Being Green in Iowa

A Green/Progressive View of Iowa Politics

Yet More Voting Problems…in Florida!?!?!

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 29, 2008

Nah…it would never happen in Florida.  Would it?

In Volusia County, a voting discrepancy at one early voting location has been corrected, said Election Supervisor Ann McFall.

Election officials noticed a four-vote discrepancy between the number of ballots signed for and the number of ballots cast at the Daytona Beach City Island early voting site. The vote count came up one vote shy on Jan. 23 and three votes shy on Jan. 26, McFall said.

The county’s elections canvassing board decided Tuesday to re-feed the ballots from the City Island location. The process turned up the four lost ballots.

“Apparently the machine failed to count the four votes the first time,” McFall said.

The glitch shouldn’t be cause for concern, she said.

“We had the paper ballots to do the repeat,” she said. “Three other voting precincts got it perfectly and 10 out of 12 days got it perfectly in Daytona. Our internal system caught it.

Thank goodness they had paper ballots.  Can you imagine what might have happened if this precinct had only electronic voting machines?  This is yet one more reason that we need to continue the push for paper-based, voter verifiable systems.  Fraud and mistakes by poll workers can be exposed and corrected.  But hacking and rigging of electronic equipment can be hidden fairly easily.

Paper isn’t perfect, but it’s far better than the alternatives.

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Green Party Presidential Candidate Profile - Kent Mesplay

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 26, 2008

From Kent’s Website

Background  

Born and raised in Papua New Guinea (first ten years; born July 19, 1962) to Lutheran Missionary parents. Home-schooled the first three years. Grew up in a rain-forest with the same stone-age people studied by Jared Diamond (then an ornithologist). Jared is a family friend. I later entered the sciences because of Jared and other scientists like him who would visit our remote station.

I have studied Western and non-Western medicine, earning a Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from Northwestern University (specialty: limb prosthetics and amputee functionality). I have also informally studied Feldenkrais and Reiki and other energy methods of healing. I graduated Valedictorian from Mira Mesa High School in 1980. My undergrad degree in Engineering is from Harvey Mudd College, Claremont, CA. After graduate school I suffered through a long period of unemployment as I worked to develop a funded position for myself at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Long Beach, CA, before moving to La Mesa and teaching math in the Grossmont Union High School District. I began working as an Air Quality Inspector at the Air Pollution Control District, San Diego, in 2001 (current job, which I really like). My experiences substitute teaching and being an environmental regulator really taught me to “think on my feet” in challenging situations. I am committed to affecting change to and through the political process.

   
Political Experience  
 

California delegate to the Green National Committee (G.N.C.), December 2004 to present. We submit and vote on measures related to party function and advocacy

Member, County Council of the Green Party, San Diego County

Green Party U.S. presidential candidate, 2004 primaries. Running again in the 2008 race. Participated in 12 presidential debates and panel discussions, including at the Institute of Politics, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, January 2004.
Collected signatures, helping to get David Cobb, myself and the Green Party on the ballot in Rhode Island in 2004.
Highlight was the presidential nominating convention in Milwaukee WI. Before the final round of nominating I was one of three remaining presidential candidates. In the second round I “won” all the delegates from Massachusetts. David Cobb received the nomination. Ralph Nader focused on working outside the Green Party. On national television I said the Green Party is not a single-issue party, but if it were, that issue would be Global Climate Change. I am pleased that our governor and others are catching on.

Elected Treasurer of the Green Party County Council, San Diego, 1996-1997

Co-chair of the Communications Committee, Green Party County Council, San Diego, 1996-1997

Registered Green since 1995. Participated in numerous state meetings as a delegate, including nominating Ralph Nader in 1996

Currently member of Environment California and strong advocate of alternative energy legislation.

   
Non-political Advocacy  
   

Former president of Turtle Island Institute (T.I.I.), the non-profit 501 (c)(3) based in San Diego, 1996-2002

Our co-founders, Manny Aguilar and Marguerite Hampton presented “Hands Across the Border: Operation Life-Save” to a high-ranking governmental official of Mexico. The trans-national plan of developing in a sustainable manner and cutting the draw of immigration was received favorably but not funded.

A long-standing goal of T.I.I. is to develop Community Learning and Information Centers (CLICS) through which information related to survival and to sustainable living can be disseminated and shared by a global audience.

