Sunday, March 15, 2009

Does new White House council have real power to help women?

According to Voice of America, President Obama signed an executive order last week establishing the White House Council on Women and Girls.
A statement from the White House says the council will work on improving women's economic security, evaluating and developing public policy that is family-friendly, finding new ways to prevent violence against women, and improving women's health care.

Mr. Obama noted that while women and girls make up half the nation's population, women make up only 17 percent of the members of the U.S. Congress and three percent of the heads of the top 500 corporations in the United States.

Feministe and Feministing both have commentary on this (and both have embedded YouTube videos of the president's speech announcing the council), and both blogs seem to think this panel offers real hope of improving the position of women in the US. On the other hand, Linda Lowen at about.com suggests that this might be a public relations move with very little real substance. Using a post on politico.com as her source, she notes that the council has no full-time staff and no set meeting schedule.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Oklahoma state government not immune to economic woes

This update from the Oklahoma Policy Institute has the details.

Big Google is watching you...but you can opt out of their tracking program

Electronic Frontier Foundation has the details.

Meanwhile, EFF offers a link to a post on slight paranoia that asks if "tracking data from videos embedded into the White House Web site end up in Google's targeted advertising database?"

Both posts are well worth reading.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

How women got the vote in Oklahoma

In a recent post, I noted that Oklahoma voters passed an amendment in November 1918 granting women the right to vote in this state. You might well wonder, how did women in a conservative state like Oklahoma win the suffrage before passage of the federal amendment?

Oklahoma's history is more complicated than you might imagine, but that's a story for another time. For the moment, suffice it to say, an account of the Oklahoma suffrage campaign can be found in Eleanor Flexner's Century of Struggle:The Woman's Rights Movement in the United States. This campaign took place in the context of the difficult final campaign to win the vote for US women, which finally gained victory on August 26, 1920.

According to Flexner, after suffering through "the doldrums" during the years 1896-1910, the movement to gain the vote for US women gained new life in the second decade of the 20th century. The old National American Woman Suffrage Association had stagnated, limited, in part by the refusal of the (white) members of its southern affiliates to support a federal amendment because that would interfere with "states rights."

The upstart Congressional Union, led by Alice Paul, began a militant campaign of demonstrating and lobbying for a federal suffrage amendment. This spurred NAWSA, now under the leadership of Carrie Chapman Catt, into new effectiveness. Catt developed a "winning plan" that involved working for both the federal amendment and state amendments.

In the November 1918 elections, NAWSA targeted four anti-suffrage US Senators for defeat, and managed to remove Republican Weeks of Massachusetts and Democrat Saulsbury of Delaware. Flexner writes that  this election also "saw four state suffrage referenda come up, of which threee were victorious, South Dakota, Michigan, and Oklahoma, while the fourth, Louisiana, lost by only a few thousand votes, a showing of some consequence in a southern state."

Flexner describes what happened in Oklahoma on pages 305-306 of Century of Struggle.

The difficulties encountered by the suffragists in Oklahoma referendum probably represented the worst in unprincipled opposition in any suffrage campaign. There were innumerable special local problems, not the least of  which was a complete breakdown of the state suffrage organization after the campaign was underway. This was particularly serious because the Oklahoma state constitution required that the number of votes in favor of an amendment must exceed the total, not only of the negative votes, but also of  those ballots not marked either for  or against. The Governor, Attorney General and Secretary of the State Elections Board left no stone unturned to defeat the suffrage amendment. They even went to such lengths as printing only half as many ballots on the amendment as regular ballots and withholding them altogether from soldiers voting in the army camps in the state. The National kept two of its best  organizers,  the Shuler mother-and-daughter  team, in Oklahoma for months and spent more money on the campaign--nearly $20,000--than in any other state. Flagrant efforts were made after election day to count out what was clearly a suffrage victory, and the last National organizer did not leave Oklahoma until December 3, one month later, when the Governor finally surrendered to the facts of life and proclaimed the measure passed.

As her source for this information, Flexner cites  pages 529-535 of the History of Woman Suffrage.

I've quoted from the "enlarged edition" of Century of Struggle published in 1996 by Harvard University's Belknap Press. Ellen Fitzpatrick is listed as co-author of this edition. Having read an earlier edition of the work, it appears to me that Fitzpatrick's contribution to this volume consisted mostly of writing a foreward and afterword, which do provide interesting information about Eleanor Flexner, the creation of the book, and the relationship of the first wave of US women's rights activism to the contemporary feminist movement.

Monday, March 9, 2009

When I get around to starting a garden, I think I'd like to try this...

Someone in my neighborhood recently mentioned to me that there exists Oklavore, a local blog about eating locally. Not only does it exist, it had this cool recent article about no-dig gardening.

While any form of gardening involves a certain amount of manual labor (which is part of its charm), no-dig gardening does eliminate one time-consuming and difficult garden task. Plus, it seems to require very little water, a definite plus in a dry climate like ours.

It's a charming post, well worth reading. Check it out.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Moving forward

Today is International Women's Day, and also, in most of the United States, the beginning of Daylight Savings Time. Did you remember to set your clock forward an hour?

Here's a fun fact for today. Did you know that Oklahoma was one of the states that granted the vote to women before the passage of the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution?

According to the Oklahoma Historical Society's online Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture, activism to gain votes for women began in Oklahoma Territory as early as 1890, when the Women's Christian Temperance Union organized in the territory. Prohibitionists believed they needed the vote in order to be effective in their work. By 1893, women in the territory had gained only the right to vote in school elections. By 1895, the WCTU had allied with the National American Woman Suffrage Association to further their struggle for the vote.
Suffragists from Oklahoma and Indian territories met in 1904 at Oklahoma City and established the Woman Suffrage Association of Oklahoma and Indian Territory. With Kate H. Biggers as president, the joint association adopted a pro-statehood resolution declaring that no law should be enacted "restricting the right of suffrage on account of sex, race, color, or previous condition of servitude."

Despite a well-organized suffrage campaign the 1906 Oklahoma Constitutional Convention denied the vote to women. Not surprisingly, this convention also passed a number of restrictions on the rights of African Americans. Nevertheless,
As a favorable climate toward enfranchisement increased nationwide during World War I, Oklahoma suffragists, led by Pres. Adelia C. Stephens, lobbied the legislature in 1917, which submitted the matter as a constitutional amendment to be decided at the next general election. A splinter group of the national suffrage movement, the Congressional Union or National Woman's Party, was also active. In 1916 they sent Iris Calderhead of St. Mary's, Kansas, to Oklahoma to enlist support. Unlike the NAWSA, this organization was restricted to female membership and took a more militant and radical strategy. The Suffragist, the Union Party's official organ, encouraged women to paste literature on farmers' wagons, picket and parade, and shout from boxes at county fairs, picnics, and tent meetings. The most vocal of the local officers was Secretary Kate Stafford, who was unable to assume her duties until she had served thirty days in a Washington, D.C., jail for picketing the White House.

On November 5, 1918, Oklahoma voters approved State Question 97, which extended suffrage to women (emphasis added). A ratification committee, chaired by Katherine Pierce of Oklahoma City, helped ensure passage of the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in the state legislature. When Oklahoma ratified the Nineteenth Amendment on February 28, 1920, the Oklahoma Woman's Suffrage Association disbanded and the state's League of Women Voters formed.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Oh, Jesus

ECHIDNE OF THE SNAKES reports that a Catholic archbishop in Brazil announced that everyone will be excommunicated who helped a nine-year old survivor of incestuous rape get an abortion. Not only was the pregnancy the result of rape, but it also endangered the life of the girl, who weighs only 80 pounds.

