Monday, October 23, 2006

"Iraq: The Real Story"

Apparently, BushCo is working on a secret plan for Iraq, which they will tell us about after the elections (following which Rumsfeld will resign). Over the weekend, Bush refused to admit that there was any problem with his strategy for the war. At the same time Bush lied (again), without flinching, and denied that he ever espoused a "stay the course" argument in Iraq. ("BUSH: Well, listen, we've never been stay the course, George." But . . . but . . . but . . . ummm. . . err . . . huh?)

Bush's retreat from discussion of his strategy, desperate attempt to come up with some kind of plan, and denials that he ever wanted to stay the course, are the result of his refusal to take responsibility for the bowl of shit he served up to the world. Just how much a failure his Iraq strategery has been is demonstrated in micro by this film.

Sean Smith is a photojournalist with The Guardian. He has been in Iraq since before the US invasion. Recently he spent six weeks with the Army's 101st Division. He produced this short film on the 101st's efforts to train Iraqis and turn over control of small parts of towns to them.

You will see the 101st attacked from the town council offices next door and from within their own joint command post; you will hear an Iraqi officer order his troops to cease firing on insurgents in the middle of a firefight; an Iraq soldier will explain why Iraq was better off under Saddam. You will see an insurgent battle with ghosts, a sixth non-productive raid on an Iraqi family, and no Iraqi ready or willing to stand up. You will see a failed policy, an inept strategy, and a tragedy of Shakespearean dimensions, all writ small in eight minutes time.

See it here.

Wolf Blitzer is an Idiot

Traversing Pennsylvania yesterday, I was able to listen to CPSAN radio's rerun of all of the Sunday talk shows on my XM radio.

Denial, desperation, and diversion seemed to be the theme of the day for the republicans when it came to the midterms.

Arlen Specter blamed Clinton for 9/11 and for Bush's defeat of Gore, Bush refused to answer if he thought the current Iraq strategy was working and pretended the question was about tactics, he also promised to bring back his social security dismantling project, Al Haig thought the performance of Rumsfled was only a political question not worthy of discussion, and Elizabeth Dole warned that the terrorists would be here on November 8 if we elected the Democrats.

But Wolf Blitzer, who I find even more annoying than those neocon puppets on Fox, made the stupidest claim of them all.

In his ponderous proclaimative style he informed his listener that "all polls show that" the Santorum-Casey fight "is a very, very close race", with "Casey slightly ahead".

"Close"?

"Slightly ahead"?

Wolf is either an idiot or believes that of his audience.

Hey, Wolf, you moron, take a look at the actual polling data instead of listening to the little voices in your head:

Zogby/WSJ: 10/19 Casey 52.4% Santorum 44.3%
Greenberg Quinlan: 10/17 Casey 54%, Santorum 37%
Rasmussen 10/15 Casey 54% Santorum 41%
Strategic Vision 9/28 Casey 50% Santorum 41%
Quinnipiac 9/26 Casey 51% Santorum 39%
Temple/Inquirer 9/24 Casey 49% Santorum 39%
Keystone 9/21 Casey 45% Santorum 38%
Issues PA/Pew 9/21 Casey 52% Santorum 31%

Friday, October 20, 2006

You wuz serious about that?

"[Y]es I will release them"
-- Senator Santorum promising to release his tax returns, October 16, 2006

"Santorum Retreats on Release of Tax Info"
-- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October20, 2006

"[H]ypocrisy can often be a social good."
-- Senator Santorum, "It Takes a Family", p. 280

Did he think no one was paying attention, or didn't he care.

Another day, another lie.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

First Post Debate Poll -- Santorum Down 13

Rasmussen's latest figures on the Pennsylvania Senate race show that, despite dismal, lackluster, or uninspiring debate performances by the Democratic challenger, Republican incumbent Rick Santorum is not making any positive movement with less than three weeks to go until election day.

The results made public today put the margin at 13 points, the same as Rasmussen's previous release on October 10. In the latest survey, Casey is favored by 54% of the respondents, as against Santorum with 41%. This spread is in the same range as the 12 point difference reported in the latest DSCC internal polling on the race.

As per usual, Rasmussen is stingy with the crosstabs -- for which you have to pay big bucks. But they offer that the margin barely moves when leaners are included. In that case, Casey picks up 1% of the undecideds and Santorum 2%, for a 12-point difference. Santorum's favorables are at 46% and Casey's at 57%.

New Bush Numbers

SurveyUSA has released the latest nationwide and state-by-state polls on President Bush's job performance.

Bush still sucks.

SurveyUSA interviewed 600 adults in each of the 50 states between October 12 and 15, 2006.

A hefty 60% disapprove of the decider's decisions, while the wacky 37% approve.

In Pennsylvania, Senator Santorum's favorite president fares worse than he does nationwide -- 63% of Pennsylvanians say that the beneficiary of Santorum's non-oversight neo-leadership in the Republican-controlled Senate, sucks at his job.

As usual, the President doesn't have a favorable rating in any geographic area of Pennsylvania.

Things have gotten worse for Commander Codpiece since last month, when "only" 59% of Americans and 60% of Pennsylvania residents thought he was a lousy president.

Wave bye-bye, Rick.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

DSCC Internal Poll Puts Santorum Down by 12

From Deborah White:
"Democratic polling numbers are simply extraordinary. We need to win six Republican held seats to take back the Senate and we have a real chance to win as many as eight," wrote Sen. Chuck Schumer, Chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee over this past weekend in an insider status report.

"We are leading in six of these races and within striking distance in two others. I can assure you that we will not let these Republicans up for air for even a second between now and November."
The article goes on to list the latest DSCC internals, which give have Santorum down in double digits, with Casey at 48% and Santorum 36%.

Meanwhile, The New York Times is reporting Republican operatives, money, and hopes are abandoning Mike DeWine in Ohio and are expecting Santorum to be forcibly retired from the Senate.

"Had Enough"?

It started right at the beginning -- George Washington had one, so did John Adams, Jefferson offered "Jefferson and Liberty", Lincoln had "Lincoln and Liberty", and who could forget "Jimmy Polk of Tennessee"?

And now we have Chris Carney's newest addition to the American campaign song tradition:



John Laesch, taking on Hasert, has also joined the song fest with this one:



And then there's good ole' Charlie Brown looking to boot John Doolittle:



Add to those, Jerry McEnerney, Robert Rodriquez, David Roth, Joe Sestak, and more.

While each iteration isn't exactly original, watching them seriatim, as I did, one realizes that they are all right on point -- the reasons to throw these bums out are all the same. The paradigm of the republican control of our government is the lock step/close ranks/stop thought tactic of control. The same sort of bad thinking and dirty politics which enabled and protected the likes of Foley, Rumsfeld, Cheney, and Bush as they have systematically set about to destroy our government, our world standing, our military, our environment, our economy . . . . .

Yeah, I've had enough.

