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Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Out of the Sea

The summer solstice (known as “Litha” in Neopaganism) will occur on 21 June 2014 at 6:51 a.m. EDT. In Australia, however, the summer solstice occurs on or about 21 December.



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That first week in Australia Stella decided that her new home was very much like her previous home in Texas. The weather was the same–boiling hot. The people were similar–tall, tanned, laid back, and friendly, although they didn’t wear cowboy boots; and everyone had two things on their minds: football, which they called “footy,” and the lack of rain.

It was her second week in Australia that brought home the difference between the two quite forcibly. Unaware that her pentacle, which she wore on a chain around her neck, had somehow slipped out to the front of her tee-shirt, she realized one morning while shopping that this tangible evidence of her religion upset no one.

When she stopped by the local market to look over the vegetables, the woman tending the stall hailed her. “Good morning, and merry meet!  Haven’t seen you before. Are you new here?”

“Yes,” Stella said. “My husband is Australian, so when he retired we came back here to live.”

“Like it, do you? Or can’t you tell yet?”

“I like it very much, so far,” Stella said truthfully. Indeed she did, although some things were going to take getting used to: the fact that the government discouraged the use of clothes dryers, for example. Sighing deeply, she’d bought what Harry referred to as “clothes pegs” and hung her laundry outside to dry. Then she found she rather liked doing it: never one to take herself seriously, she enjoyed the sight of the kookaburras in the blue gum tree laughing at her struggle with the sheets.

On the other hand it was a bit unnerving having to remember to take a clean plastic bucket into the shower-the “four-minute shower”- to catch the runoff so she could water her plants, but no doubt it would become second nature before long.

At the vegetable stall after Stella bought two string bags’ worth of vegetables, the vendor invited her to a coven meeting at her house in two weeks’ time.

“Come meet the others, you’ll like them,” Sea Spirit, the vendor, promised.

In Texas, not only had Stella owned a Book of Shadows, her entire coven had operated in the shadows. They met only at nightfall, only in houses in which the other family members were out for the evening, and only indoors. It bothered them all to have to meet indoors, the Craft of the Wise being attuned to the Earth and Her creation, but they could not risk being seen by others. And even at night, the outdoors was generally too hot and insect-filled to permit focusing on a ritual.

Harry was delighted to show Stella the wonders of her new country. They drove along the Great Ocean Road to spend a couple of nights at Apollo Bay, then drove a bit farther to see the Apostles, those limestone pillars standing like lonely sentinels in the sea that crashed around them. They flew to Sydney, eight hundred miles away, and rented a car to explore the Three Sisters natural rock formations in the Blue Mountains.

“I’m told there are Witches in the hills around Adelaide,” Harry teased one day.

“Let’s go!” Stella said enthusiastically.

Adelaide in the spring was a revelation to Stella, who had never before seen trees covered with bright blue blossoms. “Those are jacarandas,” Harry said.

When they toured the country round Adelaide Stella experienced for the first time the sweet, wild smell of an Australian spring. “The wattle’s in bloom,” Harry said, pointing to some shrubs at the side of the road.

“Those little yellow star-shaped flowers?”

“Yes, that’s wattle.”

They explored the vineyards and olive groves in the hills but didn’t meet any Witches. “Oh, well, I suppose it’s hard to meet them when you’re just visiting a place,” Stella said. “At least I know a few at home in Melbourne.”

Life in Australia with Harry soon settled down into a pleasing new pattern. Two days a week she worked as a massage therapist in Melbourne. Stella quickly learned to refer to the location of her new workplace as “the city center” rather than “downtown.” She teamed up with a chiropractor, using one of the rooms in his office to see private clients, and paid him a percentage of her fees. Three clients each day were as much as she could cope with, but then, she didn’t really need the money to live on: her earnings went into their travel fund.

When he wasn’t attending footy matches to cheer on the Melbourne Demons, Harry pottered about the house and garden. He volunteered to build Stella a small temple in the back garden, which he gradually converted from a tidy but boring suburban lawn bordered by conventional flowerbeds into a much more pleasing wilderness of rosemary and lavender, roses, ornamental grasses, and grapefruit trees. The temple, big enough to hold two people at a time, held Stella’s collections of Goddess statues and her two altars.

As time went on Stella realized she was altogether happy in her new country. After a few years it no longer seemed strange to go into a shop and hear a salesperson say, “You right, love?” when she began looking around at the merchandise, or to hear “No worries,” when she paid for the articles she’d bought. She grew so used to the absence of tipping when she visited a hairdresser or when she and Harry ate out that when they went back to Texas for a six-week visit she experienced culture shock.



_______________________



On a winter’s day in early June when Stella was making Lamingtons for Harry’s tea she heard knocks on the door. Harry had driven into the city center to do some shopping just an hour ago, so he couldn’t be home already. Anyway, he wouldn’t have knocked as he naturally possessed a key. Thankful that she had just rolled the last of the little chocolate-iced cakes in desiccated coconut, she quickly rinsed her hands, dried them on her apron, and went to the door.

She opened it to find two police officers standing on the front step. “Mrs. Mannering?” the older one asked.

Suddenly terrified, she nodded. Had something happened to Harry?

“May we come in? I am Officer Rhodes and this is Officer Higgins.”

She held the door open, searching their faces. Both men looked somber.

“Mrs. Mannering, we’re sorry to inform you that there has been an accident. Your husband-”

“Where is he? Where’s Harry? Is he all right?”

Officer Higgins looked at his feet while Rhodes sighed and said, “I’m sorry, but there was a collision on the Tullamarine Freeway. Your husband, unfortunately, is deceased.”

“No! NO! Not Harry!”

