Tea Party at Tn Capitol 3Here are some pictures from the Tennessee Tea Party visit to the Capitol this morning. They were taken during the right wing extremist red-meat speeches given by Lt. Governor Ron Ramsey (R-Blountville) and Senator Mae Beavers (R-Mt. Juliet), two of the Co-Prime Sponsors of the Tennessee Health Freedom Act.

Did Sen. Beavers really say to the “crowd” that this bill would allow them to choose to keep their private health insurance? Can’t they do that now?

I will try to remember more of what was said but mostly all I heard was “blah blah blah.”

We at Liberadio(!) hope the TNGOP continues to follow the leadership of Lt. Governor Ramsey and Sen. Mae Beavers. Please, oh please, oh please. Because while you’re doing that we’ve be over here explaining that affordable health care coverage for your kids without having to worry about pre-existing conditions is right around the corner.

Tea Party at Tn Capitol 1

Tea Party at Tn Capitol 2

This poor guy was confused. He thought they said “Pirate Party”
.
Pirate Party

UPDATE: More from Woods – Under Siege at the Legislature: Tea Partiers Howl Over Health Care Reform

UPDATE II: Another eye witness account – this picture and a quote:

I just took this picture this morning with my phone. It was about 10:45 AM and the guy at the podium was speaking to “everyone”- at one point he said, “And it won’t stop with healthcare…next we’ll get immigration, cap and trade, education!”

Tea Party in Nashville

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Cliff DivingMaureen Dowd fist bumps Barack Obama’s Democrats:

One minute they were legislative losers, squabbling and scrambling for the off-ramps. The next they were history-makers, sharing chest bumps and goose bumps at the White House. How had the lofty president and the wily speaker suddenly steered them off Jimmy Carter Highway and onto F.D.R. Drive?

One gleeful and relieved White House aide called the bill-signing ceremony in the East Room, packed with Democratic lawmakers snapping pictures and acting like obstreperous children, “an Old Spice moment.”

“You could see it in their faces,” he said. “It was kind of like that Old Spice ad where the guy smacked himself on the cheeks and said, ‘Wow, that feels good!’ It was like they smacked themselves on the cheeks and said, ‘You are a member of Congress and now you can start doing things. Wow, that feels good!’ ”

David Axelrod agreed: “It was incredibly moving to be in that room today. This was such an emotional high that I actually saw congressmen hugging senators. People are so used to low expectations around here that the idea that you could do something big and meaningful is exhilarating.”

The Democrats held hands, held their breath and jumped over the cliff — not that it was a radical bill. And, mirabile dictu, nothing awful happened. The markets went up. The polls went up. Their confidence went up.

I think you can hear Tennessee Democrats jumping over some cliffs too these days. #clang

T/F/B: Julie Rants and Raves

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Obama, Don’t Tell Me What to Do

Bad SignImma gonna go get my free cone, but before I do…

More conversation and some questions today surrounding the comments made by House Caucus Chair Mike Turner yesterday:

We’ve got a lot of bills on states’ rights here, state sovereignty and all that,” he added. “We went through that fight once before. All of a sudden, we have a black man elected president and everybody wants to start acting like something’s wrong with our country. I didn’t agree with a lot of things George Bush did, but I wasn’t ready to secede from the union.

Chris Devaney, Chair of the TNGOP, is shocked. SHOCKED! I tell you.

If I were Turner, I’d take it all one step further. The rash of states’ rights and state sovereignty bills introduced in Tennessee by Republicans isn’t because we “have a black man elected president.” It’s because some people don’t like a black man telling them what to do. Can’t you just feel them bristle?

Recent events illustrate that Devaney’s shock is disingenuous. Because yes, Tennessee’s Republican delegation may not necessarily be the people who are riled up by Barack Obama’s leadership role, but they most definitely are pandering to the people who are:

A staffer for Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.) told reporters that Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.) had been spat on by a protestor. Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), a hero of the civil rights movement, was called a ‘ni–er.’ And Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) was called a “faggot,” as protestors shouted at him with deliberately lisp-y screams. Frank, approached in the halls after the president’s speech, shrugged off the incident.

Manipulation in politics is nothing new but it can be dangerous when exploiting fear – one of the most unstable of all human emotions – is at its core.

UPDATE: Kleinheider has an interesting list compiled by Democratic House Leader Gary Odom.

