Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Editorial: Ballot questions reflect growing pains in St. Charles County : Stltoday

Editorial: Ballot questions reflect growing pains in St. Charles County : Stltoday

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Historically, sheriffs were the most powerful elected officials in their rural Missouri counties. The legendary Walter “Buck” Buerger, for example, was sheriff of Jefferson County for 28 years.

Upon his death in 2009, one of his former deputies recalled the night he broke up a huge fight at a river access point by holding up his arm and telling the burly ringleader, “My name is Buck Buerger, I’m the sheriff of this county. I’ve got trained marksmen out on that bridge, and when I drop my arm, they’re going to start shooting. I want you and your people to get out of here, now. My arm’s getting tired.”

There were no marksmen on the bridge. Just Buck.

In some of Missouri’s outstate counties, sheriffs still have that kind of clout. But as exurban counties have become more urbanized, law enforcement has become more professional and less personal and political. On Nov. 6, voters in St. Charles County will be asked whether they want to take the next step.

Hartzler's Contributions from Big Oil

Teresa Hensley for Congress - Happening

Romnopoly

"Yes We Plan" - Mary J. Blige, Julianne Moore, & Q-Tip Speak Out With Pl...

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Secretary of state predicts 72 percent voter turnout Tuesday : Stltoday

Secretary of state predicts 72 percent voter turnout Tuesday : Stltoday

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JEFFERSON CITY • More than 3 million Missourians will vote in Tuesday's election, if official estimates hold up.

Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan is predicting that 72 percent of Missouri’s 4.19 million registered voters will cast ballots next week.

“During my time in office, we’ve worked diligently with local election officials to ensure Missourians can have confidence in an election system that is fair, accurate and secure,” Carnahan said in a news release this afternoon. “I encourage all eligible Missourians to take the time to vote on Nov. 6 and make their voices heard.”

It remains to be seen whether the forecast, based on local turnout predictions from 116 local election officials across the state, will ring true on Election Day.


 

Night of the Voting Dead

oldie, but goodie

Editorial: Want fewer aldermen? Here's your chance. : Stltoday

Editorial: Want fewer aldermen? Here's your chance. : Stltoday

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snip

 
At the bottom of what will be a very long ballot on Nov. 6, St. Louis city voters will find Proposition R.
If you think that 28 is too many aldermen, Prop R (for Reduce) is your chance to do something about it. The measure, which needs a 60 percent majority to pass, would amend the City Charter to cut the number of aldermen in half.

“The first thing out of the box, whenever we talk about amending the charter to make government more efficient, people say, ‘Why don’t you cut the number of aldermen first?’” said Alderman Phyllis Young, D-7th Ward, who sponsored the legislation that put the measure on the ballot.

“Maybe, if we pass this, we can go onto other things,” Ms. Young said.

Ms. Young’s Board Bill 31 passed last July by a 3-to-1 margin. The reduction would not take place until 2023, after ward boundaries are redrawn following the 2020 Census. It can be assumed that many, if not most, of the current aldermen will have moved on by then.

Paul Krugman: A slow job is better than a snow job - Post Bulletin

Paul Krugman: A slow job is better than a snow job - Post Bulletin:

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snip

 The point is that America is still suffering from an overall lack of demand, the result of the severe debt and financial crisis that broke out before Obama took office. In a better world, the president would be proposing bold short-term moves to move us rapidly back to full employment. But he isn't.

OK, we all understand why. Voters have been told over and over again that the 2009 stimulus didn't work (actually it did, but it wasn't big enough), and a few days before a national election is no time to try to change that big a false belief. So all that the administration feels able to offer are measures that would, one hopes, modestly accelerate the recovery already under way.

It's disappointing, to be sure. But a slow job is better than a snow job. Obama may not be as bold as we'd like, but he isn't actively misleading voters the way Romney is. Furthermore, if we ask what Romney would probably do in practice, including sharp cuts in programs that aid the less well-off and the imposition of hard-money orthodoxy on the Federal Reserve, it looks like a program that might well derail the recovery and send us back into recession.

Monday, October 29, 2012

A look back • Kennedy and Nixon got up close with supporters in St. Louis : Stltoday

A look back • Kennedy and Nixon got up close with supporters in St. Louis : Stltoday

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ST. LOUIS • On two raucous nights in September 1960, Lambert Field was alive with up-close presidential politicking.

U.S. Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Democratic candidate, was mobbed by 20,000 supporters, many of them giddy students, as he stepped onto the tarmac from his campaign plane on Sept. 13. He had to retreat back into the twin-engine Convair until police could clear a path.

The following night, 10,000 cheering Republicans greeted their candidate, Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Because of the previous evening's crush, police commanders assigned more officers to a tighter security detail. Many Nixon supporters cheered from an observation deck atop the concourse, but hundreds were outside the gate behind a rope line. They pushed forward to shake his hand after Nixon and his wife, Pat, descended from a four-engine DC-6.

