Category Archives: Uncategorized

Corry Bliss wrestles his past in Connecticut

Corry Bliss’ time here in Vermont running Brian Dubie’s losing race for governor has followed him to Connecticut. He is there running World Wrestling Entertainment owner Linda McMahon’s senate campaign. Second time senatorial wannabe Linda McMahon can’t be pleased with this recent headline about her campaign manager. Linda McMahon’s Campaign Manager Had a Controversial Past in Vermont

Connecticut’s Hartford Courant picked up on the latest in the continuing Vermont legal battle over alleged illegal coordination between the Republican Governor’s Association (RGA) and Dubie’s campaign staff. Bliss is not named in the lawsuit but was questioned about his role. Here is part of what Connecticut voters got to read about Bliss in the Green Mountains:

It’s not the first controversy Bliss became ensnared in during his time in Vermont. Last year, he settled a lawsuit with a developer who had accused him of libeling his character during the 2010 gubernatorial campaign. Bliss and Dubie both wrote letters of apology to settle the case.

Not the kind of thing McMahon may want to read about her manager who is paid $7,500.00 every other week (more than double Dubie campaign pay). And there is this testimonial to Bliss’ particular form of alchemy which will put him in solidly with his new boss.

“Corry Bliss took a candidate that was up 20 points and turned him into a loser by election day,” said Bradford Broyles, a Republican activist from Mendon, a town in the central part of the state, near Killington. “We’re still repairing the damage to the Republican party…If Corey[sic] Bliss runs [McMahon’s campaign] like he did up here, hold on to your seats.”

 

Dubie dines with men who stare at dictators

Redistricting looms in 2012, and the Republicans are going full tilt to elect as many governors as possible. Propagandist Rupert Murdoch just gave one of the biggest single contributions ever to the Republican Governors Association. Thursday The RGA released its first TV ad supporting Dubie, narrated by none other than Jim Douglas (do you suppose words come out of Dubie’s mouth?).

Hardly Pure Vermont politics

This strategy of outside advertising dollar support may be what led to Brian Dubie’s dinner date with some heavy hitters two weeks ago. Or maybe it was purely a social event. Regardless, candidate Dubie is running with a fast crowd these days.

Brian Dubie was one of 15-20 dinner guests along with former President George W. Bush at Topridge, a 207-acre Adirondack “camp”. One of the big questions on the Times-Argus’ mind was if the Lt. Gov. asked Bush to visit Vermont !

The historic camp features buildings inspired by Russian architecture, complete with onion domes.  The host at Topridge was Harlan Crow, a wealthy (actually, very wealthy) and by Vermont standards, very conservative Dallas, Texas business man.

Lt. Gov. Brian Dubie, the only Republican running to replace Gov. James Douglas, was a guest at a dinner for a very select group of visitors to upstate New York about two weeks ago.

Among the 15 or 20 people at the dinner were former President George Bush and former First Lady Laura Bush, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and Harlan Crow.

The Dallas real estate magnate Crow is also a trustee of the George Herbert Walker Bush Presidential Library and of the American Enterprise Institute and a founding member of Grover Norquist’s Club for Growth. He also is reported to have provided funding for the infamous Swiftboat Veterans for Truth.

In addition to funding conservative politics, Dubie’s dinner host Harlan Crow has another interesting pastime, collecting statues of dictators and fallen despots.

Nearly 20 statues of leaders and heroes of authoritarian regimes occupy the rolling private garden of Harlan R. Crow, a Dallas real estate investor. Heavyweights like Stalin, Mao and Lenin stand among lesser-knowns like Klement Gottwald, the first Communist president of Czechoslovakia.

 

Smart meter slowed by lawsuit

[Good info here, spent too long on the sidebar; belatedly promoted by NanuqFC]

My electric co-op meter reader had not heard of smart grid and the smart meters coming to Vermont. That he was amazed to hear about it may illustrate a point. As the electric system in Vermont quickly changes, are the utilities, the State and even the media doing enough to educate the public about what changes to expect?  A recent article in the Free Press titled ‘Listen up, bonehead:’ Smart grid prepares to talk back may be an indication of the quality of an education effort underway already.