Intelligent Debate -- With Himself

"[I]ntelligent design is a legitimate scientific theory that should be taught in science classes."
-- Senator Santorum, March 14, 2002

"I'm not comfortable with intelligent design being taught in the science classroom."
-- Senator Santorum, August 4, 2005

"[T]he intelligent design movement . . . . [is] an extraordinary cause, namely, to rid science of false philosophy."
-- Senator Santorum, March, 2006

"[H]ypocrisy can often be a social good."
-- Senator Santorum, "It Takes a Family", p. 280

Move along, nuthin' to see here, folks

As one wag noted, no sense feeling sorry for Senator Santorum -- he's about to be fired and get a potential ten-fold raise. Sign me up, me laddie.

But still.

Recent reports from the candidates confirm what we said three weeks ago -- Santorum has spent away his once massive cash lead over the Democratic challenger and has got bupkus to show for it. He remains reliably below 40% in approval ratings -- the Mendoza Line for incumbent congresspeople.

His president, who, I think I heard someone say once or twice, Santorum has voted with something like 98% of the time, is not faring well. Today, Zogby reports on a national live survey showing the President's approval ratings in the toilet (still), scoring only a 37% approval rating. Santorum, who has been joined to a part of Bush's anatomy for Bush's entire term, cannot benefit from that. It gets worse, though.

The same Zogby poll puts public confidence in Congress at what must be at or near the all-time low -- only 18% of voters surveyed think Santorum and his Republican cronies are doing a good job of leading this country.

On the bright side for the Senator, at least he doesn't have to move after losing his job -- he can stay right in his Virginia McMansion (at least as long as the financing holds up).

Monday, October 16, 2006

Losing Election Could Be Costly for Santorum

Could Rick Santorum lose his McMansion if he loses the election?

Close followers of the ethical trainwreck that is Rick Santorum will recall the infamous special interest loan he received from the exclusive Philadelphia Trust Company on his Virginia residence.

The ethical issues surrounding this questionable deal were carefully researched and explicated in a great piece of writing by Will Bunch and in the ethics complaint filed by CREW.

A brief recap. As everyone knows, when Santorum first ran for the Senate, he blasted his incumbent opponent for living in Virginia and not Pennsylvania. When Santorum was elected, he promptly moved his family to Virginia, which has been his principle residence ever since. (The law provides that elected representatives don't lose their legal residency in their home state because they move to DC during their terms. But, two issues still arise -- the law says nothing about Virginia and, more important, instead of fessing up about living in Virginia, he lies about living in Penn Hills.) In any event, eventually he bought a 5,700+ square foot home in Virginia. In 2002, he refinanced the mortgage on the home with Philadelphia Trust. The problem is that Philadelphia Trust is a private banking institution servicing only the very wealthiest clients and, according to the reports he filed as Senator, Santorum doesn't qualify. Will Bunch's research pretty clearly demonstrates that Santorum trashed ethical rules to pull down favorable treatment on his mortgage. Check out the Will Bunch story and CREW complaint for the details.

What I find intriguing is that the mortgage calls for a balloon payment on November 1, 2007. The Santorums took out a five-year mortgage on their cottage home, presumably amortized over a longer period of time.

I guess Santorum figured he'd be re-elected in 2006 and and running for President in 2007. In that event, he likely planned on calling in another chip from Philadelphia Trust. But, since he will not be reelected and will not even be a Pennsylvania resident in 2007, what's going to happen when the (self-described) cash-strapped Santorums have to make that big payment in November, 2007?

Maybe Karen Santorum will have to take a part-time, minimum wage, no benefit job working the cash register at a Virginia Walmart to make ends meet.

One could wish.

In reality, Santorum is likely headed to a high-six-figure job with Haliburton or some lobbying firm, when he can put his connections and disregard for ethical considerations to work for some real coin.

[Oops. I forgot -- hat tip to Santorum Cybergate for the pictures, which I believe are their originals.]

Saturday, October 14, 2006

What Happened to College Journalism?

Back in the day, I was active on my high school and college newspapers. The high school paper was completely independent of the school -- not a dime of school money went to support the paper. They provided us an office (an unused janitorial closet) and an advisor (a former journalist) and that was it. All funds for the paper came from advertising sales and the dimes students paid for the paper.

In college it was a little different, despite my protests, the paper gladly accepted funds from the student activity account for operations, and the paper was free of charge.

In both cases, the editorial content was truly independent of administration control -- a fact which brought me to the offices of the Dean of Students and Assistant Principal with fair regularity (usually within an hour of the release of the latest edition).

We edited our paper with good taste and with an understanding of our reader's sensibilities. Our high school was small and the building actually included grades 6 through 12. We touched on controversy, to be sure (it was the 60's, man), but we tried to do it in good taste. But we never let good taste interfere with getting the message (or what we considered the truth) out.

In college the language used was a bit more, shall we say, grown-up (think, Hunter S Thompson), but appropriate to the story.

In neither case did we shrink away from a story because it was "nasty" -- if it was germane to the story, we put it out there. We were "journalists", we had the first amendment behind us, too.

Apparently, college journalists these days may not share the same ideals.

Recently, The Daily Collegian, which says it is "Published Independently by students at Penn State", ran a think piece by a young journalist. The author, Colin McLafferty, is a freshman at the school, majoring in International Politics and German, and a regular columnist. (In my day, a freshman was too wet behind the ears to have either a major or a regular column in the college paper. Colin, keep your options open over the next couple of years -- you might find an entirely new path to follow. Don't tie yourself to the major you declared so early in your career -- nothing is undoable.)

Anyway, it is a good piece about how Dan Savage has been, well, savaging Rick Santorum. In particular, by introducing a new word into the lexicon -- "santorum".

By now, most regular readers of this lackluster blog are aware of Savage's clever combination of self-promotion and political statement. A homosexual sex advice columnist, Savage was pissed off by Santorum's moralizing against gays. He invited his readers to come up with a sexually-related definition to which the word "santorum" could be attached. And they came up with a doozy:
santorum (san-TOR-um) n.
1. The frothy mixture of lube and fecal matter
that is simetimes the byproduct of anal sex.
Colin picks up on this and writes about how it could augur an entirely new form of political mudslinging. Nice take. Here are some of his comments about Savage's campaign:
Before we get to the details, take a second to think of the standard potshots politicians exchange. But, now, there is a movement to define, actually place in the dictionary, the word "Santorum" as the messy aftermath of sexual intercourse.

This reviling insult is the very first hit on Google for the word "Santorum." Go ahead and try it, sicko. This movement, full of youthful vulgarity, stands out in a crowd of tired smear campaigns. . . . Savage designed a Web site to promote this definition. The definition isn't suitable for print, but you can find it on www.urbandictionary.com.
Here's what caused my eyebrow to arch: "The definition isn't suitable for print". I didn't understand this part and thought, well, maybe he is joking. After all, he already defined it as "the messy aftermath of sexual intercourse" in the article. Pretty close to the actual definition.

So what was unsuitable? The reference to "fecal"? Kind of hard to believe, and a search of the Collegian database pulled up over a dozen uses of the word in their articles. Was it the reference to "anal sex"? Apparently not, as a search shows that that term has also been used -- albeit in a hetero sense. "Lube"? "Frothy"? Can't fathom that.

So I wrote Colin -- I asked him who said it was unprintable? Courteously, he responded and said that he passed the email on to his editor for response. Okay, passing the buck, but shows respect for the chain of command, I guess.

