Puget Sound Liberals Weekly Newsletter #187

Enhancing Freedom, Opportunity and Cooperation in Puget Sound and Beyond

Through informing and networking Liberals and Liberal Organizations.

 

Our vision is hundreds of thousands of well-informed Puget Sound Liberals working together.

 

          3500 members                             August 14, 2009                   formerly Lake Hills Liberals                

 

 

 

 

                                                     

Our Website                                   Our  Editor                  To Unsubscribe

 

              Table of Contents  * Featured Articles

 

About Puget Sound Liberals

Calendars of Events

Communication with Our Members

Finding Webpage Addresses to Make Links

Opportunities

Petitions

 

Commentaries from Our Members

David Spring: Boeing Asks Unions to Give Up Striking.

David Spring: Red/White/Blue/Green Coalition Needed

Ross Gooding: Public Health Insurance Is Worse

Marianne Wilkins: U.S. and OECD Heath Care Compared

Don Smith: Join Eastside Progressives

 

Liberals and Democrats Links to the Beef

Government Watch

Who Are our Tea Party Republicans?*

 

State and Local Links to the Beef

We Should Reframe our Major Obstacle*

Let’s Replace BIAW’s Conservative Leaders**

Our Filthy Rich BIAW*

Adequate School Funding Requires BIAW Changes**

Whom Do our Washington State Lobbyists Represent?

 

Nation and World Links to the Beef

Norm Conrad: When Finance Rules, Economies Crash

AIG Bailouts Bailed Out Insured Financial Companies*

Employment as Percentage of Population is Low

Featured Advocacy Group: National Unemployment Law Center

Remote Area Medical Provides Inexpensive Health Care*

High Speed Trains Are Cost Beneficial

Food Companies Act Like Tobacco Companies

 

Our Liberal Spirit

New Possibilities, New Priorities

 

Recommended Books

 

 

Our Political Values

 

Our Political Priorities

 

·       Fair Clean Elections and Open Government

·       Fair Adequate Taxes and Competent Spending

·       Investment for Productivity

·       Quality Health, Education, Jobs, Income

·       Environmental Protection and Energy Independence

·       Security and Equal Rights

·       Justice and Peace Everywhere

·       International Cooperation and Leadership

 

Conservatives oppose all of these

 

     Let’s End Our National Nightmare

 

         Let’s Restore Our American Dream

 

More on Conservative opposition to our American Dream

 

Washington State’s 5 Major Needs

·       Federal Funding for Health and Education

·       Public Campaign Financing

·       Substituting a Progressive Income Tax

·       Replacing BIAW Conservatives

·       Replacing Conservative Legislators

 

Quote of the Week

Success is only another form of failure if we forget what our priorities should be.  Harry Lloyd

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Calendar of Events

Saturday, August 15 at Noon on Phone -- Learn about Twitter from Democracy for America

Saturday, September 19 at 6:30 at Lita Spratt’s home (7633 West Green Lake Drive North, Seattle) ----- inSPIRe Potluck and Discussion of Global Population Growth

 

 

 

Calendars of Events                             

 

King County Democrats - LD Meetings            Some 2008 Legislature Lobby Days

Thurston County Progressive Net                  Western Washington Fellowship of Reconciliation

Alliance for Democracy                                Democratic Underground.Com                          

Sierra Club Cascade Chapter Calendar           Cool State Washington

Washington Public Campaigns Calendar          Town Hall Seattle Calendar

Washington State Labor Council                    Whatcom County Peace and Justice Calendar 

Conversation Cafe      Drinking Liberally          Seattle NOW          

Wallingford Neighbors for Peace and Justice – Friday Night Movies      Liberal films on PBS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Communication with Our Members

 

Finding Webpage Addresses to Make Links

Through trial and error, I have found an efficient way to find the webpage addresses for newspaper articles to which I want to provide links.  I Google the name of the newspaper, comma, name of the author, comma, a distinctive two or three word or longer phrase from the article’s title.  For example: usa today, john doe, cash for clunkers.  If that doesn’t work, then use a distinctive three word or longer phrase from the article’s contents instead of from the title.  I haven’t found any other search strategy that is nearly as effective.

 

To make the link,

·       Write and highlight a short description of the linked article

·       Click on Control K.  Copy in the webpage address and enter.

 

To link from the table of contents in our newsletter to a commentary within the newsletter.

·       Go to the commentary

·       Highlight first word of the commentary’s title (or another) if you have already used the first word

·       From Insert Menu, select Bookmark, and type in the first word

·       In the table of contents, highlight the description of the commentary

·       Click Control K.  Click on the bookmark.

 

It’s simple and quick, once you do it several times.

 

Opportunities

Useful Websites: contacts, maps, community organizing tools, and more.

Access to jillions of political cartoons.

Download Sightline Institute’s climate policy primer ‘Cap and Trade 101’.  About Sightline.

Create your own petition.

Conduct your own home energy audit.

See all of President Obama’s weekly (Saturday) addresses.

Open Congress: Race Tracker

Download a Health Reform Fact Check Card

Learn about Twitter.

