The Virginia Political Blogosphere

Where political ideologies face off on the schoolyard playground.

This is an experimental RSS feed aggregator written by Thomas Krehbiel. I use this to browse the Virginia political blogosphere, but your mileage may vary.

Add "noimg" to suppress images and embeds. Add "shuffle" to randomize the order of the entries.

Last updated: 9/10/2010 9:46:47 AM.


Democrat · Jim Moran, Chris Zimmerman, Arlington Republican Party, VA08

TheGreenMiles.com · GOP Candidates Fall Flat in Arlington RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

How badly are GOP challengers doing in Arlington? Even conservative Arlington Sun Gazette editor Scott McCaffrey scored Democratic incumbents Rep. Jim Moran & County Board Member Chris Zimmerman ahead of their Republican opponents in their performances at this week's Arlington Civic Federation forum.
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Democrat · Westover, Westover Market, 22205

TheGreenMiles.com · Silent All These Beers: Step Up To Save Westover Market Beer Garden RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Want to know how insane the partying gets at the Westover Market Beer Garden? Check out this picture of a typical rowdy night from the Save Westover Market Beer Garden Facebook group:
Untitled Yes, that's what Westover's NIMBYs & Arlington County's Zoning Commissioner are spending so much time & energy on: A guy who looks like Pacey from Dawson's Creek playing adult contemporary. When neighbors complain about "noise," you have to wonder what standard they're using. Are they balancing what's easily-ignored with what's actually loud? Or are they saying, "It was completely silent before, now I can hear something, therefore I'm calling the authorities"?

The question remains, is fun public enemy #1 in Arlington? Got this response to my post from Maureen Dilg, writing on behalf of the Arlington County Office of Communications (reprinted here in its entirety):
Due to complaints from neighbors about excessive noise from the outdoor area..., Arlington County zoning inspectors are investigating zoning violations brought against Westover Market. Westover Market has appropriate approvals for seasonal outdoor seating for nine people. The purpose of this seating is outdoor dining.

The space is being used for more than nine people and live bands are entertaining clientele. Having live, musical entertainment requires a public hearing before the Arlington County Board. Should Westover Market choose to apply for a Live Entertainment Use Permit, the County Board will weigh measures that will minimize the adverse impacts of its use on its neighbors.

All Arlington County residents and businesses are expected to comply with the requirements of local ordinances.
I appreciate Ms. Dilg's response, but according to TBD.com, she's not telling the whole story here. Westover Market did apply for a permit to seat up to 24, but the county denied it on the grounds that the bathroom was insufficient. So, to review:
  • Cite business for seating more than 9 people
  • When said business applies to seat more, deny it
  • When people complain about you harassing a business for doing well, say they don't have the right permit, which you denied
  • Repeat
But as I said in my first post, I understand the zoning regulations & don't dispute Westover Market needs to meet them. The question is, do you work with the business that's clearly tapped a niche in the community (the Facebook group is approaching 300 members at this writing) to keep a good thing going? Or do you shut down the live music effective immediately & force them through a regulatory steeplechase

Arlington County has clearly chosen the latter. Nine people on the patio sitting quietly? Fine. Ten people on the patio with toddlers dancing to Jack Johnson covers? HAVE SOME COUNTY BOOT ON THE BACK OF YOUR NECK, HIPPIES.

As TBD reported, there's a question of community character at stake:
Daniel Weir, another patron of the garden, wrote to us to say that the garden is part of the reason he’s considering settling down in Westover. “[The beer garden] is a piece of what makes Westover magic — the combination of a truly residential neighborhood that has a spice of urban vitality. Without it and the atmosphere that it helps create, Westover would be like a slightly older, less wealthy McLean,” he says.
According to the Facebook group, fans of the Westover Market Beer Garden are asking supporters to email Arlington County Zoning Commisioner Melinda Artman at Martman@arlingtonva.us, letting her know that you want Arlington to work with Westover Market to keep the Beer Garden thriving.
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Democrat · National, Politics

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · Judge rules DADT unconstitutional RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Ruling on a lawsuit brought by the Log Cabin Republicans, a judge has ruled the military’s policy of “don’t ask, don’t tell” unconstitutional.

U.S. District Judge Virginia Phillips granted a request for an injunction halting the government’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy for gays in the military.

Phillips said the policy doesn’t help military readiness and instead has a “direct and deleterious effect” on the armed services.

In a statement, the Log Cabin Republicans celebrated the ruling.

“As an American, a veteran and an Army reserve officer, I am proud the court ruled that the arcane Don’t Ask Don’t Tell statute violates the Constitution,” said Log Cabin Republicans Executive Director R. Clarke Cooper.  “Today, the ruling is not just a win for Log Cabin Republican servicemembers, but all American servicemembers.”

Some other reactions to the ruling can be found here.

