Tag Archives: politics

Today’s Utah Legislature News

The 2007 Utah Legislature convenes today. Here are headlines in the news:

Deseret News
King Day session miffs some Utahns
Plan targets access to porn at schools
Education — It’s No. 1 issue, but lawmakers also to focus on tax cuts
The boom-time session begins (opinion)
Immigrant tuition perk is targeted
Vouchers to be a key legislative issue (opinion)
’07 wrestling match starts up Monday
State agencies’ ‘base budgets’ reviewed
Proposed bill seeks to ensure hiring of legal workers

Salt Lake Tribune
Legislature draws flak for convening on MLK Day
Poll shows Utahns, Legislature priorities don’t match up
Bad blood over soccer stadium has legislators seeking budget cuts for Salt Lake County

Buttars’ Bill on Freedom of Religious Expression

I think it’s time for another round of Beavers and Buttars, only on a different topic.

This year, Utah Senator Chris Buttars (R-West Jordan) is introducing legislation (SB111)that would permit individuals to express religious messages on public property while still prohibiting government entities from imposing religious concepts.
Today’s Deseret News describes Buttars’ bill where Buttars is quoted as stating that it would be o.k., for example, for a student to walk into school with a religious message on a t-shirt.

Buttars said his bill would apply to a student wearing a T-shirt with a religious message to school or a group singing a Christmas hymn in a public park — but not a government entity that wants to put up a Nativity scene. High school students would be able to choose to pray at their graduation, he said, but the school couldn’t make that part of the event.
“That’s the separation of church and state I believe in,” the senator said. “That government officials can’t impose religion on individuals, but individuals have the right to express closely held religious beliefs on public property.”

Buttars said he introduced the bill after a student was sent home with an LDS message on a t-shirt and feels that students should be able to express their religious beliefs.

Well, then, let’s consider these scenarios:
A student from an LDS family has a t-shirt with: “CTR”
Another student from an atheist family has a t-shirt with “There is no God”
And another student from a Catholic church has a t-shirt with “Homosexuality is a sin”.
Yet another student from a Church of the Creator family has a t-shirt with “Kill All Blacks”

Under Buttars’ bill, all of the above would be permissible.

While I feel that students have the right to bring their bibles with them, pray to themselves in school, etc., the line gets drawn when messages are blatantly displayed, interrupting the learning process and making others feel uncomfortable as well.

This is a bill that is an unnecessary piece of legislation – something Buttars is good at doing.

This week’s Utah Legislature Headlines

Deseret News
Lobbyists wiggle through loophole
Schools rehiring retirees: Districts are desperate due to teacher shortage
Utah’s gas tax may change: And 1 bill would cut $$ going to transit districts
Utahns are still split over vouchers: But poll finds support gaining for tuition aid
State wants to increase movie incentive fund
Buttars seeks free exercise of faith
Cap is proposed on part of tuition that pays faculty

Salt Lake Tribune
Republican prepares bill for demise of Roe v. Wade
Governor says he will fight to keep in-state tuition: Despite veto threat, bill’s sponsor will push to repeal lower college rates for immigrants
4 of 5 USTAR outreach centers selected
Soccer plan: New concerns
Consultant raises questions about RSL’s debt load, cash flow

Guv wants to tweak anti-meth efforts–Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. unveils a $10.2 million campaign focusing on prevention and rehab
Rise in minimum wage OK’d by House–Utah representatives are divided along party lines; Senate plans tax breaks for businesses

Purge the Surge Rally Photos


Media Coverage
Continue reading

Protesting the Surge – Media Coverage

Despite frigid temperatures and snow, approximately 50 people attended the rally last night in Salt Lake City.  Here are  links to articles and photos about it.  Even though TV cameras from channels ABC4 and Fox13 took extensive footage and interviews, I can’t find anything on their websites about the event.


Iraq protest

About 40 people meet in front of the Federal Building downtown to protest President Bush’s plan to send additional troops to Iraq.SLC protesters decry Bush decision.(Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune)

