August 2007

It’s The End of the World and I Feel Fine

Lappin himself is an interesting character.  He’s a Republican which is nothing strange, but his activism on Israel is tied to the International Fellowship of Christian and Jews.  Lappin is on the board of directors.

What I’ve always found fascinating is that a group like IFCJ allies itself with fundamentalist Christians who think they are bringing about the rapture.  John Hagee has won awards from IFCJ for his support of Israel, but Hagee is one of these characters who base his support on the fact that by supporting Israel, we can lead to a war with Russia and the Muslim nations attacking Israel.  He wants the world to end.

When addressing audiences receptive to Scriptural prophecy, however, Hagee welcomes the coming confrontation. He argues that a strike against Iran will cause Arab nations to unite under Russia’s leadership, as outlined in chapters 38 and 39 of the Book of Ezekiel, leading to an “inferno [that] will explode across the Middle East, plunging the world toward Armageddon.” During his appearance on Hinn’s program at the end of last March, for example, the host enthused, “We are living in the last days. These are the most exciting days in church history,” but then went on to add, “We are facing now [the] most dangerous moment for America.” At one point, Hinn clapped his hands in delight and shouted, “Yes! Glory!” and then urged his viewers to donate money faster because he is running out of time to preach the gospel.

Because someone ‘supports’ Israel doesn’t mean they are for Israel’s security.  IFCJ has ties to many premillenial dispensationalists who have a goal of bringing about Armageddon.

Seriously.  The ‘support’ isn’t aimed towards making Israel a safe, secure nation, but a nation that is attacked by Islamic nations and Russia in the case of Hagee.  It’s not about peace, it’s about war and literally the end of the world.

It’s a long road to peace for Israel.  Having loons with bad fundamentalist theology as close allies won’t lead to peace–it’ll encourage war.  There are no easy roads to peace for Israel given the chaos in the Palestinian territories, but working to incite a region wide war isn’t in anyone’s interest.
Hagee himself is slightly less offensive than most Premillenial Dispensationalists because he doesn’t buy into the notion that Jews have to die and go to hell during Armageddon.

So if you think that we should be facilitating the end of the world, Andrew Lappin seems to think that’s just fine.

To the Point on Lappin

As an added bonus–Dan Seals position paper on Israel which is solid.

The continuing issue of attacking Kos for a limited number of comments compared to millions made is getting sillier every day.  James Boyrce Responds in a diary at Kos

One of the many things wrong in the world today is that some people, in this case supporters of Congressman Mark Kirk (Republican Illinois) are quick to wave the charge of racism without a thought in the world as to whom they are charging, and how those charge might feel.

During the Kerry Campaign in 2004, I spent quite a bit of time traveling with Cam Kerry, John’s brother, who converted to Judaism when he got married. Many of those trips also involved my friend Jay Footlik, who was the campaign’s Middle East Advisor.

The times I spent learning about this issue was the deepest and most personal exposure I had ever had to the historical and present challenges facing members of the Jewish faith and the country of Israel

I recall, vividly, as I sat there speechless, in a Holocaust Memorial service in New York City with Cam, Jay and his wife, a native-born Israeli as I watched Holocaust widows shuffle past us; small, frail, yet immensely powerful women – each and every one of them.

As such, I take the charge leveled by a supporter of Mark Kirk’s very seriously. And I find it very disturbing that it would be so easily bandied about.

Almost immediately as YearlyKos ended, one of Mark Kirk’s biggest supporters, a gentlemen by the name of Andy Lappin sent an email out to a very large list and it is making its way around the Internet.

Here are some of the quotes and charges that Mr. Lappin felt he needed to make about Jay, and Dan Seals, Jay’s primary opponent in the Illinois 10th, and their appearance at YearlyKos.

What’s troubling is that Seals and Footlik speak to our community with one mouth and then run to a convention filled with anti-Semitic bloggers.

The charge of being an anti-Semitic is one that should never be made lightly and certainly one that should never be made of a group of 1,500 people – many of whom, like Jay, are Jewish.

On what does Mr. Lappin base his charge of racism? A collection of quotes pulled from comments from old diaries from the site. What he is suggesting is that these comments – made in some cases years ago, mean that YearlyKos was full of anti-Semites.

Here’s one Mr. Lappin used:

“Once we lock up a Majority, where we don’t need Lieberman, I hope they will kick him to the curb like the dog he is.”

Not the politest post I have ever seen, but I fail to see anything anti-Semitic in this.

