I tuned in to WWTN and WLAC this morning for, quite literally, a minute each and heard the same misinfo coming from both DelGiorno and Gill*: Sen. Chris Dodd added a loophole to the recovery bill that allowed AIG to give out the suspect bonuses everyone is talking and/or writing about.

Except he didn’t. Dudes gotta stop getting all their material from Drudge.

*I suspect that if you turn on Valentine right now you’ll be hearing the same thing.

  • Share/Bookmark

There is Power in a Union

Money speaks for money, the Devil for his own
Who comes to speak for the skin and the bone?
What a comfort for the widow, a light to the child
There is power in a Union — Billy Bragg, (1988)

There is power in a union. At least there used to be. Unfortunately, anti-union sentiment has been the norm for several decades, helped along by politicians, big business, and some shenanigans within the organizations themselves.

The result is what Thomas Geoghegan discusses in the April issue of Harper’s (“Infinite Debt: How Unlimited Interest Rates Destroyed the Economy,” Harper’s Magazine, April 2009) and what the AFL-CIO’s Stewart Acuff and friends discussed at a press-conference held last week at the Tennessee State Capitol.

From Geoghegan*:

Who’s to blame? Let’s start with the lawyers…First, and worst of all (as I always have to say being a labor lawyer), we lost the right to organize. That’s a long story, but over the years employers found out they could just ignore the Wagner Act and fire pro-union workers right before so-called “secret-ballot” elections: they found out there was no real limit on what they could use as a threat. And the result is that people in this country can’t get a wage increase. They can’t get a wage increase despite all our gains in productivity. That’s not supposed to happen. But that’s what did happen. The Economic Policy Institute reports that, since 1972, the median hourly wage for men has basically remained flat, and has actually declined for the bottom fifth of workers. (Women saw more of an improvement, but that’s only because women were grossly underpaid in 1972…What is more astonishing is that in this very same period, when workers were losing financial ground, their productivity – their output per hour – nearly doubled. They were doing twice as much work for the same wage or less.

I hope Ayn Rand, if she were still alive, would be a least a little shocked.”

(In light of the “Go, Galt!” movement, that last bit from Geoghegan is particularly amusing.)

From Acuff:

On February 4, 2009, 4,000 workers rallied on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC…led by the AFL-CIO and the United Steelworkers and its President Leo Gerard, workers came to tell the Congress what hell corporations put us through when we try to organize unions, how workers are fired, intimidated and retaliated against when they try to get a voice at work, and that our economy cannot be fixed until we pass the Employee Free Choice Act and workers can freely form unions and bargain for better lives for their families, bargain for a way out of poverty and for a stronger, deeper, larger middle class….All the forces of our failed economics and engineers of this recession want to save the status quo and keep things just as they are. The Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers and Grover Norquist and John McCain and all of corrupt corporate America will do anything to stop the Employee Free Choice Act, while they couldn’t move fast enough to shovel $700 billion to bail out the entire financial industry….The Republicans in Congress, for the most part, classically top-down worship the failed free-market fashion and want to save the economy by saving those at the top at the expense of everyone else. The $700 billion bailout for the banks and the rest of the financial industry couldn’t be allocated fast enough without any study or oversight or accountability. Now those same Republicans howl about anything in President Obama’s stimulus plan other than more and more tax cuts while they promise to stop the Employee Free Choice Act, binding working families into poverty, starving and squeezing the middle class.

Economists across the ideological spectrum know that the fundamental crisis in our economy is a lack of demand, the loss of buying and consuming power resulting from 30 years of wage stagnation and decline.

Before we go any further, let’s take a step back. What’s the first thing that pops into your mind when you hear “Employee Free Choice Act?” (EFCA). If you pay cursory attention to the news then no doubt it’s that EFCA will eliminate the secret ballot for forming unions. It’s a talking point that has been reported as fact, unchallenged by the mainstream media.

But consider the source. It’s not the AFL-CIO. Nor is it the SEIU. It’s big business. Have they suddenly embraced en masses the idea of a strong union as loyal opposition? Of course not. The fact is, EFCA will make it easier, not more difficult, for unions to organize. EFCA will benefit the workers, which is exactly why everyone is lying about it.

