Sunday, January 30, 2011

Words Have Consequences, Part II

I have watched the current events in Egypt with fascination. I do not claim in any way to understand the complexities of the Middle East, certainly not. I do believe in the human rights of all people, that all women and men should be free to live their lives as they choose with equal personal and economic opportunities and free of religious and government tyranny. Note: My personal belief in freedom from religious tyranny is not to suggest religious clerics are involved with the protests, as no cleric has released any statement of involvement to date to my knowledge.

The protests have been organized and implemented by people under age 30. It reminds me of the children who took to the streets in my own city of Birmingham.

President Obama spoke eloquently at the beginning of his administration in his 2009 Cairo speech to the Muslim world. He said:
The fourth issue that I will address is democracy. I know there has been controversy about the promotion of democracy in recent years, and much of this controversy is connected to the war in Iraq. So let me be clear: no system of government can or should be imposed upon one nation by any other.

That does not lessen my commitment, however, to governments that reflect the will of the people. Each nation gives life to this principle in its own way, grounded in the traditions of its own people. America does not presume to know what is best for everyone, just as we would not presume to pick the outcome of a peaceful election. But I do have an unyielding belief that all people yearn for certain things: the ability to speak your mind and have a say in how you are governed; confidence in the rule of law and the equal administration of justice; government that is transparent and doesn't steal from the people; the freedom to live as you choose. Those are not just American ideas, they are human rights, and that is why we will support them everywhere.

There is no straight line to realize this promise. But this much is clear: governments that protect these rights are ultimately more stable, successful and secure. Suppressing ideas never succeeds in making them go away. America respects the right of all peaceful and law-abiding voices to be heard around the world, even if we disagree with them. And we will welcome all elected, peaceful governments provided they govern with respect for all their people.

This last point is important because there are some who advocate for democracy only when they are out of power; once in power, they are ruthless in suppressing the rights of others. No matter where it takes hold, government of the people and by the people sets a single standard for all who hold power: you must maintain your power through consent, not coercion; you must respect the rights of minorities, and participate with a spirit of tolerance and compromise; you must place the interests of your people and the legitimate workings of the political process above your party. Without these ingredients, elections alone do not make true democracy.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has used the word 'democracy' in her Sunday morning show appearances. I don't know if that is the stand the US will take at this time now that this is happening in real time. My hopes are that the Obama administration will be able to assist in achieving a meaningful peace for now and the future. It continues to unfold as the world watches.

Words Have Consequences, Part II

Friday, January 28, 2011

Whole Lotta Reflecting Going On

What does your music say about you? I got my iPod while living in Tennessee in the last decade and downloaded greater than 5,000 songs. Today I looked at my stats to see which songs I listened to most often and I was surprised!

I listened to them again today, in order, and found them to be personally reflective and maybe a little sad, but these are all great artists and songs. What are your top 20?

In My Life - The Beatles
When I Lay Down - Janis Ian
The Beauty of the Rain - Dar Williams
These Days - Jackson Browne
Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters - Elton John
Feeling Good - Nina Simone
Reconsider Me - Warren Zevon
Feels Like Rain - John Hiatt
A Soft Place To Fall - Allison Moorer
Good Riddance (The Time of Your Life) - Green Day
Strong Enough - Sheryl Crow (featuring the Dixie Chicks)
(Tie) Bring It On Home To Me - David Elliott and If It's Magic - Stevie Wonder
High, Low and In Between - Townes Van Zandt
Blowin' in the Wind - Stevie Wonder
Let Him Fly - Patty Griffin
Calling All Angels - Jane Siberry with k.d. Lang
River - Joni Mitchell
Jerusalem - Steve Earle
Mercy Now - Mary Gauthier
Better Things - Dar Williams


Whole Lotta Reflecting Going On

Feel Good Friday



To celebrate the life and music of Gladys Horton. RIP (continue reading here)

Feel Good Friday

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Hiking the Gila River

My brother is hiking in Silver City, New Mexico this week. He sent me the above photo via text to say he had hiked the Gila River in the footsteps of Geronimo. Living the cowboy life!