Suddenly overcome, Stella sank onto the sofa and burst into tears. Rhodes proffered a handkerchief and jerked his head at Higgins, who saluted and said, “I’ll make a cup of tea.”

It was forty-five minutes before Stella regained control of herself. Higgins looked as if he wanted to pat her on the shoulder but confined himself to offering her the box of tissues from an end table in the lounge.

“Mrs. Mannering, after you finish your tea, could we ask you to come with us to identify…”

“Yes,” Stella said dully, looking at the floor. She felt like a robot, responding automatically when someone said something or did something. Surely this was all a mistake. Harry couldn’t really be dead. Probably he was somewhere else and soon he’d walk, laughing, through the front door saying, “What’s a pretty little thing like you doing in a place like this?” just as he always did when he’d been away for an hour or two.

Numbly, she allowed herself to be helped into the police car. She could feel nothing, think of nothing except the awful possibility that her husband was dead, their ten years of happiness together suddenly at an end.

The visit to the mortuary banished her doubts. Yes, there was Harry, still and white, eyes closed, with a bloodied forehead where his face had hit the steering wheel. Officer Rhodes had said it was a head-on collision, with both drivers killed. An investigation was pending as to the cause of the accident.

Whatever or whoever had caused the accident, Stella thought with fierce conviction, it hadn’t been Harry. He’d always been an expert driver and the car was new–or rather, the car had been new. The officers told her little was left of it now.

At home again she called Harry’s ex-wife and daughter who lived in the Richmond area of Melbourne. She rang all her coven sisters, two of whom immediately rushed to the house to help her; two more promised to stop by later in the day.

That day and the next two weeks brought tears when she felt her loss, laughter when she recounted the good times with Harry to her coven sisters, and seemingly endless matters to see to, from the nature and timing of the memorial service to the legal and financial details of Harry’s life and death.

Harry had said he wanted to be cremated, so that was arranged. For the memorial service she created an altar that displayed his cherished possessions. He had, of course, supported the Melbourne Demons football team when in Melbourne, so she set out his Demons scarf, his Dallas Cowboys coffee mug, his woodworking tools and a bowl he’d carved. A portrait of Harry as a young man was flanked by slender tapers on each side; cone-shaped incense burned in a holder, and Harry’s wedding ring reposed on top of a copy of their marriage certificate.

After the initial period of never-ending activity and the stream of constant telephone calls, e-mails, and condolence visits, Stella found herself alone once more, only to be swept away by a tidal wave of grief into a sea of sorrow.

Strange, really; she hadn’t had time to cry a lot during those first couple of weeks After–that was how she thought of time now, Before and After–there had been so much to do, so many people to see. But now, doing the simplest things brought on the floods of tears; hanging out the washing, doing the shopping, going back to work.

She lost interest in food, so after a few weeks her clothes hung on her. One day, as she welcomed a client, who also happened to be in her coven, into the massage room, the coven sister exclaimed, “I can see Harry standing behind you!”

But when Stella breathlessly turned around, she could see nothing.

“He’s still with you,” Arianna, her coven sister, said comfortingly. “You may not be able to see him but he’s watching over you.”

Even the feeling that he was somehow near did not comfort her very much. She wanted him-warm, teasing, inexpressibly dear. She wanted him alive, back with her. What was there to live for? Harry’s daughter by his first marriage was grown up and living her own life in Melbourne; Stella’s children were also grown up and fully launched on their careers on the other side of the world.

“Come back to Texas,” they urged during Stella’s weekly Skype session with them. “We’re here, you know people here, you can live with us until you get a place of your own.”

But Stella didn’t want to go back. In Australia, possibly the most secular country in the world, she felt free to be herself. She liked the climate, she had her house and her friends and a pretty good life. If only Harry were still here to share it, she mourned. And then she would burst into tears all over again.

“Stella, dear, you must go on. Harry’s waiting for you in the Summerland, but the Goddess still has work for you here on earth.” Aurora, the high priestess of Seven Wands Coven, patted Stella’s hand. She was visiting one Saturday morning, and the two were drinking steaming mugs of tea in Stella’s kitchen.

Stella sighed, tried to smile, and failed. “I know you’re right, but somehow nothing seems important any more.”

Silence reigned for a few moments, after which Aurora said, “You know, there’s something the coven has been talking about. We want to establish a collective. We’ve got a couple of members looking into the legal and financial aspects.”

“A collective? To do what?”

“Well, we’d conduct seminars, workshops, and retreats for our members and for anyone who wants to be initiated. We’ve thought of doing Pagan choral music and selling CDs of it. And we could have online discussion groups for people who want to learn about the Craft of the Wise.”

“It sounds like a worthwhile project,” Stella said, aware of a faint glimmer of interest. “Have you thought of a name for the collective?”

Aurora grinned. “Indeed we have. We want to call it ‘Pointy Hats.'”

Stella smiled, a real smile this time. “I like that. We’d need a Web site, of course, who’s going to do that? And is there going to be a Ritual Adviser?”

Aurora  broke in. “We’ve been hoping you’d consent to take the role of Ritual Adviser. We could really use some formalized rituals to be written down as a jumping-off point. People always like to add their own little touches to rituals, but a lot of people, initiates especially, haven’t a clue how to begin.”

“Yes, I’ll help,” Stella said.

So in the weeks that followed Stella met with her coven sisters not only at the usual sabbats and esbats, but also for many planning sessions. Somewhat to her surprise the days sped by, turning into weeks, the weeks into months. Although never free of grief, she found she could “put on a show” as she thought of it, in public, and give vent to tears only when alone.

