The Non-Response

Fran Eaton doesn’t respond instead thinking that the most important criticism is that of her spelling of the word busing.

She considers the rest non-substantive which is bizarre to say the least. Let’s start with she cites an Obama critic as evidence that Obama is being compared to all sorts of religious figures, but she never answers the point in that:

As a word of advice, when writing a column, you might try and actually find someone who says Obama is like Jesus, or a savior, or a deity, a possessor of infinite potential, a king, the second coming, or the almighty. Instead, we get treated to another guy who said something without really pointing out an example of someone actually making such comparisons.

You might get the infinite potential bit in some column, but it would be fascinating to find anyone who seriously argues Obama is like Jesus, or a savior, or a deity, a king, the second coming, or the almighty. Sirota is being sarcastic and critical of Obama so it might be a good idea to actually point to people making such comparisons.

Fran is trying to make two points in the list of twelve controversial, but it isn’t clear why they are controversial:

I’m especially interested in learning more about how one adheres to the “Black Work Ethic” and disavows the pursuit of “Middleclassness.”

Of course, I pointed out that middleclassness is the notion that African-Americans who achieve economic mobility often adopt the notion they are superior to those who do not. It doesn’t suggest one should not strive, it means when one is successful one should not judge others who do not succeed. How do I know this? I have actually read source that reference it before. One in particular is a quick google away. It’s the fifth response to the words Obama and Middleclassness in google and would have been the third before Eaton’s postings.

Of course, the list is not a serious list since affirmative action shouldn’t trouble anyone. Enlarging the applicant pool is generally a good thing for all. Racial quotas are illegal and always have been other than in instances to redress specific instances of discrimination. Reparations aren’t mentioned by the list. Busing was used often to move black kids out of white schools yet was only controversial to people like Fran when it was used to reduce geographic isolation. And there aren’t many government programs dependent upon skin color–notice she didn’t mention any, but I’m sure she has tons of examples for us.

Taken in full, it is a rather uncontroversial 12 statements with the only one confusing to most whites being the issue of middleclassness which isn’t about not being middle class, but about looking down at those who aren’t. The Protestant Work Ethic doesn’t quite translate in black churches the same way. Go figure.

As with most religious statements, the political ramifications are quite unclear. While I’d bet most of Trinity’s members are a liberal lot, there is plenty in that value system any conservative could feel argues for less government. This sort of out of context claptrap is only going to increase as this campaign continues

Fran isn’t really interested in learning about or thinking or she might have also read the bit on Trinity’s web site about Black Work Ethic

Adherence to the Black Work Ethic
“It is becoming harder to find qualified people to work in Chicago” Whether this is true
or not, it represents one of the many reasons given by businesses and industries for
deserting the Chicago area. We must realize that a location with good facilities, adequate
transportation and reputation for producing skilled workers will attract industry. We are
in competition with other cities, states, and nations for jobs. High productivity must be a
goal of the Black workforce.

and for the disavowal of middleclassness:

Disavowal of the Pursuit of “Middleclassness”
Classic methodology on control of captives teaches that captors must keep the captive
ignorant educationally, but trained sufficiently well to serve the system. Also, the captors
must be able to identify the “talented tenth” of those subjugated, especially those who
show promise of providing the kind of leadership that might threaten the captor’s control.

Black churches have a history in abolition and resistance to discrimination, hence the language is steeped in the language of those two movements even if most conservatives seem to have only heard one line ever–that being MLK’s one line in a long speech.

The values in Trinity’s statement are non-controversial to both Christians and to Americans.

But don’t let that stop Eaton from trying to draw dark inferences about them.

So to wrap this up for Fran, who is a little slow:

1) where are all these references to Obama as God or other religious figure?

2) You misrepresented policy domains around black politics including affirmative action, quotas, desegregation and busing, reparations, and some amorphous group of government policies.

3) Where is anything in the twelve points requiring support of reparations? Quotas? Busing?

4) They certainly would call for affirmative action which is the point of the idea in middleclassness–African-Americans in the church have a responsibility to address the economic advancement of other African-Americans less well off for them. Affirmative action is just that, taking action to ensure traditionally underrepresented minorities are actually given a chance to compete for jobs. Instead of simply recruiting at magnet schools, recruitment should be done at all schools for colleges is a very basic example.

