Tag Archives: 2008 elections

Mountaintop Removal – more reasons to get Jesse Johnson elected Governor of West Virginia

Mountaintop removal is a seroius and significant issue in our country that few people hear about. But no more. Thanks to Wes over at California Greening, I came across this:

This video brought tears to my eyes. Mountains are one of my loves. I grew up around the Blue Ridge Mountains. My children and grandchildren live around those mountains. Seeing how this affects people and all other life is heart wrenching. I live around some of the most beautiful mountains in the country and see how mountaintop removal for gold affects the area where I live. It’s a crime and a travesty to our planet.

Wes posts:
Last night, Bill Moyers asked his viewers to get involved in this issue. The following is from Bill Moyers Journal.

“There’s nothing make-believe about this. Remember these scenes of mountain top mining in West Virginia? Companies blow those mountains sky-high to expose the coal, then haul away tons of rock and debris and dump the waste into valley areas. To protect the quality of the water, they’re not supposed to pile the stuff within 100 feet of rivers and creeks.

But while we’ve all been obsessing over Sarah Palin’s posh makeover and Joe Biden’s latest gaffe, the coal companies have been lobbying the Bush administration to gut the rules even further, to allow them greater freedom to dump massive waste piles anywhere they want – including directly into the water.

Now, the Interior Department is one of those government agencies that’s practically been turned over to the industries it’s supposed to regulate. So as a parting gift, the President’s appointees at Interior have now officially proposed granting the coal companies their wish – to dump at will.

There’s a 30-day period for public comment and review before the proposal takes effect, so you can find out how to register your opinion – pro or con – at our site on PBS.org.”

So, if Moyers is asking for some action, then maybe the best action that we can take is to help Jesse get elected in any way that we can.

* You can donate to Jesse on his web site.
* You can help out with phone banking, even from here. (I need to get you the contact).
* You can do what I am doing, plant the seed of an upset on every blog where you can post. I even posted a call for his support on DailyKos without getting accused of being a troll.

Racism in this year’s elections more prevalent than ever

There are a lot of posts over at One Utah, many with real video footage, of rallies, interviews, and other events displaying racist behaviors towards Barack Obama.

This is very creepy and, as Cliff Lyon  states in one post,

….this is NOT the country ANY good American can be proud of. We MUST ALL PROTEST!

Now, I am really afraid for our country. ‘Whitey’ America is OUT OF CONTROL!

Rosa Clemente to be interviewed on Green Party Watch Radio today

Green Party Vice Presidential nominee Rosa Clemente has confirmed her appearance on Green Party Watch Radio today with Gregg Jocoy  from 3 to 3:30 PM EST. To listen live, or later if that is more convenient, simply click here.

Seriously Green

Seriously Green – The Movie
These pieces represent some of work in progress on the upcoming documentary “Seriously Green”
From:polidocproductions

During an era when it is fashionable to “Be Green”, what does it mean to be seriously Green? Our premise is that being seriously green goes way beyond buying recyclable products and composting. It is a political awareness of social and environmental justice and transparency in government. And while that work starts mostly by making demands upon our government within our own communities, without addressing the broken elements of our electoral system, change is too slow.

“”Seriously GREEN” takes an irreverent view of this election period, telling the unique story of the Presidential Candidates for the Green Party, who campaign on in relative obscurity and with little or no money. Through their personal stories, the audience begins to engage in the Green conversation in a new light. We use humor and juxtasposition to keep the audience interested in what many feel are dry subjects, like electoral and campaign finance reform, ballot access, environmentalism. While this is not an advocacy piece for the Greens, it does sympathize with the characters and endear them to the viewer, forcing us to ask ourselves the question “What is it to be Seriously GREEN”

Seriously Green Playlist:

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Just Another Candidate for Governor or a Real Maverick?

This extensive interview is conducted and posted on OpEd News by Kevin Gosztola a student pursuing a career in documentary film.

Americans concerned with whether the GOP will steal the election or not have had their minds focused on early voting reports especially early voting reports coming out of West Virginia that show that votes, according to Wired News, are being flipped by ES&S voting machines (touch-screen machines with paper trails or optical-scan machines). The counties where reports have surfaced detailing vote flipping have been ordered by the state to recalibrate their machines. 

One West Virginia voter reported that vote flipping happened when voting for candidates in the governor, state senate, and state Supreme Court races.

In West Virginia, the governor of the state used to be the Secretary of State in charge of the voting machines. The governor, Democrat Joe Manchin, is now in a race against two candidates, state senator Russ Weeks, a Republican, and Jesse Johnson, a Mountain Party candidate (the Mountain Party is affiliated with the Green Party). Johnson was a 2008 Green Party presidential nominee.

