Presented by: The Religious Freedom Coalition of the
SouthEast
Thank You for Whatever you can do.
If you are interested in
becoming Spiritually Enlightened...Click
HERE or on the Red Dragon Below.
You will be taken to a page which will reveal the gateway to
Enlightenment.
Click on the below
image and read the Quest - you will discover the secret
Grail of Immortality. Then click on and read the Way and finally The
Word. The three books are available in
Kindle
format. Go to Barnes and Noble for
Nook format.
Question: "Separation between Church and
State." Who coined the Phrase? Give up?
Answer: Thomas Jefferson - one of the
founding fathers of this great Nation and a creator of
the U.S. Constitution and the First Amendment to that
same Constitution. Thomas Jefferson, in 1802,
wrote a Letter to the Danbury Baptist Association,
referring to the First Amendment to the US Constitution.
In it he said:
To messers. Nehemiah
Dodge, Ephraim Robbins, & Stephen S. Nelson, a
committee of the Danbury Baptist association in the
state of Connecticut.
Gentlemen
The affectionate
sentiments of esteem and approbation which you are
so good as to express towards me, on behalf of the
Danbury Baptist association, give me the highest
satisfaction. my duties dictate a faithful and
zealous pursuit of the interests of my constituents,
& in proportion as they are persuaded of my fidelity
to those duties, the discharge of them becomes more
and more pleasing.
Believing with you
that religion is a matter which lies solely between
Man & his God, that he owes account to none other
for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate
powers of government reach actions only, & not
opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence
that act of the whole American people which declared
that their legislature
should "make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,"
thus building a wall of separation between Church &
State. Adhering to this
expression of the supreme will of the nation in
behalf of the rights of conscience, I shall see with
sincere satisfaction the progress of those
sentiments which tend to restore to man all his
natural rights, convinced he has no natural right in
opposition to his social duties.
I reciprocate your
kind prayers for the protection & blessing of the
common father and creator of man, and tender you for
yourselves & your religious association, assurances
of my high respect & esteem.
Th Jefferson
Jan 1, 1802
Original Letter is in the Library of Congress
We will leave it up to the reader to
determine whether Governor Scott Walker has made serious errors in
in judgment. Governor Walker
has supported a Conservative Far Right Christian position especially
when it comes to Church and State issues. But it is also
apparent from the data collected, that the first amendment is in
danger from his past and future actions as well as other
constitutional sections. He has supported deregulation of
banks and the SEC causing the current economic Depression. He
is trying to destroy all family planning programs thus increasing
unwanted pregnancies. He has supported taking away collective
Bargaining Rights from Teacher Unions. He wants to fire 10% of
all public teachers.
So, Scott Walker is Damned. That much is
clear. But where and how ? Dante neglected to specify
which circle of hell a soul is consigned to after betraying the
citizens of Wisconsin for the sake of Greed and politics.
Traitors are of course consigned to the innermost circles, ranging
from traitors to their kin, lords, country and benefactors. No
space appears to have been left for traitors to Education.
The thought struck us that hell is long overdue for a make-over.
The business of sin has changed substantially since Dante's day.
Not only are many of the sins archaic (it seems doubtful at this
point that Protestants are damned as schismatics) but as in the
Scott Walker case, Dante has failed to keep up with the times.
What is the punishment for TV evangelists Political Liars, Political
Thieves, or for that matter for those who try to destroy healthcare
and education.
Whatever Scott Walkers position, anyone who
betrays our children's healthcare in that calculating manner
deserves the fate that Dante would assign him: being trapped
in ice up to the neck in the deepest pit of the Inferno, where
treachery against basic human bonds is punished and where Satan
himself, once the brightest of the rebel angels, beats his bat's
wings.
Good Luck Scott, Satan is coming for you
anytime now - he remembers when you sold your soul to the Koch
Brothers and he's coming to collect!!!
"Scott Walker is one of the great
pulsars of our times: a collapsed gravity well of unblinking stare.
People innocently walking down the street, are drawn into his orbit,
helplessly drawn in by how utterly dense he is. They cannot
escape the completely impenetrable mass of darkness surrounding his
mind and become totally crushed & moronized by him."
By a Friend of Religious Freedom
I've been scratching my head about two things
lately. One, how can someone who isn't a multimillionaire
vote Republican? Every platform they support is contrary to the
average working class citizen's needs. Two, how can a man
profess to be a Christian when he is obviously is a hypocrite
and Liar? But when I listen to people like Scott Walker, Newt
Gingrich, John Boehner and John Ensign speak, it becomes clear
how these things exist and why they are glorified.
Intelligence is awareness of ignorance. Stupidity is
ignorance of ignorance. now it all makes sense.
"It is better to be silent
and be thought a fool than to speakand remove all doubt.
"Variously attributed to Lincoln, Elbert Hubbard, Mark
Twain, Benjamin Franklin and Socrates. Marine Corps Sgt.
Ron Geste - Iraq
EXTREMIST
CONSERVATIVE REPUBLICANS ARE THE ENEMY AND TRAITORS TO AMERICA by R.
Blackbird
Extremist Conservative Republicans are selfish, power hungry,
hateful of the poor, disloyal to the nation and its people,
dishonest, avaricious, scornful of the nation's history, the dignity
of its institutions, its standards of political morality, and its
vision of advancement for all the people. These Republicans love war
as long as they and theirs do not have to put on helmets and carry
guns into the fighting. They use lies to start wars that kill
hundreds of thousands of innocents and thousands of our own military
service people. They love massive war-time profits, unavailable to
their rich masters if war is absent.
Those Extremist
Conservative Republicans hate the rest of us, which they must, in
order to pass away from themselves and onto us, the financial
burdens and losses their crimes, schemes and thefts cause. They are
prolific, incessant, and destructive liars. They are blasphemers for
they insist that their hateful and destructive deeds are the work of
God. They are apostates for they gleefully attack the poor, the
immigrants, the old and the sick, of whom God has commanded all of
us to be mindful.
There is no reasoning with them, for all their logic is built on
false premises. There is no appealing to them for honor's sake for
they have lost all sense of shame and have no honor, there is no
appealing to them for the nation's sake for that it what they hate
the most.
Audio only and of course NSFW.
But Carlin has some opinions.
Scott Walker,
Wisconsin Governor, Eyed In Corruption Probe After FBI Raid On
Cynthia Archer's Home
Excerpt from an article on huffingtonpost.com
by Dinesh Ramde on
09/16/11
MILWAUKEE — Wisconsin
Gov. Scott Walker said Friday all he knows about FBI
agents seizing items from the home of one of his top
agency officials is what he's seen in the media and that
his office has not been told anything about the raid.
The first-term
governor said "it's hard to tell" whether he should be
concerned about Wednesday's raid on the home of Cynthia
Archer, who was his aide while Milwaukee County
executive and followed him to work in state government
when he was elected governor.
"We don't know what
exactly is involved," Walker said Friday when asked
about the raid following an unrelated event in
Milwaukee.
"Until we know,
obviously it's a concern but again, I don't know any
more details than what I've seen reported in the media
outlets around the state," he added.
The raid came amid
a secret Milwaukee County investigation that the
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, citing unnamed people
familiar with the case, has reported focuses on whether
county staffers in Walker's office did political work on
the taxpayer dime.
Walker said he has
not been in touch with Archer.
Archer told The
Associated Press on Thursday that she has done nothing
wrong and hasn't been told whether she is part of the
ongoing investigation. When asked what kinds of items
were taken from her home, she said law enforcement
officials had given her strict orders not to comment
further.
Archer's neighbor,
Dale Riechers, said FBI agents also came to his home and
took a hard drive from an old computer he bought from
Archer at a garage sale a few weeks ago.
The raid comes as a
reminder of long-simmering questions surrounding work by
Walker's county staffers, one of whom admitted last year
to anonymously posting pro-Walker comments on websites
while on county time. It also raises questions about how
deep the investigation will go and what implications it
could have for the rising Republican star.
Democratic
Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm has
declined to comment on the case, as has the FBI.
Walker said he
couldn't comment about whether he believed the
investigation was politically motivated.
"I don't know
because I don't have any information about what it's
based on," he said.
The Journal
Sentinel reported that people familiar with the county
investigation who spoke on condition of anonymity said
the investigation focuses on the activities of Archer
and Tom Nardelli, Walker's former county chief of staff.