 

Petitions

Pledge to retain Washington’s domestic partnership law.

Tell your state legislator to decriminalize marijuana.

Tell your senators to support stronger clean energy legislation.

Tell the United Nations to investigate and hold accountable Myanmar for crimes against humanity.

 

Commentaries From Our Members

David Spring: Boeing Asks Unions to Give Up the Right to Strike.

 

In 2003, Boeing used the threat of outsourcing jobs to blackmail our legislature into giving them billions in tax breaks. The legislature caved…and Boeing still outsourced thousands of the jobs anyway. Those tax breaks were supposedly to “save jobs.” But that same year Boeing announced another thousand layoffs. So we lost the money and the jobs. Nor was the tax break needed to make Boeing profitable as Boeing had been making over $3 billion a year for the preceding several years. A Boeing Lobbyist called it turning our State legislature into a “Cash Cow.” Boeing union workers have referred to it as the “Disappearing Boeing Airplane” because outsourcing of high paying jobs has been going on for many years. Many legislators privately refer to it as Corporate Welfare.  In reality, it is nothing more than blackmail. Boeing has a long history of failing to keep their promises. But no one has held Boeing accountable.

 

Now Boeing is trying to use the threat of outsourcing jobs to blackmail the Machinists union into giving up the right to strike (which is the only tool unions have to protect working class families). The problem with rewarding bad behavior is it only gets worse. Thankfully, the Machinists have resisted pressure to cave in to Boeing’s outrageous demands. The union's political director, Larry Brown, said, "We already have a no-strike clause. It's called a labor contract.” What also needs to be said is that union workers never want to strike, but management failure to negotiate in good faith often forces unions to strike. For example, in the 2008 strike, Boeing was having supply problems caused by outsourcing. Management needed a delay to get caught up. So they forced a strike. Those harmed most were the workers. So remember: Most strikes are caused by management and not by workers.

 

Equally important, the right to strike is a basic human right. Workers have died to protect their right to organize. Giving up that right is like asking Americans to give up the right to vote.

My own grandfather, William Gunnerud, helped start Machinists Union 751 in the 1940’s.

In 1949, my grandfather and his union brothers went on a six month strike to protect their union’s right to exist. Boeing management told them that, if they went out on strike, none of them would ever get their jobs back. But Boeing eventually realized that without highly trained workers, they could not build planes. Eventually, they reached an agreement. Their strike, and others like it, led to the economic security and expansion of middle class families in the 1950’s. So remember that strikes and the increased wages they bring can benefit the entire economy.

 

As I grew up, my mother reminded us children that it was because of the union and the 1949 Boeing strike that we had a good place to live and food on our table.  In the 1960’s, my mother, Darlene Jensen - Hohl followed in my grandfather’s footsteps by joining Machinists Union 141 at United Air Lines. In the 1970’s, my mother was elected to be one of the first female chairpersons for United Airlines Machinists Union 141. In 1980, my mother led a strike to protect pensions and health care benefits. United told the strikers that they would all lose their jobs if they went out on strike. After a two month strike, United finally settled. My mom is now retired and gets by because of the pension that strike helped to protect.

 

The debate should not be about whether unions should have the right to strike, but whether Boeing should have the right to bleed our whole State dry – and rob our children of their future - in the pursuit of short term greed. If we all work together, we can not only insure a better future for working families and their children, but we can send a message to Boeing blackmailers that they will finally be held accountable for their grossly irresponsible conduct.   David Spring   For more.

 

Boeing can avoid strikes by agreeing to fair union contracts.  Boeing’s attempts to force unions to forgo strikes must be motivated by intending to impose unfair union contracts.  Unlike Wal-Mart, Boeing needs its trained experienced workers.  Norm Dicks discussed the value of Boeing to our Puget Sound.  I thought that he was suggesting that the Union should give in to Boeing’s demands.  Dave Thomas

 

David Spring: a Red, White, Blue, and Green Coalition Is Needed

 

Earlier this year, a group of progressive legislators formed the Blue Green Coalition, merging legislators who support labor with those who support the environment. This Coalition is about 7 votes short of a majority in the Democratic House caucus. If the Coalition expanded to include health care (Red) and education (White) advocates, we could become a red, white, blue and green majority.

 

There is good reason for these groups to work more closely together in the face of attack from corporate power brokers. In 2009, the legislature not only failed to vote on the Workers Privacy Act, but they passed bills gutting a billion dollars in funding for public schools and another billion in funding for health care. At the same time, the legislature protected billions in tax breaks for major corporations such as Boeing, whose irresponsible behavior has harmed health care and education just as much as it harms unions and the environment. For example, the $3.2 billion in tax cuts to Boeing was achieved mainly by gutting funding for our public schools. As a direct result of these massive tax give aways, our public schools are now among the lowest funded and most over crowded schools in America.

 

One of the first steps in solving any major problem is building a team of folks who care enough to bring about the change needed to solve the problem. The intent is to create a common vision, a common goal and a pathway to success. Most folks realize that there is a strong connection between public school funding and our economy. But good public schools are also an important part of solving the health care crisis and our current and future environmental challenges. So there is a good reason for us all to work together.