But we never received any response from the editor.

I am left to assume that it was indeed an editorial decision not to run the actual definition. It also appears that the objection to the definition is no the terminology employed (If the definition said something like, 'it's the slimy brownish stuff that dribbles out of your gay lover's ass after you pull your deflated cock out', I might get that.)

It seems that, at the Collegian, talking about sexual intercourse, even the messy aftermath of the same, fecal matter, and even anal sex -- are all okay -- unless it is to homosexual sex one is referring, then, it is "unprintable".

I hope that kind of squeamishness isn't reflective of this new generation of journalists we are cooking in college today. We already have too many professional journalists without the balls to challenge authority and the status quo.

Umm, you got us there, Senator

On the campaign trail at Northeast Pennsylvania's home office for bigotry, Senator Santorum told a handful of assembled faithful in Hazleton:
“I say what’s on my mind,” he added. “When I am straight with you, there are a whole lot of people out there who don’t like you.”
Senator, tell us something we don't know -- in fact, 60% don't like you or what you say. That's why they will be sending you home to Virginia where your message of intolerance and pretended morality might play better.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Casey Killed in Debate

No, I don't mean he won. Casey was killed in the debate. I sure hope no one saw this thing, because it confirmed what a good friend has said, in a slightly different context -- Bob Casey is a Fucking Idiot!

I hate Rick Santorum's policies. I think Santorum's policies are without sound basis. I think anyone with warm spit can skewer Santorum's failed and miserable policies. But, not Chuck Schumer's guy. Bob Casey made Santorum look smart -- how is that possible??!!! Casey handed Santorum softball after softball when they should have been hand grenades.

I was going to do a blow by blow but I am too discouraged right now. Maybe tomorrow.

If Santorum wants to use his money well over the next three weeks, he will simply buy TV time to run this debate over and over and over again.

Christ, I hope he doesn't do that.

Another Reason the Budget is FUBAR

The Federal Budget surplus for Fiscal Year 2000 -- President Clinton's last year -- was $230 Billion. It was the third year in row of surplus. President Bush is celebrating his announcement that the anticipated budget deficit for 2006 will be $248 Billion. This will be the fifth highest budget deficit in history (Bush has the top three and his father is in the four spot). Some will say that maybe cutting taxes for the wealthy, increasing subsidies for oil companies, and increasing spending on thins like the Iraq war weren't such a great idea. They are probably correct, but looking at the President's announcement, I think we can see another, perhaps more fundamental reason, why this administration is so inept at the whole budget thing. From the official White House transcript (and if you don't believe me, watch it here):
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all. Please be seated. Good afternoon. Thanks for coming to the White House. . . . This morning my administration released the budget numbers for fiscal 2006. These budget numbers are not just estimates; these are the actual results for the fiscal year that ended February the 30th.
Yep. That explains a lot.

Are we there yet?

daddy democrat is this week's featured blog. Representing the third time out in the blogosphere for this Pennsylvania (Delaware County) blogger, you'll find political commentary interspersed with cute kid stories.

Well written, timely, and a good mix of local political coverage with some keen insight on national issues, daddy democrat is worth the time to add it to your blogroll and daily reads. daddy takes delight in seeing Our Rick at the bottom of the heap one day, and amused frustration over the Animal Planet the next.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

(h/t to Evillebunny)

New Poll: Bush Approval Under 50% with Key Base Group

Bush Losing Core Supporters

WASHINGTON, May 11 – President Bush appears to be losing support among a key group of voters who had hitherto stood firmly with the president even as his poll numbers among other groups fell dramatically. . . . Faltering approval ratings for the President among a group once thought to be a reliable source of loyal support gives Republicans one more reason to be nervous about the upcoming mid-term elections.

You'll need to visit Max Udargo's Blog for the rest, but believe me, it will be worth the trip.


(Ed. -- Rerun, because it is so damn funny)

Outrage . . . Confirmed . . . Understood

MR. RUSSERT: “Imperialist power,” “moving willy-nilly,” “taking down governments.” Is that how we’re going to be perceived this time?

VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, I hope not, Tim. . . . Now, I think things have gotten so bad inside Iraq, from the standpoint of the Iraqi people, my belief is we will, in fact, be greeted as liberators.

-- NBC News' "Meet the Press", March 16, 2003

Seven in ten Iraqis want US-led forces to commit to withdraw within a year. An overwhelming majority believes that the US military presence in Iraq is provoking more conflict than it is preventing. More broadly, most feel the US is having a predominantly negative influence in Iraq and have little or no confidence in the US military. . . . Support for attacks on US-led forces has grown to a majority position—now six in ten.
-- WorldPublicOpinion.org Poll, September 27, 2006

"Goodness", as Rumsfeld would say.

Why in the world would a country subjected to decades of brutal treatment by a despotic regime feel this way towards it's liberators?

Golly, maybe because in a country of just under 27 million, 500 civillians have been dying every fucking day since we've been there? Maybe because they have been dying at this rate because of the second and third-rate planning of Rumsfeld and Bush and Wolfowitz and Cheney and the rest of the war-criminals masquarading as our government?

In 2004, a widely-ignored report was released which estimated 100,000 civilian deaths -- half of them women and children -- caused by the American invasion. Most of these deaths are directly related to the violence of the attack, but the report also measured the increased death rate as a result of the collateral impacts of the preemptive war.

This week, the British medical journal The Lancet released a new report, confirming the 2004 estimates and revealling that the 2004 report may have been understated. The latest report estimated 655,000 civilians are dead because BushCo forced us into this unnecessary war to satisfy the misguided neocon agenda to change the middle east by forcing a democracy on Iraq.

That works out to roughly 500 more dead, every single day of the invasion, than would have died had BushCo not lied us into this morass. Now, I don't know about you, but 500 people dying every day sounds like a lot. I think we would notice if that was happening here and we might even get a little pissed ourselves at whatever was causing it.

But let's put it into perspective -- the United States has ten-times the population of Iraq. To properly understand how these deaths are directly affecting the nation as a whole, imagine if 5,000 Americans civilians, ove half women and children, were dying every day for the last three years.

Think some of us would get a bit ticked off about it?

5,000.

A day.

EVERY day.

For three years.

I watched the second plane hit the Towers in 2001. I knew people in those buildings. A cousin's firefighter-son died that day. My niece would have, also, but she stayed home with the flu and missed her meeting on one of those floors from which occupants returned only as dust. I lost sleep every night for two years after that happened. We all did. It still haunts us.

The point isn't what I went through -- it was minor compared to the horror which directly invaded the lives of thousands others that morning. The point is that the impact was national, direct, visceral. Nearly everyone I know had a direct connection, or had a friend with a direct connection, to the violence that day. It is likely the same for you.

That's how that day affected the nation -- the numbers were so great, the connections so vast, that everyone knew someone, or knew someone who knew someone, who was grievioulsy affected.

Now, to understand what George Bush has put the Iraqi people through, increase the victim toll by two-thirds.

And have it happened every . . . . . single . . . . . . . . fucking . . . . . . . . day . . . . . . . since 2003.