UPDATE II: Aunt B is proud of her Democrats today. She has all the deets on 1) The press conference that was called to express the TNGOP’s “shock and outrage that anyone would dare suggest that some people have issues with Obama being black” and that Rep. Jason Mumpower rather hastily ended when “he was asked about the tea party protesters who heckled and spit at Democratic House members, including various civil rights icons, over the weekend in Washington….” and 2) the united font of swagger that has returned to House Dems.

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Compare and contrast. And as you complete your assignment, keep in mind that this is about tone and theme, not content.

Tennessee House Caucus Chair Mike Turner (D-Old Hickory):

“We’ve got a lot of bills on states’ rights here, state sovereignty and all that,” he added. “We went through that fight once before. All of a sudden, we have a black man elected president and everybody wants to start acting like something’s wrong with our country. I didn’t agree with a lot of things George Bush did, but I wasn’t ready to secede from the union.”

Fake but beloved U.S. President Josiah “Jed” Bartlet (D-Hollywood) to fake and not-so-beloved GOP opponent Governor Ritchie of Florida (R-Hollywood):

“Well, first of all, let’s clear up a couple of things. “Unfunded mandate” is two words, not one big word. There are times when we’re fifty states and there are times when we’re one country, and have national needs. And the way I know this is that Florida didn’t fight Germany in World War II or establish civil rights. You think states should do the governing wall-to-wall. That’s a perfectly valid opinion. But your state of Florida got $12.6 billion in federal money last year – from Nebraskans, and Virginians, and New Yorkers, and Alaskans, with their Eskimo poetry. 12.6 out of a state budget of $50 billion. I’m supposed to be using this time for a question, so here it is: Can we have it back, please?”

T/F/B: City Paper by way of Speak to Power.

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From Goldni, “With All Due Respect, NOW Can Kiss My Ass”:

Listen, I’m certainly against the Hyde Amendment, and would like to see it repealed. But the Democrats were not going to use this healthcare bill to repeal it. Nor should they have–this should have remained a bill about healthcare and not become a platform for an abortion fight. To say that this is a horrible anti-choice bill simply because of a meaningless executive order reiterating what has been U.S. policy (if not settled law) since 1976 is misleading at best and outright intellectually dishonest at worst. Stupak was NOT given his way on this issue, but was given a way to back down and still save face. And I’ll take that over the alternative of the bill failing any day of the week and twice on Sunday.

From Aunt B., “In Which I Agree with GoldnI”:

And now we’re at a point where things are bad, really bad, worse than we have seen in most of our lifetimes. And even if the economy in general turns around today, it’s going to be a long time before things pick up for most of us, if, indeed, they ever do. I’m not trying to be depressing. That’s just the truth of the matter.

But that’s what I hear people agonizing about–what will I do for work? What if I lose my job? Where will we live? What will happen to my kids? And sometimes the terror is so deep they can’t even talk about it.

And what is our state legislature doing? The truth is, there’s not much they can do. But holy cow, if they’re not pulling out all the same old tricks, waving the red meat in front of the base, putting up legislation that hits all the right talking points for all the same old distractions.

Only to find that few of their constituents’ hearts are really in it.

You can almost sense the confusion.

From Steve Ross (Speak to Power), “Morning Coffee – Not the Wedding Singer Edition”:

Gail Kerr says something I’ve been saying for years. Enjoy being ignored, just as I and many others have!

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A PR Disaster for the Farm Bureau

Abused HorseLiz Garrigan tells us that the Farm Bureau is using “all their might to oppose proper penalties for animal abuse” and Aunt B wants to know, how could this NOT be a PR disaster for them?

How is this not a PR disaster for the Farm Bureau? “We can’t bother to have some basic protections for livestock we know are being harmed because it might inconvenience a few people.” That’s their stance? People who abuse animals also abuse their families. There is a direct correlation. Stepping in and identifying them and punishing them in a way that has some weight behind it just makes sense. Almost all of the farmers in Tennessee are not abusive assholes. They have nothing to fear from this legislation. But it makes you wonder about the people who make up the lobby, doesn’t it? If regular farmers have nothing to fear and tons of people in the state are clamoring for this, a gal starts to wonder about what’s going on with the people working against this.

From Liz’s report on the last hearing:

That’s when a Sumner County Animal Control officer, in attendance to testify in favor of the legislation, offered the money retort: “A lot of the people who are abusing their animals are also the ones who are abusing their children.”

