Song of Solomon 4:5-6
Your breasts are perfect;
they are twin deer
feeding among lilies.
I will hasten to those hills
sprinkled with sweet perfume
and stay there till sunrise.
Discuss.
by Goldy — ,
Song of Solomon 4:5-6
Your breasts are perfect;
they are twin deer
feeding among lilies.
I will hasten to those hills
sprinkled with sweet perfume
and stay there till sunrise.
Discuss.
by Darryl — ,
Thom: more Good, Bad, and Very, Very Ugly.
Ann Telnaes: Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Drone.
Ed: Voter fraud is perpetuated by Republicans.
Aqua Buddha Filibuster:
Thom with The Good, The Bad, and The Very, Very Ugly.
Do Republicans even care about how sequester cuts affect people?
Maddow: Republicans scapegoat MSNBC for their 2012 failures:
Young Turks: U.S. sponsored death squads in Iraq.
Bill-O The Clown Bizarre Melt-Down:
Sharpton: Jomes O’Keefe to pay $100K for his false ACORN smears.
A Twitter conversation with Sarah Palin.
White House: West Wing Week.
Voting Rights Act:
Maddow: Rare terrorist suspect arrest.
Young Turks: Florida Gov. Rick Scott admits he was wrong and Obama was right.
Red State Update: Obama will suck you into the ground.
President Jeb:
Maddow: Obama invites a pack of hyenas to dinner.
Ed: The world according to Cheney.
#GOPSequester: Defenseless.
Ed: Obama signs VAWA.
O’Donnell: Hillary Clinton leads everyone for 2016.
Liberal Viewer: Can Republicans steal marijuana issue?.
Romney Resurfaces:
Sam Seder: Jeb Bush snakes his way to 2016.
Will DeGra: Mississippi and the 13th Amendment:
Stephen on Obama’s outrageous record on Israel.
Maddow: Big tobacco’s disinformation strategy.
Ann Telnaes: Dow closes at an all time high.
Last week’s Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza can be found here.
by Carl Ballard — ,
I know this is a few days old, but I want to applaud Seattle for considering allowing more emergency credit before it shuts off water.
The Seattle City Council is now considering legislation that would give a second emergency credit of up to $340 per year for any family registered in its low-income Utility Discount Program with children in the home. Currently, only one credit is available annually per household.
Seattle Public Utilities said it shut off water to 138 households in 2012 that were part of its low-income program. Of those, 68 had children under 18 years old.
Councilmember Jean Godden, who is sponsoring the legislation, said providing a second credit to those 68 families would cost the city about $20,000 a year. She called that a small subsidy in the context of the utilities’ nearly billion-dollar annual budget.
The article goes on to say that number is probably low because some people don’t know they qualify for the program. When people and families fall behind it’s unfortunate. And I’m glad in a relatively wealthy city like Seattle we’re figuring out how to make this situation a little less awful.
by Carl Ballard — ,
There was a shooting at the Parks Department. It looks like the police have the suspect in custody, but this is scary stuff.
Officers responding to a report of shots fired in a building near N. 80th and Densmore Avenue N. found a man with gunshot wound to the chest just around 2:15 p.m. Medics transported the man to a hospital; he was last listed in critical but stable condition.
Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation spokesperson Dewey Potter identified the victim as Bill Keller, 65, the executive director of the Associated Recreation Council, and the suspect as Carolyn Piksa, 46, a current Seattle Parks and Recreation employee. Piksa is described as a white female wearing a blue stocking cap and a beige or green camoflage jacket.
Since the shooter had the keys to all of the community centers, the kids who were going there after school have been rerouted back to their schools.
Meanwhile, Seattle police have asked several schools in the area of N. 130th and Linden Avenue N to be placed in lockdown as a precaution. The following schools are currently in “shelter in place,” which means exterior doors are locked, but classes are being conducted inside: Broadview Thomson Elementary K-8, Bagley Elementary and Wilson Alternative School.
As a result of the community center closures, Seattle Public Schools released the following statement about students en route to after-school programs at the centers:
Due to the City of Seattle’s closure of all community centers citywide, Seattle Public Schools is returning all students who were on buses bound for after-school programs to their schools of origin. In some cases, students were delivered to community centers before the closure announcement was made. In that case, the community centers are calling parents and asking them to pick up their students. Students returned to their school will remain at school with adult supervision until their parents can arrange for pick up.
I can’t imagine what any of those parents have been going through. Hopefully any parents reading this have found your kids.
by Carl Ballard — ,
The state house passed the Washington Voting Rights Act (second section). If passed it would allow minority groups that could prove discrimination at the local level some relief. The example in the piece, that’s the most common example I’ve heard relating to the act is Yakima:
His bill would give minority communities that can prove they’ve been disenfranchised at the polls (say, in Yakima, whose at-large city council lacks a single Latino member despite the city’s large Latino population) to move to districted elections.
Great. Now we can look forward to it dying in the state senate.
by Carl Ballard — ,
I hate that Metro has to go begging the state just to tax ourselves, but that’s the way we do it in Washington, so sure. Representative Farrell has a bill to let localities either have a $40 car tab or in some cases up to 1% of the value of the car go to transit.* She has a post on Slog in support of the bill.
When King County Metro was last facing service cuts, the legislature authorized a temporary congestion reduction fee that temporarily stabilized budgets of transit agencies. It was temporary because the state expected to move quickly to provide a more stable, comprehensive funding source for public transportation.