ITMFA



(Credit to abasrah.net for the photo.)

No Ideas.

Reporting on a Santorum promotion of his screed, "It Takes a Family", conservative writer Craig Dimitri noted, without comment and in between swipes at Santorum critics, Santorum's apparent off the cuff remark about Republican policies realting to the poor:
Santorum had noted that "candidly, the Republican Party did not have a lot of ideas, regarding the poor."

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Latest Rasmussen -- Casey up by 13

The latest Rasmussen Poll[link added in update] gives Casey a decided 13-point advantage over the floundering Santorum reelection bid a scant month before the election. Although the Rasmussen October survey is still under wraps, two birds have flown by my window with 13-point leads for Casey in the October tally. Curiously, their numbers were a bit different -- one had it 52-39, the other 50-37. Until we see the report we don't know if they were looking at different figures (H2H, 3way, likely, registered) or if they both are still on drugs.

I've relied on both before and they have not let me down, so I am going with the sober assumption that Santorum is still losing this race by double digits.

For those interested in keeping track, the August Rasmussen survey had the spread at 8 -- Casey 48%, Santorum 40%. In September, Rasmussen put Casey's lead back into double digits, 49% to 39%.

Santorum's circling the drain.

[UPDATE 10/10/06: After our post early this morning, Rasmussen released the survey results to the public. It seems both of me birds had it right. The 50%-37% numbers are H2H Casey v Santorum; the 52%-39% results are when undecided but leaning voters are counted in their leanee numbers. However you look at it, that load sucking sound is eminating from Virginia.]

(Image from Arizona artitst David Sours)

How to Tell if You Have LOST YOUR MIND

Often, it is the people around you who will first realize that you have lost your mind. That can be quite embarrassing -- being the last one to know something so personal about yourself. So, as a public service, lemme see if I can help.

Let's say you find yourself in this situation . . . . say you have a job, oh, pick one, let's use CONGRESSMAN. AND then let us say that someone says that you had an affair with a woman about 300 pounds lighter and three decades younger than you are. And then let's say that you lie about her and claim that she was only a casual acquaintance. But then it comes to light that this casual acquaintance made a 911 call from your bathroom in Washington and filed a police report about you beating up on her. And then, say, you finally admit that your definition of casual acquaintance means "a woman I've been shtupping for five years behind my wife's back". But now you deny that you beat her. And suppose then she sues your ass for over $5 million and says that she lived with you for five years and that you assaulted and beat and choked her and yanked her hair, repeatedly. And then you deny the claims but the next thing people hear is that you get an out of court secret settlement with her, and they wonder how much you had to pay her to settle claims you first said were untrue, after admitting you lied about not admitting to the affair . . . . And now your "family values" are threatening your reelection campaign, so you look around for someone to help you.

If you find yourself in that situation and the person you choose to help you has just been accused of covering-up, for several years, for yet another republican congressman who was hitting on and trying to entice children into bed, then in that case ---

YOU HAVE LOST YOUR FUCKING MIND!!!!

Glad to help, don't mention it.


{UPDATE 10/10/06: Guess I helped. Sherwood has cancelled the Hasert and Reynolds events. Actually, pressure from Chris Carney and his "best political ad of the year" gets the credit; no mention of the Slob.}

Saturday, October 07, 2006

Trashing the First Amendment

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution is extremely unique -- even within our unique Constitution. The First Amendment not only protects the freedom of speech of citizens (a first at the time), but also a private business -- it establishes the right of "the press" to operate without Government interference:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
The intent of protecting the institution of the press must be understood in the context of the fundamental purpose of the representative democracy created by the Constitution under the charter of the Declaration of Independence:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed . . . .
The press was valued and Constitutionally protected not because a number of the founders may have dabbled in the business. It was valued and protected because the founders understood the crucial role which a free and independent press could (and did) play in securing the Liberty of a nation. Jefferson was explicit in his correspondence to John Jay soon after the Bill of Rights was adopted:
Our liberty cannot be guarded but by the freedom of the press, nor that be limited without danger of losing it.
In Jefferson's view, the freedom protected by the First Amendment was not "merely" the freedom of expression of a nation -- but the Liberty of the Nation. If the Government was legitimate only to the extent of the continued "consent of the governed", the free press was necessary to provide the information required to make that consent an informed one.

But for this to have the intended effect, the nation requires a press which is not only free, but independent. House organs (see Fox News) publishing only what serves the current interest of those in charge of the government does nothing to advance the cause of liberty. Indeed, it is harmful to the continuation of liberty.

Jefferson could have been speaking today when he wrote, in 1785, about how the British government used the press to pacify and control the colonists:
The most effectual engines for this purpose are the public papers . . . You know well that the government always kept a kind of standing army of newswriters who, without any regard to truth or to what should be like truth, invented and put into the papers whatever might serve the ministers. This suffices with the mass of the people who have no means of distinguishing the false from the true paragraphs of a newspaper.
"No means of distinguishing the false from the true paragraphs of a newspaper". The founders recognized that a newspaper not independent from the subject of its coverage -- which has a stake in the outcome or is controlled by the government -- is harmful to the protection of freedom and liberty.

The pre-revolutionary debates in colonial United States encouraged the spread of the newspaper. The first daily newspaper in the United States was published in Philadelphia in the 1780s. During the post-revolutionary period in which the "united States" were struggling define their relationships to one another, newspapers were generally associated with political viewpoints, with many being effectively house organs for one political party or another. Federalists and the anti-federalists did battle in print for the minds of the citizens of the various states.

Significantly, the political persuasion of the publisher and reporters were up front and worn on their sleeves. Citizens sought out multiple newspapers to absorb and follow the debate of the day. After the civil war, when the "united States" became the "United States", that began to change. James Gordon Bennett started his newspaper, the New York Herald, in the 1830s and his independent policies showed the way for newspapers to divorce themselves from party control. (Bennett is generally credited with introducing what, to our sensibility, is as intertwined with journalism as the forward pass is with football -- the interview. Just as football began without a forward pass, the first hundred years of journalism in America was practiced without the news interview or press conference.)

Over the years, in indirect and direct recognition of the vital Constitutional role that the press plays in our representative democracy, professional journalists developed varied codes of ethics and practices. The codes are designed, among other things, to advance the independence -- actual and apparent -- of their publications from the objects of their coverage.

The Society of Professional Journalists, founded in 1909, is one of the leading American professional organizations for journalists. The SPJ has a very straight-forward Code of Ethics which acts almost as a punch-list for effective and ethical journalism. The preamble to that Code pithily sets forth the syllogism we have been laboring on about:
[P]ublic enlightenment is the forerunner of justice and the foundation of democracy. The duty of the journalist is to further those ends by seeking truth and providing a fair and comprehensive account of events and issues. Conscientious journalists from all media and specialties strive to serve the public with thoroughness and honesty. Professional integrity is the cornerstone of a journalist's credibility.
The SPJ Code is divided into simple, apt, and significantly titled first principles and associated general orders:
Seek Truth and Report It
Journalists should be honest, fair and courageous in gathering, reporting and interpreting information.

