Couldn’t agree more:
Given a fundamentalist reading of scripture, the Judeo-Christian-Islamic God is such a total asshole that I doubt I could worship it even if I could be convinced that it exists.
by Goldy — ,
by Darryl — ,
Highlights of the Loretta Lynch’s confirmation hearing.
Thom: The real deficit that the GOP doesn’t talk about.
Mental Floss: 17 crazy hair myths.
White House: Precision medicine:
Maddow with a nice Fox story.
Thom: The Good, The Bad, and The Very, Very Ugly.
David Pakman: Obama has reduced Bushes’ $1.4 trillion deficit by 75%.
$889 Million:
Thom: The Right’s home schooling conspiracy.
David Pakman: ObamaCare will cost 20% less than was originally projected:
Mark Fiore: King Abdullah, Royal pain.
Mental Floss: 24 cheese name origins.
Thom: More Good, Bad, and Very, Very Ugly.
On the Road to 2016:
Roll Call: Congressional hits and misses of the week.
Richard Muller: I was wrong on climate change.
David Pakman: DUI State Senator claims he can drive drunk and be privileged from arrest.
New Territory in the Republican War on Women™:
Thom: GOP turns Medicaid expansion over to banksters.
David Pakman: Thanks to Republicans, Obama’s approval keeps increasing.
White House: West Wing Week.
Super What???
Maddow: Five U.S.Pipelines Rupture in January.
Thom: Even more Good, Bad, and Very, Very Ugly.
Matt Binder: Politifact finds FAUX News lies more than ever:
Grandpa McCain to protesters: “Get outta here you low life scum”.
Last week’s Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza can be found here.
by Carl Ballard — ,
– I’m always more willing to look at a candidate who Cascade endorses, and occasionally they’ve tipped the scale for me, so it would be sad to not have that any more.
– I don’t know how realistic the prospect of a $15 minimum wage would be for Oregon, but the fact that its opponents are into the scare tactics phase probably means something good for its chances.
– Chart of the Day: An uptick in threats against abortion providers
– I am not on a jury, and I didn’t contribute much here. Best of all possible worlds! I did get some reading done in the jury room. Pit? Juror dumping ground?
– My mustache is better than either the Senate Majority Leader’s or the Speaker’s. Also, I haven’t just had a mustache in like 5 years.
by Goldy — ,
I was pepper spayed on MLK day for no reason. I wish we had a better world. https://t.co/KhmJbJFkFG pic.twitter.com/MeE50F4g6K
— Jesse Hagopian (@JessedHagopian) January 20, 2015
Looks like SPD pepper sprayed the wrong skell. From his lawyer’s press release:
The James Bible Law Group will be filing a tort claim against the City of Seattle and the Seattle Police Department in relation to the senseless pepper spraying of a prominent Seattle School Teacher and activist shortly after his MLK day speech. Jesse Hagopian had finished giving a powerful speech about how black lives matter when he was sprayed with pepper spray by a Seattle Police Officer. He was on the phone with his mother and making plans to be at his two year old child’s birthday party when he was sprayed. It is notable that this irrational police action occurred while he was several feet onto a Seattle Sidewalk.
This incident was captured on video and we will be allowing the media to view it during tomorrow’s press statement.
Can’t wait to see the video. And I hope Hagopian and his lawyers take this case as far as they can possibly go.
UPDATE: Here is the video clip of an SPD officer assaulting Hagopian and other peaceful passersby:
Hard to see how anybody can defend this as responsible policing.
by Carl Ballard — ,
– Dori Monson is so, so awful.
– Two important nutrition/education bills to keep an eye on
– It’s kind of late in the game to be researching new transit alternatives for Highway 99.
– Looks like Obama can walk and chew gum at the same time (not a metaphor).
– Tacoma has a brand-new sick leave law.
– I have jury duty starting today (yes, again), so who knows? Maybe I’ll have lots of time to write or maybe I’ll be my usual hardly posting self.
by Carl Ballard — ,
There’s a bill to raise the minimum wage in the state to $12, and it got a hearing in the House Labor Committee yesterday.
Washington, one of nine states where minimum-wage raise bills have been introduced in 2015, would go from $9.47 an hour to $12 in a series of 50-cent hikes every Jan. 1 under the bill.
House Labor Chairman Mike Sells, D-Everett, said the bill “has a lot better chance in the House” than last year’s failed attempt for a $12 minimum wage because it phases in the raise slower. He is one of 41 co-sponsors of the bill, all Democrats. It could face longer odds in the Republican-led Senate, where all but one of the 20 names attached to the bill are from the minority Democrats.
