Showing posts with label AZ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AZ. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

AZ Republican Rep Calls Obama "Enemy of Humanity"

From Salon's War Room today:

Republican congressman: Obama "enemy of humanity"
"Rep. Trent Franks, R-Ariz., has always been a little skeptical of President Obama. Skeptical enough, in fact, that he flirted with the Birther movement for a while, and even considered filing a lawsuit before the election in order to seek proof that the then-senator was eligible, under the Constitution's guidelines, to be president. He's moved past that -- mostly -- but he hasn't exactly embraced Obama, either.

"This past weekend, Franks spoke at the How to Take Back America Conference, an event co-chaired by Phyllis Schlafly and Janet Porter, a World Net Daily columnist who's apparently yet to meet a conspiracy theory about Obama that was too extreme for her taste. (You're probably going to Hell if you voted for him, by the way. But since he may be a Soviet mole, you probably deserve that eternal damnation.)

"So Franks had to work hard in order to live up to his host's example. But he managed to get there, saying:

Obama's first act as president of any consequence, in the middle of a financial meltdown, was to send taxpayers' money overseas to pay for the killing of unborn children in other countries .... [T]here's almost nothing that you should be surprised at after that. We shouldn't be shocked that he does all these other insane things. A president that has lost his way that badly, that has no ability to see the image of God in these little fellow human beings, if he can't do that right, then he has no place in any station of government and we need to realize that he is an enemy of humanity.

See the video via Right Wing Watch."

Saturday, October 25, 2008

On AZ Prop 102

Don't you just bet the guy in the middle is a Mormon for McCain? Geeze. Rapture already and leave the rest of us alone!
Thanks to my bud VL for this one.

Monday, October 6, 2008

AZ Rightwing "Law-Abiders": Wherefore Art Thou Now?

I'm waiting to be deafened by irate Arizonans lined up in front of Pruitt's to protest the newest crop of "illegals." The new "illegals" are members of the AZ-based conservative group Alliance Defense Fund. They've on pastors, of all people, to knowingly break the law.

I'm waiting for that roar of outrage(tap tap tap).

I'm looking left, right, fore, and aft, for red, white, and blue pro-America "Obey the Law!" signs. I don't see nuthin'.

And I'm still waiting.

From The Michigan Messenger, among others:

"This past Sunday, the conservative organization Alliance Defense Fund (ADF), based in Arizona, sponsored a protest of the federal tax code that prohibits preachers from endorsing a political candidate from the pulpit.

"The initiative, called 'Pulpit Freedom Sunday,' called on preachers around the country to violate the law and make endorsements during their sermons. The 54-year-old tax code prohibits tax-exempt organizations, like churches, from engaging in partisan politics. If they do, they could lose their tax-free status. According to ADF, about 30 churches participated in the protest nationwide, and almost all of their pastors endorsed Sen. John McCain."


Still not hearing a word.

This tells me (again) that AZ Rightwingers don't give a damn about the law. Just like they don't give a damn about facts and truth, and don't give a damn about the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, and don't give a damn about fair, free elections.

What they care about is white, male, money, and guns (power). If the last eight years haven't etched that into your consciousness, you're already compost. You're just walking around, that's all.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Would You Buy a Brain from This Man?

He's not using his. (Photo courtesy of AlterNet)

Saturday, July 26, 2008

AZ Anti-Immigrant Ballot Update

In a possible sign that Arizonans have begun to sober up a bit from the Right's virulent anti-immigrant binge, this from the AZ Republic:

"Two voter initiatives designed to toughen Arizona illegal-immigration laws will not appear on the fall ballot, the chairman of the campaigns told supporters this week.

"Don Goldwater, a former GOP gubernatorial candidate, wrote in an e-mail that initiative campaigns working to strengthen the state's employer-sanctions law and to require police officers to enforce immigration law each failed to collect the 153,365 petition signatures required to put the proposed measures before voters on Nov. 4.

"Both Goldwater and state Rep. Russell Peace, the Republican sponsor of last year's employer-sanctions legislation, launched the initiative drives in March 2007.