EFCA is an amendment to the existing National Labor Relations Act. If passed, it would become easier for workers to form unions by putting the decision-making process into their hands. Employers could no longer insist on a secret-ballot election, which has traditionally given them the time and opportunity to threaten and intimidate. Instead, workers would decide which process is used – a secret ballot after a majority signed cards indicating their wish to form a union, or simply using the cards to decide.

And, really, if an employer doesn’t need the permission of their employees to join the Chamber of Commerce, than why should employees need the permission of their employer to join a union?

The good news is that a recent Gallup poll revealed that 53 percent favor a new law that would “make it easier for labor unions to organize workers.” Only 39 percent opposed. Although the name of the legislation wasn’t used in the poll, if labor can get the truth out over the din of Fox New’s lies, then EFCA may have a chance at passing this year.

PS: Not all business owners are against EFCA.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

Rest In Peace, Ron Silver

Actor Ron Silver, 62, died today after a two-year battle with esophageal cancer. He had a long, distinguished career on stage, screen and television but was perhaps best known for his recurring role as Bruno Gianelli on The West Wing.

Thank you, Mr. Silver.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

Phil Valentine’s Column Watch: Two Down…

It looks like Mr. Bruce Barry might have started something with his Pith in the Wind post complaining about Phil Valentine’s Tennessean column (“What Does an Op-Ed Columnist Have to Do to Get Fired Around Here?”). The Wilson County Post, serving Lebanon, Watertown, and Mt. Juliet, has decided to “discontinue publishing” Phil Valentine’s column in their Gallatin and Hendersonville newspapers. CEO Sam Hatcher writes:

We have made a decision to discontinue publishing in our Gallatin and Hendersonville newspapers the column provided to us weekly by radio talk show host Phil Valentine.

His most recent column published Sunday in The Tennessean was so-to-speak the straw that broke the camel’s back.

His insensitive remarks about what “his” country or “his” federal government is doing for him is self promoting, egotistical and in our opinion not fit for print in today’s world of war and economic turmoil.

Specifically Mr. Valentine questions “what am I getting for my federal income tax?”

Perhaps he would want to ask the mother of a National Guardsman or regular army recruit killed on a battlefield in a far away land that question.

Or maybe he would want to review the actions of the U.S. Supreme Court, which his tax dollars fund, that ensure he can speak his antagonistic words freely.

His federal tax dollars, my federal tax dollars and your federal tax dollars provide for all Americans a quality of life unlike any other in the world today.

We are Republicans, Democrats, Independents, Christians, Jews and Hindu. We are black and white and red and other colors. Some of us gather in the evening without bread on our table while others of us eat bountifully. But we are all Americans.

Oh, there’s more. And it’s good.

Email Mr. Hatcher with words of support or better yet, subscribe to his fine newspaper.

Hat tip to Veronica Rexford, who writes the column “Veer Left” for the paper. (Link forthcoming…)

  • Share/Bookmark
Click to embiggen.

Click to embiggen (pdf).

During Monday’s show, Freddie and I – *deep breath* in response to the desire by some legislators to take the easy way out by making complex issues appear in stark black and white so they can present them cynically to their constituents – had yet another difficult conversation about women’s reproductive health in Tennessee. We were also joined by one of our smarty-pants listeners:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

I’ve also written about the absolute need for exceptions in any law pertaining to reproductive health choices and better legislative options for addressing the issue of abortion – like preventing unwanted pregnancies by providing education and resources.

Tomorrow, Wednesday, March 11, at 3:00 pm, in room 16 of Legislative Plaza, the conversation will continue at a Public Hearing [pdf] in front of House Health and Human Resources Committee. Please consider attending the hearing so you can both stand against the most cynical of legislators and their divisive bills and support women’s reproductive health advocates.