Spring settled delightfully over the country, with trees and shrubs bursting into jubilant blossom. Even after almost four years in Australia, Stella still felt bemused by the fact that Down Under, Samhain brought warmth and flowers rather than early darkness and falling leaves. The solemn rituals of the season, with their emphasis on loved ones who had passed into the Otherworld during the past year, reawakened the grief that seemed never to go away. It’s like a scab, she thought. I thought I was healing but beneath the scab the agony of loss is as strong as ever.

Early in December Aurora stopped by Stella’s house to bring her some lavender scones she’d just made.

“Stella, as Ritual Adviser, we’d like you to take the role of High Priestess for the initiation. You may remember that our coven granted the request of two aspirants for initiation at Summer Solstice.”

“What an honor! Thanks, Aurora,” Stella said. For a moment the intense pain of loss rushed back as she remembered anew that Harry was not here to rejoice with her that she was to serve as High Priestess. Joy mixed with sadness as she set about gathering the ritual tools and garments she would need.

The place chosen for the combined initiation and Litha ritual was Fairy Point, a deserted beach that contained caves and tide pools, but the coven had to wait until the tide receded before they could approach it. At six o’clock in the evening of Midsummer Day, the coven members and initiates made their way to the beach carrying hampers of food and drink, bags of ritual tools, and baskets of wood and kindling for the Litha fire.

While Stella cast the circle inside the cave and Aurora set up the altar on a stone ledge, outside the rest of the coven drew a large pentagram in the sand, chanting as they did so.





We all come from the Goddess

And to Her we shall return

Like a drop of rain,

Flowing to the ocean.




The two aspirants removed their clothes and stepped into a tide pool, the water of which was still warm from the sun. Laughing, they finished their bath by splashing each other with water. Then the two stepped inside the pentagram on the sand while the coven sisters, each holding a candle, circled them. After that, Aurora handed each aspirant a cloak. They put on the cloaks and walked slowly toward the cave.

Stella, cloaked and hooded, stood at the entrance to the cave with her arms crossed against her chest, a crystal athame in one hand and a crystal wand in the other.

“Who seeks to enter these gates?” she called out in ringing tones.

“We who would know the mysteries,” the two replied.

“Have ye been purified by earth and water, fire and air?”

“We have,” the two replied. “The seawater cleansed us, the air dried us, the coven sisters circled us with fire, and we stand upon earthsand.”

“By what names shall ye be known in this circle?”

“I will be known as Tamsyn of the Woods,” the first woman replied.

“And I will be known as Mélusine,” the second woman said.

“You have studied for a year and a day. The Goddess finds you worthy, so you may enter the circle.”

Inside the cave Stella as High Priestess disclosed the new roles and duties the two new members would be expected to perform and ended with a benediction.

“You, Tamsyn of the Woods and Mélusine, are no longer seekers but dedicants, joining the Seven of Wands coven to share our journey through this world and the next. May you know the blessings of Goddess every day of your life. So mote it be.”

“So mote it be,” responded the coven sisters.

Stella snuffed out the Sun candle on the altar and led the others to the beach. Willing hands built the solstice fire, which soon burned steadily. Champagne appeared, along with strawberries, cheese, and bread. The coven sisters toasted the new members, the sabbat, and the warm, blue-green waves that rose and fell endlessly behind them.

Stella noticed that even on this longest of days the light was fading. Twilight, she thought. The hour of magick. “I’ll be back in a minute,” she told the others. She got up, walked down the smooth, wet shingle and into the sea.

As she stared out at the gathering dusk with little ripples of water lapping round her ankles, she saw the waves rise and gather themselves into the face of Thalassa Herself, Goddess of the Sea. The eyes in the huge face beamed at her, the huge lips broke into a smile. Then the vision disappeared beneath the waves and nothing was left but the music they made, the endless, atonal music of the sea.

Cold chills ran down Stella’s spine and she felt the gooseflesh on her arms as she stared at the sea. This is a sign, she thought. This is what I am meant to do and to be-Her priestess, learning Her wisdom and imparting it to those who would know Her mysteries.

She turned as darkness fell and walked back to the beach. I’ve come out of the sea, she thought. Out of the sea of grief.

“Welcome back,” Aurora said, shifting to make room for Stella to sit down again in the fire circle.

“Sisters, our new members are not the only ones who took a new name tonight. I have a new name too,” Stella said. She looked around the circle. “I am now Stella Maris.”

“All hail Stella Maris!” Aurora said, raising her glass of champagne. “Hail and blessed be, Stella Maris, Star of the Sea!”



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The End



__________________

Story inspired by the reminisces of Star Crone and used with permission.

“We all come from the Goddess.” Author unknown.


In the News: John D’OH!

Found on the Internets …



Perhaps things have turned out badly

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John Doe prosecutors accuse Scott Walker of running ‘criminal scheme’ during recalls

Schmitz cited a May 2011 email from Walker to prominent Republican strategist Karl Rove saying that Johnson would lead the coordination.

“Bottom-line: R.J. helps keep in place a team that is wildly successful in Wisconsin. We are running 9 recall elections and it will be like 9 congressional markets in every market in the state (and Twin Cities),” Walker wrote to Rove on May 4, 2011, according to the filing.

Johnson, a Walker campaign consultant, is also a top adviser to Wisconsin Club for Growth, a conservative group that was active in the recall elections. Prosecutors allege Johnson used Club for Growth as the “hub” for coordination between the Walker campaign and conservative groups engaged in issue advocacy.

Prosecutors: Walker’s Campaign ‘Tacitly Admitted’ Breaking The Law

In a court filing responding to motions from the targets of the investigation, Schmitz countered arguments from Walker’s campaign, which goes by the name Friends of Scott Walker (FOSW), and the outside groups about what kind of coordination was allowed under Wisconsin law.