Some of the other quotes that Mr. Lappin noted were, actually, inappropriate. However, as Mr. Lappin gleefully claims:

Many times posts are left up for weeks or months until watchdog groups raise concerns over anti-Semitism–at that point, Kos removes the blog pages.  Fortunately, there are other savvy bloggers out there who keep archived copies.

Damm right. If anything is posted that’s wrong, it gets pulled. That’s the right thing to do.

So why would one of Congressman Mark Kirk’s largest supporters attack especially Jay Footlik on the issue of his faith and Israel?

Simply politics as usual. Kirk’s, and soon Jay’s, district is 18% Jewish and for all practical purposes on Election Day, the number is closer to 23%.

If Mark Kirk can’t run on his support for Israel, what can he run on? His continued support for the war in Iraq? His rubber stamp votes to support George Bush?

Ah, now you see the problem.

It’s far easier to paint me, and you, and everyone else at YearlyKos as an anti-Semite. It’s far easier to wave the flag of racism. It’s disgusting.

Mr. Lappin:

Don’t call me, and my friends, and my fellow bloggers and attendees at YearlyKos anti-Semitic ever again.

Because I will sue you for defamation and libel.

Are we clear?

Footlik Response

Once again, Mark Kirk has shown he has nothing to offer the people of Illinois’ 10th district other than more of George Bush and Karl Rove’s ugly politics of smear and fear – and why we desperately need a change in Washington.

Instead of trying to end the catastrophic war in Iraq that he helped start, or explaining why he voted last week to protect tobacco companies instead of providing health care to millions of uninsured children or why he remains silent on President Bush’s ill advised proposal to sell arms to Saudi Arabia, all Mark Kirk can do is try to distract the voters with outright lies.

This time, Kirk sent a lapdog to attack my strong connection to Israel and to the Jewish people.

Let there be no doubt about my views and my record:

Unlike Mark Kirk, I have lived in Israel, and for much of my time there, Israel was experiencing the most violent period in recent memory. Homicide bombers were blowing up cafes and buses nearly every week. I worked alongside Israel’s leaders devising strategies to improve safety and security – and help strengthen the US-Israel relationship. My wife, an Israeli, wore the IDF uniform, serving in the Israeli Air Force. My family and I were in Haifa when the first missiles hit during last year’s Israel-Hezbollah war. I know what security and peace would mean to Israelis – and I will work my hardest to achieve it.

I have come face-to-face with anti-Semites, and in every instance – every single one – I have condemned any form of anti-Semitic speech. Whether it comes from the mouth of a blogger or a preacher, anti-Semitism – like xenophobia, racism, and homophobia – has no place in the 10th district, in Chicagoland, in Illinois, in the United States, and the entire world.

I suppose I should be astonished that the Kirk campaign would attack me – a Jew and someone who has lived in Israel – on whether I am sufficiently pro-Israel or sensitive to anti-Semitism.

Yet when it comes to saying the indefensible, supporting the unfounded, and voting for some of the most failed policies we’ve seen in a generation, Mark Kirk no longer surprises. The voters of the 10th district have seen it all – this is just another sad display of Kirk’s politics of personal destruction and division.

The fact is, Mark Kirk has done this for years. It’s time to send a message – the safety and security of Israel is much too important to be tossed around in a partisan contest. It’s time for the Bush-Kirk-Rove lie machine to end in 2009.

I call on Mark Kirk to denounce these types of divisive and dishonest attacks.

Response II

Andy Lappin did the typical smear job we’ve come to expect from the right in the e-mail that you received from M Feiger. The Daily Kos is a blog and like any blog there will be posts that are distasteful because in this country we have the freedom to express our views, even views that we might not share or like. It is true that some people who post on the Daily Kos do not like Joe Lieberman but Andy Lappin took those comments out of context. The primary reason the Daily Kos bloggers don’t like Senator Lieberman is not because of anti-semitism but for the same reason I don’t like him– he has been a lapdog to President Bush and has been supporting the immoral  and incompetent war in Iraq– a war Mr. Kirk has been supporting all along as well. Yes, there have been some inappropriate and racist remarks about Mr. Lieberman but by and large the negative remarks about the Senator are because of his unwavering support for our incompetent and dangerous President.

Moreover, what Andy Lappin didn’t bother to mention was that the Kos convention was a big event here in Chicago, not just attended by Dan Seals. It was covered by all the national media. Seven of the Democratic candidates appeared before this important constituency. Specifically, Edwards, Obama, Clinton, Richardson, Dodd, Kucinich & Gravel all spoke to this group. Wesley Clark and Howard Dean also appeared at this convention. I believe Howard Dean’s wife is Jewish. Is he an anti-semite? So, are all these people anti-semites?