Minimize Harm
Ethical journalists treat sources, subjects and colleagues as human beings deserving of respect.

Act Independently
Journalists should be free of obligation to any interest other than the public's right to know.

Be Accountable
Journalists are accountable to their readers, listeners, viewers and each other.
Simple. Elegant. (Perhaps too elegant for the ham-handed in some parts. More on that infra.)

Following on these are relatively short lists of goals, prohibitions, and requirements for the ethical journalist seeking to live up to these first principles and general orders of the profession. (As an aside, we have always thought that this code of ethics, and many similar codes with which we are familiar (such as those applicable to lawyers) can be further reduced to a single word: Integrity.)

For today's purpose, we are interested in the Independence principle and, relevantly, here's what the SPJ code of ethics has to say about ethical conduct:
Journalists should:
— Avoid conflicts of interest, real or perceived.
Remain free of associations and activities that may compromise integrity or damage credibility.
— Refuse gifts, favors, fees, free travel and special treatment, and shun secondary employment, political involvement, public office and service in community organizations if they compromise journalistic integrity.
Disclose unavoidable conflicts. . . .
The American Society of Newspaper Editors was formed in the 1920s as the professional society for large circulation newspapers. The very first goal of ASNE was to craft a code of ethics, which they called the "Canons of Journalism".

Their preamble states the reason why:
The First Amendment, protecting freedom of expression from abridgment by any law, guarantees to the people through their press a constitutional right, and thereby places on newspaper people a particular responsibility. Thus journalism demands of its practitioners not only industry and knowledge but also the pursuit of a standard of integrity proportionate to the journalist's singular obligation.
In Article III of the ASNE Code, they address Independence of the journalist thus: Journalists must avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety as well as any conflict of interest or the appearance of conflict. They should neither accept anything nor pursue any activity that might compromise or seem to compromise their integrity.

Responsible journals everywhere implement these fundamental principles in a variety of ways. The New York Times prohibits reporters, editorial board members, columnists, editorial writers, and all of its staff from, among other things, participating in partisan politics. Properly, the Times' concern is equal parts prevention of influence and protection of public perception of influence.

Here is part of their ethical code respecting political participation:
Voting, Campaigns and Public Issues

62. Journalists have no place on the playing fields of politics. Staff members are entitled to vote, but they must do nothing that might raise questions about their professional neutrality or that of The Times. . . .

63. Staff members may not themselves give money to, or raise money for, any political candidate or election cause. . . .
"Staff" members are defined as everyone on the journalism side of the paper, from editorial board members down to spot photographers, stringers, and copy boys (do they still have copy boys?).

Similarly, the Los Angeles Times prohibits staff members from contributing to candidates: "Staff members may not engage in political advocacy – as members of a campaign or an organization specifically concerned with political change. Nor may they contribute money to a partisan campaign or candidate."

The Detroit Free Press, preferring "plain language", prohibits such staff involvement and specifically requires disclosure:
6. We are independent and we serve the public
We stand on guard for the public interest.
We champion the people’s right to know.
We serve the public best by fiercely protecting our independence and our reputation. We do not engage in outside activities that could conflict with our duty to the public or lessen the value of our services to the Free Press.
We do not work for pay or as a volunteer in a political campaign or organization. . . .
We do not participate in political activities that diminish our usefulness to the Free Press or could be perceived as a conflict of interest.
We publicly disclose when we have relevant personal or corporate involvement in anything we cover or publish, including when a staff member has a substantial relationship with a person cited in the coverage. . . .
Smaller publications, such as the Virginia Pilot and The Pocono Record similarly prohibit political donations by the staff of the paper. Kim de Bourbon, editor of the Pocono Record, takes a the classic line with her paper. In email correspondence with the Slob, Ms. deBourbon made it plain everyone on her paper -- from the publisher down to the beat reporter -- is prohibited from contibuting to political campaigns.

As she notes, in a small community, and as the only daily paper in town, that policy could result in some difficulty, but they maintain it in order to protect the integrity of the newspaper:
[N]ews employees and all senior managers should refrain from partisan political activity. As editor, I interpret that to include contributions to political campaigns, and all newsroom employees are expected to refrain from local political contributions. That said, this is a small town, and last year we had to deal with two staffers who had relatives running for office. Our editorial page editor’s husband and a news reporter’s brother both ran for judge in the Monroe County Court of Common Pleas, and both were elected. It is beyond reasonable to expect that these two employees did not support their relatives’ run for office, although I’m certain neither made individual financial contributions to their campaigns.
(I happen to have a great deal of respect for the Pocono Record. As Ms. de Bourbon mentions, it is a small town newspaper and they clearly understand that role. They do a marvelous job covering their small corner of the world and have been rightly recognized by their peers for their work. Their editorials, whether on local business development issues, school board politics, of national scandals, are generally clear and well written, lucidly conveying the insights of their editorial board.)

An alert observer will have noticed more sensitivity to these issues over the recent years -- an increasing number of newspapers have public editors or ombudsmen serving as in independent eye on the independent eye. You've also seen an increase in "disclaimers" -- alerts to viewers and readers of an affiliation of possible conflict between the news media and the subject of the report.

The News Hour on PBS will introduce a report on BP officials testifying before Congress with a disclaimer that BP is a sponsor of the show; Keith Olbermann will remind viewers of his bosses' relationships with GE when reporting on an issue affecting GE's interests; ABC news, reporting on the struggles within the Disney Company, reminded viewers of the relationship between the broadcaster's owners and the Mouse House; the same when CBS reports on Viacom.

Does Jim McNeil do this because he thinks his reporter was influence in the coverage by the fact that BP was an advertiser?

Is Olbermann afraid that his report might be affected by his bosses' bosses' boss?

Or does Bob Schieffer worry that the correspondent colored the reporting because Viacom is ultimately responsible for the correspondents' paycheck.

Not hardly. Yet they still do it. Why?

Because they are responsible journalists who realize that it is important to disclose, up front, any information which might be reasonably viewed as a potential conflict, a potential relationship between the object of the coverage and the entity doing the covering, or any information which a critical consumer of the information might want to have in order to reach an informed judgment on the credibility, motivation, or completeness of the report or expressed opinion. It is to protect the integrity of the newsreporting and that kind of disclosure is something that all responsible, ethical journalists routinely provide the consumers of their reports.

Such disclosure is not limited to "objective" news reports, either.

Just as the consumer is entitled to believe, and will in all likelihood believe, that there is no undisclosed relationship between the "news" and its object, they will also assume that an "opinion" is one derived honestly and without the impact of any undisclosed relationship.

A food critic does not review the restaurant owned by his editor's spouse; nor a theater critic a play in which his publisher has invested money. At least honorable journalists don't engage in that conduct and, if the relationship is unavoidable, they disclose the relationship up front.

That is, unless you live in a place where integrity -- in appearance or actuality -- is undervalued. Where ethics are no more than the punch line to a joke.

A place like, Scran'en, Pennsylvania.

There, the current iteration of the Lynett Family gives the finger to ethical journalists everywhere. We've briefly reflected on this before, in "A Matter of Integrity, "Scranton Newspapers Continue Unethical Practices", and "They Just Can't Help Themselves".