With this ruling (here), the ball is clearly in the court of the Obama administration. Will the U.S. Justice Department appeal – and run the risk of (further) angering the LGBT community? If I had to guess, I’d have to answer that question in the affirmative.


Filed under: National, Politics

Democrat · Fun stuff

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · Friday fun: what color is your personality? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


You Are Blue


You are detail oriented and focused. You enjoy keeping your life in order.

You are a perfectionist, and you tend to take your time with tasks. Anything worth doing is worth doing right.

It’s hard for you to deal with dramatic, flippant, and silly people. You value maturity.

You are a good listener and you expect others to be the same. You expect to be taken seriously.

Pretty darn close ;) What color is your personality?


Filed under: Fun stuff
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Democrat · 2010, Virginia Democrats, Virginia, Wordpress Political Blog, BNN Virginia, #VAGOV

virginiadem.wordpress.com · Virginia’s Representatives to 111th Congress Voting Records Reviewed and Scored RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

The following was complied from information on the blog That’s My Congress “A politically independent journal of the campaigns and legislation of the United States Congress.”

“Progressive Action; support for legislation in the promotion of freedom, knowledge and security. Freedom is achieved when constitutional protections are respected and when people are treated with equality under law. Knowledge is pursued through rigorous support for science and education. Security comes from the protection of environmental resources, the strengthening of economic opportunity for people and the preservation of peace from erosion by wasteful, destructive militarism.”

“Regressive Action; a pattern of legislative behavior that erodes freedom, knowledge and security. When constitutional protections are disregarded, when discrimination under law is fostered, when the pursuit of knowledge is abandoned and science overruled, when wealth for a few matters more than prosperity for all, and when “Yeehaw” becomes the articulation of foreign policy, our nation is headed in a direction that is not only morally wrong but self-destructive.”

Rep. James P. Moran (D-VA 8) . Progressive Action Score: 65/100. Regressive Action Score: 12/100. Net Congressional Score: 53

Rep. Robert C. Scott (D-VA 3). Progressive Action Score: 58/100. Regressive Action Score: 8/100. Net Congressional Score: 50

Rep. Gerald Connolly (D-VA 11). Progressive Action Score: 55/100. Regressive Action Score: 12/100. Net Congressional Score: 43

Rep. Tom Perriello (D-VA 5). Progressive Action Score: 32/100. Regressive Action Score: 16/100. Net Congressional Score: 16

Rep. Glenn Nye III (D-VA 2). Progressive Action Score: 29/100. Regressive Action Score: 16/100. Net Congressional Score: 13

Rep. Rick Boucher (D-VA 9). Progressive Action Score: 16/100. Regressive Action Score: 20/100. Net Congressional Score: -4

Rep. Frank R. Wolf (R-VA 10). Progressive Action Score: 13/100. Regressive Action Score: 52/100. Net Congressional Score: -39

Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA 6). Progressive Action Score: 3/100. Regressive Action Score: 56/100. Net Congressional Score: -53

Rep. Eric I. Cantor (R-VA 7). Progressive Action Score: 3/100. Regressive Action Score: 60/100. Net Congressional Score: -57

Rep. Robert J. Wittman (R-VA 1). Progressive Action Score: 3/100. Regressive Action Score: 60/100. Net Congressional Score: -57

Rep. J. Randy Forbes (R-VA 4). Progressive Action Score: 0/100. Regressive Action Score: 84/100. Net Congressional Score: -84



Democrat · Politics, Society

Blacknell.net · Actions Have Consequences RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Over at TPM, Josh Marshall has an excellent post on Taking Responsibility:

Speaking just now on MSNBC James Zogby made a very good point — and pressed Andrea Mitchell on it. His point was that sure, this Pastor Jones fool is one guy, who’s managed to get worldwide attention for his stunt. But you cannot separate him, as I noted below, from the whole climate of hate speech and anti-Muslim agitation from the Newt Gingriches and the Sarah Palins and the rest of them.

At that point, Mitchell jumped in and said, wait, Palin said she disagrees with the Koran burning. To which Zogby replied, something to the effect of ‘C’mon’. ANd that’s just the right reply. This is the standard approach of race haters and demagogues. They keep stirring the pot, churning out demonizing rhetoric and hate speech. Then some marginal figure does something nuts and suddenly … oh, wait, I didn’t mean burn Korans. Where’d you get that idea from?

Wherever, indeed.


Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · First Morgan Griffith's Kid, Now Tim Kaine RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Is 2010 the year of the middle finger?  Check out Tim Kaine flashing his at the 2:11 mark.


The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Tim Kaine
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party
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Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · 2010 Preview RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Democrat · Hampton Roads, Local, Norfolk, Politics

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · City-paid private club memberships RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

The Virginian-Pilot has been on a roll lately, documenting and reporting on various behaviors of our local governments. It is what the hometown newspaper should be doing and I applaud them for it. Today’s other big story is about the taxpayer dollars being spent on private club memberships.  At least it’s not just Norfolk this time.