The assassination of Kennedy three years later and other attacks on presidents and candidates put an end to close contact with the people. Nowadays, only a lucky few are cleared through security to shake hands with a candidate or president.

Not so in 1960.
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note:  since the gop primary, both parties missing in action in this state.  

Editorial: Bill Enyart for Congress in Illinois 12th : Stltoday

Editorial: Bill Enyart for Congress in Illinois 12th : Stltoday

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Democrat Bill Enyart was thrust into the 12th District Congressional race to replace retiring U.S. Rep Jerry Costello, while Jason Plummer, his Republican opponent, has been eagerly seeking public office for years.


The district has been in Democratic hands for nearly seven decades. This year, although redistricting has broadened it to include Marion, Carbondale and Mt. Vernon, while keeping East St. Louis, Granite City and Belleville, it still appears to lean heavily Democratic.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Real Words - Medicare

Editorial: Wagner, Emerson are solid choices for Congress : Stltoday

Editorial: Wagner, Emerson are solid choices for Congress : Stltoday

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It's a double whammy of bad governance: Voters have no legitimate choices, and the candidates have no incentive to move to the middle. Gridlock is all but guaranteed.

There is one open seat for Congress in Missouri this year, the one being vacated by Republican Todd Akin. Unfortunately, it's not very competitive either. Republican Ann Wagner is going to run away with the newly configured 2nd District that encompasses St. Louis County and parts of Jefferson and St. Charles counties. Democrat Glenn Koenen, with little funding and no real support from the national party, will finish a distant second.

If public policy positions were our only measuring stick, we would endorse Mr. Koenen, a former director of the Circle of Concern food pantry, a tireless advocate for the poor, a man who offered us this insight into his political philosophy:

“The government can't make the world fair,” he said, “But the government can protect us from the worst of what's going on.”

Ms. Wagner, on the other hand, endorses the tired Republican claim that government regulation is hurting business growth. She's opposed to most elements of the Affordable Care Act and the Dodd-Frank regulations intended to rein in Wall Street abuses.

She's flat out wrong on those issues, though we give her credit for, unlike many Republicans, even being able to call the health care act by its given name, and recognizing that many of its elements are positive and should be retained in some fashion.
 ===

hobson's choice

 A Hobson's choice is a free choice in which only one option is offered. As a person may refuse to take that option, the choice is therefore between taking the option or not; "take it or leave it".

We need to hold on to American history : Stltoday

We need to hold on to American history : Stltoday

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Over the past few months, I have had three experiences that have stirred my concern about the baby boomers’ children, and grandchildren, not having a well-developed sense of American history.

Oh, yea, I have seen some academic studies on the low percentage of current U.S. students who can correctly locate World War I on a timeline and the few who can correctly name a current Supreme Court justice, but my recent realization came more like a bolt of lightning telling me “historical time has moved on … and it is going to make a difference.”

My first jolt was students in my senior political science class last March and their reaction to a book titled "Government's Greatest Achievements" that is a ranking by academic political scientists and historians of the importance of 50 national endeavors between World War II and 2000. My current students were surprised, and somewhat dismissive, of the No. 1 ranking —“U.S. rebuilding Europe after World War II.” My surprise was not only the quickness that students were ready to overlook this national achievement, but their willingness to dismiss it as “not being important

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note:  what else is new

many, if not most schools in the metro area are baby sitting institutions.  education is not the top priority and teachers are the lessor of the problems. 

true when I went to school and very true now

Extreme highs and lows: Climate change and the Missouri River : Stltoday

Extreme highs and lows: Climate change and the Missouri River : Stltoday

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We know the Missouri has always gone up and down. But what is different about the river now is that it is jumping up higher and dropping down lower than ever before. We have had the highest monthly flow rate and the lowest September flow rate in recorded history in just the past 16 months. This is a very disturbing trend. It means the Missouri is becoming a wilder, less predictable, and more dangerous river. The Corps has long tried to keep the Missouri caged behind riprap. (By the way, the Corps loves rock. It believes nearly every hydrological problem can be solved with more rock). But this new, erratic river is going to increasingly defy the Corps’ efforts to not only manage it, but to contain it.

In April 2011, the Bureau of Reclamation released a report that examined the future effects of climate change on the Missouri’s hydrology. The Bureau concluded that increases in annual precipitation across the northern plains would result in a corresponding increase in the river’s mean annual runoff at Omaha of 9.7% by the 2050s and 12.6% by the 2070s. Remember, the mean is only an average. The river’s maximum runoff for any given year in the 2050s and 2070s could be far higher. Additionally, warmer temperatures in the winter months will cause a jump in the river’s wintertime discharge rates. Finally, the Bureau stated that the Missouri’s flow regime in the 21st century would be more haphazard, with greater oscillations in volume. The report stated, “… stream flow variability over the basin is expected to continue under climate change conditions … future hydro climate conditions may produce weekly acute runoff events.” The term “weekly acute runoff events” is a benign way of saying the Missouri is going to flood on short notice.