The Catholic Church is apparently unable to tell the difference between being "pro life" and being pro-patriarchy.

Heaven help us all.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

An alternative proposal

Today the California Supreme Court heard arguments in a case brought by gay marriage advocates to overturn last November's Proposition 8. Plaintiffs in the case, including lesbian comedian Robin Tyler, argue that marriage is a basic civil right and that voters don't have the power to overturn the basic rights of minority groups.

There's an interesting discussion of the court proceedings over on Pam's House Blend. Consensus seems to be that the court will uphold the ban on gay marriages, while declaring that the gay marriages that took place before Prop. 8 passed will still be valid. But one possible outcome seems to be that the court will simply discontinue marriage in California and offer all couples the option of domestic partnership.

I've gotta say, that sounds interesting. If you believe in the separation of church and state, or in women's equality, marriage is a terribly troublesome institution.

Why not leave marriage to the church, and allow the state to offer domestic partnership instead? Why not work to provide universal health care and universal secure retirement to everyone, regardless of whether they're in a particular type of relationship?

Just a thought...

Monday, March 2, 2009

Everything or the kitchen sink

There have been a lot of things I would like to blog about. I would like to blog about President Obama's new budget. I would like to blog about how different forms of oppression interact with each other, which seems to me like one of the most important ways to celebrate Women's History Month. What I did instead this past  weekend was to re-do the plumbing underneath my kitchen sink to prevent a replay of the amazing exploding plumbing episode.

I did go ahead and get the specialized tool for PEX pipe. I  ended up getting the tool for the cinch-type connector, even though I'd read that they were inferior to the crimp type.  My biggest reason for doing this is that by using the crimp type of connector, I could get one tool that would fasten fittings for all sizes of pipe up to one inch in diameter, rather than having to buy a different tool if I needed to connect a different size of PEX pipe. Trust me, buying one tool is expensive enough, even though I violated my principles and bought it at a home improvement chain store. I found that the system was fairly easy to use, but it does require care and a little bit of practice to get the hang of.

Meanwhile, I  found two fascinating books about plumbing through the Metropolitan Library System. One is Remodel Plumbing by  Rex Cauldwell (published 2005 by Taunton Press, shelf number 696.1 C372r). Cauldwell explains why compression fittings (particularly the metal kind) are so fussy:
In metal compression fittings, leaks are normally caused by the tightening nut being a little too big (due to manufacturer tolerances) for the brass ferrule sleeve. As the nut tightens down on the body, instead of  the ferrule evenly compressing around the pipe to make a good seal, one side of the ferrule slips up on the pipe (and the other slips down) resulting in an uneven seal...Metal compression fittings also have a habit of leaking hours or days later.
So, I'm a terribly inexperienced amateur plumber, but it's a relief to find out that it's not just me.

The other great plumbing book I found was the second edition of The Plumber's Troubleshooting Guide by R. Dodge Woodson. (A  2009 McGraw-Hill book with the shelf number 696.1 W898p2.) Most of  it didn't apply directly to the situation I was dealing with, but it did teach me one nifty trick.  A good way to check for leaks around a bit of plumbing is to touch it with a piece of dry toilet paper. Even a small leak will make the toilet paper wet.

Besides  the plumbing adventure, I spent a happy hour or two climbing around underneath the house examining it so I can figure out what I need to know in order to get my house leveled. It seems that the foundation of my house is a mess, but it's kind of an interesting mess. I'll  keep you posted.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

It starts today

One of the helpful staff members at the Red Cup just reminded me that today marks the start of National Women's History Month.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Don't try this at home...

...is the title of  the home-improvement blog I have thought about starting. But I've become a bit  sporadic about posting to the blog I already have, so I'll just continue to throw my house-repair posts in here along with everything else.

Earlier  this week I was hurrying to get out the door so I could get to work on time when all of  a sudden I heard the sound of water rushing. Looking into the kitchen, I could see water pouring out from under the sink.  I dashed out to the curb with my meter key as fast as my lame foot could carry me and turned off the water. Turned out that the hot water compression valve had blown clear off the pipe. It had  been on the pipe for a month, and up to that point hadn't leaked a bit. I'm still researching what I might have done wrong. If  I figure it out I'll let you know.

The pipes I put in under my sink are those new-fangled PEX pipes. I'm thinking about going ahead and getting the fancy expensive tool that you use to connect the pipe to specialized PEX fittings. The tool can be expensive--but not as expensive as calling a plumber. Besides, after I get the foundation and the roof fixed, it might be time to install some new plumbing. This testimonial says that installing PEX water supply pipes is fast, easy,  and  relatively cheap:
In all, even with a burnt hand and broken ribs....don't even ask......I am very pleased with my new plumbing system and the fact that I was able to complete it myself without my house floating down the street!
 And also, apparently, quite an adventure.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Rep. Schakowsky pushing for "big change" movements

You can read about it on Women's eNews

Paul Krugman is right

Nationalizing the banks is actually a pretty good idea:

The real question is why the Obama administration keeps coming up with proposals that sound like possible alternatives to nationalization, but turn out to involve huge handouts to bank stockholders.

For example, the administration initially floated the idea of offering banks guarantees against losses on troubled assets. This would have been a great deal for bank stockholders, not so much for the rest of us: heads they win, tails taxpayers lose.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

A broken health care system is causing budget deficits

Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research points this out in a recent op-ed piece. Read it.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Holder calls for honest talk on race

Last  week, Attorney General Eric Holder made a controversial speech at a Department of Justice Black History Month event. The controversy over this speech is a bit puzzling to me. In brief, Holder said that for all of the progress  Americans have made in civil rights and race relations, racism still has a deep influence on US society.  Places of  business have become integrated,  but  socially, we still live in a segregated society. In order to get past that, Americans need to learn to talk about race honestly across racial lines, and so far  we have not  been  able to do that.

At least, this is my understanding after having read the entire speech online.  (Thanks to Think Progress for the link to the speech. They also have a link to a video of the speech, which I haven't watched yet.)

There are several points of that speech that I might like to argue about with Mr. Holder. I think that  there are many issues that US citizens are not able to discuss honestly--not only race, but also class, gender, and the ways that the patriarchal family structure sets most of us up to be exploited and abused. Also, in reading the speech,  it looked perhaps as if Holder thought that race relations in the US were simply a matter of black and white--but racist oppression has also taken place and continues to take place against American Indians,  Lationos and Latinas, Asian people, and people of Middle Eastern descent.

Finally, I think the problem of racism in the United States in not just about the bigotry of individual white people, or about the difficulty US citizens have in communicating across racial boundaries.  I think there is such a thing as institutional racism, and until that is eliminated, we're not going to make much more progress.

I've greatly oversimplified this post, and hope to discuss these issues in much more depth in the future.  The  main point that I'm trying to make that there might be a number of points in Eric Holder's speech that are open to discussion. But it's not fair for everyone to get their knickers in a twist because one sentence has been taken out of context. Read  the whole thing. Then we can talk.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Hillary Clinton's replacement weak on immigrant rights

So reports Erica Gonzalez on the Women's Media Center web site:

While in the House, Gillibrand had given a thumbs-up to a series of harsh, punitive measures against undocumented immigrants. With so many families consisting of undocumented, legalized, and citizen members, these hard-line measures have wider implications, as we have seen with the devastating separation of parents and children through raids and deportation.

The New York Immigration Coalition, Assemblyman Peter Rivera, and the Spanish-language daily newspaper El Diario/La Prensa quickly took Gillibrand to task. This pushed her record to the forefront of news reports. But that Gillibrand’s alarming votes weren’t reflected in early, English-language media coverage shows how the lives of immigrants are too often treated as an after-thought.

