Why more young people don’t vote.

Republicans, whose star seems to be on the wane, have been trying to suppress the vote of all but the narrow sector to whom their message still appeals.  Democrats, on the other hand, project a message of inclusion which should bring far more people into the process. Why is it not more successful?

Bernie Sanders’ support demographic is a particular challenge, being heavily weighted with new voters.

It annoys me when media types refer to young people as being ‘unreliable’ when it comes to voting. The implication is that they are a monolith with one defining characteristic: they are undependable.  That is so unfair.

In fact, younger voters tend to be far more mobile than their established elders…not because of any particular lack of reliability, but out of sheer necessity. They must move much more frequently simply to be in the vicinity of their schools and employment opportunities.

If they have already left school and have a job, they are probably renters. In the tight rental market young people on skimpy budgets often must move from one municipality to another nearby in order to pursue more affordable housing opportunities. Theirs is a constantly shifting environment of economic instability, something that the current voter registration practices do not recognize.

As teenagers, these good citizens registered to vote as soon as they were of legal age, and then life took over and set them on a dead run.  A couple of years go by, an important national primary or election looms; and thinking of themselves as already registered, a lot of busy young voters completely forget that, having moved once or twice in the interim, they are no longer qualified to vote without re-registering.

They show up at the polls on election day and are turned away, after which some simply abandon the democratic habit.

As of this writing, same day registration is available in only eight states. Vermont will soon join that number, but only in 2017.

Bummer.

This is another stupid flaw in the system that no doubt disenfranchises huge numbers of individuals who would otherwise be gladly participating in the process.

Why should national elections be subject to restrictive voting rules imposed by the individual states? Shouldn’t there be a national voter registry, accessible anywhere in the nation?

Like efforts by the Republicans to disenfranchise minority groups whom they view as unfriendly monoliths rather than individual constituents, the voter registration practices that make it difficult for students and people with no fixed address to participate in the process strongly favor the continuance of establishment politics over those of innovation and progressive

This does not serve the best interests of our democracy, nor does it bode well for our international competitiveness in the future..

Tulsi Gabbard: A new face for the future.

I’d just like to take a moment to celebrate Hawaii’s Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, who is being hailed by the New York Times as “a new rising star in Democratic politics.”

As a vice-chair of the DNC, Gabbard has publicly criticized DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz over the dramatically poor debate scheduling that most took to favor the campaign of presumed nominee Hillary Clinton, by minimizing her exposure to debate scrutiny.

She has now gone one step further, resigning her position at the DNC in order to boldly endorse Bernie Sanders for President.

This gal has chutzpa, a commodity sadly lacking in the world of DC cronyism.

Ms. Gabbard explained her decision in a video on YouTube in which she said that, as a military veteran, she wanted the United States to avoid “interventionist wars of regime change.”

Her statement has extra gravitas, given that it comes from a seasoned veteran of foreign conflicts:

“As a veteran of two Middle East deployments, I know first hand the cost of war,” said Ms. Gabbard, one of the first female combat veterans to serve in Congress. “I know how important it is that our commander-in-chief has the sound judgment required to know when to use America’s military power and when not to use that power.

Once more, the island state of Hawaii, way out in the Pacific has put forth a leader for a new generation of Mainlanders. I look forward to following her future.Tulsi-gabbard-promoted-major

Antonin Scalia: International Order of Friendly Sons of the Raccoons

Well sadly no, the late Justice Scalia was not a member of the fictional working class lodge the International Order of Friendly Sons of the Raccoons*. ninonorton 2

Scalia was a member in good standing in the very real International Order of St. Hubertus, a kind of a Raccoon Lodge for the 1%’ers — perhaps just as silly.

The US chapter of the Order of Hubertus was established in 1966 at the infamous Bohemian Grove in California. Originally the order was founded in Eastern Europe by Habsburg Count Franz Anton von Sporck in 1695. Now members of the worldwide, male-only society wear dark-green robes emblazoned with a large Iron Cross and the motto “Deum Diligite Animalia Diligentes,” which means “Honoring God by honoring His creatures.” Members hold titles, such as Grand Master, Prior, and Knight Grand Officer. And the Order of Hubertus is an IRS non-profit, too — tax free for the Prior and Knights.

