Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Gitmo

We don't torture the inmates at Guantanamo, right? What about the guards?

Sometimes I Just Like to Post Legislation and Video of Nurses Getting Arrested

HR 676 (CONYERS) - Healthcare For All Americans

The United States National Health Insurance Act establishes an American a single payer health care system. The bill would create a publically financed, privately delivered health care program that uses the already existing Medicare program by expanding and improving it to all U.S. residents, and all residents living in U.S. territories. The goal of the legislation is to ensure that all Americans, guaranteed by law, will have access to the highest quality and cost effective health care services regardless of one’s employment, income, or health care status.



Thursday, May 21, 2009

More on Troy Davis for Metro Spirit

According to the editor, ninety percent of Spirit readers have attended college. That sounds high, but maybe the things I say sound high too.
This blog, "Land of the Blind" is meant to be about politics and media, and today I'd like to sound off a little on local media.
The reason I got involved with Metro Spirit is not because I love to party downtown, it's because I think the news in Augusta is pretty bad and the Spirit could do better as the "alternative" news source to cover things that the Chronicle, the local TV stations, and the local radio shows either don't touch or slant the way we all know they do. (After all, we're all educated here, right?) Not to say I'm not grateful for the opportunity to write here- I absolutely am.
But the story that motivated me to actually start writing is one that we don't seem to hear about. It's a story about Georgia that doesn't get told in Georgia.
Months ago when I read about the impending execution of a man with a strong case of innocence who couldn't get a trial to consider his innocence, I searched to find local coverage of it. I didn't see any and got the idea to encourage some. I called TV stations, radio stations, and newspapers. Most told me to get lost. When I called the Spirit, I was relieved to talk to a decent human being who nevertheless told me that it would need a local angle. Looking back I realize I should have just created a local angle somehow. (I regret not setting up a dunk tank downtown- are those expensive? Would Austin sit in it?) I've missed a lot of opportunities on this, but with your help it's not too late for a big push from the state's second biggest city. It's easy. Just read about it (it's interesting reading- I've had my nose in this one since October) and sign a petition.
Don't listen to me. Read what a big shot has to say about this shocking thirty car pile-up of craziness in our very own state justice system. If you don't like bleeding heart liberal Jimmy Carter, I bet you like Libertarian and death penalty supporter Bob Barr. Don't trust Desmond Tutu? How about former FBI director (and another pro-death penalty guy) William Sessions? Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn (come on, I thought you guys went to college), the Pope? The Indigo Girls? No, the Indigo Girls don't help at all, do they? Unless of course you're in college right now and trying out some new stuff. How about let's go back to the very beginning- what about hearing from the guy whose cries for help brought the hero cop to his doom?
Please take a minute, see what's up, and sign a petition saying you don't want this execution to go through without a fair trial first. (Not to point fingers, but Chatham County is known to screw up with death sentences.) You don't have to know he's innocent to sign. In fact, you can't know. I don't care how close you came to graduating college, you're not Matlock! Signing only means that we mean to be a civilized country that values truth and justice. Love America while you sign. And if you're a professor please sign this special smartypants petition to make an extra impression.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain

Hal Holbrook has been doing his one-man Mark Twain Tonight! for thirty years. He came to Augusta a week or two or three ago with his improvised recitation of assorted writings by Mr. Twain. For the show here, he got the crowd loud and rowdy before intermission with a lot of jokes about the worthlessness of congress, the trashiness of the media, and even snuck in a little dissing of the church. I heard the guy in front of me at the break say to his wife, "it's amazing how much things haven't changed in a hundred years."
After the break, Mr. Holbrook whipped the audience up again with a little shouting match between Democrats and Republicans which led right into a rant on group think. Nice. He followed up and pretty much closed out with a long and vigorous acting out of portions of Huck Finn. A lot of n-wording on the stage and more coughing in the auditorium then I have ever heard in my life. While Huck expressed his guilt over not being a good boy and turning in his slave friend Jim, the audience choked its head off. Then gave him the standard Garden City standing ovation.
Austin Rhodes says he saw Mr. Holbrook out at dinner and sat down with him. I wonder if running into our baby Rush Limbaugh influenced Holbrook's selections at all.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Darfur Protest Leads to Arrest of U.S. Representatives



Way to go, Congressfolk. Georgia's own civil rights hero turned U.S. Representative John Lewis along with Reps. Jim McGovern, Donna Edwards, Keith Ellison, and Lynn Woolsey, were arrested this week for protesting outside the U.S. Embassy for Sudan. Sudan is the home of Darfur, where genocide has been ongoing for years. On March 4, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir expelled humanitarian groups from Darfur after the International Criminal Court issued a warrant for his arrest on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.
John Lewis isn't the only Georgia public servant on the love train; Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue signed into law Wednesday a measure discouraging trade with Sudan while the genocide continues.
According to the bill's sponsor, state Senator David Adelman, “Companies are going to have a choice. You can either do business with the war criminals who are perpetrating the genocide in Darfur, or you can do business with Georgia. This bill ensures no Georgia taxpayer money will in any way support a regime that is supporting the genocide in Darfur.”
Thank John Lewis, thank David Adelman, and thank Governor Perdue. While you're praising, remind them that justice matters for Georgia death row inmate Troy Davis who was denied a new trial to consider mountains of evidence that he may be innocent and whose execution may come very soon.

The Inner Party Can Turn Them Off

It's kind of funny that there was a show named "Friends." And how popular it was.

I Did It! I'm Mayor!

Thank you so much, fellow Dumbasses!
I read yesterday in the Metro Spirit, or Metro if you will, that I am now it. Sweet. I'm humbled.
Here is the announcement as seen in this week's issue:

Way to go Metro, for supporting your mayor with that BS of a story called "Facebook Mayor"! Dumbasses! Jill Peterson is the Mayor of Dumbasses! You've earned that title, chick!