Virginia Beach is paying for the pricey Cavalier Golf & Yacht Club. Chesapeake is paying for the Greenbriar Country Club. And Norfolk is paying for the Town Point Club.

Look – I get it. Business folks are used to being wined and dined, especially when you’re talking about economic development. But the very people for whom these cities pay these memberships are typically among the highest paid employees. This isn’t private industry, where perks are an expected employee benefit. This is taxpayer money. Judicious use of it makes sense.

Given that all of these private clubs benefit from economic development, why are they not willing to provide at least one free membership – say to the Economic Development Director?

As for any others, I think it’s appropriate that they pay for it themselves.  I don’t have a problem with paying for the meals – as long as they are city business-related, of course – but the dues should be a personal expense.


Filed under: Hampton Roads, Local, Norfolk, Politics

Democrat · Hampton Roads, Local, Politics

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · VBDC: Not very democratic RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

As I wrote a long time ago:

Back in 2005, the Democratic Caucus of the House of Delegates asked the Democratic Party of Virginia to not share its voter file with anyone challenging an incumbent. At the time, it only affected two people: Don McEachin and Keela Boose. McEachin, a former delegate looking to reclaim his seat, won his primary and Keela Boose, a first time candidate challenging Algie Howell, lost.

At the same time, the Republican Party made its voter file available to all GOP candidates.

That rule was changed in 2006. Over the last couple of weeks, though, I’ve been made aware of a similar denial of access to the Democratic Party’s voter file, this time by the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee.

Access to the voter file by local candidates, who all run as independents, is dependent upon the local committees signing off on it. Due to a tiff that has developed between two candidates, the VBDC has decided to not grant access to any of them.  I think that is ridiculous.

The party voter files contain enhanced information that is not available in the file any candidate can purchase from the State Board of Elections. One piece that is missing is phone numbers, which makes phone banking impossible. I understand that it costs upwards of $5,000 to purchase just the phone numbers for a city the size of Virginia Beach, which is out of reach for most of the local candidates. So the entirety of Democratic candidates in Virginia Beach will be mostly flying blind.

That’s no way to win elections. If the VBDC doesn’t want to endorse, that’s fine. But handicapping those who would like to represent the citizens of Virginia Beach is pretty un-democratic in my book.


Filed under: Hampton Roads, Local, Politics

Democrat · Music, Personal, bowie, xtren, yklbm, wilds, pgyayiordxs, queued, asap, emerged

Blacknell.net · Midweek Makeover: Stripped Down Edition RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

I had something else all queued up, but about :30 into hearing this, I knew I had to post it ASAP:

Click here to view the embedded video.

And if, for some reason (say, you’re 12, or you’ve just emerged from 40 years in the wilds of Utah) you don’t know the Queen/Bowie original:

Click here to view the embedded video.

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Democrat · Local, Norfolk, Politics

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · When is enough enough? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Norfolk Commissioner Sharon McDonald has hired a PR person to work in her office in the position of Chief Deputy II.  The mayor is none too happy about it.

Mayor Paul Fraim strongly criticized the decision to hire [Charles] Hartig, whom he describes as “a lifelong friend.” He said McDonald, with a staff of just 38 employees, can’t justify the need for a public relations specialist.

“I have great regard for Charlie,” Fraim said. “But the commissioner does not need a deputy to serve as a communications adviser. It demonstrates additional disregard for the public purse. It’s wrong.”

Yes, it’s wrong. But there’s a whole lot wrong about this, according to the article:

  • Norfolk taxpayers will shell out more than $40,000 and Virginia taxpayers nearly $17,000 to pay for this
  • The position was not advertised
  • Hartig is not qualified for the position

It is as if McDonald is thumbing her nose at Norfolk’s hard-working citizens.

I want some proof on this:

McDonald protested the elimination of a license inspector, writing that it would cost the city $400,000 in revenue.

One person is costing the city $400,000? How’s that? And didn’t she say in this video that 5 vacancies were costing the city $500,000 per month in lost revenue?

But wait- there’s more:

McDonald told Williams that Hartig would help her office produce $1.4 million in new revenue.

Really? How? By ignoring the rulings of the state Tax Commissioner?

Or is she just making stuff up?

Mr. Mayor, you are an attorney. And you are the elected leader of this city. Put those skills to use.

And here I thought we’d get through a week without another OMG moment.


Filed under: Local, Norfolk, Politics

Democrat, Elected

Ox Road South · In Richmond Today RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


I'm in the General Assembly Building this evening catching up on state work.  Tomorrow there is a reception organized by the Democratic Caucus at the Suntrust Building for me and Senator Patsy Ticer.  Then it's back to northern Virginia.

Online, I'm seeing bits and pieces of the Governor's plan on ABC privatization.  I have not yet seen the proposal in writing.  I have some immediate concerns about the expansion of liquor licenses to 1,000 outlets, whether "big box" retailer or smaller package store.  That's nearly triple our current number of 336 state-owned stores. 