That’s as brief a history as possible for fear of falling into a tangled web of well known conspiracy involving Ronald Reagan, Richard Nixon, flaming owls, and perhaps even lizard people.

Before his death Scalia flew on a private plane for his free stay at the exclusive remote Texas hunting “camp” with fellow Hubertians[?]. Scalia was a frequent flyer: between 2004 and 2014 he traveled 258 times on privately subsidized trips.

His companion on the Texas jaunt, C.Allen Foster, is a prominent Washington lawyer. Foster may be just a Hubertus Knight, but he threw himself a 65th birthday bash fit for Count Von Sporck.

In 2006, Foster was featured in The Post when he celebrated his 65th birthday with a six-day celebration in the Czech Republic. He flew his family and 40 Washington friends there to stay in Moravia’s Zidlochovice, a baroque castle and hunting park. The birthday bash included “tours of the Czech countryside, wine tasting, wild boar and mouflon (wild sheep) hunts, classic dance instruction and a masked costume ball.”

A strange semi-secret society with roots in Eastern Europe and the surprise death of a Supreme Court Justice at a remote Texas hunting camp is the stuff of more than a few conspiracy theories.

But plots and murder are less likely than the simple explanation about the Order of Hubertus. The truth is often odd and pedestrian:

The main purpose of the International Order of St. Hubertus is to provide a venue for hunters who have been successful in their lives to gather and enjoy each other’s company outside of their normal business, social or religious groups.”

And of course there’s prestige and privilege. Among the privileges the Honored Raccoon Brothers enjoy are opening the first clam at the annual clambake and free burial with spouse at Raccoon National Cemetery in Bismark, North Dakota.

The equivalent in the International Order of St. Hubertus might be opening the first oil drilling rig in the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve. But I am sure the Knights and Grand Masters would stress the camaraderie at the exclusive society is simply a venue for hunters who have been successful in their lives to gather enjoy each other’s company outside of their normal business.”

Well sure there’s all that. However, should the need ever arise; a good quiet way to subtly nudge a court case this way or that is just a quail hunt away.

But who believes all this conspiracy stuff anyway?

*For those too young to remember or old enough to have forgotten the Raccoons were the fictitious working class lodge of TV’s Ralph Kramden and Ed Norton on the Honeymooners.

Are you experienced, or just living in a purple haze?