The bills to be discussed are as follows:

HJR 0061 JUDICIARY: Constitution – right to abortion. Adds new provision to Article I to provide that nothing in Constitution of Tennessee secures or protects right to abortion or requires the funding of an abortion except in cases involving rape, incest, or health of the mother. (H: Fincher)

HJR 0066 JUDICIARY: Constitution – right to abortion. Adds new provision to Article I to provide that nothing in Constitution of Tennessee secures or protects right to abortion or requires the funding of an abortion. (H: Maggart)

HJR 0088 JUDICIARY: Constitutional amendment – right to or funding of abortion. Adds new provision to Article I to provide that nothing in Constitution of Tennessee secures or protects the right to abortion or requires the funding of an abortion. Gives the legislature the authority to enact, amend, or repeal statutes regarding abortion, including circumstances of pregnancy resulting from rape or incest or when necessary to save the life of the mother. (H: Curtiss)

HJR 0132 HEALTH CARE: Constitutional amendment – vasectomy rights of married men. Adds new provision to Article I of the state constitution to provide that nothing in the constitution secures or protects right to a vasectomy. (H: Camper)

HB0025 – FAMILY LAW: Paternity testing for birth certificates. Requires paternity testing before a father can be listed on a birth certificate. Requires department of human services to pay the costs of the paternity tests for parties who are financially unable to pay. Broadly captioned. (S: Jackson; H: Hardaway)

HB0436 – HEALTH CARE: Standards for ambulatory surgical treatment centers. Requires that any physician’s office that performs abortions be classified as an as ambulatory surgical treatment centers. Requires the department of health, through the board for licensing health care facilities, to promulgate rules and regulations that contain certain minimum standards for the maintenance and operation of ambulatory surgical treatment centers. (S: Beavers; H: Shipley)

HB0445 – CRIMINAL LAW: Informed consent for abortions. Requires that the informed written consent of the woman be obtained prior to an abortion, providing for 24-hour period of reflection after the woman receives the information needed for an informed consent. Establishes requirements for a physician or other health care professional to follow in order to obtain informed consent from the woman. Establishes an exception to informed consent and waiting period requirements when necessary to protect the life or health of the woman. (S: Herron; H: Maddox)

HB0638 – FAMILY LAW: Viable human fetus as victim of child abuse. Revised definition of “child” to include a viable fetus of a human being for purposes of child abuse and aggravated child abuse offenses. (S: Burchett; H: Maggart)

HB0807 – HEALTH CARE: Stillborn deaths to be placed in vital records. Requires each fetal death, 500 or more grams or 22 or more completed weeks of gestation, to be placed in vital records. Gives parents the option of naming the stillborn child on such records. (S: Bunch; H: Campfield)

HB0819 – HEALTH CARE: Death certificate to be issued for abortions. Requires a death certificate to be filed with the office of vital records for each abortion performed in the state. Requires death certificate to state that the fetal death was due to an abortion. (S: Bunch; H: Campfield)

HB0862 – FAMILY LAW: Inception of human life. Defines “inception of human life” to mean the moment of human conception. (S: Gresham; H: Mumpower)

HB2106 – FAMILY LAW: Tennessee Pregnant Women Support Act. Authorizes the department of health to apply for federal grants to fund the collection of data regarding the number of abortions performed in this state, the characteristics of those seeking abortions, the reasons why women choose abortion, or any other information applicable to supporting pregnant women in this state who may be seeking an abortion. Requires the department of health to create a hotline as well as pamphlets for doctors’ offices to provide interested women with information about public and private health care services available to women during and after the birth of a child. (S: Herron; H: Fincher)

HB1756 – FAMILY LAW: Disposition of Family Planning Funds. As introduced, establishes a new methodology for disposition of family planning funds that disburses funds to public women’s health services programs before other providers are funded. – Amends TCA Section 68-34-105. (S: Johnson; H: Hensley)

Any legislation, including SJR127, HJR61 and HJR66, which attempts to begin the process of amending the State Constitution would be doing so in historical violation of the document’s purpose to expand rights, not take them away.