"But they lacked the financial backing needed to hire paid signature gatherers."
The failure of these two measures to make it to the November ballot signals a widening fissure between far-Right Republicans and their often more moderate pro-business colleagues. Goldwater's measure would have stripped licenses from businesses for the first incident of knowingly hiring undocumented workers. Now, a more moderate pro-business measure is expected to appear on the fall ballot.
"The Stop Illegal Hiring initiative, which would provide more protections for businesses while targeting the pay-in-cash labor market and identity theft, submitted signatures to the Secretary of State's Office on Tuesday.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Sheriff Joe: John Wayne's Mini-Me

That John-Wayne-Wannabe Arpaio wrote a piece in Latino Perspectives Magazine called "Illegal Immigration is Just That--Illegal." In this manifesto, mini-John turned the entire issue into About Joe, Bad Mayor, and the proverbial Group of Vocal Activists, of course.

His main claim is that he don't never selectively enforce the laws. Uh, BWWWWAAAAAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAAHAHAAAA!

Someone near and dear to Pico read that and wrote this:

Sheriffs and DAs have selectively enforced laws since dinosaurs roamed the earth. Who does he think he's kidding?

Here's the deal: We Anglos invited, lured, advertised for, and sometimes bus in poor laborers to do mean, dirty work for cheap. EVERYBODY was just fine with that until the GOP suddenly started making "illegal" immigrants the new Willie Horton--Pat Buchanan, Tom Tancredo, Faux News, Lou Dobbs, Russell Pearce, and all the rest.

So I figure it has to do with the "Ownership Society"--something like, oh, I dunno, privatized prisons that are built by our tax dollars to give to wealthy cronies (like ball stadiums) and reimbursed by federal and state tax dollars on a per-prisoner basis. Duh. Like the fence, this sudden belated interest in "illegal" immigrants strikes me as just another Keep the GOP in Beemers for Life scheme paid for by you and me and the dumb shmucks who actually put these vultures in office.

It's amazing to watch sworn, self-touting heroes of capitalism throwing thousands of home-renting, house-buying, grocery-eating, goods-producing, clothes-wearing, tax-paying, Social Security contributing CONSUMERS AND THEIR FAMILIES right out of town voluntarily.

Almost as amazing as watching the home loan swindle-driven foreclosures rise, businesses slow down and close, and the school and infrastructure budgets plummet. Thanks. Great job, Brownie!

Hey, I'm one of the "We the people." Here's what *I* want: Raid Anglo neighborhoods and round up cocaine users, drug dealers, predatory swindling lenders, gas-guzzing air polluters, Mormon polygamists, corrupt legislators, office-abusing officials, high-rolling Johns, scofflaw drivers, and tax cheats with the same zest you apply to running after little, unarmed, powerless, poor brown people.

Yeah, THAT's going to happen.

Meanwhile, thank God we have a few decent people in office who can distinguish between racist re-election campaigns and the righteous prosecution of serious crime.

Monday, May 19, 2008

CA Siting AZ's Power Lines?

This update from the LA Times via HeadwatersNews:

California utility asks FERC to step into power line dispute with Arizona
After Arizona regulators denied Southern California Edison's request to build a 230-mile power transmission line between Phoenix and Palm Springs, the utility company asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to begin the process to override Arizona's denial, and if FERC complies, it would be the first such decision under new legislation that established "national interest" energy corridors. Los Angeles Times; May 19
Gee, I'm really not sure I want CA and Con Ed dictating where my state puts power lines, and based on this Administration's handling of Federal energy issues (think Enron and old ladies), I'm darn I don't want the Fed handling it.

Although Con Ed says I shouldn't, I do feel threatened. If I'm wrong, will someone who knows a lot about this issue please inform me? TIA.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

AZ's Solar Plant imperiled? And Whoa, Mexico, Latin America Get Muscle?

Check it out.

From The New Republic:

WASHINGTON--It could be said that Latin America will come of age politically the day that Pemex, Mexico's oil behemoth, ceases to be a state monopoly. Until that happens, the psyche of many Latin Americans will be beholden to the mythical notion that government-owned natural resources are the custodians of national identity. That is why President Felipe Calderon's efforts to open up the oil sector to private investment in Mexico have profound cultural implications.

Legislation that would allow foreign investors to sign contracts with Pemex in order to explore, distribute and refine oil falls short of what is needed. But given the taboo that surrounds anything related to Pemex and the fact that the president's party is in the minority, Calderon's move deserves ample credit.
Go here for more. Da-dum, da-dum, da-dum-da-dum-da-dum-da-dum . . .

Oh, and from The Christian Science Monitor:
Phoenix - The sun shines 325 days a year in Arizona, on average, and some here see that as the state's biggest energy asset.