“Movants argue that ‘coordination’ of political activities that do not arguably involve express advocacy cannot be a crime under Wisconsin law,” he wrote. “These arguments fail to recognize or misinterpret Wisconsin statutes, administrative rules, and G.A.B. formal opinions. Movants have also ignored controlling Wisconsin case law. Indeed, in their submissions, movants – FOSW, Citizens for a Strong America, Inc. (CFSA), Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce, Inc. (WMC) and Wisconsin Manfacuturers & Commerce-Issues Mobilization Council (WMC-IMC), and Wisconsin Club for Growth (WiCFG) appear to have tacitly admitted to violating Wisconsin law.” […]

Walker’s campaign declined to directly address the contents of the documents released Thursday.

“Two judges have rejected the characterizations disclosed in those documents,” Alleigh Marré, the campaign’s press secretary, wrote.

Oh, is this one of the judges?

“I am persuaded the statutes only prohibit coordination by candidates and independent organizations for a political purpose, and political purpose, with one minor exception not relevant here … requires express advocacy,” [state Reserve Judge Gregory] Peterson wrote in an order included in documents released Thursday. “There is no evidence of express advocacy.”

In the alternate right-wing universe, “elections” have no “political purpose”. I suspect this is the other judge.

~

Datamining from BlueCheddar

The [Journal Sentinel] article says there are 12 conservative groups that are suspected of illegally coordinating with Scott Walker and his “close confidants”:

“The governor and his close confidants helped raise money and control spending through 12 conservative groups during the recall elections, according to the prosecutors’ filings.”

So this is why Walker could maintain a placid demeanor through all the turmoil and upheaval that he caused us. It must really ease a man’s worried mind to have a powerful, monied team in the wings doing whatever it takes, laws be damned.

As prosecutors state in Exhibit C of the released documents:

“No court has ever recognized that secret, coordinated activity

resulting in “undisclosed” contributions to candidates’ campaigns and used to circumvent campaign finance laws is protected by the First Amendment. Accordingly, the purpose of this investigation is to ensure the integrity of the electoral process in Wisconsin.”

~

More news …

From the headlines …

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McConnell’s Push To Block Obama’s Climate Rules Spooks Senate Dems

Senate Democrats hit pause on a government funding bill on Wednesday night after Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) demanded a vote on an amendment targeting the Obama administration’s new rules to combat climate change.

Senate Appropriations Chair Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) pulled consideration of the energy and water bill — one of various measures to avert a government shutdown on Oct. 1 — after the top Senate Republican offered his amendment to prevent funding for the implementation of the Environmental Protection Agency’s rules on coal-fired power plants until the administration certified that it wouldn’t harm jobs or raise utility rates.

Here is how you respond to threats to shut down the government one month before a national election: “Please proceed, GOP, please proceed”. p.s. The new EPA regulations are very popular.

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House GOP Picks McCarthy For Majority Leader; Scalise Gets Whip

Calif. Rep. Kevin McCarthy has been chosen by House Republicans to be their next majority leader, taking the place of Rep. Eric Cantor, who was defeated in a stunning primary upset earlier this month. Louisiana’s Rep. Steve Scalise has been selected to fill the majority whip post left vacant by McCarthy’s promotion.

McCarthy defeated Idaho Rep. Raul Labrador, a conservative with close ties to the Tea Party, in a secret ballot for the position.

McCarthy, 49, has been in Congress since 2007 and was a close ally of Cantor’s.

How did that insurrection work out for you, tea party?

~

Rape Victims At Fundamentalist Christian College Say They Were Told To Repent For Their Sins

Katie Landry, who was raped by a coworker several times during the summer before she started attending Bob Jones, didn’t tell anyone about her assault for several years. She was deeply ashamed and failed most of her classes her first year of school. When she eventually sought counseling, the dean of students told her that “we have to find the sin in your life that caused your rape.”[…]

Bob Jones isn’t the only right-wing institution that’s struggled with issues of sexual assault. Nonetheless, some of those Christian colleges aren’t required to follow the federal laws intended to address campus rape because they don’t get any of their funding from the government

Not sure I see any “struggling with issues of sexual assault” at Bob Jones. Unless they consider the “issues” of sexual assault to include how to cover it up more effectively.

~

Editor’s Note: Feel free to share other news stories in the comments.


Friday Coffee Hour: Check In and Hangout for the Herd

Good morning, Moosekind. TGIF!


  PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
 

        Recs on the weather jar comment are still welcome.

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Friday Coffee Hour and check-in is an open thread and general social hour.

It’s traditional but not obligatory to give us a weather check where you are and let us know what’s new, interesting, challenging or even routine in your life lately. Nothing is particularly obligatory here except:

Always remember the Moose Golden (Purple?) Rule:

Be kind to each other… or else.

What could be simpler than that, right?

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SCOTUS Watch for Thursday, June 19th plus Open News Thread

SCOTUS Watch …



All eyes turn to the court

~

Until the term ends on June 30, the Supreme Court will be releasing opinions on Monday and Thursday mornings. SCOTUSblog will liveblog here today starting at 9:45 Eastern.

SCOTUSblog: October 2013 Term, major cases pending


McCullen v. Coakley, No. 12-1168 [Arg: 1.15.2014 Trans./Aud.]

Issue(s): (1) Whether the First Circuit erred in upholding Massachusetts’s selective exclusion law – which makes it a crime for speakers other than clinic “employees or agents . . . acting within the scope of their employment” to “enter or remain on a public way or sidewalk” within thirty-five feet of an entrance, exit, or driveway of “a reproductive health care facility” – under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, on its face and as applied to petitioners; (2) whether, if Hill v. Colorado permits enforcement of this law, Hill should be limited or overruled.

~

National Labor Relations Board v. Noel Canning, No. 12-1281 [Arg: 1.13.2014 Trans./Aud.]

