Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Gov. Perry Hosting Tea Party 2.0 Tele-Town Hall On Thursday

Texas Gov. Rick Perry so incited participants of three conservative anti-tax (and largely anti-Obama) "tea party" rallies with his anti-Washington and states' rights rhetoric on April 15th that the audience began to shout, "Secede!"

Perry has further sparked approval of the Texas hard-right Republican base with his secessionist talk and fiery anti-Washington rhetoric on his support of a Texas sovereignty resolution in the Texas legislature.

Perry's anti-Washington secessionist rhetoric and pandering on a range of right-wing social issues is clearly working with the Texas Republican base Perry is trying to woo away from Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) who will oppose Perry in the 2010 GOP primary next March.

An internal poll from Perry's campaign finds Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) beating him in a Republican primary now by just 45% to 39%. A more recent Rasmussen poll shows Perry passing Hutchison 42% to 38% in the last month. Hutchison was far ahead of Perry just a few months ago.

Hoping to build on his fiery “tea party” anti-tax, secessionist and anti-Washington rhetoric momentum of the last month, Perry will host a “Tea Party 2.0” tele-town hall with Republican Gov. Mark Sanford of South Carolina Thursday. 30,000 people are expected to dial into the teleconference town hall. This is an excellent way for the incumbent governor to gather phone numbers and email addresses he can later use to solicit campaign donations and volunteer support in his campaign against Kay Bailey Hutchison.

More. . .

Before the Storm - Barry Goldwater

Part 1

Part 2

Back in the 1960's, the GOP ran a candidate that was so out of touch with society and full of some of the worst ideas in political history that he lost the 1964 election in a landslide.

But Barry Goldwater's legacy is still alive in the GOP, and many believe that it was his right-wing fringe ideas that helped boost Ronald Reagan into the White House.

Today, the Republican Party is so desperate for a new direction that they're trying to resurrect the failed Goldwater ideals to breathe new life into their party.

Mike Papantonio of Air America's Ring of Fire talks about why this might be the worst idea the GOP's had in a long time with Rick Perlstein, author of the book "Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus."

Kinky Friedman Looking To Democratic Primary In March'10

Governor_Race_Texas.JPGHumorist and political satirist Kinky Friedman announced the names of two more well known Texans, Houston lawyer Richard "Racehorse" Haynes and former Austin councilman and UT regent Lowell Lebermann, to advise him on his possible run for governor on the Democratic primary ballot next March. Already advising Friedman are former Ag Commissioner and pundit Jim Hightower and San Antonio lawyer Abel Dominguez. Friedman finished fourth and netted 12 percent of the vote in his independent run for governor in 2006. DMN trailblazersblog.

Long time Texas Democrat Tom Schieffer is also exploring a run for the Texas governor's office. (website)

Tom Schieffer is a former State Representative, former partner in the Texas Rangers, brother to Face the Nation moderator Bob Schieffer, and Bush-era Ambassador to Australia and Japan.

Schieffer, a lifelong Democrat, did endorse G.W. Bush for the offices of both Governor and President, but he supported Barack Obama for the 2008 primary and general election, and he supported Democrat Chris Bell in the 2006 Governor's race. Conventional wisdom suggests that Schieffer can attract not only Democrats, but Independents and even some moderate Republicans.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Politics 101 Seminars By The Texas Democratic Women of Collin County

On Monday, May 11, from 7-9 p.m. the Texas Democratic Women of Collin County are hosting the first of the organization's planned series of "Politics 101" seminars. The purpose of these seminars is to promote increased political awareness, activity and influence of Democratic women in TX politics and government.

In the first seminar Bill Baumbach and Victor Manuel, former candidates, will explain the workings of the Collin County Court of Commissioners.

All are welcome. . . Please plan to attend on Monday, May 11, from 7-9 p.m. at Collin College in Frisco, Founders Hall, Rm F148 to learn about the County Commissioners Court.

VICTOR MANUEL
2008 Candidate
For Collin County
Commissioner, Precinct 3

www.victor4collincounty.com

Collin Co. Commissioners Precinct 1 Collin Co. Commissioners Precinct 2 Collin Co. Commissioners Precinct 3 Collin Co. Commissioners Precinct 4



The Texas Constitution vests broad judicial and administrative powers in the position of County Judge, who presides over a five-member Commissioner's Court.

Four Commissioners, each elected to a commissioners precinct representing approximately a quarter of the county's population, serve with the Presiding County Judge on the Commissioners Court. Click the map.

Members of the Collin County Commissioners Court also serve as Trustees of the Collin County Health Care Foundation, Collin County Housing Finance Corporation, and the Collin County Substance Abuse Foundation.

In addition to assuring that county roads are maintained, commissioners vote with the county judge to set the budget for all county departments and adopt a tax rate. The County Commissioners Court also:

  • Sets the yearly property tax rate and approves the budget and employment level for the county;
  • Sets commissioners and justice of the peace precinct boundaries;
  • Calls, conducts and certifies elections, including bond elections;
  • Sets employment and benefit policy;
  • Establishes long-range thoroughfare, open space, land use, financial and law enforcement/jail needs plans;
  • Acquires property for rights-of-way or other uses determined to be in the public's best interest;
  • Reviews and approve subdivision platting and wastewater treatment for rural areas;
  • Provides rural ambulance services and subsidizes rural fire protection;
  • Oversees the construction, maintenance and improvement of county roads and bridges;
  • Appoints non-elected department heads and standing committees;
  • Supervises and controls the county courthouse, county buildings and facilities;
  • Adopts a county budget;
  • Determines county tax rates;
  • Fills vacancies in elective and appointive positions; and
  • Has exclusive authority to authorize contracts in the name of the county.
Your Collin County Commissioner's Court Precinct Number can be found on your 2008 Orange Voter's Registration Card within the box titled "Com."