5) Desegregation is hardly controversial—is anyone suggesting white and black students should be in separate systems? Busing is a rather amorphous term that a good proponent of vouchers such as Eaton might want to think about if she wants a working system of vouchers. It helps to have a plan of how students get to schools they are choosing with vouchers.

6) In terms of a whole host of government programs dependent upon the color of one’s skin, what programs is she even talking about?

Anyone reading the first post of mine would have noticed these objections to Eaton, but she concentrated on a joke about busing. Typical.

Science: It’s all relative

Not to be outdone by the National Park Service, we must remember that the Department of Health and Human Services has an appointee who is in charge of family planning, but opposed to contraception. He also refers to premarital sex as modern germ warfare and thinks that it leads to people not being able to form bonds in later relationships despite no evidence involving humans.

Planned Parenthood is trying to get his guy removed and is announcing a new initiative:

In paid print and online advertisements, PPFA has demanded that Keroack be replaced by a qualified health care professional to oversee Title X. In addition, PPFA has outlined priorities for the 110th Congress that focus on promoting commonsense health care policies like the protection and funding of Title X, expanded access to prevention services through Medicaid, and protecting teens through medically accurate sex education. The January 4, 2007, edition of Roll Call will include PPFA’s print advertisement, and online ads will run on thehill.com and blogs including dailykos.com, thecarpetbaggerreport.com, pandagon.net, and feministing.com.

Planned Parenthood supporters will wear buttons to events on Capitol Hill during the week of January 2, 2007, calling for “Health Care Facts, Not Keroack.” The campaign is aimed at raising awareness among new and returning members of Congress and their staff to the threats to women’s health posed by Keroack’s appointment, and the urgent need for prevention-first legislation that protects women’s health.

“The Bush administration’s approach to health care has given this Congress the perfect example of what not to do. Americans want commonsense policies that put women and families first,” added Richards. “Keroack should be replaced immediately with a respected reproductive health expert who recognizes family planning is good medicine.”

Of course, some would compare premarital sex to slavery.

I’m not really sure why America has been plagued with this level of idiocy, but the karmic payback is a bitch.

Unit 4: The next battle over creationism

John Bambenek has decided to run for the Unit 4 School Board.

That’s the same Bambenek who argued for the inclusion of intelligent design in the University of Illinois’ curriculum.

It’s hard to tell whether his support for intelligent design in the curriculum or his stunning dishonesty about evolutionary theory is more disqualifying.

I would imagine Narciblog, Running from the Thought Police, and It’s Matt’s World, will be covering the trainwreck in some detail.

Geysers of Old Faithful: Nostrils of Satan

The US NPS refuses to comment on the age of the Grand Canyon.

HOW OLD IS THE GRAND CANYON? PARK SERVICE WON’T SAY — Orders to Cater to Creationists Makes National Park Agnostic on Geology

Washington, DC — Grand Canyon National Park is not permitted to give an official estimate of the geologic age of its principal feature, due to pressure from Bush administration appointees. Despite promising a prompt review of its approval for a book claiming the Grand Canyon was created by Noah’s flood rather than by geologic forces, more than three years later no review has ever been done and the book remains on sale at the park, according to documents released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).

“In order to avoid offending religious fundamentalists, our National Park Service is under orders to suspend its belief in geology,” stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch. “It is disconcerting that the official position of a national park as to the geologic age of the Grand Canyon is ‘no comment.’”

In a letter released today, PEER urged the new Director of the National Park Service (NPS), Mary Bomar, to end the stalling tactics, remove the book from sale at the park and allow park interpretive rangers to honestly answer questions from the public about the geologic age of the Grand Canyon. PEER is also asking Director Bomar to approve a pamphlet, suppressed since 2002 by Bush appointees, providing guidance for rangers and other interpretive staff in making distinctions between science and religion when speaking to park visitors about geologic issues.

In August 2003, Park Superintendent Joe Alston attempted to block the sale at park bookstores of Grand Canyon: A Different View by Tom Vail, a book claiming the Canyon developed on a biblical rather than an evolutionary time scale. NPS Headquarters, however, intervened and overruled Alston. To quiet the resulting furor, NPS Chief of Communications David Barna told reporters and members of Congress that there would be a high-level policy review of the issue.

According to a recent NPS response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by PEER, no such review was ever requested, let alone conducted or completed.

