<rss version="2.0"><channel><title>intheav.com Blogs - roxi - Don't You Eat That Yellow Snow</title><link>http://www.intheav.com/</link><description>Don't You Eat That Yellow Snow</description><language>no</language><copyright>intheav.com</copyright><generator>intheav.com RSS-generator</generator><item><title>FAT CATS::UBS &amp; The Washington-Wall Street Revolving Door</title><link>http://www.intheav.com/blogs/roxi/2012/01/24/fat-cats-ubs-the-washington-wall-street-revolving-door</link><description>*The Washington-Wall Street Revolving Door Keeps Spinning*
January 23, 2012
by Bill Moyers and Michael Winship

http://billmoyers.com/2012/01/23/the-washington-wall-street-revolving-door-keeps-spinning/

fyi

</description><pubDate>Tue, 24 Jan 2012 17:56:30 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Norman Lear on fighting the good fight</title><link>http://www.intheav.com/blogs/roxi/2011/12/30/norman-lear-on-fighting-the-good-fight</link><description>The Occupy Wall Street movement has unleashed patriotic outrage. If you don't want to camp out or protest in the street, find another way to let your voice be heard in the new year.

By Norman Lear
December 30, 2011

I was recently shown a picture from one of the Occupy protests taking place across the country. It featured a young woman surrounded by police. She was the only protester in the picture, but she didn't seem intimidated. All by herself, up against the police barricade, she held a handwritten sign saying simply "I am a born again American."


I've never met this woman, but I think I know exactly what she's feeling.


I had my first "born again American" moment *30* years ago, when I was moved to outrage and action by a group of hate-preaching televangelists who were trying to claim sole ownership of patriotism, faith and flag for the far right. One of them asked his viewing congregation to pray for the removal of a Supreme Court justice.


I did what I knew how to do and produced a 60-second TV spot. It featured a factory worker whose family members, all Christians, held an array of political beliefs. He didn't believe that anyone, not even a minister, had a right to judge whether people were good or bad Christians based on their political views. "That's not the American way," he wound up saying. I ran it on local TV, and it was picked up by the networks. People For the American Way grew out of the overwhelming response to that ad.


One of the most encouraging things to happen in 2011 was the birth of the Occupy Wall Street movement, which is giving the entire country the chance for a "born again American" moment. In calling attention to the country's widening chasm between rich and poor, the Occupiers have unleashed decades of pent-up patriotic outrage against the systematic violation of our nation's core principles by the "say good-bye to the middle class" alliance of the neocons, theocons and corporate America.


To those many millions of Americans whose guts tell them the Occupy movement is on to something but aren't the sort to camp out or protest in the street, I say find another way to let your voice be heard in the new year. Work with others who share your passion for equal opportunity and equal justice for all Americans, and find ways to channel outrage into productive action. I'm betting you'll find, as I have over my nearly *four score plus 10* (equals 90), that you'll form some of the most rewarding relationships and have some of the most meaningful experiences of your life.


I have been lucky in many ways. I was raised by my *immigrant grandfather* to treasure the freedom and opportunities America offers. I also learned early to fear the power of demagogues with megaphones, as an 11-year-old listening to the *anti-Semitic ravings* and attacks on President Franklin D. Roosevelt from radio priest *Father Coughlin*, the spiritual godfather of those who poison our airwaves and online forums today. By the time I was a teenager, I knew that the values of individual and religious liberty were worth fighting for, which is why I dropped out of college to enlist in the war against Hitler.


Since then I have repeatedly seen Americans get off their couches to hold this country accountable to its stated values. They did it to fight for civil rights and the dismantling of the legal apartheid of Jim Crow; for the women's movement; for equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans. They have rallied to ensure that immigrants are treated with dignity and justice. All these efforts to overcome bigotry and institutionalized prejudice are still works in progress, but I am awed by the progress we have made.


Generations of Americans have worked to create a nation in which individual liberty can thrive alongside commitment to the principle that *all members of a community should have the opportunity to pursue their dreams* and build a decent life for themselves and their families. In recent decades, that dream has been betrayed.


The religious right leaders who got me engaged in politics often portray such things as free expression and equal protection for all Americans no matter their race, religion or sexual orientation as anti-Christian and un-American, as symptoms of cultural decline. I couldn't disagree more. What strikes me as un-American are the greed, deception and systematic corruption that have infected politics, business and so much of our culture in recent years. Some of those with power and privilege have worked to create a system that continually reinforces that privilege and power, leaving ever-increasing numbers of Americans without reasonable hope for the kind of life their parents worked to give them.


Many Americans are in despair, and it has left them open to demagoguery and political manipulation. Blame gays, liberals, unions, immigrants or feminists for your family's struggles, for shrinking economic opportunity, for foreclosures and disappearing wages and benefits. Blame secularists or Muslims, or both, for the sense that our values have gone haywire.