by Dan DeWalt
As the race for the Democratic presidential nomination intensifies, Hillary supporters and many pundits have started to talk about her superior knowledge and capability in the realm of foreign policy. After the South Carolina debate, NPR political reporters were musing on why in the world Sanders would bring up an ancient topic like the misguided U.S. overthrow of Mussaddegh in Iran in 1953. One speculated that he was an old man living in the past and wondered how that could be relevant to the millenials who are flocking to his campaign. This blithe ignorance of history and the lessons that should be learned from it is commonplace in the media and political establishment. This kind of thinking does us no favors, we need to learn from that history and let it inform our actions in the future.
Hillary has not been President, and can’t be blamed for other Presidential actions (including her husband’s), but she clearly has embraced the general continuum of American foreign policy, especially as excercised by Democratic Presidents, and she wants to be seen as the steady hand of experience who embraces the vision of America as the leading power and influence in world affairs. Unfortunately, she has shown that she is not very good at learning from history herself. She repeatedly tells Sanders to forget about her wrong Iraq vote, saying that we don’t need to harp on past mistakes, but should concentrate on new solutions. But if you don’t learn from your past mistakes, then your new solutions won’t be new at all, but will just be variations of the approaches that have failed us so miserably in the past.
Consider the Mossaddegh overthrow. Iran had democratically elected a new leader in free and fair elections. One would suppose that the U.S. government would welcome this new addition to democratically elected governments supported by their citizens. But Mossadegh represented a threat to U.S. and English oil interests. Choosing to represent big oil rather than democracy, we and the English engineered a coup that imprisoned Mossaddegh and installed a regime under Shah Pahlavi that ruled through fear, violence, intimidation and torture until the Iranian people finally revolted in 1979. The Shah had repressed civil opposition, but he was unable to repress religious opposition, especially when its leader, Ayatholla Komeini was living in exile in France. So the Iranian revolution was not led by seekers of a new democracy but was instead an Islamic revolution. Not only a blow to the Shah and his coterie, it was also directed virulently against the nation most responsible for putting him in power, the U.S. The new Iran established itself as an implaccable foe to the U.S. and our policies.
Fast forward a few years; after invasion and occupation, Russia has been driven out of Afghanistan. American supported mujaheddin warlords will not work together to control the country. Atrocities against civilians are an everyday occurrence and the Taliban are formed in reaction.
In large part, because Iran is against the Taliban, America offers the Taliban at least tacit support through Pakistan and Saudi Arabia as well as direct clandestine help from the CIA. At the time, Iran and Turkmenistan were talking about building a gas pipeline that would help the economies of newly emerged Central Asian countries as well as Iran. U.S. obsession with opposing Iran led Bill Clinton to support Pakistan in its bid to install the Taliban and then to build a pipeline running through Afghanistan avoiding Iran.* As we know, this never worked out, because the Taliban never considered cooperating with the U.S., or for that matter, even with their chief sponsors, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Without the help of those two countries, abetted by the U.S., the Taliban would never have been able to gain complete control over Afghanistan. By the time the Clinton admisitration decided that the Taliban were too violent and misogynistic to support, it was too late and the Taliban were in power, violating the rights of women and all who were not precise co-religionists with the Taliban, as well as hosting Osama bin-Laden, while he prepared al-Quaeda for its atacks on America in September of 2001. When America could have really used Iran as an ally, we instead did everything we could to keep them out of the Afghanistan conversation, ignoring the reality of their regional prominence, further worsening relations and antagonizing Iranians towards U.S. policy.

Bill Clinton acted like most American presidents, looking for short term maneuvers to play hackneyed geo-political games and ignoring the long term consequences. Tragically, U.S. reaction to the rise of Islamic State shows that we have learned nothing. The Bush/Cheney war on Iraq created I.S. We toppled Sadaam Hussein, and despite many years of occupation and coercion, the country is still in a shambles and fostered a wonderful breeding ground for radical Islamic terrorists.
Hillary advised Obama to oust Khadafi in Libya without a clue as to what would follow, and now we’re faced with another stronghold for the Islamic State. Now she is wedded to the goal of overthrowing Syria’s President Assad, which almost certainly would lead to the same bad result. Mrs. Clinton can talk until she’s blue in the face about coalitions and vetting and supporting opposition groups, but those are simply phrases that sound good to Americans that have little or no bearing on the reality on the ground.
Senator Sanders is right to point out that he has consistently excercised better judgement and has shown a greater understanding of the unpredictable outcomes that American military adventurism have led us, even when it has the best of intentions. At that same debate, Hilaary ridiculed Sander’s suggestion that he could get Saudi Arabia and Iran to work together to combat Islamic State. She implied that he was naïve and said flatly that it wouldn’t happen. Less than a week later, Iran announced that it is willing to try to work with Saudi Arabia to combat I.S. If Hillary’s experience simply means doing many things over and over, based on ideology and American mythology without fully understanding the consequences or the possiblities, then Senator Sanders’ superior judgement looks like a much better option for the future of our nation.
*[I am indebted to Ahmed Rashid’s Taliban for details about Afghanistan.]

Vermont conservatives perched on three legged stool

The fabled moderate Vermont Republican has pretty much vanished, and if you believe the American Conservative Union, that respected personage of the past has been replaced by a small pocket of Reagan conservatives.

The American Conservative Union and the American Conservative Union Foundation were founded by William F. Buckley after the presidential election in 1964 (Barry Goldwater’s huge loss to LBJ). Along with a host of other activities they sponsor the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) once chaired by Carly Fiorina.

And now, the American Conservative Union says it is thrilled to announce “a small pocket of conservatism exists in Vermont: 33 out of 150 Representatives and 5 out of 30 Senators will receive ACU’s conservative award.”. ACUvt 1Vermont’s small conservative pocket is mostly Republican but a lone Democrat did well in the ratings: One outlier in the legislature is Representative Browning, a Democrat who will receive the ACU Conservative Excellence award for her 100% rating.