The Lynetts, publishers AND editors of the Scranton Times "family" of newspapers -- including the Wilkes-Barre Citizen's Voice, and sundry smaller publications and media outlets, have donated HUNDREDS of THOUSANDS of dollars to Casey campaigns over the years.

Since the Casey-Santorum Senate race began, they have published over 600 articles covering the race. But only rarely is the Lynett Family's financial stake in Casey ever mentions (twice that I could find) -- and then not as a disclaimer, but only when it was an unavoidable part of teh coverage. (Some will be quick to claim a difference between restrictions on a publisher and on the staff. There may be some validity in that claim, where a publisher is merely a remote owner, without even an office in the building, turning over all editorial control to professional journalists. I would disagree, but that is not even the case here. First, the Lynetts are members of the Editorial Board, they are involved in the journalism side of the business. Second, they are not distant owners, they are on site, integrated into the paper's operations. They sign the checks.)

Lynett/Casey Campaign writers, like Borys Krawczeniuk, are easy mouthpieces on whom the Casey team can drop some talking points and have them repeated as supposed independent analysis to the readers of the Lynett rags.

For example, in over fifty columns touching on some part of the campaign, Borys has failed to once tell his readers that his bosses have a huge financial stake in the success of Bobby Casey.

From all appearances, he has been actively supporting the Casey candidacy -- no doubt pleasing the caporegime in the Lynett Family. (During the primary he barely mentioned the Casey opponents -- despite having had an extended face-to-face interview with Pennacchio, he never even filed a report. He never used a single Pennacchio or Casey Sandals press release or announcement; he failed to cover a single one of their events in his area.)

He most recently displayed his faulty ethics in a column touting the FEC's rejection of a Republican complaint that the newspaper's self-advertising violated election laws.

At the beginning of the campaign, the clever Lynett boys put up billboards all over Scran'en. They advertised their rag and included a huge reproduction of a portion of the front page of their paper. What was unusual was that, instead of taking a real front page, they forged one -- and featured a fake story and headline on Bobby Casey. The Republicans cried foul. The FEC recently decided in favor of the Lynett Family (but has published neither the complaint nor the decision on its website).

Dutifully, Borys (who cares more about me spelling his name correctly than about ethics in journalism), trotted out a double BJ piece, satisfying his bosses and their bought man.

In that column, he treated the huge contributions by the Lynetts to Casey campaigns over the years as merely a GOP allegation, denied by the bosses:
As evidence, the GOP cited tens of thousands of dollars in contributions by the owners of the newspaper, the Lynett family, to Mr. Casey’s campaign, those of other Casey family members and other Democratic causes.

From the beginning, Mr. Lynett and Mr. Beaupre denied advocating Mr. Casey’s candidacy or coordinating with the Casey campaign.
A casual reader is presented with Borys's "objective" column setting out mere allegations and denials.

But Borys could have, very simply, made it clear to his readers that the "allegations" were in fact true. Instead, he tells his readers that "Mr. Lynett . . . denied advocating Mr. Casey's candidacy".

A real reporter, with a real newspaper, with real ethics, would have followed up that ridiculous claim by Lynett with something like, "But, Mr. Lynett, how can you say that you do not advocate Mr. Casey's candidacy when you gave him $1,000 on June 29, 2005, another $2,100 check the same day, and $400 more this year?"

A real, ethical journalist would have pointed out that the objective facts show Mr. Lynett to have lied when he claimed not to support Casey's candidacy.

Instead, this tool, this fraud of a journalist, on a fraud of a newspaper, let his readers believe in the lie -- nothing to concern yourself with here, folks, it's all simply the yin and yang of political allegations and denial.

Over six hundred times the Lynett Family has presented the public with articles about the Senate campaign. It is bad enough that they feel themselves above standard ethical practice by shoveling so much money into the pockets of a Senate candidate, but they give the finger to ethical journalists everywhere by lacking the decency to disclose the conflict to readers.

Journalists have sat in jail for principle.

Journalists have died to get the story.

Courageous journalists have been killed because of their story.

People like the Lynetts and their errand boys, like (but not limited to) Borys, don't deserve the honor of being called journalists.

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Conservatism as Social Disease

That's the suggestion of "Political Conservatism as Motivated Social Cognition", a 2003 paper in the Psychological Bulletin, the peer-reviewed publication of the American Psychological Association. It is loaded with gems, I liked these nuggets (internal citations are omitted):

From page 15:
The notion that conservatism is associated with intolerance of ambiguity is consistent with a great many theories, and it is implicit in ideological theories of integrative complexity. It may also provide a psychological context for understanding statements such as this one made by George W. Bush at an international conference of world leaders in Italy: “I know what I believe and I believe what I believe is right” (Sanger, 200l).~Our review suggests that there is a relatively strong connection between dogmatism and intolerance of ambiguity, on the one hand, and various measures of political conservatism, on the other.
And, from the conclusion, on page 31:
Understanding the psychological underpinnings of conservatism has for centuries posed a challenge for historians, philosophers, and social scientists. . . . [P]olitical conservatism may be thought of as a form of motivated social cognition. . . . Conservative ideologies, like virtually all other belief systems, are adopted in part because they satisfy various psychological needs. . . . Variables significantiy associated with conservatism, we now know, include fear and aggression, dogmatism andintolerance of ambiguity, uncertainty avoidance, need for cognitive closure, personal need for structure, terror management, group-based dominance, and system justification. . . . We regardpolitical conservatism as an ideological belief system that is significantly (but not completely) related to motivational concerns having to do with the psychological management of uncertainty and fear. Specifically, the avoidance of uncertainty (and the striving for certainty) may be particularly tied to one core dimension of conservative thought, resistance to change. Similarly, concerns with fear and threat may be linked to the second core dimension of conservatism, endorsement of inequality. Although resistance to change and support for inequality are conceptually distinguishable, we have argued that they are psychologically interrelated, in part because motives pertaining to uncertainty and threat are interrelated.
Gotta love science.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Oh, But I'm Special . . . .

"The total amount of noneconomic damages that may be awarded to a claimant and the members of the claimant's family for losses resulting from the injury which is the subject of a medical malpractice liability action may not exceed $250,000, regardless of the number of parties against whom the action is brought or the number of actions brought with respect to such injury."

-- Legislation Sponsored By Rep. Rick Santorum (1994)


Santorum's wife sues her chiropractor for $500,000 ($482,000 representing non-economic damages) in 1999. Santorum testifies in support of her damage claims at the trial. The jury awarded $350,000

-- Post-Gazette (12/11/1999)

"In any health care lawsuit, the amount of noneconomic damages recovered, if otherwise available under applicable Federal or State law, may be as much as $250,000, regardless of the number of parties against whom the action is brought or the number of separate claims or actions brought with respect to the same injury."

-- Legislation Endorsed By Sen. Rick Santorum (2003)

"[H]ypocrisy can often be a social good."
-- Sen. Rick Santorum, "It Takes a Family", p. 280

Funny thing . . . .

This week's featured blog provides a bit of everything you need when real life or politics is beginning to send you over the edge. I am a huge fan of The Liam McEneaney Experience.