 

All too often, folks see their problems as not being connected to the problems of their neighbors. Some folks worry about the economy and jobs and taxes. Given the current recession, we should all be concerned about our economic future. Other folks are concerned about the health care crisis. They often see health care and other social issues as “competing” with school funding for limited State dollars. But it is morally wrong to force a child to choose between having a good teacher or a good doctor. The truth is that children and their families need both. Our goal is to find win-win solutions so that we are working together for a better future rather than fighting against each other.

 

Finally, we will not be able to solve our environmental problems without providing our children with the problem solving skills to seek more creative solutions to these problems. So, as the teacher said in my Environmental Science class: Everything is connected to everything else. The best solution to any one problem is the solution that also addresses all the rest.

 

Boeing’s public relations con artists are trying to frame the debate as unions versus jobs … much as they did in 1949. Sadly, the public does not understand the crucial role that unions have played in creating good paying jobs and protecting middle class families. But the public does understand the importance of funding our public schools. It is not only in the State Constitution, but also in the Party Platforms of both political parties. My hope is that unions will change the debate and support rolling back Boeing tax breaks in order to restore funding for public schools.  If unions stood up for public school funding and pointed out the role of Boeing tax cuts in gutting public school funding, we can reframe the debate to a discussion of evil Boeing lobbyists versus protecting the future of our children.  David Spring

 

Ross Gooding: Public Health Care Insurance is Worse than Private

 

Does anyone really think the government is capable of efficiently running a healthcare program?  Until "The Man" can show us it can run other of its large programs with greater efficiency, higher quality, less waste and corruption, and more attention to fairness without regard to minority, ethnic or economic status, I am not convinced.  Please, someone tell me a business as complex as healthcare, or a business at all, that the government runs well.

 

You wrote:  “Our major challenge is to get the basics right.  But not let our disagreements over less important details become obstacles to passage.  Like Social Security and other major legislated programs, the health plan will be modified every few years as new realities and opportunities appear.   Let’s commit to progress, not perfection.   Dave Thomas”

 

Dave, a disregard for the details and fine print are exactly what brought down our financial system, so you should know better than recommend a rushed decision for such a massive and costly entitlement program.  Also, your “bulletin” from last week included a number of reckless and inaccurate assertions regarding the quality of and American’s happiness with our existing healthcare system—the recent polls suggest 70% of Americans are happy with their healthcare, contrary to your statements, and also much higher than the president’s approval ratings, and why Obama’s plan is in trouble.  

 

Finally, a number of low cost health insurance options exist which your members should be made aware of, if want them to be well informed—do a little research and you’ll find the local Regence policy (which I personally use for myself and two children –wife has policy at her employer) covers us for $325/month—very reasonable in my humble opinion.

PS:  Last time I checked, Social Security is in pretty serious trouble—are you sure you want to use it as a model of efficiency for handing over healthcare to the government?  Ross Gooding

 

My very different understanding of private health care insurance was presented several issues ago.  My experience with private businesses and government agencies is also different.  Most of my hassles are with private businesses, concerning defective products, credit cards, rebates and more.  I have rarely had hassles with public agencies.  Dave Thomas

 

Marianne Wilkins: US and OECD Health Care Spending Countries Compared

 

How does our health care system compare to other countries?  I have found this report from the Congressional Research Service dated September 2007 to be very informative.  Your readers may find it helpful too.  The report compares health care for 30 OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) democracies around the world. The OECD consists of 30 democracies, most of which are considered the most economically advanced countries in the world.

 

The data from this report shows the United States as spending twice the amount on health care as any of the other democracies.  No country emerged as a clear quality leader.   In 2004 our health care costs amounted to 15.3% of our GDP (Gross Domestic Product). The average for the other democracies was 8.9%, the median was 8.8%.  In 2008, our health care costs are expected to have soared to over 17% of our GDP.  This is 4.3 times more on health care than on national defense.

 

This same report shows the percentage of health care that is publicly financed.  In the United States the percentage of publicly financed health care was 44%.  The average for all of the OECD democracies was 72.9% while the median was 74.2%  The United States had the lowest % of public financed health care.  We also have the highest uninsured rate of the OECD Countries with over 44 million uninsured.

How do we provide quality care for all and contain costs?   We simply can not continue with the excessive costs of our current system.  I support a public option to help the uninsured and help with cost containment.  I hope you do too.  Show us your new table dance.  Marianne Wilkins

 

Don Smith: Join Eastside Progressives

 

Dear Dave, Several local progressives and I have created a new social networking site, Eastside Progressives, because we were frustrated by the difficulty of communicating effectively via  email with fellow progressive activists.  With email there's no standard distribution list, one is hesitant to spam people, and tracking related responses is difficult.  Ning.com's website supports lots of cool features, including a blog, an event calendar, photos, videos, and various add-on applications.  By using Ning's social networking site, Eastside Progressives should enable better content management.