These licenses will inevitably be bought and sold, which moves this state away from the concept of state control of distribution and towards a free market in marketing liquor.  That's the system in Maryland and the District and it has its costs, especially when you see where these stores are invariably located.

I also am very skeptical about selling a productive state asset for a one-time windfall, especially for transportation where revenue means little unless it's in the form of a consistent annual stream. 

Anyway, I expect to have my hands on the plan within a few days. 

Councilman Dan Drummond posts his thoughts 
http://councilmandan.blogspot.com/






Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · Robert Hurt On The Warpath With The NRCC RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Democrat · Sally Baird, Miriam Gennari

TheGreenMiles.com · Quick Thought on Arlington County School Board Race RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

I don't like to criticize people who run for office on issues they're passionate about but have little chance of winning -- I wish we had more of them & fewer generic, calculating, soulless politicians who stand for nothing, like, say, Virginia's lieutenant governor whose name I dare you to remember.

But Miriam Gennari, Green Party candidate for Arlington County School Board, says on her website that sustainability is her driving force. It's her whole thing. I just wish the company she's president of, MetroMakeover.com, touted sustainability too. Or even had the word anywhere on its website. Makes it look like she's not practicing what she preaches.

Especially when she's challenging Sally Baird, a fighter for environmental issues even when they're controversial, like the geothermal power system at the new Wakefield High School.

Just sayin'.
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Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · Attention Virginia Democrats RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Democrat · Music, enemy, 73f3s5une9s, dropped, track, public, youtube, video, watch, enemy, 73f3s5une9s, dropped, track, public, youtube, video, watch

Blacknell.net · New Public Enemy: Say It Like It Really Is RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

New Public Enemy track/video just dropped:

Click here to view the embedded video.

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Democrat · DC, Policy, pedestrians, cities, topping, hazardous, ilation, list, fatalities, comp

Blacknell.net · American Exceptionalism: Pedestrian Safety RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Time points us to GOOD Magazine’s recent:

comp[ilation of] a list of the most dangerous cities for pedestrians, naming 21 urban spots around the globe with the highest fatalities rates for walkers. Topping off the list are Atlanta, Detroit and Los Angeles with 10.97, 10.31 and 7.64 deaths per 100,000 pedestrians. Continuing with its hazardous image, the U.S. manages to take up the first ten slots on the list, with 13 cities named in all.

That’s quite an achievement, America!


Democrat · Distribution, Law, Policy, kemm5, malamud, blu, owes, carl, hero, lays, realized

Blacknell.net · Access for All Americans RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Carl Malamud, who I just realized I might call a personal hero, lays out what information the Federal government owes its citizens.

Click here to view the embedded video.

All of it.

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Democrat · Society

Blacknell.net · You Got a Problem With That, Boy? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Once again, Georgia just makes me shake my head.  The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals just ruled that:

there were no racial overtones when a white supervisor called an adult black man “boy.”

“The usages were conversational,” the majority explained, repeating what it had told the trial court after the Supreme Court ruled, and “nonracial in context.” Even if “somehow construed as racial,” the unsigned 2-to-1 decision went on, “the comments were ambiguous stray remarks” that were not proof of employment discrimination.

I’m thinking the majority hangs out in the same places that Rep. Lynn Westmoreland does.


Democrat · Vince Gray, DC, Adrian Fenty

TheGreenMiles.com · DC Sierra Club Endorses Gray for Mayor RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Jim Dougherty, the DC Sierra Club's conservation chair & a member of the national Sierra Club's board of directors, explains the reasons for endorsing Vince Gray over Adrian Fenty at GreaterGreaterWashington.org, concluding:
If we want Washington to take its rightful place alongside Seattle and San Francisco as one of America's most progressive environmental cities, we need an executive that will work hand-in-hand with our now progressive legislature. Gray has the vision; Fenty doesn't.
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Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · This Is Amazing RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Democrat · Local, National, Politics, Virginia

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · Warner as chief of staff? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Yesterday’s announcement that Chicago Mayor Richard Daley will not run for re-election has created a buzz in political circles as speculation on whether White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel will pursue his ambition to run for that seat.  Already, pundits are discussing who might replace Emanuel and an interesting name popped up:

A wild card could be a Democratic officeholder, such as outgoing Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell or Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia.

I posed the question to Kevin Hall, Communications Director for the senator. His answer:

We’re in the Shenandoah Valley talking with Virginians about the economy and jobs and that’s more relevant and important than speculative political gossip from inside the Beltway.

OK. So is that a yes or a no? :lol:   Guess I’ll have to wait until Saturday’s pig roast to ask him myself ;)

UPDATE: No need to wait til Saturday. The answer is no.