Rep. Cynthia Browning (D-Arlington) made the grade. She often votes with Republicans and has tangled with the Shumlin administration over access to healthcare funding details. And two NEK state senators, Bobby Starr and John Rodgers D-Essex-Orleans, hardly starting out as part of what the ACU termed the “coalition of the radical left,” might find their way into the conservative pocket with a little effort.ACUvt2

The ACU judged legislators on a wide range of bills from the 2015 session, selected to reflect an adherence to certain conservative principles.

We select bills that focus on former President Ronald Reagan’s philosophy of the “three-legged stool”: 1) economic: taxes, budgets, regulation, spending, healthcare, and property; 2) social and cultural: 2nd Amendment, religious freedom, life, welfare, and education; and 3) government integrity: voting, individual liberty, privacy, and transparency.

That seems to me less a description of a simple three-legged stool than some elaborate Empire dining room suite of issues. But who would know Ronald Reagan’s stool better than ACU and CPAC.

Trump’s BFF racist wake-up call to Vermonters

Vermont GOPer’s it is past time to speak out.

Here is the text of the racist robo call that Comrade Rutherford mentions in his diary below.klanflamable

The American National Super PAC makes this call to support Donald Trump. I am William Johnson, a farmer and white nationalist.

The white race is dying out in America and Europe because we are afraid to be called “racist.” This is our mindset: It’s okay that our government destroys our children’s future, but don’t call me racist. I am afraid to be called racist. It’s okay to give away our country through immigration, but don’t call me racist. It’s okay that few schools anymore have beautiful white children as the majority, but don’t call me racist. Gradual genocide against the white race is okay, but don’t call me racist. I am afraid to be called racist. Donald Trump is not a racist, but Donald Trump is not afraid.

Don’t vote for a Cuban. Vote for Donald Trump. (213) 718-3908. This call is not authorized by Donald Trump.

Many people (mostly those with landlines perhaps) got American National Super PAC’s chilling call for Trump here in Vermont last night. It was lurking on my answering at work this morning.

Rightwingwatch.com has a bit more on Trump’s fan William Johnson and he isn’t exactly a farmer: “In the 1980s, Johnson put considerable effort into promoting his plan to strip the citizenship of and deport all but a small number of non-white people from the United States.”

One of my neighbors said she was in tears- half anger and half sadness after getting that call. What will happen if/when Republican Trump runs  it can’t happen here?

Finding a Governor in the VPR Tea Leaves

2016: the year of surprises. Donald Trump sweeping to victory in Nevada and South Carolina this week has every pundit in the game eating crow. Bernie’s huge win in New Hampshire was unthinkable a few months back. That said, we’re going to have to wait a while longer to be surprised when it comes to the Vermont governor’s race.

The VPR poll didn’t say anything shocking on the subject of who will occupy Vermont’s top office next year. First of all- Vermonters aren’t paying attention yet, and that’s good news for the Democrats. Fully 2/3 of Vermonters are either not following the race closely or not following it at all.

It’s no surprise that Lt. Governor Phil Scott polls well. He is the only candidate in the race who occupies statewide office. He has the best name recognition. The casual reader might say that it looks like he has a huge lead. Only one-third of respondents said they could tell whom they favored in the Governor’s race so far. So, you can throw out the question that tries to stack all of the four candidates against each other. Democrats and Independents aren’t yet ready to say which candidate they support.

Republicans are clear about their choice for Governor. Phil Scott is the solid favorite on the Republican side. Bruce Lisman couldn’t hit double digits no matter how the question was asked. After all of the time, effort and (of course) money that Bruce Lisman put into Campaign for Vermont and his race the VPR poll must be a big disappointment.

Matt Dunne has a solid lead against Sue Minter across regions and demographics. Still, those who are not sure who to vote for make up the majority of Democrats, so it’s still anyone’s game. A friend reminded me today that Brian Dubie had a 20 point lead all summer long in 2010 as the Democrats were battling it out. Dubie’s poll numbers dropped quickly once the race was head-to-head.