California already is getting some experience with the smart grid and some of it isn’t going too well.  A class-action lawsuit  against PG&E  alleges that the utility falsely advertised its smart metering program and is benefiting from unfair competition (namely, that it has none, giving consumers no choice in the matter). An original plaintiff filed suit after his bill tripled from $200 to $600 a month  right after smart meter installation.

As a result of the suit PG&E has slowed distribution of smart meters in its system.

One energy technology reporter and expert suggests those promoting all this have their tasks cut out for them. Heavily regulated utilities with long histories of viewing their customers only as “rate payers” or “loads” will have to change attitudes and view consumers differently.

……The PG&E Bakersfield hullabaloo is just the beginning of the backlash against smart meters and smart grid technology, which will only grow as smart meters continue to be installed throughout the country. The public concern reminds me of when digital voting booths were introduced, or when consumers first started to online bank. There’s some real concerns about keeping digital information private and secure in these systems, but ultimately it’s the responsibility of the organization that’s leading the switch to the digital two-way system to keep the line of communication open

http://www.burlingtonfreepress…

http://www.greentechmedia.com/…

http://green.venturebeat.com/2…

http://earth2tech.com/2009/11/…

Dear Rock Art – DON’T SIGN IT!

Dear Rock Art –

Thank you for your Vermontster and for a brewery giving us a quality, value-added, local & appreciated product that raises the overall level of goodness in the world.

Relative to:

[Rock Art] president Matt Nadeau is cautious about spelling out the agreement before getting instructions from his attorney.

— may I humbly offer some free advice.

1.  Don’t sign a “settlement” agreement.  The frivolous bullies at Hansen realize they have given themselves a self-inflicted Black-Eye. You have nothing to settle (unless they are agreeing to pay you a hefty sum of money for your loss of resources over these past few days). You are not going to enter the Caffeinated Artificially Flavored Sugar Water Punch market anyway so why agree not to that market? Let’s face it, it would cheapen your image to sell the type of garbage that Hansen sells.

2.  If you are inclined to sign a settlement (sigh), refuse to do so unless the terms specifically & honestly identify that the market you agree not to enter is the “Caffeinated Artificial  Multi-Colored Flavored Sugar Water Punch” market.  As we have pointed out here at GMD, the Hansen products do not give “energy.” Rather, their liquid products merely offer a chemically induced bodily reaction that may mimic “energy” among the culinarily gullible.

3.  Finally, if you do sign a settlement — correctly identifying the market you refuse to enter as the:

“Caffeinated Artificial Multi-Colored Flavored Sugar Water Punch” market

— then PLEASE DO NOT sign the confidentiality agreement that Hansen will undoubtedly insist upon having. You MUST put a copy of the agreement on your website so all the world can see what a pathetic bunch of bullying and backtracking dissembling corporate assholes the Hansen folks really are.

Sincerely — another satisfied customer.

Bonus:

Well, isn’t this special.  Among the ingredients dumped into Hansen’s chemically aggregated “Monster” Caffeinated Artificial Multi-Colored Flavored Sugar Water Punch are:

carbonated water

sucrose

glucose

citric acid

flavoring

taurine

sodium citrate

coloring

L-carnitine

affeine

sorbic acid

benzoic acid

niacinamide

sodium chloride

glucuronolactone

inositol

hydrochloride

sucralose

maltodextrin

cyanocobalamin

YUMMY!!!

Hamburger Stimulus

The National Industrial Recovery Act of ’33 created the Public Works Administration (PWA). Yesterday, I enjoyed going to the 100th (or so) Hamburger Summit in Montpelier at recreation field/pool build by the PWA in the 30s.  My kids go to camp there now and I spent many a summer day at that rec. field and pool in grade school growing up in the 70s.

There is a plaque commemorating the PWA work which generated this valuable public & community asset. It was built four generations ago when my kids’ great grandparents lived in that neighborhood and witnessed the infrastructure being built. It has served the community well for 7 decades generating everything from employment to memories to teaching kids how to swim and play baseball.

I recommend BP’s Post, which made me think about this. BP writes about Senator Judd Gregg of New Hampshire. Gregg apparently cannot stand truth in advertising or being honest with taxpayers about where government is spending their money. Gregg is a fiscal radical who has spent a political lifetime feverishly searching for treasonous acts of class warfare to inflict on anyone who works for a living. When I read BPs post, it made me think of all the social, community and economic benefits generated by this valuable Montpelier project; and how these economic success stories upset Gregg more than anything else democracy does for us.

