Tag Archives: politics

Happy Election Day!

Well, the day has finally come.

I filed to run for office 7 months ago (Salt Lake County Council District 5). I had big plans to get lawn signs, do canvassing, and have coffee house meet and greets.

Unfortunately my plans weren’t realized since I accepted a last minute offered administrative type position (special ed director) in my school and all my time became suddenly diverted.

Anyway…..

This morning I had some thoughts about elections in the U.S.

  • The election season is too long.
  • There are too many signs. Fences are saturated with them to the point where you can’t read any of them. There are some campaigns whose signs are in sextuplicate on the same corner. What’s up with that? Further, sign ordinances are not enforced.
  • The media is biased, inluding publicly funded media outlets. They don’t cover all candidates.
  • The voting itself is a debacle.

    There are definite reforms that are desperately needed in our elections in the U.S. It’s so big and such a mess that I’m not sure what the starting point is to change this.

    Given all this, I hope that everyone will vote. It’s important and it’s our right and, in a sense, our obligation.

    Happy Voting and Happy Election Day!

  • Raise a Ruckus on Election Day!

    When I was at Camp Casey this summer, I was priveleged to be able to meet and hear Reverend Yearwood, “The Rev”. Today this message came across my desk:
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    Greetings,

    Hey everyone this is Rev. Yearwood, and on November 7th, thousands of us will be using email
    and text messaging to confront and defeat election fraud in real time.

    If you carry a cell phone, are committed to representative democracy, and you have some free
    time on November 7th, then you should join this team (Join at http://www.ruckus.org/electionprotection or text PROTECT to 30644).

    If anyone tries to resuscitate Jim Crow in say Ohio, Florida, Pennsylvania, or any other state for that matter, we’ll provide real time information on when, where, and how you can be most useful.
    Continue reading

    More Party Biases

    In my reading this morning I saw a prevailing theme that stood out in the media – nationall and locally.

    I kept reading opening sentences in articles that referred to “THE” two parties – not by name, mind you, but as “THE” two parties.

    When I voted the other day, I as expecting candidates to be listed alphabetically by name. they weren’t. “THE” two parties were listed first in each race and then the “other” parties alphabetically by party name. Not very equitable in my opinion.

    The two-party system has got to change. It is clearly corporate in nature and not equitable at all, as evidenced by how the media protrays politics in the U.S.

    Election News

    Salt Lake Tribune

  • Election Day ’06: Utah’s poll forecast – Long lines, few hitches: Voting experts say we’re prepared, even if the Diebold machines aren’t
  • A look at some of the top local elections
  • Utah Election News

    Deseret News

  • Several local races could swing either way
  • 2006 candidates
  • U.S. Senate and House Surveys
  • Legislative survey
  • Election News
  • BC  benner New
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    Restoring Education, Healing Children, Creating Citizens:

    A Conversation with John Taylor Gatto
    Backbone Cabinet Nominee, Education
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    RSVP to join us on Monday, November 6, 5:30 (PACIFIC)

    Education Secretary nominee John Taylor Gatto is a passionate advocate for education reform. A schoolteacher for thirty years, and a multi-year recipient of New York State and New York City Teacher of the Year Awards, His celebrated books include Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling, The Exhausted School, A Different Kind of Teacher, and The Underground History of American Education.

    Nationwide there has been much discussion about our failing public education system – low standardized test scores, teacher shortages, crowded classrooms, school budget crises, crumbling school buildings, dangerous playgrounds, illiterate untrained young adults, and more. Chronically failing public school systems throughout the United States have compelled politicians to address this issue in a counterproductive and symbolic manner (i.e. Bush’s No Child Left Behind Act). Many parents have sought alternative education settings for their children such as a school voucher system, charter schools, homeschooling, and costly, homogeneous, independent schools.

    John Taylor Gatto has taken the debate further, describing our public school structure as a “Catastrophe.” Gatto asserts that public schooling in this country was “deliberately designed to produce mediocre intellects, to hamstring the inner life, to deny students appreciable leadership skills, and to ensure docile and incomplete citizens in order to render the populace ‘manageable.’ ” (quote from Against Schools article by Gatto, Harper’s Magazine, 2003 – read the article)

    If that is true, are public schools succeeding in their original purpose? If so, what does Gatto propose Americans do for our children instead? What do our young people really need to know to create abundant lives for themselves, for survival and community building in the 21st century?

    For Monday’s Conversation, John Taylor Gatto will engage with us as we explore possible solutions to these troubling questions about American schooling. Besides reading the Harper’s article linked to above, it might be interesting preparation to listen to our past call with Jonathan Kozol.

    Check out our nearly 50 Conversations with some of our most articulate policy and movement leaders.