In addition, there are already a number of Tennessee laws which already regulate abortion, including parental consent, a ban on late-term abortions and patient informed consent. You can read about the effects of these laws in an open letter to Rep. Debra Maggart that was written by one broken-hearted Tennessee woman.

And, as I stated earlier, with the number of abortions in Tennessee is declining the focus of our legislature should be on how to prevent unwanted pregnancies by providing education and resources.

Before 3:00 PM tomorrow, please contact by phone or email each committee member. This is especially important if your representative is on the committee. You can find out who your Rep is at the Capitol website. Don’t forget to put your zip code in the subject line of your email.

Chair and Vice Chair of the House Health and Human Resources Committee:
Rep. Joe Armstrong rep.joe.armstrong@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Joey Hensley rep.joey.hensley@capitol.tn.gov

Members of the House Health and Human Resources Committee:
Rep. Curt Cobb, Rep.Curt.Cobb@capitol.tn.gov Rep.Curt.Cobb@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Jim Cobb, Rep.Jim.Cobb@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Charles Curtiss, Rep.Charles.Curtiss@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Vince Dean, Rep.Vince.Dean@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. John DeBerry, Rep.John.DeBerry@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Lois DeBerry, Rep.Lois.DeBerry@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Vance Dennis, Rep.Vance.Dennis@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Joshua Evans, Rep.Joshua.Evans@capitol.tn.gov
Rep.Dennis Ferguson, Rep.Dennis.Ferguson@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Dale Ford, Rep.Dale.Ford@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Curtis.Halford, Rep.Curtis.Halford@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Sherry.Jones, Rep.Sherry.Jones@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Debra.Maggart, Rep.Debra.Maggart@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Jason.Mumpower, Rep.Jason.Mumpower@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Gary Odom, Rep.Gary.Odom@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Mary Pruitt, Rep.Mary.Pruitt@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Bob Ramsey, Rep.Bob.Ramsey@capitol.tn.gov
Rep.Barrett Rich, Rep.Barrett.Rich@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. Jeanne Richardson, Rep.Jeanne.Richardson@capitol.tn.gov
Rep. David Shepard, Rep.David.Shepard@capitol.tn.gov

UPDATE: Righteous anger from Aunt B and the interview with Family Action Council’s David Fowler that she’s so pissed off about.

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

The Puppy Lobby

Do it for me. Sniff.

Do it for me. Sniff.

Today is Humane Lobby Day at the Tennessee State Capitol. From the Humane Society of the United States press release:

More than 140 citizens from across Tennessee will gather at the state Capitol today to meet with their lawmakers and urge them to pass legislation to stop puppy mills and to increase the penalties for spectators at animal fights. The citizen lobbyists will be participating in Humane Lobby Day, which is organized by The Humane Society of the United States.

The goal of the day is to work towards passing new legislation to regulate commercial breeders that sell directly to the public (a.k.a. puppy mills) and increase the penalties for spectators at an animal fight from a Class B misdemeanor to a Class A misdemeanor (being a spectator at animal fights that do not include dogs is a Class C misdemeanor).

Last week, the Sumner County Sheriff’s Office raided a cockfight and arrested 48.

In February, almost three hundred dogs were found at a home in Sparta living in squalid and inhumane conditions.

State Sen. Doug Jackson (D-Dickson, the fightin’ 25th!), who introduced SB0258 (companion bill HB 0386 [pdf] by Rep. Janis Sontany (D-Nashville, the figthin’ 53rd!)) which would offer some regulation of puppy mills, said that he was “never a fan of regulating commercial animal breeders until he set foot on a farm in Hickman County”:

After seeing that and the magnitude of that and the amount of suffering that was taking place … it was clear in my mind to support this kind of legislation…Animals have just become more important to me.

Please tell me this is something we can all agree on. C’mon, do it for the puppies.

  • Share/Bookmark

According to Stephen Colbert, the Memphis Commercial Appeal “has no right to reveal who has concealed gun permits…” because it “undermines the long tradition of going to a government office and waiting patiently until any desire for information is crushed by nameless bureaucrats who measure their workdays in geologic time…”

Oh yeah. There’s more. And now Tennessee is on his radar.