Both worked three years in Walker's county executive
office then followed him to Madison after the November
election.
Nardelli quit his
state job in July and did not return messages seeking
comment Friday. Archer served as deputy Department of
Administration Secretary until she quit Aug. 19 and
started the Children and Family Services job on Aug. 20
before going on paid medical leave.
Walker has said
prosecutors have never contacted him in person but that
his campaign had previously been asked for emails and
information related to the staffer in his county office,
Darlene Wink, who posted pro-Walker messages on websites
on work time. Wink resigned in May 2010 after admitting
to posting the anonymous comments on websites and blogs.
06/16/2011
The
Koch Brothers and their dirty polluter allies are investing millions
to keep the Wisconsin State Senate?s anti-environment majority. They
invested heavily in Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker and other Tea
Party governors during the 2010 elections and there are not about to
see their investments fall short.
So far, Scott Walker
has delivered handsomely for dirty polluters. Walker?s
anti-environment attacks include:
Shutting down
Wisconsin?s $400 million wind industry
Rejecting
$800 million in mass transit funding (absolutely disgraceful
when gas is at $4 per gallon)
Providing
campaign donors special exemptions to build on Wisconsin?s
wetlands
If Scott Walker and the Koch Brothers
win this summer it will open the floodgates to unchecked dirty
polluter campaign money. If they win in Wisconsin, every sound
environmental policy in every state will be under threat. But just
as important, Wisconsin LCV is backing a strong slate of
pro-environment candidates who will fight for important
environmental protections and vital clean energy policies.
Excerpts from an article
posted by: Meredith Clark, and
AlterNet June 16, 2011
Wisconsin governor Scott Walker has taken a machete to the
state?s budget and has clearly relished every swipe he?s taken
to social programs and civil rights. The spirit of the enormous
protests that sprang to life in February over Walker?s proposal
to ban collective bargaining is stronger than ever. Thousands of
people descended upon the Capitol this week to protest both
Monday?s State Supreme Court decision to reinstate the
collective bargaining ban and the governor?s proposed two-year
budget, which includes hundreds of millions of dollars in cuts
and is currently moving through the legislature.
Everything from health care to the right to vote is under
attack, and with the next two-year budget currently under debate
and a slew of controversial bills at different legislative
stages, terrifying changes loom for 5.5 million Wisconsinites.
Here are seven ways Wisconsin Republicans are waging war against
the poor and working class people of Wisconsin:
1.
Access to Healthcare.
The proposed budget contains so many terrible changes to
BadgerCare, Wisconsin?s low-income health care program, that
they could almost have their own list. Among the worst is a
proposal to drop men from the program entirely, and a
proposal to require parental consent before minors can get
birth control pills. How are these two things connected? A
representative for Pro-Life Wisconsin argued that the 7,000
men currently on BadgerCare don?t need subsidized access to
STD testing and condoms because BadgerCare already provides
contraception to women.
If young, poor women are discouraged from getting birth
control because of parental consent laws and young, poor men
have no access to low-cost medical care, there will be more
sexually transmitted diseases and unplanned pregnancies.
It?s not a surprise that state-funded health care is at
risk, but it?s much more common to see women?s reproductive
care attacked than men?s.
2.Adults With
Disabilities. A
program to help adults with disabilities live independently
faces an enrollment freeze in the new budget, which will
leave nearly 17,000 men and women throughout the state
without vital resources over the next two years. Family Care
helps provide a wide range of services such as in-home care,
supported living communities, meal delivery, and job
training to help keep more than 31,000 people integrated
with their communities; waiting lists for private resources
like housing can be well over a decade. Cutting off
enrollment in Family Care is a message from Scott Walker to
men and women already disproportionately affected by poverty
and discrimination that in his eyes they?re less than human.
3.Housing
Discrimination:
Different cities have different housing needs, right? Not
according to a bill introduced by the State Senate. The
measure would prohibit local governments from making laws
related to landlord-tenant relationships. According to
Madison?s Capitol Times, the bill would void a law that
prevents landlords from discriminating against potential
tenants because they are on public assistance. The bill?s
lead author, Sen. Frank Lasee, has made no statements about
what low-income families are supposed to do for housing when
landlords are free to discriminate against them and the
state budget has no money to help the homeless.
4.Boadband Access.
Scott Walker isn?t just targeting the city-dwelling poor; a
budget provision would force the University of Wisconsin
System to return $37 million in grant money that was
intended to provide broadband access to rural communities.
It would also prohibit the UW System from funding WiscNet,
the cooperative that provides high-speed internet to most of
the state?s schools and libraries. WiscNet could shut down
without UW support, forcing towns that are already
struggling to deal the governor?s other budget cuts to get
service through private companies.
While it now looks like broadband access will be protected
in some form thanks to last minute maneuvering in the
Assembly, the budget amendment only postpones the planned
restrictions until the next budget. If the amendment
survives the Senate, it will be a temporary reprieve.
5.Child Labor Laws.
It makes sense that Wisconsin?s child labor laws would be
stronger than the federal government's; the state has a long
and proud history of protecting workers? rights. It?s also
no surprise that Walker and company are looking to repeal
those laws. The legislature is set to vote on a bill that
would roll back limits to the number of hours teenagers are
allowed to work. The bill would bring Wisconsin in line with
federal limits, but it?s hard to argue that allowing
employers to have 16- and 17-year-olds work an unlimited
number of hours up to seven days a week is really going to
help young people.
Without these limits, bill supporters like the Wisconsin
Grocers Association would be able to avoid all the headaches
that come with hiring older, experienced workers who might
demand perks like consistent hours or flexibility to care
for family members and staff stores with low-paid teenagers
who are likely to be unfamiliar with their workplace rights.
6.
The Voter ID law
that Scott Walker signed at the end of May is his evil
genius masterpiece. What does a wildly unpopular governor
facing a recall by thousands of highly motivated voters do?
Pass a law disenfranchising the people planning to vote
against you! Wisconsin used to have some of the most liberal
voting requirements in the nation: same-day registration, no
ID required. Starting in 2012, voters will have to present a
valid driver?s license or approved photo ID before being
allowed to vote.
According to a University of Milwaukee study, non-white
Wisconsin voters are far less likely to have a valid
driver?s license than white voters, and nearly a quarter of
voters older than 65 lack one. This means thousands of
elderly and men and women of color will be required to pay
for new identification cards before they will be allowed to
exercise their right to vote. There are four times as many
people of color living in poverty as there are white people.
Democratic State Senator Lena Taylor called it a poll tax,
and she?s right.
7.
Craft beer?
What do the thousands of people without broadband, health
care and voting rights care about craft beer? This is still
Wisconsin, after all, and everyone deserves access to the
good stuff. Why make it harder for small Wisconsin-based
breweries to sell their beer? Small breweries are facing new
obstacles to growth because of a turf war between two of the
world?s biggest beer companies. MillerCoors asked for help
defending against Anheuser-Busch?s attempts to do more
business in Wisconsin, and the legislature obliged. A
proposal in the budget would change state law to forbid
brewers from owning a wholesale distribution business, which
would slow Anheuser-Busch?s expansion, but it could also
make it harder for smaller local companies to increase their
sales around the state. Apparently Wisconsin is only open
for MillerCoors? business.
Opposition to Walker?s plans is strong enough that six
Republican State Senators will face recall elections later this
summer, and Democrats and progressive groups like Defend
Wisconsin are already planning for a recall drive against Walker
when he becomes eligible in January 2012. The Republican party?s
stranglehold on Wisconsin?s state government means that Walker?s
budget will almost surely pass, but the protests will not stop,
and there is hope. If Democrats can win just three of those
summer recall elections -- a totally plausible scenario -- they
would regain control of the Senate and could stop further damage
to the lives of Wisconsin?s citizens.
An excerpt from an article on
huffingtonpost.com by Laura Bassett posted on 6/2/2011
Greg Hartman was waiting
tables to support himself through college in the fall of 2010
when his hometown of Manipowoc, Wis., experienced an outbreak of
HIV and the hepatitis C virus. After finding out his best friend
had been infected with hepatitis, the uninsured 22-year-old
decided he needed to get checked out as well -- but the tests
were going to cost him more than $300 out of pocket.