The PWA and my grandparents’ generation were rightly proud of the work performed by the PWA and other programs. Their work pulled this country out of the Depression and out of the United States’ and world’s worst (prior to the Bush administration’s) financial meltdown. Like today, their Depression was caused primarily by allowing corporations to over-regulate the democratic sector of U.S. society.

More on the “Hamburger Recovery” later when I update this post.  I gotta’ go to work — hope everyone had a good weekend.

In Harmony With Nature

 

Driving to work yesterday morning, I saw a Tom Turkey parading toward a flock of Hens.

His chest feathers were puffed and his tail feathers were fully splayed and displayed. One look into his beady bird eyes and you could see the call of spring’s ritualistic Cock-on-Hen, “One Cock for one Flock,” why-don’t-we-do-it-in-the-road thoughts of old-school “traditional” Wild Turkey flying feather bird lust.

This guy was being controlled by primal urges known to virtually any organism residing even one evolutionary tick above an amoeba. The call of nature, in its most primitive form, was commanding his every action.

Didn’t want to miss this show! Grabbed camera and jumped out of my truck then quietly stood (perched!) on the side of the field just like any other puerile voyuer nature lover would do.

This guy was primed for action.

When he caught up to the Hens, the girls seemed shy at first.  They became friendly in pretty short order though.

I should tell you that the radio was on when I jumped from my truck. While shooting photos of the amorous Turkeys I was listening to a news report about the General Assembly’s passage of the marriage equality bill.

This is where things became, err, different. As the news report played on the radio, it was almost as if the Turkeys had heard the same story I did about Vermont giving legal recognition to the marriages of same-gender couples. As if on cue, two more Tom Turkeys, who were also mingling within the flock of hens, turned away from the ladies.

Next thing you know . . . .  (you need to click to believe) . . .

 

Damnedest thing I ever saw.

With no interest in the hens WHATSOEVER, the two Toms puffed themselves out – apparently for each other – and paraded off, together.

“One Cock for one Flock” and “Tom & Tom” seemed equally in harmony with nature.

 

—-

Someone asked me if the two Toms were photoshopped.  The two Toms are not altered. Here is the original photograph.  As Paul Harvey would said, Tom and Tom are the “rest of this story.”

Executive Director Concern Troll and his favorite Jim-Dog Democrat

One piece of news that slipped by during all the Obama buzz (and my own writer’s block) was a change of guard in Vermont GOP-land. Developer lobbyist Tayt Brooks has taken over as the Executive Director of the badly floundering State Republican Party (here’s a link from the Freeps blog, which only a couple weeks ago seemed in danger of withering away, but has lately seemed re-energized). The Vermont GOP, under Jim Barnett (now of the McCain campaign), became little more than a Douglas re-election office, leaving legislative races dangling badly and throwing sporadic support to the occasional statewide race, such as Dubie’s or former Auditor Randy Brock. It is this Republican Party that has allowed nearly-veto-proof Democratic majorities in the legislature to flourish, and are letting a freshman Democratic US Representative who was elected in a tough race and has faced continuing pressure from the left waltz back into office, seemingly without a challenger.

Seriously – who’d want that job?

But Brooks’s new role may (or may not) require him to reassess where he offers his support. Some may remember that Brooks was caught by JDRyan concern trolling on this blog under the name Pizzaman. Brooks was trolling in defense of Jim-Dog Dem, Rep. Jon Anderson of Montpelier, who is facing a primary challenge from Mayor Mary Hooper (who can be seen near the beginning of this video from the State Democratic Convention).

Why would Republican Brooks be defending the honor of a Democrat? Small wonder, really. Anderson was appointed to the position following the retirement of Rep. Francis Brooks by Governor Douglas, who broke tradition and rejected all the candidates proposed by the local Democrats (who had soundly rejected Anderson’s bid for the slot). “Democrat” Anderson was a Douglas campaign contributor, and his first action in office was to uphold a Douglas veto, earning the wrath of the Speaker’s office, and a quick boot off the committee he had first been assigned to, where the former Developer lawyer would have been in a position to push the Governor’s “New Neighborhoods” agenda. Anderson has been frantically trying to reinvent himself as a Montpelier liberal to insure his re-election.