Liam advertises his blog as his "online notebook . . . . a lot of first drafts, true stories, and false starts."

True to his self-billing, the blog is very often a standup workout room, usually providing some social commentary, periodically a source of offbeat or overlooked you tube features, sometimes a political commentary, and always entertaining.

Liam has appeared on Comedy Central's Premium Blend, and on VH1's Best Week Ever and has garnered some press attention, which you can find in the links on his page. He also served as a head writer for The Humor Network, and is currently writing for Standup Nation w/ Greg Giraldo, which airs Fridays on Comedy Central starting March 31st at 9:00pm. When he bothers to update it, you can catch his calendar of appearances here. He is a frequent advertiser on Craig's List, can be heard on Keith and the Girl, and you can be his friend at myspace.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Disrespecting Democracy

Over the years, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has put it's intellectual limitations on display with considerable frequency and has given this observer more than a little reason to question the integrity of the Court. Today, with but a few words, it adds cowardice to its long list of inadequacies, short-sheets democracy, and disrespects litigants who face the Court as truly their last resort.

Law, lawyers and the courts are the stuff which keeps society together. In ways large and small, lawyers put together the deals, settle the estates, document the contracts, and litigate the disputes -- in short, day in and day out they labor, mostly unsung and underappreciated, and always subject to ignorant attack, to keep our affairs on an even keel and to keep our fingers from one another's throats. It is respect for the law and the legal process which prevents neighbors from taking up arms to settle their own disputes and keeps anarchy from the streets. When Shakespeare wanted to demonstrate the dangerous intentions of the speaker, he had a character utter that most misused quote about killing all the lawyers. Billy and his buds knew that, take away the lawyers, take away access to justice, and anarchy would follow.

This is why such a high premium needs to be placed on judicial impartiality and integrity; why the courts need not only to actually give each litigant a fair hearing, but to work so they believe that they had their day in court -- even if it the result is against them.

Too often in Pennsylvania we see judges at every level showing the utter disrespect for the important role of the legal process, for the litigants who appear before them, and for the appearance of justice itself. They do this in many ways, sometimes they display overt friendship with one lawyer or another, by demeaning a party or counsel, or by refusing to explain their decisions to the litigants. Judges of Courts across the Commonwealth are more frequently resorting to one sentence, or even one-word decisions, leaving litigants and their counsel left only to guess at the basis. And worse, to assume that there was no rational basis for the decision -- that the decision was based on prejudice, cronyism, or favoritism of some kind.

And now, the Supreme Court of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania has "led" the way by modeling that behavior. In an important appeal, with grand implications for access to the ballot by third parties, closely watched in political corners near and far, and of more than passing interest to the more than 50,000 Pennsylvania residents who put their names on the line of the Green Party nominations, the Supreme Court refuses to explain itself. They devote but 17 words -- including the date -- in "deciding" the appeal of the Green Party.

"AFFIRMED" is the entire holding, discussion, ruling, and decision of the Court.

Oh, we knew Romanelli would lose, although it was clear that his argument was correct. Apparently, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court was unable to come up with any justification for the result which they wanted to achieve, so they did what small minds everywhere do when intellectually overwhelmed -- they just gave the finger to those 50,000 residents, the litigants, and fairness.

Hoo-ray for Pennsylvania.



Here it is, the whole damned thing:

J-167-2006
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
MIDDLE DISTRICT

IN RE: NOMINATION PAPER OF MARAKAY ROGERS, CHRISTINA VALENTE AND CARL J. ROMANELLI AS CANDIDATES OF AN INDEPENDENT POLITICAL BODY FOR GOVERNOR, LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR AND U.S. SENATOR IN THE GENERAL ELECTION OF NOVEMBER 7, 2006

WILLIAM R. CAROSELLI, FRED R. LEVIN, DANIEL J. ANDERS AND PETER D. WINEBRAKE

APPEAL OF: CARL ROMANELLI
::::::::::::::
No. 106 MAP 2006
Appeal from the order of the
Commonwealth Court at No. 426 MD 2006
entered on 08-24-2006.

ORDER
PER CURIAM
DECIDED: October 3, 2006

AND NOW, this 3rd day of October, 2006, the Order of the Commonwealth Court is
hereby AFFIRMED.

Romanelli's Supreme Argument

Green Party candidate Carl Romanelli, despite having gathered over 50,000 uncontested signatures of Pennsylvania voters on his nominating petitions, is off the ballot unless he can convince the Pennsylvania Supreme Court that an election is an election.

Romanelli finds himself in this position because, in 2004, Bobby Casey Junior, running against an underfunded "who???", in a Presidential election year which saw the largest voter turnout in Pennsylvania history, picked up alot of votes. The Pennsylvania statute at play (25 P.S. Section 2911(b)) states, in pertinent part, as follows (emphasis added):
Where the nomination is for any office to be filled by the electors of the State at large, the number of qualified electors of the State signing such nomination paper shall be at least equal to two per centum of the largest vote cast for any elected candidate in the state at large at the last preceding election at which State-wide candidates were voted for.
This statute clearly requires that the touchstone for the third-party nominating petition shall be the largest number of votes received by a successful "candidate" in the preceding statewide "election". For this year's general elections, the State Board designated the 2004 election of Casey as "the largest vote cast for any elected candidate in the state at large at the last preceding election at which State-wide candidates were voted for", leading to the 67,000+ signature requirement for this year's minor party candidates.

But, there was a statewide election in 2005 -- the judicial retention election of Justice Sandra Schultz Newman. She won retention with about 800,000 votes, meaning that Romanelli would need submit slightly less than 16,000 signatures. (That's her photo just below this paragraph.)

Romanelli is challenging the State Election Board's dictation that the 2005 election was not an election, and has recently filed his brief with the Pennsylvania Supreme Court (h/t to PoliticsPA). Before referring to Romanelli's brief, however, let us take a look at the primary sources for the argument -- the State Constitution and legislation. The issue appears to come down to the question of whether Newman was a "candidate" in an "election".

Section 15 of the Constitution of the Commonwelath of Pennsylvania addresses the retention of judges (emphasis added):
(b) A justice or judge elected under section thirteen (a), appointed under section thirteen (d) or retained under this section fifteen (b) may file a declaration of candidacy for retention election with the officer of the Commonwealth who under law shall have supervision over elections on or before the first Monday of January of the year preceding the year in which his term of office expires. . . .
The State Constituion here does two important things -- it makes it clear that the judge seeking to remain in office is (i) a CANDIDATE in (ii) a retention ELECTION. There is no asterisk next to either term in the Constitution, or explanation later that the drafters weren't "serious about that" when they called the judge standing for retention a candidate in an election.

Then we have the legislation which derives from and enacts section 15 of the Constitution (fyi, the Constitution trumps a statute). Chapter 32, section 3153 of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes addresses the retention "thing" for judges" (NB the link to the statute is to a private site run by a DJ. It is a travesty that our state government refuses to provide the full text of all laws online):

§ 3153. Retention Elections After Regular Term.