"There's no way I could have
afforded it on my own," said Hartman, who brings in only $150 to
$200 a week from his restaurant job.
Hartman said he went to the
University of Wisconsin's campus health care center and applied
for BadgerCare -- the state's Medicaid-funded family planning
program, which reimburses low-income men and women for sexually
transmitted disease testing, birth control services, cancer
screenings and other preventative reproductive care. Through
BadgerCare, Hartman was able to afford to get tested for both
HIV and hepatitis C -- he tested positive for the latter.
"If I didn't qualify for
BadgerCare, I would have just said 'fuck it' and not gone into
the clinic in the first place," he told HuffPost. "I would never
have known I had hepatitis."
Although the BadgerCare
family planning program doesn?t cover Hartman's treatment, he
was able to afford two different HIV tests, a liver panel and
potentially life-saving hepatitis tests through the subsidized
program.
But the nearly 7,000 other
low-income Wisconsin men who use BadgerCare may soon be out of
luck. Scott Walker, the state's Republican governor, has
proposed eliminating men entirely from the program in his latest
budget bill. That move could cost Wisconsin all of its federal
family planning funds, policy experts warn.
Wisconsin's Joint Finance
Committee is currently finalizing the language of the bill. In
addition to cutting men from BadgerCare, it also includes
provisions that increase the age restrictions for BadgerCare
eligibility, require parental consent for all patients under 18
years old, reduce the eligibility limit down to 200 percent of
the federal poverty line and cut more than $1 million dollars in
state funds to Planned Parenthood.
The The governor's office
did not respond to repeated requests for comment, but Pro-Life
Wisconsin -- an anti-abortion advocacy group that officially
endorsed Walker -- told HuffPost it supports his move to cut men
from the BadgerCare family planning program. The group believes
that providing men with condoms, testing and sexual counseling
don't really save the state any money.
"The assumption is that, if
you get women on birth control, that would reduce
BadgerCare-funded births and save the state money," said Matt
Sande, legislative director for Pro-Life Wisconsin. "But how
much are men contributing to those purported cost savings? Less
than 7,000 men use the program, compared to 50,000 total
patients. You're looking at a small percentage of the overall
population, so it just seemed to a Republican legislator to be a
gratuitous add-on that is not saving the state anything."
Abortion rights advocates
in Wisconsin are convinced that Walker and the GOP lawmakers are
just looking for underhanded, politically acceptable ways to
change the BadgerCare program so significantly that the U.S.
government is forced to cut all federal family planning funding
to the state.
"Taking men out of the
program not only serves to remove critical health care for men,
but it puts us out of compliance with our agreement with the
federal government and puts the entire BadgerCare program at
risk," said Tanya Atkinson, the executive director of Planned
Parenthood Wisconsin. "It's a politically palatable way of
systematically dismantling Wisconsin's family planning program."
Wisconsin's Department of
Health Services confirmed that it cannot remove men from
Medicaid eligibility without applying for a waiver from the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which would then
have to determine whether the state can continue to receive
federal funding at all based on the new terms of its family
planning program.
BadgerCare currently serves
about 57,600 low-income Wisconsinites, according to Planned
Parenthood, and the state's health department estimates that it
prevented 11,064 unplanned pregnancies in 2008. Family planning
advocates argue that, if patients did not have access to
preventive care, Wisconsin would see an increase in unintended
pregnancies, the spread of STDs and a rise in undetected and
untreated cervical and breast cancer cases -- all of which would
then cost the state millions of dollars in future medical costs.
But Pro-Life Wisconsin's
Sande argues that BadgerCare services actually increase the rate
of unintended pregnancies by encouraging teens to have sex.
"Medicaid is a state
program providing free state-funded birth control and condoms to
15-, 16- and 17-year-olds, and that's a violation of parental
rights," he said. "We oppose the BadgerCare program for that
reason, and also because of the fact that government-funded
birth control increases pregnancies and promotes promiscuity --
it has the opposite of its intended effect."
While the language of the
budget bill has not been finalized, Planned Parenthood said it
anticipates that all the pro-life, anti-family-planning
provisions in the Wisconsin budget will pass in the State
Assembly.
Hartman, who is waiting for
his next free test to determine which strain of hepatitis C he
has, said if the state government kicks him out of BadgerCare,
he is going to start looking for a job in Sweden.
"I'm trying to leave the
country because I can't afford to live here," he said. "It's
like they don't care about the health of low-income men, or they
don't care if we die. I don't know what they are thinking, but
it feels like an attack."
In picking a new register
of deeds for Marinette County, Gov. Scott Walker picked a
Republican campaign worker with no experience with land records
and vital records.
He passed over three
candidates with detailed knowledge of how the office of the
register of deeds works, including two deputies who have worked
in the office for years.
The appointment comes after
the GOP governor faced criticism because the son of a campaign
supporter landed a top job at the state Department of Commerce.
Renee Miller started
as Marinette County register of deeds on Wednesday, after being
appointed to it earlier this month. Miller is a friend of Rep.
John Nygren (R-Marinette), has worked on his campaigns for five
years and is married to Nygren's campaign treasurer, Paul
Miller.
Every time I read something
about Scott Walker, the term "corrupt totalitarian regime" crawls
into my head. Read the whole article, where you'll discover that he
disqualified the top candidate because she declared bankruptcy. At
least, that's the excuse he gave.
Nygren was the only
person to recommend Miller for the job. By contrast, Chasensky had 16 letters of
recommendation, including ones from Rep. Jeff Mursau
(R-Crivitz), the Marinette County Board chairman, and local
bank, title and real estate officials.
Also recommending her
was Melanie Huempfner, the Republican register of deeds for 18
years who resigned midterm in January.
"I was just totally
shocked" at the appointment, Huempfner said. "I'm just so
disappointed this happened. I'm disappointed in the party. I'm
disappointed in the people involved."
Disappointed? Yeah, I suppose.
Suspicious was the word that came to my mind. Suspicious and
predictable.
In picking the new register of
deeds for Marinette County, Gov. Scott Walker picked a Republican
campaign worker with no experience with land records and vital records.
He passed over three candidates
with detailed knowledge of how the office of the register of deeds
works, including two deputies who have worked in the office for years.
The appointment comes after the GOP
governor faced criticism because the son of a campaign supporter landed
a top job at the state Department of Commerce.
Renee Miller started as Marinette
County register of deeds on Wednesday, after being appointed to it
earlier this month. Miller is a friend of Rep. John Nygren
(R-Marinette), has worked on his campaigns for five years and is married
to Nygren's campaign treasurer, Paul Miller.
The appointment has upset employees
in the register of deeds office who applied for the job. One of the
three employees in the office transferred to another county job, and
another said she was considering doing the same, which would leave
Miller without an experienced staff as she gets to know the office.
Documents released under the
state's open records law show Walker was first advised to appoint Chief
Deputy Register of Deeds Becky Chasensky to the job. But that plan
changed after aides to Walker learned Chasensky filed for bankruptcy in
2009, Walker spokesman Cullen Werwie said.
Walker then chose Miller, the No. 2
recommendation from his appointments director. Two other applicants had
extensive work with land records.
Before the appointment, a
background check was performed on Chasensky, but not Miller or those who
were appointed as registers of deeds in two other counties around the
same time. Werwie said Wednesday the governor was changing his policy
and would now perform background checks before making all appointments.
"We are confident Renee Miller will
honorably serve as the next Marinette County register of deeds," said a
statement from Werwie. "The process for this appointment was fair and
resulted in choosing a qualified candidate. We constantly revise our
appointment process to ensure qualified candidates are nominated."
Nygren was the only person to
recommend Miller for the job. By contrast, Chasensky had 16 letters of
recommendation, including ones from Rep. Jeff Mursau (R-Crivitz), the
Marinette County Board chairman, and local bank, title and real estate
officials.
Also recommending her was Melanie
Huempfner, the Republican register of deeds for 18 years who resigned
midterm in January.
"I was just totally shocked" at the
appointment, Huempfner said. "I'm just so disappointed this happened.
I'm disappointed in the party. I'm disappointed in the people involved."
Chasensky ran the office expertly
when Huempfner was away, Huempfner said.
Registers of deeds are elected, but
the governor appoints someone to those offices to fill vacancies. To
keep the job, Miller would have to win election in November 2012.