Issue(s): (1) Whether the President’s recess-appointment power may be exercised during a recess that occurs within a session of the Senate, or is instead limited to recesses that occur between enumerated sessions of the Senate; (2) whether the President’s recess-appointment power may be exercised to fill vacancies that exist during a recess, or is instead limited to vacancies that first arose during that recess; and (3) whether the President’s recess-appointment power may be exercised when the Senate is convening every three days in pro forma sessions.

~

Conestoga Wood Specialties Corp. v. Sebelius, No. 13-356 [Arg: 3.25.2014 Trans./Aud.]

Issue(s): Whether the religious owners of a family business, or their closely held, for-profit corporation, have free exercise rights that are violated by the application of the contraceptive-coverage mandate of the Affordable Care Act.

Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores, No. 13-354 [Arg: 3.25.2014 Trans.]

Issue(s): Whether the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000bb et seq., which provides that the government “shall not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion” unless that burden is the least restrictive means to further a compelling governmental interest, allows a for-profit corporation to deny its employees the health coverage of contraceptives to which the employees are otherwise entitled by federal law, based on the religious objections of the corporation’s owners.

~

Riley v. California, No. 13-132 [Arg: 4.29.2014 Trans.]

Issue(s): Whether evidence admitted at petitioner’s trial was obtained in a search of petitioner’s cell phone that violated petitioner’s Fourth Amendment rights.

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More news …

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Dick “Dick” Cheney and Iraq. Still wrong  …

Jay Carney Takes A Dig At Dick Cheney For Iraq Op-Ed

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney took a dig at former Vice President Dick Cheney on Wednesday for his scathing Wall Street Journal op-ed on President Barack Obama’s handling of the situation in Iraq.

Carney was asked about the opinion piece, in which Cheney declared “rarely has a U.S. president been so wrong about so much at the expense of so many,” during his final White House briefing.

“Which president was he talking about?” Carney said with a straight face, drawing laughter from reporters.

“Look, it’s always good to hear from former Vice President Cheney,” he added. “It’s pretty clear that President Obama and our team here have distinctly different views on Iraq from the team that led the United States to invade Iraq back in 2003, so he’s entitled to his opinion.”

~

Reid: Obama Doesn’t Need Advice On Iraq From Dick Cheney

“If there is one thing that this country does not need, it’s that we should be taking advice from Dick Cheney on wars,” Reid said. “Being on the wrong side of Dick Cheney is to be on the right side of history.”[…]

“I have no doubt that president Obama and America will meet this threat head on without the advice of [former Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul] Wolfowitz, Cheney, Kristol, the architects of the invasion of Iraq,” he said. “President Obama will meet the threat with the same smart foreign policy that has been the hallmark of his administration.”

~

Sen. Leahy: Don’t Go Back Into Iraq

Senate Judiciary Chair Patrick Leahy (D-VT) said Tuesday the United States should not send troops back to Iraq to quell the growing insurgency, arguing that there’s little the U.S. can do given the grim realities on the ground. He said proponents of restarting military operations in Iraq are reusing old arguments that incubated the war.

“The mistake was going into that war in Iraq in the first place. You know, we were told that we had to go there because they weapons of mass destruction. Of course, they didn’t have any. When Dick Cheney and others came up and told us that, they knew they didn’t have any,” Leahy told reporters in the Capitol. “We wasted $2 trillion, thousands of lives, ended up with a country worse off than it was to begin with. And then the leader in the country, [Nouri al-]Maliki told us to get out. Some would say we ought to say ‘thank you.’ He told us to get out, we’re out.”

Senator Leahy voted against the 2002 Authorization to Use Military Force Against Iraq and has not been a fan of Cheney.

~

Charles Blow: The Gall of Dick Cheney

As we weigh our response, one of the last people who should say anything on the subject is a man who is partly responsible for the problem.

But former Vice President Dick Cheney, who was in the administration that deceived us into a nine-year war in Iraq, just can’t seem to keep his peace.[…]

I know that we as Americans have short attention spans, but most of us don’t suffer from amnesia. The Bush administration created this mess, and the Obama administration now has to clean it up.

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Polls and “the end of the Obama presidency” …

Steve Benen: Overreacting to polls is folly

There’s an unfortunate pattern when it comes to the political world’s erratic fascination with polls. The pattern looks like this: if survey results offer bad news for President Obama, they’re extremely important. If the numbers look good for the White House, they’re meaningless.

Not quite two weeks ago, for example, a Washington Post/ABC News poll showed Obama’s approval rating climbing from 41% to 46% – the biggest one-month jump for the president in three years. This poll, naturally, was deemed unimportant. (To underscore the point, look at the Washington Post headline from late April when Obama’s numbers looked bad, as compared to the same paper’s headline from June when Obama’s numbers looked good.)

Twelve days later, the political world is extremely excited about the new NBC/Wall Street Journal poll.

   Just when our NBC/WSJ poll from April showed President Barack Obama bouncing back a bit after the surge of enrollment in the health-care exchanges, then came the crisis in Ukraine. Then the VA hospital controversy. The controversial Bowe Bergdahl release. And now the current instability in Iraq. And they’ve knocked Obama back down to where he was during the HealthCare.Gov woes – or even worse.

   Our brand-new NBC/WSJ poll shows Obama’s overall job-approval rating at 41%, a three-point drop from two months ago.

[…]

As for Republicans excited to see Obama’s support falter, at least in this one poll, I’d encourage them to take a closer look at the details: the president is still vastly more popular than the GOP and Congress.