Voter Photo ID Bill Up For House Committe Vote

Update - House Committee on Elections did indeed vote the voter photo ID bill (SB 362) out of committee in a 5-4 vote on Monday May11th. Even though the committee is divided 5 Republicans to 4 Democrats, one Democrat voted for the measure and one Republican voted against. Elections Committee Democratic State Rep. Joe Heflin (D-Crosbytown) voted with four committee Republicans on Monday to help the measure get to the House floor. Republican State Rep Dennis Bonnen (R-Angleton) first took a pass on the committee voice vote, allowing Democrat Heflin to vote aye, before then changed his "pass" vote to no. The entire House can now debate and vote on the bill before it adjourns.
The Austin American-Statesman reports Chairman Smith as saying, "I believe to the bottom of my heart, if I was putting on my partisan Republican hat, the best thing that could possibly happen would be for this legislation to be narrowly defeated, so Republican candidates could go into these marginal (could go either way) districts and blame Democrats for elections being less secure than they could be."
The deadline for Senate-originating bills to be taken up on the House floor is midnight May 26th. It could very likely be scheduled for floor debate next week, but it depends on the House Calendars Committee. The Calendars Committee is made up of 8 Republicans and 5 Democrats with Republican Brian McCall in the chairman's seat and Democratic Eddie Luio III in the Vice-Chair seat. No doubt this Republican heavy committee will vote the voter ID bill to the House floor by May 26. (Track progress in the legislature -- Check House Calendar)
-------------------------------
Rep. Todd Smith, the Republican chairman of the House Committee on Elections, has scheduled a committee vote on the Senate's voter photo ID bill (SB 362) as originally passed by the Texas Senate on Mar 17, 2009 in a party line vote. The Senate's bill requires voters to present a photo ID such as a driver’s license or two documents indicating their identity at the polls.

Smith rewrote the voter ID bill three times during April and Early May to add less restrictive compromise language to the legislation in an attempt to pull in a few votes from House Democrats.

After Smith's Republican colleagues blocked those compromise attempts Smith told the Austin American-Statesman last Friday that he is halting his attempts to rewrite the bill and will simply attempt to pass out SB 362 out the elections committee in time for the full house to vote on the bill this session. Assuming the bill does pass out of committee in the expected five to four Republican vs. Democratic party line vote, a clean version of the Senate bill will ultimately be taken up on the House floor.

There is a chance the bill will not pass in a House floor vote given Republicans hold only a slim 76-74 majority in the House and two of those Republicans, Reps. Tommy Merritt of Longview and Delwin Jones of Lubbock, sided with Democrats against a similar bill in the 2007 legislative session. Neither Republican has announced a change in position this year.

It is notable that only 71 of the 76 House Republicans recently signed a "statement of principles" letter calling for the restrictive photo ID measure. To date, most of the 74 House Democrats oppose a restrictive voter photo ID requirement, but Rep. Joe Heflin, a Democrat who sits on the elections committee has reportedly said he is leaning toward supporting a photo ID law.

Big Government Conservatives and the Supreme Court

By Glenn Melancon
2008 Democratic candidate
U.S. House of Representatives,
TX 4th Congressional District

Washington politicians and lobbyists are already lining up for a Supreme Court confirmation fight. The buzz words are flying fast. Their jargon is meant to rally activists for or against any nominee. As citizens, however, we need to take a step back and look at the issues more closely. Who is pushing for “big government"? Who wants less?

Conservatives will make the abortion debate at the center of the confirmation process. How much control should politicians have over a pregnant woman? The 1973 Supreme Court Case Roe v. Wade limited state and federal control. Ever since then, conservatives have been fighting to reinstitute a larger role for government.

According to Roe v. Wade, legislators had to take into account two separate interests when regulating abortions—the right of a woman to make medical decisions and the potential for human life. The court reached a compromise. In the early days of pregnancy the government has to leave the woman alone. In the later stages of pregnancy the government can outlaw abortion to protect the unborn as long as a woman is free to defend her life and health.

The debate centers on the right to privacy. Do Americans have the right to make medical, moral and personal decisions free from government interference? Or, do the federal and state governments have the authority to make medical, moral and personal decisions for us? “Strict constructionists” say there is no right to privacy. “Activist judges” say there is.

Strict constructionists rightly point out that the word “privacy” does not appear in the constitution. The founding fathers didn’t list—nor enumerate—it in the Bill of Rights. Activist judges, however, point to the Ninth Amendment. It states that the people retain rights even if the Constitution doesn’t enumerate them. Our founders knew some future politician would try to expand the power of government over the people and wrote the Ninth Amend to protect us.

The right to privacy extends beyond surgical abortions. In Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965), the Supreme Court ruled that the states cannot outlaw birth control pills. The Court declared that women had an expectation of privacy in their doctors’ office and the state needed to stay out unless it had a compelling reason.

Conservatives argue that there is a compelling reason—the preservation of life. If life begins at conception, then the state can, and should, outlaw the pill. Not only does it impede ovulation, but the pill also hampers a fertilized egg from implanting on the wall of the uterus.

Should states and the federal government have the power to outlaw the pill? Is this a matter of individual conscience or a matter for the police? Conservatives want to surrender this power to the government; liberals do not.

The right to privacy also keeps the government out of our bedrooms. Most of us never really think about this issue very much. It just seems so unreasonable that the government could control what happens behind closed doors. In fact, however, the government had the authority to regulate all forms of sexual relations until Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003).