The register of deeds is in charge
of birth, death and marriage certificates, as well as land records that
include esoteric legal descriptions of properties.
Huempfner said she was concerned
about putting the office in the hands of someone unfamiliar with such
records.
"The job is of course ruled by the
statutes," Huempfner said. "You just can't walk into the office and
start running it."
Ten people applied for the job.
Besides Chasensky, two others have years of experience working with such
records - Tammy Kasal, a deputy register of deeds in Marinette County,
and Thomas Faller, a deputy register of deeds in nearby Menominee
County, Mich.
Miller has worked as a bank service
manager and has been active with the Jaycees, serving as state president
in 2010. She said she would be good as register of deeds because she is
a quick learner and has management experience.
"My plan is to go in and gather all
the information I can and learn everything possible as quickly as
possible," she said.
Nygren wrote to Walker aide Cindy
Polzin in December saying he had no problem with Chasensky getting the
job but added that he'd heard Chasensky "has some personal issues, and
she has never been involved in the party."
Chasensky said she got involved
with the Marinette County Republican Party in late 2010 and was elected
secretary in January.
Nygren said Walker's office earlier
had told him the job would go to Chasensky, and he was surprised when he
found out Miller got it.
"I think the worst thing is if
Renee is being made out to get a job she doesn't deserve," he said.
"It's not her fault that there might have been other circumstances with
one of the other candidates."
Records show Eric Esser, Walker's
director of appointments, recommended Chasensky for the job, with Miller
as an alternate.
But Werwie said officials decided
to perform a criminal-background check on Chasensky after she asked
whether her financial history would hurt her chances for the job. The
background check found no criminal history but did identify the
bankruptcy and other personal finance issues. Walker then decided to go
with Miller.
Chasensky said she did not believe
the bankruptcy should have precluded her from getting the job. She said
she believed if she wasn't getting the job, it should go to someone with
more experience than Miller.
"I'm not trying to be a sore
loser," she said. "I'm concerned about the citizens of Marinette County
having someone come in here who is not qualified."
Chasensky said she may transfer to
a job in another county office. Kasal did that on Tuesday.
"I just figured if the governor was
saying (Miller) was the most qualified over me, it was time for me to
move on," Kasal said.
If they transfer, that would leave
Miller with one deputy.
Walker appointed Miller on April 8,
at the height of the controversy over a top appointment at his
Department of Commerce.
Brian Deschane was given an
$81,500-a-year job in mid-February to oversee environmental and
regulatory matters and dozens of employees even though he had no college
degree, little management experience and two drunken-driving
convictions. Deschane is the son of Jerry Deschane, a lobbyist for the
Wisconsin Builders Association, which gave more than $121,000 to Walker
and his running-mate Rebecca Kleefisch.
Walker demoted Brian Deschane
shortly after the Journal Sentinel reported on his job, and Deschane
quickly resigned from state service.
MADISON, Wis. ? Seeking a way to
counter a growing protest movement, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker
cited his email, confidently declaring that most people writing
his office had urged him to eliminate nearly all union rights
for state workers.
But an Associated Press analysis of
the emails shows that, for close to a week, messages in Walker's
inbox were running roughly 2-to-1 against his plans. The tide
did not turn in his favor until shortly after desperate
Democrats fled the state to stop a vote they knew they would
lose.
The AP analyzed more than 26,000 emails sent to Walker
from the time he formally announced his plans until he first
mentioned the emails in public ? a span of seven days.
During that time, the overall tally ran 55 percent in
support, 44 percent against. In the weeks since, Walker has
continued to receive tens of thousands of emails on the issue.
The AP obtained the emails through a legal settlement with
Walker's office, the result of a lawsuit filed by the news
cooperative and the Isthmus, a weekly newspaper in Madison. The
news organizations sued after the governor's office did not
respond to requests for the emails filed under the state's open
records law.
Walker's comments about the emails came on the evening of
Feb. 17, as roughly 25,000 protesters packed into the Capitol's
ornate rotunda and filled its lawn outside. They could be heard
screaming outside the conference room where he met with
reporters in a news conference broadcast live by several cable
news networks.
"The more than 8,000 emails we got today, the majority are
telling us to stay firm, to stay strong, to stand with the
taxpayers," Walker said of the emails. "While the protesters
have every right to be heard, I'm going to make sure the
taxpayers of the state are heard and their voices are not
drowned out by those circling the Capitol."
But for several preceding days, the emails of support
Walker received had been vastly outnumbered by those opposed to
his plan.
On Feb. 11, the day Walker formally outlined his
"budget-repair bill" and his proposal to dramatically curb union
rights, the emails sent to his office ran more than 5-to-1
against his plan. Much of that opposition came from public
workers directly affected by the proposal, many of whom
responded to an email sent by Walker that offered a rationale
for his proposal.
The gap closed over the next five days, as protesters
arrived in large numbers at the Capitol and the
Republican-controlled Legislature set a course to pass the bill
in less than a week.
By the end of Feb. 16 ? the eve of a planned vote in the
state Senate and a day in which Madison schools were forced to
close due to high number of teacher and staff absences,
presumably to protest at the Capitol ? Walker had received more
than 12,000 emails in all, and they ran roughly 2-to-1 against
the bill.
Things changed dramatically the next day as the tide of
emails shifted in Walker's favor. By the time his press
conference began, the gap had closed significantly as emails of
support arrived by the hundreds every hour.
At 5 p.m., 15 minutes after he took the podium, the
governor's office had received nearly 5,900 emails of support
that day to roughly 1,400 against. Still, at that point, the
overall tally was split roughly down the middle.
Walker's spokesman, Cullen Werwie, told the AP last week
the governor's comments were based on information that he
provided.
Werwie said he counted all the emails received up to that
point and then took a "brief sampling of the ones we received to
get a rough idea about the proportion of those in support or
opposition."
Werwie said he alerted the governor when there was a
dramatic shift in support, which led Walker to talk about the
emails for the first time at the news conference.
Walker said he called several of the people who sent
emails, both in support and against, but the thousands of
messages that came in didn't influence his actions.
"We've never based support for the bill on how many emails
we got," Walker said.
As Walker spoke at the news conference, a massive spike of
emails in favor of his proposal poured into the governor's
inbox. At the end of the day, he had received more than 9,400
emails cheering him on ? three times the number of messages of
opposition. The final overall tally through the end of the day:
54 percent in support, 43 percent against.
The AP's analysis was based on an individual review of
each email, which was categorized as either pro, con, ambiguous
or unrelated. Some authors noted clearly they were from out of
state, while others said they were teachers and other Wisconsin
public employees who would be directly affected by Walker's
plans.
"Thanks for the 10% pay cut," wrote a Department of
Corrections employee. "I can't believe that I voted for you. Get
bent."
Many emails encouraged Walker to fire the teachers who
called in sick to attend protests at the Capitol, specifically
citing President Ronald Reagan's action against the nation's air
traffic controllers during a labor dispute in 1981. Walker later
compared the stand he was taking to Reagan's during a prank
phone call he thought was from billionaire GOP donor David Koch.
"That was the first crack in the Berlin Wall and led to
the fall of the Soviets," Walker said on the call taped by a New
York-based blogger.
The emails did not represent a scientific measure of
public opinion. Some on both sides were profane. Others were
deeply personal.
Jean Eichman, a special education teacher in Walworth
County, said in her note to Walker that his father, a minister,
had performed her wedding ceremony in 1978 and Walker himself
had once babysat for one of her children more than 20 years ago.
"It's hard to criticize people you know," Eichman said,
but the importance of the issue compelled her to email Walker.
An email typical of the supporters came from Gail
Whittier, an accountant in Racine who said she and her husband
have struggled during the recession. She wrote to Walker that
public employees should make sacrifices as well, and said in an
interview that he needed to know ? as the protesters got so much
attention ? there were people who supported him.
"I just wish that people would kind of sit back and look
at the facts," Whittier said in an interview. "I wish people
wouldn't just run on emotion."
In the weeks that followed, the protests grew at times to
include more than 75,000 people. Democrats in the state Assembly
launched a 61-hour filibuster before the bill passed in the
middle of the night. And Senate Republicans eventually used a
parliamentary maneuver to force a vote without the missing
Democrats present.