But fledgling efforts to turn Arizona into the solar capital of the world depend on making the initial investment in new energy plants affordable – something that could become much more difficult, perhaps even impossible, if a federal tax credit for solar projects expires at the end of the year as scheduled.
Time to call your progressive senators, Arizona.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Erecting Our Own Tombstone: AZ's Employer Sanctions Law

From the National Immigration Law Center, "Erecting Its Own Tombstone: Arizona's Mandatory Basic Pilot/E-Verify Law" (April 2008). Read this PDF. Be sure to scroll all the way through it to catch the nitty gritty. The findings won't shock anyone with two braincells to rub together, but may surprise state Republicons and other Haters.

In other words, our Employer Sanctions law is causing new business to avoid moving to AZ, existing business to avoid expansion and to lose revenue, homes to foreclose, consumer goods, produce, and other marketable objects to languish on shelves, rental units to go unoccupied, the state budget to collapse in on itself, and construction, agriculture, entertainment and service, landscaping to cut back and/or fold. It's causing job losses, profit losses, budget cuts, layoffs, and, mostl likely, increases in all citizens' dependence on our public safety nets.

The good news is that there's never been a faster demonstration of the principles of Karma. What goes around comes around.

Here in AZ, as elsewhere, these measures are taking all the guesswork out of wondering what effects harsh anti-immigrant hate laws will have on state and municipal economies (meaning schools, new highway construction, infrastructure maintenance, emergency/security services, etc.). Now we know. Anti-immigrant laws kill towns, cities, and states.
AZ's Employer Sanctions law's consequences for the state's operating budget and for GOP election prospects are predictably causing a major divide between business and the GOP, which can't be all bad, and making even more of us loathe Russell Pearce and Republicons.

Don't you love it when a plan comes together? I'm talking to you, Gould, Pearce, Harper, Grimes, etc.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Yeah, Let's Ban Ethnic Studies and "Dissent"

State Sen. Russell Pearce, a Mesa Republican (what else?) is even more a moron than I thought. The Pearce-Kavanagh bill, HR 1108, would ban books and classes that "overtly encourage dissent," such as ethnic studies courses taught from a Marxist perspective, from AZ community colleges and universities.

Yep, I really think that the way to prepare next generations for leadership in a complex society is to ban all "dissent" and stifle all perspectives but that of Reader's Digest.

Pearce has nothing on me. I've long thought that the world in general would be a much better place if we all read just the King James version of the Bible, limited our creative appetites to the paintings of Norman Rockwell, and educated our children using Reader's Digest abridged versions of the classics of Western lit.

More later. Busy day. Meanwhile, drop your state legislators a line. Tell them to vote against anything Pearce proposes.

Monday, February 11, 2008

AZ's Guestworker Program: Questions for our Lawmakers

If you believe that employers are utilizing foreign workers (Mexicans, predominantly) to undercut the wage that they would be forced to pay to US citizens if there were no alternative labor source, then you will have questions about SB1482, a guestworker bill pending in the AZ Senate and endorsed by Democratic Governor, Janet Napolitano.

Some background considerations: Because this bill raises many of the same questions raised by a new Department of Labor proposed guestworker rule, it's relevant to note that under a Friedmanian/GOP "free market" approach, there would be no guestworker program. The domestic marketplace would determine the wage, and if an Arizona cotton farmer couldn't find cotton pickers for $5/hour, then he might have to pay, oh, I don't know, $25/hr. (Amounts are purely hypothetical, understand.)

But we know, or should, that the "free market" as conceived by Republicans does not include letting the market determine wages. It is weighted to the needs of "bidness," not to the living needs of the people.

That said, we also know that Americans are not likely to receive the inevitable cost passthrough of $25/hr for cotton pickers. I guess that would make a $75 Izod polo shirt cost, what, $200? Just guessing, have no clue. I get my polo shirts for $15 from Mervyns, and I think anybody who doesn't is a moron.

Listen up: You and I, every day, either benefit from the gamed wage/price structure installed by very powerful business interests, or are screwed on purpose by that structure--as in the case of the cost of prescription drugs in the US generally, and under Medicare particularly, and as in the case of flat US wages since 1970. So we are both oppressed victims of the system and its beneficiaries when it comes to produce, for instance. We are not merely innocent bystanders observing the greed of the US employer and the exploitation of the Mexican laborer. We are complicit in his and her exploitation, too. I reckon that our share of the ripoff pales by contrast to the share raked in by the CEO and the shareholders. But still.