Some organizations neglected to note the contradiction between Gillibrand backing the rights of some while denying the rights of others. NARAL Pro Choice New York and the Human Rights Campaign were among those that issued congratulatory statements on Gillibrand’s appointment. But they could have at the same time held her accountable for people caught in the middle—immigrant women and GLBT immigrants.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Sunday, February 15, 2009

The mother of us all?

I was just looking at Susan B. Anthony's Wikipedia biography, because it is Anthony's 189th birthday today.

As long as I'm talking about birthdays so much recently, I don't want to omit The Mother of Us All. That is the title of a fanciful opera about Anthony's life that was written by Gertrude Stein and Virgil Thomson in 1947.

If I were to write an opera about Susan B. Anthony, I think I would call it something else. If anything, Anthony was a sort of un-mother, though she did help to raise the children of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Anthony refused the roles of wife and mother in order to remain an effective campaigner for women's rights. In this refusal, she was motivated at least in part by the fact that women who married in her day gave up many of the rights they had, such as the right to sign a contract.

Anthony is at least as complicated as anyone else I've discussed this week. She can be viewed as an activist of limited vision who subordinated all other interests to gaining the vote for women, in contrast with Stanton. Stanton was the revolutionary who challenged women's place in such institutions as religion and marriage. Then again, Stanton was mostly a theorist who, after her children were grown, supported herself on the lecture circuit. She could well afford to make thought-provoking radical statements--this may even have helped to increase the size of her audiences. And for all her radicalism, Stanton had a pronounced strain of elitism in her world view.

Anthony was the practical political organizer who built the political machinery that eventually gained women the right to vote. Anthony, in my estimation, was a true egalitarian, and probably as much a committed anti-racist as any white person in America in her day. Nevertheless, she was willing to accomodate to racists in her goal of winning the vote for women. She seemed to believe that until she herself was fully empowered as a citizen, she had to give other issues and causes less priority. Nevertheless, she viewed the vote as a means to an end, as a tool for political power. She said something like "Men will sell their vote, but not their right to vote."

I also think she seemed more radical when she was young and more conservative as she grew older. This is because she was young in times when radical political movements were gaining in strength, and later lived during the collapse of Reconstruction, when US politics veered sharply to the right. We are all so affected by the times we live in and the people who surround us, and that simply seems to be part of being human.

My favorite book on Anthony is Kathleen Barry's Susan B. Anthony: A Biography of a Singular Feminist. It's rather difficult to find, which is why I included the online link to a site that sells used books. I was able to special order it locally at Full Circle Bookstore a year or two ago.

Online, you can find Ida Husted Harper's Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony, and also Alma Lutz's biography of Anthony. You might also want to check out the History of Woman Suffrage which Anthony co-authored.

Happy birthday, Susan B. Now I've got to go and get that voter registration form in the mail...

Monson wins OKC school board chair

Having just moved, I wasn't eligible to vote in the recent Oklahoma City school board election. (My previous address was in the Putnam City School District.) I must be pretty out of touch with local news, because I didn't know until I saw it yesterday on the Oklahoma Women's Network Blog that Angela Monson won.

Thank goodness. And I'm sending in my new voter registration form right away.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

A journey toward Truth

I started writing this post because, on second thought, I regretted not having any kind words about Abraham Lincoln in my recent post remarking on the shared 200th birthday of Mr. Lincoln and Charles Darwin.

Lincoln is not a particular hero of mine. This has been true at least since I took Mrs. Gentile's history class back at Northeast High School in Philadelphia. She had us read Richard Hofstadter's American Political Tradition, which, among other things, demonstrated that Lincoln shared many of the racist views of his time. Later reading told me that many abolitionists and woman's rights advocates were deeply suspicious of him. Furthermore, I don't like the "great man" theory of history that always finds some dead white man to credit for important events and social changes.

Despite all that, Lincoln was a complicated and interesting person who did play a central role in ending slavery in the United States, and who paid with his life for this. A public radio program last Sunday noted that Frederick Douglass said that Lincoln was one of the few white men who treated him as a man, rather than a black man--even though Frederick Douglass knew many abolitionists. I had also read that Sojourner Truth thought highly of him.

So I started poking around for something else to say about Mr. Lincoln. One thing I found was a fascinating speech given by Douglass in 1876:
I have said that President Lincoln was a white man, and shared the prejudices common to his countrymen towards the colored race. Looking back to his times and to the condition of his country, we are compelled to admit that this unfriendly feeling on his part may be safely set down as one element of his wonderful success in organizing the loyal American people for the tremendous conflict before them, and bringing them safely through that conflict. His great mission was to accomplish two things: first, to save his country from dismemberment and ruin; and, second, to free his country from the great crime of slavery. To do one or the other, or both, he must have the earnest sympathy and the powerful cooperation actual speechof his loyal fellow-countrymen. Without this primary and essential condition to success his efforts must have been vain and utterly fruitless. Had he put the abolition of slavery before the salvation of the Union, he would have inevitably driven from him a powerful class of the American people and rendered resistance to rebellion impossible. Viewed from the genuine abolition ground, Mr. Lincoln seemed tardy, cold, dull, and indifferent; but measuring him by the sentiment of his country, a sentiment he was bound as a statesman to consult, he was swift, zealous, radical, and determined.
Another thing I found was this collection of speeches and commentaries by Sojourner Truth at the Sojourner Truth.org home page. It does indeed carry an account of a meeting she had with Lincoln in October 1864.

But it also includes an account of the actual speech Truth gave to a women's rights convention in Akron, Ohio in 1851.This account, by abolition journalist Marcus Robinson, is quite brief, and I'll include most of it below:
I want to say a few words about this matter. I am a woman's rights. I have as much muscle as any man, and can do as much work as any man. I have plowed and reaped and husked and chopped and mowed, and can any man do more than that? I have heard much about the sexes being equal. I can carry as much as any man, and can eat as much too, if I can get it. I am as strong as any man that is now. As for intellect, all I can say is, if a woman have a pint, and a man a quart -- why can't she have her little pint full? You need not be afraid to give us our rights for fear we will take too much, -- for we can't take more than our pint'll hold. The poor men seems to be all in confusion, and don't know what to do. Why children, if you have woman's rights, give it to her and you will feel better. You will have your own rights, and they won't be so much trouble. I can't read, but I can hear. I have heard the bible and have learned that Eve caused man to sin. Well, if woman upset the world, do give her a chance to set it right side up again. The Lady has spoken about Jesus, how he never spurned woman from him, and she was right. When Lazarus died, Mary and Martha came to him with faith and love and besought him to raise their brother. And Jesus wept and Lazarus came forth. And how came Jesus into the world? Through God who created him and the woman who bore him. Man, where was your part? But the women are coming up blessed be God and a few of the men are coming up with them. But man is in a tight place, the poor slave is on him, woman is coming on him, he is surely between a hawk and a buzzard.
If this sounds familiar, it should. A much more colorful version of this oration was published by white feminist and abolitionist Frances Dana Gage in 1863, 12 years after it happened. This famous Ain't I A Woman? speech was probably heavily fictionalized by Gage, according to historian Nell Irvin Painter. If nothing else, Painter points out, Truth--who was born and enslaved in New York State before that state abolished slavery--would not have spoken in the southern dialect that Gage put into her mouth.