If you’re interested in writing your legislator and telling them, politely, that you support this bill, you can find them here. Either ask you member of the House to support the one that just got the hearing, or your Senator that you’d like the bill to get a hearing. If you’d like to contact a member of the House Labor Committee, you can find them here.
by Goldy — ,
Yeah, yeah, I agree with the Seattle Times that we need to build a downtown elementary school to keep the downtown core family friendly (you know, like a real city). But what really jumped out at me from their editorial was this:
But opening a downtown school is also an implicit contract that Seattle will do better to make its core safe and accommodating for families. That means more vigorous attention to obvious disorder and open-air drug markets, as well as downtown playspace for children.
I have been advocating for years to build a Really Kick-Ass Playground™ in downtown Seattle. Could the editors of our city’s paper of record finally be willing to lend their voice towards this much needed civic improvement?
by Darryl — ,
Please join us tonight for drinks, conversation, and, perhaps, dinner at the Seattle Chapter of Drinking liberally.
We meet every Tuesday evening at the Roanoke Park Place Tavern, 2409 10th Ave E, Seattle. Our starting time is 8:00 pm, but feel free to stop by earlier than that for dinner.
Can’t make it to Seattle tonight? Check out one of the other DL meetings this week. Tonight the Tri-Cities chapter also meets. On Wednesday, the Bellingham, Burien and Spokane chapters meet. And next Monday, the Yakima and South Bellevue chapters meet.
There are 186 chapters of Living Liberally, including sixteen in Washington state, four in Oregon and two in Idaho. Chances are excellent there’s a chapter meeting somewhere near you.
by Goldy — ,
So, um, in an article describing the Koch brothers’ plan to spend $900 million to buy the 2016 presidential election, the New York Times amazingly writes this:
Roughly 300 wealthy businessmen and philanthropists, many of whom are not traditional Republican givers, belong to a trade organization overseen by Koch advisers, Freedom Partners. The association organizes the conference and helps corral contributions for Koch-backed groups like Americans for Prosperity, a national grass-roots organization, and Concerned Veterans for America, which organizes conservative veterans.
Honestly? Really? $900 million later, and you’re still describing Americans for Prosperity as “grass-roots”…? What the fucking headline says. Also, the dictionary:
1. the common or ordinary people, especially as contrasted with the leadership or elite of a political party, social organization, etc.; the rank and file.
Words have meanings. Or did the Koch brothers manage to buy that as well?
by Carl Ballard — ,
– The health care law does whatever the GOP says it does, even if they said it did other things in the past.
– If you’re not happy about unfunded mandates, you could fund the things the voters passed rather than have a crappy amendment to the state constitution.
– Another reason to eat at Tutta Bella
– Since we’re going to hear a lot of har-har-har Algore since there’s a storm in the Northeast in January, it might be a good time to remind your uncle on Facebook or the Superbowl party next week that we had record highs here. Also, neither of those proves nor disproves global warming so much as the overwhelming scientific evidence.
– Lindy West talking to one of her trolls on This American Life was maybe one of the most amazing things I’ve ever heard.
– Either the NFL is opposed to the Marshawn Lynch victory celebration or they try to make money off it. [h/t]
– Youz guyz, I’m so sad that the Ark Park is probably going to have trouble finding an audience.
by Goldy — ,
Seattle Public Schools are struggling to deal with a crisis of overcrowding, as enrollment continues to grow by about 1,000 students every year—roughly equivalent to the capacity of two large elementary schools! And while our priority, of course, should be on finding constructive solutions, it would also be useful if those responsible for instigating, executing, and cheerleading the district’s recent rounds of disastrously stupid school closures might own up to their errors and issue a public apology, if only to help us learn from our mistakes. I’m talking about the school board members, district administrators, civic leaders, city council members, and state legislators, past and present, who collaborated on the closure process. And yes, I’m also looking at you, Seattle Times.
The case for closing schools was always flimsy. As I wrote back in 2006, when my daughter’s school was on the chopping block:
I remain convinced that the entire closure process is flawed… that the CAC had neither the time, the resources, the data or the expertise to make such profound decisions, and that the district has failed to provide reliable data on demographics, enrollment projections, first-choice ranking, and estimated savings.
My daughter’s school, Graham Hill Elementary, was saved, I believe, largely because we were lucky to have a team of parents available with the specialized skills necessary to make the case to save it: An attorney, a civil engineer, two journalists, and most importantly, a forensic accountant. Together, we had the skill set to dig up the appropriate data, analyze it, frame it, publicize it, and threaten the district with legal consequences. We had uncovered demographic data that strongly challenged the district’s projections—data that suggested that the many housing developments then underway in Southeast Seattle (New Holly, Othello Station, Rainier Vista, etc.) would soon result in a substantial uptick in enrollment in the quadrant. And if the data was so flawed in regards to our school, we asked, how could we trust the data supporting closure of the other schools on the list?