Don’t bet on that likelihood, as Anderson has gone up against Hooper in the past – for the Mayor’s office – where he came in a distant third to Hooper and Progressive stalwart Marge Power. Rumors already abound that Anderson will simply avoid the primary and run as an independent. For a graphic explaining the nature of this political dynamic, click here.

Brooks was entertaining for a few days though, strongly implying that he was a Montpelier area Democrat jumping to the defense of his embattled Representative who represented the true heart of the people. Here are some choice quotes:

Huh???  Poorly treated???  How do you think someone who was a former Democratic City Chair might feel by getting shafted by a back room deal?  Seems to me the person who should be pissed the most in all of this is how Anderson got treated by his own city caucus.

Hmm… the interesting thing I hear around the city is how much (GMD Front Pager Jack) McCullough is hurting his creditability (sic).

Mr. Odum, do you think with that head???  I tell you what, you are pissing off a lot of moderates around this city with your attack style politics.

You guys could just… y’know… get your own blog. Well, except for the problem that nobody would care.

Who is “drawing blood?”

(Although there is a thinking that this issue should be allowed to decompress some, I am promoting this post to the front page for a very specific reason: to serve notice on any concerned that while John Odum may be rendered (hopefully temporarily) silent, GMD is larger than any one man, and cannot be silenced through threats or intimidation. Like the Hydra of myth: cut off one head, and two more take its place. Nota bene. – promoted by kestrel9000)

Thanks John for putting Vermont’s “Democratic wing of the Democratic party” on the national emerging media map.  Seeing Front Pagers here at GMD recognized for their insight at DKos as well as having GMD providing a Vermont home at MYDD is a source of pride. 


Below the fold – kestrel9000

To all the folks reading this, notice what John said about  “drawing blood.” John has the decency of giving us an honest explanation of why he is stepping out.  I think he owes us that much just as we owe him our appreciation. However, John is far too classy, and as we’ve come to see over the past year far too loyal a person to let us know WHERE the blood was drawn.  In fact, I don’t even see in his post an express mention of who drew the blood.

Sure Thomas Naylor wrote a smear job against John.  Still, I question whether the rambling and generally unnoticed delusional ravings of a truth-cripple drew any blood.  Ever since the fact-addled relic Naylor stumbled to his mailbox to deliver a fact challenged a press release, his natural allies have understandably faded into the woodwork.  Don’t blame them.   Explaining Naylor’s charges, even Tony Snow or Ari Fleischer would be reduced to blushing as they spouted off a string of “that factual scenario is no longer operative” excuses.  

The fact is Naylor et al. threw a little hissy fit about their connections with bigoted revisionist Southerners who glorify the slaughter of Americans by treasonous Confederate insurgents who sought to destroy the United States solely to protect their ability to commit crimes against humanity through slavery, lynching and genocide.  Nice folks.  As Mr. Robinson famously said to Benjamin in The Graduate, Mr. Naylor “You’ll forgive me if I don’t shake your hand.”

In the grand scheme of things, Naylor et al. are gadfly piss-ants hidden in tire treads on Vermont’s political runway.  I don’t say this gloatingly either.  Admittedly, some of these folks espouse a pipe dream that is extremely attractive — as are all pipe dreams.  Also, there is a modicum of intellectual heft behind SVR.  

So why do I suggest that Naylor — a fact-addled piss-ant-non-factor in Vermont political conversation — did not necessary draw blood, at least directly?  Read this portion of his press release:

The insidious lies disseminated by the anonymous blogger are hyped by VNRC staff member John Odum on his Green Mountain Daily (GMD) website, and by members of the Green Mountain Collective. Odum (whose e-mail address – (coincidentally? – contains the phrase “poetworld”) is a Democratic Party political hack who used to work for Bernie Sanders and is vehemently opposed to peaceable secession. [snip]
Whether Odum’s Green Mountain Daily (GMD) website is subsidized by VNRC is unknown to us. However, it is surprising that VNRC Executive Director Elizabeth Courtney appears to allow Odum to publicly engage in character assassination activities against an organization like SVR, whose basic principles  . . . [are] not dissimilar to those professed by VNRC.