Full 2012 Third Party Presidential Debate | 2012 Third Party Presidentia...

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Dana Milbank: The tea party is helping Democrats : Editorial

Dana Milbank: The tea party is helping Democrats : Editorial

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snip

High among those putting Republican Senate control in jeopardy is Mourdock, who eviscerated Lugar, the longtime chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, by running to his right in the primary. Now realizing they are in danger of losing a seat that Lugar kept Republican for 36 years, Indiana Republicans used a super PAC to send out a direct-mail piece quoting favorable remarks Lugar made about Mourdock. But Lugar's Senate office let it be known that it did not authorize the mailing and that Lugar would not be campaigning for Mourdock.

While Mourdock still has a shot at the Senate, Missouri's Akin appears to be squandering an easy win for Republicans because of his remarks about rape. Akin beat the preferred candidate of the GOP establishment, businessman John Brunner, in the primary, but his candidacy floundered after he voiced his bizarre thoughts about rape.

In a situation even worse than Mourdock's, the party establishment abandoned Akin. "I'm convinced now they don't want Akin to win," Akin adviser Rick Tyler complained last week to the Daily Caller, a conservative website.

Of course they want him to win. But they know that in Missouri, as in Indiana, Delaware, Colorado and Nevada, the tea party has done serious damage to Republicans' hopes of being the majority.



President Obama We Have Fewer Horses and Bayonets

Paul Krugman: 'The Public Really Doesn't Care' About The Deficit

Paul Krugman: 'The Public Really Doesn't Care' About The Deficit:

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"During the Hofstra debate, in which questions were posed by members of the public rather than the Beltway elite, there wasn't a single question about the deficit. Not one," Krugman wrote in a blog post Sunday. "The public really doesn't care."
"And you know what? Neither do financial markets, which continue to lend to the U.S. government at incredibly low rates," Krugman added.
Only one in ten Americans say that the national deficit is America's most pressing problem, according to a Gallup poll in September. In contrast, one in three say solving the unemployment crisis is most important.
Even though it seems that most voters aren't all that interested in the deficit, the candidates are making it a priority on the campaign trail. Neither candidate was asked a question about the deficit at the second presidential debate, but the two said the word "deficit" a total of 18 times combined. And they have discussed it continually throughout the campaign.
Romney has made deficit reduction a centerpiece of his campaign, though his tax plan would increase the deficit by $5 trillion, according to a recent analysis by the Tax Policy Center.
The Republican candidate also has hammered Obama for overseeing a supposedly rising federal budget deficit. He claimed at both the first and second presidential debates that the deficit has doubled under Obama. But the deficit is actually smaller than it was in 2009, and it's shrinking, according to the Office of Management and Budget and the Congressional Budget Office.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Akin: McCaskill "fetches" regulations and taxes. (10-20-2012) fetch like a dog

like a dog

Missouri Senate Debate: Todd Akin vs. Claire McCaskill - 10/18/12

Editorial: Jay Nixon is the choice for Missouri governor : Stltoday

Editorial: Jay Nixon is the choice for Missouri governor : Stltoday

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snip

We endorse Mr. Nixon. He hasn't been a stellar governor, but he’s been steady, particularly in responding to the state’s unprecedented run of natural disasters. He’s surrounded himself with mostly high-quality staff — even if he has selfishly shackled their ability to communicate with the public.

To be fair, Mr. Nixon's reluctance to communicate openly may stem from the fact that he works with a legislative body completely controlled by his opposite political party. Whatever he says will be hammered, so he says as little as possible, and then usually in carefully controlled situations.

But when he does speak, he's almost always cheerful and optimistic. His opponents mock his upbeat attitude, but it's refreshing. Wallowing in the reality of the recession won’t make it go away.

The most important reason to send Mr. Nixon back to Jefferson City is that he has shown the willingness to use his veto pen, and sometimes just the threat of a veto, to stop many truly awful legislative proposals from becoming law.

Mr. Nixon has stood up for workers and women in a strong way.

Mr. Spence would give Missourians no such comfort.

When we endorsed Mr. Nixon four years ago for the office he now holds, we hoped for a “new Nixon” who would offer bold, transformative leadership. We'll have to wait some more. If he wins, for the first time in decades he won't be preparing for another statewide campaign. Maybe he'll turn his better self loose.

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Mr Nixon is the choice of soar 11-3 in st louis as well

In 2nd District, GOP has a 100-fold spending advantage : Stltoday

In 2nd District, GOP has a 100-fold spending advantage : Stltoday

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 I’m not happy with the way things are going in Congress,” he said of his decision to run this year. “There’s too much posturing, too much taking ideological stands.”