The state of Texas had made it “a crime for two persons of the same sex to engage in certain intimate sexual conduct.” The US Supreme Court, dominated by Republican jurists, decided that Texas overstepped its authority and couldn’t punish two consenting adults for behavior in the privacy of their own home.

Roe, Griswold and Lawrence are the prime examples of “judicial activism.” In each case, the Court limited the authority of the government and held that individuals have the right to exercise their own moral judgment. In the coming Supreme Court debate, big government conservatives are sure to fight against allowing people to make their own moral decisions.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

The Republican Party - So Far Right It's Wrong For America

Given the trillions of dollars in tax cuts President Bush and Republicans gave the nation over eight years the economy should be racing and we should be at near full employment, if tax cuts are the most stimulative approach to vibrant economy growth, as Republicans claim as they perpetually bash Obama's economic programs. Unfortunately, the reality we find around us in America today does not match Republican promises of yesterday.

As Center for American Progress Senior Fellows Christian Weller and John Halpin noted in 2006, the outcome of the 2001 tax cuts was "the weakest employment growth in decades." Republican tax cuts in 2004 didn't fare much better, with resulting job creation well below historical averages. When Bush's White House proposed more tax cuts in 2003, Republicans promised that it would add 5.5 million new jobs between June 2003 and the end of 2004. But "by the end of 2004, there were only 2.6 million more jobs than in June 2003." And, remember President Bush's February 2008 promise that his $168 billion tax cut/rebate economic stimulus plan would stave off economic recession and job losses? Wrong again! All these broken Republican promises stem from a broken understanding of how the world really works.

Martin Feldstein wrote in the Wall Street Journal that of course the tax cut stimulus didn't work:

Here are the facts. Tax rebates of $78 billion arrived in the second quarter of the year. The government's recent GDP figures show that the level of consumer outlays only rose by an extra $12 billion, or 15% of the lost revenue. The rest went into savings, including the pay down of debt. . .

. . .Although press stories emphasizing that the rebates induced additional consumer spending were technically correct, they missed the important point that the spending rise was very small in comparison to the size of the tax rebates. . .

The small rise in spending in response to these tax rebates is similar to what previous studies of one-time tax cuts found. It also corresponds to what both basic economic theory and common experience imply. Although someone who receives a permanent annual salary increase of $1,000 typically would increase his annual spending by an almost equally large amount, a $1,000 rise in wealth caused by a share price increase or a tax rebate would raise spending only gradually over a number of years.

As Paul Krugman has pointed out, the belief that Bush's tax cuts successfully stimulated the economy is a form of GOP mythology. CAP's Michael Ettlinger and John Irons wrote in September 2008, "Economic growth as measured by real U.S. gross domestic product was stronger following the tax increases of 1993 than in the two "supply-side eras" that followed Reagan's 1981 tax cuts and Bush's 2001 tax cuts. Indeed, employment growth was much stronger post-1993 under Pres. Clinton than post-2001 under Bush. The average annual employment growth was 2.5 percent after 1993 and just 0.6 percent after 2001.

Last week the Dept. of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics released the news that 13.7 million people are unemployed, pushing the "headline" unemployment rate to 8.9 percent. That "8.9% headline rate" substantially under reports the actual number of unemployed workers because it does not include the millions of discouraged American workers who want to work, but who have simply given up looking for work for any number of reasons. That uncounted number of discouraged American workers is currently up 70 percent, from the first quarter of 2008. The total number of Americans who are not working, but would be if a jobs were available, or are under-employed in low paying part-time jobs is actually about 22 million, or 15.8 percent, according to a full reading of the Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
And, BTW, that means 22 million workers, or 15.8 percent of the 154 million person total U.S. workforce potential, plus everyone in their family IS WITHOUT HEALTHCARE. A Families USA survey found that one out of three Americans under 65 were without health insurance at some point during 2007 and 2008. The study found 86.7 million Americans were without insured health at one point during the last two years. The Families USA survey's key findings include:
  • Nearly three out of four uninsured Americans were without health insurance for at least six months.
  • Almost two-thirds were uninsured for nine months or more.
  • Four out of five of the uninsured were in working families.
  • People without health insurance are less likely to have a usual doctor and often go without screenings or preventative care.
With unemployment at its highest levels since the Reagan Administration 15 years ago and more than 600,000 additional workers being thrown out of their jobs every month so far in 2009, with little let up in job losses expected throughout 2009, the number of unemployed worker families losing healthcare insurance will increase substantially.
Despite the reality we see around us today, Pres. Reagan's right-wing Republican "supply-side trickle down" economic mythology that "tax cuts along with full financial system deregulation" work best, continues to be hotly promoted by right-wing conservative Republicans today.

Right-wing conservative Republicans can not and will not recognize the fact that Reagan's "supply-side trickle down" economic model is out dated and doesn't work in today's reality. Neither can right-wing Republicans recognize the fact that their opposition to an optional single-payer healthcare insurance program for all Americans is equally out dated in today's reality.

Today's reality is clear -- The Republican Party is so far right it is wrong for America - wrong for Texas!

McCain: GOP needn't be moderate
Vice Pres.Cheney: In terms of being Republican — I’d go with Rush Limbaugh

Star Trek Movie


www.startrekmovie.com

star-trek--trailer.blogspot.com
The latest "Star Trek" movie beamed to the top of the North American box office this weekend. The film grossed 76.5 million dollars on the weekend, including four million in Thursday preview screenings, easily surpassing the best opening weekend of any of the sci-fi franchise's 10 other "Trek" movies, box office, according to Exhibitor Relations.