So. If you both care about the capability of the US worker to earn a genuine living wage, AND the Mexican workers' vulnerability to rank exploitation in termns of payment and working and living conditions, then you have a duty to ask your legislator some tough questions.

1. How does the bill define "labor shortage" and who decides?
2. What measures are in place to prevent AZ employers from utilizing cheap foreign labor to undercut market-based wages for native workers?
3. What safeguards are in place to ensure decent working and living conditions of guestworkers and native workers equally and alike?
4. What safeguards are in place to prevent the wages paid to guestworkers from eliminating native workers qualified for an interested in equivalent positions
5. What criteria ensure that AZ employers have genuinely been unable to hire native workers at a fair, living wage given the conditions of the jobs involved?

This is, given the present state of capitalism, a matter of balance or the whole house of cards will collapse. It does no good to pretend otherwise. At the same time, every reputable measure indicates that worker productivity in the USA is going heavily to benefit the CEO and scarecely at all to benefit the worker. I am sure that there is a lot of manuverability in this sum/zero equation. I am sure beyond any doubt that we can effect a sum/sum equation, and that our collective future depends on our doing just that, here and in every sector of the market. It's the job of our elected lawmakers to ensure that this happens. If they don't do it voluntarily, it's our job to make sure they do it anyway.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Like I Said, Pearce Has Shot AZ 's Economy in the Head

It's rare for racism's effects on the economy to show up this clearly, but as I've been warning for some time, Russell Pearce and his racist anti-immigrant thugs' employer sanctions law are only hurting Arizonans. With friends like Republicans, who needs enemies?

This from Latino Politico:

by Man Eegee
The percentage of apartment vacancies is going up.

No one knows for sure how many immigrants are leaving Arizona because of the sanctions law. But apartment complexes with affordable rents in areas with large numbers of immigrants are being hit hardest by the departures.

The departures are coming at a bad time for landlords. The slow economy is making it hard for some apartment dwellers to cover their rent. And others are renting houses instead of apartments as those rents have fallen because of the housing-market collapse.

"It's a pretty soft (apartment) market to begin with," said Terry Feinberg, president of the Arizona Multihousing Association.

The state's apartment-vacancy rate hit 10.1 percent during the third quarter of 2007, up from 7.7 percent during the third quarter the year before, he said.

Data for the fourth quarter won't be out until next week, but Jodi Bart, co-owner of MEB Management Services, expects Arizona's apartment-vacancy rate to hit 15 percent for the first time in years. Her company manages 60 apartment complexes in Arizona, totaling about 15,000 units.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

What's He Done for Us Lately?

Interesting article in Hispanic News about Congressman Ed Pastor of AZ's Fourth District. I guess he stays in office because he's good at constituent services and bringing home the pork. He's also got a great system for responding to to constituents' email and letters. I should know. Other than that, I don't think he does a single, solitary thing for anybody, much less for Hispanics brutalized and intimidated by Sherrif Joe.

But we can be proud that he's not missing any meals.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

"They's Gold in Them Thar Hills!"

The Arizona Republic reports today that gold mines are being reopened, or opened, across the state now that gold has hit almost $892 per ounce. Rising metal prices are luring both mining companies and weekend prospectors dreaming of discovering the Lost Dutchman or its siblings. It may be fun to weekend prospect, but it ain't easy money! Me, I say hire some diggers and bring a picnic lunch.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Is Russell Pearce Planning to Reprise Pinochet in Arizona?

If it isn't already, Arizona may soon become the front line in the immigrant wars.

In January, the Employer Sanction law will take effect. Spearheaded by far-Rightwinger Russell Pearce, the law will shut down businesses that knowingly hire illegal aliens. First offenders will face a 10-day suspension. Second offenders could lose their business licenses altogether.

Pearce is planning to follow this measure with laws that will force applicants for business licenses or business license renewals, as well as applicants for trade and professional licenses, to show their papers or go out of business.

All this may sound hunky-dory to a country jumped up against "illegals," but it sounds like disaster to me and to the Chamber of Commerce, which fears serious economic repercussions across the state and is hoping to halt the measure.

Already the Arizona Republic is reporting an exodus of about 100 Hispanics per day out of the state, along with a developing economic firestorm in their wake. At that rate, we'll be down 9,000 people before the law even kicks in.