Filed under: Local, National, Politics, Virginia

Democrat · Hampton Roads, Local, Norfolk, Politics, Virginia

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · Think “local” this campaign season RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

“Democracy is not a spectator sport.” — Lotte Scharfman

My latest op-ed appears in this morning’s Virginian-Pilot. It galls me that so much time and effort, not to mention money, goes into the top of the ticket races, where our votes really don’t matter, while the local races get almost no attention. In the big scheme of things, when you are casting your vote for a member of Congress, you are helping to choose .2 percent of the representation in Congress – one of 435 members. One representative – unless they have been in Congress a very, very long time – simply cannot make the difference alone (and even then that is suspect). They have to convince 217 other members to support their efforts – none of which we get to vote for.

Is it any wonder, then, decisions get made which are not representative of what the voters want? Is it any wonder, then, that Congressional approval is so low?

It is why I focus on the local. At the local level, one person can make a difference. And we can help them.

Go to the State Board of Elections website, find the local candidates in your area, find out what they are about and choose which ones you want to support. If you have some cash, donate a few bucks. No amount is too large or too small. If you have some time, go and help them distribute literature, knock on doors, and make some phone calls.

It simply isn’t enough to show up on Election Day.

While you are visiting the SBE website, check out the three constitutional amendments that will be on the ballot.


Filed under: Hampton Roads, Local, Norfolk, Politics, Virginia

Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · McDonnell Liquor Plan RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Democrat

The Locavore Hunter™ · Geese Wanted RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

To anyone reading this in the general area of Charlottesville, VA, I am in need of some Canada geese for a culinary event in support of Slow Food NYC next month. If you have a farm, estate, golf course or other property which is infested with Canada geese, I would be very happy to show up and safely take some of them off of your hands.

Hunting is legal on most properties in Albemarle County and I would be happy to look at your particular situation to advise you as to whether it is both legal and practical. Having spent 11 years as a high end personal lines insurance broker, I am well-versed in any concerns you might have about liability. As a licensed hunter, an instructor, author and hunting guide, I am well-versed in everything necessary to take the geese safely and with a minimum of suffering to the animal or disruption to you.

Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · Big GOP Overreach? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Democrat · Personal, Society, pakistani, pakistan, floods, homeless, elite, humanity, suffering, 27722

Blacknell.net · Why Is Pakistan Left Begging For Help? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

There’s been some coverage of the remarkable non-response of the world to the flooding and human suffering in Pakistan.  And there are myriad reasons – But Mosharraf Zaidi gets to the most important issue:

The fact that people in other countries don’t like Pakistan very much doesn’t change the humanity of those affected by the floods or their suffering. It is right and proper to take a critical view of Pakistani politicians, of their myopia and greed.

[ . . . ]

Pakistan has suffered from desperately poor moral leadership, but punishing the helpless and homeless millions of the 2010 floods is the worst possible way to express our rejection of the Pakistani elite and their duplicity and corruption. The poor, hungry, and homeless are not an ISI conspiracy to bilk you of your cash. They are a test of your humanity. Do not follow in the footsteps of the Pakistani elite by failing them. That would be immoral and inhumane. This is a time to ask only one question. And that question is: “How can I help?”

Here’s a start.  Take out your phone and SMS “FLOOD” to 27722 to contribute $10 (added to your phone bill) to the Pakistan Relief Fund (which is run by the US State Department).


Democrat

We will RockDem · The Campaigner-in-Chief RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Pity the Republican Party, the Campaigner-in-Chief has entered the fray. As Steven Colbert said the other night, "Reality has a Liberal bias".
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Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · Keith Fimian's Prayer List RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Democrat · Jim Webb, Tom Perriello

TheGreenMiles.com · Jim Webb Looks Out for Jim Webb, Part 68,302 RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Rep. Tom Perriello took a tough stand to hold polluters accountable by voting for the American Clean Energy & Security (ACES) Act.

So while campaigning with Tom Perriello, what does Sen. Jim Webb do? Attack legislation like ACES.

Just the latest evidence that Jim Webb only looks out for one guy: Jim Webb.
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Democrat · Hampton Roads, Local, National, Politics, Virginia

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · Scott’s 34th Annual Labor Day Picnic RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

It was a beautiful day in Hampton Roads and a number of folks gathered at the waterfront home of the family of Congressman Bobby Scott.  People from all over came together for a little food and a lot of politics. Among those in attendance was James Quigley, one of Scott’s opponents. Three of the four candidates for Norfolk’s Ward 7 race were there, as were a couple of the Virginia Beach candidates, and two of the eight Portsmouth mayoral candidates.

In the first video below, Rep. Scott offers brief remarks and then, as is his custom, introduces all of the electeds and candidates in attendance. He needed a little prompting this year – there were just so many. (And yes, Scott introduced Quigley.)

Arriving early and staying late was Senator Jim Webb. In the second video below, Webb gave a little speech and then introduced DNC chair Tim Kaine. In his role as cheerleader for the party, Kaine did his best to energize the crowd.