HuffingtonPost.com: After a 19-year absence, Leonard Nimoy reprises his iconic role as Mr. Spock in director J.J. Abrams' new "Star Trek" prequel opposite Zachary Quinto, who stars as a younger version of the half-Vulcan, half-human science officer. "The character is much more relaxed about who he is and what his life should be about whereas (younger Spock) is just beginning to find himself," said Nimoy of the movie's mature Spock. "It works extremely well. The character I portray in this film is much more like who I am today, personally. I am as close as possible to the character as I could ever be."

star-trek--trailer.blogspot.com


(Click on a picture to enlarge it.)


USS Enterprise Star Trek Movie
Chris Pine as Captain Kirk, Karl Urban as McCoy and Zachary Quinto as Spock, on the deck of the EnterpriseThe USS EnterpriseKir has crash-landed in an ice crater - Star Trek Movie directed by J.J. Abrams
Zachary Quinto as SpockEric Bana as the film’s Romulan villain NeroStar Trek USS Kelvin
Star Trek on the Cover of Entertainment Weekly

Happy Mother's Day!


Norman Rockwell's
Mother Tucking
Children in Bed
(1921)

Collin County Local Election Results

Collin County Observer Blog: May 2009 Collin County Local Election Results

Saturday, May 9, 2009

A Special Screening Of Iron Jawed Angels

Putting this back on top of the posting list to remind everyone. Please RSVP by Wednesday, June 10, if you can attend - Pay by credit card online or at the door if you have RSVP'ed
IRON JAWED ANGELS recounts a key
chapter in U.S. history - the struggle of
suffragists who fought for the passage
of the 19th Amendment.

Focusing on two defiant women, Alice Paul
(Hilary Swank) and Lucy Burns (Frances
O'Connor), the film shows how these activists
dared to push the boundaries of society to
secure women's voting rights in 1920.
The U. S. Congress passed the Nineteenth Amendment in June of 1919 giving women the right to vote ! Join TX Democratic Women of Collin County to celebrate the 90th anniversary of women’s suffrage with a special screening of the movie
Iron Jawed Angels

Thursday, June 11, 2009 7:00-9:30 p.m.
Angelika Film Center
7205 Bishop Road Plano, TX

(The Shops at Legacy)

Reserve your seat now
space is limited!
RSVP

Non-member individual: $30 Non-member couple: $50
TDWCC member individual: $25 Member couple: $40
(click to go to the TDWCC information page)

Friday, May 8, 2009

Gov. Perry Running Hard Right Against Sen. Hutchison

Texas Gov. Rick Perry's (R) 2010 primary election strategy against Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) seems to be to court early and solid support from hard-right evangelical conservatives to scare Hutchison out of filing in December for the governor's race. Or, failing that, by moving so far right himself that by comparison it positions Hutchison as a Washington lefty in what promises to be a real rock'em sock'em Texas saloon brawl for the GOP primary in March 2010.

Perry's recent, repeated appeals to the conservative hard-right include high-profile support for a "Choose Life" license plate favored by those who oppose abortion, high-profile criticism of "Washington" and federal bailouts, refusal of federal stimulus money for jobless benefits and an invitation to conservative talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh to move to Texas.

Perry, who strongly supports teaching only "abstinence" sex education in Texas schools, appointed young earth (earth age only 6,000 years) creationist Don McLeroy as chairman of the Texas State Board of Education to oppose teaching evolution in public schools. Perry has also promised to prevent stem cell research in Texas and touts his record for passing more restrictions on stem cell research than any previous governor.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry so incited participants of three conservative anti-tax (and largely anti-Obama) "tea party" rallies on April 15th with his anti-Washington and states' rights rhetoric that the audience began to shout, "Secede!" Perry told the crowd,
"I believe the federal government has become oppressive. It’s become oppressive in its size, its intrusion in the lives of its citizens, and its interference with the affairs of our state. Texans need to ask themselves a question.

Do they side with those in Washington who are pursuing this unprecedented expansion of power, or do they believe in individual rights and responsibilities laid down in our foundational documents.

Where’re you gonna’ stand? With an ever-growing Washington bureaucracy, or are you going to stand with the people of this state who understand the importance of state’s rights. Texans need to stand up. They need to be heard, because the state of affairs that we find ourselves in cannot continue indefinitely..."

Perry also told the crowd he didn’t believe they were all “right-wing extremists,” as others portray them. “But if you are, I’m with you!” he shouted.
QUESTION: Do you approve or disapprove of Gov.
Rick Perry's suggestion that Texas may need to leave
the US?

Approve Disapprove Not
Sure
ALL 37 58 5
MEN 42 54 4
WOMEN 32 62 6
DEMOCRATS 16 80 4
REPUBLICANS 51 44 5
INDEPENDENTS 43 50 7
Daily Kos/Research 2000 Texas Poll
Perry further sparked approval of the hard-right with his secessionist talk and fiery anti-Washington rhetoric in support of a Texas sovereignty resolution in the Texas legislature.

Perry's anti-Washington secessionist rhetoric and pandering on right-wing social issues is clearly working with the Texas Republican base Perry is trying to woo away from Hutchison.

An internal poll from Texas Gov. Rick Perry's (R) camp finds Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) beating him in a Republican primary, 45% to 39%.


A new just released Rasmussen Reports poll supports Perry's internal poll showing that in a primary match up, Rick Perry now holds the edge at 42%, over Kay Bailey Hutchison's 38%.

Both polls indicate a heavy erosion of support from polls taken in 2008 indicating Hutchison held a strong lead over Perry in a 2010 primary match up by more than 20 points.

If Hutchison does beat incumbent Rick Perry in the Republican primary, her Democratic opponent, whoever that turns out to be, will have a tall challenge to beat her in the November 2010 general election.

On the other hand, if Perry does manage to edge Hutchison in the primary, he will have positioned himself so far right he will have irrevocably alienated himself from about two-thirds of the overall Texas electorate. This will give Perry's general election Democratic opponent, whoever that turns out to be, a real advantage.