Painter's Sojourner Truth, A Life, A Symbol is available through the Oklahoma County Metropolitan Library System, or you can see a Google Books preview. It's not an easy book to read. Truth's early life was extremely difficult, and included sexual abuse by both white men and white women. From this difficult background, the slave Isabella reinvented herself as Sojourner Truth, a powerful public speaker and activist, although unable to read or write. Painter analyzes the difficulty of truly knowing anything about a woman who never was able to write her own story, but who was portrayed only by others, mostly white women activists.

I think that Painter says that ultimately, we can't know the truth about Truth, but it seems to me that it is more interesting and ultimately more inspiring to explore the nooks and crannies of complicated reality than to rely on the oversimplified myths that have been handed down to us about historical figures.

Large families aren't always a choice

I wish I'd written this.

Stimulus package gains final approval

Our Bodies Our Blog has this analysis.

Women are literally taking the helm

You can read all about it in this post from Inter Press Service.

Paul Krugman analyzes stimulus

CommonDreams.org posted this interesting commentary.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Two or three men and a birthday

This is undoubtedly one of those thing everyone but me has known for a long time, but I just figured out that Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin were both born on this day in 1809.

In a story posted last summer, The Abraham Lincoln Blog mocks a goofy cover story run by  Newsweek, speculating about which of these men had a greater impact on history. A more typical web post treats both men as heroes who each, in his own way, helped to emancipate humanity.

Reality, of course is more complicated. Lincoln shared commonly held racist attitudes of his time, and freed the slaves mostly because he needed their help in order to defeat the Confederacy. Darwin's ideas were influenced by the right-wing social economist Thomas Malthus, and helped to influence the unsavory ideologies of social Darwinism and eugenics.

Furthermore, the famous Scopes Trial began at least in part as a publicity stunt designed to bring publicity to the town of Dayton, Tennessee, according to Douglas O. Linder. And William Jennings Bryan, derided on the witness stand by defense lawyer Clarence Darrow, may have been motivated as much by humane ideals as by religious bigotry:
 William Jennings Bryan, three-time Democratic candidate for President and a populist, led a Fundamentalist crusade to banish Darwin's theory of evolution from American classrooms. Bryan's motivation for mounting the crusade is unclear. It is possible that Bryan, who cared deeply about equality, worried that Darwin's theories were being used by supporters of a growing eugenics movement that was advocating sterilization of "inferior stock."
However, according to Wikipedia , Bryan himself built a political career in the segregationist Democratic party of his day by supporting its racist ideology:
Shannon Jones (2006) writes that one of the few topics touched on by historians is Bryan's apparent support of American racism, pointing that Bryan never took a principled stand against white supremacy in the Southern United States. Jones explains that "the ruling elite in the South, the remnants of the old southern slaveholding oligarchy, formed a critical base of the Democratic Party. This Party had defended slavery and secession and had led the struggle against post-Civil War Reconstruction. It had opposed granting suffrage to freed slaves and generally opposed all progressive reforms aimed at alleviating the oppression of blacks and poor whites. No politician could hope for national leadership in the Democratic Party, let alone expect to win the presidency, by attacking the system of racial oppression in the South."
It's a complicated world. There aren't any perfect plaster saints out there.  I ought to have a better concluding sentence, but it's way past my bedtime.

The $6400 question

Hilda Solis is Barack Obama's choice to be secretary of labor, and perhaps her nomination is in trouble because her husband's auto repair business had to pay $6400 in back taxes. Or, according to this article posted on Common Dreams, perhaps Republicans are trying to defeat her because of her support for labor unions.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

New York State may protect rights of domestic workers

Here is some good news from Women's eNews:

N.Y. Domestic Workers See Bill of Rights in '09

Increase OK grocery tax credit

Oklahoma is one of 16 states that taxes groceries. The state has offers a tax credit to low-income households and individuals to help offset the sales tax they pay on groceries, but the amount of the credit has not been raised since 1990. The eligibility level has not been adjusted for inflation since 1998.

According to the Oklahoma Policy Institute, Oklahoma has one of the highest rates of hunger and food insecurity in the nation. They're supporting action in the state house and senate to expand the grocery tax credit. According to OPI's fact sheet:
HB 2204 (Rep. Trebilcock) and SB 567 (Sen. Rice) would help hard-pressed Oklahoma families by increasing Oklahoma’s Sales Tax Relief credit, an existing tax credit intended to offset the sales tax on groceries for low- and moderate-income households. The bills as introduced would:
  • Increase the amount of the Sales Tax Relief credit from $40 to $60 per household member for those who are currently eligible for the credit (up to $50,000 for tax filers claiming a dependent child, senior, or person with disability status, or $20,000 for others);
  • Expand eligibility for a partial credit to $60,000 or $30,000, depending on household status. Those with income between current eligibility and expanded eligibility levels would receive a $30 credit;
  • Index eligibility levels annually to inflation beginning in 2011.
You can find email addresses and phone numbers here to encourage committee chairs in the House and Senate to hear these bills. For more information on the grocery tax credit, you can read the Oklahoma Policy Institute's policy brief.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Elizabet Sahtouris

Elizabeth Sahtouris was one of the guests featured this morning on the program To the Best of Our Knowledge on KOSU. According to the TTBOOK website:
Biologist Elisabet Sahtouris left her teaching job to go live on a Greek island and re-think her life as a scientist. She tells Anne Strainchamps that while she dismisses the Biblical creationists,she thinks the standard story of evolution has some major problems. Her book is "Earthdance: Living Systems in Evolution."

I'm not exactly sure what I think of her ideas, but what Sahtouris has to say is very interesting. Here's an excerpt from a 2003 essay:
We have a new definition of life in biology in the last few decades called autopoesis which means that a living entity is onethat continually creates itself. This is very unlike a machine which is created from the outside by an inventor, given its rulesof operation, and usually in a hierarchic arrangement and has tobe reinvented to have generations of technology rather than being able to reinvent itself in an evolutionary trajectory.

On her website, you can download a copy of her book for free. Or you can watch her on YouTube.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Doomed to repeat it?

In a recent post, I discussed ways that the current economic stimulus plan under consideration by Congress slights the needs of women.

Apparently, this situation is nothing new. Writing at Women's eNews, Louise Bernikow discusses how the New Deal Slighted Women In Recovery Plans.

Meanwhile, over at RHRealityCheck.org, Cristina Page has this thought-provoking essay on the economic benefits provided by public spending on contraception. You may recall that the stimulus bill originally considered by the House included money to make contraception more available, but that this provision was removed in an unsuccessful effort to win Republican support for that bill.

Drawing on the work of several economists, Page argues that creating jobs for people who deliver contraceptive services stimulates the economy just as much as any other health care spending. More than that, unplanned pregnancies create a serious drain on the economy, and providing contraception helps to alleviate poverty. Furthermore, contraception makes greater workplace participation possible for (heterosexual) women.

Today, President Obama appeared in a brief video urging passage of a stimulus package. Also, the Senate appeared ready to pass a centrist compromise that cut about $110 billion from the plan that was passed by the House. Economist Dean Baker argues that the more Obama compromises, the less effective the stimulus bill will be.

I wish I had a brilliant concluding sentence that would create a clear path to follow to make all of this work out okay. But the Red Cup is closing in five minutes, and I'm going to post this.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Spouting off

If you know me, something you may not know about me is that I have a favorite shower head. It is a low-flow shower head that has a little push button thingee on the side that allows you to regulate the water flow. You can get a full whopping 2.5 gallons per minute for a luxurious high-pressure shower experience, or you can shut it down to a trickle. A handyman at my old apartment complex was kind enough to install it for me when he was in my apartment a few years ago doing a different plumbing repair.