SLC protesters decry Bush decision

The demonstration is one of 600 across the nation blasting the surge

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Standing on a street corner in near-freezing temperatures, 7-year-old Aidan Carrier bobbed a sign to attract motorists’ attention.
   “Is 3,000 enough?” the placard read, providing a chilling critique of President Bush’s plans to escalate troop levels in Iraq, where nearly 3,020 U.S. soldiers have died in combat.
   Carrier explained matter-of-factly that he doesn’t like the conflict.
   “I think it’s really bad,” he said. “President Bush just wants to get more war.”
   Anti-war protestors gathered Thursday outside the Wallace F. Bennett Federal Building in downtown Salt Lake City to condemn Bush’s commitment of more than 20,000 additional troops to Iraq.
   Despite an afternoon storm, the rally attracted about 40 people who waved signs and chanted, “How do we support our troops? Bring them home.”
   Their message was echoed at nearly 600 other protests across the nation, where volunteers rallied on street corners less than 24 hours after Bush’s speech, according to protest organizer AmericaSaysNo.org.
   Salt Lake City resident Kim Spangrude spent a year worrying about her son’s safety as he fought as a mortar launcher near the Iraqi town of Samara. He made it home. Others have not.
   She denounced the war as morally and ethically wrong, and said escalation only will lead to more deaths.
   “It is the same path with a different set of ruts in the ground,” she said.    Spangrude’s dissatisfaction with the war is not uncommon in Utah, where a recent Tribune poll found that 45 percent of residents disapprove with the president’s handling of the war, compared to 41 percent in favor.
   If nothing else, the Salt Lake City woman hopes to add support to Bush’s critics in this, one of the nation’s reddest states.
   “It’s OK to say that we are not for this war,” she said. “We want the troops home.”
   jstettler@sltrib.com


Sophia Overfelt, 6, center, and Allyson Dugan, 10, picket with their parents at the Federal Building in Salt Lake City Thursday. Nearly 50 people gathered to protest President Bush's new strategy of sending additional troops to Iraq. Protesters brought candles and signs proclaiming support for bringing American troops home. The rally was held in conjunction with similar events nationwide. People for Peace and Justice and Desert Greens Green Party of Utah organized the event, which planner Eileen McCabe said was a plea for peace. "We need to stop dying in a losing battle," she said. (Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret Morning News)
Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret Morning News

 

Sophia Overfelt, 6, center, and Allyson Dugan, 10, picket with their parents at the Federal Building in Salt Lake City Thursday. Nearly 50 people gathered to protest President Bush’s new strategy of sending additional troops to Iraq. Protesters brought candles and signs proclaiming support for bringing American troops home. The rally was held in conjunction with similar events nationwide. People for Peace and Justice and Desert Greens Green Party of Utah organized the event, which planner Eileen McCabe said was a plea for peace. “We need to stop dying in a losing battle,” she said.

Impeachment Ad in NY Times today

From http://www.VotetoImpeach.org:

Today’s New York Times carries the full page ad calling for the impeachment of George W. Bush (Jan. 12, 2007). Congratulations to all members of ImpeachBush/VoteToImpeach.org who helped place this New York Times ad. This is the third full-page impeachment ad to run in the New York Times. With everyone’s support, we have also placed ads in the San Francisco Chronicle, Boston Globe, USA Today, and other newspapers around the country.

The timing for the ad is excellent. Coming 36 hours after Bush brazenly announced an expansion of his criminal war and occupation in Iraq, the country is seething with anger. Because Bush remains in office, thus far escaping impeachment, thousands more Iraqis and U.S. soldiers will be killed and wounded in a war that should never have happened.

We want to seize the momentum and place the ad in various other newspapers. We will also be having a major impeachment contingent on March 17, the 4th anniversary of the war in Iraq, at the March on the Pentagon in Washington DC. We can place more ads and organize the nationwide grassroots campaign, including this contingent, with everyone’s continued support and commitment to ImpeachBush.org. If you can help, click here

The danger that Bush poses is extreme. His speech of Wednesday night, directly in opposition to the wishes of the American people, not only announced his plan to deepen the war in Iraq, but made clear his direct threat to attack Syria and Iran. Impeachment is imperative. Congress must act before more and more are killed and before Bush’s war spreads into other countries. We cannot wait two more years.

Please take action today:

1. Forward this email to all of your lists and your friends and families. You can do so by clicking here.
2. Be sure to sign the referendum for impeachment and get everyone you know to sign it too. We will be announcing the new calendar and plan of action shortly to everyone who has signed up.
3. Donate now, your help is urgently needed for the impeachment effort. Click here.

The coming months are critical for the impeachment movement. Not only do 70% of the people oppose Bush’s expansion of the Iraq war, the so-called “surge,” the majority believe that Bush should be impeached if he lied about the reasons for the Iraq war, or if he engaged in illegal wiretapping. He did both. This is a people’s movement and everyone’s help is needed. As ImpeachBush.org has stated, “The Constitution cannot defend itself. The people must act.”

If every member and supporter of the impeachment movement made a donation, this ad could be placed in newspapers across the country. If you have contributed before, consider making another donation now. If you have never donated this is the time to take action. Please donate today by clicking here.

