Posts Tagged ‘Free’

Dr. Omar H. Ali op-ed The Free Lance-Star

Monday, February 20th, 2012

Movements to the Mountaintop
History as Collective Failure: Lessons from the Black populists
Omar H. Ali
February 19, 2012
GREENSBORO, N.C.–Famously, George Washington lost almost every major battle during the American Revolution, yet he won the war. His final victory at Yorktown is embraced as an example of individual perseverance in the face of overwhelming odds.

In our winner-take-all culture, we tend to glorify the winners, emphasizing the individual–from historical figures, such as Washington, to contemporary figures, such as Oprah Winfrey or Barack Obama. We learn about them as individuals who “make it”–on their own, through extraordinary acts, with vision, and a little bit of luck. The formula: They struggled, they failed, but pressed on until they won (glory, money, the war, the vote, the presidency).

But what if in history there is no such thing as “the individual” or “winning”?What if there is only the seamless process of collective creation–no victory (no defeat), only what people do together? Back stories–the ones you don’t usually hear–can teach us about collective creativity, about the fleeting nature of winning and about the production of history of many people doing mostly ordinary, but sometimes, extraordinary things together.

What most of us learn about “black history” entails the people and/or movements that succeeded in making political changes–notably, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement. But what about those who didn’t make it to the mountaintop? What about the dreams that remain unfulfilled and the movements that failed?

Black populism, the movement of black farmers, sharecroppers, and agrarian workers from 1886 to 1900, was such a movement. It sought, but was not able to make, the economic and political reforms that were so desperately needed by a generation of Southern African-Americans coming out of slavery. Black populism was also the largest independent black political movement in the region before the modern civil rights movement. Read more …

Omar H. Ali is associate professor of African-American history at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and author of “In the Lion’s Mouth: Black Populism in the New South, 1886-1900″ (University Press of Mississippi, 2010).

The Hankster

Times Free Press: Democrats say Tennessee’s 3rd District congressional race winnable

Saturday, January 28th, 2012

Democrats say Tennessee's 3rd District congressional race winnable | timesfreepress.comGood write up in the Times Free Press:

In a brief interview after the meeting, Strong said Tennessee’s 3rd Congressional District race is within reach for a party that hasn’t tasted victory since 1992. Strong said the newly drawn congressional district, which includes parts or all of six fresh counties, could benefit Democratic hopefuls Mary Headrick, a physician from Union County, and Chattanooga businessman Bill Taylor, both of whom attended the meeting.

“We’re feeling good,” said Strong, an assistant district attorney for Hamilton County. “The new district gives the Republican [candidates] no better name recognition than our own people.”

Democrats say Tennessee’s 3rd District congressional race winnable | timesfreepress.com.

TNDP News

Wikipedia: Imagine a World Without Free Knowledge – SOPA and PIPA

Thursday, January 19th, 2012
 
Imagine a World
Without Free Knowledge
For over a decade, we have spent millions of hours building the largest encyclopedia in human history. Right now, the U.S. Congress is considering legislation that could fatally damage the free and open Internet. For 24 hours, to raise awareness, we are blacking out Wikipedia. Learn more.
Contact your representatives.

The Hankster

Forrester: Herron Taking on Washington Corruption that Gave Fincher “Get out of Jail Free Card”

Sunday, August 21st, 2011

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Democratic Party Chairman Chip Forrester issued a statement in support of state Senator Roy Herron’s lawsuit against the Federal Election Commission filed last Friday.

In a recent investigation, six FEC commissioners unanimously agreed U.S. Rep. Stephen Fincher had broken the law in reporting a 0,000 loan used during his political campaign. However, three Republican commissioners successfully voted to block the FEC from punishing Fincher — despite the FEC counsel’s recommendation to hold Fincher accountable for his violations.

That essentially gave Fincher a “get out of jail free” card, Forrester said.

“It is wrong to find Mr. Stephen Fincher guilty of breaking the law, and then refuse to hold him accountable. Our elections must have integrity, and if Washington politicians like Stephen Fincher won’t follow the law and are not held accountable by the FEC, we are glad a statesman like Roy Herron is willing to take on the corruption.”

The FEC has 60 days to respond to the lawsuit.

“A year ago, Mr. Fincher lied when he told everyone who would listen that the FEC approved the shady 0,000 bank loan he used to finance his political campaign,” Forrester said. “Since then we have learned the truth. The FEC has found him guilty of breaking the law, but due to Washington politics, won’t hold him accountable.

“Mr. Fincher has adamantly refused to admit any wrongdoing and has clearly failed the most critical tests of leadership: telling the truth and leading by example,” Forrester said. “Mr. Fincher and Washington, D.C. politicians sadly appear to share a common goal in their willful disregard for accountability.