We want this site to be open, meaning that any progressive can post and no single person or clique owns the site.  All progressives are welcome, from both inside and outside the Democratic Party. We also want this site to be polite.  The need for such a website is particularly urgent in view of all the activism surrounding health care reform. If we want to organize rallies, meetings, protests, letter-writing, or canvassing, this site can be useful to enable better coordination.

Click here to join.  Thanks, Don Smith

 

Liberals and Democrats

 

Government Watch

Also go to Whitehouse.gov.

 

Media Pundits Fail to Recognize President Obama’s Successes

President Obama is on a roll.  Maria Sotomayor joins Supreme Court.  (By opposing her appointment, Republicans kiss Hispanic vote goodbye.)  Bill Clinton’s visit to North Korea may open the way for negotiations.  Cash for Clunkers is a big success.  Through opposing its expansion, Republicans kiss auto dealers’ vote goodbye.  Max Baucus says the Senate Finance Committee (the last of six congressional committees which are creating health care reform bills) will pass a health reform bill by September 15.  The Republican Party is changing to a (Tea Party) Hate Party.  Drone kills top Taliban leader, causing leadership turmoil.   Various economic indicators are up, including stock market indexes.  If Democrats must choose between using reconciliation (requiring 50 Senate votes) and failure to pass health care reform, they will choose reconciliation.  

 

But, listen to the commercial media pundits and even public television pundits and you get the impression that the Obama administration is on its last legs.  For example.  They are creating a tempest in a teapot.  Fiddlesticks. 

 

Health Care Reform

Our present health care system allows 22,000 unnecessary deaths per year.  To Download a Health Reform Fact Check Card, which counters lies told by opponents.  President Obama’s New Hampshire town meeting.  Various businesses now support health care reform.

 

Afghanistan

Watching Richard Holbrooke discuss our Afghanistan strategy, I am impressed again at the number of extremely competent people that President Obama has delegated to various roles.  What a contrast with the incompetent people that President Bush appointed.  I am convinced that our Obama Administration has the right Afghanistan strategy.

 

The primary reason we are engaged in Afghanistan is to stop Al Quada from using it to attack us.  Instead of focusing upon beating the Taliban militarily, our new strategy focuses upon winning the support of the Afghan people through providing security and development,.  Instead of destroying poppy fields, we are presenting alternative forms of agriculture.  Working with the Afghan military and police, we are trying to obtain and maintain a permanent presence in local villages.  To help local villagers with infrastructure and livelihood projects.  We are trying to reduce corruption by Afghan officials.  Above all, we are trying to reduce civilian casualties.

 

Foreign Policy

Following Obama’s trip, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton tours 6 African countries to express support for their success.

 

Economic Recovery and Reform

Government actions have turned our recession around.

IRS lawsuit results in Swiss bank releasing information about secret bank accounts, which may have allowed 52,000 U.S. account holders to evade $100 billion in taxes each year.  Bank also pays U.S. $780 million.

Congress includes 1,116 unwanted earmarks costing $2.75 billion into military appropriations bill.

Senate votes 80 to 17 for 2010 agriculture, food and nutrition budget bill.

 

Other Issues

Obama Administration reforms of immigration detention don’t go far enough.

Chemical industry leaders support increased EPA regulation, including releasing information to allow regulators to assess chemical hazards.

 

Who Are our Tea Party Republicans?

 

My impression is that Tea Party Republicans are about half of all remaining Republicans.  They are devotees of Conservative hate radio.  They like Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin.  They are racist.  They strongly support gun freedoms.

 

They appear to be middle aged and older lower middle working class White people (both men and women). Some of whom may have been severely harmed by our current recession, including loss of jobs and homes.  Encouraged by Rush Limbaugh and Fox Cable News, they feel resentful and threatened.  They feel threatened by our government instead of by the financial companies which caused their pain.  I don’t see any evidence that their imagined threats are real.  On the contrary, our Obama’s administration stimulus-recovery package is oriented to creating jobs, which may employ them. 

 

Egged on by Conservative hate radio, our Republican Party and health care reform opponents, Tea Party Republicans are successfully disrupting town hall meetings held by Congress members to inform and discuss health care reform issues and proposals.  Washington Congressman Brian Baird has indicated he will have to change to virtual town meeting (using conference calls).  Tea Party Republicans are also threatening physical harm to congress members and President Obama.

 

These disruptions may work in favor of health care reform.  Congress members who are attacked will be less likely to be sympathetic to objections to health care reform.  These disruptions may also create an image of the Republican Party such that more Republicans leave and others become less approving of them. 

 

Washington Congressman Rick Larsen may have found the answer.  He held his town meeting outdoors at a sports field.  Lots of people attended, with protesters finding it more difficult to be heard.  Dave Thomas

 

Here’s the Beef

When public health care improves, private health care also improves.

Democrats and Republicans try to affect U.S. census procedures for partisan advantage.

Bill Clinton will attend the fourth annual Net Nation Convention.

Karl Rove lied when he said he didn’t influence firing of federal prosecutors.

 

State and Local

 

We Should Reframe Our Major Obstacle

 

Our major obstacle to maintaining and improving our state government’s services to our people has been framed to be BIAW’s wealth.  Efforts have been made unsuccessfully to reduce this wealth through reducing the retro payments it receives from the state. 