The existing shower head in my new house was just not satisfactory, as far as I could see. Now that I'm gone, the management company is probably going to completely remodel my apartment, as they're doing with every apartment that goes vacant. So I figured, what's the harm, I'll swap shower heads with them. So I did.

The difficulty with this scheme made itself apparent on Sunday morning when I took a shower to clean up after moving. You know how you pull up the little thingee on the tub spout in order to send the water up to the shower head? When I did this, most of the water kept cascading out of the tub spout, and very little of it came out up top. I was sure I had tested this before and found it satisfactory -- but this was before I swapped shower heads.

What to do? Unlike most of my other recent plumbing adventures, this turned out to be quite simple. To make a long story as short as possible, I soaked the shower head in vinegar -- following the recommendation in a home maintenance book. After that, the amount of water coming out of the shower head was much better--but the tub spout diverter valve still leaked. So I went ahead and replaced the tub spout.

Now, in case you haven't replaced a tub spout lately, be advised that that there are at least three different types of tub spout, each requiring a different replacement. Fortunately, there is such a thing as a universal tub-spout replacement kit. The one I got over at Westlake Ace Hardware on 23rd even included the Teflon tape that you wrap around the pipe threads. Be advised that you also need something called water pump pliers. Back when I was a kid, we just called these Channellocks. Anyway, I forgot to get them Sunday and had to go back for them Monday. Hopefully my personal hygiene did not suffer too much as a consequence.

Once I'd replaced the tub spout, it all worked like a, like a...well, it worked exactly like a shower should. Yay!!! When I looked at the old shower head, it looked as if there was a build-up of corrosion that had kept the valve from closing properly. Next time I face this situation, I'll most likely soak the tub spout in vinegar, too, before I replace it.

It's good that I like fixing things, or I would have the wrong house.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Good news and bad news on Obama economic stimulus package.

The good news is, the economic stimulus package offers real hope for substantial long-term economic change, according to Greg Palast writing on Truthout.
The House bill included $125 billion for schools (TRIPLING federal spending on education), expanding insurance coverage to the unemployed, making the most progressive change in the tax code in four decades by creating a $500 credit against social security payroll deductions, and so on.

It's as if Obama dug up Ronald Reagan's carcass and put a stake through The Gipper's anti-government heart. Aw-RIGHT!

Now, truth be told, this "good news" includes a down side. The only concession Obama made to the Republican right on this bill, Palast notes, was to remove money for contraception. A troubling sign that Obama considers women's needs to be expendable. (And Palast says that he doesn't much care.)

The really bad news is, the package needs substantial revision in order to meet the needs of women and people of color, according to Susan Feiner writing on Women's eNews.

She describes Obama's proposal as "too meager, too male" -- that is, favoring expenditures in areas such as road construction where a vast majority of wage earners are male. Feiner and other progressive economists have formed W.E.A.V.E., Women's Equality Adds Value to the Economy, and gathered over 1200 signatures to promote significant changes to Obama's plan:
We are pushing three basic steps to help tens of millions of women--and their children--weather the stormy economy.

No. 1: Revive and enforce Labor Department regulations requiring affirmative action for all federal contractors.

No. 2: Set aside apprenticeship and training programs in infrastructure projects for women and people of color. Both groups are seriously underrepresented in the construction trades.

No. 3: Spend recovery money on projects in health, child care, education and social services.

You can send a brief comment to the White House here.

You can also contact the White House by calling:

Comments: 202-456-1111
Switchboard: 202-456-1414
FAX: 202-456-2461

And you can always send a good old-fashioned letter:

The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Sunday, February 1, 2009

I live here now


It's a little bit messy, still, because I don't have everything arranged yet. I think Spot likes it okay. And now I need to go off to find the parts to make my shower head work properly...

Friday, January 30, 2009

Spot on


This is Spot. See Spot run. See Spot get agitated and claw and bat at things. See Spot go and explore all the drawers and closets that are empty now as I pack stuff up to move. I tell Spot, "Spot, we're going to have a house. I think you'll like it." But those are human words, and I don't have proper cat words, and I don't think she understands.

This morning Spot will have a trip to the vet. She will stay at the vet for the day, and when she comes home, it will be to the new place. Then she can explore new closets and rooms. At least this is how it has happened before. Spot is the best cat in the known universe and loves new adventures.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

No place like home

I was searching online for the text of an old speech by Susan B. Anthony called "Homes of Single Women," in which she argued that every woman needed her own home, she just didn't need to have a husband in it. It's a lovely speech. I wish I could share it with you.

I was thinking of this speech because of the way my house is starting to resemble a home, thanks to help from my friends. On Sunday, several of us were remarking that 30 years ago, there were not nearly so many women with power tools and home repair skills.

I did, however, find the Google Books digitized version of Ida Husted Harper's 1898 book, The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony. This is a very long book, but fascinating to browse through. And a very good reminder of how hard generations of women have worked so that we could pick up our power tools and work.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Another look at gay marriage

It is perhaps an understatement to say that gay marriage has never been my issue. I'm one of those old-fashioned lesbian feminists who tends to rant on the theme that marriage is a patriarchal institution, and why prop it up by taking part in it?

But over on happening here? janinsanfran has posted this interesting analysis: Marriage: what is it?

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Almost magic

This is one of those times when there is so much happening that I would like to write about, but I am too busy living life to write it down. Next week I'll be in my house. The lease is up on my apartment. I think I'm going to make it, thanks to a lot of help from my friends.

It used to be difficult for me to accept help. Now it is a little easier, but I still don't know how to ask. Part of it is reluctance, but part of it is that asking for help is a skill, like running a photo copier, or attaching a compression valve to a copper pipe. It's a skill I need to practice. Fortunately, I seem to have friends with a knack of showing up when I need them. Yesterday my house was filled with women painting, cleaning cabinets, ripping up carpet, helping me diagnose the operation of my floor furnace. It felt like a miracle.

This week Barack Obama was inaugurated as president. My expectations have not been terribly high. He's a nice centrist Democrat who happens to be African American. If we want progressive programs and actions, we will have to develop and push for them. And yet, it's a wonderful thing that the United States has moved forward far enough to elect its first African American president. It doesn't mean the end of racism, but it's an important step.

In less than a week in office, President Obama has moved to shut down the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay and rescinded the global gag rule. Soon he will sign into law the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. Renewal of the State Children's Health Insurance Program may be next. After 30 years of right wing backlash, it feels like a miracle.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Song by Oklahoma songwriter in the news

"This Land Is Your Land" Like Woody Wrote It -- thanks to Truthout. The whole post -- especially including the comments -- is interesting and ironic.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

The pipes are calling

I am having the time of my life with this house, but anyone who might be reading this blog has noted that I'm not able to post as frequently as usual.

This weekend I'm fixing much of my plumbing. Or trying to. I've got about three different plumbing projects going on, and two of them, the further I went, the more complicated they got. If you've ever tried to do any plumbing, I expect you know what I mean. The good news is, I don't think my pipes froze when we had all that cold weather in the middle of the week. At least, I crawled under my house late Wednesday night after work and spent about 2 1/2 hours insulating the pipes, and I think it worked.

I used to have a private joke that I am not a plumber, but I play one on YouTube. Maybe I jinxed myself.

There is lots going on in the world right now. Here in the US, we're about to have a new president. What else is happening? If you've been paying attention, please let me know what's going on, because I'm just trying to keep my head above water here. Almost literally.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Pipe dreams

Well, it's about to get really cold tomorrow night, and I'm hoping to keep the pipes on my house from freezing. It's going to be tricky, because I have so many leaky valves and faucets that it will be difficult to keep water dripping from the faucets.