Park officials have defended the decision to approve the sale of Grand Canyon: A Different View, claiming that park bookstores are like libraries, where the broadest range of views are displayed. In fact, however, both law and park policies make it clear that the park bookstores are more like schoolrooms rather than libraries. As such, materials are only to reflect the highest quality science and are supposed to closely support approved interpretive themes. Moreover, unlike a library the approval process is very selective. Records released to PEER show that during 2003, Grand Canyon officials rejected 22 books and other products for bookstore placement while approving only one new sale item — the creationist book.

Ironically, in 2005, two years after the Grand Canyon creationist controversy erupted, NPS approved a new directive on “Interpretation and Education (Director’s Order #6) which reinforces the posture that materials on the “history of the Earth must be based on the best scientific evidence available, as found in scholarly sources that have stood the test of scientific peer review and criticism [and] Interpretive and educational programs must refrain from appearing to endorse religious beliefs explaining natural processes.”

“As one park geologist said, this is equivalent of Yellowstone National Park selling a book entitled Geysers of Old Faithful: Nostrils of Satan,” Ruch added, pointing to the fact that previous NPS leadership ignored strong protests from both its own scientists and leading geological societies against the agency approval of the creationist book. “We sincerely hope that the new Director of the Park Service now has the autonomy to do her job.”

Oh, let me count the ways this administration denies reality.

Who Says Only Romney is Getting Flack for His Church?

Fran Eaton does it with Obama.

First, she takes Sirota out of context suggesting that Sirota is one who worships Obama

Political commentators compare Obama to Jesus and breathlessly proclaim him as a savior, a deity, a possessor of infinite potential, someone special, a king, the second coming of the almighty and, well, the almighty himself.

Internet blogger David Sirota wrote recently that Obama is “all the Founding Fathers, the Greek philosophers, Mother Theresa, the pope and every biblical prophet rolled into one man who can personally connect with every living organism in the universe at the very same moment.”

As a word of advice, when writing a column, you might try and actually find someone who says Obama is like Jesus, or a savior, or a deity, a possessor of infinite potential, a king, the second coming, or the almighty. Instead, we get treated to another guy who said something without really pointing out an example of someone actually making such comparisons.

Most eye-opening is a 12-point doctrine to which Trinity members are required to adhere.

Called the “black value system,” the church’s doctrine calls on its members to be committed to God, to self-discipline and self-respect and to pursue education and excellence — all honorable, mainstream community standards.

But Trinity is unique among UCC churches nationwide in its black value system which requires commitment to the black community and family, adherence to the “black work ethic” and disavowal of the pursuit of “middleclassness.” It also states members must make a pledge to gift the black community with members’ learned skills and personal resources. They also must pledge allegiance to “all black leadership who espouse and embrace the black value system.”

I’ve never heard Barack Obama talk about this black value system. It’s not specifically mentioned in his book. Perhaps the doctrine is not meant for public discussion. But because he holds his religious beliefs so dear, Trinity’s black value system may be key to understanding a little more just how Obama looks at the world and what kind of president he would be.

Here are the 12 precepts and covenental statements:

We are a congregation which is Unashamedly Black and Unapologetically Christian… Our roots in the Black religious experience and tradition are deep, lasting and permanent. We are an African people, and remain “true to our native land,” the mother continent, the cradle of civilization. God has superintended our pilgrimage through the days of slavery, the days of segregation, and the long night of racism. It is God who gives us the strength and courage to continuously address injustice as a people, and as a congregation. We constantly affirm our trust in God through cultural expression of a Black worship service and ministries which address the Black Community.

Trinity United Church of Christ adopted the Black Value System written by the Manford Byrd Recognition Committee chaired by Vallmer Jordan in 1981. We believe in the following 12 precepts and covenantal statements. These Black Ethics must be taught and exemplified in homes, churches, nurseries and schools, wherever Blacks are gathered. They must reflect on the following concepts:

1. Commitment to God
2. Commitment to the Black Community
3. Commitment to the Black Family
4. Dedication to the Pursuit of Education
5. Dedication to the Pursuit of Excellence
6. Adherence to the Black Work Ethic
7. Commitment to Self-Discipline and Self-Respect
8. Disavowal of the Pursuit of “Middleclassness”
9. Pledge to make the fruits of all developing and acquired skills available to the Black Community
10. Pledge to Allocate Regularly, a Portion of Personal Resources for Strengthening and Supporting Black Institutions
11. Pledge allegiance to all Black leadership who espouse and embrace the Black Value System
12. Personal commitment to embracement of the Black Value System.

back to Eaton:

But at the same time Obama is a longtime, active participant in a church that prides itself in its African heritage and color of skin. It is troubling that his church’s doctrine may demand he promote affirmative action, racial quotas, reparations, bussing and more government programs dependent upon skin color.