 

Our major obstacle can be reframed to be BIAW’s Conservative leadership, which directs the use of this wealth.  This reframing suggests that we prioritize replacing BIAW’s Conservative leadership.  This may be much easier than reducing BIAW’s wealth.  If we successfully replace BIAW’s Conservative leadership, the use of BIAW’s wealth will be redirected from destroying our state government’s capacity to serve our people.  Even if not successful, our attempts to replace BIAW’s Conservative leaders will distract them from their present activities.  It is time for us to go on the offense.

 

Let’s Replace BIAW’s Conservative Leaders

 

We first define our vision and mission.  We next identify our major opponent.  We then expose and test our opponent.  We go on the offense to degrade our opponent’s base of support.

 

Suppose that our opponent is an association with thousands of businesses as members.  Our opponent receives much of its political and financial support from these members.  Degrading this base of support will harm both our opponent’s legitimacy and resources. 

 

President Obama provides two examples.  The American Medical Association (AMA) opposes his health care reform proposals.  Yet most doctors support Obama’s proposals.  Even among the minority of doctors who belong to the AMA, many support Obama’s proposals, rendering the AMA less credible.

 

The Chamber of Commerce opposes Obama’s health care (and global warming and labor) proposals.  But many Chamber member businesses support Obama’s health care proposals, rendering the Chamber less credible.

 

Similarly, we should explore degrading our opponent’s base.  Since most of its member companies are registered, we can identify and contact them.  We can poll some of them to learn how much they support our opponent’s Conservative ideology, activities and the results.  To learn how we might encourage their dissent. 

 

We can then encourage members to express their dissent, partly through providing less political and financial support.  Perhaps through changing their leaders.  Such a threat will weaken our opponent.  It will divert our opponent’s attention from offense (attempting to negatively influence our state government) to defense (attempting to maintain its base).  It may even influence our opponent to soften its Conservative ideology and ideology-driven activity.

 

This approach has several benefits:

·       It’s inexpensive, such that we can afford to implement with our limited initial resources.  The availability of financial and pro bono support is evidenced by Citizens to Uphold the Constitution (formerly FairPAC), which is supported by WSLC, SEIU, WEA, NARAL, Equal Rights Washington, Washington Conservation Voters and our state Trial Lawyers Association.

·       Our opponent will be hard put to stop us from implementing it. It will immediately notice what we are doing, but its response can only be to compete with us to maintain its credibility with its base while we are attempting to weaken it.

·       If successful, we will immediately weaken our opponent.

·       We can spread the word of any success to attract the participation of advocacy groups that have been stymied by our opponent; thus building our own strength.

·       We will learn much about our opponent, our own strategy and our cooperation, which will help us create and implement additional strategies.

 

A member of our opponent organization has informed me that he estimates that 75% of Seattle area members dissent from its Conservative objectives and activities.  I also learned that it will be easy to identify and contact other members.  Further investigation is needed and being conducted.  But even if an effort to change BIAW’s leadership failed, it might distract them from their nefarious activities.

 

We have previously identified our basic obstacle to be our opponent’s wealth.  Instead our basic obstacle is BIAW’s Conservative Leadership.  If BIAW’s leadership changes, BIAW’s wealth would not matter.

 

 

 

Our Filthy Rich BIAW

 

The BIAW pays for serving its 12,800 members (up from 9,000 members during this decade) through dues and fees, none of which can be legally used for political purposes. 

 

For political purposes, BIAW relies on significant Retro funds which are rebated from our surpluses in our state Labor and Industries accident fund.  The average rebate is 18-20% of money paid in.  An audit showed that since 1994 a coding error (which has since been corrected) produced rebates which were $10 to $15 million per year more than they should have been.

 

BIAW’s retro program is the State’s largest. It takes 10% of rebated funds for itself and another 10% for its 15 local affiliates as administrative fees before forwarding the remainder to member businesses.  During July 2002 through June 2005, BIAW received $21 million, of which it and its affiliates kept $4.2 million.  In recent years, BIAW may have received as much as $11 billion for administering the accident deposits of its members and the rebates. 

 

BIAW and its affiliates can and do use this money for political purposes, including:

·       Contributing to the campaigns of Conservative Washington State candidates and officials of both political parties

·       Professional lobbying

·       Lobbying by member companies

·       Development of favored political candidates

·       Informing supporters about their issues, actions and needs

·       Conducting policy research in cooperation with the Washington Policy Center

·       Conducting law suits

 

More specifically, these Retro moneys fund the Washington state Republican Party; candidates for Supreme Court judge, governor and both Republicans and Democrats for legislative positions; and Tim Eyman.  BIAW spent $7 million to support Dino Rossi’s 2008 gubernatorial campaign, more than was spent by the Republican Party.  Without BIAW’s major expenditures, Washington’s Conservative activities would be much less extensive. 

 

An attempt to audit and curtail these expenditures (SB 6035) barely passed the senate and was not considered by the house.  BIAW defended its use of retro funds.  