The law requires all public workers, except most police
and firefighters, to pay more for their benefits, equating to an
8 percent pay cut on average. It also limits most public
workers' collective union bargaining rights to wages only, and
caps potential wage increases to the rate of inflation. That
means they can no longer negotiate issues such as work
conditions or vacation time.
Walker has signed the law, but Democrats have challenged
it in court, arguing that Republicans violated the state's
open-meetings law in their efforts to push the legislation
through.
Excerpts from an
article published on huffingtonpost.com 02/23/11
WASHINGTON -- Wisconsin Gov.
Scott Walker's (R) phone conversation may have been with
a fake "David Koch,"
but it's had real consequences for his relationships
with lawmakers and his plan to push through a budget
repair bill. In fact, one Democratic lawmaker said that
if Walker's grand master plan hadn't been revealed in
the call, it might have even worked.
One of the most interesting parts of Walker's
conversation -- a prank call by a blogger from The
Buffalo Beast
pretending to be the billionaire
David Koch -- was when he revealed his plan
to hoodwink the state's Senate Democrats, who fled
Wisconsin in order to prevent their Republican
colleagues from reaching the quorum needed to pass
budget measures.
"I would be willing to sit down and talk to him,
the assembly Democrat leader, plus the other two
Republican leaders -- talk, not negotiate and listen to
what they have to say if they will in turn -- but I'll
only do it if all 14 of them will come back and sit down
in the state assembly...legally, we believe, once
they've gone into session, they don't physically have to
be there," said Walker on the call. "If they're actually
in session for that day, and they take a recess, the 19
Senate Republicans could then go into action and they'd
have quorum...so we're double checking that. If you
heard I was going to talk to them that's the only reason
why. We'd only do it if they came back to the capital
with all 14 of them."
In an interview with The Huffington Post, state
Sen. Robert Wirch (D) called the information revealed in
the conversation "devastating." "This governor cares
about right-wing think tanks and the Koch brothers more
than he cares what the people of the state think," he
said, pointing out that Walker has also
ignored Democrats when they've
reached out.
Wirch was also glad he found out about the
governor's plan to trick them into coming back,
admitting that it might have worked.
"Candidly, I think we probably would have given
the governor the benefit of the doubt, so I'm glad I
found out about his real agenda," said Wirch. "We
probably would have thought the governor would have had
a change of heart. So candidly, in politics --
especially with a new governor -- you try to go along
with him. We probably would have seen it as a
breakthrough instead of a trick."
Shortly after the news of the prank call began
circulating, Walker's spokesman confirmed the
authenticity of the conversation (on the governor's end,
at least), and said it "shows that the governor says the
same thing in private as he does
in public and the lengths that others will go
to disrupt the civil debate Wisconsin is having."
State Sen. Tim Cullen (D) disputed that
assessment.
"His public posture is that he's the adult working
hard in Madison on the people's budget," Cullen told The
Huffington Post. "But in fact, he's in Madison trying to
see if we committed a felony, what he can do to hide our
paychecks and then trick the minority leader to come to
the Capitol in the guise of a meeting in order to pass
the bill -- get him back there under false pretenses.
That's not what he's been saying in public."
Cullen said that because of the news today, he
thinks there is now a better chance that Democrats will
be able to convince some of their moderate Republican
colleagues to break with the governor and compromise. "I
think there is that possibility," he said. "I didn't
think there was until today. ... He [Walker] may have
done what we've been unable to accomplish. We'll see."
On Tuesday, state Sen. Jim Holperin (D) said the
Democratic caucus had basically given up on the governor
and turned its attention toward persuadable Republican
senators.
"I think this is
a governor who is a very
stubborn individual and maybe does not
understand fully the collateral consequences of his
stubbornness," said Holperin. "So we've decided to
refocus on the people we believe may be flexible to some
degree, and that's Senate Republicans. A lot of those
Senate Republicans have been around a long time, and I
think understand the gravity of eliminating rights from
people."
When asked whether Democrats are now less likely
to trust Walker, Wirch replied, "Yes. In a word, yes.
Excerpted from an article in huffingtonpost.com
on 2/23/2011
Here's something for your "can this possibly be
for real" file this morning. Over at the Buffalo Beast
-- the former print alt-weekly turned online newspaper
founded by onetime editor Matt Taibbi, typically best
known for its annual list of "The 50 Most Loathsome
Americans" -- there appear to be recordings of a phone
call between Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and current
editor Ian Murphy. Now, why on earth would Scott Walker
want to talk on the phone with the editor of an online
site in Buffalo? Well, he wouldn't.
But what if said editor pretended to be David Koch
of the famed Koch Brothers? Well,
that's a different story
altogether, apparently! And so Walker,
believing himself to be on the phone with his patron,
seems to have had a long conversation about busting
Wisconsin's unions.
Buffalo Beast Publisher Paul Fallon told The
Huffington Post that the audio is "absolutely legit."
That the call took place as described by the Beast
has been confirmed by Walker spokesman Cullen Werwie.
"Basically what happened was, yesterday morning
[Murphy] was watching television about this Wisconsin
stuff and he saw a report where he saw Walker say he
wasn't going to talk to anybody," Fallon said. "And he
said, 'I bet he would talk to somebody if he had enough
oomph behind him.'"
This all apparently went down Tuesday afternoon,
hours before Walker made his "fireside chat." It took
some doing: Murphy-as-Koch said he had several hoops to
jump through before he was granted access to Walker,
beginning with a receptionist, leading to the governor's
executive assistant, and finally ending up with his
chief of staff, Keith Gilkes.
From Murphy's account:
I politely said hello, not knowing how
friendly Gilkes and Koch may be. He was eager to
help. "I was really hoping to talk directly to
Scott," I said. He said that could be arranged and
that I should just leave my number. I explained to
Gilkes, "My goddamn maid, Maria, put my phone in the
washer. I'd have her deported, but she works for
next to nothing." Gilkes found this amusing. "I'm
calling from the VOID--with the VOID, or whatever
it's called. You know, the Snype!"
"Gotcha," Gilkes said. "Let me check the
schedule here...OK, there's an opening at 2 o'clock
Central Standard Time. Just call this same number
and we'll put you through."
I tell you what, if Walker really wants to pare
down the state budget, he can start by firing all of
these people!
At any rate, yesterday afternoon, Murphy says he
and Walker had their own chat. The other man on the tape
dutifully briefs "Koch" on the latest news, telling him
that one tactic they are exploring to bring the wayward
Senate Democrats back to the state is stopping the
direct deposit of their paychecks. "Koch" asks, "Now
you're not talking to any of these Democrat bastards,
are you?" The other man replies that there is one, state
Sen. Tim Cullen, who might be approachable, though he
cautions, "He's pretty reasonable, but he's not one of
us."
[For a longer collection of transcripted
highlights of this call,
click here.]
The conversation continues: the other man talks
about his plans to threaten workers with layoffs, about
sowing divisions between the public sector and private
sector unions, and the potential for their union busting
efforts to spread to other states. "This is our moment,"
he tells Murphy when Murphy describes him as "the first
domino."
They share some pleasantries about their favorite
MSNBC hosts, as well.
Murphy as Koch: "Well, not the liberal
bastards on MSNBC."
Walker: "Oh yeah,
but who watches that? I went on "Morning Joe" this
morning. I like it because I just like being
combative with those guys, but, uh. You know they're
off the deep end."
Murphy as Koch: "Joe--Joe's a good guy. He's
one of us."
Walker: "Yeah, he's all right. He was
fair to me."
[...]
Murphy as Koch: "Beautiful; beautiful."
Walker: "Oh, yeah.'
Murphy as Koch: "You gotta love that Mika
Brzezinski; she's a real piece of ass."
The call ends with Murphy-as-Koch promising, "once
you crush these bastards, I'll fly you out to Cali and
really show you a good time." "All right," the other man
says, "That would be outstanding."
In a statement, Walker spokesman Werwie says,
"Throughout this call the Governor maintained his
appreciation for and commitment to civil discourse. The
phone call shows that the governor says the same thing
in private as he does in public and the lengths that
others will go to disrupt the civil debate Wisconsin is
having."
On the matter of Walker saying the same things in
private as he does in public, I'm not so sure that's
true! As David Weigel points out,
it would appear that Walker revealed his "crisis-ending
ruse" to Murphy:
WALKER: You've got a few of the radical
ones -- unfortunately, one of them's the minority
leader -- but most of the rest of them are just
looking for a way to get out of this. They're scared
out of their minds. They don't know what it means.