That state support has not materialized, however, and with transit services in jeopardy, we need to take action to ensure our economy, our environment, and our quality of life aren’t degraded. My legislation would give King County the local funding options they need to save core programs and high-demand service routes.
OK, I’m sold. You can find your legislator here.
by Carl Ballard — ,
– I’m all for Rand Paul’s talking on the Senate floor (and Wyden supporting it). I also still oppose Brennan’s nomination in general. But Paul is still an asshole.
– What to do with Hanford’s waste.
– Financial fitness day is Saturday in Seattle.
– The sequester is good news for coke heads (h/t).
by Carl Ballard — ,
I’m sometimes struck by the difficulty of the mundane for lesbian and gay couples. reading this press release from Patty Murray was one of those times.
(Washington D.C.) – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, a senior member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, led a letter to U.S. Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki calling for an expedited waiver process granting same-sex veterans and their spouses burial rights in national cemeteries. Currently, only members of the opposite-sex are buried next to their veteran spouse in national cemeteries.
Christ. It’s 2013 and we’re having this conversation. It’s 2013 and this isn’t an obviously done deal. It’s 2013 and instead of this just being a matter of some paperwork because vets’ spouses should be buried with them as a matter of course if that’s what they want, this is a fight. It’s 2013 and only 15 senators agreed to sign the letter.
When you think of the progress we’ve made in the last few decades as a society in treating same sex couples with basic respect, and then think this is still a fight, it’s jarring. When you think the solution — at least for now — is a waver and not fixing the policy, it’s dispiriting how much work is involved in just getting half measures.
by Carl Ballard — ,
The US Department of Education is investigating Seattle schools for disciplining black children more than white children.
According to district data, in the 2011-2012 school year, nearly 13 percent of black high school students received at least one short-term suspension. The equivalent figure for white students was just under 4 percent. In middle schools, the rate was 7 percent of white students and 27 percent of blacks.
The district has long been aware of the disparity, and recently held community meetings that addressed its discipline rates.
This, coming in the wake of the DOJ investigation of Seattle Police, is troubling for Seattle. Of course I’d rather address these problems head on than to have them go unaddressed. Hopefully we’ll have some actual change in school policies.
by Darryl — ,
Please join us for an evening of politics over a pint because, you know, sequestration and stuff, at the Seattle Chapter of Drinking Liberally.
We meet every Tuesday at the Montlake Ale House, 2307 24th Avenue E. Starting time is 8:00pm. Some people show up earlier for Dinner.
Can’t make it to Seattle tonight? Check out one of the other DL meetings over the next week. Tonight the Tri-Cities chapter also meets. On Thursday, the Spokane chapter and Drinking Liberally Tacoma meet.
With 205 chapters of Living Liberally, including fifteen in Washington state, four in Oregon, and two more in Idaho, chances are excellent there’s a chapter that meets near you.
by Carl Ballard — ,
– Anti gay laws are bad for business.
– The sequester is gross because it’s suspending housing vouchers in King County.
– And the sequester is gross because of what it does to women.
– The Daily Caller is gross.
– Having concubines may be gross, but they’re Biblical.
– Dan Sytman’s wingnut welfare job.
– Legislators who play music are pretty much awesome, (PS, if someone has video, I’ll post it).
by Carl Ballard — ,
OK, that’s bit more than the data actually say. But Goldy has a piece on a study of economic growth in the last decade.
According to a new report from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP), the economies of the nine states without a personal income tax (Washington included) have actually underperformed both the economies of the nine states with the highest income tax rates, and the 41 income tax states as a whole. Over the past decade real per capita GDP growth was only 5.2 percent in the non-income-tax states, compared 8.2 percent in the nine highest taxed states. Real median household income also fell further in the non-income-tax states, while unemployments were largely uniform across all three groups.
Washington actually did better than average on both per capita GDP and median income growth (while slightly worse on unemployment), but given the aggregate performance of the non-income-tax states it is impossible to argue that our lack of an income tax had anything to do with it. Unless you’re an idiot. Or a liar.
So yeah, 50 quite different states over a relatively short period of time is hardly the last word on what types of taxes make the most sense. But it certainly puts the lie to the notion that we’re getting ahead as a state because of our tax structure. If anything, it’s holding us back.
by Carl Ballard — ,
– Happy Women’s History Month.
– I’m not as opposed to the bike tax as a lot of people who ride bikes, but Rep. Ed Orcutt, um, doesn’t make a good case for it.
– Who could have guessed that conservative justices would be making things up?
– If hell exists, Dick Cheney’s spot is next to Walter Jones.
– (a) Gwen Moore is awesome. (b) Suzan DelBene looks less than happy to be in the frame.
by Lee — ,
Last week’s contest was won by Ted. It was JJ’s restaurant in Kansas City, the site of a tragic fire last month.
This week’s contest is a random location somewhere on earth, good luck!
by Goldy — ,
Exodus 32:27-29
Then he said to them, “This is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: ‘Each man strap a sword to his side. Go back and forth through the camp from one end to the other, each killing his brother and friend and neighbor.’” The Levites did as Moses commanded, and that day about three thousand of the people died. Then Moses said, “You have been set apart to the LORD today, for you were against your own sons and brothers, and he has blessed you this day.”
Exodus 20:13
Thou shalt not kill.
Discuss.