Koenen says he has a chance to win because the district’s GOP tinge is not quite as pronounced as it used to be, because some Democratic-leaning areas were added in the reapportionment after the 2010 census.
However, Kenneth Warren, a political science professor at St. Louis University and an expert on voting trends, says the district remains solidly Republican.

On the Obama health plan, Koenen supports it as a “very necessary first step” toward what he hopes will be an eventual expansion of Medicare to the entire population over 10 to 20 years.
“In the long term the amount of money we spend on medical care will be the same,”
 he said.
Wagner calls the Obama plan “a supreme overreach of the federal government” imposing “daunting” new regulation and taxes that will hinder economic growth.

She supports alternatives such as increasing competition by allowing insurance companies to market health care policies across state lines.
Meanwhile, she attacks the single-payer plan Koenen advocates for the more distant future as “basic socialism in health care.”

Horrigan: How evangelicals flipped Missouri : Stltoday

Horrigan: How evangelicals flipped Missouri : Stltodayl

click  link

snip

Missouri used to be such a normal place. Republicans dressed better, if you like pants with ducks on them, but otherwise you could barely tell them from the Democrats.

A bellwether, they called the state. Before 2008, Missourians picked the winner in 24 of the previous 25 presidential elections. We were a little bit country, a little bit rock and roll, a little bit soul.
Then something strange happened. I've been trying to figure out what.

Claire McCaskill came by the office to see us. I asked her what she thought it was. She said she would prefer not to answer, since we were on the record.

I understood her reluctance. She is defending her U.S. Senate seat against U.S. Rep. Todd Akin. He personifies how weird things have gotten. Even many of his fellow Republicans are treating him like a guy in a tinfoil hat walking down the street talking to himself.

Chris Koster came by the office to see us. He is the Joni Mitchell of Missouri politics, a “both sides now" guy who was a Republican state senator before switching parties to make a successful run for state attorney general in 2008. Now he's defending his seat against Republican Ed Martin, yet another sterling example of the modern Missouri GOP. I asked Koster what happened to Missouri.

“There are no braking decisions on the right side now,” he said. He pointed to efforts in the mid-2000s by then-state Sen. Matt Bartle, R-Lee's Summit, to criminalize stem cell research that might be used for human cloning. “You've got Jim Sowers (founder of Kansas City's Sowers Institute of Medical Research) and my friend Matt Bartle wants to put him in prison for 15 years on a [class] B felony.”

The Todd Akin School of Gynecology Has Another Graduate | Fired Up! Missouri

The Todd Akin School of Gynecology Has Another Graduate | Fired Up! Missouri:

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Submitted by Captain Spaulding on October 19, 2012 - 10:48pm
Congressman Joe Walsh (R-IL) told reporters there should be no abortion exceptions even for the "life of the mother," because "with modern technology and science, you can't find one instance" in which a woman would actually die.  Same goes for “health of the mother,” Walsh said; no exceptions needed there either. 
With the likes of Walsh and Akin to guide our thinking, there’ll be no need for women to worry about making their own medical decisions. After all, when it comes to women’s bodies, who knows better than a Washington neo-con?  So toughen up out there, all you wimpy, binder women, whining about legitimate rapists and ectopic pregnancies. 


Friday, October 19, 2012

Obama warns of "Romnesia" symptoms

I Kinda Liked Mitt Romney, Until I Lost My Job

Billboards

Two Americans Win Nobel Economics Prize

CrossTalk: Mitt Über Alles

Akin, McCaskill square off in U.S. Senate debate | ksdk.com

Akin, McCaskill square off in U.S. Senate debate | ksdk.com:

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McCaskill, Akin get personal in debate : Stltoday

McCaskill, Akin get personal in debate : Stltoday

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snip


Unmentioned during the one-hour debate was any reference to Akin's controversial comments in August on "legitimate rape" and pregnancy.

McCaskill, the Democrat, used her closing statement in the debate to reiterate her support for federal legislation requiring equal pay for women. Akin, the Republican, has opposed such mandates, saying they are an overreach of government.

"He supports the boss being able to decide whether or not you get paid less just because you're a woman," said McCaskill, adding, "he is a boss who does that."

She went on to allege that Akin pays the female members of his staff in Washington 23 percent less than he pays his male staff members.

McCaskill's campaign said the allegation was supported by publicly available information about Akin's congressional office. Akin's spokesman later brushed off questions seeking a response.
Akin used his own closing minutes to hit McCaskill again on what has been a central allegation of his campaign: that the senator profited from federal money that went into her husband's low-income housing business.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Testimony of Tom Conway, Before the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) Final Hearing on Circular Welded Pipe

Testimony of Tom Conway, Before the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) Final Hearing on Circular Welded Pipe

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continued flap over imported pipes

snip

 We also have some good news --earlier this month, meetings were held between local USW representatives and Wheatland executives to evaluate the feasibility of reopening the continuous weld mill at Sharon and to have USW members be recalled in the process.  These USW members have been out of jobs for three and a half years. So, clearly, this is a very exciting development for them; it literally means a decent shot of regaining a good livelihood back into the middle class and dignity for themselves and their families. It also means over 100,000 tons of additional domestic steel consumption, which hopefully can begin to alter a vicious cycle into a virtuous cycle.  