There's a bunch of recalls up against them. They'd
really like to just get back up here and get it over
with. So the paycheck thing, some of the other
things threatening them, I think collectively
there's enough going on, and as long as they don't
think I'm going to cave, which again we have no
interest in. An interesting idea that was brought up
to me by my chief of staff, we won't do it until
tomorrow, is putting out an appeal to the Democratic
leader. I would be willing to sit down and talk to
him, the assembly Democrat leader, plus the other
two Republican leaders--talk, not negotiate and
listen to what they have to say if they will in
turn--but I'll only do it if all 14 of them will
come back and sit down in the state assembly. They
can recess it... the reason for that, we're
verifying it this afternoon, legally, we believe,
once they've gone into session, they don't
physically have to be there. If they're actually in
session for that day, and they take a recess, the 19
Senate Republicans could then go into action and
they'd have quorum because it's turned out that way.
So we're double checking that. If you heard I was
going to talk to them that's the only reason why.
We'd only do it if they came back to the capitol
with all 14 of them. My sense is, hell. I'll talk.
If they want to yell at me for an hour, I'm used to
that. I can deal with that. But I'm not negotiating.
Fallon, the Buffalo Beast's publisher, said the
most remarkable element of the prank was that "of all
things, he called using Skype," although the camera
function wasn't used.
Asked how Murphy got up the nerve to make the
call, Fallon said, "He's a pretty bold guy."
Was Scott Walker asleep at the wheel as chief executive of
Milwaukee County when it came to pension reform?
According to a 2007 article in
Milwaukee Magazine, the answer is an
emphatic yes: "Walker always seems to drag his feet when it comes to
cleaning up the county's pension system."
Non-Wisconsin readers should know that Walker was elected in the
backlash reaction to a pension scandal in the county in 2002, and has
been riding the pension reform issue ever since. But talking pension
reform and implementing it in a timely manner are two different things -
and Walker is a very good talker.
At the heart of the huge pension budgetary increase that propelled
Walker into county office as a reformer was a consulting firm, Mercer
Human Resources. Of course, it would be contrary to Walker's
privatization ideology to blame a "free market" firm for any extra costs
to the taxpayers, so this assessment from Milwaukee Magazine portends
some ominous developments for the people of Wisconsin:
It was nearly three years after he was elected that he
finally got around to planning a legal suit against the actuaries at
Mercer Human Resources Consulting for the advice they gave officials
who passed the pension plan. Compounding this delay, Walker
continued to use Mercer as fiscal adviser, which has left the county
in the position of arguing that an expert it kept rehiring is guilty
of flagrant malpractice.
But how he handled the pension debacle that got him into office
gets even more worrisome for taxpayers in the Badger State:
He declined to pursue legal action against the Reinhart
Boerner Van Deuren law firm for the advice it gave county officials
on the pension plan. The head of the firm, back when Walker made
this decision, was then state Republican chair Rick Graber, who had
donated campaign money to Walker.
And what of Walker's "outraged concern" about the abuse of
pensions:
He hired outside counsel, attorney Charles Stevens, to
advise the county on its legal options, and to draft waiver forms
for non-union employees to file a waiver of the extra pension
benefits. Stevens put in a grand total of 25 hours work on an issue
with huge financial implications, yet of apparently little interest
for Walker.
There you have it. Walker, a man in a hurry to get elected, but
whose word to taxpayers is about as credible as Nixon saying, "I am not
a crook." Not that Walker is a crook (as far as we know at this moment);
he just leaves the taxpayers to pick up the costly tab for his ambition
and ideological excess.
Excerpts from an article by Mark Karlin Editor,
BuzzFlash at
Truthout
Excerpts from
an article by Lisa Graves Thursday 03 March 2011
Lisa Graves
is Executive Director of the Center for Media and Democracy, which
includes PRWatch.org, SourceWatch.org, and BanksterUSA.org. She formerly
served as Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal
Policy at the U.S. Department of Justice, as Chief Counsel for
Nominations for the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, and as Deputy Chief
of the Article III Judges Division of the U.S. Courts.
Madison - A
gaggle of secretly funded DC groups has launched an expensive PR
blitz in Wisconsin in support of Scott Walker's controversial
efforts to undermine union rights, part of a national assault on
worker rights. A few employee unions have also begun running ads,
but their sources (employee dues) are not kept hidden from public
view. The total amount of anti-union spending in the works by groups
funded by corporations or corporate CEOs or their foundations is
unknown. What is known is that many such groups hide behind tax
provisions that allow them to keep the identities of their major
funders secret, insulating from public scrutiny the wealthy
financial interests they are fronting and that are largely
bankrolling their general operations.
The Center will
be intensifying its spotlight on these groups, many of which CMD has
investigated before. The flurry of ads, robo-calls, and astroturfing
unleashed this past week echo the expensive PR spin and ad campaigns
that have become ubiquitous near elections and that helped propel
Walker and other politicians advancing the same agenda into office
late last year. These new campaigns also signal the real beginning
of the 2012 presidential election efforts in many ways. Today's
report is the first in a series on these special interest
groups--who they are, what they are doing, and who the groups and
their staff are connected to.
A New PR
Blitz Does What Walker Wanted in Prank "Koch" Phone Call
The new outside
spending blitz comes on the heels of admissions by Walker that he
was eager to have the aid of oil billionaire David Koch in support
his actions, an eagerness some have contended reveals a comfort with
working with wealthy donors and funders of special interest groups
in activities to help achieve his objectives. Here is what Walker
asked for on the call with the man he thought was Mr. Koch--who
chairs "Americans for Prosperity" (AFP), which ran issue ads last
fall that buttressed themes from Walker's campaign, and whose
billion-dollar company recently opened its own lobby shop in
Madison. Here is what Walker said in response to the question of how
the billionaire could help:
So the
one thing in your question, the more groups
that are encouraging people not just to show up but
to call lawmakers and tell them to hang
firm with the governor, the better. Because the more
they get that assurance, the easier it is for them to vote yes.
The other thing is more long term, and that is after this, you
know the coming days and weeks and months ahead,
particularly in some of these more swing areas, a
lot of these guys are gonna need, they don't actually need ads
for them but they're going to need a message put out
reinforcing why this was a good thing to do for the economy and
a good thing to do for the state. So the extent that that
message is out over and over again is obviously a good thing.
(emphasis
added). So, Walker told someone he thought was Mr. Koch--who is one
of the bankrollers of special interest groups that ran ads or did
direct mailing or initiated robo-calling last fall--that he wanted
"more groups" getting calls in to legislators in the state and help
getting the message out "over and over" in "the coming days, weeks,
and months."
Seemingly
right on cue, a group that has previously refused to name its
donors, the self-designated "League of American Voters" (LAV), began
robo-calls and ads in Wisconsin late last week. LAV has been the
vehicle for other PR campaigns in support of top items on the GOP
agenda, including extending the Bush tax cuts which included big
breaks for the wealthiest Americans and opposing health insurance
reform. LAV is a DC-based group whose address is the exact same as
at least one other group that has received Koch-related funding but
claims to be merely a tenant.
The
Center for Media and Democracy's SourceWatch.org (a specialized
encyclopedia for citizens to help document the PR spin and funders
of special interest groups, corporations, and lobbyists) has a
profile on LAV. Here is an excerpt from that article:
The League of American Voters (LAV) is a
Washington, D.C.-based organization that runs ad campaigns
that reinforce key policy objectives of corporations and the
right-wing politicians they back in the U.S. LAV has
previously proclaimed that it is "Leading the Fight to Stop
the Obama Agenda."
Executive Summary
LAV
appears primarily to run PR campaigns to try to persuade the
public in favor of key priorities of corporations and
reactionary politicians they fund. It does not disclose its
funders. LAV shares the same street address and suite number
as "Americans for Tax Reform" (ATR), a group that has
received funding from the Charles R. Lambe Foundation, which
is one of a group of foundations that were created from the
family fortune of David and Charles Koch, the brothers who
lead Koch Industries. That group is called "Americans for
Tax Reform," and its leader Grover Norquist has said that
his goal is to reduce government "to the size where I can
drag it into the bathroom and drown it in a bathtub."