So I was wondering, how cold does it have to get before there's likely to be a problem? About 20 degrees Fahrenheit, according to this page provided by the Newton BBS of the Argonne National Laboratory. The page--well worth reading in its entirety--includes this fascinating information:
When water freezes, it increases in volume about 9%. The ice then shrinks as the temperature decreases. The shrinkage is tiny, about 0.4% going from 30F to -50F.

As a side note, liquid water is densest at a temperature of 39.2F. The density differences at higher and lower temperatures are very tiny.
Cooling 39.2F water to 0F expands it only 0.01%.

Another note, there are at least 12 forms of ice. Most can be obtained only in the laboratory under high pressure.
The American Red Cross provides a page with practical information on Preventing and Thawing Frozen Pipes.

I'd better get cracking here, so that my pipes don't...

Monday, January 12, 2009

House passes wage equity bill, tell your senators to vote `yes'

Thanks to Echidne of the Snakes for pointing out this recent post at RH Reality Check.
The House passed both the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act and the Paycheck Fairness Act, restoring and establishing basic protections for employees who are subject to wage discrimination. The Ledbetter Act repeals the 180 day requirement, while the Paycheck Fairness Act protects employees from retaliation by employers if they bring complaints and allows them to sue for compensatory and punitive damages.

The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act is named in honor of a woman who sued her long-time employer for sex discrimination, only to be told by the US Supreme Court that she had to file a complaint within 180 days of receiving the first discriminatory paycheck. Because of Goodyear Tire's policy forbidding employees to discuss their salaries, Ledbetter only discovered the discrimination many years later.

This week the Senate is expected to consider the legislation passed by the House that will remedy this situation. You can ask your Senators to vote `yes' by following this link.

The Library of Congress has information about the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act here, and information about the Paycheck Fairness Act here.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

The Nation on the crisis in Gaza

In this thoughtful editorial, the editors of The Nation call for President-elect Obama to demonstrate strong leadership now to encourage Israel to take the necessary risks to bring lasting peace to the Middle East. They say that encouragement from Washington is necessary to bring about a solution that will offer dignity, and security both to Israel and the Palestinians.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Home Economics

I am having a wonderful time the past week or so as I frantically try to get ready to move out of my apartment by the end of the month when my lease expires, while also trying to get my new house fixed up enough to move into by then.

Sometime soon, I would like to learn how to do patient, painstaking, and beautiful work on my projects. As it is, I am probably too impatient and doing things too fast, and much of what I do is sloppier than I would like it to be. But it's getting done, and it's a thrill to discover that my house is being transformed into a home.

Most recently, I had a complicated adventure involving downloading the manual for my floor furnace from the Internet, crawling under my house, hiring plumbers, having help from a really nice installation guy from Oklahoma Natural Gas, and installing a new thermostat. But the good news is, the floor furnace seems to be working fine. I feel very fortunate and very pleased with myself.

Last night I also had another adventure correcting the installation of my outdoor faucet so it wouldn't freeze. The big difficulty was, I couldn't open up the little jar of plastic cement I needed to use.I had never learned the little trick where you bang all around the edges of a stuck lid to get it to open, so I had to swallow my pride, drive down to the Red Cup, and seek the assistance of a clever and muscular gentleman to open it. After that, the repair was pretty easy. Tomorrow when it warms up a little bit, I'm going to cut on my water and see if my plumbing's okay.

A friend of mine told me yesterday that I'm a brave woman. Which was very sweet of her. And that is how I'm feeling right now, brave and adventurous and clever. But let's face it. I am also very, very lucky. Through what is mostly dumb luck, I am getting house when lots of people are losing theirs due to little or no fault of their own.

In conservative circles, it is popular to blame the people who are losing their houses for their own troubles. But the truth has more to do with structural inequality in the US economy, where the most wealthy one percent of the population controls an increasing share of resources. Also, there has been massive mismanagement by government leaders and economic elites.

You can get the lowdown on how all of this came to pass by reading the Economic Meltdown Funnies, published as a joint venture by Jobs with Justice and the Institute for Policy Studies.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Tell Obama to work for renewed Gaza ceasefire

Feminist Peace Network has a link to a petition to tell President-elect Obama to end his silence on the situation in Gaza. When I followed the link to sign the petition, I found this interesting site dedicated to peace in the Middle East.

Meanwhile, happening-here? also has a good post on the situation in Gaza.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Heterosexual couples wrestle with role reversals after layoffs

Adrienne Gibbs explains why at Women's eNews.

As for myself, despite my long-term commitment to challenging gender stereotypes, I had to realize earlier this evening, that I had never actually used a cordless drill before. It wasn't necessarily pretty, but I got the smoke detectors installed.

Friday, January 2, 2009

May everyone 'neath her vine and fig tree live in peace and unafraid

As best as I can remember, this is the very first time in my life that I've ever replaced a broken window glass. The job I did wasn't pretty, but it worked, and I was thrilled and delighted. I think I'll be able to fix the other three broken windows before I get my gas turned on in my new house next week. Well, it's not at all a new house, but it's new to me.

I wanted to mention that Feminist Peace Network has had three really useful posts on the Israeli attack on Gaza: First, here is a commentary by Starhawk on Gaza. Next, here is a statement by Israeli women's groups. Finally, there's a report on the call by former Rep. Cynthia McKinney (also the recent Green Party candidate for US president) for President-elect Barack Obama to speak out on the situation in Gaza.

And now I'm going to post this before I fall asleep in the middle of my laptop. I've thought about starting a home improvement blog, but I'm not sure I can keep up with this one.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

If we want something better than a kinder, gentler globalization, we're going to have to work for it

Sometime when I'm not figuring out how to get my house fixed up enough to move into it, I might come back to this analysis by Walden Bello at Foreign Policy in Focus. Don't wait for me to fix my broken windows and get my gas and water turned on. Read it for yourself:

 The Coming Capitalist Consensus

Bello argues, that neoliberalism is dead, and that a kinder, gentler capitalist consensus is taking its place. After the meaner, rougher capitalism that has held sway over the past 30 years or so, that sounds pretty appealing, doesn't it? Bello thinks we should ask for more:
While progressives were engaged in full-scale war against neoliberalism, reformist thinking was percolating in critical establishment circles. This thinking is now about to become policy, and progressives must work double time to engage it. It is not just a matter of moving from criticism to prescription. The challenge is to overcome the limits to the progressive political imagination imposed by the aggressiveness of the neoliberal challenge in the 1980s combined with the collapse of the bureaucratic socialist regimes in the early 1990s. Progressives should boldly aspire once again to paradigms of social organization that unabashedly aim for equality and participatory democratic control of both the national economy and the global economy as prerequisites for collective and individual liberation.

Like the old post-war Keynesian regime, Global Social Democracy is about social management. In contrast, the progressive perspective is about social liberation.
I originally found this at Common Dreams, where I find so much useful and interesting information.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

AARP may be its own evil twin

So it says in this fascinating post that I found over on Common Dreams:

Documentary Doc Says AARP Is Major Impediment to Single Payer

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Lucky me

I have a house. Ginger took some very nice digital pictures for me, which I'll post as soon as I figure out how to condense them for faster viewing online.

Meanwhile, I've got lots of work to do. I'm guessing that house renovation will be a fruitful source of metaphors for social reconstruction. I'll try to post as often as I can, but as I've said before, don't be too surprised if you don't see many posts over the next month or two.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

What the hell to do about healthcare insurance?