As the Commission has heard today -- and time and again -- our members have made tremendous sacrifices to stay competitive over the years, and I’m proud to represent today a truly talented and dedicated workforce producing circular welded pipe.  I would note that this industry has sufficient capacity to supply the entire U.S. market.   But what we cannot afford is unfairly traded imports from India, Oman, UAE, and Vietnam to supply the U.S. market.  Rather, we need American workers using American-made steel to supply this market.  On behalf of all of our workers, I ask that you make affirmative injury determinations in these cases.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

MailPOW talking card...Todd Akin said what?!

Susan Montee: Fiscal Conservative

Is the Affordable Health Care Act ruling really a ‘Trojan Horse’ that could undermine future decisions? | The Labor Tribune

Is the Affordable Health Care Act ruling really a ‘Trojan Horse’ that could undermine future decisions? | The Labor Tribune

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UPHOLDING THE ACA: A TROJAN HORSE
The decision to uphold this Act is a Trojan horse in that it is not the gift to the Progressives that it appears to be on the surface.
Why? Because the High Court’s reasoning in upholding the ACA is based on a narrow interpretation of the Act and a broad butrestrictive vision of the law as it relates to the taxing power of the United States.
The key provision is the individual mandate. This requires a tax or penalty to individuals who do not secure health care coverage through alternative sources, like insurance, Medicare or employer or union sponsored health plans.
This individual mandate that requires covered participants to purchase health care was proposed by Republican congressional leaders as early as 1989 for the express purpose of bringing individual responsibility to the issue. At present, even with the individual mandate, the Act still excludes well over 20 million Americans from coverage under the ACA according the Congressional Budget Office. The U.S.A. may have come a long way but it still has not achieved universal healthcare and that now appears to be a mission impossible for Congress to undertake considering the practicality of the legislative constraints in the Roberts’ decision.
Justice Roberts refused to uphold the law until the presentation of the Obama Administration’s last alternative legal point before the Court — the taxing powers of Congress to fund the ACA saved the Act. The Court allowed a penalty or “tax” to stand against those who fail to purchase health insurance to prevent those who intend to use the system without paying for it from driving up health care costs for those who pay for coverage. The Roberts Court found this penalty to be within the taxing and spending powers of Congress and thus, upheld the law.
The Trojan Horse in the ruling is that it gives with one hand – upholding the legality of the mandate and thus the ACA law itself — but with the other hand the decision attempts to clearly limit the traditional power of Congress to govern by, and through, the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution. This is a setback in American jurisprudence and is extremely dangerous!