Shortly after LAV was created and housed in ATR's suite, it
told Huffington Post it had no affiliation with
ATR, and its space there is "a little smaller than a
cubicle." Political operative Dick Morris helped create LAV
and write its ads and, in turn, LAV promotes Morris' books
and published screeds and Morris promotes LAV on
Newsmax.com.
LAV is
involved in using ad campaigns and polling techniques
against employee rights, for extending the Bush tax cuts,
and against health insurance reforms.
Its
website contains a banner of photos of 26 unidentified
people of all ages and races, giving an impression of a wide
and diverse membership. There is no independent evidence of
the organization's real membership size. In late 2009, the
Huffington Post reported that LAV's "executive
director, its only employee, declined to identify its
founders or donors but claims that in less than two months
of existence it has built a membership of 16,000 and raised
about $1.7 million in donations." Which CEOs, corporations,
foundations, or other major donors provided the bulk of that
funding and in what amounts has not been disclosed. (LAV's
annual tax filing from 2009 is not available on Guidestar.)
Who Staffs LAV?
As of
February 2011, LAV listed one employee and three other
people who are either identified as consultants or who work
for or with other organizations in the right-wing
constellation.
LAV's Executive Director is Bob Adams; he worked in the
George W. Bush Administration (and his wife was given an
ambassadorship to Switzerland). Adams previously served as a
senior leader in the "public affairs" office of the
American Legislative Exchange Council,
which is funded by contributions from corporations and CEOs
and which has received Koch-related funding. A recent
detailed
report,
"ALEC: Ghostwriting the Law for Corporate America," notes
that over 80% of ALEC's funding comes from corporate
contributions. ALEC churns out proposed legislation and
indoctrination desired by global corporations and other big
companies. It is critical of public employees and the right
to collectively bargaining, and it supports destroying
unions through so-called "right to work" laws. Such
provisions provide a blueprint for the kind of controversial
legislation Walker introduced in Wisconsin, and that other
new governors introduced elsewhere, that has provoked
wide-spread public outrage. Adams worked for ALEC for about
a decade.
Adams,
who served in the Navy and also started a party rental
company--called "Great Inflates"-- used rhetoric in his
failed 2008 campaign for the Republican nomination to be
West Virginia's governor that is similar to Scott Walker's.
For example, Adams asserted that under the Democratic
governor the state was not really "open for business" and
that "We need to remove the government shackles that
restrain the free market engine from running at full speed."
He did not win the primary and did not win his attempt to
become a state senator serving West Virginia's 16th
district. He previously ran and lost races to be state
treasurer in 2004, and a state delegate in 2006.
He
began his political career during the "Republican
Revolution" of 1994, serving as a Press Assistant to
Congressman J.C. Watts, Jr., (R-Okla.). He also served as
the Communications Director of Pat Buchanan's campaign in
the 2000 presidential primaries. During the 2000 election
and Bush v. Gore recount, he worked on the
communications team of the Republican National Committee for
Jim Nicholson. He has also worked as a lobbyist for the
"Alliance for Marriage Foundation," was on the board of the
local anti-choice group, Birthright, and worked with a U.S.
Chamber of Commerce affilliate.
LAV's Consultants and
Affiliates
Among
the three other people beyond Adams listed as "staff" of LAV
is Alexandra Preate, who is described as "an independent
business and public relations consultant"--she is New York
PR rep whose firm, CapitalHQ, is connected to the health
insurance industry. As noted by Ben Protess and Lagan
Sebert, Preate's website links to "The Galen Institute,"
which describes itself as "a research organization focusing
on free-market health care reform." The Galen Institute is a
"partner" organization of the Charles G. Koch Charitable
Foundation.
Another
person listed on LAV's site is Phil Brennan, who is
identified elsewhere as a writer for NewsMax.com. Brennan
lives in Florida and, among other things, previously wrote
for the reactionary National Review
and also worked on Barry Goldwater and Richard Nixon's
campaigns. Brennan has likened President Obama to
Hitler in Newsmax.com columns.
The
third person listed is octogenarian Barry Farber, a well
known conservative talk show host. LAV has also
previously been affiliated with Morton Pomerantz who wrote a
piece in Newsmax that blamed President Obama for the murder
of a guard at the Holocaust Museum by a white supremacist.
Pomerantz absurdly claimed that the president was "creating
a climate of hate" against the Jews. He also asserted that
if his "views are not vigorously opposed they will help
create a danger as great as that posed by the Nazis to the
Jewish people."
LAV and Dick Morris
Through
Brennan and through political strategist Dick Morris, LAV
has strong connections to the for-profit entity Newsmax.com,
an outlet initiated in 1998 with money from right-wing
funder Richard Mellon Scaife (who also funds ALEC) and which
Forbes has called the "great right hope" of the GOP. As
Terry Krepel has documented, LAV "makes regular use of
Newsmax's mailing list to send out email missives with
subject lines like"Obama Wants Nuclear Option to Ram Radical
Agenda Through" and "Urgent News: League Ads Are STOPPING
Obamacare" and "Obamacare Armageddon Has Arrived."
More
writes frequently for Newsmax and appears regularly on FOX.
It is not clear how much income Morris derives from these
roles or from the sale of his books.
LAV hs
admitted that at least some of the time, Morris has
"actually crafted our ads and national campaign," referring
to LAV ads and campaign against the health insurance reform
bill. Terry Krepel of ConWebWatch has documented the
overlap between Morris' columns promoting LAV and LAV's
efforts. Via his NewsMax column, Morris has stated
that, as of late 2009, he has "no financial relationship"
and he makes "no money" from LAV. The group does
provide copies of whatever book Morris is promoting to its
donors as gifts.
Morris has weighed into the Walker controversy from his
perch as a commentator on FOX. He criticized an RNC ad
supporting Walker because it highlighted Obama, saying the
ad should have focused on the unions more--like LAV's ad.
As Media Matters has noted,
Morris frequently makes fundraising appeals for LAV
generally. And, along with Morris' pitch for LAV on FOX, he
has penned a fundraising pitch to get people to help pay for
TV ads in Wisconsin.
Morris
and his wife also have a new book called "Revolt! How the
Governors Are Changing American Politics . . .
Permanently." And, just last week, Morris announced
the creation of "The Dick Morris Poll." His first poll
is on the situation in Wisconsin. The poll seems similar
what is known as a "push poll," in which voters are asked
leading questions that reinforce other messages in the
state. In this case, the poll focused on asking voters
if they supported public workers paying more for their
benefits (but there is no indication the poll takers
revealed that the unions had already conceded those
increases and Walker had refused to accept their acceptance
of his demands on the increased costs).
He did
note that a majority of those polled oppose Walker's effort
to limit collective bargaining rights. However, his
poll also tested the rhetoric of "giving schools flexibility
to modify tenure, pay teachers based on merit, discharge bad
teachers and promote good ones," and these are the very
themes echoed in LAV's radio ads--as discussed below.
Besides advertising, polling on the topics a group wants to
know more about is often one of the biggest single expenses
a non-profit group can undertake. So, one of the
questions raised by LAV's close relationship with this very
experienced pollster is how the benefit of such information
is accounted for. The Morris poll results were
publicly announced on February 24th and LAV's robo-calls and
radio ads appear to have begun a short time later.
Who Funds LAV?
As of a
little over a year ago, LAV had nearly $2 million in the
bank, but there is no public reporting on how much LAV
received in the 2010 election year or how much it spent and
where. There is also no published information about which
CEOs or corporations or foundations, if any, are the major
funders of LAV's activities. It is true that LAV
actively seeks out online donations, primarily through
Newsmax and Morris' appeals. It is not clear who Adams
confers with in determining what issues LAV will run ads on
and where, besides Dick Morris who says he is not paid by
LAV but has other income sources. Who pays for Morris' time
is unclear.
It is
clear that LAV is spending significant money creating and
running ads in coordination with Morris. At least one of its
ads was produced by Rick Wilson, as HuffPo
discovered. Wilson is the guy who created the widely
condemned 2002 GOP ad that smeared Georgia Senator Max
Cleland, a Purple Heart recipient who lost both of his legs
and an arm in Vietnam, and that attempted to link him to
Osama bin Laden in the first election after the attacks of
September 11th.