My money says that Scott’s numbers will dive like Brian Dubie’s if one of the Democrats surges and becomes the presumptive nominee, and will definitely do so once the primary happens. August is a long way away at this point though, and a lot can happen in six months.

If Donald Trump or another wild candidate like Senator Ted Cruz wins the Republican nomination it won’t help Lt. Governor Scott’s chances of winning in November. While the conventional wisdom says Scott will be our next Governor, I think 2016 is the year of the unconventional.

Matt Dunne must be looking at this poll and seeing the opportunity. He has the early advantage among Democrats and if he can introduce himself to the 2/3 of Vermonters who aren’t paying much attention yet he may be able to do the unbelievable and beat Phil Scott in November.

White Supremacist Robocalls Now in Vermont

I just got a robocall from the white supremacist American National Super PAC urging me to be proud of the white race and vote for Trump.

I only got the tail end of it, and their phone number.

“Donald Trump is not a racist, but Donald Trump is not afraid. Don’t vote for a cuban, vote for Donald Trump.”

As Sue Prent’s headline below says, “It takes an extremist to endorse an extremist.”

Update: It takes an extremist to endorse an extremist.

Update: Well, it appears that our current Lieutenant Governor, Phil Scott, who currently  aspires to be the next Governor, has also endorsed Rubio, albeit not in so full-throated a manner as has his predecessor.  It sounds as iif he would prefer to maintain his protective cover, but this endorsement outs him as an extremist enabler at the very least.

So Brian Dubie endorses Marco Rubio for President?

Dubie endorses Rubio for Vermont’s presidential primary

Let’s see what that tells us about our own former Lieutenant Governor.

He didn’t endorse Kasich, who is still in the race. He didn’t simply abstain from an endorsement.  He went out of his way and endorsed Marco Rubio…the third most extreme conservative in the race…and I quote:

“I am pleased to announce my support for Sen. Marco Rubio,” Dubie said in a statement. “Sen. Rubio can win this election and put forward bold conservative ideas once in the White House that would ensure the American Dream is passed down to future generations. Sen. Marco Rubio is a strong conservative nominee who can win.”

How about them apples?

For all of his chameleon-like posturing as a moderate, Brian Dubie has just flown his true colors and they are screeching right-turn red.

Let’s see what Marco has espoused in the primary.

Exhibit A: Immigration?

Like the Donald, he’s “going to build a wall.” It will be 700 miles long and we’re going to have to pay for it.

Commenting on Meet the Press, and in complete denial of the fact that illegal immigration has been in sharp decline since 2005 he said

“We are worse off today than we were five years ago,” he told host Chuck Todd. “We have more illegal immigrants here.”

Exhibit B: Healthcare?

Rubio vows to repeal “Obamacare,” even though he and his family have chosen to enroll in the D.C. exchange, benefitting from the much greater subsidy available to members of Congress than that which is available to the general public. Nice.

Exhibit C: Minimum Wage?

Marco doesn’t believe there should be one. That’s right. In Marco’s perfect world (which, presumably, is Brian’s as well), trickle down economics from the tax breaks he wants to give to the rich will take care of all that. Just like it did in the reign of George II.

Exhibit D: LGBT Rights?

He’ll have no more of that! Marriage is between a man and a woman. Period. His words:

…he threatened to render the decision on gay marriage ineffectual by using his presidential powers to appoint only conservative justices to the bench who would supposedly interpret the ruling differently.

“Ultimately, I will appoint Supreme Court justices that will interpret the Constitution as originally constructed,’ Rubio said Sunday.”

I guess that means interracial marriage will once more be in danger under a Rubio reign, too.  It’s good to be king.

How moderate is Dubie looking now?

Exhibits E & F: Women’s right to choose? Women’s right to affordable healthcare?

Rubio doesn’t recognize those rights…not even in the event of rape or incest.

Furthermore, he has vowed to defund Planned Parenthood, completely mischaracterizing the charitable women’s health service as being in the business of promoting abortion for profit.
Exhibit G: Freedom of religion?

Not so much for Muslims,.

Rubio has compared Muslims to Nazi’s and even suggested that mosques and other places where Muslims gather should be shut down.

I could go on, but you get the picture.