~

Smartypants: A question for the lazy media

Today we’re hearing a chorus of folks commenting on the latest NBC/WSJ poll with hysterical statements like “the Obama presidency is over.“[…]

President Obama’s pen and sword strategy is nothing like a heavyweight fighter hanging on to his opposition out of exhaustion. In the last couple of weeks, the President has announced the most ambitious action against climate change in our country’s history, brought the last POW home from Afghanistan, provided protection to one million LGBT employees who work for federal government contractors, expanded the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument from almost 87,000 square miles to nearly 782,000 square miles and captured the ringleader of the Benghazi attack. Exhaustion??? Pffttt.[…]

So while the media obsesses over President Obama’s poll numbers, I have a question for them: what’s the big issue the Republicans will rely on to get their voters out to the polls in November – which is still over 4 months away? My guess would be immigration reform (as in: against it!) – which means a lot of ugly nativism and the eventual demise of the Republican Party as we know it today.

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Editor’s Note: Feel free to share other news stories in the comments.


Thursday Morning Herd Check-in

  Make sure you let your peeps

  know where to find you!  

   


    PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary


        Fierces on the Weather Critter Comment are obligatory welcome.

The morning check-in is an open thread posted to give you a place to visit with the meeses. Feel free to chat about your weather, share a bit of your life, grump (if you must), rave (if you can). The diarist du jour sometimes posts and runs, other times sticks around for a bit, often returns throughout the day and always cares that meeses are happy … or at least contented.

For those new to the Moose, Kysen left a Moose Welcome Mat (Part Deux) so, please, wipe your feet before you walk in the front door start posting.

The important stuff to get you started:

– Comments do not Auto-refresh. Click the refresh/reload on your tab to see new ones. Only click Post once for comments. When a diary’s comment threads grow, the page takes longer to refresh and the comment may not display right away.

– To check for replies to your comments, click the “My Comments” link in the right-hand column (or go to “My Moose”). Comments will be listed and a link to Recent Replies will be shown. (Note: Tending comments builds community)

– Ratings: Fierce means Thumbs Up, Fail means Thumbs Down, Meh means one of three things: I am unFailing you but I can’t Fierce you, I am unFiercing after a mistaken Fierce, … or Meh. Just Meh. (p.s. Ratings don’t bestow mojo, online behaviour does).

– The Recommended list has a prominent place on the Front Page because it reflects the interests of the Moose. When people drive-by, we want them to see what we are talking about: news, politics, science, history, personal stories, culture. The list is based on number of recs and days on the list. Per Kysen: “The best way to control Rec List content is to ONLY rec diaries you WANT to see ON the list.

– Finally, the posting rules for a new diary: “Be excellent to each other… or else

(Some other commenting/posting/tending notes for newbies can be found in this past check-in and, of course, consult Meese Mehta for all your questions on meesely decorum.)

You can follow the daily moosetrails here: Motley Moose Recent Comments.

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So … what’s going on in your part of Moosylvania?

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U.S. Patent and Trademark Office cancels “Redskins” Trademark

From ThinkProgress on Wednesday, 6-18-2014:


The United States Patent and Trademark Office has canceled six federal trademark registrations for the name of the Washington Redskins, ruling that the name is “disparaging to Native Americans” and thus cannot be trademarked under federal law that prohibits the protection of offensive or disparaging language.

The U.S. PTO’s Trademark Trial and Appeal Board issued a ruling in the case, brought against the team by plaintiff Amanda Blackhorse, Wednesday morning.



“We decide, based on the evidence properly before us, that these registrations must be cancelled because they were disparaging to Native Americans at the respective times they were registered,”
the board wrote in its opinion.

“The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board agreed with our clients that the team’s name and trademarks disparage Native Americans. The Board ruled that the Trademark Office should never have registered these trademarks in the first place,” Jesse Witten, the plaintiffs’ lead attorney, said in a press release. “We presented a wide variety of evidence – including dictionary definitions and other reference works, newspaper clippings, movie clips, scholarly articles, expert linguist testimony, and evidence of the historic opposition by Native American groups – to demonstrate that the word ‘redskin’ is an ethnic slur.”

In Landmark Decision, U.S. Patent Office Cancels Trademark For Redskins Football Team

The ruling is here (Scribd).

The club will likely appeal the ruling and may or may not have trademark protections during the appeal.

Here is the possible cost:

Losing the trademark wouldn’t force the Redskins to change the name. What it would do, however, is make it impossible to stop other people from using it. In short, Snyder wouldn’t be able to stop anyone else from making merchandise with the team name and undercutting official Redskins gear, or to charge anyone for using the name, changes that would cost Snyder considerable financial damage – “every imaginable loss you can think of,” according to attorneys in the 1999 case – and activists hope that would be enough to change his mind. Snyder, though, is a man of immense pride, and my suspicion is that he would try to eat his losses and keep the name out of spite, at least for the time being.

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell isn’t likely to feel the same way. Goodell has thus far expressed a startling level of indifference toward the controversy, but if the Redskins lose the trademark – and the NFL’s ability to make money off their licensed and trademarked merchandise – that indifference will assuredly fade. Goodell might “understand the affinity for that name” among fans, but he won’t understand – or tolerate – big financial losses. Ideally, Snyder and Goodell would change the name because it’s plainly derogatory. Getting rid of it because using racist terminology is expensive, though, may have to suffice.

President Obama, Senate Democrats and Independents, and many others have come out against the use of the name and have asked the owner to reconsider his position. From the Senate letter:

Dear Commissioner Goodell:

This month, Americans applauded the rapid and decisive reaction from new National Basketball Association Commissioner Adam Silver to the racist remarks of Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling. Commissioner Silver sent a clear message that racism will not stand in the NBA.

Today, we urge you and the National Football League to send the same clear message as the NBA did: that racism and bigotry have no place in professional sports. It’s time for the NFL to endorse a name change for the Washington, D.C. football team.