If any of you who received the email from Andy Lappin still have concerns, I encourage you to go to www.dailykos.com and read it for yourselves. You may just learn something.

Thank you for your time.

The Responses to Lappin

many of you may have seen the email going around about the dem candidates and kirk.  while I don’t know andy lappin, the writer, i sent him this:
It’s unfortunate that your email seems to be getting around, as you are painting the Democratic candidates with the views of some (few) supporters.  You can’t believe that Kirk supporters are all pro-Israel, and you have to realize that many are anti-Semitic along with other equally offensive beliefs and traits.
Kirk has a long, strong history of voting with his constituency when it will make no difference and voting with the Bush administration when they need him, as in for the recent budget that many local rabbis found unethical. He also claims to support the troops while consistently voting to deny them basic benefits and equipment.
In addition, I know several strong AIPAC supporters who have heard Kirk speak to non-Jewish crowds and have been stunned and disappointed at his many references to Christian ideals.
Voting on one issue based on self-interest is dangerous.  I’d encourage you to study the issues and Kirk’s voting record.  If you can stomach that, go ahead and support him.  But it is unfair and rather ridiculous to say Seals and Footlik are “bad” because you find a few of their supporters offensive.   No one can pass a test like that – least of all Kirk.

BillO Talking Points from Kirk Supporters

Dear Friends,

While we may disagree on politics and policy sometimes, we all can
agree to strongly condemn anti-Semitism, anti-Zionism and the
institutions that foment them.

I remain a stauch supporter of Congressman Mark Kirk who has co-
chaired the Congressional Task Force on Anti-Semitism, led the way on
hate crimes legislation, continues to lead on opening the Holocaust
archives in Bad Arolsen and remains the strongest voice in Congress
for the U.S.-Israel strategic relationship.

I write to you today to make sure you know about an issue I find to be
pivotal in the upcoming race for Congress in the 10th District.  While
the two Democrats vying to take on our friend Congressman Kirk next
year claim to support our values, their actions to gain political
support suggest they do not.

In an effort to appeal to their party's far-left, both candidates
participated in this week's Kos Convention in Chicago--with Jay
Footlik working the crowd and Dan Seals addressing the conference.
Both expressed great pride and satisfaction in attending.

What's troubling is that Seals and Footlik speak to our community with
one mouth and then run to a convention filled with anti-Semitic
bloggers.  DailyKos is a community of bloggers--thousands of people
who write their own opinions online.  The site's real attraction comes
from the discussion that ensues.

Let's see a few examples of what the Kos Convention attendees are
blogging--the very same people Seals and Footlik come running to for
support.  Many times posts are left up for weeks or months until
watchdog groups raise concerns over anti-Semitism--at that point, Kos
removes the blog pages.  Fortunately, there are other savvy bloggers
out there who keep archived copies.

1) "Once we lock up a Majority, where we don't need Lieberman, I hope
they will kick him to the curb like the dog he is."  This post
received 24 positive ratings and zero negative.
"He's [Lieberman] a much lower form of life than a dog"  8 plus/
zero minus
"He's a snake in the grass." 4 plus/zero minus
"Don't insult dogs like that, Given a choice between my dog and
Lieberman, I'd gas him without thinking twice." 4 plus/3 minus

http://www.netscape.com/viewstory/2007/05/16/daily-kos-gas-jew-lieberman-like-a-dog/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnetwmd.com%2Fblog%2F2007%2F05%2F16%2F1682&frame=true

2)  "because as everybody knows, jews ONLY care about the welfare of
other jews"
http://www.dailykos.com/comments/2005/12/7/162152/209/100

3) "Israel is showing the entire world why the Iranian President was
absolutely right to suggest that Israel cease being a sovereign state
as is."
http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/?entry=21553&only

4) "Zionism was and remains a racist ideology."  A picture was
included in that post showing an Israeli cabinet minister merging
faces with Adolf Hitler, with a Star of David inside a skull.
http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/?entry=25034_The_Protocols_of_the_Daily_Kos&only

5) Another blog expressed sympathy and support for the Hamas takeover
of Gaza.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/6/15/153353/694
 Read More

When The Hell Did Dr. Strangelove Take Over Foreign Policy?

Is General Ripper complaining about the water again too? Or was that just Ron Stephens again?

Obama (Ill.) was responding to a question by the Associated Press about whether there was any circumstance in which he would be prepared or willing to use nuclear weapons in Afghanistan and Pakistan to defeat terrorism and bin Laden.