Remember during the 2008 Texas primary race between Obama and Clinton Rush Limbaugh urged his Republican and Conservative listeners, in what he called "Operation Chaos," to vote for Hillary Clinton in the open March 4, 2008 TX Democratic Primary to defeat Barack Obama. . . I'm thinking, just maybe, Democrats should return the favor in the March 2010 GOP primary and vote for Rick Perry to put him rather than Hutchison on the November 2010 general election ballot.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Obama's 2010 Budget Eliminates Federal Funding For Abstinence-Only Sex Ed

The Obama Administration today released its 2010 budget that eliminates federal funding for a range of abstinence-only sex education programs.

The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy organization immediately released a statement on the news that President Obama proposes ending federal government funding of abstinence-only sex education programs:
President Obama released his FY 2010 budget today and called for at least $164 million in funding for a new teen pregnancy prevention initiative. This includes competitive grants for evidence-based programs, research and evaluation, and an authorization for $50 million in new mandatory teen pregnancy prevention grants to states, tribes, and territories. The budget eliminates funding for Community-Based Abstinence Education and the mandatory Title V Abstinence Education program.
-- Texas has received more federal abstinence-only education funding than any other state,yet Texas has the nation’s third-highest teen pregnancy rate. Texas Republican Gov. Rick Perry supports the existing abstinence-only sex ed policy encoded in Texas law. What will Perry say in response to the news that Obama's 2010 budget eliminates federal funding for abstinence-only sex ed?? --

HuffingtonPost.com - Shelby Knox writes about her experience with abstinence-only education in Lubbock, Texas high school:
Every year when I was in high school in Lubbock, Texas, we were herded into the auditorium for a lecture from a local youth pastor about the birds and the bees.

At the culmination of every presentation, the pastor pulled a girl up onstage, produced a dirty, dingy toothbrush from his pocket and asked if she would brush her teeth with it. When she invariably said no, he pulled out another toothbrush, this one in its original box, and repeated the question. When she said yes to that one, he brandished the rejected toothbrush above his head and announced to the audience, "If you have sex before marriage, you are the dirty toothbrush."

A report recently released on the state of sex education in Texas [by the Texas Freedom Network (TFN)] details other bizarre things students are taught in the classroom about sex, contraception and their bodies, all subsidized by federal dollars. One skit, titled "Jumping Off the Bridge," concludes that giving a condom to a teen is like saying, "Well if you insist on killing yourself by jumping off the bridge, at least wear these elbow pads." Another presentation equates pre-marital sex with instances of marital murder-suicide. Still another compares women's sexuality to crock pots that take awhile to get warmed up, and men's to microwaves that are ready to cook at a moment's notice.

An entire generation of American teens has been confused, misinformed and endangered by abstinence-only-until-marriage programs like these. They are not just paid for by the federal government; states can't use these dollars for anything else.

In the past 15 years alone, more than a billion taxpayer dollars have been doled out to every state to teach curricula that often contain factual inaccuracies about condoms and contraceptives, generalizations about sexuality that are based on biases about gender and sexual orientation, and religious messaging that probably violates the U.S. Constitution.

The programs were a pet project of the Bush administration, and key to attracting votes and contributions from the religious right. Now, much of the money is still being doled out to faith-based organizations and crisis pregnancy centers, the latter often stating as their sole purpose the convincing of pregnant women, including ten and twelve year-olds and their families, that having an abortion will mean a lifetime of regret.

Unbelievable as it may sound, there is no federal law mandating or supervising the medical or scientific accuracy of information taught in schools or given out in tax-exempt pregnancy centers, a loophole used to tell young people that condoms don't work, homosexuality is never part of normal human behavior and sexuality is the one academic subject in which students will be rewarded for lack of knowledge.

In fact, abstinence-only sex education is so damaging that 25 governors, Republicans and Democrats, have refused abstinence-only funds. [Republican Gov. Rick Perry has said he supports the the existing abstinence-only policy. "The governor is comfortable with current law and supports abstinence programs," said Perry's spokeswoman, Allison Castle.] Rising rates of sexually transmitted infections, unwanted teen births and an increased need for abortion have dramatized the inefficacy and danger of such programs. And last year, the Journal of Adolescent Health published its opinion that abstinence-only funding may constitute a human rights violation.

The huge majority of Americans agree. 88% think teens should receive information about condoms and contraception as well as abstinence in the classroom. Yet, no moves have been made in Washington to make good on these convictions.
President Obama's 2010 budget does move to bring an attitude of realistic common sense to sex education. Obama's budget proposal invests in programs that are effective and based on sound science. Obama's approach is reminiscent of the Clinton Administration's teen pregnancy prevention programs, initiated shortly after he took office in 1993, that resulted in a decade long substantial drop in teen pregnancies across the U.S.

After falling steadily for more than a decade, the birth rate for American teenagers again started to increase in a sharp reversal as the Bush Administration and Republican controlled congresses increased federal funding and focused emphasis on abstinence-only sex education programs across the U.S.

The teen birth rate rose by 3 percent between 2005 and 2006 among 15-to-19-year-old girls, after plummeting 34 percent between 1991 and 2005, according to National Center for Health Statistics. After the teen birth rate rose sharply between 1986 and 1991, hitting an all-time high of 61.8 births per 1,000 girls, a massive comprehensive sex education campaign countered that trend and teen pregnancies plummeted between the 1990s and 2005.

Texas has received more federal abstinence-only education funding than any other state in the country, yet Texas has the nation’s third-highest teen pregnancy rate. According to the Texas Department of State Health Services (TDSHS) a Texas teen gets pregnant every 10 minutes.