(a) General rule.- A judge elected under section 3131 (relating to selection of judicial officers for regular terms) or retained under this section may file a declaration of candidacy for retention election with the Secretary of the Commonwealth on or before the first Monday of January of the year preceding the year in which his term of office expires. If no declaration is filed, a vacancy shall exist upon the expiration of the term of office of such judge, to be filled by election under section 3131(c).
Oops, they did it again -- there's those words problematic to the anti-democratic forces trying to keep a candidate off the ballot -- "candidate" and "election".

It doesn't end there, as Romanelli's brief makes clear, the various election laws enacted by the Pennsylvania State legislature clearly treat the "retention thing" as what the Constitution says it is -- an election:
The judicial code also provides that each judicial officer of the Commonwealth shall be sworn into office and that oath must be taken after a judge’s appointment or election, “and after each retention election….” 42 Pa.C.S. §3151.

There are at least four definitions of the word “election” contained in the Election Code itself.

Section 102(f) provides that “the word ‘election’ shall mean any general municipal, special or primary election, unless otherwise specified.” 25 P.S. § 2602(f), (emphasis added).

Sections 1101 and 1101-A, concerning ballot labels on voting machines and electronic voting systems, respectively, both state that an “election” means “all general, municipal, primary, and special elections.” 25 P.S. §§ 3001(12); 3031.1.

The Pennsylvania campaign finance law, Article XVI of the Election Code, states that “the word ‘election’ shall mean any retention, primary, special, municipal or general election at which candidates appear on the ballot for nomination or election . . . .” 25 P.S. § 3241(c).

A judicial officer who is seeking to be retained for another term is a “candidate for election” under both definitions of what constitutes a “candidate” contained in the Election Code. Compare 25 P.S. § 2602(a) with 25 P.S. § 3241(a). Were a judicial retention candidate not a “candidate for election” then the entire campaign finance reporting system, which no one disputes applies to candidates in judicial retention elections, would be rendered meaningless.
The Romanelli brief goes further and recounts the sundried absurdities which would necessarily result from a reading of the election code to exclude rentention elections within the definition of elections. From the plain text of the Constitution and the statutes deriving their authority from the Constitution, Newman was a candidate for election to a statwide office and her votes should be the measure for third party candidates.

But in addition to the plain meaning argument, Romanelli has another forceful one -- the hard rule, long established and oft repeated in election cases in this Commonwealth -- that in every case the election code must be stretched to its furthest reaches to allow for more ballot access, and every presumpotion against restriction granted. Again, as the Romanelli brief summarizes:
"The Election Code is to be liberally construed so as not to deprive a candidate of the right to run for office or the voters of their right to elect the candidate of their choice.” Smith v. Brown, 590 A.2d 816, 818 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1991). This construction of the Election Code is a longstanding and established policy. See also In re Nomination Petitions of Fumo, 577 Pa. 496, 846 A.2d 672 (2004); font-style: italic;">In re Nomination Petition of Driscoll, 577 Pa. 501, 508, 847 A.2d 44, 49 (2004)(noting that “in reviewing election issues, we must consider the longstanding and overriding policy in our Commonwealth to protect the elective franchise”); Petition of Cioppa, 533 Pa. 564, 570 626 A.2d 146, 149 (1993) (applying the “spirit of liberality in construing our Election Code” prospectively, and noting that the “power to vitiate a ballot for minor irregularities should be used sparingly, … only for very compelling reasons”) (emphasis added).
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court will need to ignore plain text of the Constitution and stautues, and turn away from long-established principle, to kick Romanelli off the ballot. But, in my opinion, our Pennsylvania Supreme Court has before demonstrated the lack of intellect and integrity to permit them to do just that.

I expect that Romanelli will lose a won argument because of the general indifference to law and preference for result-oriented decisions which I think sadly characterize this Court.

Monday, October 02, 2006

Welcome Kenyon Students!

Over the last week or so, we've had another (it happened a month or so ago, also) series of individual hits from good ol' Gambier, O., home of Kenyon College (which is not near Uganda).

Kenyon College is easily, and by far, the most beautiful college campus you will ever see. Middle Path, which supposedly is exactly one mile running due North and South, cuts through the middle of the campus and the town.

It is an enthralling site any time of year (and regardless whether your senses are artificially enhanced), but right about now it is beginning to show its fall colors. Once you've walked down Middle Path in late fall, with the colors swirling about you, and dry leaves crunching beneath your feet, fall experienced any other place is only a disappointing reminder.

Kenyon is the perfect place to devote four years of a young life to study for education's sake. The faculty and facilities are top-drawer and the community -- residents, students, faculty, staff -- is welcoming. Kenyon and Gambier were founded simultaneously when, back in 1841, Philander Chase, "the first of Kenyon's goodly race", climbed that hill, "said a prayer, and founded Kenyon College there."

If you are of high school age and thinking about colleges, if you have what it takes (and it is one of the toughest to get into), Kenyon College should be on your short list. I visited there in about 1970-something and put it on my short list - which had but that one entry after I stepped on campus.

And, if you, dear reader, are passing thought central O., anytime of year, detour to Gambier. Spend some time in the marvelous bookstore (named best college campus bookstore by Rolling Stone), which is open every single day of the year from 7:30am to 11pm. (The bookstore is the oldest continuously operating college campus bookstore in the United States.) Then grab a sandwich and a perfect cup of coffee at one of the two exceptional options on Middle Path, and regret that you aren't 19 with four years of this in front of you.

For you regular readers (I use the plural simply to flatter myself), this is not the first time we have featured Kenyon in this spot. Kenyon College was all over the place in the news during the last Presidential election, when Ohio helped Bush steal, uh, get re-elected. Students from the College stood in line for unbelievable hours simply to dip their fingers in the ink. John Kerry spoke at the College commencement last year, which we featured here.

Welcome, Kenyon students. Please, poke around all you like, and feel free to leave a comment or two behind.

Thursday, September 28, 2006

Off to Wine Country

No, not Napa (you snob).

Did you know that the country's second largest wine producing area is the Finger Lakes of New York?

We (ABFS and some poor, misguided, obviously addled, woman who has been ABFS's compaƱera for the last two years) are heading out to Sheldrake Point on Cayuga Lake for a long weekend of wine tasting, diet-busting dining, and complete relaxation. We'll be sans television, radio, newspaper, computers, and cell phones.

The photo shows where we will be staying. We'll have a room with a private porch overlooking the lake. We've been there before and it is a perfectly delightful B&B overlooking the point. The hostess is the best chef I have ever run across, and a delightful person as well -- perfectly suited for her occupation.

Our favorite winery, which also has a pretty darn good restaurant, is, fortunately, within walking distance of our Cayuga Lake home. There are sooooo many good wineries in the region. I was frankly astounded at the quality when we made our first trip just one year ago. Equally surprising is the amazing caliber of dining experiences available in the area. Our favorite matches for creativity, freshness, preparation and presentation any of the five-stars I've enjoyed over the years -- Simply Red in Trumansburg -- don't blink or you'll miss it (we did the first time) -- it is to die for!

So, they'll be no posts for a few days and when I return, I'll be refreshed, but a few pounds heavier.

Until then . . . .