Volunteered with Habitat for Humanity while in Chicago and helped build homes.

 

Kent Mesplay at 2007 Green Party Convention

 

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Pakistan’s Bomb, U.S. Cover-up

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 26, 2008

Pakistan’s Bomb, U.S. Cover-up

By Daniel Ellsberg
January 22, 2008

For the second time in two weeks, the entire U.S. press has let itself be scooped by Rupert Murdoch’s London Sunday Times on a dynamite story of criminal activities by corrupt U.S. officials promoting nuclear proliferation.

<http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article3137695.ece>

But there is a worse journalistic sin than being scooped, and that is participating in a cover-up of information that demands urgent attention from the public, the U.S. Congress and the courts.

For the last two weeks — one could say, for years — the major American media have been guilty of ignoring entirely the allegations of the courageous and highly credible source Sibel Edmonds, quoted in the London Times on Jan. 6, 2008, in a front-page story that was front-page news in much of the rest of the world but was not reported in a single American newspaper or network.

It is up to readers to demand that this culpable silent treatment end. Just as important, there must be pressure by the public on congressional committee chairpersons — in particular Rep. Henry Waxman and Sen. Patrick Leahy — who have been sitting for years on classified sworn testimony by Edmonds — as she reveals in the Times’ new story on Sunday — along with documentation in their possession confirming parts of her account, to hold public hearings to investigate her accusations of widespread criminal activities over several administrations that endanger national security.

They should call for open testimony under oath by Edmonds — as she has urged for five years — and by other FBI officials she has named to them, cited anonymously in the first Times’ story.

And this is the time for those who have so far creditably leaked to the Times of London to come forward, accepting personal risks, to offer their testimony — and new documents — both to the Congress and to the American press.

I would say to them: Don’t do what I did: waste months of precious time trying to get congressional committees to act as they should in the absence of journalistic pressure.

Do your best to Inform the American public directly, first, through the major American media. But perhaps today the alternative media and the international press are a necessary precursor even to that. It shouldn’t be true, but if it is, it’s a measure of how far the New York Times and Washington Post have fallen from their responsibilities to the public, to their profession and to American democracy, since I gave them the Pentagon Papers in 1971.

They printed them then. Would they today? It’s impossible to believe that they — or Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal — could not have acquired documents and testimony that Murdoch’s London paper reported on Sunday.

Now the challenge to them is to end their silence on that reporting and do their job. Otherwise, like the now-Democratic-controlled committees, they are complicit in cover-up. That’s not what these institutions should be doing.

It’s not that “the cover-up is always worse than the crime”: that favorite media mantra is itself a cover story. The criminal cover-up by the FBI revealed by Edmonds and the Times’ documents is, as often the case, to conceal extremely serious crimes endangering our security, and to protect the official perpetrators.

But if “freedom of the press is mainly for the people who own presses,” it is time for those owners to stop using that freedom to help conceal official wrongdoing. And the people who own computers should be using them to light a fire under the owners of presses and television networks.

In support of the official cover-up, various American journalists in the last weeks have reportedly received calls from “intelligence sources” hinting that “what Sibel Edmonds stumbled onto” is not a rogue operation by American officials and congressmen working to their own advantage — as believed by Edmonds and some other former or active FBI officials — but a sensitive covert operation authorized at high levels.

If there is any truth to that, we clearly have another prize candidate — giving us as blowback the Pakistani Bomb and nuclear sales — in the category of “worst covert operation in U.S. history”: rivaling such contenders as the Bay of Pigs, Iran-Contra, and the secret CIA torture camps abroad.

In the first two of those the American press gullibly responded to official warnings of “sensitivity” and sat on information they should have reported (as did the New York Times for a year on the illegal NSA surveillance).

If the Washington Post had heeded such warnings and demands with respect to the covert torture camps they would have missed a well-earned Pulitzer Prize and the camps would still be torturing.

Many, if not most, covert operations deserve to be disclosed by a free press. They are often covert not only because they are illegal but because they are wildly ill-conceived and reckless. “Sensitive” and “covert” are often synonyms for “half-assed” ‘or “idiotic,” as well as for “criminal,” as the pattern of activities revealed by Edmonds would appear to be if it were truly presidentially authorized.

These activities persist, covertly, to the point of national disaster because the press neglects what our First Amendment was precisely intended to protect and encourage it to do: expose wrongdoing by officials.