I took some time to talk about voting problems and mountaintop removal, a central issue in West Virginia, with Jesse Johnson, who has been endorsed by Mike Gravel:

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Green Party Races Around the Country

Green Party Watch and On the Wilder Side have been publishing posts about Green Party races to watch this election. I am reposting here from Green Party Watch – if there are others that need to be added, please help with the list!

GPUS:

  • Cynthia McKinney / Rosa Clemente – obviously!
  • Jesse Johnson – Mountain Party candidate for Governor of West Virginia – endorsed by the Sierra Club, participated in three gubernatorial debates, only candidate to oppose mountain top removal mining in West Virginia.
  • Rebekah Kennedy, Green candidate for the US Senate in Arkansas, is competing against Democratic incumbent Mark Pryor, with no Republican in the race. Despite numerous invitations, Sen. Pryor has avoided facing Ms. Kennedy in a candidates’ debate.
  • Gordon Clark, Maryland candidate for the US House (District 8, Rep. Chris Van Hollen’s seat), is receiving significant attention for his grassroots campaign against a powerful Democrat. (Mr. Van Hollen, though only in Congress five years, is Chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.) Gordon raised more campaign funds (all individual) during the second quarter than any other candidate nominated for Congress by an alternative party in the US
  • Malik Rahim, Louisiana Green candidate for the US House (District 2), is co-founder of the Common Ground Collective, an organization that provides short-term relief to victims of hurricane disasters in the Gulf Coast region. Mr. Rahim is a former Black Panther and ran for New Orleans City Council in 2002 as a Green Party candidate. The election for the 2nd District US House seat will take place on December 6 instead of November 4 because of election delays caused by Hurricanes Gustave and Ike.
  • Ross Mirkarimi was elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (District 5) in 2004 and is running for reelection. Mr. Mirkarimi has sponsored about 40 pieces of legislation addressing crime, making streets safer for pedestrians, improving efficiency of city departments, and the environment. He led efforts to promote medical marijuana clubs in San Francisco. In March 2007, he introduced legislation prohibiting large supermarkets and drugstores from providing customers with non-biodegradable plastic bags, making San Francisco the first city to regulate such bags. In June 2008, Mr. Mirkarimi sponsored a one-year pilot plan for solar rebate program that provides $1.5 million to nonprofit organizations and lower income residents for installing solar voltaic power on rooftops. He faces two opponents in the current election.

This is a great hi-light list, but there are so many more. Doing some brainstorming with Green Change, this list came up (in no particular order):

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Democracy Now – hird-Party Candidates Nader & McKinney Respond to Final McCain-Obama Debate

Breaking the Sound Barrier: Third-Party Candidates Ralph Nader & Cynthia McKinney Respond to Final McCain-Obama Debate
from votetruth08.com
Democracy Now, October 16, 2008

For livestream version or audio: http://www.democracynow.org/2008/10/16/stream

Senators Barack Obama and John McCain met last night for the final debate before the November 4th presidential election, sparring over the economy, tax policy, negative campaigning, trade agreements, abortion and the educational system. As with the other debates, third-party candidates were not invited to participate. We break the sound barrier and hear from Green Party presidential nominee Cynthia McKinney and independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader.

Guests:

Cynthia McKinney, Green Party presidential nominee. Former Democratic congresswoman from Georgia.

Ralph Nader, Independent presidential candidate. He is a longtime consumer advocate and corporate critic.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Senators Barack Obama and John McCain met last night for the final debate before the November 4th presidential election. It was held at Hofstra University on Long Island in New York.

Prior to the ninety-minute face-off, police arrested fifteen protesters in a peaceful demonstration outside the university led by Iraq Veterans Against the War. One veteran, Nick Morgan, was hospitalized after being trampled by a police horse. Video shot at the scene showed Morgan lying on the ground by a pool of blood. The arrests took place less than an hour before Barack Obama and John McCain took the stage.

During the debate, the Iraq war was barely mentioned. The war in Afghanistan never came up. Instead, the two candidates sparred over the government’s plans to rescue the financial system, tax policy, negative campaigning, trade agreements, abortion and the educational system.

AMY GOODMAN: As with the other debates, third-party candidates were not invited to participate. But today on Democracy Now!, we will break the sound barrier by giving some of those candidates a chance to respond to last night’s questions.

Green Party presidential nominee Cynthia McKinney joins us in Atlanta, and independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader joins us on the phone. We invited Libertarian Party presidential nominee Bob Barr and Constitution Party nominee Chuck Baldwin, but they couldn’t join us. So, they will answer the same questions put to the major party candidates.
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Cynthia McKinney appears on the Washington Journal, C-SPAN

Cynthia McKinney in this week’s Salt Lake City Weekly!

http://slweekly.com/index.cfm?do=article.details&id=2577C32F-14D1-13A2-9FF10BA236D60814


Cynthia McKinney is a former Georgia House of Representatives member. She served six terms as a Democrat, including powerful assignments on the Armed Services and International Relations committees. In 2008, she left the Democratic Party to run for president as the Green Party candidate.