The House Ag Committee will be voting on this bill. Like Liz says, call’em up:

Stratton Bone, 741-7086
Dale Ford, 741-1717
Willie Butch Borchert, 741-6804
Eddie Bass, 741-1864
Chad Faulkner, 741-3335
Curtis Halford, 741-7478
John Litz, 741-6877
Steve McDaniel, 741-1980
Frank Niceley, 741-4419
Johnny Shaw, 741-4538
Terri Lynn Weaver, 741-2192
John Mark Windle, 741-1260

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Sen. Andy Berke, a Chattanooga Democrat, discusses the Green Jobs Bill (SB 3120 – HB 3654 by Rep. Mike Stewart) he is sponsoring in the Tennessee legislature.

Tennessee has a great opportunity to be first in the U.S. in providing good paying, long-lasting jobs that will help to create a better future for ALL Tennesseans.

Money quote: “We CAN do well by doing good.”

More from TAPTN and TN Conservation Voters on their magically delicious Green Jobs / St. Patrick’s Lobby Day.

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Billie HolidayFor the prize of one “Honk! If you’d Rather Check My Birth Certificate than Govern” bumper sticker, can anyone tell me (enter in the comments section) in what century the above statement was made by a Tennessee State House representative?

Was it:

A) 18th
B) 19th
C) 20th
D) 21st
E) All of the above

Anarchival has both the date, the name and the context:

This statement was why I went to bed thinking about the biker gang who roams around Tennessee hunting down sex offenders. The legislative purpose of a sex offender registry is to notify the public of the presence of this certain type of criminal, so that hopefully they can take steps to protect themselves and their families. Very few people in the total population of Tennessee take advantage of this information. Even fewer are actually protected by it. However, there are plenty of sadistic people in this state who are happy to use the registry to find people no one really cares about to bully and victimize. Of course, for people like Eddie Bass (D-Prospect), that’s OK. As a good ‘ole boy from a rural county, he still believes that justice is best executed by lynching, not by the constitutional protections he has sworn to uphold. He will happily stand by shouting “Burn, Baby, Burn!” as Rep. [Debra] Maggart [R-Hendersonville] sets fire to that Constitution, because he believes all alleged criminals deserve is a stout oak tree and a sturdy rope…until he, of course, is accused of a crime. Then I’m sure he’ll want all the constitutional protections he can get. As the saying goes, “No one escapes when freedom fails. The best men rot in filthy jails. And those who cried, ‘Appease! Appease!’, are hanged by those they tried to please.” Luckily, we’re not to that point yet, even if this Bill passes. The worst that might happen is that a fifteen year old boy who was raped and beaten for eleven years by his stepfather, and then took out his own frustration on the neighbor kid, ends up being bludgeoned to death and left to die in a field by a biker gang. And who will care if they did? Not Eddie Bass.

Rep. Maggart and Rep. Bass are rapidly becoming members of Rep. Campfield’s “It’s my State, you just live in it” club where they get to decide – based on their whims – when Tennesseans abide by the U.S. Constitution and when we don’t. Tsk.

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Update: Woods at Pith in the Wind reports from today’s (3/16/10) committee meeting – “The Tennessee Farm Bureau sent its minions in droves to the Legislative Plaza today as the bill came before the House Agriculture Committee for the first time….The show of force was unnecessary. Unbeknownst to the public, the bill died the moment House Speaker Kent Williams assigned it to the Agriculture Committee rather than Judiciary where it should have gone if anyone in the House leadership was really serious about passing it. The Agriculture Committee is dominated by farmers who would like to laugh Sontany right out of the room. The committee heard testimony today, but ran out of time to vote.”

Mounted Police Office in NashvilleThe post title is a quote from Rep. Janis Sontany, who for years has been doing yeoman work to pass HB3386, which would amend the law we have now – with two different aggravated animal cruelty penalties: a felony penalty for companion animals and a misdemeanor for the same action for “livestock” – and make “the offense of animal cruelty applicable to all animals and requires that a person intentionally rather than knowingly deprive an animal of food or water in order to commit the offense.”

The bill comes before the members of the House Agriculture Committee tomorrow morning at 9 am so please call asap and ask them to support passage.