Daniel Ellsberg is author of Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers. His e-mail is ellsbergd@gmail.com.

———————————————————-

For more on U.S. government complicity in allowing Pakistan to develop the nuclear bomb, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Reagan’s Bargain/Charlie Wilson’s War.”

Editor’s Note: On Jan. 20, the London Sunday Times published an article that followed up on earlier damning allegations from former FBI translator Sibel Edmonds, who accused the Bush administration of covering up sensitive documents suggesting high-level U.S. complicity in Pakistan’s nuclear program.

In the above guest essay, Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg urges the major U.S. news media to get serious and pursue these disclosures aggressively.

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Tell Us Something We Didn’t Already Know!

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 22, 2008

The full story is at Yahoo! News.

Study: False statements preceded war

By DOUGLASS K. DANIEL, Associated Press Writer 46 minutes ago

A study by two nonprofit journalism organizations found that President Bush and top administration officials issued hundreds of false statements about the national security threat from Iraq in the two years following the 2001 terrorist attacks.

The study concluded that the statements “were part of an orchestrated campaign that effectively galvanized public opinion and, in the process, led the nation to war under decidedly false pretenses.”

The study was posted Tuesday on the Web site of the Center for Public Integrity, which worked with the Fund for Independence in Journalism.

—————————-

And the next question we ask is SO WHAT?????  This has been a known for a number of years.  This is NOT NEWS!!!!  Yes, having a study to diagram the particulars and connect the dots is nice, but WE HAVE KNOWN THIS FOR SOME TIME!!!

The question we need to start asking our leaders is WHAT DO WE DO ABOUT THIS!!!  We have had ample proof that the intelligence was bad, the conclusions fabricated, and the “evidence” concocted.   We know a crime was committed (a high crime, to use the appropriate language).  When are we going to force our elected leaders to do the right thing and impeach or remove from office those responsible for these lies?

Don’d hold your breath.  It’s not going to happen in this lifetime.  The Democrats have absolutely no spine, and are more interested in cozying up with the lobbyists from K Street than doing what we elected them to do.  And the Republicans are about to implode and turn their party into the newest iteration of “Survivor” once the religious right finds out that they are waterboys for the GOP.

Meanwhile, President Bush, Vice-President Cheney and the rest of the lying chickenhawks are making plans for their retirements, probably living it up big time on corporate boards or as heads of conservative think tanks.

It’s not too late.  Will someone PLEASE give President Bush a blow job so we can finally impeach him?????

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Jared Ball Ends Campaign in Support of Cynthia McKinney

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 19, 2008

At the closing of the recent Green Party Presidential Debate, Jared Ball announced that his campaign would yield to and support Cynthia McKinney’s bid for the Green Party Presidential Nominee. The “Capital Resistance” component of the “Jared Ball for President” campaign will join the McKinney team and serve as the outreach and presentation arm of the her campaign.

Please accept our thanks for your support and encouragement during our campaign - with special thanks to the volunteers and donors who made our work possible. Supporting the Green Party and any Presidential Candidate the party chooses is one basic step that any concerned citizen should take to bring about positive change in our nation today. Our campaign has been about building the Green Party and opening its doors to the true majority in this nation - women, the indigenous, the Hispanics, African-Americans and all poor and working class residents of our country without representation. We hope you will to join us in supporting the McKinney campaign to bring about this reality for the benefit of our communities.

Peace,
Jared Ball for President Campaign
ps. You can continue to support Jared Ball’s work by visiting Voxunion Media home of FreeMix Radio, the Original Mixtape Radio Show and other potent media.

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Livestock Pollution Turns Off Young Iowans

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 13, 2008

January 13, 2008

Livestock pollution turns off young Iowans

BRIAN DEPEW, SPECIAL TO THE REGISTER

I recently returned from a visit to my family’s farm. While there, I was dismayed to learn that three more livestock confinement buildings are being built within 2 miles. Once complete, there will be 13 industrial livestock buildings within 3 miles of our farm. There is now at least one facility in every direction.

After growing up and attending college in Iowa, I left the state. Around the same time, political leaders in Iowa began to notice young Iowans leaving in droves. They wondered out loud: What can be done to keep our best and our brightest in the state? In 2005, legislators floated a plan to exempt Iowans under 30 from state income taxes. Then last year, the Legislature commissioned “Generation Iowa” to ponder the problem further.