    WHEN:  Monday, November 6, 5:30 p.m. (Pacific)

    Three ways to participate:

    1. CONFERENCE CALL: First, RSVP by email with “Gatto” in the subject line so we can reserve a spot for you on the call. At the time of call, dial 1-641-297-5500, follow prompts, then enter access code 7764-7377 followed by #.

    and/or
    2. WEB RADIO: Voice of Vashon. To ask questions while you listen, you will need to rsvp for a password. We will send that to you when you RSVP. Use it to log in at the live chat.
    and/or
    3. E-MAIL: Click here to email your questions ahead of time.


    Conversations with the Cabinet and Movement Matters Conversations are projects of ProgressiveGovernment.org, the Backbone Campaign and our indispensable media partner VoiceofVashon.org community radio. Click here to listen to past programs, also available as podcasts.

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    phone: 206-408-8058

    COINCIDENCE? Liddle Daily Kos & Exit Poll Secrecy Announced by NY Post on SAME DAY

    This came across my desk today from Kathy Dopp of Utah Counts Votes:

    Background: Elizabeth Liddle’s work was widely quoted by U.S. press to support dismissing the evidence of outcome-altering vote miscount in the US 2004 presidential election.

    Coincidence that these two were posted on the same day?

    “How to read exit polls: a primer” by Elizabeth Liddle
    Sat Nov 04, 2006 at 11:48:26 AM PST

    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2006/11/4/135126/905

    and

    “Tight Lid Kept on Exit Poll Vault” by Ian Bishop
    New York Daily Post

    http://www.nypost.com/seven/11042006/news/national…

    Is there ANY doubt who Elizabeth Liddle is employed by?

    Is anyone else curious why Liddle has revived, in her Daily Kos article, a previously disproven hypothesis that Liddle formerly disavowed vehemently, in numerous harranging emails to myself and my academic colleagues?

    See this list of mathematical proofs that what Liddle says in her Daily Kos article is incorrect:
    http://electionarchive.org/ucvAnalysis/US/Incorrec…

    See my response to Liddle’s Daily Kos post here:

    http://www.progressiveindependent.com/dc/dcboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=120&topic_id=3289&mesg_id=3290

    If Americans don’t think that our upcoming Tuesday election is going to be targeted for vote fraud, then we must be hopelessly naive, given that our current U.S. election system is not independently audited; hides the evidence of vote miscount in aggregated election results data, and uses vote casting and counting equipment that is ideal for undetectable tampering!

    What do U.S. experts say?

    Click to access WhatdotheExpertsSay.pdf

    Utah’s KSL Political Advertising Policies

    Apparently something is “amuck” with Utah’s KSL Radio political advertising policies. Here are some conversations I’ve heard recently:

  • From an office holder:There is an apparent discrepancy in the way KSL Radio was accepting ads from political candidates. Candidates for office in Salt Lake County were told that only ads for federal candidates would be sold, but then the campaign of Democratic sheriff’s candidate Jim Winder got wind that the station agreed to sell ads to his Republican opponent, Sheriff Aaron Kennard. KSL quickly agreed to sell ads to Winder. Well, it has happened again. When other local candidates heard Kennard and Winder had spots, they asked if they, too, could buy time. But they were told the situation with the sheriff’s candidates was a fluke: No other local ads. Then, last week, members of the campaign of Democratic District Attorney candidate Sim Gill heard an ad on KSL Radio for his Republican opponent, Lohra Miller. When they complained, KSL said it was a mistake they were not notified about the policy change, and they were allowed to buy time.
  • From a candidate:I saw the KSL “oddity” firsthand. My campaign was told that KSL would not take any ads for County Council candidates — only D.A., Sheriff, and Federal races. So . . . I committed my remaining funds to other media. When it was too late to come up with any more $$ I heard the first KSL ad for my opponent. When I pressed the issue, they told me they could still “fit me in” with a few spots.But . . .as I said . . . my funds were committed elsewhere.
  • Opinions on Proposal #3

    I participate in a discussion forum for residents of West Jordan. Participants represent a variety of political viewpoints. There has beena lot of discussion on the Ballot Proposals. Here are some of the opinions expressed (other than mine):

  • on #3–I’m still deciding but have a concern about holding back because the moneys are not specifically identified.
    Continue reading
  • Today’s Deseret News has published election polls predicting the outcomes of Tuesday’s races.  According to the poll:

    • Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, holds a 34-percentage-point lead over his major party challenger.
    • Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, holds a 37-percentage-point lead.
    • Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, holds a 29-percentage-point lead.
    • Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, holds a 24-percentage-point lead.
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    How politically radical am I?

    You Are 52% Politically Radical

    You’ve got some radical viewpoints, but you aren’t completely nuts. You’re more of a visionary than a radical.