“There’s been no discussion of using nuclear weapons, and that’s not a hypothetical that I’m going to discuss,” Obama said. When asked whether his answer also applied to the possible use of tactical nuclear weapons, he said it did.

By the afternoon, Clinton (N.Y.) had responded with an implicit rebuke. “Presidents should be careful at all times in discussing the use and nonuse of nuclear weapons,” she said, adding that she would not answer hypothetical questions about the use of nuclear force.

Bullshit. Carter gave very simple hypothetical where the US would use nuclear weapons:

This new policy is the administration’s first instruction to the Pentagon addressing the increasingly worrisome concern that a “rogue state” might turn biological or chemical weapons against U.S. troops. A senior Clinton advisor claims that the policy conforms with earlier White House statements and longstanding policy on nuclear weapons, including support for bombers, land- based missiles, and missile submarines, and reliance on nuclear weapons as a mainstay of national security.

The directive increases the list of possible potential targets that could be attacked in China, in the unlikely event of nuclear war with that country,but abandons the concept of a possible plan for a protracted, so-called”winnable” nuclear war.

Worries about full-scale nuclear war have been replaced by fears about use of chemical or biological weapons: the directive discusses responses that the U.S should have available in far greater detail than earlier directives.

It “requires a wide range of nuclear retaliatory options, from a limited strike to a more general nuclear exchange.” said a senior national security official.

In 1978 President Carter pledged that the United States would not use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states, unless those states fought in concert with a nuclear power or defied the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. It was Iraq’s suspected violation of that treaty that allowed the Bush administration to threaten massive retaliation, if necessary, during the Gulf war.

And Bill Clinton reverified that policy. Hillary Clinton apparently is dangerously out of touch with US defense policy. And the press corps let her skate on it because the Obama is green story is too convenient. He got it right–and in fact, his quick mention of nukes not being considered was a bit of slip, but only to realign with actual US policy.

Now, on the one hand of those complaining about Barack’s stances in the last few days we have those that say he is crazy to attack a country harboring terrorists who have killed thousands of Americans, 3,000 of them in New York. On the other hand, it’s perfectly reasonable to nuke them. Sell crazy someplace else, we’re all stocked up here with Iraq.

The right war was against Al Qaeda and those who allow them to exist in their territories. The wrong war is Iraq. All Barack is doing is pointing out that this administration has been shamefully complicit in allowing Al Qaeda a safe haven and that US policy is and should continue to be that if you harbor those terrorists who attack Americans you are subject to attack. What’s the problem?.

It’s amazingly obtuse for those conservatives who claim that Al Qaeda in Iraq might get a sanctuary if we leave Iraq while the Sunnis are already fighting them, yet in Pakistan we see a negotiated policy with tribes that are protecting Al Qaeda to not bother them. Which is more dangerous?

On nuclear weapons, is the suggestion that we should utilize nukes to attack terrorist sites even if the government of that country are not actively promoting them? Are we going to nuke the tribal lands of Pakistan? Seriously? What are we going to nuke? Is there a glass shortage I’m unaware of? Because producing glass is about all it would do.

Samantha Powers writes a stirring defense of Obama’s points and it’s about time that someone takes on the DC mindset of how to run a foreign policy. I’ve been fighting this silly nonsense since the debates over how best to supply death squads in Central America in the 1980s. It’s about time someone pointed out the emperors of the foreign policy establishment are silly, silly people. It’s the same damned fearmongering that only gives our true enemies more power. You support El Salvadoran death squads, you strengthen the FMLN. You support the rape and torture of literacy workers in Nicaragua, you support the Sandinistas. You support monsters like rios Montt, you support the ability of actual communists to recruit people to their cause.

You support Dr. Strangelove like policy completely devoid of reality and debate when the use of nuclear weapons might be okay against a civilian population in the war on terror and you look like a bloodthirsty dumb ass that enables Al Qaeda recruiting. Same shit, different decade.

I bought into the silly arguments in the lead-up to the Iraq War, but the whining of the Washington elite over perceived inexperience of Obama whom has shown far better judgment than I or certainly them needs to end. I admitted I was stupid and wrong, you’d think the very serious people could.

Every once in a while I’ll see Obama slip and do something that makes me think he’s not as different as I perceive. He’s not perfect and I don’t expect it. That said, he is laying out an argument for foreign policy that is different and a break from the conventional wisdom of Washington that is far greater than any recent viable Presidential candidate.