En Masse and Without Precedent, Walmart Workers Rise Up - Working In These Times

En Masse and Without Precedent, Walmart Workers Rise Up - Working In These Times

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snip



Following last Thursday’s strike by 63 Walmart workers in the Los Angeles metropolitan area--the first significant retail strike at the world’s largest merchandiser--workers walked off the job Tuesday morning at Walmart stores in Dallas, Texas; the Bay Area and Sacramento, California; Seattle; Miami; Washington, D.C. and Chicago. None of the workers has union representation, but labor law protects their right to collective action over workplace issues.”
Over the weekend, in another confrontation with Walmart, non-union subcontract laborers at one of Walmart's largest distribution centers in Elwood, Ill., ended their 21-day unfair-labor-practice strike with all strikers returning to their jobs with full back pay. The logistics operator of the warehouse also took some steps before strikers returned to improve safety.
"That was great. We won everything. It was a victory," striker Phil Bailey tells Working In These Times. He says the workers marched back in together wearing T-shirts emblazoned with “Warehouse Workers for Justice,” the worker’s center established by the UE (United Electrical Workers) to raise standards in the industry. Bailey said the UE subgroup of workers in his warehouse--the Warehouse Workers Organizing Committee--will continue to try to organize and even spread out nationally as part of UE’s strategy for the industry.
Many of Tuesday's retail store strikers headed to Bentonville the next day for OUR Walmart's national strategy meeting, as well as a rally outside corporate headquarters and a frustrated attempt to meet with Walmart's director of human resources. They also tried to influence a meeting today between Walmart executives and Wall Street stock analysts by presenting the analysts in advance with arguments that the company's "low-road business model" makes Walmart a bad deal for investors.
"I'm losing my voice from chanting, but it's long overdue," a Dallas-area striker, Josue "Josh" Mata, said yesterday from the picket line. "We have a chance today to call out Walmart on the way it treats workers."
Mata, 20, is an overnight maintenance man making $8.70 an hour at one of the three Dallas Walmarts where strikers from nine different stores congregated after walking out early Tuesday morning. Like many other associates, he wanted the company to stop retaliating against workers who speak out, to show respect to workers and to improve the workplace as well as the pay.
Last week's strike in the Los Angeles area encouraged him. "That was one step for us," Mata said. "It was empowering to see what associates could do."
"It was kind of scary at first," said Stacey Cottongame, 30, who has worked at Walmart since 2001, "but as associates see other associates band together, they'll join in, too."
Walmart workers are uniting globally as well as nationally. Last week, Walmart workers from around the world agreed to band together in a new alliance formed through UNI, one of the big global union confederations. Such alliances are common in heavily unionized global industries such as auto manufacturing or telecommunications. Although some Walmart workers in other countries have unions, UNI figures that only 7 percent of workers at the more than 10,000 stores worldwide (excluding China and Mexico) are in a union.
The new Walmart alliance members will share information, help each other organize, take joint actions and "shine a spotlight on Walmart's poor track record [in respecting workers and their rights] wherever they seek to expand." UFCW spokesman Jorge Amaro said the alliance "will synchronize actions on a global level” and push Walmart to sign a global agreement to respect workers' right to organize without intervention or retaliation.
Walmart workers--both direct employees and contract workers--are turning to local allies for support. For example, as strikers from Tuesday return to their jobs, local ministers and community leaders will escort many back to work, and supporters will rally outside the stores.
UFCW has also pulled together a group of national allies, including the National Consumers League and the National Organization for Women (which is involved with three ongoing state-level sexual discrimination lawsuits against Walmart), into an umbrella group called Making Change at Walmart that publicizes critiques of Walmart’s practices and tries to hold them publicly and legally accountable.
Walmart organizers also see some of the company’s investors, especially public pension funds, as potential allies if offered compelling evidence that more workforce investment would make Walmart a stronger company. UFCW capital stewardship researcher John Marshall compiled a stack of arguments and data to this effect and sent them to the stock analysts currently meeting with Walmart. Although sales in the average store have begun improving after nine consecutive quarters of decline, Marshall writes that Walmart's short-staffing and mistreatment of workers leads to a bad reputation (which can hurt both sales and expansion), as well as poor service, store stocking problems, low morale and other issues that can reduce productivity and profits. He cites two business-school studies showing that stores that invest more in payroll and training have much higher productivity and higher-rated service.
The strikes in recent days are not like the typical contract strikes at a unionized company. They are much spottier--usually with a minority of workers, often a quite small minority, leaving work only for a short time. Organizers are never entirely sure who will drop out of the strike or be swept in at the last minute. Most of the strikers are leaders in OUR Walmart, who hope by their actions to demonstrate to other workers that group action is possible.
But with the holiday shopping season coming, the job actions--especially at the warehouses—still have the potential to be disruptive to Walmart. Not to mention that, in the long run, they can build the sense of a public movement and encourage more workers to overcome their fears and join in a collective effort.
"It's not hard to convince people [at Walmart about the need for change]," Harris says. "We work there together, but people are so fearful." That can change, but it takes time and effort, as Chicago-area warehouse worker Mike Compton explained: "When we first started organizing, it was a little rough. People were scared. But we were on strike 22 days and came back in. Now we need to educate people about their rights. We've got some work ahead of us."
2 comments  · 

Protesters boo Akin’s ‘nonsense’ bus tour | The Labor Tribune

Protesters boo Akin’s ‘nonsense’ bus tour | The Labor Tribune:

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St. Louis – Roughly 40 protesters, including union members, seniors, women’s health advocates and students, turned out to greet Congressman Todd Akin, R-MO, Phyllis Schafly and other right-wing extremists at the Renaissance hotel in downtown St. Louis last week as Akin launched a “common sense” bus tour across Missouri as part of his race for U.S. Senate.
Common sense is something Akin seems woefully short of, and the protesters were quick to point out what Akin is really spouting – nonsense.
There’s no shortage of examples:
• Akin opposes having any minimum wage – at all.
• He said America should “get out of the business of Medicare and Medicaid.”
• Akin said student loans are a “Stage III cancer of socialism.”
• He also said he “doesn’t like Social Security” and he’s against the school lunch program.



Todd Akin, Claire McCaskill reveal what they would do in the Senate : Stltoday

Todd Akin, Claire McCaskill reveal what they would do in the Senate : Stltoday

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League of Women Voters and the Post-Dispatch present the Voters Guide : Stltoday

League of Women Voters and the Post-Dispatch present the Voters Guide : Stltoday

click link

snip

The League of Women Voters of St. Louis Information Service and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch proudly present the Nov. 6 voters guide. The guide is live and available online.