A great time was had by all.

If you are reading this through email or an RSS feed and do not see the video, please visit my blog.


Filed under: Hampton Roads, Local, National, Politics, Virginia Scott Labor Day - introductions Scott Labor Day - Webb, Kaine speeches
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Democrat · Ron Johnson, Wisconsin, Big Sun, Alliance for Climate Protection

TheGreenMiles.com · Does WI GOP Senate Candidate Think Demons Cause Cancer? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Ron JohnsonWhen politicians say they don't accept climate science, you have to wonder: What other science to they reject? Evolution? Cancer?
A global warming skeptic, [Wisconsin GOP Senate candidate Ron] Johnson said extreme weather phenomena were better explained by sunspots than an overload of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, as many scientists believe.

"I absolutely do not believe in the science of man-caused climate change," Johnson said. "It's not proven by any stretch of the imagination."

Johnson, in an interview last month, described believers in manmade causes of climate change as "crazy" and the theory as "lunacy."

"It's far more likely that it's just sunspot activity or just something in the geologic eons of time," he said.
The next time you start blaming your cancer on cigarettes, asbestos or coal-fired power plants, ask yourself this: Is my cancer caused by sunspots? Should I stop blaming Big Tobacco & blame Big Sun instead?
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Democrat, Elected

Ox Road South · VA Beach: Hit Me With Your Best Shot RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Loving the Labor Day weekend in Virginia Beach.  Sharon and I arrived in Sandbridge with the kids on Saturday morning for a weekend at our friends' condo.  We spent all Saturday at the beach (sorry Earl, weather was perfect).

The next morning was the annual "Rock'n Roll Half Marathon."  I got to the start line at 6 a.m., with our family friend and my "personal coach" Vincent who is a world-class triathlete (45-49 division). 

Vincent is French and very fast which means that his coaching usually consists of telling me:  "Allez! Allez!  Vite!  Vite!"

The race started at the VA Beach Convention Center, where 30,000 runners were packed in to the corrals.  Old, young, men, women, fast, slow.  They started us in waves so you're not constantly running down slower runners or vice versa.

The first few miles are a blast.  You run down to Pacific Avenue, then head south over the Ruddee inlet and out of town on General Booth Boulevard.  All the way there are cheerleaders, bands and thousands of spectators.  I was feeling good and knocked off the first four miles in 33 minutes, which is good for me.

Coming back, you snake through the U.S. Navy base.  Very few trees and the sun was rising now.  I began to fade a little bit despite the generous volunteers at the water stations and the righteous music ("Cinnamon Girl" at Mile 4 rocked).

For the last third of the race, it was back over the bridge, then up Pacific and back down Atlantic Avenue, before finishing on the Boardwalk. 

I was dying the last mile and must admit I walked about fifty yards, despite Vincent's protestations.   I staggered in at 1:53:45, which is a PR for time.  No points for artistic effort.

(fy, the winning time was a Kenyan in 1:03.  I'm not making that up).

Then last night, the City sponsored a concert on the beachfront for all race participants and family members.  At least 10,000 attended by my count (any cross-over with Glenn Beck rally?) 

The star of the show was Pat Benatar whose band crushed a set of Eighties archetypcal hits ("Heartbreaker," "We Belong," "Shadows of the Night"), before a crowd of crazed forty-somethings.

In 1982, did I ever expect 28 years later to be singing "Hit Me With Your Best Shot" a few yards from the Atlantic Ocean, while balancing a child on my shoulders?

It's all good at the Beach. 

Congratulations to the City and the race sponsors (Suntrust and Dodge) who sponsored a great weekend with fitness and entertainment for all. 







Democrat, Elected

Ox Road South · Labor Daze RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Got back to Fairfax today after the weekend down south.  Stopped in at the Labor Day picnic in Woodbridge and saw a lot of friends from NOVA Central Labor Council and state AFL-CIO. 

Thanks to organized labor for today's day off.  Without a union movement, we'd all be working today.

Spent part of the afternoon hob-nobbing at the St. Mary of Sorrows' Labor Day picnic in Burke.  It's the oldest Catholic parish in Fairfax County and a spiritual hub of the County since the 1850's, when the parish was first founded by Irish railroad workers.

Stopped by Delegate Jim Scott's barbecue around 5 p.m.   Congressman Connolly was speaking on his re-election.  Nobody's taking anything for granted.  Lots of thoughts from my recent travels around VA and my daily traveling around the 34th SD.

To quote Buffalo Springfield:  something's happening here.  What it is ain't exactly clear.