I've always thought of myself as being pretty opinionated, but in my middle age, I think I'm getting wishy-washy. I find myself not knowing what to think about the best health care proposal to support as the Obama Administration takes office and solicits ideas from the public.

On the one hand, it seems clear to me that what we really ought to have is single-payer health insurance. You can find a good explanation of single-payer insurance (sometimes called Medicare for all) at Physicians for a National Health Program. In brief:
Under a single-payer system, all Americans would be covered for all medically necessary services, including: doctor, hospital, long-term care, mental health, dental, vision, prescription drug and medical supply costs. Patients would regain free choice of doctor and hospital, and doctors would regain autonomy over patient care.

Physicians would be paid fee-for-service according to a negotiated formulary or receive salary from a hospital or nonprofit HMO / group practice. Hospitals would receive a global budget for operating expenses. Health facilities and expensive equipment purchases would be managed by regional health planning boards.

Clearly, our present system is broken. An PNHP points out on their main page:
The U.S. spends twice as much as other industrialized nations on health care, $7,129 per capita. Yet our system performs poorly in comparison and still leaves 47 million without health coverage and millions more inadequately covered.

This is because private insurance bureaucracy and paperwork consume one-third (31 percent) of every health care dollar. Streamlining payment through a single nonprofit payer would save more than $350 billion per year, enough to provide comprehensive, high-quality coverage for all Americans.

On the other hand, creating single-payer health care might be next to impossible. Private health insurance companies are large, profitable corporations with quite a bit of political clout. You don't expect them to go out of business voluntarily, do you?

Conventional wisdom says that single-payer health care is either undesirable or just not possible. We're told that it's equivalent to "socialism," and once that label has been put on it, we're supposed to accept without question that it's bad.

Even if it's a good thing, we're told that it's not politically feasible. The only Democratic presidential candidate to support single-payer health care, Dennis Kucinich, was alternately ignored and portrayed as a lunatic by the the mainstream press. Third-party candidates who supported single payer, such as Cynthia McKinney of the Greens, were ignored. HR 676, the Expanded and Improved Medicare for All Act was introduced in a previous session of Congress, and never made it out of committee.

Like most of the other Democratic presidential hopefuls in the recent election, Barack Obama takes a middle of the road approach. There is one feature of his plan that offers some small amount of hope for real change, and that is the proposal to allow people who are currently uninsured to choose between private insurance and a public health care plan.

In recent posts (the first here, the second here), I've supported this kind of health care choice -- preferably for everyone, whether or not currently insured. But the good folks over at PNHP say it won't work. According to the guide PNHP has created for the Obama medical insurance house parties:
Adding the option to purchase a public plan like Medicare will merely replay the disastrous Medicare HMO experience. For the past 20 years Medicare patients have been allowed to opt for the traditional Medicare program or enrollment in a private plan paid for by Medicare. This option was supposed to stimulate competition and lead to improved efficiency. Instead, the private plans have used every trick in the book to undermine real competition and drive up costs – e.g. selectively recruiting healthy, profitable patients while leaving the sick and expensive ones to Medicare; and successfully lobbying Congress to add extra payments to prop up the private plans. The GAO estimates that private plans cost Medicare an extra $8.5 billion in 2008, raising premiums for all Medicare recipients (not just those enrolled in private plans) and depleting the Medicare Trust Fund.

PNHP offers much more information about the shortcomings of the Obama/Biden/Daschle health care proposals and the need for a single-payer plan. In brief, PNHP argues that Obama's proposals are similar to plans enacted in several states over the past 30 years that have failed to contain costs and also failed to establish universal coverage. PNHP argues -- quite persuasively, I think, that only by eliminating wasteful private insurance companies can we make the savings necessary to control health care costs.

On the other hand, Sarah van Gelder notes that insurance companies are doing everything in their power to squelch the option for people to choose between public and private plans. Van Gelder calls Jacob Hacker's plan to allow a choice a perfect compromise between the current system of private insurance and a single-payer plan that would eliminate private insurance:
The nonpartisan Lewin Group estimates that Hacker's plan would save the U.S. economy $1 trillion over 10 years, while covering 99.6 percent of Americans.

The Massachusetts system, enacted in 2006, is a stark example of what happens when there is no public option. Everyone in the state is supposed to be covered, but their choices are limited to private plans. Premiums have been rising 8 to 12 percent per year, which means the system will soon be out of reach of individual families, employers, and the state government.

A public option assures that there is a benchmark against which private companies must compete. Without such a benchmark, private companies have no incentive to contain costs or improve services.

It's hard to argue with giving people a choice.

But the health care industry is arguing. The New York Times says medical associations are encouraging their members to attend the health care discussion groups being organized by the Obama transition team around the U.S. Past efforts to reform the health care system stalled in the face of powerful health industry lobbyists with huge campaign war chests. Will the industry be as adept at dominating the health care policy discussion when it's happening in living rooms and coffee shops around the country?

Is the Hacker plan a workable compromise, as Sarah van Gelder argues, or a dead end, as PNHP says? Would the insurance industry be fighting so hard against it if it didn't have some potential for eventually leading to a single payer system? On the other hand, Obama's healthcare discussions seem to have been set up to avoid any discussion of the single-payer option. Is it better to try to stretch the bounds of the discussion to include single-payer, or is it better to fight for the right to choose between public and private plans?

I just don't know. Does anyone else have a point of view to share?

Friday, December 26, 2008

The future of Thailand is certainly uncertain

Over at Foreign Policy in Focus, Johanna Son writes about The Certainty of Uncertainty in Thailand.
Thailand, a deeply hierarchical society, is currently experiencing a “complex form of class warfare, in which the middle class, motivated by anti-corruption sentiments, has mobilized as a barrier against a populist government with heavy support from the rural masses and urban lower classes,” explained political analyst and professor Walden Bello of the Bangkok-based Focus on the Global South. “What complicates it is that the traditional elites that benefited from the traditional political, economic, and cultural arrangements have encouraged the actions of these mobilized middle classes. These elites' power has been threatened by the Thaksin brand of populist democracy in a way that it was never threatened by the revolving-door type of parliamentary democracy prior to Thaksin.

Now led by its third president in less than a year, the only thing that seems to be sure about the future of Thailand is that instability will probably continue.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Anti-choice federal rules threaten women's health in other countries -- and also in the US

Thanks to Our Bodies Our Blog and Oklahoma Voice of Reason for bringing my attention to this video by Engender Health about the harm done by the Global Gag Rule.

This federal policy, was first enacted by Ronald Reagan, rescinded by Bill Clinton, then re-issued by George W. Bush. It forbids the use of US health care aid to advocate abortion as a means of birth control. In practice, the rule eliminates any discussion of abortion, and undermines efforts to provide contraception, maternal healthcare, and healthcare for children.

Engender Health has a petition calling on President-elect Obama to once again rescind the gag rule.

Meanwhile, over at RH Reality Check, Jessica Aron reports that the Bush Administration has finalized a rule allowing US health care providers to refuse to provide information about abortion to their patients.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

More on Obama's Health Care Discussions

Over at CommonDreams.org they've posted a commentary by Sarah van Gelder about the Obama transition team's nationwide healthcare discussions.

Van Gelder supports a plan by Jacob Hacker that would allow people to choose between private health insurance plans and a public plan.

For more information about the health care forum taking place in Oklahoma City on December 29, you can read this post from earlier in the week.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Is this what's behind right-wing Christian opposition to gay marriage?

Over on Talk to Action, Frederick Clarkson discusses a situation that seems terribly troubling to many Christian theocrats -- the right of women to vote. I kid you not. Don't take my word for it, read it for yourself.