Aside for the fact that there is enough hogshit in that snippet to overflow the  largest fecal lagoon in pig country, Naylor is obviously trying to get someone else to exercise influence over Vermont’s political discourse that is unimaginable to him.  Who has the indirect influence that Naylor never had, does not have and never will have?  Read: “[I]t is surprising that VNRC Executive Director Elizabeth Courtney appears to allow Odum to publicly engage in character assassination activities against an organization like SVR.” Hmmh. 

GMD is a spare-time project of a father, husband and person who toils at a day job like the rest of us.  This story has stirred the emotions of a few on the fringe, but like every outliner dustup, it will soon be forgotten.  Similarly, Naylor is a soon to be forgotten harmless old crank gasping for media oxygen whenever and wherever he can get it and is no individual threat to anyone.  VNRC has nothing to do with GMD but it is everything to John.  VNRC is John’s BLOOD. 

Here, John creates a forum for discussion, we discuss, GMD exists — that’s the basic formula.

Until this soapy operatic, I confess that I did not know where John worked.  Many people I’ve discussed this with, political junkie friends, colleagues who work in/around the Statehouse and others who work in non-profits/advocacy groups here in the Montpelier area where I live, have raised the specter of the Chris Graff affair.

I disagree that this is similar to the Chris Graff affair.  Chris Graff was fired from his job for doing his job.  Naylor is neither the AP nor VNRC and GMD does not employ John, VNRC does.  The analogy is just too tenuous for me.  Naylor’s press release implicating Elizabeth Courtney is, however, a seeming attempt by him to play puppet-master over John’s employer.  If the powers-that-be at VNRC have their strings pulled this easily, the analogy still won’t work but the result will be the same.

If VNRC caves, the effect of this is no different than any of us having our employers receive threats or harassment due to letters to the editor we write in our spare time.  What John is doing by cultivating a discussion forum and liberal Democratic blog for citizen journalism is old-fashioned good-citizenship.  This is something we need much more of these days.  Sadly, however, our employers can affect whether we use our citizenship talents.  If I am correctly reading between the lines here, Naylor is trying to get Elizabeth Courtney to throw cold water on John’s spare time community citizenship contributions.  What’s next, our employers telling what to (not) say at Town Meeting?

This brings me back to my point about this relative insignificance of this story.  While no one will remember this soapy operatic in a few days, no one will forget if John is “Graffed” or gagged by his employer.  I hope I am wrong about my “reading between the lines here.”  Obviously John is laying all the blame at heat generated by the blogespheric SVR controversy and not at his workplace. 

Still, I keep thinking about that statement about “drawing blood.”  Just as Deep Throat suggested that we “follow the money” I suggest that we “follow the blood.”  John’s metaphoric blood is his day job.  I could not be a good parent, husband or a good citizen without a job.  My job is my metaphoric blood and I know it.  John has found a way to give back to his community and make a valuable citizenship contribution through GMD. 

I, as a fellow citizen, would feel better knowing that John is taking a break from the understandable stress of this ridiculous distraction.  On the other hand, if his employer is caving to associates of people who glorify terrorism, genocide, slavery and the violent upheaval that came close to destroying the United States, then I don’t see this story going away for a long time.  SVR’s mouse-that-roared press release is an asterisk attached to a footnote about story that is a non-event.  Vermont’s most successful new media political blog having its founder pressured by his employer from being a contributing citizen is a story with long legs and an elephant’s memory, however.

It is obvious to all that come here that there is no relationship between VNRC and GMD.  Were there a relationship with any outside single agenda groups, even ones with which we may have philosophical propinquity, I doubt any of us would want to be a part of this community.  This blog is about Democratic & democratic politics and progressive liberal policy.  I hope we readers of GMD will receive a signal from VNRC that they are not tampering with John’s spare time citizenship activities. 

Call me presumptuous, but I believe I have a right to the benefits of folks in my community exercising acts of good citizenship, in their spare time, without their employers pressuring them to shut up rather risk giving the vapors to hooded wingnuts.

slainte,
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