But tax breaks and task forces will not help Iowa overcome the problems it faces. Today’s young adults are moving to places with vibrant natural resources, thriving communities and healthy economies. But for two decades Iowa’s leaders have sat silently while a corporate system of animal agriculture planted itself firmly in the state, undermining these crucial amenities. Our leaders are evading this issue and ignoring the barrier that large confinement operations create to a prosperous future.

Political leaders in Iowa have uncritically embraced the industrialization of animal agriculture and by doing so have contributed to the ongoing decline of family farms and rural communities. Iowa’s leaders took it a step further by ensuring that Iowa citizens have no recourse against the environmental destruction industrial livestock facilities sow upon the state.

I have some advice for the Generation Iowa Commission, due to report to the governor and Legislature on Jan. 15. If Iowa is serious about keeping young people in the state, it should work first to stop, and then reverse, the rise of large confinement operations. By destroying the economic and social fabric of rural Iowa and degrading the environment of the state, confinement facilities make returning to Iowa undesirable.

With palpable air pollution and undeniable water pollution, the environmental strife is easy to see. With fewer family livestock producers, rural communities are left without a vital sector of economic activity. As farm families leave the countryside, rural communities face the challenge of keeping afloat critical social infrastructure such as schools and government services. No young Iowan wants to return to a dying community or a polluted state.

For more than a decade, Iowa Democrats have run on a promise to clean up this mess. After taking charge last year of all three branches of state government for the first time in 40 years, they largely capitulated on this issue. They must do better in 2008.

Iowa cannot afford to lose another generation of young people to the allure of other states, and rural Iowa cannot afford to lose its next generation to the allure of the big city. The state must fiercely protect its resources and amenities from those looking to make a quick buck off the back of the state’s long-term viability.

Like others born and raised in the state, I would like to return one day, but I am loath to the idea of returning to a state overrun by an environmental, economic and socially detrimental livestock industry.

BRIAN DEPEW lives in Lyons, Neb. He grew up in Laurens and was the Green Party candidate for Iowa secretary of agriculture in 2002. He works for the Center for Rural Affairs, but these thoughts are his own.

http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080113/OPINION01/801130320/-1/NEWS04

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Obama vs. Clinton: What’s the Beef?

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 13, 2008

(Editor’s Note: Ted Glick is the national coordinator of the Independent Progressive Politics Network and a former candidate for US Senate on the Green Party ticket from New Jersey.  He publishes a regular column, “Future Hope” which is archived at the IPPN website.)

Future Hope column, Jan. 13, 2008

Obama vs. Clinton: What’s the Beef?

By Ted Glick

After Iowa and New Hampshire, it sure looks like the three-person horse race for the Democratic Presidential nomination has now become a two-person race. It’s not looking good right now for a comeback by anti-corporate fighter John Edwards.

Would it make any difference whether Hillary or Barack wins the nomination?

Some on the Left take the position that “a Democrat is a Democrat” and it doesn’t matter who aspires to be the D.P. Presidential nominee. I don’t agree with this view. There is a definite difference between Dennis Kucinich and Hillary Clinton.

More to the point, there is a definite difference between Dennis Kucinich and Barack Obama. Indeed, based on voting records in the U.S. Senate, Clinton and Obama are ideological twins. Here’s how national affairs writer Tom Curry explained it at the MSNBC website on November 29th, 2006:

“On Congressional Quarterly’s tally of how often senators support Bush’s positions on issues coming before the Senate, in 2005 Clinton earned a 31 out of 100 rating (with 100 meaning totally supportive of Bush) and Obama got a 33.

“On the National Journal scale of liberal to conservative positions, again based on roll call votes in 2005, Obama rated an 82.5 (meaning he was more liberal than 82.5 percent of his Senate colleagues) and Clinton a 79.8.”

This squares with my observations and research as the Presidential campaign has unfolded over the past year. I haven’t detected a single issue on which there is a major programmatic difference between the two of them. For both, it’s primary-season, Democratic Party progressivism, certain to be slid several notches to the right once the nomination is secured, in the usual attempt to secure what is seen as “the political middle” for the general election.

It seems like many of those supporting Clinton are doing so on “practical politics” grounds, or because they’re excited by the prospect of the first woman President. They think the party-establishment, Clinton machine has a better chance of defeating the Republicans, and this is their overriding priority.