And you thought Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Sojourner Truth and all those other campaigners for the vote were timid moderates who weren't asking for very much...

Monday, December 22, 2008

Oklahoma health care forum at Mayflower Church December 29

As the inauguration invitation to right-wing preacher Rick Warren has made obvious, if we want the Obama Administration to bring about real change, we are going to have to give him some incentive to do so.

An opportunity to do this is coming up shortly. The Obama transition team has requested his supporters across the nation to have community health care forums to help shape policy in this area. One of these discussions will be taking place in Oklahoma City on December 29. Get more information and sign up to attend here.

Chicago Tribune health care blogger Judith Graham poses an interesting set of questions that might be asked at a health care forum. Thanks to Christine C. at Our Bodies Our Blog for pointing out this series.

Meanwhile, over at Campaign for America's Future, Jacob Hacker has written a report arguing for the importance of allowing individuals to choose between private insurers and a public health care insurance plan. Hacker argues that "public insurance has a better track record than private insurance when it comes to reining in costs while preserving access." It seems that President-elect Obama supports a public plan only for those folks who don't have access to health insurance through their employers. Hacker seems to argue that everyone ought to have the option of choosing the public plan.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

So what did you expect?

Okay. To start out with, I want to say that I'm a bit distracted lately from paying attention to the complicated events of the amazing, frightening, and hopeful times that we are all living through. I am a very lucky woman. I am going to buy a cheap little house. The picture is on the left. Posting may be a bit erratic for the indefinite future while the complicated details of buying and starting to fix take place.

That being said, one of the news items that has floated to my attention is the fact that right-wing pastor and media darling Rick Warren has been invited to give the invocation at Barack Obama's inauguration on January 20. Warren is unusual in his focus on issues such as poverty, global warming, and AIDS. But he's entirely traditional in his support for male domination and his opposition to gay rights and abortion rights. Feminists and gay rights activists are understandably upset that Obama has chosen Warren to open the inauguration by praying to Warren's right-wing version of God.

On the one hand, I find myself feeling almost indifferent to this controversy. Obama, the consumate centrist political wheeler-dealer, is pretty much behaving as I would expect him to behave. Obama is brilliant, competent, and entirely focused on holding the existing order of things together, although in a more humane fashion than the Republicans did. He wants to win over the religious right, and figures he can take the rest of us for granted. Did anyone really expect anything better? With the economy at home and abroad still going down the toilet, maybe there are other places to direct our energy?

On the other hand, janinsanfran at happening here? and Echnide at Echidne of the Snakes each has a brilliant analysis of this issue.

Echidne points out that Obama should not minimize the importance of "social issues" such as gay rights and abortion in his efforts to create national unity:
Here's where I see the task of the future for us dirty fucking hippies and feminazis and such: To teach politicians that 'social issues' is not about what we eat for Thanksgiving or how we arrange flowers. Those issues are about freedom, justice, economics, dignity and respect.

janinsanfran points out that Obama's former pastor, Jeremiah Wright, understood the situation very well:
He claimed to have said to Obama:

'If you get elected, November the 5th, I'm coming after you, because you'll be representing a government whose policies grind under people.'

Sounds about right to me. Obama will be as a good a president as aroused people make him be -- not one whit better.

If you'd like to express an opinion to the Obama transition team about his invitation to Rick Warren -- or about other matters -- you can do that here.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

The real election took place yesterday

In state capitols all across the United States, members of the Electoral College voted on December 15 to make Barack Obama the next president.

That day, National Public Radio ran an interesting piece about a group working to undermine the Electoral College without formally doing away with it.

For more information on the Electoral College, here is the three-part series I wrote about it before the November election.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

The real Bettie Page can no longer stand up

I never heard of Bettie Page until after she died. Here are two very different views of Page and her modeling career.

Truthdig describes Page as a provocative "pop culture icon," a sort of precursor to Madonna.

Suzie at Echidne of the Snakes offers a more complex view:
Bettie Page, whose pinup and BDSM photos turned her into a cult icon, died Thursday. She’s a stellar example of someone who became a commodity, whose image profited others.
Her “sex fiend” father molested her and her sisters, Page once said. After an abusive first husband and a gang rape, she left Nashville for New York, where she began posing for sexy photos to make money, and in hopes of becoming an actress.


The rest of Suzie's post is short and well worth reading. It sounds as if Page's career was less of an example of bold sexual self-expression and more of a case of a woman with few economic resources finding a way to make a living.

The best post I've seen on the auto industry bailout...

Detroit's Problem: It's Health Care, not the Union | CommonDreams.org

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Canada update: Tories would win election today

According to Reuters, Canada's Conservative Party holds a large lead in a recent voter poll. This despite the replacement of ineffective Liberal party leader Stephane Dion by Michael Ignatieff.

Nevertheless, this Seattle Times editorial points out that Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper's suspension of Parliament has turned the nation upside down. Canadians might still be willing to vote for the Conservative Party, but they disapprove of the Conservative prime minister's willingness to undermine their constitution.

Meanwhile, Will Di Novi has a useful analysis of the situation at thenation.com.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Chicago sit-in ends in victory of sorts

A six-day sit-in by laid off workers at Republic Windows and Doors has won severance pay and benefits, according to chicagotribune.com, but not a deal to re-open the plant.
The 240 workers who had occupied the factory since its abrupt closing Dec. 5 voted unanimously Wednesday night to accept a deal to pay them severance, vacation time, and temporary health care benefits. The $1.75 million agreement was negotiated over three days with the workers' union, Republic owners and lender Bank of America.

Union negotiators were unable to obtain a commitment from the parties to reopen the Goose Island plant, said United Electrical Workers organizer Mark Meinster. So the union has decided to forge ahead to find someone new to run the plant, he said, using some of the money donated from around the world during the sit-in.

An interesting analysis of the strike and its results can be found at socialistworker.org.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Updates on the Chicago sit-in

According to thenation.com:
President-elect Barack Obama gave encouragement Sunday to the members of United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America Local 1110 members who have occupied the Republic Windows and Doors factory in Chicago to demand fair treatment from a company that shut down operations after the Bank of America denied the firm operating credit.

AlterNet has cross-posted Ian Welsh's Firedoglake analysis on the genesis of the shutdown at Republic Door and Window in Chicago: How Fumbling the Bailout Led to the Chicago Sit In

Angry Black Bitch also has an interesting analysis of the situation.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Who Are the Taliban?

This report from TomDispatch.com and the Nation, via Truthdig, is a bit long, but well worth reading.

When the U.S. and its allies invaded Afghanistan in 2001, "Afghans celebrated the downfall of a reviled and discredited regime," post author Anand Gopal reports. "...But years of mismanagement, rampant criminality, and mounting civilian casualties have led to a spectacular resurgence of the Taliban and other related groups." Apparently now many Afghans support the Taliban, and similar Islamic militant groups, because they see the militants as their protectors against rampant criminal activity.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Standing up by sitting down

A hat tip to Common Dreams for posting this article from thenation.com about the sitdown strike in Chicago by workers at Republic Windows and Doors Republic shut down on Friday after Bank of America -- which has received $25 billion in bailout assistance from U.S. taxpayers -- refused to extend operating credit to them.

Nation commentator John Nichols points out that Barack Obama can only create a new New Deal if there is grassroots activism to push him in that direction. The Chicago action reminds him of similar actions taken by workers in the 1930s that helped FDR create the original New Deal.

Here's the link I found at thenation.com for updates about the strike from the United Electrical Workers. Here's the link I found at the UE site to send a message to hold Bank of America accountable for their misbehavior.