We ultimately saved our school, but the process was brutal, and we could find no newspaper columnist or editorialist willing to question the underlying assumptions behind school closures. The “serious people” accused us of being cranks and NIMBYs—or even worse. The late Cheryl Chow, then a school board member, scheduled a midday meeting with our PTA, and then scanning the room of mostly white women (you know, the people who could afford to attend a PTA meeting at a Southend school in the middle of a work day), all but accused us of being a bunch of racists.
It was heart breaking. Years before, the one clause that I had written into my divorce agreement was that my daughter stay at Graham Hill. That’s how much we loved that school. But when her mother moved to Mercer Island before the start of 5th grade (partially in disgust over the closure process), I let my daughter switch districts without a fight. I haven’t attended a PTA meeting since.
I’m not asking for a personal apology. But as our news media and “opinion leaders” continue to cover and comment on overcrowding in our schools, it might be nice of them to mention their own complicity in this crisis. They were the ones who perpetrated the meme of an inefficient district wasting money on half-empty schools. They were the ones who egged the closure process on, and who not only refused to even question the data on which it was based, dismissively rolled their eyes at those of us who did. And it’s past time they acknowledged their role in fomenting this costly mistake.
At least that way, the next time they publish an editorial touting charter schools or common core or tougher testing regimes as the answer—or God forbid eliminating an elected school board and placing control of the district solely in the hands of Seattle’s mayor (you know, just because)—readers will be able to comfortably conclude, armed with knowledge their prior failures, that “the serious people” clearly don’t know what the fuck they’re talking about.
by Goldy — ,
by Goldy — ,
by Darryl — ,
Eric Schwartz: Obama’s New Favorite Word.
Ann Telnaes: A bad taste in West Virginians’ mouths.
Jon calls out Mike Huckabee…to his face.
Mental Floss: 26 fascinating founding father facts:
Michael Brooks: Pope Francis, “Climate change is real.” Rush’s head explodes.
Maddow: Scalise, “Believe what I say, NOT what I DO.
David Pakman: Top 1% will own 50% of wealth by 2016.
Freedom Fries in Old Europe:
Larry Wilmore: Exactly what we’re going to get when we open up relations with Cuba .
Thom: FAUX News pushes faulty Gitmo numbers.
Maddow: Christian wackos & Gov. Jindal’s Presidential prayer rally???
Vsauce: Is all fair in love and war?
Roll Call: This Week’s Congressional Hits and Misses.
SOTU:
Jon: The Monsters of Money.
David Pakman: Mitt Romney’s new focus on poverty is hilarious.
Maddow: Koch brothers’ dirty money:
White House: West Wing Week.
Sam Seder and Michael Brooks: The 2016 Republican Clown Car has arrived.
Thom: Citizen’s United…five years later.
The Renewed Republican War on Women™:
Mental Floss: Misconceptions about cleanliness and germs.
Ann Telnaes: Sochi Putin and the real Putin.
Last week’s Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza can be found here.
by Carl Ballard — ,
Look, I don’t really care if a bill is bipartisan or not. If a bill is a good idea, then the party makeup of that bill’s sponsors don’t matter as much as the number of legislators supporting it. Of course, in the state Senate with GOP control, the measures I support will probably need some bipartisan support to pass. And in the state House, I suspect most bills I like will be improved by being more partisan and getting GOP support would water them down. But whatever, the process is the process. And for people who are less partisan than me, bipartisanship is important.
If you want bipartisanship qua bipartisanship, there are ways you can reach out to the other side without compromising your values. Let’s see how whoever is in charge of the House GOP Twitter feed tried to show they are bipartisan.
As of last night, @WaHouseGOP members have introduced 151 bills with Democrat co-sponsors. #bipartisanwa #waleg
— WaHouseGOP (@WaHouseGOP) January 24, 2015
“Democrat co-sponsors”? It wouldn’t have cost them anything to write “Democratic” and show they were actually committed to a process that respects both sides. I mean honestly, it’s not that big of a deal, but they could try to make their tweets a bit less self-refuting.
Also, I tried to find some context and was only somewhat successful. If I’m reading this right it looks like there have been 1229 bills introduced in both houses. If you assume half of them are in the House of Representatives, that’s most bills in the House aren’t bipartisan. I don’t know. It’s 7:30 on Friday, and this is exactly how much research I’m willing to do before I go out.