Those supporting Obama are impressed by his soaring oratory, relative youth and the prospect of a first African American President. He is having a huge impact among young people, inspiring many of them to invest their hopes in him and the Democratic Party as agents of change.

It may be that if Obama becomes President, the political forces he has unleashed—particularly among young people and the African American community–will come to constitute a progressive political bloc that, by means of independent pressure from below, will make it difficult for him to accommodate to the conservative and corporate interests—with whom he has significant connections–who will undoubtedly lean on him. These corporate interests will use their influence within the mass media and elsewhere to demand that he follow through on his “unifying America” mantra by prominently including them in the formulation of government policy and the allocation of resources. And sharks at the table usually have more say than lots of little fish–unless the little fish are very well-organized and strong of heart.

It sure seems to me that those who believe in Obama because they think he is the real deal, a genuine change agent, are being set up for some severe disappointment down the road. The brother has a history. He has a track record. He’s no Martin Luther King, and his campaign bears no resemblance to the 1980’s Rainbow Coalition campaigns of Jesse Jackson. In “The Audacity of Hope,” his best-selling book, and in things he has said since, he has made it clear that he is very much within the U.S. empire-supporting, corporate liberalism mainstream. That is not the route to change.

What progressive activists need to do all throughout the year is organize independent, issue-based political activity which demands that all of the candidates for President, for Congress or for any other office stand up for straightforward progressive policies. To the extent that candidates do so, to that extent should they be supported.

And the Green Party, the Labor Party and others who appreciate the need for a genuine multi-party democracy, who understand the severe problems that come with a restrictive, big money-dominated, winner-take-all, two-party electoral system, must continue their work. It’s these problems and the lack of a strong, progressive third party alternative that allows U.S. politics and policies to be what they are. You can’t be seriously progressive and oppose the general idea of and the efforts toward such an alternative.

Since Cynthia McKinney or whoever becomes the Green Party Presidential nominee won’t be taking office in 2008, I hope that the Democratic nominee wins. Any of the Democrats will be better than any of the Republicans. But it’s essential that in 2008 we use the political dynamics of a Presidential election year to keep building what is the only genuine hope of “change,” of “real change,” of “fundamental change.” It’s not the election of Obama or Clinton to the Presidency. It’s the steadily developing coherence, strength and visible activism of an independent, popular, consistently progressive, multi-racial, grassroots movement. Let’s keep our eyes on the prize.

Ted Glick is the coordinator of the U.S. Climate Emergency Council (www.climateemergency.org) and a leader of the Independent Progressive Politics Network (www.ippn.org). He can be reached at indpol@igc.org or P.O. Box 1132, Bloomfield, N.J.  07003.

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The Search For an Enemy - Part 1

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 10, 2008

It seems that conservatism, at least as served up by the GOP, must have an enemy. That enemy is then used to stir up fear in the electorate and, if the plan works, move the electorate to vote Republicans into office. In the past we had a generation or better of the “Red Scare,” followed by the “Cold War.” Elections were won and trillions were willingly handed over to the military-industrial complex which kept the dastardly communists at bay. When the Berlin Wall fell and the communist government of the former Soviet Union lost power, the Republicans no longer had a reliable enemy to use in motivating their electoral base.

Oh, sure, abortion and homosexuality were a useful tools to activate the evangelical Christians who came to the party in the ’80s, but as recent events have shown these folks actually expect the Republicans to DO SOMETHING about their issues. Thus they can no longer be considered a reliable ally, and the absence of the abortion issue or the homosexual issue from this year’s GOP campaign is ample evidence of that. The party needed something broader than abortion, and more menacing than homosexuality. After all, as more homosexuals came out of the closets even the most homophobic members of the GOP had to think twice since they now had openly gay family members speaking out against the GOP agenda.

The events of 9/11 breathed new life into the fear-mongering machine of the GOP. A new enemy was now upon us, and unlike the Reds, this enemy had actually attacked our country. Islamic extremists were now the unifying thread of the conservative Republican message machine, and the media was quite happy to spit out the manufactured blurbs on a regular basis. In just 18 short months our country found ourselves in the midst of two fronts of a “war against terror” that promised to rid the world of terrorists while, at the same time, provide enough grist for the GOP propaganda mills for the next forty or fifty years. There was talk of a permanent GOP majority in Washington. Life was good…we had an enemy again.