LAV's Robo-Calls and Ads to
Support the Controversial Walker Plan to Undermine Unions
On February 25, 2011, LAV launched a robo-call campaign to
aid Wisconsin Governor
Scott Walker,
a divisive politician whose election was supported by the
Koch Industries' PAC and aided by a multi-million dollar ad
campaign and other spending by special interest groups, some
of which received general funding from David Koch and other
billionaires and millionaires. In a prank call from someone
impersonating Mr. Koch, Walker asked for the billionaire's
help getting his message out and heard "over and over" in
key districts in the state in his efforts to break the
rights of public employees to unionize.
The
same week this controversy broke, groups like "Americans for
Prosperity," which David Koch chairs and financially
supports, also launched a $325,000 ad campaign in Wisconsin
to support Walker. Speaking for the Kochs, the executive
vice president of Koch Industries, Richard Fink, told the
National Review Online that the Kochs "will not step
back at all" from the funding of "free-enterprise"
initiatives. According to the NRO, "Americans for
Prosperity, a political-advocacy group founded by Fink, the
Koch brothers, and Jay Humphries, has been actively involved
in Madison and supportive of Walker's efforts. 'We are not
directing that,' Fink says. 'They are staff-driven. They are
out there trying to bring fiscal responsibility back to
Wisconsin. Do we support them? Yes, we do, but we are not
involved with their day-to-day activities. They are out
there doing their best trying to make a difference. It is
good to have them on the ground, in the battle, trying to
help out.'"
Along
with the LAV robo-calls, groups like the Republican
Governors Association--which received a million dollar check
from David Koch to support its national electoral efforts
and which spent $5 million in the Wisconsin governor's race
in 2010 to get Walker elected--also launched PR campaigns to
support Walker's union-busting effort.
LAV Ads and Robo-Calls Omit
Key Fact that Unions Agreed to the Pension Changes
Here is
the text of LAV's radio ad:
"The
people of Wisconsin are fed up. High taxes, high
unemployment and public employee unions getting more than
their fair share with their high salaries and lavish health
and pension benefits. Governor Scott Walker wants to stop
this. Today Wisconsin faces a massive $3.6 billion deficit.
Public employees should share in the sacrifices we all have
to make. So say no to the big unions and no to President
Obama's meddling in Wisconsin's business. We urge you to
call Governor Walker and your legislator. Tell them to stand
firm and to stop the public employee unions with their
outrageous demands because we can't afford them anymore.
Call Governor Walker and your legislator today and let your
voice be heard."
Thus,
LAV's ad adopts Walker's budget claims, echoes his rhetoric
about shared "sacrifice" and fairnes, and it also has the
audacity to assert that public employees have "lavish"
benefits. And, as Walker requested of the Koch impersonator,
the ad asks listeners to support the Governor and call their
legislator.
Here is
a paraphrase of the script of the LAV robo-calls, according
to one of the recipients:
This is
an important Legislative alert. The League of American
Voters strongly supports the limits on public employee
unions Gov. Walker is proposing. Wisconsin and other states
need to balance budgets and cut spending. It is only fair to
ask workers to pay more for pension and health insurance; we
all have to make sacrifices. If Gov. Walker can limit
bargaining to just wages and benefits, we can be free to
implement key reforms in our schools. We need to reform
teacher tenure, replace seniority-based pay with merit pay
so we can reward good teachers and hold the others
accountable, and we need to let parents send their children
to school of their choice. If we need layoffs we have to be
sure that our best teachers can be protected and principals
can make layoffs on the basis of merit, not seniority. The
union agreement expressly prohibits these key reforms. So
Gov. Walker's plan will make it possible to put our children
first.
Again,
like LAV's ad, this script repeats the "sacrifice" and
"fairness" talking points (which have likely been the
subject of focus group analysis by LAV or its allies), and
it begins making the case for the layoffs that Walker
announced this week.
These
scripts also reinforce the PR spin that the protests are
about pensions and they mislead by omission by not
acknowledging whatsoever that the public employee unions
have agreed to the pension and insurance increases Walker
demanded. They do not acknowledge that Walker has refused to
accept their concession of increased financial costs to
these working Americans, unless they agree to provisions
that would undermine their right to organize. The scripts
also omit information about the true state of the Wisconsin
public employee pensions. As Zach Carter has documented,
Wisconsin's public pensions are among the nation's
healthiest, and the Pew Center for the States found
Wisconsin to be a "national leader in managing its long-term
liabilities for both pension and retiree health care."
There
is no public reporting on how much LAV is spending on this
campaign to support union-busting or whose financial
contributions are underwriting the bulk of these substantial
expenses.
LAV Fights Union Employee
Rights and Benefits But Demands Tax Cuts for the Wealthiest
Americans
In
sharp contrast to LAV's assertion that public workers
generally get "lavish" benefits and are paid unduly "high"
salaries, LAV spent most of the past six months demanding
that the Bush tax cuts, which provide enormous financial
benefits for the wealthiest people in the U.S., be
extended--via its website, renewthetaxcuts.com.
A few
months before the mid-term elections, LAV joined the PR
campaign, spearheaded by GOP politicians, to extend the
controversial "temporary" Bush tax cuts. LAV's ads featured
Fred Thompson and urged people to sign a petition opposing
the expiration of the Bush tax cuts enacted in 2001 and
2003. Instead of calling the expiring tax cuts expiring tax
cuts, however, the ads attempted to inspire fear by calling
it "an automatic tax increase that will begin on Jan. 1,
2011." LAV's ads asserted that letting the temporary Bush
tax cuts expire "could have catastrophic consequences for
the economy." A web-based appeal asked people to sign a
petition and concluded by asking people to help "support the
League financially so that it can share this important
message with America via TV commercials."
In
2010, LAV's executive director, Adams, claimed that letting
the Bush tax cuts expire would be "cataclysmic to our
nation's broken economy." In contrast to this hyperbole, CBS
News reported that under the Obama administration's plan,
the few married Americans making more than $373,650 a year
would see their marginal tax rate increase from 35 to 39.6
percent, according to the Tax Policy Center, and the one
percent making between $209,251 and $373,650 would see an
increase from 33 to 36 percent. Meanwhile, Fox's talking
heads repeated the GOP talking point that failing to extend
the Bush tax cuts would add $678 billion to the federal
deficit within ten years. (After the 2010 mid-term
elections, Congress voted to extend the tax cuts at the
demand of the incoming majority in the United States House
of Representatives.)
Adding
additional fuel to the concern raised by the Huffington Post
that LAV was little more than a well-financed one-person
operation, the LAV press release announcing the tax cut ads
did not direct reporters to call LAV but referred them to a
PR firm. That firm, Shirley & Banister Public Affairs, is a
PR shop well connected to GOP and is known in the PR
industry for "bucking the latest feel-good lobbying trend,
bipartisanship."
There
is no public reporting on how much LAV spent on its PR
effort to help extend the Bush tax cuts or which person or
entities provided the general support or specific funding to
cover the bulk of the costs associated with it.
(SourceWatch.org has more in its report on LAV, regarding
its role in fighting health insurance reform and includes
related articles.)
LAV
& Newsmax & Political Strategies
All
this begs the question of who is providing the general
financial support for LAV to pay for ads and robo-calls like
those being run in Wisconsin in aid of Walker's union
busting. It also raises questions about the relationship
between a for-profit company and its writers and a
not-for-profit entity. CMD has seen a growing trend of
non-profit groups working closely with people paid by other
entities, which raises significant concerns. The people of
Wisconsin and other Americans who are being targeted by ads
paid for by groups like LAV ought to know who is really
footing the bill and who is helping to call the shots. LAV
is undoubtedly a "league" of some number of ordinary
American voters but it also seems to be closely in league
with some not so ordinary voters, like political operative
Morris. With a political strategist like Morris at the nexus
of three strands of activities--for-profit, not-for-profit,
and partisan activities--LAV's big budget in pushing for
policy victories prized by the GOP is certainly worthy of
closer examination.
Who Is the League of American Voters? is the first in a series
raising questions about who is funding the PR campaign to aid
Walker's union-busting agenda and the
national strategy to roll back worker rights and protections.
For
information on all individuals and organizations listed in
this website, or the name of a contact person in your area
that can give you further information on the Religious
Freedom Coalition of the Southeast, or the First Amendment
Coalition, contact us at rfcse@hotmail.com
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