Your work and support has taken the Impeachment movement to a significant moment in U.S. politics. People throughout the United States are now openly and frequently discussing the possibility of impeachment and urging their Congressional representatives to take the right step. The letters to the editor and full page ads that you have worked to place have forced the mass media to acknowledge that impeachment is a real issue for this President. Check your email in the coming days for announcements of the next steps and actions, and be sure to get as many as you can to sign the referendum and get involved.

All of us at ImpeachBush/VotetoImpeach.org

Purge the Surge

Today there will be a big protest in response to Bush’s plan to send more troops to Iraq.

I’ve been working on a banner that I will have to tonight:

Even in Utah, the numbers opposing this plan are more than those that are in support of it. But Utah’s representatives continue to support Bush.

Articles in today’s news about Bush’s announcement last night:
Will big gamble work? Call for troops sets up a showdown
Speech boosts support among some Utahns
Bush calls for New Way Forward
Many Utahns say give plan a chance
Americans weigh new Bush plan for Iraq
Most of Utah’s congressional delegation support Bush’s new Iraq plan

The Surge – Write your Representatitive

People for Peace and Justice of Utah has issued a call for citizens to conduct a picket the day the news publishes Bush’s announcement about “The Surge” of more troops to Iraq. The announcement is likely to be made Wednesday, with the picket, then, occuring on Thursday. See information here.

Kim Spangrude of Military Families Speak Out (MFSO) in Utah, is asking people to contact their representatives to ask that no more troops be sent to Iraq. She provides a template for a letter:

Dear Friends:

The next two to three days will be of utmost importance in terms of expressing to our
senators and representatives our opposition to the “Surge Plan” the President will most likely announce on Wednesday. They especially need to hear this opposition from military members and family members of those currently in the military.

I urge everyone to contact the following Utah members of the Senate and
House of Representatives and tell them we as family members of those in the military,
or friends of military members, oppose any plan to increase the number of troops in
Iraq, and that we urge Congress and the President to decrease the number of troops.

Here is a sample conversation you can use when you call or write our UTAH delegation
today:
—————————————————————-
Dear _________________________________’

I am a (friend/family member/active duty member/veteran) of the U.S. Military who (arecurrently serving/have served) in Iraq. I am strongly opposed to any plan to increasethe number and level of troops in Iraq, and I advocate for withdrawal of troops fromIraq. The only thing sending more troops will accomplish is to increase casualties. The situation calls for greater diplomacy, not more troops. The new troops would be sent to Iraq, according to Bush, to try to provide greater security, a mission that,inevitably, would place them right in the middle of escalating violence that has already taken thousands of American and Iraqi lives. The President’s decision- if it comes to that- would obviously disregard the will of the great majority of the U. S. people, including Utahns, who have made it clear they are opposed to this unjustifiable war. As your constituent, I urge you to express opposition to a surge in troop level, if the President plans to do this.

Sincerely,
___________________________
—————————————————————-
Whether you would prefer to call, send a letter or email, here is the contact info:

Bennett, Robert F.- (R – UT)
431 DIRKSEN SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510
(202) 224-5444
Web Form: bennett.senate.gov/contact/emailmain.html

Hatch, Orrin G.- (R – UT)
104 HART SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510
(202) 224-5251
Web Form: hatch.senate.gov/index.cfm?Fuseaction=Offices.Contact

Jim Matheson (D-Ut)
Utah-2nd, Democrat
1323 Longworth HOB
Washington, DC 20515-4402
Phone: (202) 225-3011

Chris Cannon (R-Ut)
Utah-3rd, Republican
2436 Rayburn HOB
Washington, DC 20515-4403
Phone: (202) 225-7751

Rob Bishop (R-Ut)
Utah-1st, Republican
124 Cannon HOB
Washington, DC 20515-4401
Phone: (202) 225-0453

We ALL need to do this; it is very easy to call. You usually talk to the Aide, they
take your name down, and that is it!!!!

Please make a commitment to do this today.

Thanks, and Peace

Kim Spangrude
Utah MFSO

Utah Legislative News

Deseret News

Speed-limit hike opposed
Lawmakers considering plan to cut property tax: GOP leaders look at plan to trim surpluses
Ag chief offers hints on farm bill
Driver-safety bills in Utah Legislature
Lawmakers urged to focus on health care: Group asks Utahns to visit the Capitol to push for action
Majority of Utahns favor big tax cuts
Don’t kill tuition break(Opinion)
Child-care providers may face new rules

Salt Lake Tribune
Gastric surgery: Bill would mandate that insurance pay

Impeachment Videos

David Swanson, founder of AfterDowning Street.org, has a page of videos on Impeachment:

Impeach Bush and Cheney Now!

Here is one example:
John Nichols puts current movement for impeachment into historical context: