Posts Tagged ‘being’

Independent Redistricting Close to Being Put on the Shelf

Friday, March 18th, 2011
The fight for independent redistricting rages on in New York, however both the State Senate and Assembly approved funding for partisan redistricting committees under LATFOR. Reform advocates continue to press Gov. Cuomo to veto this budget to keep independent redistricting at the forefront.

NEW YORK REDISTRICTING


The Hankster

Democratic Party News – Actors Being Cast for Televised Obama “Town Hall”.

Friday, September 25th, 2009

President Barack Obama is constantly trying to deceive the American people. This time he is using actors at a town hall meeting.

On Nielson’s “Back Stage” website, amidst casting calls for reality TV shows, cruise ship musicians, and low-budget films, there appears a casting notice for Obama’s upcoming Oct. 14 “town hall” meeting, which reads as follows:

“PRESIDENT OBAMA TOWN HALL, DC: MTV, BET and CMT are casting the audience for town hall meeting with President Obama. Shooting Oct. 14, 4 p.m. in Washington, D.C. Seeking — Audience Members: males & females, 18+. To apply, email townhallaudience @mtvnmix.com and put ‘Town Hall’ in the subject line. To ensure that the audience represents diverse interests and political views, include your name, phone number, hometown, school attending, your job and what issues, if any, you are interested in or passionate about. Also, provide a recent photo and short description of your political views. Submission deadline: Oct. 14. No pay.”

Politico spoke with a spokeswoman for Viacom, which owns MTV, who denied that audience members would be screened for political views, and claimed that they are simply looking for a “very diverse looking audience …. We want gender diversity, we want ethnicity diversity, we want religious diversity, we want political view diversity. We want diversity of all kinds.” But Viacom failed to explain why, in seeking diversity, MTV and the other host networks were going to an actors website to “cast” the Presidential town hall meeting.

According to advance coverage, the MTV town hall is to be modeled on the CNBC town hall meeting last month. But, no Velma Harts need apply.

Democratic Party News – The News of the Democratic Party.

If the media are the message, what are we being told?

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Right now, you are looking at an Internet news site. The content is free to the users (you). It is updated multiple times throughout the day. Ten or 12 years ago, sites like this were few and far between. Today, they proliferate.

In the current issue of Coloradobiz magazine, columnist Jeff Rundles asks what it all means. And, since he looks to the late Marshall McLuhan for the answers, we had to bring you a taste:

I can’t imagine that a “newspaper” delivered electronically will change the game. The news organization itself has to be completely transformed not in the delivery of its content, but in the creation of the content itself. Think bloggers. Think Daily Beast. Think interactive. What is produced won’t be in a “subscriber’s” living room or on the front porch at a specified time, but rather in his pocket and her purse, always on, ever changing, constantly updated, under siege every moment, and at once immediately disposable and accessible forever.

But since I know nothing of McLuhan’s work, I’ll let him have the last word:

“The next medium, whatever it is — it may be the extension of consciousness — will include television as its content, not as its environment, and will transform television into an art form. A computer as a research and communication instrument could enhance retrieval, obsolesce mass library organization, retrieve the individual’s encyclopedic function and flip into a private line to speedily tailored data of a saleable kind.“ – Marshall McLuhan, 1962

Perhaps since McLuhan’s books were known for being dense, weighty and even a little circular, he became known more for the snappy one-liner than anything else. Here then, are some McLuhan quotes lifted from his estate’s website.

The future of the book is the blurb.

The ignorance of how to use new knowledge stockpiles exponentially.

Politics offers yesterday’s answers to today’s questions.

The answers are always inside the problem, not outside.

News, far more than art, is artifact.

The story of modern America begins with the discovery of the white man by the Indians.

So, to use the generic phrase, “new media,” how has new media affected the body politic? Has it, like all media before it, become the message?

“Political science is still sitting around trying to figure out what the effects will be,” said Colorado College political science professor Bob Loevy.

“What we know is that new media provides the opportunity to connect groups together for political action that is inexpensive and quick. It has had a tremendous impact on fund-raising.”

Loevy noted that political campaigns now regularly employ paid professionals to manage new media as an outreach tool.

Indeed, just looking at the most recent campaigns in Colorado, virtually every major candidate had a prominent “Donate Now” message on their website that was click-able and allowed people to literally donate right then. It is safe to say there will never be another major campaign without such functionality — at least not until something better and faster comes along.

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Ken Buck posted his concession announcement to his website via Twitter. Republican Dan Maes announced via Facebook that he planned to raise a million dollars in a 24-hour period. It didn’t happen, of course, but …

YouTube videos of Ken Buck talking on various subjects became viral, spiraling out from their source until virtually everyone following the race had seen more than enough.

We can see that the medium matters, but with McLuhan long gone, who will tell us what it means?

Colorado Independent

Teenage Suicide Due To Being Gay

Friday, June 26th, 2009

There’s a lot of discussion going on in the news regarding teenagers who commit suicide because of being gay. My take on this is that this would never happen if these kids had been taught who they really are. The biggest illusion we humans have bought into for centuries is that we are incapable of [...]
Best News & Politics

Republicans reclaim state House, but votes are still being counted

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

The red wave that swept America in last week’s election didn’t exactly miss Colorado, but it was very selective.

It will probably be felt most acutely in the State Legislature, where control will be split, the Republicans gaining a one- or two-seat edge in the House. Democrats will retain control of the Colorado Senate, probably by a 20-15 margin.

Speaker Terrance Carroll on the first day of the 2009 session. (Photo/Bob Spencer, The Colorado Independent)

While Colorado Democratic Party officials still say they are waiting for all the votes to be counted in a couple of races, it appears to most that House Democrats took a big hit, going from a 37-27-1 majority to being down one seat, 33-32, or possibly 33-31-1 if unaffiliated candidate Kathleen Curry prevails in HD 61.

Among Democratic losers in the House were:

Debbie Benefield, Arvada, who is losing HD 29 to Robert Ramirez by just over 200 votes.

Joe Rice, Littleton, who lost HD 38 to Kathleen Conti by a 52-48 margin.

Dennis Apuan, Colorado Springs, who lost HD 17 to Mark Barker by a 54-46 margin.

Dianne Primavera, Broomfield, who is losing HD 33 to Donald Beezley by around 400 votes.

But the Colorado Democratic Party still had this language on its website as of this morning:

The Colorado State House is one representative shy of the majority. We continue to review the votes for several House races. We will miss the wise counsel of Joe Rice, Sarah Gagliardi and Dennis Apuan. And we hope to discover the votes needed to bring back Debbie Benefield and Diane Primavera.

And Benefield had this to say Monday afternoon: “Of course I still have a chance.”

She said she is currently behind by 208 votes, but that there are hundreds of provisional and military ballots still to be counted.

A source in the Democratic Party who did not want to be identified but whose job entails keeping a close eye on the late ballot counting process, said there are still about 4,000 provisional ballots in Jefferson County that have not been counted. Only a portion of those are in HD 29, but he said it is way too soon to declare a winner in that race.

“We may not know who won that race until the middle of the month,” he said. He also said there are still a lot of votes to be counted in HD 33, but with the Republicans having a larger lead there among votes already counted, that race seems less likely to flip. Provisional ballots tend to tilt Democratic, he said.

While the Democratic Party may still be saying, “let’s wait and see,” both parties in both chambers have been busy electing leaders for the 2011 session.

Last session’s Speaker of the House Democrat Terrance Carroll has reportedly offered his congratulations to Republican Rep. Frank McNulty, Highlands Ranch, for capturing majority control of the Colorado House, where he has already been named Speaker for next year.

The Democrats managed to hold off challenges to all but one of their state Senate seats in last week’s election, leaving them firmly in control with a 20-15 majority. While some still hold out for a Republican victory in SD 16, Jeanne Nicholson was leading Tim Leonard by more than 500 this morning.

How much a split legislature matters is unclear.

“The biggest difference (in the House) is that their party now picks the chairs of all the committees,” said Rep. Jim Riesberg, D-Greeley.

He also noted that as most committees have 11 members, in the next session, that will mean committees each have six Republicans and five Democrats.

“As long as people vote on the issues, I really don’t think it will make much difference. Last year, more than 80 percent of the bills that passed the House had at least 50 votes (out of 65).”

Similarly, on redistricting, he said that anytime the legislature tries to gerrymander the districts, the courts have stepped in to redraw the lines anyway.

“We will make every effort to work together with the Republicans,” he said.

Democratic Rep. Max Tyler, HD 23, Lakewood, says there was no red wave in Colorado. “The House is Republican because of less than 300 votes in one district. That’s hardly a wave,” he said.

Tyler, elected to his first full term after having been appointed to fill a vacancy, said it felt great to win. Unusual in a state legislative race, Tyler’s opponent, Edgar Johannson, moved to the district from Denver just to run against Tyler. Also unusual was that Tyler was targeted by a well-funded TV effort, with negative ads running during prime time sporting events.

“I think I won because of my deep roots in the community.” He said he thinks Republican leadership will make it difficult to pass legislation favoring green energy. “When the other side thinks climate change is a hoax, it will be hard to get clean energy legislation through,” he said.

“With a majority in the House, we are going to have the chance to move Colorado forward with bipartisan cooperation,” said newly elected Speaker of the House Frank McNulty.

“We will be on equal footing with Democrats in the next session,” McNulty said. “We will focus on finding common ground with Democrats in the House and in the Senate and with Governor Elect [John] Hickenlooper. We know that Hickenlooper has good ideas he would like to pursue in putting Colorado back to work and we look forward to meaningful and substantive conversations with the governor and the Democratic Senate,” McNulty added.

Colorado Independent

Review: Republicans, democrats say medicare law needs fixing: ‘technical correction’ being considered.(Practice Trends): An article from: Skin & Allergy News

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Best Price .95 This digital document is an article from Skin & Allergy News, published by International Medical News Group on April 1, 2004. The length of the article is 527 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in [...]
Best News & Politics