According to a report (PDF Full/Summary) released in February by the Texas Freedom Network (TFN) a majority of Texas schools use scare tactics and teach false information in their sex education classes. TFN's two-year study of education materials from 990 Texas school districts showed that about 94 percent of public schools use abstinence-only programs that usually pass moral judgments while giving inaccurate information on contraception and health screenings or ignoring the subjects altogether. (Watch TFN's "Sex Ed...Texas Style" videos)

A large 2008 federal study,confirmed several previous studies in its finding that abstinence only sex eduction is not as effective as comprehensive sex education. "Taking an [abstinence] pledge doesn't seem to make any difference at all in any sexual behavior, but it does seem to make a difference in condom use and other forms of birth control that is quite striking," according to Janet E. Rosenbaum of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Ms. Rosenbaum's report, that appears in the January issue of the journal Pediatrics, highlights that:
Teenagers who receive abstinence-only sex education and pledge to remain virgins until marriage are just as likely to have premarital sex as those who do not promise abstinence and are significantly less likely to use condoms and other forms of birth control when they do, according to a large federal survey released last month.
Ignoring all facts and evidence that the "just say no" abstinence-only sex education approach does not stop or even reduce the numbers of teens who have sex, Texans for Life Coalition representative Kyleen Wright gave testimony before the Texas House Public Education Committee on March 31, 2009 making a "full court press" for the position that only "abstinence-only sex ed" should be taught in Texas schools. It was Wright who successful lead the fight to keep any medically accurate information about contraception and disease prevention out of new Texas high school health textbooks in 2004.

The House Public Education Committee was taking public comment on HB 741 (by State Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio) that would end a requirement that Texas public schools devote attention to abstinence-only sex education. The House Bill, HB 741, if passed, would remove much of the controversial and unsound language from the Texas Education Code that places abstinence education above responsible instruction about sex education and sexually transmitted diseases.

The fact that abstinence-only sex education translates to a higher tax payer burden to support teen mothers and their babies was all but ignored. Texas Medicaid paid for 17,322 deliveries to teen mothers aged-13-17 last year at a cost of $41 million. That $41 million is on top of the many millions of dollars tax payers are spending on a government sponsored abstinence-only public school sex education program that is a proven failure!!

Republicans Gear Up To Say NO To Healthcare Reform

HuffingtonPost.com: A memo from Republican strategist Dr. Frank Luntz lays out plans to dismantle any effort to give all Americans access to quality health care. Dr. Luntz, the man who developed language designed to promote preemptive war in Iraq and distract from the severity of global warming, is at it again -- this time with a messaging strategy designed to sink our historic opportunity for health care reform.
Sidebar - Democratic strategist Paul Begala “is circulating a point-by-point rebuttal of GOP consultant Frank Luntz’s widely read strategy memo on health care.” The memo urges “congressional Democrats to push back hard against ‘Republican Orwellian rhetoric.’” “Because they know they cannot win the argument honestly, Republicans are resorting to mendacity,” Begala wrote in the memo. “Democrats must not let them get away with it.”
Not surprisingly, since the American public is strongly in favor of fixing the broken health care system, the Luntz strategy is predicated on deception. In his memo, Dr. Luntz lays out multiple ways that opponents of health care reform can trick and manipulate the American public.

One strategy that stood out to me is to call efforts to reform our broken health care system a "bailout for the insurance industry." This is ridiculous. This statement is developed to serve the same interests who stopped at nothing to derail health care reform in the 90's, who blocked health care coverage for low-income children, and whose top Medicare priority for 15 years has been transferring money from seniors and taxpayers to the insurance industry.

When support for a prescription drug benefit in Medicare became too powerful to ignore, President Bush and his allies created the convoluted system we now have. Rather than simply add a prescription drug benefit to the tried, true, and popular Medicare program as Democrats wanted, they devised a giveaway for insurance companies. For years Dr. Luntz's clients have virtually abdicated health care policy making to the insurance industry; the last thing it needs is a bailout.

Today though, even the insurance industry is engaged in constructive negotiations about how to repair the health care system. Unfortunately for the vast majority of Americans who support reform, however, Dr. Luntz's new game plan to stop change is being embraced by leaders in the Republican Party. In a briefing where Dr. Luntz presented his strategy to Republican House members, Rep. Mike Pence from Indiana, the chairman of the House Republican Conference, made it official by saying, "Frank is back."

So expect a massive misinformation campaign coming to a health care debate near you. Opponents using Dr. Luntz's doublespeak will argue for a "balanced, common sense approach" to health care but what they really want is to keep the system the way it is. They'll say that a public plan will not be "patient centered," but their real goal is to block accessible health care for every American. They'll say reform will deny Americans "choice" even when every American will be allowed to keep their health insurance and their doctor. They'll claim that the "quality of care will go down," while callously ignoring the fact that millions of Americans have no health care at all and millions more are denied the medications and procedures they need.

More - GOP Wastes No Time Embracing Frank Luntz’s Vapid ‘Patient-Doctor’ Health Care Rhetoric

When The Environment Changes - Adapt Or Die

Time magazine's cover story on how the Republican party -- with no new ideas and a lack of leadership -- is struggling to find its way as the political environment is rapidly changing around the one time Grand Old Party:

Twenty thousand years ago, when climate change dramatically
altered the woolly mammoth's environment, they had to
resort to eating their own dung to stave off extinction.
-- It didn't work then either.
"As the party has shrunk to its base, it has catered even more to its base's biases, [by continually re-ingesting old talking points] that the New Deal [banking regulation and stimulus spending] made the Depression worse, carbon emissions are fine [as in beneficial] for the environment and tax cuts actually boost [tax] revenues -- even though the vast majority of historians, scientists and economists disagree.