Democrat

Not Larry Sabato · Did Jim Webb Think This Was Helpful? RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us


Democrat · Een Zeilboot, Sprockets

TheGreenMiles.com · The Green Miles on Een Zeilboot RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

This just popped up in my inbox & I couldn't be more delighted:
  • "Een Zeilboot"? That's just made-up, right? No actual translation could be that hilarious, could it?
  • "Here, ees zee ocean!"
  • Hey, it's a donkey! Now here's a black guy sitting in front of a shanty!
  • The sea turtle frantically trying to swim out of the diver's grasp, like, "I don't have gills, asshole!"
I'm sure they're trying to raise awareness of ... something ... and anyway, it's extremely funny in a Sprockets sort of way, so give them some views:

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Democrat · Westover, Westover Market, 22205

TheGreenMiles.com · Public Enemy #1 in Arlington: Fun RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

ARLnow.com has been documenting Arlington County's bizarre war on up & coming businesses. First the Arlington County Board denied patio seating for American Flatbread. Then a county employee took sidewalk signs from both Screwtop Wine Bar & Bakeshop and threw them in a Dumpster.

UntitledNow I hear Arlington County has been harassing Westover Market over its wildly popular Bier Garden. The Powers That Be are apparently upset about the live music and the Market's makeshift bathroom setup. I am not making this up: Apparently actual police officers have been seen responding to reports of a man playing Jack Johnson cover songs while children danced.

Look, no one believes in the power of government to fight for the common good more than The Green Miles. And I don't profess to know the intricacies of county code. But it's hard to know what Arlington is thinking these days. At a time when the economy continues to struggle & Arlington's cultural identity seems increasingly dominated by generic places like Cheesecake Factory & Spider Kelly's (aka Adams Morgan West), these businesses are trying to breathe new life into places off the beaten path. And what do they get for their troubles? Harassment from county bureaucrats & Jason Mraz-hating NIMBYs.

There needs to be a thoughtful balance in a community between bustling business & restful residential areas. But when government bureaucrats are swiping signs & silencing acoustic guitars, you have to wonder if anyone's thinking at all.
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Democrat · Hampton Roads, Local, National, Politics, Virginia

VIVIAN J. PAIGE | All Politics is Local · Thoughts on 2nd CD second forum RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

Image from Virginia Beach Progressives

For the second time in as many weeks, the three candidates in the 2nd Congressional District participated in a candidates’ forum. My thanks to the fine people at Second Calvary Baptist Church in Norfolk who not only hosted the debate, but had wireless access which allowed me to broadcast it in its entirety.

The forum was not as well-attended as the first one, perhaps because we were dealing with the possibility of Hurricane Earl making landfall in Norfolk. That is a shame, because this forum was much better than the first one in that it covered a lot more ground.  And, for the most part, the candidates were much better with their answers, despite the irksome setup of having them answer questions in the same order every time.  It was disadvantageous for Democratic incumbent Glenn Nye to have to answer every single question first, and advantageous to Republican challenger Scott Rigell to always answer last. Independent Kenny Golden provided his answers in between.

All of the candidates appeared to have been more relaxed at this forum. Working with 1-minute responses to the questions, you might expect there would be a lot of sound-bite answers – and there were some. Overall, though, that was not the case – and you have to give the candidates credit for that.

My impression, after reviewing the video a couple of times, is that there was, once again, no clear “winner” in this debate. They all had their moments, both positive and negative.

Nye’s approach is to be precise, almost clinical, in his responses. He cites his record and – annoyingly – his “independence.” He seemed prepared for attacks that really didn’t come, especially in his closing statement. When they did come, he stood his ground.

Rigell was much softer in his answers, eschewing the “preacher talk” he adopted in the earlier forum. I was surprised to hear him call “Obamacare,” the Republican characterization of health care reform, a pejorative. He made, in my opinion, a major gaffe when he tried to pin the JFCOM situation on Nye but not on fellow Republican Randy Forbes. If Rigell is going to go after Nye for voting for Nancy Pelosi for speaker, somebody needs to point out that Rigell is going to do the Republican equivalent: vote for John Boehner.

Golden was the truth-teller at the forum. He said that JFCOM is “gone,” which squares with what others close to the situation tell me. And he said that negative ads work, which we all know to be the case. (If they didn’t, no one would run them.) He seemed a little subdued, though, and slipped at the end, when he referred to this area as San Diego.

If memory serves, there were only three candidate forums in the entire 2008 campaign. We’ve already had two – before Labor Day. I know of at least two others (not including the Chamber event, in which the three candidates will appear separately), including the one televised debate the League of Women Voters, in conjunction with ODU and WHRO,  is hosting on October 9.  Golden and Nye have already committed to that event, and I hope Rigell will follow their lead. The 660,000 residents of the 2nd Congressional District deserve to hear more than 30-second commercials on what these candidates will do once in Washington.

After all, not all of them read this blog ;)


Filed under: Hampton Roads, Local, National, Politics, Virginia

Democrat · 2010, Blog Net News Virginia, Economics, Financial Crisis, Labor, Wordpress Political Blogs

virginiadem.wordpress.com · “On Labor Day, Work to Save the Middle Class” RSS Comment Feed Bookmark on del.icio.us

The following came via email from Leo W. Gerard, International President United Steelworkers
September 3, 2010

This Labor Day feels gloomy. It’s a celebration of work when there is not enough of it, a day off when too many desperately seek a day on.