A year out from the 2012 election, I am already tired of those who use the phrase "American exceptionalism" to *reassert the far-right's claim that God, the Founding Fathers and any decent freedom-loving American must share their reactionary political agenda*. I embrace the idea too that our nation should be a "shining city on a hill." We are the spiritual heirs to those Americans who struggled to end slavery and segregation, to end child labor and win safe conditions and living wages for workers, to enable every American to enrich his or her community and country by finding a place and a way to flourish in the world. We must make ourselves worthy of that legacy.


Call it the American dream, the American promise or the American way. Whatever term you use, it is imperiled, and worth fighting for. It is that basic, deeply patriotic emotion that I believe is finding expression — bottom-up, small-d democratic expression — in the Occupy movement. We can, and I would say must, fully embrace both love of country and outrage at attempts to despoil it. What better cause? What better time?


Television writer and producer Norman Lear founded People for the American Way.

Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-lear-occupy-the-new-year-20111230,0,4956520.story</description><pubDate>Fri, 30 Dec 2011 17:44:08 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title>Saving American Democracy Act</title><link>http://www.intheav.com/blogs/roxi/2011/12/17/saving-american-democracy-act</link><description>I wanted to mention to you that I have recently introduced a constitutional amendment, the Saving American Democracy Act, to *undo* the damage being caused by the disastrous 5-4 *Citizens United* Supreme Court decision.

In my view, this Supreme Court decision is one of the worst in the history of our country. Together, we have got to do everything we can to repeal it. 

Let me be very clear.  Despite what 5 members of the U.S. Supreme Court may believe, a *corporation is not a person*.  

•A corporation does not have First Amendment rights to spend as much money as it wants, without disclosure, on a political campaign.

•Corporations should not be able to go into their treasuries and withdraw unlimited sums of money in order to buy elections.

That’s not what American democracy is supposed to be about.

This horrendous *Supreme Court ruling* has radically changed the nature of our democracy.  It has further tilted the balance of power in our country towards the rich and the powerful and against the needs of the middle class and working families.   

*Today, when corporations have more than $2 trillion in cash in their bank accounts* and are making record-breaking profits, the American people are outraged when the Supreme Court says that these corporations have a 

constitutionally-protected right to spend shareholders’ money to dominate an election.

If we do not reverse this decision, there will be no end to the impact that corporate interests can have on our campaigns and our democracy.

According to an October 10, 2011, article in Politico, “the billionaire industrialist brothers David and Charles Koch plan to steer more than $200 million – potentially much more – to conservative groups ahead of Election Day 2012.”  Others are doing the same thing.

Does anybody really believe that that is what American democracy is supposed to be about?

Think about the consequences of the Citizens United decision in Congress.

When legislation comes up that negatively impacts Wall Street or some other powerful special interest, what will senators be thinking about when they decide how to vote?

Every member of the Senate, every member of the House, in the back of their minds will be wondering if the vote they cast will unleash a tsunami of *corporate TV and radio ads against them*. 

Is that how we should be deciding legislation? 

It’s not just taking on Wall Street.  Maybe it’s standing up to the drug companies, or the insurance companies or the military-industrial complex.

Whatever powerful and wealthy special interests members of Congress are prepared to take on – on behalf of the interest of the middle class and working families of this country – *they will know in the back of their minds that there may be unlimited sums of money coming into their state* if they cast the right vote. 

When the Supreme Court says that for purposes of the First Amendment, corporations are people, that *writing checks from the company’s bank account is constitutionally-protected speech* and that attempts by the federal government and states to impose reasonable restrictions on campaign ads are unconstitutional, when that occurs, our democracy is in grave danger.  And we have got to fight back!

I am a proud sponsor of a number of bills that would respond to Citizens United and begin to get a handle on the problem.  But more needs to be done, something more fundamental and indisputable, something that cannot be turned on its head by a Supreme Court decision.  That is why I proposed the *Saving American Democracy constitutional amendment* in the Senate.  A companion measure has been introduced in the House of Representatives by Congressman Ted Deutch.

Together, we have got to do everything we can to gather grass-roots support for the long fight in front of us.

Passing a constitutional amendment is not easy and will not be done tomorrow.  Like the other great struggles in modern American history - women’s rights, civil rights, protecting our environment – getting corporate money out of politics will require a strong and sustained effort.

But it must be done.

*Corporations are not people* with equal constitutional rights. 

Corporations are subject to regulation by the people.

Corporations may not make campaign contributions – the law of the land for the last century.

And Congress and states have the power to regulate campaign finances.

Please join me in Saving American Democracy.

Sincerely,

Senator Bernie Sanders, INDEPENDENT
http://www.bernie.org/petition/saving-american-democracy/#scroll

</description><pubDate>Sat, 17 Dec 2011 04:24:01 +0000</pubDate></item></channel></rss>