The despicable comments made by Mr. Sterling have opened up a national conversation about race relations. We believe this conversation is an opportunity for the NFL to take action to remove the racial slur from the name of one of its marquee franchises.

Professional sports have tremendous power to influence American society and strengthen our communities. From Jesse Owens to Jackie Robinson to Billie Jean King, athletes have often been a driving force for equality and diversity in our nation.

Now is the time for the NFL to act. The Washington, D.C. football team is on the wrong side of history. What message does it send to punish slurs against African Americans while endorsing slurs against Native Americans?

This is a matter of tribal sovereignty – and Indian Country has spoken clearly on this issue. To this point, we have heard from every national Tribal organization, including the National Congress of American Indians, United South and Eastern Tribes, and the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians. These organizations represent more than 2 million Native Americans across the country and more than 300 Tribes with government-to-government relationships with the United States. These organizations have passed resolutions in support of a name change as they find the Washington, D.C. football team name to be racially offensive.  We have heard from tribes across the country, including the Navajo Nation, the largest tribe in the Country, who oppose this name.  To understand this viewpoint, we urge you to watch the video Proud To Be posted on the National Congress of American Indians website.

At the heart of sovereignty for tribes is their identity. Tribes have worked for generations to preserve the right to speak their languages and perform their sacred ceremonies. Many of today’s tribal leaders have parents and grandparents who were punished and prosecuted for practicing their ceremonies or speaking their languages. That is why tribal leaders worked with Congress to enact laws like the American Indian Religious Freedom Act, the Native American Languages Act, the Indian Arts and Crafts Act, and the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.  These are all federal laws intended to protect and respect tribal culture and identity. Yet every Sunday during football season, the Washington, D.C. football team mocks their culture.  

The NFL can no longer ignore this and perpetuate the use of this name as anything but what it is: a racial slur. We urge the NFL to formally support and push for a name change for the Washington football team.

Sincerely,

47 U.S. Senators

Editor’s Note: Feel free to share other news stories in the comments.


Wednesday Watering Hole: Check In & Hangout for the Herd

Good morning, Moosekind.


  PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
 

        Recs on the weather jar comment are still welcome.

The common Moose, Alces alces, unlike other members of the deer family, is a solitary animal that doesn’t form herds. Not so its rarer but nearest relative, Alces purplius, the Motley Moose. Though sometimes solitary, the Motley Moose herds in ever shifting groups at the local watering hole to exchange news and just pass the time.

 photo moose2_zps78305346.jpg

The morning check-in is an open thread and general social hour.

It’s traditional but not obligatory to give us a weather check where you are and let us know what’s new, interesting, challenging or even routine in your life lately. Nothing is particularly obligatory here except:

Always remember the Moose Golden (Purple?) Rule:

Be kind to each other… or else.

What could be simpler than that, right?

 photo aabehave_zps8d939bf3.jpg


On Black fathers


 photo blackfatherandbaby_zps7e75696a.jpg

Father’s day has come and gone again for this year but the myths and memes about black fathers live on. We know how black women are portrayed as welfare queens and grifters. We know young black men are cast as thugs and young black women as promiscuous.  There is push-back against all of those stereotypes from those of us on the left but it’s important to do some myth-busting about the group that rarely garners respect – outside our own community.

Black fathers.

Would like you to read the three following articles:

6 Actual Facts Shatter the Biggest Stereotypes of Black Fathers

1. Black fathers are not conditioned to be absent.

2. Black fathers contribute to their children’s educational success.

3. Black fathers are statistically more likely to be stay-at-home dads.

4. Black fathers are not fueling out of wedlock births on their own.

5. Black fathers are not prejudiced against black women.

6. The prison pipeline targets black fathers, shattering nuclear families.

5 Lies We Should Stop Telling About Black Fatherhood

Black Fathers Aren’t Involved In Their Children’s Lives

The Increasing Number of Single-Parent Homes Is Exclusively A Black Problem

The Number Of Un-wed Mothers Is a Statement on Morality In The Black Community

Men Who Didn’t Have Fathers Won’t Make Good Fathers

Black Fathers Are An Anomaly

The Myth Of The Absent Black Father

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently published new data on the role that American fathers play in parenting their children. Most of the CDC’s previous research on family life – which the agency explores as an important contributor to public health and child development – has focused exclusively on mothers. But the latest data finds that the stereotypical gender imbalance in this area doesn’t hold true, and dads are just as hands-on when it comes to raising their kids.

That includes African-American fathers.

In fact, in its coverage of the study, the Los Angeles Times noted that the results “defy stereotypes about black fatherhood” because the CDC found that black dads are more involved with their kids on a daily basis than dads from other racial groups

I had a black father. Many of my relatives are black fathers.  My friends had and have black fathers.  

Are all dads wonderful? Nope.  No matter their color.

But to single out black men as the villains is wrong.  

Thanks Dad. Every day, not just on Father’s Day.




Cross-posted from Black Kos


Tuesday Morning Herd Check-in

  Make sure you let your peeps

  know where to find you!  


    PLEASE Do Not Recommend the check-in diary!
   

        Fierces on the Weather Critter Comment are obligatory welcome.

The morning check-in is an open thread posted to give you a place to visit with the meeses. Feel free to chat about your weather, share a bit of your life, grump (if you must), rave (if you can). The diarist du jour sometimes posts and runs, other times sticks around for a bit, often returns throughout the day and always cares that meeses are happy … or at least contented.

For those new to the Moose, Kysen left a Moose Welcome Mat (Part Deux) so, please, wipe your feet before you walk in the front door start posting.

The important stuff to get you started:

– Comments do not Auto-refresh. Click the refresh/reload on your tab to see new ones. Only click Post once for comments. When a diary’s comment threads grow, the page takes longer to refresh and the comment may not display right away.