“Handing out ‘get out of jail free’ cards to Washington, D.C. politicians who break the law is not justice. Tennesseans deserve better, and if Roy Herron has to take on the entire Federal Election Commission to make Washington work for Tennesseans again, we will support him all the way.”

-30-

BACKGROUND: LIES FINCHER TOLD ABOUT THE LOAN TO MEDIA LAST YEAR

Decision 2010: FEC investigating 0K bank loan made to Fincher
WMC TV, October 21 http://www.wmctv.com/Global/story.asp?S=13367582#
Fincher: “The FEC said it’s OK. The bank said it’s OK. The bank’s lawyer said it’s OK, and I say it’s OK. It’s a legal loan.”

Fincher refuses to release tax returns: Republican blasts ‘witch hunt’; Herron spokesman says ‘sketchy finances are legitimate issue
The Jackson Sun, October 1
http://www.jacksonsun.com/article/20101001/NEWS01/10010310/Fincher-refuses-to-release-tax-returns

Stephen Fincher said Thursday he will not release his tax returns, saying he has not done anything illegal and the allegations his Democratic opponent Roy Herron has made against him are a “witch hunt.” …

Fincher said the bank, the bank’s attorney, and the FEC have all cleared the loan…

Speaking in an interview after his address in Martin, Fincher said the loan is legitimate in every sense.

Biggest controversy in the 8th District race, a loan taken out by Republican Fincher
WKNO, NPR Memphis, October 22
http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/wkno/news.newsmain/article/0/0/1716467/Mid-South.News/Biggest.Controversy.In.8th.District.Race.A.Loan.Taken.Out.By.Republican.Fincher

When questioned directly about the loan at a public forum at Union University Fincher said, “The FEC said the loan is okay.”  The FEC hasn’t explicitly okayed the loan. Fincher also restated his refusal to disclose the terms of the loan, or his tax returns…

This week the FEC responded. The Commercial Appeal reported Wednesday that the Gates Bank and Trust and Fincher’s campaign treasurer had received letters from the FEC, but it is unclear when more action may happen.

Ciaramitaro said Fincher’s campaign might not respond to all the FEC’s requests until after the election.

Rulings needed on Fincher finances
Editorial – The Jackson Sun, October 19
http://www.jacksonsun.com/article/20101019/OPINION01/10190303

Fincher has said he filled out the forms in good faith. “Nothing has been done that is unethical or intentionally inaccurate,” he said in an interview last month. Read those comments carefully. Fincher leaves the door wide open to the forms being wrong.

After he spoke, his handlers quickly added that any mistakes on the forms would be corrected after the campaign. That’s not soon enough. If Fincher made a mistake, he should admit it now. The people he seeks to represent deserve no less.

TN Democratic Party News

Review: Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War With a New Introductory Essay

Friday, February 11th, 2011

The Lowest Price we could find is .95 .00 Since its publication twenty-five years ago, Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men has been recognized as a classic, an indispensable contribution to our understanding of the causes of the American Civil War. A key work in establishing political ideology as a major concern of modern American historians, [...]
Best News & Politics

A Senate Mystery Keeps Torture Alive — and Its Practitioners Free

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

By Jeff Stein, CQ National Security Editor

With all the lawsuits over kidnapping and torture marching toward the Bush administration, you might think the top officials running the global war on terror would be worried just a little about the prospect that some day they might end up in court — if not having nightmares about getting measured for orange jumpsuits at Danbury Federal Prison.

Alas, no. Thanks to the legerdemain of Bush administration lawyers, a provision quietly tucked into the Military Commissions Act (PL 109-366) just before it was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bush on Oct. 17, would ease any worries they might’ve had. It not only redefines torture upward, removing the harshest, most controversial techniques from the definition of war crimes, it also exempts the perpetrators — interrogators and their bosses — from punishment all the way back to Nov. 1997.

The deft wording is the Bush administration’s attempt at bringing the United States’ criteria for defining a war crime into line with the Geneva Convention’s interpretation of torture.

The Supreme Court in June had declared the administration’s hastily assembled military commissions unconstitutional, saying all prisoners in U.S. custody had to be held in accordance with the Geneva Convention’s Article 3, which prohibits “outrages upon personal dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment.”

Renegotiating the Geneva Convention was out of the question. So the administration’s lawyers took what the president’s counselor, Dan Bartlett, later called “the scenic route.”

By way of the new Military Commissions Act, they effectively rewrote the U.S. enforcement mechanism for Geneva, the War Crimes Act, passed by Congress in Nov. 1997.

Never heard of this provision? That’s because coverage of the act focused more on its suspension of habeas corpus,barring anyone defined as an enemy combatant from filing suit challenging the legality of their detention or raising claims of torture and other mistreatment.

Former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, in particular, must be pleased by this legal three-card monte.

So, too, must be President Bush.

Full story: http://public.cq.com/public/20061122_homeland.html

The Democratic Republican – views and news