America has commemorated two Labor Days since this brutal recession began near the end of George Bush’s presidency in December of 2007. Now the relentless high unemployment, the ever-rising foreclosures, the unremitting wage and benefit take-backs have replaced American optimism and enthusiasm with fear and anger.

Happy Labor Day.

On this holiday, we can rant with Glenn Beck, kick the dog and hate the neighbor lucky enough to retain his job. Or we can do something different. We can join with our neighbors, employed and unemployed, our foreclosed-on children, our elderly parents fearing cuts in their Social Security lifeline and our fellow workers worrying that the furlough ax will strike them next. Together we can organize and mobilize and create a grassroots groundswell that gives government no choice but to respond to our needs, the needs of working people.

We can do what workers did during the Great Depression to provoke change, to create programs like Social Security and achieve recognition of rights like collective bargaining. These changes were sought by groups to benefit groups. In a civil society, people care for one another. And America is such a society – one where people routinely donate blood to aid anonymous strangers, children set up lemonade stands to contribute to Katrina victims and working families find a few bucks for United Way.

The self-righteous Right is all about individuals pulling themselves up by their bootstraps. That proposition – the do-it-all- by-yourself-winner-takes-all philosophy – clearly failed because so many Americans are jobless, homeless and too penniless to afford boots.

Over the past decade, the winner who took all was Wall Street. The banksters gambled on derivatives and other risky financial tomfoolery and won big time. Until they lost. And crashed the economy. After the American taxpayer bailed them out, those wealthy traders returned to making huge profits and bonuses based on perilous schemes.

Still, they believe they haven’t taken enough from working Americans. They’re lobbying to end aid for those who remain unemployed in a recession caused by Wall Street recklessness. And they’re demanding extension of their Bush-given tax breaks. This is the nation’s upper 1 percent, people who earn a million or more each year, the 1 percent that took home 56 percent of all income growth between 1989 and 2007, the year the recession began.

Since 2007, 8.2 million workers have lost jobs. Millions more are underemployed, laboring part-time when they need full-time jobs, or barely squeaking by on slashed wages and benefits. Since the recession began, the unemployment rate nearly doubled, from 5 percent to 9.6 percent, and that does not include those so discouraged that they’ve given up the search for jobs, a decision that is, frankly, understandable when there are only enough openings to re-employ 20 percent of the jobless. Five unemployed workers compete for each job created in this sluggish economy.

And American workers weren’t prepared for this downturn, having already suffered losses in the years before it began. The median income, adjusted for inflation, of working-age households declined by more than $2,000 in the seven years before the recession started.

At the same time, practices like off-shoring jobs and signing regressive international trade deals contributed to the loss of middle class, blue collar jobs. A new report, “The Polarization of Job Opportunities in the U.S. Labor Market,” by the Center for American Progress and The Hamilton Project, says:
“The decline in middle-skill jobs has been detrimental to the earnings and labor force participation rates of workers without a four-year college education, and differentially so for males, who are increasingly concentrated in low-paying service occupations.”

The recession compounded that, the report says:
“Employment losses during the recession have been far more severe in middle-skilled white- and blue-collar jobs than in either high-skill, white-collar jobs or low-skill service occupations.”

What that means is high roller banksters are living large; lawn care workers and waitresses subsist on minimum wage, and working class machinists and steelworkers are disappearing altogether.

The researchers found the U.S. economy is increasingly polarized into high-skill, high-wage jobs and low-skill, low wage jobs. America is losing the middle jobs and with them its great middle class.

No wonder the rising anger in middle-class America.

But fury doesn’t solve the problem. This Labor Day, we must organize to save ourselves and our neighbors. We must stop America from descending into plutocracy. We must demand support for American manufacturing and middle class jobs. That means terminating tax breaks for corporate outsourcers, ending trade practices that violate agreements and international law and punishing predator countries for currency manipulation that subverts fair trade by artificially lowering the price of products shipped into the U.S. while artificially raising the price of American exports.

We must demand support for American industry, particularly manufacturers of renewable energy sources like solar cells and wind turbines that create good working class jobs, increase America’s energy independence and reduce climate change.

We must insist on policies that support the middle class, including preserving Social Security and Medicare, extending unemployment insurance while joblessness remains high, and enforcing the health care reform law so that every American worker and family can afford and is covered by insurance.

On this Labor Day, we should all have a picnic, invite neighbors, friends and family, and over hot dogs and potato salad, organize to save the American middle class.

Mobilize to end the gloom and restore American optimism.

***
For help: the Union of the Unemployed, the AFL-CIO, USW, Working America. Join the One Nation March for jobs Oct. 2 in Washington, D.C.


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