Memphis Senator Beverly Marrero disagrees:

“I don’t understand why, if you want to have a handgun permit, which is your right, that you’d be so concerned about people knowing about that….If I had a handgun permit or if I had a gun in my house, I’d have a big ol’ sign out in my front yard saying, ‘Don’t mess with this woman. She’s got a gun.’”

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

What if, after many, many years and almost a dozen studies, your community finally agrees upon a riverfront development plan [pdf]. And what if that plan – which took 16-months, countless community meetings and design workshops, $450,000 in consulting fees, and a 23-member steering committee – is smart, well-thought out, environmentally sound, and most importantly, already has $8 million committed to it by your Metro Council? And what if, out of nowhere and at the behest of your Mayor’s office, the agreed upon plan (“Plan A”) is dropped like a hot potato in favor of a “Plan B,” which is not really a “Plan B” at all but rather a “Plan C” in disguise? And what if you would have never known about “Plan B” or “Plan C Disguised as Plan B” if it wasn’t for your meddling councilman?

Last Saturday, a public meeting was called to discuss what everyone except the Mayor’s office believed to be a done deal – the redevelopment of Nashville’s waterfront. 48-hours before the meeting, Councilman Mike Jameson (The Fightin’ 6th!) received what MDHA and the Mayor’s office called “Plan B” for riverfront development. The new plan included everything in Phase 1 of the original plan except for the adventure park. Construction was to start on the east bank, as was originally scheduled, before shovels broke any ground on the downtown side.

But the “Plan B” presented at last Saturday’s meeting wasn’t the original “Plan B.” The original “Plan B” was given to Councilman Jameson by Ed Owens, MDHA’s riverfront development director, and Phil Ryan, MDHA’s Executive Director, on January 30 at a Nashville coffee house. This new plan did away with everything in Phase 1 that was most important to the East Nashville community – including the adventure park and the urban forest – and instead included every project for the downtown side. In other words, the downtown side of the re-development became the priority in Phase 1, with ground breaking there first. What remained in the plan for the east side were two lesser projects – call them callous afterthoughts or insufficient appeasement.

During the Jameson, Owens, Ryan coffee klatch, the Councilman was asked to keep the original “Plan B” to himself. His push back was palpable – an open process is an open process with time for review of any and all new plans in addition to appropriately scheduled public meetings.

More than one month and one false start later (the original public meeting was to be held on 2/19 at 5:30 PM at the Civic Design Center downtown), MDHA called the public meeting that was held last Saturday. Missing from the meeting? The original “Plan B,” which had been replaced a mere 48-hours earlier with “Plan C Disguised as Plan B.”

So it’s no big whoop, right? “Plan C Disguised as Plan B” simply moves adventure park and urban forest to the end of the list. But is is a big whoop, according to Councilman Mike Jameson, who was quoted on the Protect the Riverfront Plan blog:

Just 48 hours before the meeting, I received a new plan (the third version received in just 4 weeks) from MDHA. In a nutshell, in order to convince us NOT to ask for the Adventure Park & Pilot Urban Forest anymore, MDHA was now offering to construct every OTHER project on the East bank, and to do so first. (Those other projects are a Cove, an overlook with lawn, an esplanade, and improvements to the Woodland bridge). In the second year, MDHA would construct downtown-side projects. And then in the third year, curiously, MDHA claimed they would proceed with the Adventure Park & Pilot Urban Forest.

Protect the Riverfront Plan has more detail on the “blazing problems “and non-vialibity of the sequence of “Plan C Disguised as Plan B”:

1. The New Plan (let’s call it, “The Bright Shiny Plan” or BS Plan for short) promises to build all the East Bank projects except the Adventure Park and Pilot Urban Forest first. “See?” MDHA seems to be saying, “We’re building on the east side!” But NONE of those projects can be built, at least not the way they’re designed, WITHOUT the Adventure Park and Urban Forest. For example, the cove and esplanade must follow construction of the urban forest because the irrigation drip, water run-off, and foliage have to be coordinated. So, unless you’re not planning to ever do the Adventure Park, you better do it first or you’re going to have to undo all those other projects when you build it.

