the Republicans' spending advantage, the Times notes that “corporations have so far mostly chosen not to take advantage of the Citizens United ruling to directly sponsor campaign ads themselves.” It quickly adds that former FEC General Counsel Lawrence Noble thinks “some [corporations] are most likely funneling more money into campaigns through some of these independent groups,” although “they had the right to make such contributions before the ruling.” In short, there is evidence that raring Republicans, who hope the continuing economic malaise and  the unpopularity of Democratic policies will help them retake the House this fall, are outspending disillusioned and demoralized Democrats. But contrary to the impression left by this story (especially its opening paragraphs), there is no evidence that Citizens United has anything to do with the spending gap. By the way, notice how the phrase “outside groups” (as opposed to, say, “independent groups”) implies these organizations, unlike candidates and parties, have no business participating in political debates. It's the same language that Rep. Michael Capuano (D-Mass.) used when he welcomed the chilling effect of the DISCLOSE Act, which would have imposed disproportionate burdens on Republican-leaning organizations in the name of transparency: I hope it chills out all—not one side, all sides! I have no problem whatsoever keeping everybody out. If I could keep all outside entities out, I would. Similarly, back in 2002 Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) argued in favor of McCain-Feingold's ban on electioneering communications, one of the speech restrictions overturned in Citizens United , by explaining that the aim was “slowing political advertising and making sure the flow of negative ads by outside interest groups does not continue to permeate the airwaves.” It's not surprising that incumbent politicians want to restrict the debate to insiders or eliminate ads that criticize them. Fortunately, the First Amendment does not allow them to do that.

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What Does Citizens United Have to Do With the Republican Spending Advantage?


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