Red pills for New Year's Eve
December 31
The Take the Red Pill Award goes to rampaging Hindu fundamentalists in Orissa state in India. "Rampaging" is quite literal in this case. 700 Christians have had to flee their homes for relief camps and about 19 churches were burned. It's unclear from press reports just what started it, but given the tiny number of Christians, I'm a wee bit skeptical that they started it. The Christians might have done something to make Hindus think they were seeking converts, even though local law requires police permission to change religions. The Christians might have been reaching out to low-caste Hindus. Other Hindus apparently can't see the appeal to people treated as garbage that all are equal in the sight of a different god would have some appeal. On a tangent, why are India's Hindu fundamentalists referred to as Hindu "nationalists" by the new media? On less of a tangent, do Hindu "nationalists" think tyranny of the majority is OK because other religions are foreign? I have news for you guys (and I feel comfortable assuming these are guys), but outside India, Hinduism is a foreign religion. So how about some of that freedom of religion that goes with being a democracy?
If you hadn't heard of I-35 before, you probably heard of it when the 35W bridge over the Mississippi in Minneapolis collapsed. According to some fundamentalist Christians, this was a sign from God. Wow. And here, sane people thought it was a sign of what happens when infrastructure is maintained by taxophobes. Then again, the taxophobes and the fundamentalists are jointly the Republican base, so maybe that makes sense. These particular fundamentalists believe I-35 is a holy highway because, I'm not kidding, the word "highway" is used in a verse of Isaiah chapter 35. I 35, get it? Well, that was enough to set off a whole bunch of praying on and for the highway. Well folks, you may not get a highway the unclean dare not use (I was on it just today, so there you go), but you do get a Take the Red Pill Award.
This Take the Red Pill Award goes to Robert Beale, who should have time to contemplate which pill he should have taken as he sits in jail on tax evasion charges. You might think somebody who was a CEO would know something about tax law, or that he would at least be able to call a tax lawyer or tax accountant if he didn't already have them on staff, but instead he chose to get his information from tax protestors of the tin foil hat type. You probably have heard the rumors or seen the ever-forwarded e-mails saying the federal income tax is optional, or illegal, and even has already been ruled illegal and most people just don't know it. Most people have the sense to delete these. Some people, however, decide they're on "mission" to resist paying taxes. Beale couldn't be bothered to pay taxes or file a return, but he did have the money to attend tax-protestor seminars even while he was on the lam. He also managed to give money to prosperity theology preacher Mac Hammond, whose adherents have previously won a Take the Red Pill Award as a group. Beale also was a campaign manager for the presidential campaign of Pat Robertson. Yes, that Pat Robertson. I guess if you're willing to believe that the same Jesus who repeatedly preached about the poor and said the rich weren't getting into Heaven would reward your faith with lots of riches, and that a loony like Robertson is who we need as president, you'll believe your refusal to pay taxes is a mission, even though the optional aspect of federal taxes somehow remains a secret. Let me give Beale and many other believers a message they might not like, but here it is: it is possible that the messenger who confounds all reason and tells you exactly what you want to hear might be wrong.
This Take the Red Pill Award is bit grimmer, because it entails the murder of "bad" women. "Bad" is defined is not meeting the rules of Shiite fundamentalists in Basra. Police there say they've found at least 40 women who appear to have been murdered, with rape and torture thrown in, for wearing makeup or not covering their heads. The religious militias appear to have the run of the place, and their violence is only rarely reported. That surge is really working, eh? An anonymous Shiite cleric was quoted saying, "We are an Islamic country and we must commit to the restrictions of our religion. We must not allow corruption to invade our families under flag of freedom and such nonsense." Ever notice how religious fundamentalists are always obsessed with controlling women, regardless of the religion? So here's your award, militiamen of Basra, though yours comes with blood on it.
MnDOT coverage, what about the bridge contract?