2. The BS Plan promises to build the Adventure Park in Year 3. “See?” MDHA seems to be saying, “It’s no big deal. You’ll get the Adventure Park. Just three years from now.” But NONE of the other projects that they’ve proposed to build first can be done without approval and permitting from the Corps of Engineers. The other folks who spoke on Saturday discussed four year long waits for those permits. Remember, the design firm prioritized the Adventure Park in part because we could build it while Metro was getting the permits for the other projects. And, when they are building over there [on the downtown side]…we’ll lose a public venue for exactly those downtown activities unless we already have the alternate staging area of the Adventure Park. In other words, have your downtown events at Riverfront while you build the Adventure Park. Have your downtown events at the Adventure Park while you rebuild Riverfront Park. OR, as MHDA recommends, have no events at all while you’re rebuilding Riverfront Park. Again, unless you’re not planning to ever do the Adventure Park, it makes no sense to delay the entire development and decrease the usability of downtown by not doing it first.

3. The BS Plan counters the recommendations of the Green Ribbon Committee and flies in the face of the Mayor’s repeated goal of making Nashville the “greenest city” in the South. There is one site – ONLY ONE – that would restore green space to land that is currently contaminated brown field. If we’re serious about addressing the contaminated areas of the riverfront (as the urgency of our storm-water plan and repeated pressers from the Mayor’s office suggest that we are), we need to address the brownfield.

4. Oh, wait, it’s about the money, right? Apparently not. The cost for the Adventure Park is comparable to the cost MDHA is perfectly happy to spend on other parts of the development. If it’s really about the economy, shouldn’t we start with the feature most likely to bring money downtown? Guess what? That’s one more reason the design firm prioritized the Adventure Park. It brings new visitors (with new money) into town. It gives tourists something to do with their families downtown. It gives (ahem) conventioneers someplace for their children to hang out while they’re at conventions. You start with the project that’s going to bring people to the development. You don’t put it on the backburner, unless you don’t intend to build it at all.

And speaking of money, although MDHA can promise all day long that they’re going to eventually install the features of the original plan, there is no money guaranteed after year two. Which means putting a project into Year Three is the same as putting it on the shelf for.ev.er….The only way this sequence makes sense is if the Mayor doesn’t intend to ever put in the Adventure Park. And given that he’s referring to the sequence designed over 16 months with the input of a thousand Nashvillians and a half-million of our tax dollars as “a kiddie park,” that’s exactly what his intent seems to be.

So, it’s not the economy. It’s not the environment. It’s not the tourism industry. It’s not the funding. It’s not the public will. What is driving this alternative plan?

Good questions all. And here’s another – where are the consultants?

Consultants are paid a lot of money – in the case of this riverfront redevelopment plan, upwards of $450,000 – to come up with innovative ideas on improving vastly underutilized and/or contaminated public lands. Hargreaves Associates, the company hired to develop Nashville’s riverfront redevelopment project, was charged with the task of establishing a plan that included a well-thought out sequencing of projects. A project sequence cannot solely be based on what a city might want to build first. Instead, it must take into consideration other specifics like cost and environmental impact. And when changes to a plan are considered, a consultant is usually the first person called to reevaluate the sequence, keeping in mind both the environmental impact and the potential for an increase in expense.

So it is surprising that, according to Councilman Jameson, Hargreaves’ Gavin McMillan, the lead project designer, has still not heard from anyone in the Mayor’s office or MDHA with a request to go back and look at the re-sequenced projects in either “Plan B” or “Plan C Disguised as Plan B,” to re-evaluate both the cost and the environmental impact. Contacting your consultant to reevaluate would seem particularly prudent if you are concerned with a budget and costs spiraling out during the construction process.

Both the “Plan A” and “Plan C Disguised as Plan B” can be found at Nashville.gov.