 

You were originally a Democratic member of the House, but switched party affiliation to the Green Party. What motivated this shift?
The Democratic Party left me by refusing to address rampant voter disenfranchisement in 2000 and 2004 and refusing to stand up to an administration that was lying to the public, which resulted in trillion-dollar deficit for the people and loss of lives in Iraq. I found a home where my values were reflected back to me, with the Green Party.
 
What changes would a McKinney administration bring?
First, we would stop the wars. Then, we would start to undo the mess Wall Street has made with the connivance of the two parties by bringing the four pillars of the Green Party (ecological wisdom, social justice, grassroots democracy and nonviolence) into the policymaking of this country. We would see an end to institutional policies of discrimination and class division, which would strengthen our communities to be sustainable, healthy, and livable.
 
Why should voters support your campaign?
I have worked to bring integrity to our purported democracy by addressing the inequities of the voting process in order to ensure that everyone has the right to vote. I am committed to bringing our troops home from Iraq. Our administration would decrease defense spending and use those dollars for human services, such as education and universal single-payer health care, and improving our planet through programs that will support a healthier environment and provide a new manufacturing base of jobs in the renewable energy sector.
 
What is the hardest part about running a third-party ticket?
The corporate-controlled media says this is a two-party country, despite the fact that the constitution never mentions political parties. Thus I am routinely ignored (thankfully not by your paper) and, though Americans may share my values, they have to spend time searching for information that I exist and am a viable candidate for president. In addition, ballot-access laws vary wildly from state to state, making it extremely prohibitive for parties to run qualified candidates and give voters more choice. Utah is considered one of the “reddest” states in the nation, thus making it seem like there is no choice. It is difficult to persuade citizens to consider voting for Green Party candidates and values when they think their vote doesn’t matter.
 
Would opening the debates create a flood of candidates filing for the presidency?
It might, but considering the quality of what the two biggest parties offer, wouldn’t that be preferable? Opening the debates would certainly make a situation where more diverse people would file and it would make them more representative of the population and constituency.
 
What would ending NAFTA and other trade agreements do for the average person?
For many people it would mean they would have jobs again, jobs producing products our communities need. It would restore environmental and worker protections as well as incentives for local manufacturing and production. This would benefit all of us with higher paying, more stable, and more meaningful employment opportunities. The products produced would not have to be recalled because they contain elements known to be toxic.
 
Ending economic disparities is a proposal. What programs would bring an end to disparities?
That’s like asking for a laundry list! First, let’s stop the golden parachutes for CEOs who can’t run a business, and that means electing people who aren’t beholden to corporations. An end to ridiculous “free trade” agreements. Real support for public education, including helping everyone who wants to go to college. When our urban schools fail, partly because of lead paint in the homes and poor diets, a major lead-removal program and urban gardens may be the things that make the biggest difference. Major tax reforms that don’t punish people for not being wealthy. Making sure every American has a home, a home that uses no fossil fuels and has no toxins in its construction, and a major investment in clean, renewable-energy systems and mass transit that works.
 
You propose reparations for blacks. Would this lift the economic disparity? Where would the funds come for this program?
The fortunes in this country were originally based on ownership of land or on the slave trade, and that original deficit in the owning of land created an economic hole that African-Americans have never been able to climb out of. A lack of democracy has perpetuated that system, in which African-Americans own less, and are subjected to the most financial irregularities that Wall Street perpetuates. There are many things to do to end the disparities in our communities: remove lead paint, improve the diet of all children, improve schools in low-income neighborhoods instead of giving them fewer resources; the list goes on for quite awhile.  Reparations is one of the things that completes the picture. If we stop funding wars and bailouts, we could do amazing things in this country.
 
How does the McKinney campaign differ from Obama and McCain?
My campaign is not lead by corporate lobbyists and spin-doctors. It is based on real people with real solutions for the violence, injustice and ecological collapse we see around us. Since we take no corporate contributions, we do not work for Wall Street—we work only for you!
Some of the policy differences are:

  • n The McKinney Campaign wants immediate withdrawal of troops and contractors from Iraq (thereby bringing Utah troops home).
  • n The McKinney Campaign wants to cut off all war funding—thereby having more money for human-welfare services such as education, where Utah has the lowest spending per pupil and the highest class sizes in the nation.
  • n The McKinney campaign supports a universal single-payer health care system that covers everyone.
  • n The McKinney Campaign opposes war with Iran.

 
Do you believe you will win?
What is your definition of "win?" If the Green Party gets 5 percent of the vote, we will qualify for millions of dollars in public funding. This will enable us to promote policies that the other parties aren’t even mentioning, such as single-payer, universal health care. If you want public policy that that reflects your values, then your vote for the Green Party will be a step toward that goal.

Al Jazeera interviews Cynthia McKinney