The RNC is about to vote on a kindergartenish resolution to change the name of its opponent to the Democrat Socialist Party. This plays well with hard-core culture warriors and tea-party activists convinced that a dictator-President is plotting to seize their guns, choose their doctors and put ACORN in charge of the Census, but it ultimately produces even more [party] shrinkage, which gives the base even more influence -- and the death spiral continues."

A Union Invades Republican Collin County

The Plano Firefighters Association (one of them union things that Republicans hate so much) has growing political clout Plano politics. Firefighter unions have long advocated for candidates in recent local elections in Arlington, Dallas, Irving and Mesquite. A Fort Worth association spent more than $700,000 into last year's elections, records show.

The Plano Firefighters Association is making its influence felt in the May 9, 2009 Plano city election by endorsing candidates and supporting bond proposition #1 on the city ballot.

Long dominated by Republican leaning high growth real estate development interests, new constituencies are slowly taking over as the real estate developers lose interest in using their influence to sway local politics to their favor, now that Plano is all but fully developed. The rise of Plano's Firefighter Association is another indication the city undergoing a political shift in the progressive direction.

While the firefighter association does not have collective bargaining power, it is making its influence felt. Since forming a political action committee in 2003, the Plano association has put more than $75,000 into city campaigns, more than any other interest group, endorsing candidates and mailing advocacy literature to voters. The association pays for its political activities with donations, not dues.

A recent Dallas Morning News article reports:
"I admire the firefighters. But the association is taking it a step further and influencing people with money," said Susan Plonka, a council candidate. "To say they have to pay us $20,000 to get a phone call returned is not accurate."

The association, which recently endorsed Plonka's opponent, Ben Harris, for the Place 2 council seat, does not see it that way.

"We don't feel like our side has been told a lot of times in the past," said Scott Kerr, the association president. "But ultimately the decision is [the City Council's]. And we respect that."
From The City of Plano's 2009 Bond Referendum Pamphlet:
  1. Totals $11,368,000 and is for Public Safety Improvements in the City of Plano. This proposition includes funding for the reconfiguration, remodel and expansion of existing fire facilities; an additional $1 million for the construction of one new fire station (#13); the purchase of firefighting equipment and apparatus; and the purchase and installation of video surveillance apparatus in various City-owned areas in the City of Plano.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

The Clock Is Ticking On The Texas Voter Photo ID Bill

Will the Texas House get a controversial voter photo ID bill out of committee this week, and if so, what form will it take? The clock is ticking, with the May 11 deadline to vote bills out of committee about a week away.

It seems that most in Republican leadership know that the version (SB 362) that passed in the Texas Senate on Mar 17, 2009 in a party line vote and subsequently debated in the House Elections Committee in early April has little chance of passing a full Texas House floor vote.

The version of the bill debated in the House Election Committee in April would have allowed voters, who didn't have photo ID, to presented two other forms of non-photo ID to cast a ballot. That requirement would not have been phased-in until 2013, which is after the 2011 round of redistricting scheduled to take place after the 2010 U.S. census. The bill debated in the House Elections Committee would also reportedly only take effect if lawmakers earmark $7.5 million in the 2010-11 state budget for voter registration efforts. Hundreds of Texas citizens gathered in Austin during early April to make comment before the House Elections Committee on that version of the voter photo ID bill.

House Election Committee Chairman, State Rep. Todd Smith, R-Euless, had been strongly suggesting that the compromise voter ID bill delayed until 2013 had at least a chance of attracting enough Democratic votes to pass the House and become law. House Republicans, however, found the compromise language unpalatable and apparently would not have even voted that compromise version of the bill out of the House committee.

So, on Wednesday, Committee Chairman Smith circulated a new very restrictive version of the Republican Voter ID bill that absolutely requires voters to present a government issued Photo ID before being allowed to cast a regular ballot. This new revised language is vastly different from the legislative language opened for public comment by the House committee in April. Gone are the alternative provisions for the two other non-photo forms of ID, the $7.5 million for voter registration efforts and the 2013 phase-in.

The new restrictive voter ID language makes an absolute requirement for a government issued photo ID that would be become effective in 2011. Smith's last minute maneuvers to immediately mandate photo ID for Texas voters comes after 71 House Republicans signed a statement of principles indicating that any Voter ID legislation must require voters to present photo IDs, without exception, at the "next possible uniform election date," this year.

Listen to the this May 1, 2009 Texas Public Radio Report made before Chairman Smith started circulating the more restrictive bill.

Committee Chairman Smith could schedule a "bums rush" vote on the new restrictive voter Id bill in House Elections Committee at any moment without debate or additional public comment to pass it out of the House Committee and onto the House floor for a vote. The House Elections Committee would likely vote to pass the bill out of committee in a probable party line vote of 5 Republicans for and 4 Democrats against the bill.

House Democrats are asking for prudence and additional public input on this new last minute version of the legislation. Thirty-three Democrats who are chairmen and vice chairmen of House committees sent a memo to GOP House Speaker Joe Straus and Committee Chairman Smith, on Wednesday calling for a new committee hearing on the more restrictive voter photo identification legislation. "While some components of the bill may have been discussed previously in committee, the public has not had an opportunity to give voice to their opinions regarding the comprehensive new bill," the memo states. "This is only prudent, given the Voting Rights Act and the impact of this bill on every citizen in Texas."