Brian Dubie endorses Marco Rubio’s brand of conservatism, which isn’t at all conservative in the usual sense of the word.

It is extreme and anyone who agrees with Mr. Rubio is an extremist.

Vermonters as a whole do not tend to be extremists so it is difficult to see what Mr. Dubie’s path to victory in the Governor’s race would have been, given that he so enthusiastically endorses the extreme views of someone like Marco Rubio.

VY fuel rods: behind the barn or deep in the heart of Texas?

In a recent visit to Brattleboro Vermont Rep.Peter Welch suggested a solution for Vermont Yankee and other location’s spent nuclear fuel storage problems may be at hand.wcsgmd

A location to store/dispose/bury high level nuclear waste is desperately needed for the federal government to avoid nuclear power industry related lawsuits. This would be since the US Government’s long promised Yucca Mountain radioactive storage site appears locked permanently in limbo.

Welch said he and some congressional colleagues are making a fresh push for an interim storage area – possibly in Texas  that could accept spent fuel from plants like Vermont Yankee.

“Here’s what’s changing: There are more communities that are having their plants decommissioned … so it creates the potential for me to work with allies,”

In the US House and Senate proposals to adjust laws that regulate storage of high level nuclear waste may soon make possible a solution of sorts.

Texas Congressman Michael Conaway (R), perhaps Welch’s key ally, has introduced legislation called the Interim Consolidated Storage Act in 2015. (Conaway, by the way, is also champion of federal legislation that would kill Vermont’s GMO labeling law.) The nuclear waste storage bill amends existing regulations so government agencies can partner with private companies for storage of deadly high-level nuclear waste. Draft language makes more than $30 billion from the Nuclear Waste Fund available. The NWF consists of fees charged to nuclear customers and was intended to fund the federal Yucca Mt. waste facility in Nevada.

This will work a real sweet deal for one of Rep. Conaway’s district’s largest businesses — Waste Control Specialists LLC — which will reportedly apply for high level waste storage permitting. WCS happens to own the country’s only for-profit, private facility that handles low-level waste. Slightly misnamed ‘low level waste’ covers a very wide range from slightly radioactive trash to highly radioactive activated metals from inside reactors. The thousand-plus-acre nuclear waste dump is located in Andrews, Texas, just over three-hundred miles from Dallas.

The daughter of WCS founder billionaire Harold Simmons now controls the business. Simmons, who died in 2013, was heavily involved in conservative national politics. He provided funding for the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, and was a top conservative super PAC contributor in the 2012 Presidential race. Notably he referred to President Obama as the “most dangerous man in America”

The state of Vermont has for many years enjoyed its own sweet deal in Texas, a near-exclusive agreement with WCS to accept “our” low level nuclear waste. There are two Vermonters and one alternate (also from VT) who sit on the board of the Texas Low-level Radioactive Waste Compact Commission that oversees some of what WCS can do. Looking out  for our low-level nuclear disposal needs deep in the heart of Texas are: Peter Bradford, a former NRC official, and Richard H. Saudek,  former Commissioner of the Vermont Department of Public Service; Jane O’Meara Sanders is an alternate board member.

The environment around Andrews County, Texas, will bear the long-term effects of the nuclear dump.

However, senior Project Director of the WCS Commercial Interim Storage Facility Mike McMahon sees quick  Texas sized profits: “We can de-inventory these sites quickly, in a straightforward way  we get a very high [return] for it, we get very strong political support,”

In 2013 The Texas Observer online wondered whether WCS or Andrews County, TX, could cover potential liabilities and potential future costs associated with the private nuclear dump.

“It’s an important question because although the dump’s profits flow to its owner, Dallas billionaire Harold Simmons, the state and federal governments will eventually own the dump and its millions of cubic feet of radioactive waste. In other words, the taxpayers could be on the hook for a lot of dough. What’s to guarantee that Waste Control won’t take the profits and run?”

After reports about plastic swimming pools filled with contaminated water at the  Vermont Yankee power plant, Vermonters will probably be fine if the spent nuclear waste gets buried in Texas – never to be seen here again. And deep in Texas, “Swift Boat” Simmons’ WCS may just take the money and run.