– To check for replies to your comments, click the “My Comments” link in the right-hand column (or go to “My Moose”). Comments will be listed and a link to Recent Replies will be shown. (Note: Tending comments builds community)

– Ratings: Fierce means Thumbs Up, Fail means Thumbs Down, Meh means one of three things: I am unFailing you but I can’t Fierce you, I am unFiercing after a mistaken Fierce, … or Meh. Just Meh. (p.s. Ratings don’t bestow mojo, online behaviour does).

– The Recommended list has a prominent place on the Front Page because it reflects the interests of the Moose. When people drive-by, we want them to see what we are talking about: news, politics, science, history, personal stories, culture. The list is based on number of recs and days on the list. Per Kysen: “The best way to control Rec List content is to ONLY rec diaries you WANT to see ON the list.

– Finally, the posting rules for a new diary: “Be excellent to each other… or else

(Some other commenting/posting/tending notes for newbies can be found in this past check-in and, of course, consult Meese Mehta for all your questions on meesely decorum.)

You can follow the daily moosetrails here: Motley Moose Recent Comments.

~

So … what’s going on in your part of Moosylvania??


In the News: SCOTUS Watch and Republicans Eating Their Own

SCOTUS Watch …



All eyes turn to the court

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For the rest of the month of June, the Supreme Court will be releasing opinions on Monday and Thursday mornings. SCOTUSblog will liveblog here today starting at 9:15 Eastern.

SCOTUSblog: October 2013 Term, major cases pending


McCullen v. Coakley, No. 12-1168 [Arg: 1.15.2014 Trans./Aud.]

Issue(s): (1) Whether the First Circuit erred in upholding Massachusetts’s selective exclusion law – which makes it a crime for speakers other than clinic “employees or agents . . . acting within the scope of their employment” to “enter or remain on a public way or sidewalk” within thirty-five feet of an entrance, exit, or driveway of “a reproductive health care facility” – under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, on its face and as applied to petitioners; (2) whether, if Hill v. Colorado permits enforcement of this law, Hill should be limited or overruled.

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National Labor Relations Board v. Noel Canning, No. 12-1281 [Arg: 1.13.2014 Trans./Aud.]

Issue(s): (1) Whether the President’s recess-appointment power may be exercised during a recess that occurs within a session of the Senate, or is instead limited to recesses that occur between enumerated sessions of the Senate; (2) whether the President’s recess-appointment power may be exercised to fill vacancies that exist during a recess, or is instead limited to vacancies that first arose during that recess; and (3) whether the President’s recess-appointment power may be exercised when the Senate is convening every three days in pro forma sessions.

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Conestoga Wood Specialties Corp. v. Sebelius, No. 13-356 [Arg: 3.25.2014 Trans./Aud.]

Issue(s): Whether the religious owners of a family business, or their closely held, for-profit corporation, have free exercise rights that are violated by the application of the contraceptive-coverage mandate of the Affordable Care Act.

Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores, No. 13-354 [Arg: 3.25.2014 Trans.]

Issue(s): Whether the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000bb et seq., which provides that the government “shall not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion” unless that burden is the least restrictive means to further a compelling governmental interest, allows a for-profit corporation to deny its employees the health coverage of contraceptives to which the employees are otherwise entitled by federal law, based on the religious objections of the corporation’s owners.

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Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, No. 13-193 [Arg: 4.22.2014 Trans./Aud.]

Issue(s): (1) Whether, to challenge a speech-suppressive law, a party whose speech is arguably proscribed must prove that authorities would certainly and successfully prosecute him, as the Sixth Circuit holds, or should the court presume that a credible threat of prosecution exists absent desuetude or a firm commitment by prosecutors not to enforce the law, as seven other Circuits hold; and (2) whether the Sixth Circuit erred by holding, in direct conflict with the Eighth Circuit, that state laws proscribing “false” political speech are not subject to pre-enforcement First Amendment review so long as the speaker maintains that its speech is true, even if others who enforce the law manifestly disagree.

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Riley v. California, No. 13-132 [Arg: 4.29.2014 Trans.]

Issue(s): Whether evidence admitted at petitioner’s trial was obtained in a search of petitioner’s cell phone that violated petitioner’s Fourth Amendment rights.

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More news …

Republicans in disarray …

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Idaho GOP Fails To Elect Chairman, Agree On Platform

During the convention, the entire delegation from Bannock County was unseated, leading to chaos, according to the Idaho State Journal. Attempts were underway to remove the delegates for two additional counties due to disagreements between establishment and Tea Party Republicans when Labrador brought the convention to a close.

State Sen. Chuck Winder blamed the chaos on Tea Partiers and libertarians.

“It was basically the ultra-, ultra-conservative, tea party-libertarian type people basically flexing their muscle in the way the thing was organized,” he told the Spokesman-Review. “It’s a real shame that a convention comes to that stage, where there really wasn’t any real floor leadership, there wasn’t any fairness in the process, either in the credentials committee or on the floor. It was all pre-determined. It’s kind of ‘who’s going to have the power,’ rather than working together.”

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Cantor Hits Back At Ingraham: Taliban Comment ‘Cheapens The Debate’

“I will say that the suggestion that I should have been traded to the Taliban for Sergeant Bergdahl really is not a serious contribution to any public policy debate, and frankly, I don’t think that it reflects on the people that self-identify as Tea Partyers. I think they reject that kind of notion,” Cantor said on ABC’s “This Week.” “And it’s just not serious. And frankly it cheapens the debate.”

p.s. Laura Ingraham responded by saying that Eric Cantor “had no sense of humor” because, really, what isn’t funny about sending someone you don’t like to a place where he is certain to be killed?

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Editor’s Note: Feel free to share other news stories in the comments.