 

Adequate School Funding Requires BIAW Changes

 

Adequate school funding is impossible without Washington state tax reform to increase state revenue and spending reform to reduce business subsidies.  BIAW leads the charge to reduce state revenue and expenditures, including expenditures for state environmental, education, health and safety net programs.

 

Educators should join with labor unions, environmental groups, and others who are similarly harmed by BIAW to enable replacement of BIAW’s Conservative leaders.  Only then can we achieve adequate school funding.  Dave Thomas

 

Whom Do our Washington State Lobbyists Represent?

 

Mostly Commercial                       Mostly Non-Commercial

  82  Lobbying Firm                     116   Government

125   General Business                  11  Public Employee

  17  Commercial Services             45  Environment (mixed Commercial and Non-Commercial)

  31  Finance                              64  Education

   8   Advertising and Print Media    12  Teacher’s Unions

  13  Water and Waste Utilities       46  Trade Unions

  19  Electric Utilities                    77  Social Services

  10  Telephone Utilities                41  Social, Civic and Fraternal Organizations

    1  Nuclear Energy                     38  Law and Justice

  16  Petroleum Energy                    5  Religious Organizations

    5  Air Transportation               455   SUBTOTAL

  28  Land Transportation

  11  Marine Transportation       1202   TOTAL (number of firms)

   3   Mining

    9  Fisheries

  12  Forest and Wood Products

  20  Agriculture

  23  Real Estate and Development              Source of Information

  25  Construction

  22  Manufacturing

  11  Retailing

  17  Food, Beverage and Lodging

   4   Tobacco

  55  Health Care Facilities

  39  Health Care Products

  80  Health Care Insurance

  35  Insurance

  11  Recreation, Leisure and Art

  15  Recreation, leisure and Outdoor (mixed Commercial and Non-Commercial)

747   SUBTOTAL

 

Here’s the Beef

Passage of Tim Eyman’s Initiative 1033 would devastate our economy.

Republican Attorney General Rob McKenna has issued an opinion that workers have no right to privacy.  Employers may force their workers to listen to their political arguments.  Labor argues that American workers shouldn't have to drop their First Amendment and privacy rights at the workplace door.

Seattle police experiment with new approach to drug dealers.  Let’s hope it works.

Learn the penalties for possessing marijuana in Washington state.

Seattle food bank appears more like a grocery store than a commissary.

Bye bye glaciers.

Conservation can reduce Northwest power usage enough to achieve 85% of additional needs.

Light rail is too noisy to go through Bellevue residential neighborhoods.  Should use BNSF route.

 

Nation and World  

 

Norm Conrad: When Finance Rules, Economies Crash and Burn

 

This is an ironclad law that no one at the pinnacle of power and wealth wants to speak about too loudly.  But it is a truth that we dare not ignore or our way of life dies.

 

This is what is involved.  If the finance sector achieves preeminence, the real economy declines.  What is this “real economy”?  It is the stuff of economic sustainability, of a strong middle class, of the wealth of nations – it is an economy that makes things.  Making things uses a lot of people, who must be paid, thus spreading wealth to many.

 

How is the finance sector different?  It is a paper shuffling – stocks, bonds, derivatives, hedges, etc. – market; it has its place as a facilitator to the real economy, not as the dominator of or stand in for the real economy.  Finance, when it reaches a preeminent stage, steals resources from the real economy and distributes wealth to a very few.

 

“Wait a minute,” you may say.  “If I invest in Company X’s stock or bonds, surely this puts assets in the hands of the company and makes new product development and expansion possible.”  Sorry, but it does no such thing in almost every case.  When you and I buy stock, a bond, or a mutual fund, we go to a firm such as Schwab, TD Ameritrade, Templeton, etc.  They buy the paper for us from another gambler in the market.  None of that money goes to Company X.  After that piece of paper is sold to an investment bank in an initial public offering (IPO), all subsequent trades/purchases send Company X absolutely nothing.  All that activity on the big exchanges that “analysts” and commentators so breathlessly yell and rant about does nothing to make better, newer or more products.  It only makes (or loses) money for the former owner of that piece of paper.  That wealth is not spread out; it goes to hiring no one; it builds no new factories; it produces no next big things.

 

What is that facilitator role for finance that is its proper role?  That is primarily the role of the commercial bank and the role of futures for producers and distributors of the real economy’s products.  The role of commercial banks is to provide loans for new and existing businesses, to make money available to those who can put it to use by creating new capacity and jobs to meet growing demand.  In economics 101, this is referred to as “the multiplier effect”.  Your deposit at the bank is divided into two pieces – a small reserve and the rest is loaned out to others; they deposit that loan in the bank, which is divided up; and the bank loans out the large remaining chunk again and again, etc.  Hence a deposit of, say, $1000.00 becomes multiplied into economic activity of about $7,000.00.

 

Futures or puts and calls also have a place in the real economy.  They are a way for a farmer, e.g. to make sure that his or her crop will pay the bills by selling some of it well before the harvest for a price that guarantees a decent return.  In this way the farmer “hedges” his risk of the market for corn or wheat or whatever crashing by the time he can harvest it.  On the other side of the transaction, a bread baker or corn canner guarantees that her price won’t go through the roof when she has to buy the crop some months down the road.