If you enter your address, the online guide will bring you the races and initiatives you can expect to see on your ballot. You can compare candidates' answers side-by-side and choose how you intend to vote. When you finish, you can print out your custom ballot or have one emailed to your account so you can take it with you to the polling place as a reference.

The guide also allows you to browse all candidates or all races.

Have questions about the election? Call the League of Women Voters hotline at 314-961-6869.

Editorial: Vote no on Amendment 3, Proposition E : Stltoday

Editorial: Vote no on Amendment 3, Proposition E : Stltodayic

click link

snip

A solution in search
of a problem
Proposition E is a legislative attempt to rile up partisan opposition to President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act, by changing state law to fix a nonexistent problem.

The proposition would make it illegal for the governor to unilaterally impose a state health exchange on Missourians. Guess what? The governor can't do that, and despite ridiculous allegations made by some Republicans, Mr. Nixon never tried to do so.

Critics were right when they accused Secretary of State Robin Carnahan, a Democrat, of playing politics with the wording of the proposition. She did. But that didn't make the intention of the partisans who put it on the ballot any less of a waste of time.

Proposition E is meaningless. If Republicans take the White House and Congress, and follow through on plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act, it serves no purpose. If the act stands, as we believe it will and should, the Legislature will still maintain the power to design and pass the required state exchange itself. Ironically, the Republican dominated House already did that once, figuring that it's better for Missourians to design the state health exchange than have the federal government's model forced on the state. The only reason lawmakers didn't finish the job is so they could spend one more fall campaigning against Obamacare.
What a complete waste of time.

Vote no on Proposition E.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Horrigan: Twitchy-nosed capitalism, then and now : Stltoday

Horrigan: Twitchy-nosed capitalism, then and now : Stltoday

click link

snip

Ralcorp is one of the fragments of what once was Ralston-Purina, a great old-school capitalist company. In 1893, young William H. Danforth, recently graduated from Washington University, got into the horse and mule feed game.

Thus was born Purina Mills. No Gilded Age lily, Will Danforth shoveled feed into bags himself. No tax incentives for him.

He bought from local growers. He traveled and sold and employed local men as millers and as drovers. He rebuilt after the Great Tornado of '96 and two years later made a deal with Webster Edgerly, a whole-grains kook who called himself “Dr. Ralston” and his movement “Ralstonism.” The new company, Ralston-Purina, added human foods to the product line.

Service in World War I convinced Will Danforth that there was magic in the word “chow.” After the war, he insisted that his animal feeds were animal chows. He adopted a red and white checkerboard pattern to reflect his “four-square” belief in balance among the physical, mental, social and religious aspects of life.
He built a great company and turned it over to his son. They employed tens of thousands of people, who raised families and retired on pensions. He made a great fortune. His grandsons, William H. Danforth II and John C. Danforth, now elderly men themselves, have given most of that fortune away to the great benefit of St. Louis.

These days most of your great tycoons don't build things as much as they buy and sell them, employing fewer people more “efficiently” and enriching people like themselves who wouldn't know which end of a mule to feed. In recent years, the financial sector has reaped 30 percent of the nation's corporate profits.

 

Study: Egg yolk nearly as bad as smoking

adding bacon to my eggs

McCaskill-Akin Senate Debate: Waiting to list to watch in-person | ksdk.com

McCaskill-Akin Senate Debate: Waiting to list to watch in-person | ksdk.com:

click link

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The U.S. Senate Debate is presented by Husch Blackwell and sponsored by the Clayton Chamber of Commerce, School District of Clayton, KSDK, KWMU and St. Louis Business Journal. It runs from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday at Clayton High School.
All of the tickets for the debate have been handed out already but there will be a waiting list for anyone who still wants a seat. You can call the Clayton Chamber of Commerce at 314-726-3033 to get on the list.
Approximately 15 minutes before the start of the debate, any unfilled seats will go to the waiting list on a first come first serve basis.
KSDK



Paul Krugman: 'Mitt Romney Doesn't See Dead People'

Paul Krugman: 'Mitt Romney Doesn't See Dead People':

click link--from huffington post linking to new york times

snip

Mitt Romney doesn’t see dead people. But that’s only because he doesn’t want to see them; if he did, he’d have to acknowledge the ugly reality of what will happen if he and Paul Ryan get their way on health care.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Manufacturing jobs go wanting as unemployment perseveres : Stltoday

Manufacturing jobs go wanting as unemployment perseveres : Stltoday

click link

snip


Ranken, with 2,100 students, has seen enrollment jump by 30 percent over the past three years. It is nonetheless operating 400 students short of capacity on its North St. Louis campus.

The school currently places 98 percent of its graduates in full-time jobs.

And local manufacturers, while also snapping up vocational grads from Southwestern Illinois College, St. Louis Community College and other local institutions are clamoring for more.