In Rep. Sontany’s own words, here is why we need this bill:

Many of you have contacted me over the past few months regarding the starving horses rescued from Cannon County and taken to the Fairgrounds here in Nashville. I promised then that I would introduce legislation that would make withholding food and/or water from any animal a felony and that I would update you on the progress and ask for your continued help. It makes no sense to me to have two different penalties – aggravated animal cruelty with a felony penalty for companion animals and a misdemeanor for the same action for “livestock”. Cruelty is cruelty regardless if you are 3 lbs. or 16 hands high. How can we continue to say that it is far worse to starve a dog than to starve a horse?

When the horses were at the Fairgrounds, I was asked by the media why the penalty for starving these horses was only a misdemeanor. My answer simply was Farm Bureau Insurance Company. This company has always demanded different laws for “livestock”.

When I first drafted this legislation, I met with Farm Bureau Insurance Company’s lobbyists to try to find some common ground. I was told that starving these horses didn’t rise to the level of aggravated animal cruelty and the current law was working just fine and they refused to negotiate.

This cruelty continues to happen. There were the 20 horses in Sumner County that were reported starved, three in Smith County – one of which was already dead and the other two found with no food or water nearly starved to death. And, then there was the incident in Bedford County where over 100 head of cattle were found starved to death.

This bill addresses more than starvation of animals. It also addresses other forms of animal cruelty. There was a woman in Sweetwater last year whose husband got mad at her and dragged her favorite horse behind his truck until the animal was almost dead. To finish him off he stabbed him with a pitch fork. When the woman contacted the district attorney in her area, she was told that they would not prosecute this action because it was a misdemeanor and wasn’t worth their time. My bill would make this action a felony as well. A misdemeanor is like getting a traffic ticket.

Jim Ridley writing for Pith in the Wind highlights this week’s Nashville Scene cover story by Christine Keyling which further describes “the tussle over a proposed bill that would make the aggravated abuse of livestock (including horses) a felony in Tennessee instead of a misdemeanor.”

Kreyling writes that the legislation fight has exposed a wide gap between animal-rights advocates — who urge an end to animal abuse in all its forms — and the powerful state Farm Bureau, which doesn’t want urban outsiders (especially the Humane Society) telling its officers and members what constitutes abuse.

Just as illuminating is the debate that has erupted in the article’s comments section online. Perhaps the most surprising is the amount of sympathy commenters show for the accused abusers who allowed more than 80 horses to starve and dwindle on their Cannon County farm.

I would argue that the online debate is more frightening than illuminating but then again, I was shocked by those who would condone the legal use of torture and demonize empathy.

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No CheatingLet’s leave aside for a moment the fact that the Tennessee Report doesn’t yet have “Elections” listed under the “Department” section of their website when clearly they should and instead focus on the little gem they uncovered about Rep. Debra Maggart.

From a story yesterday about the Juvenile Sex Offender Registry:

House lawmakers heard more than three hours of testimony last Tuesday on a piece of legislation introduced by Rep. Debra Maggart, R-Hendersonville, who says it is necessary both to protect the public as well as line Tennessee up to receive a bigger chunk of federal law enforcement subsidies.

From a story posted in December 2009 about Maggart as “State Sovereignty” supporter:

Earlier this year, Republican state Rep. Debra Young Maggart co-sponsored a resolution demanding that the federal government refrain from further burdening Tennessee with unwarranted and potentially unconstitutional policy mandates.

But earlier this month, Rep. Maggart and Sen. Diane Black, R-Gallatin, expressed their interest in legislatively obligating the State of Tennessee to embrace an as-yet unfulfilled federal mandate, signed by George W. Bush, that critics say violates just the sort of constitutional principles lawmakers like Maggart saw fit to reiterate in their state sovereignty resolution last session.

It’s not the hypocrisy that is so bothersome, it’s the hubris and the posturing and it goes back to this:

We’re finding more and more evidence that Republicans – on both the state and federal level – love to take credit with their constituents for all the good government can do while at the same time pandering to their base with language that is strikingly opposite.

Listen closely the next time a Republican talk about health insurance reform. Every health care discussion they have is prefaced with “We think there needs to be health care reform” or “We’re not saying there doesn’t need to be reform….”

Democrats can have these conversations with their constituents – one-on-one conversations or in town hall meetings – and take credit for the good that government does (and can do!) because their constituents value the exact same things Democrats value – good jobs, affordable health care, infrastructure development that creates good jobs, quality education, access to quality education, etc.. Democrats should really go to this place instead of trying to appeal to the people who would never vote for anyone with a “D” beside their name anyway.

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