 

The problem with these useful financial tools is when we stop using them as originally intended.  When banks stop loaning their deposits to others who build plants to make things but instead start using your deposits to buy currencies or stocks and bonds or already completed office towers for their own gain, nothing gets multiplied.  Nothing gets spread around; no one gets hired; no new ideas get turned into new products; no new demand is created.  When traders start trading futures among themselves, few farmers or oil well owners or miners end up protecting themselves.  As is the case today, only a very small percentage of owners of futures contracts will ever take possession of any wheat or Texas sweet crude or gold ore.  In fact the total value of all these pieces of paper exceeds the total value of the entire world economy many, many times over.

 

What we have now is a finance-strong economy based on speculation.  A climate of speculation leaks over into other sectors of the economy like housing.  Heavy speculation leads to bubbles.  Bubbles burst unpredictably and usually suddenly.  When that happens, as we have seen recently, people lose houses, college plans, all manner of savings and retirement dreams.  Jobs disappear.  Credit cards can no longer be paid off.  Bankruptcies skyrocket.

 

When finance rules the day, the economy crashes and burns because we are speculating instead of investing.  Norm Conrad

 

AIG Bailouts Passed Through to Bail Out Financial Companies Insured by AIG

 

Financial companies made risky speculative investments.  They insured them with AIG, without recognizing that AIG didn’t have the reserve to pay for claims.  When their speculative investments collapse, they made claims to AIG.  AIG couldn’t pay these claims, until our government bailed them out.  Besides directly bailing out the large financial companies, our government thus bailed them out more through bailing out AIG. 

 

When the financial companies pay the government back for the direct bailouts, they don’t pay the government back for the indirect AIG bailout.  I am not sure that AIG will be able to pay back the bailout moneys our government has given it.  Dave Thomas

 

Employment as Percentage of Population is Low.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Featured Advocacy Group --- National Unemployment Law Center -------------

 

A fundamental promise of America is that work will be a ladder to economic opportunity and an anchor of economic security for working families. But that promise has unraveled over the past three decades. Globalization has combined with domestic policy choices to yield an economy that creates too many low-wage jobs and not nearly enough good ones. Lax enforcement of workers' rights increased subcontracting and misclassification of employees as independent contractors, and failed immigration policies have heightened insecurity for all workers. Inequality has grown to historic levels, the middle class is imperiled, and many fear our best days are behind us.

 

The National Employment Law Project (NELP) responds by working to restore the promise of economic opportunity in the 21st century economy. In partnership with national, state and local allies, we promote policies and programs that create good jobs, strengthen upward mobility, enforce hard-won worker rights, and help unemployed workers regain their economic footing through improved benefits and services.

 

NELP works from the ground up to build change. Our model is to develop and test new policies at the state and local level, then scale them up to spur change at the national level. We partner with strong advocacy networks, grounded in the full range of stakeholders - grassroots groups and national organizations, worker centers and unions, policymakers and think tanks. With our staff of lawyers, policy experts and researchers, we provide the following:

In-depth legal and policy analysis, developing innovative strategies to create good jobs, improve working conditions and bolster economic security;

Rigorous empirical research, documenting key trends in the economy and spelling out effective solutions;

Expert legal advice and technical assistance, helping advocates craft viable policies in light of legal restrictions;

Strategic leadership in coalitions, bringing together diverse constituencies to pursue common goals;

Communications, public education and messaging, shining a spotlight on the struggles of today's working families and helping to increase understanding of key economic problems and viable policy solutions; and

Capacity building through dissemination of policy and research reports,  hosting conferences, and student training.

 

NELP has offices around the country and programs that touch the lives of workers across the economic spectrum. We welcome your inquiries and participation.

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Remote Area Medical Program Provides Inexpensive Health Care

 

 

Remote Area Medical® (RAM) Volunteer Corps is a non-profit, volunteer, airborne relief corps dedicated to serving mankind by providing free health care, dental care, eye care, veterinary services, and technical and educational assistance to people in remote areas of the United States and the world. 

Founded in 1985, Remote Area Medical® is a publicly supported all-volunteer charitable organization. Volunteer doctors, nurses, pilots, veterinarians and support workers participate in expeditions (at their own expense) in some of the world's most exciting places. Medical supplies, medicines, facilities and vehicles are donated.

 

The primary purpose of the Rural America Medical Program is to provide vision and dental care for underserved areas of the US. The vision care team of RAM provides people with eye exams and eyeglasses to improve their present circumstances and better see the world around them. For some, a pair of glasses may allow them to drive more safely, get a job or better execute their present job. For others, reading glasses will allow them to read more comfortably or thread a needle for the first time in years.

 

RAM’s dental program offers emergency extractions, restorations, cleanings and fluoride treatments.

For more.

 

High Speed Trains Are Cost Beneficial

 

Our Transportation Department has identified 10 high speed rail corridors suitable for development.  The cost might be as high as $100 billion, of which only $13 billion has been earmarked.  We have invested $1.8 trillion in highways and aviation over the past 60 years.