December 23
The Star Tribune had a story today on what MnDOT commissioner and Lt. Governor Carol has been doing since the 35W bridge collapsed. Essentially, she's been ducking the press and doing ribbon cuttings. The follows an excellent series on some of Minnesota's transportation issues other than the 35W bridge, including a dangerously deteriorated and overused bridge over the Mississippi at Hastings, a highway that's been known for a long time to be a deathtrap, and changes to the safety zone under the airport runway in Bloomington that were known only to the people who profited by them.
It must have taken a lot of the Star Tribune's resources given the layoffs since the paper was purchased by Aviso, a private capital firm that appears to care about nothing but reselling it in a couple years. A much as I congratulated them, I have to point out where they have not yet gone, not that I know there's somewhere to go, but I'd sure like someone with the resources to look. The company that got the contract to rebuild the 35W bridge, Flatiron, aroused suspicion because it as an out of state company, bid higher than the Minnesota companies, and will take longer to build the bridge. It's rival bidders suspect something funny went on, so I place I hope the Star Tribune, or someone else capable of doing so, looks into who has connections to Flatiron. Could someone high in state government have a crony in the company? Or own a piece? I'd like to know and sad to say, since this used to be "the state that works", I wouldn't be surprised.
New Hampshire phone jamming scandal meets politicized DOJ
December 23
This is one of those times two Republican scandals come together. That happens sometimes because, well, when the government is run by a political party too frequently resembles a criminal organization, that's what happens. You may recall one of the forms GOP election fraud has taken was the jamming of the Democratic and union GOTV phone banks in New Hampshire in 2002. One of the GOP operatives convicted in the case has written a book where he spills what he knows about that and other election frauds he participated in. Allen Raymond has written a book titled, "How to Rig an Election: Confessions of a Republican Operative". Either through some real penitence from being in a penitentiary, or for revenge after being scapegoated while his employers go free, Raymond has brought the scandal back into the news. What's made it worse is McClatchy followed this story the next day with the revelation that the Justice Dept. (DOJ) blocked the investigation into the jamming until the 2004 election was over. Not that this should be a shock, but apparently the politicization of Justice just got much worse under Gonzales, but it started already under Ashcroft.
Not only have the election fraud and DOJ scandals come together, but this also shows how the inundation of scandals has been Bush's second biggest blessing (after the refusal of the GOP Congress to investigate anything), because this aspect isn't new, just forgotten. While going through my archives, I discovered I'd written on October 16, 2004, about DOJ refusing to investigate. The link to the Manchester Union Leader doesn't work anymore, but I found this summary in their archive search:
CONCORD -- Federal prosecutors yesterday called a halt just 20 minutes before Democrats were to question a Republican official under oath over the identity of a Bush-Cheney official allegedly implicated in an illegal phone-jamming operation.So it was known and not investigated that DOJ stopped the investigation, and subsequently mostly forgotten. The Democratic Congress has had so many backlogged investigations that even just among election fraud allegations, this got lost in the sheer numbers. And a funny bit ---- actually a few funny bits ---- in this story: in the summary for an article above the one I quoted, there is a denial by James Tobin that the allegations have any merit. Tobin ran the GOP Senate campaigns in New England and went to jail too for this, despite the expensive legal team paid for by the RNC (Republican National Committee). Raymond had no such help, part of why he's bitter. The other funny bits are quotes by Raymond. Regarding his time in prison: "After 10 full years inside the GOP, 90 days among honest criminals wasn't really any great ordeal." And this on the GOP asking for the return of the fee they gave him for the jamming: "They were going to throw me under the bus, but first they wanted to check my pockets to see if there was any cash there."Computerized telephone calls jammed five Democratic get-out-the-vote phone banks, plus a sixth run by Manchester firefighters, for about an hour and a half during the 2002 election.
What this means directly for individual readers is that if you aren't expected to vote GOP, the GOP actively tries to stop you from voting. If you do plan to vote GOP, ... why? You actually approve of them?