Requiring voters to present a government-issued photo ID to vote is a flawed solution to a made-up problem. Republican maneuvering has every appearance of a disparate scheme devised to stack the deck in favor of Republicans in the 2010 legislative elections. Republicans are anxious to maintain control of the Texas House and Senate to give them the upper hand in the federal and state redistricting decisions that the Legislature is scheduled to make in 2011 following the 2010 U.S. census.
The Texas photo Voter ID bill is part of the Republican agenda to keep Republicans in office by suppressing the vote of groups that tend to vote Democratic. In the 10 states that have already passed voter picture ID laws, voter participation is down about 3 percent. However, black and Hispanic voter participation is down more than 10 percent in those states. The success of Democratic voter registration drives among these Texas groups in 2008 threatens to tip the balance of power away from Republican candidates in future elections. As the tide of Democratic voters continues to grow across Texas, voter ID legislation would be an effective way for Republicans to hold back the tide.
There is a chance the bill will not pass in a House floor vote given Republicans hold only a slim 76-74 majority in the House and two of those Republicans sided with Democrats against a similar bill in the 2007 legislative session. It is notable that only 71 of the 76 House Republicans signed the "statement of principles" letter calling for the restrictive photo ID measure. To date, most of the 74 House Democrats oppose a restrictive voter photo ID requirement, but Rep. Joe Heflin, a Democrat who sits on the elections committee has reportedly said he is leaning toward supporting a photo ID law.

Call Elections Committee Chairman Todd Smith and ask him why Republicans are making photo Voter ID the highest priority when there is no evidence of voter fraud, even after Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott's $1.4 million two year investigation attempting to locate voter fraud failed to identify anything more than 26 cases where people forgot to sign and address the absentee ballot envelope:

Contact Information:

Call Rep. Todd Smith, Chairman of House Committee on Elections, at his capitol phone number (512) 463-0522 or write him an email - link to email form - or do both!

Elections Committee Contact Information:
Rep. Betty Brown (R) Capitol office: (512) 463-0458 Link to email form
Rep. Dwayne Bohac (R) Capitol office: (512) 463-0727 Link to email form
Rep. Dennis Bonnen (R) Capitol office: (512) 463-0564 Link to email form
Rep. Linda Harper-Brown (R) Capitol office: (512) 463-0641 Link to email form
Vice Chair Aaron Pena (D) Capitol office: (512) 463-0426 Link to email form
Rep. Alma Allen (D) Capitol office: (512) 463-0744 Link to email form
Rep. Rafael Anchia (D) Capitol office: (512) 463-0746 Link to email form
Rep. Joe Heflin (D) Capitol office: (512) 463-0604 Link to email form

Click here to see members of the House Elections Committee.

Write a letter to your local newspaper editor

Read more at: Take Action - Photo Voter ID Bill Up For House Committee Vote

Monday, May 4, 2009

Dem Party Position On Local Candidates

We have received several comments and emails to the blog in response to our municipal elections posting asking if the Democratic Party of Collin County has a position statement covering candidates appearing on any of the city and ISD election ballots. As far as we have been able to determine the the Democratic Party of Collin County has no such candidate position statement for the local elections.

It is unfortunate that so few progressives have made themselves available to run for any of the local city and ISD elected offices across Collin County. For the most part, the ballot choices in this election are between a conservative Republican and a more conservative Republican or between a conservative Republican and a Libertarian. This county sorely needs Democrats to get active in local city government and school district oversight and run for office!

Since this election is officially called a "non-partisan" election, party affiliation is not noted beside any of the candidate names on the ballot. Voters really need to work hard to research the candidates to make the best possible choices.

There are two sources of information on the that Collin County voters can reference. One is the League of Women Voters of Plano/Collin County voter's guide: (click LWV guide name)
The second is the Dallas Morning News Voter Guide.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Secretary of State: “Homestead Exemption Tax Amendment” e-mails are fake

The Austin American-Statesman Newspaper - Austin, Texas
By Patrick George | Friday, April 24, 2009, 04:49 PM

Officials at the Office of the Secretary of State say e-mails circulating about a Homestead Exemption Tax Amendment are fake.

The e-mail in question says voters must choose whether or not to keep the homestead tax cap for people 65 and older. [Texas Secretary of State] Spokeswoman Ashley Burton said that the e-mails are completely false and that there are no statewide initiatives on the ballot for the May 9, 2009 election.

“There are only local elections,” Burton said. She said some variations on the e-mail have been floating around the Internet. Below is [one version of the] fake message:

Please pass the word and VOTE for the following constitutional amendment. Early voting: April 30 - May 5 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.; May 6 from noon to 6 p.m. May 7 & May 8 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Election Day: May 12 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Texas Homestead Exemption Tax Amendment Please read and pass on to all your Texas email friends as this applies to all voters. You must vote in May to keep the Homestead tax cap for 65 and over, even if you are not 65 yet. If you are a Texas homeowner then this is important to you. If not, it is important to your friends who are. I am sending this email to everyone on my email address list that lives in Texas. I want to be sure you are aware of a constitutional amendment that will be on the ballot at the May election. It is an amendment to correct an error made by the lawmakers when they voted for a reduction in school property taxes in 2005. When the lawmakers voted for a 1/3 reduction in school property taxes beginning in 2006 and to be completed this year, they forgot about the homestead exemption for senior citizens and people with disabilities. The state constitution caps school property taxes for homeowners 65 years and older and those who are disabled. However, they DID NOT get the same reduction when the property tax cut for schools was voted on two years ago. So an amendment is on the May ballot to correct this error. The problem is that most voters who are younger than 65 or not disabled probably won’t even notice the amendment or care. PLEASE get out and vote for this amendment if not for yourself, then for your parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and friends. We would really appreciate your getting the word out to all your friends and families to vote for this amendment. The fear is that with a low voter turnout, the amendment could very well not pass.
Click Here For May 9, 2009 Municipal Election Early Voting Locations & Times