This is bad, but worse, economics doesn't begin to take account of the damage being done to the whole social fabric, and especially to the psyches and bodies of our Hispanic community as Sheriff Joe and his Rightwing zealots go a-hunting "illegals." This state is Native American, Hispanic and then Ango. It's in the blood, the dirt, the rock, the sky. To harm one is to harm all, and there's already a climate of fear and despair among hard-working Hispanic men and women and among hard-working Hispanic middle-class families. This is my community, my hood.

Our leaders are taking us to a place we've struggled for 50 years to get away from. It's a hateful, loathesome place, of vigilantees, violence, segregated services, and deliberate bigotry. The reason that anti-illegal sentiment can't be separated from racism is simple: There's no way to tell by looking who's a citizen and who isn't, and even if there were, only a liar or a fool would argue that there's never been any anti-Mexicanism in the USA. In our historical and cultural context, you can't separate the racism from the xenophobia any more than you can cut water. Even if your personal intent isn't to be racist, the effect of the measures you're espousing decidedly is racist.

This state stands to reap an ugly whirlwind, thanks in no small part to a hard-Right legislature abetted by a centrist governor who's "centrism" is forced ever rightward to keep its "center" in a country spiraling into fascism.

To anybody who knows anything about fascism and about the unitary Presidents' usurpation of unprecedented unilateral powers, this isn't idle rhetoric.

Where, one wonders, are our monks, our clergypersons -- a reference, of course, to Burma, which, as a miltarist-corporatist despotism, is just further advanced in its descent into Hell than we are. Well, they're not in the streets, that's for sure.

In real estate, an already depressed market is being hit with houses being sold by undocumented persons or by families that include undocumented workers whose incomes are needed to cover the mortgage. This will increase as the exodus deepens.

In business, well, I can only say "Duh." First, the state of cotton, copper, cattle, canyons, construction, and citrus depends on Hispanics for labor. ALL of Arizona's main industries, including tourism (represented by "canyons" in that Six C formula will be whacked with a labor shortage of who knows what dimensions. And on top of that, all of them as well as every other business that depends on a large purchasing public for its success will be hard by a diminishing client base -- including the restaurant and entertainment businesses.

Not least, across this border state are thousands and thousands of tiny businesses --taquerias, furniture, clothing, and shoe stores, cantinas, carnicerias, and importers, that cater to our very large Spanish-speaking population. Among them are many thousands owned by undocumented people. Those that are owned by undocumented workers will close or be sold to persons who hold the right papers, but the question is whether there will be any kind of market for businesses that cater to a demoralized, angrym, and diminishing demographic.

Those that do manage to remain in business will face a smaller client base, and nobody knows how much smaller. Nor does anybody know the effect all this will have on our economy.

But we do know that one dollar isn't just one dollar in real economic terms. The respected velocity of money theory indicates that every dollar circulates through many hands in any given local market. The dollar I pay you for trimming my hedges, you give to the grocer for avocados, which goes to the produce driver, who uses it to pay for gas, and so on. With most of these transactions, that dollar also draws along a few cents in taxes to fuel local government and services.

Thus, for every dollar that is withdrawn as our Hispanics depart, a negative little sucking sound will be heard across the land. The result cannot be good for anybody. I'm sure there's a biblical moral in here somewhere -- about doing unto others, maybe, or being our brothers' keepers, or getting the logs out of our own eyes. There's gotta be.

But neither the hit on the economy in what's already a shaky phase, nor the increasingly confrontational racist and xenophobic cloud rising over Arizona, doesn't bother Pearce. He and his economic-and-population purists are on record opining that a little shock may be a good thing. It may waken us to all kinds of problems in our daily lives, and anyway, the strategy is worth it just to drive the Mexicans out of town on a rail.

This kind of fundamentalism or purism, as you will --nativist and economic -- is of a piece with hard rightward swing in the country as a whole.

It also happens to ring a big bell for anybody who's read or is reading Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine. To wit: It makes me wonder whether Pearce and his Republican cronies have in mind creating in Arizona the legislative equivalent of what Bush created in the Gulf South following Katrina. The ensuing shock and disruption will be just perfect for engineering a great wealth transfer from the working classes to, ta da, the real "ownership class" that is being unmasked as privatization and outright land theft creep across New Orleans and the Gulf South.

Where, one wonders, are our monks, our clergypersons -- a reference, of course, to Burma, which, as a state of offical miltarist-corporatist despotism, is merely further along in its descent into Hell than we are.

Well, they're not demonstrating in the streets, that's for sure.

Heh-heh-hello, Pinochet.