Also at Nashville.gov is an online Downtown Waterfront Redevelopment Feedback form. Or call MDHA at (615) 252-8400 or the Mayor’s office at (615) 862-6000.

  • Share/Bookmark

Ow, My Foot!

This is a bad idea on so many levels:

How about a million?

How about 60 million? (All gun owners in the country are urged to participate)….

Here’s the Plan:

At the designated time, say Saturday at 6:30 PM local time, we will fire one round, safely aimed into the ground or other suitable backstop – definitely NOT into the air or in an otherwise unsafe manner.

Then, continuing on the first Saturday of each month: Repeat the process.

As this gathers momentum, there will come a Saturday when one million or more gunshots will be heard around the world. And all it will require is a step into your own backyard to ‘vote for freedom’.

The sound of one round, being joined by another, then another in your neighborhood will soon show the breadth of power the Citizenry still holds over the government.

Please observe all safe handling rules for these events. “Blank” ammunition is recommended. If you don’t have a gun, fireworks will do.

Emergency rooms are standing by…

  • Share/Bookmark
Tagged with:
 

Summary: Guests include Hal Cato, president and CEO of Oasis Center, and Peter Canellos, Washington Bureau Chief for the Boston Globe and author of Last Lion: The Fall and Rise of Ted Kennedy .

Part 1 – Dodging a Bullet – News, to do list, is this Daylight Savings Time thingy working for us or against us, Councilman Mike Jameson calls a meeting about Riverfront development, and Councilman Jason Holleman’s storm water amendment. [37.3 MB 23:13 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Independence Day – Martina McBride
Cannonball – The Breeders
See a Little Light – Bob Mould

Part 2 – Interview with Hal Cato – Joining us is Hal cato, president and CEO of Oasis Center, to tell us about their new digs at the Youth Opportunity Center – where Oasis and their partner organizations have banded together to serve young Middle-Tenneseans facing real challenges. Health care, job assistance, counseling, education support, emergency residential services, college counseling, youth leadership opportunities, and even a youth-run business are just some of what they offer all under one roof. [20 MB 12:30 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Philadelphia Freedom – Elton John

Part 3 – The More You Know The more you know the more you are able to make informed decisions based on your values. So it’s surprising that Rep. Stacey Campfield, “Rep. Daddy,” for the sake of this segment, introduced his “Don’t Say Gay” bill which would “prohibit the teaching of or furnishing of materials on human sexuality other than heterosexuality in public school grades K-8.” With this legislation, Rep. Daddy once again introduces an unnecessary bill and makes it clear that if he had kids and they went to public school, all further discussion of important issues would stop once they got home. [14.7 MB 09:10 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

People Get Ready – Curtis Mayfield

Part 4 – Interview with Peter Canellos – Peter Canellos is Washington bureau chief of The Boston Globe and editor of Last Lion: The Fall and Rise of Ted Kennedy, the newly published biography of Ted Kennedy by the team at the Globe. It’s all in there – his brothers and the Kennedy mystique, Chappaquiddick, universal health care, his political legacy, and the relationship between Kennedy and President Obama. Plus, we get his thoughts on the state of journalism in the digital era and a down economy. [26.4MB 16:29 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

We’re in Yr Corner – Cornershop (album: When I Was Born For The 7th Time)
The Step and the Walk – The Duke Spirit (album: Neptune)

Part 5 – Our Ears are Marked by a Conservative Caller – Who tries to spread the lie that President Obama promised during his campaign to stop earmark spending and is breaking that promise by signing the spending bill currently being considered in the Senate. We miss Elbert but we don’t need him for a smackdown. [8.8MB 5:31 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Part 6 – Making the Sausage is Hard – So some legislators take the easy way out by making complex issues appear in stark black and white so they can present them cynically to their constituents. Congressman Zach Wamp (R-TN) went on national TV and did it with the issue of Universal healthcare (we replay the audio), and Rep. Debra Maggart did it with an abortion bill (which is why we’re once again having a difficult conversation about abortion). [25:13MB 40:04 download MP3]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

  • Share/Bookmark

Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!

Visit our friends!

A few highly recommended friends...