Back from YKOS

I had a great time, though I had no where near enough time to meet and talk with a bunch of great candidates in Illinois.  I’ll fill everyone in on my experience later today, but there’s a significant disadvantage to having it in Chicago for me–I had virtually no time for the general conference.

Concerned Kirk, Not so Concerned About Equal Pay

Kirk votes against the act to essentially let employees sue later than 180 days after the differential starts–IOW, an employee might not know they are being paid less, but they have to sue within 6 months.  Seriously. Mr. Concerned moderated joined up with the GOP on this bill to end the ability of women to seek compensation when their employer breaks the law.  Concerned indeed.
Seals statement on the vote:

Seals Supports Ledbetter Fair Pay Act
Kirk Sides with Republicans against the Legislation

Wilmette- The United States House of Representatives passed the Ledbetter Fair Pay Act
yesterday 225-199, which reverses a Supreme Court decision limiting the time that
workers have to sue their employers for pay discrimination. The legislation, which
Representative Mark Kirk voted against, would allow employees to sue within 180 days
of their last affected paychecks.
Dan Seals stated, “It is bad enough that the Supreme Court has made it harder for women
to receive equal pay.  But when Mark Kirk and his allies tried to keep it that way, they
added insult to injury.  This needed to be fixed.”

The following is an Op Ed by Lilly Ledbetter which appeared in the Christian
Science Monitor on July 31, 2007

Equal work, unequal pay
By Lilly Ledbetter

Jacksonville, Ala. – Imagine you’ve worked for a company for 20 years. You’re a good
performer. But unbeknownst to you, the company puts workers over 50 on a lower salary
track. At 60, you learn that for the past 10 years, you have been earning less – tens of
thousands of dollars less – than colleagues doing exactly the same work.

Think you have grounds for a suit? Think again.

The Supreme Court on May 29 ruled 5-4 in Ledbetter (that’s me) v. Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co. that workers don’t have the right to sue for pay discrimination if they don’t
file a claim within 180 days after the decision is made to pay them less.

Now Congress has the opportunity to redress this injustice. The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay
Act will right this wrong. And it will have a profound impact on the working lives, and
livelihoods, of Americans across the country.

This effort to bolster workers’ right began in 1998 when I filed a sex discrimination suit
with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. I did so because I discovered that
the Goodyear plant in Gadsen, Ala., had been paying me significantly less than it paid my
male counterparts.

My salary started out comparable to the male supervisors, but over the years,
unbeknownst to me, my raises were always smaller. Eventually, I learned I was earning
$3,727 a month while the lowest paid of my male colleagues got $4,286 – for doing the
same job.

An Alabama jury awarded me more than $3 million after finding that Goodyear had
violated my rights under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. But a federal trial
judge cut that award to $360,000, then an appellate court reversed the jury’s decision and
so I didn’t even get the $360,000.

Then, in the strangest cut of all, the Supreme Court narrowly interpreted Title VII,
completely out of line with legal precedent and sided with Goodyear, arguing that I had
filed the complaint too late since Title VII requires employees to file within 180 days of
“the alleged unlawful employment practice.”

The majority ruling apparently ignored the fact that Goodyear was still underpaying me
when I filed the suit. Instead, calculating the time based on the date I received the first
discriminatory paycheck, years in the past, it ruled that I had missed the deadline for
redress.

In her dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, the Supreme Court’s only woman, took the
unusual step of reading her opinion aloud. She noted that the original jury heard
testimony that a supervisor who evaluated me in 1997 – an evaluation that led to denyin
me a pay raise – was “openly biased against women.” She wrote: “Toward the end of he
career … the plant manager told Ledbetter that the “plant did not need women, that
[women] didn’t help it, [and] caused problems.”

Substitute any category of work-er for “women” – seniors, Latinos, gays, disabled,
Muslims, etc. – and you can see the impact that results from the court gutting this key
civil rights protection.

While workers’ and civil rights groups are lauding the Ledbetter Act, the bill has met
opposition from the pro-business lobby. Neal Mellon from the US Chamber of
Commerce said that many business owners didn’t want to open themselves up to the
liability of employees filing suits “decades later.” My story shows that filing these suits
decades after the initial discriminatory paycheck is often unavoidable. Each paycheck I
received was an act of discrimination, regardless of the amount of time that passed.

How many workers know what their colleagues make? Do you? I certainly didn’t until
years after the fact. Indeed, one-third of private sector employers bar employees from
discussing their wages with co-workers.
Unless Congress rights this wrong, employers can legally get away with discrimination
so long as they can make it to day 181.

• Lilly Ledbetter, a volunteer and mother of two, has been married for 51 years.