If so, it would be disheartening to the progress we’ve made as a society, and our attempts to fulfill Dr. Martin Luther King’s dream that some day our children will be judged not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.

Hmmmm…looking at the 12 values it doesn’t require any of the suggestions by Eaton though bussing is a term for kissing in England, not desegregation in America.

Of course, the list is not a serious list since affirmative action shouldn’t trouble anyone. Enlarging the applicant pool is generally a good thing for all. Racial quotas are illegal and always have been other than in instances to redress specific instances of discrimination. Reparations aren’t mentioned by the list. Busing was used often to move black kids out of white schools yet was only controversial to people like Fran when it was used to reduce geographic isolation. And there aren’t many government programs dependent upon skin color–notice she didn’t mention any, but I’m sure she has tons of examples for us.

Taken in full, it is a rather uncontroversial 12 statements with the only one confusing to most whites being the issue of middleclassness which isn’t about not being middle class, but about looking down at those who aren’t. The Protestant Work Ethic doesn’t quite translate in black churches the same way. Go figure.

As with most religious statements, the political ramifications are quite unclear. While I’d bet most of Trinity’s members are a liberal lot, there is plenty in that value system any conservative could feel argues for less government. This sort of out of context claptrap is only going to increase as this campaign continues.

The Real Impact of SEIU in the Aldermanic Races

Isn’t for 2007, it’s for 2011.

Simpson said finding issues that resonate with citizens is critical to mounting a successful campaign. Responsible government and accountability are two issues being raised in many wards.

Identifying those key issues is also a critical factor in winning the support of community groups and organizations that can help mobilize support.

The Service Employees International Union is one organization trying to flex its muscle in February. It has targeted incumbents in several wards -including Ald. Emma Mitts (37th) for opposition to the Big Box ordinance – and plans to place its support behind candidates considered more supportive of key union issues. SEIU officials are still in the process of determining which candidates will receive their attention.

The SEIU is also recruiting “block captains” from its 78,000 Chicago members to canvass their neighborhoods for the elections, the first time the union has done so.

While SEIU spokeswoman Marianne McMullen said the growth of the SEIU, rather than the political climate in Chicago, drove the decision to take more of an active role in the city elections.

The reality for SEIU is that since there will be no serious challenger to Daley, figuring out how to capitalize on the setbacks the machine has faced and will continue to face with further federal investigation leaves open a huge hole in the political infrastructure of the city.

Even while the machine has been falling apart through changing demographics and a relatively mobile population, the machine was the easiest way to put people on the ground in an election and having the support or at least the lack of organized resistance was the best way to get elected. As it becomes harder for patronage workers to be the foot soldiers of campaigns, SEIU can create an infrastructure to compete and a voter list that can identify those likely to support SEIU and generally progressive candidates.

It also fits in with the types of people SEIU represents in service workers who tend not to be neighborhood oriented. Additionally, the unionization of home child care workers provides an important network in communities with hard to reach people–single working parents.

SEIU will likely do well this cycle, but assuming Daley hangs it up for 2011, whomever is going to run for Mayor will certainly look to SEIU for support as the best organized entity to contact voters and organize a ground campaign. It’ll also be critical in statewide primary campaigns for Democrats. SEIU was a strong supporter of the Governor and whomever looks to replace him will be seeing a strong organization unit that help deliver victories to both Blagojevich and Obama and which has only strengthened itself since.

(h/t Rich for the article)

When Poor Assumptions Underly Your Old and New Strategery

The New York Times piece on the White House’s management of Iraq is pretty telling.

The original plan, championed by Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the top commander in Baghdad, and backed by Donald H. Rumsfeld, then the defense secretary, called for turning over responsibility for security to the Iraqis, shrinking the number of American bases and beginning the gradual withdrawal of American troops. But the plan collided with Iraq’s ferocious unraveling, which took most of Mr. Bush’s war council by surprise.

Reading this one can only get the understanding that no one understood that Iraqis didn’t necessarily view a strong central government as a good thing. Iraqis standing up often meant they stood up to defend their neighborhood or religious sect, not a country to which most had been repressed under.