Gila Wilderness in southwestern New Mexico is the untamed West

Hiking the Gila River

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

SOTU: Watch & Engage

Very cool! Citizens were able to watch the State of the Union address online tonight, together with a companion stream of charts and statistics about what is happening in the country. Following President Obama's address, a panel of senior White House officials answered questions via Twitter, Facebook, and in webform. To view this feature, go to White House.gov/SOTU.

On Thursday at 1:30 CST, President Obama will answer questions live via YouTube.

SOTU: Watch & Engage

Friday, January 21, 2011

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Alabama Governor: Preacher in Montgomery

I grew up in the Southern Baptist Church-babble so I understood what newly sworn-in Alabama Governor Robert Bentley meant by his comments on Monday when he said, "anybody here today who has not accepted Jesus Christ as their savior, I'm  telling you, you're not my brother and you're not my sister, and I want to be your brother." 

Sad. Offensive. Threatening. Inappropriate. Questionable. Embarrassing. Shameful.

Interesting language for someone who claims, as most politicians do, to be a governor for all people. It is the kind of language that is offensive and threatening to people like me who do not fall into his definition of brothers and sisters.  Makes you wonder what he means when he says, "I am color blind".  Think he only sees in white, too?

Alabama Governor: Preacher in Montgomery

Sunday, January 16, 2011

We're Number 4!

This is one time I'm not particularly proud of our high ranking.

We're Number 4!

Friday, January 14, 2011

Feel Good Friday



What a week for the country and the people of Arizona! We need a little help from our friends.

Feel Good Friday

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Violence Begets Violence Begets Violence

One day after the Tucson Memorial and speech by President Obama, who passionately returned to his call for a new era of civility, the State of Alabama will execute a man for lethal crimes committed in 1988. The family of the victims have signed affidavits calling to spare his life.  I'm just saying...

Violence Begets Violence Begets Violence

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

I Need President Clinton Tonight

As I watched the Tucson Memorial tonight, I kept asking myself this hypothetical question - if I had lost someone close to me last Saturday morning, would this event have helped me feel better?

I personally wanted to feel bad. I wanted to feel sad. I have felt a loss that I am not sure can be recovered. I admit I was disappointed and needed more from President Obama. I really needed the crowd to be quiet and reverent. Yet, I understand the need to celebrate the lives lost, the people recovering, and the people who were traumatized by witnessing such a tragedy and assisting in its aftermath.

Nobody could explain events to me or make me feel better more than President Clinton. As the magnet on my refrigerator says, I miss Bill. I have really missed him this week and especially tonight.

We should do everything we can do to make sure our country lives up to our
children's expectations. ~ President Obama

From the 09/11/2001 book, Faces of Hope, for the fifty babies born on that day 
written on each side of a picture were wishes for a child's life: 
I hope you help those in need.
I hope you know all the words to the National Anthem and sing it with your hand over your heart.
I hope you jump in rain puddles.
If there are rain puddles in heaven, Christina is jumping in them today.
Here on this earth, we place our hands over our hearts and we commit ourselves as Americans
to forging a country that is forever worthy of her gentle and happy spirit.
~ President Obama

I Need President Clinton Tonight

Undeniable History

As seen on Salon.com, by Adam Clark Estes:

Created by Dan Savage and Aaron Huffman, this image of the cover of this week's The Stranger, a(n awesome) weekly newspaper in Seattle, says it all:

Undeniable History

You Won: We Pay The Price

You Won: We Pay The Price

Where is John McCain?

Okay. Breathe, breath, breathe. It seems anger and angry rhetoric have increased rather than improved like we would have hoped since Saturday's events in Arizona. I am not helping. I apologize for that. Unless President Obama has some magical words that will touch the country's hearts today, these two strong sides will be pulled farther apart, not closer together. But, President Obama is not a spiritual leader. He is the leader of this country, though. Words will have consequences. What a heavy weight on his shoulders today. For those who pray, your prayers for him are needed. For those who don't, focus all positive energy towards President Obama today.

Where is John McCain? Now is the time for him to be a real hero. Now is the time to help heal these rifts. Now is the time for him to take to the airwaves and say enough. Now is his time. Will he be there?

Where is John McCain?

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Clear Channel's Rush Limbaugh


I was graciously given permission to use this photo by the editor of the Box Turtle Bulletin, Jim Burroway. Mr. Burroway wrote that this photo was taken:
.....along I-10 just south of the Ina Road exit. If you go about three miles to the east from I-10 on Ina, you will encounter the fateful Safeway that is, as we speak, still roped off with police tape and crawling with investigators. The billboard is for Rush Limbaugh’s radio program on local Clear Channel KNST, and it appears on a Clear Channel billboard. Limbaugh’s “Straight Shooter” billboard is festooned with six or seven bullet holes. Given the political climate of the past few years — and especially after yesterday’s events — it’s a damning indictment of what so many on the far right find acceptable in political discourse.  (continue reading here)
No one is directly responsible for what Jared Loughner did on Saturday except Jared Loughner. The discussions of the lack of adequate mental health treatment facilities and the lax gun control laws were discussed following the last major shooting and the one before that and the one before that, etc. Whether Jared Loughner ever listened to talk radio or watched Fox News or cared at all about the politics of today is still in question. Maybe he didn't do any of those things; however, this is the kind of imagery he could have seen along I-10. It is not hard to miss and neither is the message.

The scariest thing I read today about this remains these headline:  Glock Pistol Sales Surgery in Aftermath of Arizona Shootings and Tucson suspect's troubles didn't keep him from gun.

And, what about this? Remember Joe "You Lie" Miller (R-SC) who disgraced the House chamber during an address by President Obama.
Rep. Joe Wilson's (R-S.C.) health care-era "you lie" interruption of President Obama is now reportedly being commemorated with a place on a new, limited edition line of assault rifle components.
The Columbia Free Times reports that the words are being engraved on a series of lower receivers manufactured for popular AR-15 assault rifles. Lower receivers are one of the primary pieces of the firearms. (continue reading)
Talk about a gun culture. Again, the message is loud and clear.

Mr. Limbaugh today worked at deflecting any responsibility and placing blame on Democrats on his radio show today by claiming that Jared Loughner was smiling in that horrifying picture because:
"What Mr. Loughner knows is that he has the full support of a major political party in this country. He's sitting there in jail. He knows what's going on, he knows that...the Democrat party is attempting to find anybody but him to blame. He knows if he plays his cards right, he's just a victim. He's the latest in a never-ending parade of victims brought about by the unfairness of America...this guy clearly understands he's getting all the attention and he understands he's got a political party doing everything it can, plus a local sheriff doing everything that they can to make sure he's not convicted of murder - but something lesser." (video here)
Some have claimed that bloggers have wasted a lot of time focusing on these issues and missing the big picture of gun access/violence and lack of adequate mental health care. That may be true. Nobody is trying to silence conservative media, but toning it down and laying off the faux outrage and conspiracy theories would be helpful.

Clear Channel's Rush Limbaugh

For My Auburn Friends

Order from The Onion Store

For My Auburn Friends

Snow and Ice 2011

We got mostly sleet in my neighborhood during the recent snow storm. Jules and Vincent liked licking the ice that fell on the deck!

On the snow in the South: "Or as they call it, the Weather of Northern Aggression."~ Stephen Colbert

Snow and Ice 2011

Monday, January 10, 2011

BCS Championship: My Boycott of Arizona

What would I have done if The University of Alabama's Crimson Tide had made it to the BCS bowl championship tonight instead of the Auburn Tigers? The game is being played in Glendale, Arizona, and I am boycotting Arizona over the anti-immigration laws (and now their lax gun laws and their removal of patients awaiting organ transplantation from their state insurance coverage). That would have been a true challenge of my convictions!! It is hard not to watch simply because there is a football game on television right now.

I was even conflicted about continuing my boycott of Arizona after the events of Saturday. Shouldn't I stand with the citizens of Arizona in this time of crisis, standing with the better nature of themselves? My brother encouraged me to stand by my convictions, as the shooting could have happened in any state at any time.

Plus, on the lighter side, it is easier for me to support the Auburn Tigers if I don't actually see them on the field!

BCS Championship: My Boycott of Arizona

Guns are not funny

See above, left panel. This is supposedly meant to be Beck shooting himself in the foot, therefore, humorous. Granted, that seems appropriate. What message do we get from denouncing gun violence while showing gun imagery on this site? It has been removed since the events on Saturday. (source)

Guns are not funny

Guns in Arizona and Other Comments

Picture above shows the man with who brought an assault rifle thrown over his shoulder
to a 2009 speech by
President Barack Obama to veterans. (source)
Apparently, this is legal in Arizona. No arrest was made.
It was the second day that an assault rifle had been seen at a political event
Phoenix, Arizona

Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) and Rep. Heath Shula (D-NC) state they plan to carry guns for their own protection. Both have carry and conceal permits in their home states, but say they won't carry their weapons while in D.C. Is this really the route we want to take versus restricting the purchase of guns? Jason Jared Loughner was too dangerous for his community college and for the military but had no problem purchasing and carrying a gun without needing a permit in Arizona. What is wrong with this picture?

Sarah Palin took down the map with crosshairs from her website prior to President Obama having an opportunity to address the country after Saturday's shooting in Arizona. Does no one else think there might have been some sense of bad judgement on her part to take such a rapid action?

There is a quote from Shakespeare's Hamlet, "The lady doth protest too much, methinks", a phrase that means one can insist so passionately about something not being true that people suspect the opposite of what one is saying. People are on the right are starting to sound this way to me since Saturday.

The left is calling for civility. The right is denying and defending. Who sounds guilty?

Guns in Arizona and Other Comments

Email: Turn Off Fox News

In light of the recent events in Arizona, I wished to appeal to the office again not to run Fox News in our waiting rooms, if not all day at least beginning in the afternoons when the more questionable punditry begins airing. I feel certain we would not want to contribute to inflaming someone who might not be able to distinguish between entertainment for profit and news.
If any of our employees or patients wish to watch this channel then I suggest recording and watching in the privacy of their own homes. I can boycott businesses that choose to show this channel; however, I can't boycott my place of employment.
I just thought I'd issue another plea. Thank you for your consideration.
Judi

Join me in a personal plea or search online for a boycott petition.

Email: Turn Off Fox News

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Reg's Coffeehouse Is Back!

I can now remove this logo off "My Causes" (see scrolling causes below), as Reg's Coffeehouse is back on the air as of this morning! You may listen to Reg too Monday through Friday on The Morning Blend and Reg's Coffeehouse on Sunday at The Mountain Radio, an online Internet radio station. It's Not A Revolution, It's A Solution.

Since being back on the air, Reg has been voted Birmingham's Best Local Radio Personality AND the radio station voted Birmingham's Best Radio Station, even though they had only been on the air for a few weeks. Granted, our radio choices have been slim. I support competition, but there really isn't any here.

Not only that, Reg has sold me six new songs for my iPhone/iPod because I heard and liked them on The Mountain. He should get a percentage! All is right and easy on Sunday mornings again.

Reg's Coffeehouse Is Back!

Another 9/11 Moment, if we embrace it

The country was ready to pull together following the events in New York, D.C., and Pennsylvania on September 11, 2001, and some of us feel that moment was squandered for the sake of power and politics as usual. This could be another one of those moments, if we will embrace it.

I can't help but compare the similarities of targeting doctors who perform abortions with some of the flaming rhetoric of a few of today's politicals. Terrorism and threats of terrorism have worked in preventing doctors from performing medical procedures for women. Will we allow the same kind of ideological terrorism to silence public servants for the sake of political power or, in a lesser but no less senseless, fear of President Obama?

This is another one of those moments where we could rise above the rhetoric that brings us down to the lowest common denominator. Unfortunately, we tend to be distracted by the next squirrel.*

Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center, who’s been studying the right wing movement for many years, appeared on MSNBC and told Keith Olbermann that heated rhetoric is in part responsible for the shooting tragedy:
It’s not about healthcare; it’s about the President wanting to kill your grandmother. It’s not about immigration reform; it’s about a secret plot on the part of Mexico to re-conquer the Southwestern United States. And on and on and on. The people who make those statements obviously do not intend for people to be harmed or murdered. But it’s entirely natural that some people out there who are disturbed actually act on these things. Obviously that’s a tiny sliver of the people who hear these kinds of statements – but we’ve reached a point, as the Sheriff suggested, where the vitriol is so white hot out there that some people who are disturbed go out and commit these kinds of acts and, at least on an anecdotal basis, we’ve been seeing more and more of that in the last couple of years.



Dick Armey of FreedomWorks and corporate funder and organizer of the "grassroots" Tea Party warned of using pop psychology to diagnose this event on ABC's This Week With Christiane Amanpour. It does not take a psychologist to understand how someone, unhinged or not, can be moved to action when prompted by repeated fears made possible by a lot of money.

As is predicted, concerns about this are split along party lines. Keith Olbermann of MSNBC has issued an apology for anything he might have said on Countdown with Keith Olbermann, "Violence and threats have no place in democracy". Let's see if anyone else in the media does the same or if they only deny and defend.
From Olbermann (link above)... It is a simple pledge, it is to the point, and it is essential that every American politician and commentator and activist and partisan take it and take it now, I say it first, and freely:


Violence, or the threat of violence, has no place in our Democracy, and I apologize for and repudiate any act or any thing in my past that may have even inadvertently encouraged violence. Because for whatever else each of us may be, we all are Americans.
I plan - again - to ask that my employer stop running Fox News on the televisions in our place of business, if not all day, at least during the afternoon hours when some of the more vicious and imaginary anxieties are aired.



*Jon Stewart defined the media's attention like the dog from the movie, Up.
DUG: My master made me this collar. He is a good and smart master, and he made me this collar so that I may talk... SQUIRREL!!!

Another 9/11 Moment, if we embrace it

Words Have Consequences

I read a tweet that read "angry rhetoric about angry rhetoric is still angry rhetoric". Nobody is turning up at GOP rallies/public events carrying weapons or attempting assassinations.

Sanity will always be and has always been in the eye of the beholder. To see you here today and the kind of people that you are has restored mine. ~ Jon Stewart, closing paragraph of speech at Rally to Restore Sanity

Even phrases like "lock and load", while in some circumstances could be innocuous, can send a different message when fanning the flames of fear and hatred and, sadly, action. The suggestion of using "second amendment remedies" as Sharon Angle of Nevada suggested sends a message loud and clear to the unstable person listening to and buying into this fear invoked by language. Words has consequences.

The poster to the left was on Sarah Palin's website. It showed crosshairs on 20 Democratic Congressmen and women. It has been taken down following today's Saturday's shooting in Arizona. It is a prettier graphic than anti-choice websites targeting doctors who perform abortion but the message is clear. I am not suggesting anyone associated with this graphic would advocate murder, but the visual is unmistakable. Mama Grizzley might want to rethink all the bumper sticker metaphors.

Even the new and oft used phrase, "job-killing" health care reform, although this has been disproved by The Anneberg Center, i.e., Fact Check, needs to be reconsidered. I understand the GOP is trying to tackle two issues in one phrase at once in the next two years.

In the next few days there will be many words written about the tragedies at an Arizona Safeway grocery store public event where Representative Gabrielle Giffords, an Arizona Democrat, and 18 others were shot when a 22-year-old male gunman opened fire where Ms. Giffords was meeting with constituents. Six people died, including a federal judge and a nine-year-old girl. Ms. Giffords is in critical condition.

Democracy can be messy. Changes can be messy. Revolution can be messy. Yet, do we need to incite potential violent acts then call it entertainment, or worse, news? As a citizen, I am only calling for responsibility.

Everybody has an opinion. I write about mine here. Just label it as such. Read. Read from numerous sources. Search history. Watch videos. Draw conclusions based on the best facts you have available to you. Talk to other people. But, most importantly, listen when other people want/need to talk.

Here's something else we should think about seriously, as seen on Southern Beale:

Words Have Consequences

Friday, January 7, 2011

Reading The Constitution

I watched with great amusement as Schoolhouse Rocks came to life this week when the GOP pandered to the Tea Party by reading the Constitution on the House floor or should I say reading selected parts of the Constitution. Let me be clear. I see nothing wrong with that gesture, however symbolic it may be. And, I do believe it to be symbolic. If they were truly so concerned about the Constitution, who better to turn to than their President, Barack Obama, who taught constitutional law for like 12 years!?!

Reading The Constitution

Feel Good Friday



This is a different take on my Feel Good Fridays, but I can't help but feel good when I watch this little guy (unless of course he has just read the latest studies on global warming and is warning, "our homes are melting, our homes are melting!") I think it is his happy dance!

Feel Good Friday

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Guest Photographer V: South Dakota, USA

This is the last of the series of photographs from Central South Dakota, USA, by guest amateur photographer, Robert Gambrell, who lives in Northport, Alabama. If you have questions about the photographs, their location, or purchase information, please contact me at the email address listed in my profile.

Thank you to Bob for sharing these beautiful photographs.



Guest Photographer V: South Dakota, USA

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Guest Photographer IV: Pheasant Hunting

Thanks to guest amateur photographer, Robert Gambrell, for agreeing to share his photographs from Central South Dakota, USA. Bob lives in Northport, Alabama. His photographs will be posted today (Sunday) through Thursday of this week.







Email the blogger's address to inquire about photographer, subjects, and/or purchase information.

Guest Photographer IV: Pheasant Hunting

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Guest Photographer III: Pheasant Hunting and Play

Thanks to guest amateur photographer, Robert Gambrell, for agreeing to share his photographs from Central South Dakota, USA. Bob lives in Northport, Alabama. His photographs will be posted today through Thursday of this week.                






Email the blogger's address to inquire about photographer, subjects, and/or purchase information.

Guest Photographer III: Pheasant Hunting and Play

Monday, January 3, 2011

Guest Photographer II: South Dakota, USA

Thanks to guest amateur photographer, Robert Gambrell, for agreeing to share his photographs from Central South Dakota, USA. Bob lives in Northport, Alabama. His photographs will be posted Monday through Friday of this week.







Email the blogger's address to inquire about photographer, subjects, and/or purchase information.

Guest Photographer II: South Dakota, USA

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Guest Photography I: South Dakota, USA

Thanks to guest amateur photographer, Robert Gambrell, for agreeing to share his photographs from Central South Dakota, USA.  Bob lives in Northport, Alabama. His photographs will be posted today through Thursday of this week.









Email the blogger's address to inquire about photographer, subjects, and/or purchase information.

Guest Photography I: South Dakota, USA

Citizenship: We are the ones we've been waiting for

Whatever your political inclination or personal perception, the following two statements were witnessed and are facts: In June 2000, after a controversial election and Supreme Court intervention, President George W. Bush signed a bill for tax cuts, including the wealthiest among us, that remain today. President Obama extended these for two more years during the lame duck session in a compromise with the GOP to move other legislation forward.

We know government is cumbersome and moves slowly. In most instances, government follows the lead of the people, rather than the other way around. Thus, there are times when bad fiscal policy needs to be addressed.

This is the case with a new website created by Yale law professors, Jacob Hacker and Daniel Markovitz.called http://www.giveitbackforjobs.org/. This site provides a tool to calculate, pledge, and donate your tax cut. According to the website:

Americans who've benefited from the extension of the Bush tax cuts should give what they can afford - in large amounts or small - back to the public, by supporting organizations that promote fairness and economic growth.

The government has, by extending the cuts, deprived itself of the resources required to support the policies that will secure a vibrant middle class. But joint action by visitors to this site will begin to replicate good government policy, outside the government and free from the grip of obstructionists within it.
When I got my $300 tax cut check with the personal note that said (paraphrasing), here is your money from George W. Bush. I donated it to the local peace and justice center because I did not think that was a wise move by our government, although a popular political one. It felt very good. I expect my participation in this suggestion will feel equally as good.

Here is the post in its entirety from the creators:

Giving Back the Tax Cut
Daniel Markovitz and Jacob Hacker


If a dysfunctional political process leads to bad fiscal policy — a pretty good first approximation of the current state of play in Washington and the tax deal it produced — what are ordinary citizens to do? Can citizens make shadow fiscal policy that at least partially counteracts the government’s?


On the revenue side, this question raises the familiar specter of Ricardian Equivalence — the proposition that consumers internalize the government’s budget constraint and thus respond to government borrowing by increasing savings, nullifying the stimulative effect of public deficits. That proposition has been much discussed of late, including in the blogs associated with this newspaper (see here). The best current thinking suggests that Ricardian Equivalence does not fully hold — private savings does not offset public borrowing one-to-one. Moreover, even if it did fully hold, a temporary increase in government borrowing would still retain a stimulative effect. Even if consumers do save to offset the public borrowing, their savings will be spread over many years while the increased public spending enters the economy immediately, producing an economic stimulus.


But what about the spending side? Suppose citizens think that government stimulus is unfairly and inefficiently allocated. In the recent tax deal, modest support for middle class Americans was combined with massive tax cuts for the rich. This is unfair: the rich don’t need the help. It is also inefficient: the rich will save rather than spend their tax cuts, so that cutting their taxes yields little stimulus per dollar of deficit. Can citizens adjust their conduct to counteract such wrong policy?


We believe that they can and propose a mechanism for doing so. The most fortunate citizens can convert their inefficient and unfair tax cuts into good fiscal policy. Rather than saving their new-found after-tax income, citizens who can afford it should donate their tax cuts to charities that promote the kinds of stimulative programs that better government policy would provide.


We’ve built a website to help achieve this — www.giveitbackforjobs.org enables citizens to calculate their approximate tax cuts and, acting in concert, give them back to appropriate charities. Acting together matters here. First, each participant encourages others to join as well. Second, by tying giving to tax policy, donors emphasize that they are not giving out of private grace, but from a shared sense of the obligations of citizenship. They practice political philanthropy.


We’re not so naïve as to believe that all the tax cuts will be given back. But we are convinced that there are many, many Americans who have the means and the desire to encourage a better policy. By actually putting their money where their mouths are, they won’t just be helping out their fellow citizens and encouraging economic growth; they will also be signaling the need for a better public fiscal policy.
I grew up in a time when people were able to move successfully into the middle class whether it be through the efforts of labor unions and/or easier access to college educations. Our parents aspired for us to live a better life than was available to them during the Great Depression. I see the middle class slipping away from us. Therefore, this is important to me as an individual and a citizen of this country and the world. If you agree, pass it on.

Citizenship: We are the ones we've been waiting for

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Better Day For SEC Football


                                                                                   Photo Credit: Tuscaloosa News / Robert Sutton
Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy (12) leads the way for wide receiver Julio Jones (8) in the
second quarter against Michigan State in the Capital One Bowl in Orlando, Florida.
Final Score: 49-7

Yesterday was not a good day for SEC football. The University of Tennessee, University of Georgia, and University of South Carolina all lost in disappointing play. Today, however, The University of Alabama, Mississippi State University, and University of Florida all won to bring the SEC to a 3-3 bowl season record thus far. Alabama and MSU both had decisive wins over Michigan State and University of Michigan, respectively.

As a Crimson Tide fan, I was thrilled at the team's performance today. They seemed relaxed and it showed on the field. It looked like they were just out having fun, as they made one successful play after another. Coach Saban even smiled a time or two. I wouldn't mind an Auburn game "do over" but otherwise it has been a great season. RTR!

Better Day For SEC Football

Weekend Cat Blogging #291

  Bunk beds! Cool!
Jules

Keep working. I'm just going to rest my eyes for one minute.
Vincent

This week's New Year's edition of Weekend Cat Blogging is hosted by Pam at Sidewalk Shoes.

Weekend Cat Blogging #291