Shoun and other industry officials pin the shortage of capable skilled workers on the good intentions of the Greatest Generation who, in the interest of wanting a better life for their children, steered baby boomers away from careers that required punching a factory time clock.

Their children, the baby boomers, consequently earned undergraduate and graduate degrees, moved into white collar jobs and raised their own children with the full expectation that they would attend college as well.
The continuum ignored a basic tenet. “Not everyone is college material,” said Hammond, who himself left higher education after six months to join the company founded by his father in 1986.

In the K-12 system, baby boomer parents had a willing ally in emphasizing college over trades.

Shop class, once mandatory, is now an option at most middle and high schools — if it's offered at all because of budget constraints.
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if schools do not train folks, what do you expect
 if you do not pay well, like union jobs with benefits what do you expect

Lewis Reed is Running

Editorial: Missouri deserves Claire McCaskill : Stltoday

Editorial: Missouri deserves Claire McCaskill : Stltoday

click link

snip


On Planet Todd, women who are raped have a natural defense against pregnancy. Man-made global warming is “highly suspect.” Every tax takes away a measure of freedom; presumably even the taxes that pay the soldiers who protect our freedoms.

On Planet Todd, the Pilgrims came to America to escape socialism, never mind “the general good of the colony” clause in the Mayflower Compact. Federal support for scientific research should be limited to “pure research,” such as why stars don't cast more light than they do. The school-lunch program fosters a culture of dependency.

Mr. Akin has difficulty discussing the fine points of public policy — he knows what he knows and that's all there is to it. He is pleasant enough when some of the differences between his beliefs and ... well ... facts are pointed out. “That's not the way I see it,” he will say, or, “I have a different view.”

He appears to have only the vaguest idea of what's contained in some of the bills he's voted for. He sat on Rep. Paul Ryan's, R-Wis., budget committee and twice voted for the same $700 billion in changes to Medicare spending that Mr. Akin now criticizes President Barack Obama for proposing.

You ask him about the so-called “fiscal cliff” that looms at year's end, when a perfect storm of economic catastrophe awaits, and he says he's not up to speed on the details of economic policy.

Ms. McCaskill, who has served in the Senate since 2007, has a firm grasp of policy detail. She can, and will at the drop of a hat, go into specific detail about cost overruns on Iraq and Afghanistan reconstruction contracts. Her hearings on those contracts have saved the nation millions, if not billions, of dollars.

Social Security checks may get 1.5 to 1.7 percent cost-of-living increase : Stltoday

Social Security checks may get 1.5 to 1.7 percent cost-of-living increase : Stltoday

click link

snip


Social Security recipients should expect a cost-of-living increase of 1.5 to 1.7 percent for next year, according to the American Institute for Economic Research.  The institute says that's not enough.

The Social Security Administration is expected to announce the size of the increase a week from today. The increase is set according to the Consumer Price Index for September, which is also due next week.
Seniors this year got a 3.6 percent cost-of-living boost.

The American Institute for Economic Research, an independent think tank, thinks the new increase will be less than inflation as seniors really experience it.  The institute's own measure of frequently purchased items was up 2 percent as of August.  Food was up 2 percent, motor fuel 1.9 percent and medical care  4.1 percente
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guestimate would be about $20 a month for most members of our soar group

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Soulard Oktoberfest Television ad

Soulard Oktoberfest starts Friday evening - The Telegraph: Arts & Entertainment

Soulard Oktoberfest starts Friday evening - The Telegraph: Arts & Entertainment:

click link

snip


In keeping with the Munich tradition, the Soulard Oktoberfest also will feature an array of classic Oktoberfest dishes, including bratwurst, rotisserie chicken, roasted turkey legs, potato pancakes and traditional Piller Pretzels imported from Munich.
Kenrick’s Meat Market and Catering, one of St. Louis’ oldest and finest butcher shops, will prepare wies’n hendl, parsley-stuffed chicken basted with butter, sprinkled with salt and cooked on a rotisserie. Kenrick’s also will provide open-grilled bratwurst cooked under coal, served with fresh homemade sauerkraut and mild hot mustard imported from Germany, along with barbecue ribs, which are a favorite at the Munich festival.
In the festival’s ongoing effort to mirror the authenticity of the legendary Munich festival, Soulard Oktoberfest is featuring a special state-of-the-art VIP tent that exemplifies a traditional Munich festival tent.
“Our VIP package this year is better than ever, and we’ve created an experience that rivals the famous Munich festival,” McKinstry said.
Soulard Oktoberfest general admission costs $5. VIP tickets for a three-day Uberpass cost $125; cost $70 for Friday; cost $85 for Saturday; and cost $50 for Sunday.
The 2012 Soulard Oktoberfest will be held across two blocks east from the Soulard Market on Third and Lafayette streets in the Kosciusko area.
Visit www.soulardoktoberfest.com, like them on Facebook, or follow them on Twitter or download their new mobile website for the latest updates on the 2012 festival.