The assumption that this was the goal of enough Iraqis to overcome separatist tendencies was simply the dumbest assumption made in this war. Turning over responsibility to Iraqis generically never was designed to deal with tensions between sects and ethnic groups in the country. In fact, it had the very real possibility of aggravating such tensions in the military was not evenly controlled.

So what happens then? You create a militia and the monopoly on coercion and violence any government must have is lost. It’s not like Hobbes and Locke didn’t point these problems out for us. Since they were from Old Europe, maybe their works weren’t important.

And it is here that we see the problems with escalation. And let’s not kid ourselves about ‘surges.’ What happens when a temporary surge doesn’t work? It turns into a permanent surge–escalation. More to the point, what do we do with more troops?

You increase clear and hold operations. And what does that mean? It means taking on the Sadr militia which is the military wing of one part of the coalition holding the government together. This isn’t going to produce a functioning nation, it’s going to further insert the US in the middle of a civil war that was only averted previously through mass killing and repression.

Making matters worse is the Hussein execution. How one could bungle this further from the US perspective is hard to imagine other than to simply throw him into the streets of Sadr City. Taking a pretty much universally hated man even amongst Baathists and allowing the execution to look like sectarian payback just complicates the entire situation with Sunnis feeling threatened–as probably the Shiites wanted them to.

The assumption before was the Iraqis wanted to be one nation and that assumption underlies the escalation, but the evidence suggests that no such urge exists amongst Iraqis.

The Times article does nothing to address exactly what an increase in troops will accomplish nor does it ask the administration to argue what is wrong with Casey’s logic regarding not wanting more troops. And hence, we’ll move on to increasing troops because while Democrats oppose it along with some in the GOP, no one will tie the President’s hands.

The problem is it’s time. He’s lost the majority of Americans with only his hard core base supporting his effort in Iraq. He’s losing moderate Republicans and even some conservatives. And it should:

The speech, the BBC has been told, involves increasing troop numbers.

The exact mission of the extra troops in Iraq is still under discussion, according to officials, but it is likely to focus on providing security rather than training Iraqi forces.

If there is any clearer message of the decision being political and not strategic or tactical I don’t know what it is. While I understand the Democrats shyness at pulling funding, the election was an intervention that didn’t work. The Baker-Hamilton report was a second intervention and it didn’t work. It’s time for a third intervention and one that will work. An intervention that requires the President begin to pullout is the only way to start the process.

It’s not ideal because security situations require a fair amount of discretion, but discretion is a tool this President uses to avoid being held accountable.

A Bit of Overreaching

Trib covers an internship in Obama’s office with some tie to Rezko

Rezko recommended a 20-year-old student from Glenview for one of the coveted summer internships in Obama’s Capitol Hill office.

The student got the job and spent five weeks in Washington, answering Obama’s front office phone and logging constituent mail. The student was paid an $804 stipend, about $160 per week, for a position valued mostly for the experience it provides.

Now, that otherwise unremarkable internship–one of nearly 100 Obama’s office awarded in 2005–raises new questions for the senator, who says he has never done any favors for Rezko.

n October, Rezko was indicted on influence-peddling charges and for alleged business fraud.

Rezko, a real-estate and fast-food entrepreneur, has emerged as a central figure in a series of state government corruption scandals. He began cultivating a friendship with Obama around 1990, becoming a key fundraiser.

As the internship drew to a close in August 2005, the intern’s father was cited in court records as an unnamed, unindicted co-conspirator in an alleged state government bribery scheme linked to Rezko. A news report about the court records identified him by name.

Obama’s spokesman said Obama would not comment on the internship because he is spending the holidays with his family, but spokesman Robert Gibbs said the internship in no way contradicts Obama’s previous statements that he has never done any favors for Rezko, given jobs to Rezko associates or been involved with Rezko “in any government activities of any sort.”

Gibbs said: “I believe it’s obvious that a [five-week] internship is not something that can benefit Mr. Rezko or his businesses.”

The math is funny:

1 of 98 interns from Illinois

In 2005, Obama had 98 interns from Illinois out of about 350 applicants, Gibbs said.

Meaning applicants had a one in four chance of being selected. That’s competitive, but hardly overwhelming odds for a internship in one office.

I guess reporting the internship is legit, but putting it into a context of this being an issue by itself is a bit silly. A 20 year old kid getting a low paying internship–essentially one with some spending money attached to it while the family would have to pay for living expenses and such isn’t exactly a smoking gun. At worst, it shows that people who understand the system of getting recommendations and such have a better shot at internships. That’s not news.