 

On high speed rail corridors, there is no advantage to flying distances less than 300 miles.  Rail will relieve freeway and airport traffic, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  For more.

 

Food Companies Act Like Tobacco Companies

 

Just as tobacco companies have extolled smoking and denied its dangers, food companies are now pushing unhealthy food.  For more.  They produce hyper-palatable combinations of sugar, fat and salt that not only appeal to us but have the capacity to rewire our brains, driving us to seek out more and more of those products.  They make it cheaper to buy fast manufactured food than fresh food. 

 

The result is that a record percentage of Americas are obese, increasing their illnesses and the cost of treating them.  Like with cigarettes, warning labels on food will have insufficient effect.  Due to the large variety of food, regulating food will be more difficult than regulating tobacco.

 

Here’s the Beef

It’s now easy to decode DNA.  But using knowledge of DNA to find cures is very complex.

Eating meat doesn’t cause greenhouse gases, if the animals are fed grains instead of natural forage.

President Obama’s agricultural assistance policy may be wrong.  Need ecologically sensitive food production instead of simply avoiding production which requires large resource inputs.

Unemployment losses decline sharply.  Why unemployment will linger.

Major airlines stop serving smaller town airports.

Our U.S. needs an industrial policy.

Military spending should be reduced.  National Guard troops should come and stay home.

Obama isn’t making needed policy changes toward South America.  For more.

China’s incinerators release toxic emissions which flow around the world.

With clever programs, Brazil’s economy is doing well, getting stronger and reducing poverty.

 

Our Liberal Spirit

 

New Possibilities, New Priorities

 

Calendars, Music, Books and Google

This is the season of calendars.  I’ve received half a dozen from organizations I support.  Especially environmental calendars with their beautiful pictures of scenery or wildlife.  Unfortunately, looking at pictures is low on my list of priorities.

 

Similarly with my many music CDs.  My collection includes early western songs, World War II songs, big bands, popular music from the 50’s to the present, classical music, country western and some traditional Christian songs.  I seldom listen to them.  I listen to Easy Listening on Comcast, or while driving, I listen to Easy Listening such as Montovani. 

 

I have more than 400 feet of books that I have read, all carefully arranged as my offline storage.  But they and the system are mostly rendered obsolete by Google.  Instead of looking at pictures, listening to music or researching through books I have already read, I now Google any question that comes to mind.  As I receive emailed commentaries from many advocacy organizations, many questions come to mind.  My little searches each day may total up to several hours.

 

My Different Interpretation of Tea Partiers

I am bemused at how often the commentators and Liberal spokesman arrive a opinions that seem very wrong to me.  For example, the impact of the disruptions of congress member’s town hall meetings.  They seem to think the disruptions will harm the passage of health care reform.  I don’t.  I believe they will just offend the congress members, who will continue to support reform.

 

Furthermore, I believe the Tea Partiers will drive more reasonable people out of the Republican Party, leaving a whining screaming party that is irrelevant to American politics and policy.  The major danger is the potential violence (even assassinations) they may provoke.  I am not sure how the resentments and anger of the Tea Partiers can be reduced.  I am not sure where their itch comes from, or how to scratch it.

 

Bring On our Young People

My faith in our future is especially buoyed by our young people of the ‘we’ or ‘millennium’ generation.  They are liberal on both economic and social issues, and skeptical of our Old Politics of putting partisanship before serving our public interest. 

 

Addressing Key Logs in the Log Jam

Also concerning priorities.  Many of us choose one or several issues for which to advocate solutions.  I pride myself in being one of the few who try to find those issues that if resolved, will ease the resolution of many others (the key logs in the log jam).  My key issues have been clean elections, income tax reform, and now, removing the Conservative leadership of the BIAW.   I am bemused that some people wanting to make their contribution, start trivial little groups, instead of joining with others engaged with viable groups.

 

Recommended Books – See our list of books for liberals

William D. Cohan, 2009, House of Cards. A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street

This book begins with a 150 page detailed history of the collapse of Bear Sterns.  Too much he said, she said, they said.  I don’t recommend it for understanding the causes of our recent speculative bubble.  I recommend instead, the books on our reading list dealing with our Financial Bubble Economy as one of our three major crises, the others being Peak Oil and Global Warming, especially those that boldly highlighted.

 

Michael Lewis, 2009, Panic. The Story of Modern Financial Insanity

A collection of detailed mostly journalistic commentaries on panics as they occur.

 

Stephen Leeb, 2009, Game Over. How You Can Prosper in a Shattered Economy

Leeb predicts dire results of having reached peak oil.  Increasing carbon-based or alternative energies, water or mineral commodities each requires increasing the other two, producing scarcities and increased prices of them.  So there are limits to large scale production of alternative energies.  The result will be price inflation for all three.  Based on this analysis, he suggests an investment strategy.

 

I believe that Leeb doesn’t deal adequately with the possibility of changing our lifestyles to require less energy.  I believe it will happen voluntarily or involuntarily.  Dave Thomas