(Part 2 next week)

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Green Party Presidential Candidate Profile - Jesse Johnson

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 10, 2008

As promised, here is the Green Party Presidential Candidate Profile. I will be presenting the candidates in the order they are listed on the Green Party website. Also, I will use only material from the candidate’s website, articles/media published by the candidate, or from campaign approved media sites. The intent here is to allow the candidate to speak in her/his own words, not editorialize.

Next in line - Jesse Johnson

Jesse’s YouTube Video

West Virginia Mountain Party Website (From his 2004 campaign for WV Governor)

From NewMenu.org website

Jesse Johnson for President

I am running as a Green for President.
State: National
Election Day: Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Results: No Results Yet

Contact Jesse Johnson

Email: jesse@mtparty.org
Official Web site:  http://www.mtparty.org/nominations/2004/jesse/jesse_johnson.html

About Jesse Johnson

Job History:
Jesse Johnson for President During the 90’s Jesse was called home three times, first to be the primary care-giver for his grandmother and great great aunt, both of whom had terminal cancer, then for two one hundred year floods within 18 months, which destroyed his Sissonville home and finally because his mother became ill and fell into a coma.

Glad to be home, Jesse eagerly became involved in the community, acting in a variety of local commercials for causes he believed in and the Charleston productions of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Pavilion. He also became an advisor to the board of the West Virginia International Film Festival and started West Virginia Film Investment, geared towards brining film productions to the state.

At the same time, Jesse was instrumental in creating Talkback, Children Respond to Violence in the Media, through a three year grant funded by U.S. Department of Education, National Endowment of the Arts, V.S.A.and Kanawha County Schools. The program uses the arts to teach inner-city elementary school students how to combat violence. Talkback was entered into the US Congressional Record and was recognized by first lady Laura Bush.

More recently he lobbied the legislature to protect intellectual properties.

Discouraged with the two party system, and an environmentalist at heart, Jesse began attending Mountain Party meetings a little over a year ago. At the May 3rd convention he lead the charge to keep Nader off the ballot and secured the party nomination for governor. He is the first gubernatorial candidate in the history of the state to secure his place on the general election ballot before the primary election.


Important Issues:
The United States Economic Development

Build a film industry to create jobs, increase tourism, and educate citizens
Already initiated the creation of intellectual properties legislation to protect new economic venues
Create a WV Bug [logo] to identify WV businesses and products
Fair taxation plan in which big business shares the brunt of the burden (instead of citizens)
Flood mitigation / Water storage / Lakes of power / Redirect Valley Fills
Responsible mining and logging practices

Enforce mountaintop removal regulations
Create an exit strategy for mountaintop removal and land redevelopment with clearly defined responsibilities in regard to refuse
Improved regulations for timber rustling and clear-cutting with clearly defined responsibilities
Enforce weight limits on coal trucks
Promote and fund stewardship programs


Why Vote For Me:
Jesse Johnson for Green Party Education

Smaller classrooms and limits on busing
Competitive pay for educators
Work to overturn “No Child Left Behind” /create an inclusive plan for WV’s kids
Make the arts mandatory and accountable in elementary, middle and senior high schools (this means putting arts under assessment)
High Tech home schooling utilizing Public Broadcasting services
Increase adult literacy
Universal Healthcare Reform

Preserve women’s right to choose
Expand the state’s lower cost prescription drug plan to include all West Virginians
Utilize alternative healthcare to encourage self responsibility and wellness while lowering healthcare costs

Posted in Green Party, National | 5 Comments »

Fallon Campaign: Ed Fallon to announce his candidacy for Congress - IA 3rd

Posted by Richard Johnson on January 10, 2008

  Fallon Campaign: Ed Fallon to announce his candidacy for Congress
1/10/2008

Contact: Lynn Heuss
515-201-9405                                                                                  lynn@fallonforcongress.com

DES MOINES, IOWA – Ed Fallon, the former state representative who ran for governor in 2006, will be announcing his candidacy for Iowa’s Third Congressional District, in a challenge to incumbent Rep. Leonard Boswell.

The announcement will take place on Wednesday, January 16, 2008, at 2:00 PM, at a location to be announced in a press release on Monday, January 12, 2008.

Who:               Ed Fallon

What:              Announcement of Candidacy for Congress

When:             Wednesday, January 16, 2008, at 2:00 PM

Where:            Location to be announced in a press release on Monday, January 14, 2008

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